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    The woman's book Publication date 1911

  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  THE
  
  WOMAN'S
  
  BOOK
  
  CONTAINS EVERYTHING A
  WOMAN OUGHT TO KNOW
  
  
  EDITED BY FLORENCE B. JACK, LATE
  PRINCIPAL OF THE SCHOOL OF THE
  DOMESTIC ARTS, EDINBURGH, AND
  RITA STRAUSS, ASSISTED BY MANY
  EXPERT CONTRIBUTORS
  
  
  LONDON: T. C. & E. C. JACK
  
  16 HENRIETTA STREET, W.C. : AND EDINBURGH
  
  1911
  
  
  ^otx^
  
  
  . f\t
  
  
  PREFACE
  
  We have been asked to address a few words to our readers before tbe Woman's
  Book goes to press. Its preparation has been no light task, and we have
  attempted so much that it is with some reason we fear some omissions and
  not a few mistakes will be discovered by our critics. But, defects notwith-
  standing, we are confident that the book is valuable, and we look forward hope-
  fully to new editions being called for, when any suggestions and corrections
  sent us can be effected.
  
  We have done our best to provide a Reference Book dealing with all subjects
  of special interest to women. A glance at the Contents will show how varied
  a list it is. And now that our work is finished and we look back on the book
  as a whole, thoughts about women's work in general force themselves upon us.
  Our work would have been mechanically done if they did not.
  
  We have noted the variety of the work undertaken by women. It is matter
  for congratulation that so many new spheres of usefulness have been opened
  for women within recent years ; but we look forward to the time when capacity
  for work will be the only test of competence to undertake it. To have the
  work well done - that is the end to be aimed at, whether it be done by men or
  by women.
  
  It is often urged that the limited outlook and training of women in the past
  have left them insufficiently developed in mental capacity and judgment for
  certain responsible spheres of work. But it seems to us that, if the test of the
  educative value of work is the number of faculties it calls into play, woman's
  work, even in the past - the work of the domestic woman - caUed forth faculties
  of the highest order. It has taken months of hard work to write an intelligible
  book on woman's work. A considerable part of the book is devoted to the
  ordering of a household, and this portion has not been the easiest to write. In
  writing it we have discovered afresh that the quahties that are demanded of a
  field-marshal, and a few not unimportant quahties in addition, are the necessary
  quaUfications of a model wife and mother. Instinct in selecting subordinates,
  tact in managing them, organising of daily work, financial ability in handling
  the household budget, the taste that imparts charm to a home - these are not
  common faculties. But the training of the child makes the highest demand upon
  
  
  ^0%^^
  
  
  PREFACE
  
  We have been asked to address a few words to our readers before the Woman's
  Book goes to press. Its preparation has been no light task, and we have
  attempted so much that it is with some reason we fear some omissions and
  not a feAV mistakes will be discovered by our critics. But, defects notwith-
  standing, we are confident that the book is valuable, and we look forward hope-
  fully to new editions being caUed for, when any suggestions and corrections
  sent us can be effected.
  
  We have done our best to provide a Reference Book dealing with all subjects
  of special interest to women. A glance at the Contents will show how varied
  a list it is. And now that our work is finished and we look back on the book
  as ia whole, thoughts about women's work in general force themselves upon us.
  Our work would have been mechanically done if they did not.
  
  We have noted the variety of the work undertaken by women. It is matter
  for congratulation that so many new spheres of usefulness have been opened
  for women within recent years ; but we look forward to the time when capacity
  for work will be the only test of competence to undertake it. To have the
  work well done - that is the end to be aimed at, whether it be done by men or
  by women.
  
  It is often urged that the limited outlook and training of women in the past
  have left them insufficiently developed in mental capacity and judgment for
  certain responsible spheres of work. But it seems to us that, if the test of the
  educative value of work is the number of faculties it calls into play, woman's
  work, even in the past - the work of the domestic woman - called forth faculties
  of the highest order. It has taken months of hard work to write an intelligible
  book on woman's work. A considerable part of the book is devoted to the
  ordering of a household, and this portion has not been the easiest to write. In
  writing it we have discovered afresh that the qualities that are demanded of a
  field-marshal, and a few not unimportant quahties in addition, are the necessary
  qualifications of a model wife and mother. Instinct in selecting subordinates,
  tact in managing them, organising of daily work, financial ability in handling
  the household budget, the taste that imparts charm to a home - these are not
  common faculties. But the training of the child makes the highest demand upon
  
  
  vi PREFACE
  
  a woman. Patience, wisdom, self-sacrifice are called for at every hour of the
  day. Morally as well as intellectually the domestic woman's life is rich in
  opportunity.
  
  While, however, we cannot appreciate too highly the value of the work
  done by the domestic woman, it is absurd to regard that as woman's only sphere.
  Many have not the opportunity of such a life : many have not the aptitude
  for it. We have therefore endeavoured to take the widest possible view of
  Woman's sphere. Everything she can do well, that she is entitled to have
  the opportunity of domg. We hope that the information given in the volume
  about the various kinds of work now open to women, and the various agencies
  at work to quaUfy women for the work they can do, will be found useful ; and
  we hope, too, that the manner in which we have presented the domestic informa-
  tion may lead to a higher standard of attainment in woman's greatest industry
  
  - the home.
  
  F. B. J,
  
  R. S.
  
  London,
  
  A-pril 1911.
  
  
  \
  \
  
  
  LIST OF CONTENTS
  
  PAOE
  
  The House - Choice, Construction, Fittings .... 1
  
  Mistress and Servants 41
  
  Guide to Household Work 58
  
  Food and the Kitchen 87
  
  Guide to Cookery 116
  
  The Table 236
  
  Household Linen 257
  
  Guide to Laundry Work . . . . . . .271
  
  Dress - its Choice and Care 301
  
  Etiquette and Social Guide 325
  
  Management of Money and Legal Guide . , . . 362
  
  Plain Sewing and Mending 387
  
  Home Dressmaking 419
  
  Home Millinery 432
  
  Health and the Toilet 447
  
  The Child 466
  
  Holidays and Travel . 498
  
  Home Pets 507
  
  Poultry-Keeping 517
  
  Recreations 524
  
  Home Nursing and " First Aid " 548
  
  Home Gardening 580
  
  Household Repairs and Upholstery 604
  
  Careers for Women 615
  
  Literary and Secretarial Work 62b
  
  Medicine and Nursing 633
  
  Women in Horticulture and in Agriculture . . . 647
  
  Domestic Science 658
  
  Women in Business 665
  
  Civil Service and Public Work 678
  
  Arts and Crafts 682
  
  Social and Philanthropic Work 691
  
  Women in Politics 696
  
  Miscellaneous Facts and Figures 699
  
  vii
  
  
  SOME OF THE CONTRIBUTORS
  
  MRS. BERNARD MOLE, Principal, St. Mary's Nursery College, Hamp-
  stead,
  
  MISS FEDDEN, Principal, St. Martha's College of Housecraft, London.
  
  MISS MAUD COOKES, Head Teacher, Dressmaking and Millinery,
  National Training School of Cookery, London.
  
  MISS ALICE LEMON, M.R.B.W.A.
  
  MISS MARGARET E. BUCHANAN, Ph. Chem., M.P.S., President of
  the Association of Women Pharmacists.
  
  MISS K. M. COURTAULD, Principal of Colne Engaine Farm, Earl's
  Colne, Essex.
  
  MISS N. EDWARDS, President of the Ladies' Poultry Club and
  Principal of Coaley Poultry Farm, Gloucestershire.
  
  MISS BERTHA LA MOTHE, Teacher of and Lecturer on "Bee-
  keeping."
  
  
  viil
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  THEK. is nothing that requires more careful -nsideration than the^^^^^^^^^
  
  qXt^^Stur-t^^^^^^^^^^^^
  
  never a thought to position, site, aspect ventilat3 ox. samtary a^ange..ente^ ^^
  
  purse.
  
  
  First Considerations.- The first point for the
  would-be householder to consider is what rent
  can be afforded, or, if she wislies to Purchase
  the house, what sum can be devoted to this
  purpose. She should be as exact as possible m
  her calculations before she makes up her mmd
  whether to buy or rent a dwelhng Bates and
  taxes have to be considered m both cases. The
  purchase money, it must be remembered, repre-
  sents money which otherwise ^vested would
  have brought in a yeaily rate of interest. Ihe
  loss of this yearly interest must be reckoned as
  equivalent to annual out-of-pocket expenditure,
  aided to which must be the cost of upkeep
  and repairs, and those taxes which, m the case
  of a house let on lease, are paid by the landlord,
  not to speak of the many other expenses which
  the ownership of house property involves.
  
  K it is proposed to lease a house there are
  several points wliich Would increase or decrease
  the expenditure as the case may be. If it is
  taken on a repairing lease, the tenant wiU have
  to see to all repairs both inside and out. _ itos
  will amount to not a little expenditure in the
  course of the year, and therefore repairing leases
  should be avoided where possible. In London,
  however, and many other large towns most ot
  the houses are let upon repau-mg leases. _ In
  these ch-cumstances it is more than ever im-
  portant that the house be in thorough condition
  and repair before the new tenant takes pos-
  session.
  
  
  In some leases a stipulation is made that the
  landlord will attend to aU outside repairs, whilst
  a tenant wiU be held responsible for inside re-
  pairs ; but the ideal arrangement is undoubtedly
  that in which the landlord undertakes to do oM
  repairs, even though the rent may be a httle
  higher in consequence. There are many im-
  portant legal points involved in the drawing up
  of a lease or a deed of purchase (see Law of
  Landlord and Tenant, p. 379). It is always
  advisable, therefore, for the would-be house-
  holder to secure the service of a good and
  reUable house agent to act for her m the trans-
  action. She might also find it expedient to
  consult her lawyer.
  
  A small amount expended upon agent s and
  lawver's fees has often been the means of saving
  large sums of money, and it is worse than folly
  for the householder without any elementary
  knowledge of the law in regard to landlord and
  tenant, or of the intricacies of a contract of sale
  to We to cope with the legal teclmicahties
  invoh^d in a purchase or lease without any
  advice. Even if she does possess some know-
  Tedge of the law, it is better for her to have
  expert advice; often flaws are found in leases
  or agreements which only a trained legal mind
  can detect, and it is always better to be on the
  safe side in these matters. (See Agents Fees,
  
  ^'i?f ^regard to the purchase of a house, this
  may often be done tlirough the medium of a
  
  
  THE WOIMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  good " Bxiilding Society." A Building Society
  advances to its members loans for the purpose
  of acquiring houses, or of ewjquiring land for
  building purposes. In return for the loan, the
  house or land so acquired is mortgaged to the
  Society. \Mion the loan is repaid, the house
  becomes tho absolute property of the member.
  The fund out of wliich the Society grants the
  loans is provided by the subscription of the
  members themselves.
  
  Locality. - Hax-ing calculated to the nearest
  figure the sum of money she is justified in
  spending, or the annual amount for rent, rates,
  smd taxes wliich she can afford to allot out of
  her yesu-ly income, the householder must con-
  sider in what locality she is most likely to obtain
  a house wliich will best meet •w-ith her require-
  ments. If members of the family have to go
  into the city daily, then the residence should
  be one from wliich the city is of easy access.
  House rents in towns are higher than in
  the suburbs, but where a residence in the
  suburbs is selected, train and omnibus fares
  will have to be added to the yearly ex-
  penditure, so that in the long run the dif-
  ference may not be so great. Very often in
  some parts of a town rents will be found to be
  on a cheaper scale than elsewhere, but this is
  mostly the case in streets which do not bear
  the best of reputations ; the character of the
  locality should therefore be well inquired into
  before deciding to profit by a seeming bargain
  in the rental of a town house.
  
  Where there is a family of cliildren, it is better
  as a rule to choose a house in some accessible
  suburb rather than in a town itself. In the
  suburbs good roomy houses with gardens can be
  had at quit" moderate rentals. Houses with
  gsu'dens are rare in town, except at very high
  rentals, whilst in many towns even a high rental
  cannot secure the most minute amount of
  garden space.
  
  A suburb where there is a good train service
  should be selected, and the house should be as
  near as possible to the station. This last is of
  the utmost importance. Some people, whilst
  being careful to select an easily accessible spot
  within twenty minutes' train joiuney of town,
  choose a residence of about half-an-hour's walk
  from the station. If they had chosen a home
  nefir tho station in one of the more remote
  suburbs, they would have been better off. The
  time spent in going backwards and forwards
  would have been the same, and the drawback
  of the long walk to and from the house in
  inclement weather would have been avoided.
  
  Many of the smaller towns, it is true, combine
  the advantages of town and suburban hfe in that
  good dwelling-houses may be had with gardens
  at fairly moderate rentals. These towns, how-
  evfir, are not great centres of activity, and the
  foregoing remarks must only apply, of coxirse,
  to those cases where paterfamilias has to earn
  
  
  liis Uvelihood in one of our large towns or
  cities.
  
  In many cases, it will be argued on behalf
  of the cliildren, that educational faciUties in
  towm are so much greater and cheaper than in
  the suburbs or in the country. Nowadays, how-
  ever, good educational establishments are to be
  found everj'\\-horo, and in regard to specialised
  subjects such as those included in cormnercial
  training, many of the large town estabUshments
  have opened branches in most parts of the
  country. Then, again, if the suburb has been
  selected with due regard to railway facihties,
  cheap fares, &c., there is nothing easier than
  to let the young people go into town for their
  special lessons if necessary. In the selection
  of a house, educational facihties for the cliildren
  should never be overlooked, and for this reason
  it is always better to inquire whether there are
  good schools in the neighbourhood.
  
  The same argument must prevail if the house
  is selected in some country place. In many
  c£ises, apart from all question of low rental, &c.,
  the love of paterfamiUas for the country is so
  great, that not aU the tedium and discomfort
  of the long train journey twice daily will deter
  liim from pitching his tent " far from the
  madding crowd." If he is prepared to endure
  the discomfort, well and good, but the welfare
  of the cliildren from the point of view of educa-
  tion must be considered, and for this reason
  he should take care to be near some good
  educational centre, unless the plan of sending
  the children to a boarding-school is adopted.
  
  If one decides to pitch one's tent in tho
  co'ontry, care should be taken to find out if
  there are one or two good reliable medical men
  within easy distance. In case of illness, the
  fact of having to send two or more miles for
  medical aid may at times amount to actual
  calamity. Such risks should therefore be
  avoided. It is ad\nsable also that the house
  should not be too far away from a village where
  food and other commodities can be purchased.
  
  The chief drawback to residence in the country
  hes in the fact that up-to-date arrangements
  in regard to sanitation, water supply, and light-
  ing are not always to be found, and although
  many charms are to be found in hfe in a country
  cottage, there are also in many cases disadvan-
  tages which will more than counterbalar .-o these
  charms if great care and discrimination are
  not exercised in the choice of both locality and
  dwelling.
  
  House versus Flat. - The comparative merits
  of houses and flats as places of residence will ever
  be a debatable subject. There is no doubt,
  however, that as regards town life, for people
  of moderate means, flats represent the minimum
  amount of annual outlay. It is much easier
  for a woman to regulate her expenditure when
  she knows that the sums she pays yearly for
  her flat will cover not only rent, but also rates
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  and taxes. As the latter usually amount to a
  third of the rental, this is a most important con-
  sideration. Then there is an old saying that
  " a large house is a big tliief," and many a
  weary householder, harassed at the thought
  of high wages claimed by servants, large sums
  spent in cleaning and keeping the house in
  repair, has proved the truth of this old adage.
  
  With a flat expenditure is kept within easy
  bounds ; none of the thousand and one odd
  expenses are Uable to crop up in veirious unex-
  pected quarters as in the case of a house, and all
  the rooms being on one floor, one's housework
  is reduced to a minimum, and the amoiint spent
  on servants' wages is correspondingly decreased.
  
  There is also the additional advantage of
  security, for one feels quite safe when leaving
  for the annual holiday in locking up the flat
  and placing the key in the care of the doorkeeper.
  It can also be locked up during the daytime,
  when one wishes to go out, without the necessity
  of leaving any one in charge.
  
  On the other hand, a flat nas many disad-
  vantages as compared with a complete dwelling-
  house. The rooms are small, in many cases
  dark, the larder and cellar accommodation poor
  - dress cupboards are generally conspicuous by
  their absence, and in even the best and most
  expensive of flats the servant's room, where
  there is one, is little better than a cupboard in
  size. Then, again, flats at the lower rentals are
  always on the top or second top stories of a
  building or else in the basement. In the case
  cf the luxurious buildings which are let out in
  flats at high rentals a lift will be provided, but
  this is seldom the case in regard to the buildings
  at which flats are let out at moderate rents. In
  the absence of a lift there will be the weary
  cUmb up high flights of stone steps before one
  can reach one's dwelling, a disadvantage which
  does much to counterbalance the advantage of
  the rooms being On one floor. But even with
  this disadvantage, top floor flats are preferable
  to flats in the basement in regard to light and
  ventilation.
  
  In a flat it is impossible to maintain the same
  degree of privacy as in a house. One's slumbers
  are apt to be disturbed in the small hours of
  the morning by the efforts of some conscientious
  youngster laboriously practising five finger
  exercises in the flat below, or else a " musical
  evening " in the flat opposite continued far
  into the night, though very enjoyable to those
  whom it may concern, succeeds in robbing you
  of those precious hours of " beauty sleep " wliich
  you prize so highly. In case of contagious illness
  olso the danger of infection is greater, as isola-
  tion is more difficult.
  
  On the whole, there are many things to be
  said for and against flat life ; but it may be
  taken as a general rule that for the young couple
  beginning housekeeping on strictly limited
  means, a flat is always best from the point of
  
  
  view of keeping down expenditure ; whilst in
  the case of a family of young children, flat life
  is incompatible with comfort owing to the
  hmited space available, and the very fact of all
  the rooms being on one floor is in these cir-
  cimistances a positive disadvantage.
  
  Site and Soil. - Absence of damp is of the
  utmost importance to health, and in tliis re-
  spect a great deal will depend on the soil upon
  which the house is built. A gravel soil or chalk
  soil above the water level is best. A clay soil,
  being non-porous, retains moisture and should
  be avoided.
  
  On the other hand, the position of the site is
  an important factor in determining the advantage
  or disadvantage of the soil upon which it is built.
  Generally speaking, a house should never stand
  low : it often happens that a house standing
  on high ground, although built on clay soil, is
  dryer than a low-lying dwelling situated in a
  valley upon gravel soil. Trees are desirable,
  if not too near the house, as they aid in drjnng
  the soil, certain trees such as eucalyptus, plane,
  and poplar being specially useful.
  
  what is known as " made-up ground " is
  about the worst soil upon which a house can be
  built. The word " made " is true in its actual
  sense, for the ground consists of holes and
  hollows wliich have been Uterally filled up with
  all sorts of rubbish and refuse to make a founda-
  tion. The danger of building on such a soil,
  which will in many cases be largely composed
  of organic matter from which noxious gases
  emanate- and force their way upwards, is ob\'ious.
  Carefiil inquiry should therefore be made in
  regard to this important question of soil before
  selecting a dwelling.
  
  Construction. - ^The absence of damp will also
  depend to a great extent upon the construction
  of the house, proper construction tending to
  minimise many of the disadvantages of an
  unsuitable soil. Houses built on clay soil should
  be well raised above the ground level, and should
  possess neither cellars nor basements. Houses
  with basements must be very carefully con-
  structed with the view of preventing the damp
  from rising up the floor and lower walls. The
  subsoil should be drained by means of subsoil
  drain-pipes, which consist of short earthenware
  pipes laid in trenches several feet below the
  surface (see p. 4). To prevent dampness rising
  through the floor of the basement, the floor
  should be built upon a bed of concrete, wliilst to
  prevent moisture from rising up the lower walls,
  these should not only be constructed upon a
  foundation of concrete, but what is known as a
  " damp course " should be provided. A " damp
  coiorse " consists of an impervious layer of
  cement, slate, asphalt, or bitumen, wliich is
  placed in the brick-work of the wall above the
  ground level, but below the floor. Houses with
  basements should always be separated fi-om
  the street by an area.
  
  
  4
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  A great deal of the comfort and well-being
  of the inhabitants of a house ^\-ill depend upon
  the plan upon which it is built. Houses with
  basements alwaj's entail work for servants in
  going up and down stairs between the dining-
  room and the kitchen. On the other hand, in
  bouses where the kitchen and dining-room are
  on one floor, care should be taken that the
  kitchen is not situated in such close proximity
  to the other rooms as to make the smell of
  cooking go all over the house. The ideal plan is
  to have the kitchen and pantry shut off from
  the rest of the rooms on the first floor by a
  
  
  one of the upper landings in addition to the bath-
  room. There should in all cases be a housemaid's
  pantry on one of the upper landings in which
  she can keep pails and brushes.
  
  Too much stress cannot be laid upon the
  necessity of the house being thoroughly dry:
  for this reason it is never vrise to take up resi-
  dence too soon in a newly-built house, as the
  walls are usually damp. Fires should be kept
  burning in all the rooms for as long a period as
  possible before going into a new house.
  
  A httle wall-peeling and discoloration in the
  case of a new house is almost unavoidable, but
  
  
  nnn.
  
  
  Illustration showing Concrete Foundation ol a House with Damp Course
  and Drainage System.
  
  
  A, House drain.
  
  B. Concrete foundation.
  
  C. Intercepting trap.
  
  D, N. Gulleys.
  
  
  F. Dry area.
  
  G, H. Damp proof course.
  K. AV.C.
  
  L. Soil pipe.
  
  
  O. Rainwater pipe.
  
  P. Dath waate-water pipe.
  
  R. Sink.
  
  
  separate little passage and door, the passage
  running between the kitchen and pantry, the
  latter being placed at the back of the dining-
  room, with a hatch, i.e. a small cupboard like
  an aperture in the wall itself opening from
  the pantry into the dining-room, through which
  dishes may be passed to the servant waiting at
  table. WTien not in use, this little cupboard
  can be kept closed and will not be noticeable.
  A lift from the kitchen to the dining-room whore
  there is a basement is a very great help ; but
  these are a.s a rule expensive to fit in and are
  luxuries not within the reach of the many.
  Plenty of cupboards are also desirable, including
  a hot-air cupboard for the airing of linen. If
  the house is a high one, water should be laid on
  
  
  if, when looking over a house which has been
  built for some time, the paper is seen to be
  discoloured, this may be taken as a suio sign
  of damp, and the house should be avoided. In
  these cases a musty damp smell will almost
  invariably be present ; a house of this kind
  cannot possibly be healthy, and residence in
  damp dwellings is a most proUfic cause of all
  kinds of illness. Many a case of chronic rheu-
  matism can be traced to residence in a damp
  house. Care should also be taken to find out
  if the roof is in good condition, as dampness in
  the upper rooms may often be traced to some
  defect in the roof, lliough for the purpose of
  drainage of the soil it is well to have trees
  near the house, they must not be too near, as
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  in this case they are liable to make it damp.
  Ivy growing up the walls of the house, though
  very pretty and decorative in appearance, is
  also a cause of damp.
  
  Aspect. - A house should also be carefully
  selected in regard to its aspect. Generally
  speaking, the front should face south-west or
  south-east. The front bedrooms and sitting-
  rooms will in this way catch the morning sun,
  wliilst the back rooms will have the afternoon
  sun. For this reason it is advisable to have as
  many bedrooms in the front as possible. The
  breakfast-room should also have a sunny aspect ;
  where there is no breakfast-room, the dining-
  room should be in the front of the house in
  order that the cheering influence of the morning
  sun may be enjoyed at breakfast, whilst the
  drawing-room will do well in a position where
  it receives the sunsliine in the afternoon. It is
  not advisable, as a rule, to choose a house facing
  due north ; the rooms will be dark through
  absence of sunlight, and the house will be cold,
  requiring a much greater degree of artificial
  ■warmth in winter to make it habitable than in
  the case of a south-west or south-east aspect.
  
  DRAINAGE
  
  A house should not be purchased nor an
  agreement for a lease entered into before the
  ptirchaser or lessee is satisfied that the drainage
  system is in thorough order. To make sure
  of this, it is essential to take independent
  expert ad\nce upon the subject and to have
  the premises examined by a sanitary en-
  gineer. FaiUng this, it would be advisable to
  insist upon a written guarantee from the vendor
  or landlord that the drains have been recently
  tested and are in good condition. It is well,
  however, to always have an independent opinion,
  therefore the former plan is the better of the
  two, and by adopting it the intending pur-
  chaser or tenant procects himself from becoming
  saddled with a house where insanitary con-
  ditions prevail.
  
  However well a house may be constructed
  in regard to light and ventilation, if the drainage
  is wrong, siclcness and disease will invariably
  follow, and a Uttle trouble and expense in in-
  vestigating this important matter in the first
  instance will save no end of trouble and expense
  in the long run.
  
  The most usual system of drainage or disposal
  of sewage prevaUiiig in towns and almost all but
  remote country places is that known as the
  " water-carriage system " by wliich all the
  sewage is can-ied off underground in pipes called
  drains. Tlie following drain-pipes are to be
  found in the average house -
  
  The sink pipe for taldng away water from the
  sink; the water pipe for taking away the bath
  water ; the soil pipe (discharging from the
  water-closets), with its ventilating pipe carried
  
  
  above the roof ; the outer drain pipe for carry-
  ing off superfluous water.
  
  These pipes all lead to the house drain which,
  in its turn, is connected with the street sewer.
  It is not only important that all drains
  should be properly constructed, but also that
  they be kept in good condition if the house
  is to be health}'. To this end they should be
  regularly examined and all defects put right
  with the least delay possible.
  
  Good drains should be ( 1 ) water-tight ; (2) well
  ventilated ; (3) without direct connection be-
  tween those carrj^ing sewage and those carry-
  ing waste from baths, basins, and the Hke ; (4)
  well flushed.
  
  (1) In order to be water-tight, the drain-pipes
  are best made of iron, but owing to the expense
  this involves they are generally made of earthen-
  ware. Long iron pipes with lead joints consti-
  tute the most water-tight system invented so far.
  The bed in wliich the pipes are laid must not be
  Uable to sink, or the joints wiU give, even al-
  though firmly cemented. For this purpose, care
  must be taken not to sink the original trenches
  deeper than is necessary, as any fiUing in with
  fresh earth promotes consequent sagging.
  
  (2) The ventilation must be very thorough,
  or sewer gas wiU find its way into the house in
  spite of the most careful traps to prevent it.
  
  (3) The waste pipes from baths, &c., should
  never open directly into the sewer, even although
  the connection is guarded by a trap. They
  should pour their water into an open receiver or
  gully placed outside the house, and the gully
  should be connected with the sewer. Then if
  any sewer gas escapes from the gully, it will pass
  off in the open air without being conducted into
  the house. In the case of all pipes connection
  with the sewer must be guarded by a trap.
  Traps are devised to prevent the escape of
  sewer gas from the drain into the house. Many
  of the older traps had the drawback that they
  allowed filth to accumulate in them. U- or
  S-shaped traps are the ones now cliiefly used.
  By having it of either shape, whenever the
  drain is flushed some water is retained in
  the bent part or trap, which then prevents the
  passage of gas through this portion of the pipe.
  The water used to flush the water-closet should
  not come direct from the chief cistern, but from
  a special small cistern, the water of which is
  never used for drinking purposes. By tliis
  means, if sewer gas passes into the small cistern,
  it will be absorbed by the water in it with-
  out passing on to the chief water-drinking
  cistern.
  
  (4) In order that a drain may be well flushed,
  not only must an ample supply of water pass
  down it, but the drain must be laid at such an
  inchne that the flow is sufficiently rapid. It
  must be fairly narrow and as straight as possible
  for the same reason ; and, again, friction must
  be reduced by making the internal surface
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  smooth. By these means the accumulation of
  filth IS reduced to a minimum.
  
  Testing the drains is done by plugging the
  outlet of tlie suspectod drain at the nearest
  manhole and tlien filling it with water from
  the nearest water-closot. If a leak is present,
  the water soon sinks, and if many leaks are
  present, it may not be possible to fill the
  drain at all. Suspected leaks may also be
  tested by pouring down strong oil of pepper-
  mint or assafetida in hot water, whilst a
  second person in the room below determines
  whetlier the odour escapes or not, but tliis
  method is not so thorough as the former
  test, thougli more easily performed by the
  householder.
  
  Tlie water-closet must bo of such a pattern
  that it is always clean and efficiently trapped,
  has no direct connection with the drinking-
  water cistern, and is flushed by a special
  cistern of its own which should hold from
  two to tliree gallons. Tlie " wash-out " closet
  and the " valve " closet are two of the best
  patterns in use at present - a " hopper " closet
  is conunonly used, and it is satisfactory if a
  short hopper is used, but a long hopper is
  to be condemned for its lack of cleanhness.
  What is known as the " pan " closet is an
  old form of closet which cannot bo too strongly
  condemned. Tlie traps should be furnished
  with anti-siphonage pipes to prevent them be-
  coming unsealed. In well-built houses water-
  closets are always separated from the other
  portion of the house by a small passage, and
  where there are two or three they are placed on
  the different landings one above the other. In
  properly constructed houses all places where
  water is laid on, such as the bath-room, lava-
  tories, hou36-maid's sinks, should come one over
  the other on the various floors.
  
  The Earth System. - In the country, where a
  sufficient water-supply is not always available
  for a complete water-borne system of drainage,
  what is known as the " Earth " system is the
  most sanitary to adopt. In this system earth
  is used instead of water in the closet pails, and
  the contents of the latter are buried at intervals
  in the garden.
  
  The principle of the earth system is founded on
  the well-known power possessed by dry earth
  of deodorising and disinfecting faecal matter -
  a given quantity of earth, if applied in detail to
  fresh excrement, destroying all smell and absorb-
  ing all noxious vapours. Where sufficient earth
  is not available, ashes should be used. Moule's
  earth closets are amongst the best-known sanitary
  appliances used in connection with this system.
  
  Removal of Refuse. - All the dry refuse of a
  house which does not come under the designa-
  tion of " sewage," is removed by dustmen in
  the employ of the local authorities at regular
  intorv'-als. The most sanitary dustbins are made
  of zinc. The dustbin should be kept closed to
  
  
  keep out rain and damp, otherwise the contents
  will quickly decompose, and noxious odours will
  be the result. It should not be kept too near
  the wall of the house, but sliould bo at least sis
  feet away from it. Only dry refuse should be
  placed in the dustbin. All vegetable matter,
  such as potato peirings, &c., should be burnt if
  noxious and unsanitary odours are to be avoided.
  (See Kitchen Refuse, p. 94.)
  
  WATER-SUPPLY
  
  A pure and abundant water-supply is a
  necessity in every house. Care must be taken,
  therefore, to flnd out ( 1 ) if the supply is good ;
  (2) if it is constant or intermittent; (3) if the
  latter, whether the cisterns are adequate for the
  storage of the water and Eire in good condition.
  
  In regard to the purity of the water, this
  should be ascertained by applying to the county
  or borough analyst for an analysis. The usual
  fee for this analysis is one guinea. As a rule the
  water-supply in large towns is pure. When, as
  in country districts, the water is derived from
  wells, the utmost precautions should be taken.
  All well water should be boiled before use,
  as it is very liable to pollution. If a well is
  shallow the risk of contamination is often con-
  siderable. A well should be deep and have its
  sides protected by some waterproof material
  to prevent the surface water from entering it.
  The best wells are those wliich are driven
  tlirough the first impervious stratum so as to
  tap the one lying below.
  
  Filters are largely used for purifying water,
  but a number of those in domestic use are not
  so effective as is generally supposed. Many
  stop some of the germs, which then flourish in
  the substance of the filter and infect all subse-
  quent water that passes through. Hence puri-
  fication of the water by boiling is a much safer
  method. Among the more reliable filters are
  the Pasteur-Chamberland and the Berkefeld.
  In the Peisteur-Chamberland filter the water
  passes tlirough a thick-walled unglazed earthen-
  ware tube, which stops germs. It has been
  recommended to clean this by brushing the
  outside with a stiff brush ; as, however, the
  germs are not only outside but probably also
  distributed tlirough the substance of the porce-
  lain, to be thoroughly cleansed it should be
  boiled or a new tube substituted. All filters
  require thorough and constant cleansing if they
  are to be effective. A dirty filter will do more
  harm than good.
  
  In most towns there is now what is called a
  " constant water-supply.'" The constant supply
  system renders cisterns for the storage of water
  unnecessary, excepting in connection with the
  hot-water supply. Where there is what is known
  as an " intermittent supply " tlie water is
  turned off for a certain time each day. In these
  circumstances the intending householder should
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  find out if the cisterns are large enough for the
  adequate storage of the water during those
  hours in which the supply is cut oS, and also
  if the cisterns are clean and in thoroughly good
  condition. Cisterns shoxild never under any
  circumstances be left uncovered, but should be
  provided with a well-fitting Ud. No house
  should be taken until it has been ascertained that
  all cisterns have been thoroughly cleaned by
  the plumber. This cleaning should be repeated
  at regular intervals. Tlie cisterns should be
  made of galvanised iron. An overflow pipe
  should be provided for any overflow of water
  that might arise ; tliis pipe should discharge
  into the open air and never into a soil pipe or
  drain, or pollution of the water by sewage gases
  is likely to result. Cisterns from which drinking
  Water is drawn shoidd be as far as possible from
  water-closets and drains. The simple precaution
  of letting the water run a Uttle before drawing it
  in the morning for drinking purposes should
  always be taken, as it should be remembered
  that the water has been stationary in the pipes
  all night, and the supply is therefore not so pure
  as when constantly drawn from during the
  day.
  
  Hot- Water Supply. - ^A good hot-water supply
  is a necessity in every household, and a great
  deal of the comfort of the house depends upon
  this supply being adequate to the demands made
  upon it.
  
  In most houses the water is heated by the
  kitchen range, at the back of which is a boiler ;
  from this hot water is conveyed to the hot-water
  tank by means of circulation pipes. The supply
  of hot water will depend to a great extent upon
  the efiicacy of the kitchen range and the supply
  system installed. The two best-known systems
  in this connection are the " tank " and the
  " Cylinder " system. In the first system a tank
  is supphed for storage
  of hot water, while
  a cyhnder takes the
  place of the tank in
  connection with the
  second system. Before
  taking a house, care
  should be taken to
  ascertain whether the
  hot-water system is
  in thorough working
  order.
  
  Heating Water by
  Gas. - There are other
  methods, however, of
  securing a hot-water
  supply independent
  of the kitchen-range.
  There has been placed
  upon the market with-
  in recent years an ap-
  paratus known as a " Circulator." Tlais is a
  small boiler heated by gas which can easilj' be
  
  
  Hot-water Circulator.
  
  
  connected to the " flow " and " return " pipes
  from the coal-range boiler, and will then with
  a quite moderate consumption of gas supply hot
  water to the circulating tank, either indepen-
  dently of, or in conjunction with, the coal -range
  boiler, the working of the latter, in the event
  of the kitchen fire being lighted, being in
  no way interfered with. These circulators are
  specially adapted for use in flats, and in villas
  where the length of the circulating pipes are
  not abnormal.
  
  In small houses and flats where gas is
  used exclusively as fuel, many people obtain
  their supply of water for the bath by installing
  a geyser in the bath-room for the purpose
  of heating the bath water, whilst the water
  for kitchen and other purposes is boiled on
  the gas stove. Geysers for the purpose can
  be hired from all the gas companies. The
  geyser, however, does not give a storage of hot
  water throughout the house, and does not
  therefore fully take the place of the range boiler
  as does the circulator. It is a useful accessory
  to the bath-room, however, in summer, as hot
  water for the bath can be obtained by this
  means independently of the kitchen range.
  
  VENTHATION
  
  A supply of fresh pure air is essential to
  health, hence it follows that homes shotild
  be well ventilated. Good air must be admitted
  and bad air expelled. Ventilation is the
  renewal of the air contained in a room. Thљ
  necessity for such renewal increases with the
  number of people occupjnng it, and the number
  of lights burning in it. Both lights and people
  ahke use up the oxygen of the air and dis-
  charge into it a certain amount of carbon-
  dioxide ; but the human breath has a more
  noxious effect than the flamo of an ordinary
  lamp or gas jet, for it emits a certain quantity
  of highly poisonous organic matter, and it is
  chiefly this which vitiates the air and gives it
  the well-known " stuffy " odour.
  
  Every one is aware that air that has been
  breathed is warm, and that warm air rises.
  Many people think that if a room is sufficiently
  lofty the bad air will all accumulate near the
  roof and the air near the floor will not be \-itiated
  for many hours. This is a gi'eat mistake, for
  unless some means of letting out the bad air
  is provided, its warmth will soon become lost
  and its moisture will condense, causing the
  bad air to become heavier than the fresh air,
  when it will sink and niingle with the latter
  and a vitiated atmosphere will be the result.
  As a matter of fact, the bad air rarely rises
  liigher than twelve feet before it becomes cool
  and descends.
  
  Every room, therefore, that is to be ade-
  quately ventilated requires both an inlet for
  good and an outlet for bad air.
  
  
  8
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  To secure the ventilation of a dwelling-room
  vre reciuire no ceiling to be higher than
  tvpelve feet, but the windows slaould reach
  the coiling and be open at the top. A fire-
  place should always be present and the chimney
  register should never be closed. Tlie window
  and the cliininey are the two readiest means of
  ventilation.
  
  The ventilation should be arranged so that
  the fresh air is lot in with its current directed
  upwards, and the bad air let out near the
  ceiUng. It is an error to ventilate the room
  into the passage bj' lea\nng the door open and
  the window closed. " Windows were made to
  be opened, doors to be shut." Bedroom
  ■windows, especially, should never be altogether
  closed at the top. Care should be taken that
  the bed is placed so that the cold air does
  not beat down upon the sleeper.
  
  The danger of draughts, however, must be
  reckoned with in many cases, and for deUcate
  
  
  The ninckes-Bird Method
  of Ventilation.
  
  people wide-open windows in winter are not
  always advisable. In these circumstances a
  very simple system of ventilation known as the
  Hinckes-Bird method should be adopted. It
  consists in raising the lower sash of a window a
  few inches, and blocking up the opening with a
  piece of boarding as long as the width of the
  window and about six inches broad, thus allow-
  ing the fresh air to enter the room, but only
  between the two sashes, and with an upper
  current.
  
  The proper ventilation of a house will depend
  to a great extent upon its warming arrange-
  ments. Somo grates are constructed so that
  the fire burning in them serves to warm the air
  before it enters the room. A Galton's grate, fur
  instance, has an air-space behind the chimney
  communicating below with the outside air and
  above with the interior of the room, the heat
  of the chimney being in this way used to warm
  the incoming air.
  
  A very simple means of ventilating ordinary
  dwelling-houses is found in what is known as
  
  
  the " Sheringham Valve," which is a metal
  guard placed aroimd an aperture in the wall,
  so arranged as to direct the incoming air upwards
  and made to work on a liinge so as to show the
  opening when desired.
  
  A Tohin'a Tube is a pipe the lower end of
  which communicates through an opening in the
  wall with the outside air, whilst tlie upper end
  opens into the room about six feet above the
  floor.
  
  Among other simple aids to ventilation with-
  out draught are the following : -
  
  Perforaled Bricks, communicating with the
  room by gratings, wliich servo to break up the
  current and thus prevent the draught from
  being felt.
  
  Boyle's Valve inserted in the cliimney near
  the coihng. Tliis contrivance consists of an
  apertiire leading into the chimney with two
  talc flaps, forming a valve, which permits the
  air of the room to enter the chimney, but
  prevents the smoke from entering the room.
  
  Louvre Panes, consisting of slips of glass placed
  obliquely in an oblong opening cut in the
  window pane. They are commonly used in
  shop windows that do not open. The Cooper
  rose ventilator is on the same principle.
  
  
  LIGHTING
  
  The proper lighting of a house is essential
  not only from the point of view of the
  health, but also for the comfort of its inhabi-
  tants. A person is more influenced by his or
  her svuToundings than one would think - good
  temper and cheeriness come naturally amid
  cheerful surroundings, whereas dark, gloomy,
  and ill-lighted premises tend to have a most
  depressing effect upon even the most optimistic
  of individuals.
  
  Good natural light during the daytime may
  be secured by a wise choice of aspect (see p. 5).
  Stained-glass windows should be avoided in
  living rooms. JIany people elect to have the
  lower sashes of their dining-rooms, for instance,
  of stained glass. The effect may bo imposing,
  perhaps, but it is certainly not cheerful, and
  grandeur is dearly bought at the expense of the
  light and cheeriness of a room. Then, again,
  creepers should not be allowed to grow over
  the front of the house in such a way as to over-
  shadow the windows, nor should the light be
  shut out by the too close proximity of trees.
  It must bo remembered tliat plenty of light
  is essential to our health, and care should be
  taken therefore to secure it.
  
  Artlflclal Lighting. - In towns electric light and
  gas form the chief artificial illuminants. Gas
  is also suppUed in a large number of country
  places, but where this is not to bo had, lamps
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  are generally used. In large country houses,
  however, air gas is often made from a plant on
  the premises.
  
  Electric Light as an illuminant has many
  advantages. It is cleanly, hygienic, and con-
  venient; and if caxe is taken in regulating its use,
  the quarterly electric hght bill may be kept well
  within bounds. It is very little trouble to switch
  off the hght when one leaves the room, and if this
  is done not once in a way, but as a general rule,
  a substantial sa-ving on the electric light bill is
  the result. Low candle-power lights should be
  used in the bedrooms, one or two 7 or 8 candle-
  power lamps being usually sufficient for each
  room.
  
  Economy may also be exercised by means
  of the electric lamps selected. Tantalum
  and many of the other metallic filament
  lamps, whilst giving a much brighter Ught than
  the ordinary incandescent lamps with carbon
  filaments, consume much less current than the
  latter, and are therefore more economical.
  
  In connection with the installation of an
  electric plant for Ughting in country mansions
  situated in localities where there is no pubUc
  supply, the initial outlay will necessarily be
  higher. Where a pubUc supply is available
  the only expense will be that of wiring the
  premises and purchasing the necessary fixtures.
  In most oases the latter may be hired from
  the electric hght company by payment of a
  fixed sum every year. The cost of electric
  hght varies in different towns. In London
  it averages from 4d. to 5d. per unit for hght-
  ing, whilst for heating purposes the cost is Id.
  per unit.
  
  Coal Gas is obtained by the distillation of
  coal in large chambers or retorts. The dis-
  tillation proceeds for about four hours under a
  great heat, and the products are broadly coke,
  gas, and coal tar. The gas is then cooled,
  washed with water, and treated with slaked
  lime to remove impurities.
  
  The large cylindrical vessels so prominent in
  all gas works are the gas-holders, from which the
  supply issues to the consumers. These holders
  rise and sink in a tank of water by their own
  weight and the upward pressure of the gas in-
  side. The gas is conveyed from the holder by
  mains and from the mains to the consumer by
  service pipes.
  
  The use of coal gas as an illuminant is almost
  universal, and many important improvements in
  regard to fittings have been made within recent
  years which have increased its usefulness to a
  remarkable degree.
  
  IMeters are used to meastu-e the gas consumed,
  and it is important that every householder
  should know how to read and check the meter.
  Gas meters are usually lent on liire to the con-
  sumer by the gas company. It is important
  that the supply of gas to the burner should be
  regulated. Tliis can always be done by means
  
  
  of a regulator or " governor " on the main pipes
  or governor burners.
  
  Incandescent Gas. - This is by far the most
  superior and effective method of gas hghting.
  It is used in connection with special burners
  which admit air to be burned with the gas, a
  most brilUant effect being achieved by the
  illumination of the wliito mantle which is
  used in conjunction with the burner. The
  biirner is usually fitted with a by -pass for lower-
  ing and raising the light. By means of this
  by-pass the gas may be left turned on at the
  stop-cock, whilst only the faintest flicker of a
  flame is left on the burner. The Veritas and
  Welsbach mantles are amongst the best known
  and most effective to lase with incandescent
  gas.
  
  Amongst the latest improvements in connec-
  tion with gas hghting may be classed the
  Pneumatic Gas Switch, by means of which
  gas can be switched on in the same manner as
  electric Ught. With tliis simple apparatus any
  number of gas hghts can be switched on or off,
  separately or together. It consists of three
  parts - a switch, a valve and a coil of small tubing.
  The switch turns the gas up or down from any
  position or distance. The valve with by-pass
  complete screws on to any ordinary gas bracket
  or chandeher at the burner, winch is easily done
  without tools of any kind, whilst the tube, which
  is as small and flexible as a beU wire, conducts
  the air pressure from the switch to the valve,
  and is attached to the wall or woodwork with
  small staples suppUed with the sets. By touch-
  ing the switch, air pressm-e is sent through the
  fine tube, and the Hght is thus turned either
  on or off as desired. One of the special features
  of the gas switch is the fact that no batteries
  or chemicals of any kind whatever are requii-ed.
  It is self-contained and requires no further
  attention when fitted. Another advantage to
  be found in using tlais switch lies in the fact
  that incandescent mantles will be found to last
  much longer owing to the fact that the gas
  switches on easily ; it does away with the sUght
  explosion which always takes place when a
  match or taper is apphed when hghting the gas
  in the usual way.
  
  Air Gas, - In large country houses where there
  is no pubhc gas-supply, air gas is largely used
  for lighting purposes. Tliis is manufactured "
  from a plant on the promises, and there are many
  apparatus for the purpose on the market. One
  of the best apparatus for manivfacturing air
  gas is that sold by Messrs. W. A. S. Benson and
  Co., Ltd., of 82 and 83 New Bond Street, London,
  W. It is known as the " Aeos " Gas Apparatus.
  Tlie hght given by " Aeos " gas, whilst being
  brilliant and pure white, is exceedingly soft and
  restful. The apparatus is exceedingly simple,
  as the plant is whoUy automatic ; it is £ilso
  absolutely safe to use, being non-explosive.
  
  The price for a 25-light apparatus capable
  
  
  10
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  of supplying 25-26 candle-power burners would
  be as follows : -
  
  Apparatus £42 0 0
  
  Pump and Tank 5 10 0
  
  Carriage, including return of emjities,
  
  about 3 10 0
  
  £51 0 0
  
  
  whilst the cost of installing would be about £1
  per point. Once the initial cost of installation
  has been borne this gas proves one of the most
  economical ilhiminants it is possible to have.
  
  Electric Light, Gas and Oil Fittings.- A great
  deal of the beauty of a room depends upon the
  choice and position of suitable Ughting fittings.
  In the dining-room there should always be
  a centre light coming over the dinner-table in
  addition to any other bracket hghts necessary.
  With electric fittings it is as well to have one or
  two lamps to the centre hght which are switched
  on by different switches, so that either one or
  more of the lamps can be lighted at will. A red
  silk shade over the centre light has a most
  softening and soothing effect. The metal work
  is most effective when of antique copper or
  brass.
  
  In the drawing-room which is lighted by
  electricity, the centre pendant is of different
  design, usually consisting of a number of lights,
  each with separate ornamental glass shades.
  A high electric standard lamp, with a pretty silk
  shade of a light colour to tone with the general
  decorative scheme of the room, gives a very
  pretty effect, as do small lamps to be placed on
  mantelpiece, table, or piano as desired.
  
  The hall should be provided with a hang-
  ing centre lamp of lantern design, whilst,
  especially in houses built in the Queen Anne
  style, a plain old-time iron lantern should be
  hung outside the porch.
  
  In the billiard-room the lights over the table
  should have plain green shades. In the Ubrary
  or study a centre light with one or two small
  metal table standard lamps with soft silk shades
  should bo provided.
  
  In the bedrooms there should always be a
  light in front of the toilet table and one over
  the bed, the latter to be turned on by a switch
  at the side of the bed.
  Pretty soft silk shades
  of a light bright colour
  to tone with the colour-
  ing of the room should
  be used ; pale pink and
  pale green shades are
  very effective.
  
  Gas and Oil Lamps. -
  In regard to gas, where
  inverted incandescent
  burners are used, fit-
  tings for centre hghts and bracket hghts may be
  very bimilar to those used for electric hght, and
  
  
  \
  
  
  Bray's Inverted Burner.
  
  
  whore the " switch on " system is installed, the
  illusion can be made almost complete.
  
  Meiny of the disadvantages comiected with
  the use of oil for house hghting can be minimised
  by moans of suitable fittings. Pendant lamps
  should be used as much as possible. In the
  hall a lantern lamp is most effective. The
  dining-room lamp can be provided with a pretty
  silk shade, or, whore it is preferred, a plain wliite
  glass shade, and can be carried out in wrought
  iron metal work or polished brass. (For Care of
  Lamps, see p. 77.)
  
  Bracket lamps for hanging on walls are eJso
  made in many pretty and effective designs.
  
  Warming the House. - The comfort of the house
  will depend not a httle upon the method of
  artificial heating adopted during the cold season.
  Warming should always be considered in relation
  to ventilation as there is a very close connection
  between the two.
  
  Rooms may be warmed either by open fire-
  pleices, closed stoves (for burning of coal or coke,
  g£is and oil), or by hot- water pipes and radiators.
  
  The old-fashioned open grate will always be
  popular in EngUsh homes. There is some-
  tiling Very cheery and comforting about a
  good bright coal fire that is lacking with closed-
  in stoves and other methods of heating. It is
  true it consumes a large amount of fuel for the
  heat it yields, as most of the heat goes up the
  cliimney, but it makes the chimney a vtiluable
  ventilation shaft, wliich many more economical
  grates do not. A great deal of the heat-giving
  capacity of a fire will, of course, depend upon
  the construction of the grate. Tlie best heating
  fire-places have the back and sides of brick and
  not of iron, as brick radiates back the heat,
  whilst iron lets heat slip through it up the
  chimney. The back should loan over the fire,
  not away from it. The sUts in the grid that the
  coal rests on should be narrow so that cinders
  may not fall tlirough and be wasted. Tlie bars
  in front of the grate should also be narrow, and
  the space beneath the fixe should be closed up
  in front by means of an iron sliield. Again, the
  grate should be wider in front than at the back.
  All these principles of construction are to be
  found in the grates devised by Pridgin Teale
  and Lionel Teale ; the Teale system, in fact, has
  formed the basis of all the latest improvemeats
  in fire-grates. Many fire-places are now made
  almost entirely of glazed briquette, this mate.-ial
  covering both the hearth and fire-place surround.
  This is undoubtedly one of the most 8U"tistic as
  well as one of the most heat-giving styles of
  grate.
  
  An adjustable canopy is in most cases fitted to
  the top of modern grates.
  
  Many of the newer types of grate are con-
  structed wthout the front bars. Of these the
  Wells fire-grates are perhaps the best known.
  The " Burkone " patent barlesa fire is another
  also of escelleat design ; both grates are so coo-
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  11
  
  
  Btrueted as to give the maximum of heat with
  a mimimum consumption of fuel.
  
  Stoves. - Closed stoves greatly economise fuel
  at the expense of ventilation. They often give
  the room a stuffy odour, probably from organic
  matter in the air being charred by contact with
  the stove, and also from the fact that hot iron
  is porous and permits the escape of some of the
  gaseous products of combustion tlirough it.
  They also tend to make the atmosphere un-
  pleasantly dry. This latter defect can be
  remedied to a certain extent, however, by
  keeping trays of water around the stove. The
  ventilating stoves specially constructed to admit
  air by means of pipes or tubes are the best kind
  to use. Various kinds of fuel are used for burn-
  ing in these stoves, chief amongst which are coal,
  coke, and anthracite coal.
  
  The last-named is a slow-burning natural coal
  wliich has three times the heating power of
  ordinary bituminous coal, and is absolutely
  smokeless. The fuel is very expensive, costing
  about £2 per ton, but as one fire will last for
  hours, an anthracite stove will really prove an
  economy in the long run. It has been calculated
  that the average cost for fuel for twelve hours
  continuous biirning will not amount to more
  than l^d. Anthracite stoves are best fitted in
  front of fire-places. Where there is no fire-place,
  it is always necessary that the flue pipe should
  be carried to a chimney.
  
  Heating by Gas. - The open gas fires, consisting
  of jets of flame distributed amongst lumps of
  asbestos and burning in an ordinary grate with
  
  
  An Anthracite Stove.
  
  the chimney just as open as for a coal fire, form
  the healthiest method of heating rooms by gas
  in ordinary dwelhng-houses.
  
  The most careful ventilation of the room is
  
  
  necessary when any means of heating by gas
  is employed. Whenever gas is used as fuel,
  whether in open fires or stoves, trays of water
  should be kept near the fire-place or stove to
  prevent excessive drying of the atmosphere.
  The convenience of gas fixes as labour-saving
  
  
  Boudoir Grate.
  
  devices is undoubted, and for bedrooms especi-
  ally they form an easy and convenient method
  of warming, the fact that they can be turned
  oS as soon as the room is sufficiently warmed
  adding not a Httle to their usefulness. There
  are some people, however, who, although they
  quite appreciate the many good points about
  gas fires, refrain from adopting them from purely
  sentimental motives, the coal fire representing to
  them the essence of homehness and cheeriness.
  Gas stove manufacturers are quite aware of the
  existence of this feeling, and are continually
  inventing new devices calculated to render the
  gas fire as near as possible in appearance to
  the coal fire. In a new gas fire-grate sold by
  Messrs. Davis & Sons, aiid known as the
  " Boudoir Grate," an almost perfect imitation
  of a homely log fire is achieved. In the
  " Boudoir " fire imitation logs are fitted ; and
  the marked resemblance to the effect of the old-
  fashioned wood log fire is so great as to almost
  make the illusion complete. Tliis grate, it is
  interesting to note, was designed by a woman -
  IMiss Helen Eddon, of the Gas Light & Coke
  Company, London.
  
  Electric Radiators. - Wliere electric light is laid
  on in a house the electric radiator stoves make
  very convenient, cleanly, and useful heating
  apparatus. They can be switched on and off
  at will as in the case of electric light. The
  initial cost is small, very good radiators being
  
  
  12
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  procurable for an outlay of 35s. and upwards ;
  but they have the drawback of consuming a
  great amount of current, and for tliis reason,
  unless great care and discrimination aro exer-
  cised in their use, they are apt to prove expensive.
  
  Oil-Stoves. - Where no other method of
  heating is available oil-stoves are very useful,
  but at the same time they have many disad-
  vantages. From the point of \dew of ventilation
  they ai'e not hygienic, as they use up a good
  amount of pure air ; and being neeirly always
  used in rooms which contain no fire-place
  there is no outlet for the fumes which pass into
  the room and \'itiate the atmosphere.
  
  Oil-stoves reqvure constant attention in the
  way of cleaning and trimming; they have a
  tendency to smell unpleasantly, and this ten-
  dency is particularly marked when their care
  in either of the above respects is neglected.
  The prices of these stoves range from three or
  four shillings to two and a half guineas. Very
  useful Uttle stoves may be purchased for an
  outlay of ten to eleven sliillings. The more
  expensive varieties are of course the best. They
  burn a good deal of oil, however, and for this
  reason, if burning constantly, the weekly outlay
  on oil for a stove would represent in many in-
  stances more than the outlay on coal for a fire.
  
  Hot-Water Pipes. - This system of heating is
  mostly restricted to large houses and pubUc
  buildings and institutions. The heat is diffused
  by means of hot water circulated through
  the house by pipes and radiators. The in-
  stalling of a hot-water system amounts to a
  considerable sxmi in the first instance. The
  disadvantage of this heating arrangement Ues
  in the i&ci that it is not easy to regulate the
  temperature, and a stuffy atmosphere is usually
  the result. Very often in large houses a hot-
  water system is installed for heating the hall
  and landings, whilst the rooms are heated with
  fires in the ordinary way. There is no doubt
  that many colds and other similar ills may often
  be attributed to the fact that people are apt to
  overlook the danger of loitering in a cold and
  draughty hall after coming out of a warm room.
  Some method of heating the hall to make it of
  uniform temperature with the rooms is therefore
  highly desirable, and no more efficient method
  than that of a hot- water system could bo devised
  for the purpose.
  
  General Condition of the House. - Before rent-
  ing or purchasing a house, careful investigation
  should be also made into the general condition
  of the premises.
  
  The roofs should be examined by a builder for
  any defect that might give rise to damp and
  other similar ills ; walls, flooring, and ceihngs
  should be looked into for cracks and other im-
  perfections. Care should be taken to find out
  that doors fit well, opening and shutting easily,
  on their hinges ; also that locks are in good
  conditirn. Windows should be examined to see
  
  
  that cords are good, and that they open both
  top and bottom ; also that they are properly
  fitted with bolts, and that the shutters (if any)
  are in working order.
  
  Defects in cliimneys should be looked for;
  these are often indicated by discoloration by
  smoke of the marble of the mantelpieces. The
  kitchen range and boiler should be tested, care
  being taken to find out if a good supply of hot
  water can be ensm-ed. In some houses it is
  only after a regular furnace has been blazing in
  the Icitchen grate for some hours that the water
  begins to show any signs of warmth ; this points
  to some defect in the boiler, and a plumber should
  at once be called in to put matters right.
  
  If the kitchen fire-place is of an obsolete type,
  the landlord should be asked to put in a modern
  range. AH pipes should be attended to and
  put in repair.
  
  Care should be taken to see that the principal
  rooms are fitted with belLs, and if so, whether
  the latter are in good condition. Needless to
  say, the house should be thoroughly clean and
  in every way fit for the occupation of the in-
  coming tenant. The latter must be careful to
  ascertain that this is the case, and also that it
  is not infested by rats, mice, beetles, or other
  vermin of an even more disagreeable kind.
  
  No pains should be spared in attending to all
  these matters, and seeing that attention is paid
  to everytliing that makes for comfort. The
  landlord who wishes to lot a house is a much
  better-tempered and amenable person than the
  landlord who has actually " caught" his tenant.
  Insist on everything being put in order before
  you take over the premises. If matters are
  allowed to slide a great deal of future expense
  will be entailed, more especially where the house
  is taken upon a " repairing " lease. The need
  for caution before making a purchase is none
  the loss imperative, or else the purcheiser will
  find that what with the cost of putting the
  premises into repair in the first instance and the
  amount expended subsequently upon the general
  upkeep of the house, he will have made a very
  bad bargain indeed.
  
  It should bo remembered that, excepting in the
  case of houses let fvu*nished, a landlord is not
  bound in law to put the premises in a state of
  repair or even into a habitable condition before
  the tenantry commences unless he has entered
  into an agreemient to do so with the incoming
  tenant.
  
  HOUSE DECORATION
  
  Once a house has been taken and all the
  necessary cleaning and repairs have been duly
  carried out, the important question of decora-
  tion will have to be entered into.
  
  Many women look upon the selection of wall-
  paper as a tedious task which is best avoided
  where possible, and leave the entire scheme of
  papering and decoration to the discretion of
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  13
  
  
  the landlord, with very often lamentable results.
  True, in some instances, the latter may be a
  man of taste and may take sufficient pride in
  his property to select papers suitable for the
  aspect of the various rooms and the purpose
  for which they are intended. But such a land-
  lord will prove an exception to the general rule.
  The idea wliich ranks paramount in the mind
  of the average landlord is how to save himself
  expense. In these circumstances it may be
  taken for granted that if the selection is left to
  him his choice will be governed by no other
  consideration that that of his pocket.
  
  The policy of leaving the selection of wall-
  papers to a landlord is therefore an altogether
  fallacious one, and should never be adopted.
  If he has arranged to paper and decorate the
  premises for the incoming tenant he will be
  only too pleased for the latter to make his selec-
  tion, provided however that he keeps within
  a certain stipvilated sum. If the tenant wishes
  to obtain papers of a better quality than those
  procurable for the stun allotted, all that he will
  have to do wiU be to make up the difference. A
  landlord will always consent to an arrangement
  of this kind.
  
  It should be ascertained that the walls are
  thoroughly dry and clean before the new paper
  is put on. The practice of pasting a new paper
  over an old one cannot be too highly condemned
  from the point of view of cleanliness and sani-
  tation. Care should also be taken that the
  paper is fixed to the wall with material that
  does not turn sour; bad size used for this
  purpose is particularly noxious. A great deal
  of illness has been traced to the hanging of
  wall-papers with bad paste or size. The walls
  of newly-built houses should not be properly
  papered for six or eight months, as they will
  not be thoroughly dry before that time. A
  temporary papering should be provided during
  this period.
  
  The decorative scheme should be carefully
  considered both in regard to the shape, size,
  light, and aspect of the various rooms, and also
  in regard to the style of furniture which they
  will contain. Rooms that are furnished accord-
  ing to a special period scheme, for instance,
  must bo papered in conformity with the style
  of this period. Wall-papers must always act
  as a suitable background for the furniture of
  a room both in regard to pattern, style, and
  colouring, and tliis fact should never be lost
  sight of in making a choice. Then, again, the
  aspect of a room must influence the choice of
  the colour selected ; what are known as warm
  colours should not be selected for a room with
  a south or south-east aspect, whilst all " cold "
  colours should be avoided in the decoration of .
  rooms facing north or north-east. Yellow and
  red, for instance, are warm coloxors, whilst blue
  is what is known as a cold colour. These tliree
  colours are known as the " primary " colours.
  
  
  Any child who has experimented with a bos
  of paints will know that blue and yellow mixed
  make green, whilst red and blue make purple.
  The secondary colours so made may be either
  warm or cold colours according to the proportion
  in which their primary colours are mixed. In
  green, for instance, if the blue preponderates over
  the yellow the result is a " cold " colour ; but
  many shades of green in which the yellow pre-
  ponderates will result in an almost warm colour,
  the warmth of the original yellow being judi-
  ciously tempered by the admixture of the cold
  colour blue. Certain tones of very pale green
  should always be avoided, because their colour
  is due to an injurious white pigment containing
  arsenic. At an inquest held in London a short
  time ago on the body of a man it was found that
  his death was due to arsenical poisoning from
  the cheap green paper on his bedroom wall.
  Fires in the bedroom had caused the fliiff fiom
  the paper to be distributed over the room, and
  as the man was in a weak state of health the
  poison germs proved fatal.
  
  Just because some greens are dangerous,
  however, it does not follow that green should be
  tabooed in house decoration. It is only the
  cheap pale cold greens which should be shunned.
  Dark green is one of the most useful colo\irs
  that can be selected in room decoration, as
  most other colours tone or contrast well with
  it. Several delicate greens may also be had
  which have no injurious ingredients in their
  composition.
  
  Dadoes and friezes enter largely into the
  scheme of present-day wall-paper decoration,
  but their choice must depend upon the size and
  height of the room. In small low-ceilinged
  rooms dadoes should never be used, as they only
  make small rooms look smaller. In regard to
  friezes, there is a certain difierence of opinion
  amongst furniture experts. Some say that
  they should not be used at all in low small
  rooms, whilst others maintain that an un-
  broken line of wall-paper from floor to ceiling,
  far from adding to the apparent height of a
  low room, only serves to diminish it, whilst if
  the line is broken by means of a narrow frieze,
  the eSect is to make the room more loftj'. It
  may be said as a general rule, however, that the
  striped self-coloured papers are the best to use
  in small low-ceilinged rooms, as the stripes
  tend to give an impression of height. All papers
  with lai'ge patterns should be avoided on the
  walls of small rooms, although, if judiciously
  chosen, when used in large lofty rooms they are
  very eSective. Before choosing a wall-paper it
  is always as well to see it in the piece, and to
  try the effect of a piece held against the wall
  before making the final selection.
  
  One important thing to remember in the
  decoration of rooms is that the vaxious de-
  corations should not match each other in
  monotonous fashion. The colour scheme is
  
  
  14
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  always more effective, for instance, when carpets
  or table coverings or both form a pleasing
  contrast to the wall-papers. Wlaere there is a
  pattern on the wall-paper, let the cvirtains be
  of absolutely plain material ; never repeat tlie
  pattern of a wall-paper in the cliintz of curtains
  or chair coverings.
  
  Ceilings should always be in light tones and
  cornices should harmonise with the ceiling,
  whilst all woodwork, including wall skirting,
  insides of doors, and windows, should be painted
  in a tint to match the principal tones of the
  W£ill-paper - with light delicate papers white
  woodwork is always suitable. In bedroonis,
  the designs of which should be always light
  where possible, light woodwork is also an
  advantage.
  
  On the whole it may be said that the absolutely
  plain papers are those which form the most
  effective background for both pictures and
  furniture, proxnding of course that sviitable
  colourings are chosen. \Vhere a number of
  pictvu-es are to be hung, elaborate designs should
  never be used. Papers with dull svu-faces show
  off good pictures to the best advantage. Picture
  rails OP mouldings from wliich the picttires can be
  hung by means of pictvire-hooks should
  be included in the decoration of all
  the reception rooms. These mouldings
  not only f oma an additional ornament
  to the room, but do away altogether
  with the necessity of adopting the old-
  fashioned method of suspending the
  pictures from large nails in the wall, a
  method which is certainly not conducive to the
  long life of the wall- paper.
  
  Different Kinds of Papers. - Amongst the most
  effective of present-day wall-papers may be
  cltissed the plain silk fibre papers in uniform
  tints. These have a softness of siu-face which is
  peculiarly pleasing and effective. Pretty friezes
  in floral and other designs are sold to match
  these papers.
  
  The most pleasing effects with all plain papers,
  however, are achieved by means of floral borders,
  which are not only utilised as friezes, but are
  carried down the walls at certain intervals to
  form wide panels. These plain papers with
  border effects form the most fashionable de-
  signs at the present moment. The silk fibre
  papers may be had from Is. 6d. per piece, an
  especially good quality being obtainable for
  2s. 6d.
  
  The plain ingrain papers are also very effective ;
  they have a somewhat rougher surface than the
  silk fibre papers, and may be had from Is. 6d.
  per piece.
  
  The moir^ papers have a surface resembling
  the silk after which they are named, and may
  be had from Is. 6d. a piece. They are especially
  effective when thrown into reUef by a pretty
  frieze or border.
  
  Verj' artistic also are the satin stripe papers.
  
  
  These are in uniform colourings consisting of
  satin-like stripes alternating with stripes of a
  duller siu'face. Their effect in pink, blue, and
  all the lighter shades is dainty in the extreme ;
  wliilst carried out in alternate stripes of white
  and silver they make a particularly effective
  drawing-room decoration, especially when used
  as a backgi-ound for seventeenth-century furni-
  ture.
  
  Patterned weJl-papers, where they are pre-
  ferred, can be very effective if judiciously selected,
  but the principle that large and bold designs
  are only suitable for large lofty rooms should
  never be lost sight of. Several very pretty
  designs may be had in the chintz wall-papers.
  Stencilled papers are much more expensive
  than the other varieties. They are very hand-
  some in effect, but on the whole are more suitable
  for the decoration of large public buildings than
  for that of private houses.
  
  The plain saniteiry washable papers are
  especially useful for nursery decoration when
  finished with pretty friezes and borders illus-
  trating nursery rhymes, fairy stories, or re-
  presenting various farmyard animals or any
  other objects calculated to appeal to the
  childish mind.
  
  Tiled walls form an ideal decoration for the
  bath-room, but these are necessarily expensive
  and beyond the reach of the average purse.
  A very good substitute for tiles is to be had in
  the material known as " Emdeca," which con-
  sists of an alloy of tin enamelled and is sold at
  prices ranging from 2s. 4d. the piece (16^x22
  inches) and upwards. This, however, would
  also form a somewhat costly decoration for a
  bath-room when regarded from the point of
  view of only a moderately filled purse, but it can
  be used as a dado, the upper part of the walls
  being painted with " muraline " or some other
  washable preparation. Emdeca is also very
  useful for fixing in sheets at the back of wash-
  stands and sinks, its appearance being very
  cleanly and dainty.
  
  Painting and Distemper. - The usefulness of
  paint in wall decoration must not be over-
  looked, especially when quite plain walls are
  required. It does not show damp or dirt in
  the same degree as plain wall-paper, nor is it
  liable to fade when exposed to tho glare of the
  sun in a room with a sunny aspect.
  
  Of the various preparations for painting
  walls " Ripolin " is one of the most satisfactory.
  The Flat Ripolin has a dull velvety surface
  which is very soft and pleasing in effect. Ripolin
  may be had in any colour. It should be finished
  off where possible with a paper border or frieze,
  and a dado of lincrusta or other material where
  the decoration scheme of the room admits of it.
  
  Sanalene is also an excellent paint for wall
  decoration. Ripolin Gloss and Sanalene Glosa
  are especially good decorations for nui-series,
  bath-rooms, larders, kitchens, &c., as they are
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  15
  
  
  washable. Both Ripolin and Sanalene are also
  very usefiil for painting the woodwork of a
  room. Plain distempered walls can also be
  very effective. Hall's Sanitary Washable Dis-
  temper is one of the best to use. It is easily
  washed when the walls begin to show signs of
  dirt., and proves one of the cheapest and most
  economical wall decorations it is possible to
  have. A pretty paper frieze can be used with
  advantage to finish ofi the decoration of dis-
  tempered walls.
  
  Dadoes, Panelling and Relief Work. - Dadoes
  make a very effective finish to wall decoration,
  being especially suited to rooms with lofty
  walls. The Japanese leather papers sold at
  from 3s. 6d. a yard are often used in dado work.
  Lincrusta is another good material which can
  be had at prices varying from Is. a yard and
  upwards, a very good quality being procurable
  for 3s. or 4s. per yard. The brown lin-
  crusta is much used for dining-room dadoes.
  " Anaglypta " is also a very useful material
  both for dadoes and ceiling relief work. It may
  be had in all designs and quaUties, is. a yard
  representing a good average price for ordinary
  purposes, A pretty dado of white anaglj'pta
  makes a very graceful finish to drawing-room
  walls.
  
  Dadoes should always be finished with orna-
  mental mouldings called dado rails. These
  serve not only to set them off to advantage, but
  also as a protection to the lower part of the
  walls from the knocks of chairs and other
  furniture.
  
  Wood panelling makes a very effective decora-
  tion for dining-room, library, or study where
  the rooms are large and lofty. A panelUng is
  carried much higher up the waUs than a dado,
  a deep frieze being as a rule the only other wall
  decoration required. Oak, mahogany, and cedeur
  panellings give a most handsome effect. The
  cheapest oak panelling is Is. 6d. a foot. Good
  English oak may be had from 2s. 3d. a foot,
  whilst mahogany panelling may be had from
  2s. a foot. Though the initial expense is
  necessarily very great, yet from the point of
  view of wear wood panellings are unequalled.
  They are easy to keep clean, and can be bodily
  removed and fitted in other rooms if desired.
  Wood panelling enamelled or painted white is
  often used in drawing-room decoration. In very
  elaborately decorated period drawing-rooms the
  wood is often carried up the walls in very narrow
  panels, alternating with panels of silk in deHcate
  tints. Such an elaborate scheme of decoration,
  however, would only be suitable in very large
  and luxuriously fvirnished dwellings. Where
  white wood panelling is used in the drawing-
  room of the average household it is only carried
  to the height of a dado. Needless to say, in very
  small rooms panelling of any kind would look
  altogether out of place. (For Chimney-piece
  Decorations, see p. 22.)
  
  
  COLOUR SCHEMES FOR DIFFERENT
  ROOMS
  
  The Dining-Room. - For the decoration of a
  dining-room reds, yellows, buffs, dark greens,
  and r\isset browns are the colours most often
  selected. There is a certain tradition in regard
  to the decoration of a dining-room which dies
  hard. Everything about the room must be
  imposing, hence a rich red is a very favourite
  colour. It is, however, not so fashionable for
  this purpose as of yore, its use being to a certain
  extent superseded by the present vogue for
  papers of buff and russet tints, which are now
  being used extensively in the dining-room decora-
  tion of the most tastefully furnished houses.
  
  The choice of colour must of course be guided
  by the aspect of the room - red, yellow, and the
  warmer shades being the most suitable where
  it has a north-east aspect, whilst cool dark
  greens and mauves are ideal colourings for
  rooms with sunny aspects. Red and green,
  russet and green, and buff, brown and green,
  mauve and grey make admirable dining-room
  colour schemes. For instance, a dining-room
  papered in red might have dark green curtains,
  a dark green table-cover, and an Axminster
  carpet in which dark green is the prevaiUng
  tone, or else one of these many-toned oriental
  carpets, the soft tones of which combine so well
  with almost any scheme of colouring ; russet-
  colo\ired walls would look well with green cur-
  tains, green table-cloth, and a warm red carpet-
  square over a dark parquet or polished wood
  flooring.
  
  A plain pattemless bufi paper thrown into
  relief by a rich brown dado woiild make an ex-
  ceptionally handsome background for mahogany
  furniture and pictures in dark brown frames,
  whilst walls papered in soft mauve with a frieze
  of silver grey, mauve curtains, a tapestry
  carpet-square with a subdued pattern on a
  grey ground, and a tapestry table-cover to
  tone with the carpet, would set off a dining-
  room suite of oak in Queen Anne style.
  
  The Drawing-Room. - The drawing-room is
  the room of aU others which lends itself to Ught
  and dehcate treatment. The general effects of
  the decorative scheme should be one of bright-
  ness and cheerfulness, and, above all, of refine-
  ment. Dehcate mauves, soft greens, turquoise
  blues, white, pinks, are all suitable colours for
  wall decoration. The aspect of the room must
  of course be considered. Warm soft pinks and
  yellows are best for rooms facing north-east,
  whilst soft cool greys, blues and greens form
  ideal colourings for rooms with sunny aspects.
  Wlnte is particularly suitable in small rooms,
  as it gives an impression of greater space. As
  a background for Adam's or Empire furniture
  it is especially effective. Pretty striped papers
  in hght colours with floral friezes go well with
  Hepplewhite furniture.
  
  
  16
  
  
  THE WOJyiAN'S BOOK
  
  
  A drawing-room papered or painted in white
  would look well with a frieze or floral border of
  a pretty shade of blue green with a carpet and
  curtains in the same colouring. The entire
  woodwork of the room, including mantelpiece,
  overmantel, and dado (if anj') would also be
  white.
  
  A drawing-room with a north-east eispect
  would look well with a pink satin stripe paper
  in a soft tone, an art green pile carpet, and
  curtains of the same shade of green.
  
  Soft grey wall-paper with a rose-coloured
  floral frieze, rose curtains, and rose and grey in
  the colour of the carpet would make another
  effective colour scheme.
  
  Notliing could bo calculated to set o2 drawing-
  room furniture to better advantage than a
  light well-pohshed parquet flooring adorned here
  and there by one or two choice oriental rugs.
  The cost is, however, prohibitive to those who
  are not superabundantly supplied with this
  world's riches.
  
  Many people who have carpet-squares or rugs
  as floor coverings in all the other rooms of the
  house prefer a fitted carpet in the drawing-
  room. Where square carpets are used " par-
  quet " makes the best surround, but this is
  necessarily expensive. Failing parquet a good
  floor stain should be applied to the surround.
  Many good stains are sold to imitate oak, dark
  oak, hght oak, walnut, rosewood, satinwood,
  and other woods. Both parquet and stained
  floorings require to be kept weU polished
  (see p. 66).
  
  The Library. - The hbrary should be painted
  or papered in sober colours such as brown,
  red, tan, and dark green, in keeping with the
  dignity of the room. To paper a library in
  the pale eu-t shades of blue or green would
  be to go against every law of what is fitting
  and proper. A good soft Turkey carpet
  forms a favourite floor covering for this
  room. The shades of Turkey and other oriental
  carpets are so skilfully interwoven that they
  will tone with almost any colour. Brown walls
  and a deep red carpet and curtains are very
  effective. All the wood should be in brown.
  Oak and other wood panelUngs are largely used
  for wall decoration in the libraries of the rich.
  They have a very handsome and imposing
  effect. Dadoes in dark shades of anaglypta
  or hncrusta are very suitable. Red is a
  favourite colour in library decoration. Walls
  papered in red with brown woodwork, a carpet
  in deep tones of green and red, and curtains
  to match makes a very effective background.
  
  Breakfast-Room. - The colour treatment of a
  breakfast-room will, of course, depend upon its
  aspect. In well -planned houses it usually has
  a siinny position. A paper with an unobtrusive
  rose floral pattern on a white ground would tone
  well with an art blue carpet-square. A plain
  blue paper with white woodwork, pretty chintz
  
  
  or cretonne curtains with a pink floral pattern
  on a wliite ground, a pretty cord carpet with a
  rose pattern on a fawn ground would also be
  very suitable.
  
  Bedrooms. - The bedroom papers should be
  bright and cheerful-looldng ; never heavy, and,
  above aU, intricate designs should bo avoided.
  Those are apt to be particularly irritating to an
  invaUd who is forced to spend a number of days
  in bod, and worrying over the intricacies of a
  wall-paper can at times have an ahnost madden-
  ing effect upon a person so situated. As illness
  is a factor which will have to be reckoned with
  in almost every household, let the bedroom
  paper be bright yet restful in design { in fact,
  noticing can be better than an absolutely plain
  wall-paper. Washable distemper also forms
  an admirable decoration, and can be had
  in all the best and most artistic shades.
  Distempered walls, however, should always
  be finished off with a pretty frieze. A plain
  white paper or distemper, with a pretty floral
  border of roses to form a panelled effect, would
  go well with a green art square carpet, rose
  curtains, and ivory-white woodwork : soft blue
  paper would tone well with a pretty tapestry
  carpet with a rose design on a fawn ground,
  whilst pretty white and rose chintz curtains
  would complete the colour scheme. White
  papers with pretty floral friezes and borders to
  tone with the rest of the decorative scheme form
  the most characteristic feature of present-day
  bedroom decoration ; a plain white paper with
  a very deep wisteria frieze is especially effective
  and would look well with a mauve carpet and
  mauve curtains.
  
  The Hall. - ^It is a mistake to think that
  gloomy colouring is essential to the decoration
  of a hall - so much depends upon whether it is
  a bright hall or a dark one. Plain papers or
  distemper are as a rule the best to use unless the
  hall is a very lofty one. Warm shades of red and
  terra-ootta are very suitable, or green where the
  hall is a particularly bright one. White dadoes,
  friezes, and woodwork will go a long way towards
  brightening up a dark hall. Very deep friezes
  can be losed with good effect. A rich pile caxpet
  to tone with the stair carpet and laid over lino-
  leum is a very effective floor covering. Wh en the
  hall is separated from the outer door by a small
  vestibule, the door of tho latter should be Jraped
  with curtains to tone with the rest of the
  colour scheme. Wlicre hnoleum is used as floor
  covering it should be of a simple pai-quetry
  pattern. Any vakicd trophies, such as swords,
  other armour, fox brushes, &c., &c., form most
  suitable decorations for the walls of a hall.
  
  FURNISHING THE HOME
  
  The choice of furniture for the home should
  not be undertaken lightly. It is a matter which
  calls for the exercise of much discrimination
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  17
  
  
  and forethought, careful consideration of ways
  and means, and, above all, much ingenuity in
  cutting one's coat according to one's cloth, and at
  the same time getting the best possible value for
  money expended.
  
  The requirements of the different rooms in
  the house should first be carefully studied, and
  a list made out of every piece of furniture
  necessary for each separate room, including
  carpet, fire-irons, window-curtains, curtain rods,
  blinds, &c.
  
  It may take some time to make out a thor-
  oughly comprehensive list, but it will prove to
  be time well expended. To go to a furniture
  shop with only a vague idea of the general wants
  of the different rooms is to court disaster at the
  outset. Money which should have been ex-
  pended upon essentials goes to purchase articles
  which may be ornamental, it is true, but which
  are totally unnecessary for use, whilst the im-
  portant essentials that make for comfort are
  either overlooked, or else remembered too late.
  
  It is most important, therefore, to set about
  buying furniture in a business-like way. Lack of
  method in buying will inevitably result in chaos,
  and the shopping for the home, instead of being
  a pleasure, as it should be if undertaken in the
  proper spirit, will prove a positive ordeal for
  the unfortunate shoppers.
  
  Many people who have only a very small sum
  to spend upon furnitxire make the mistake of
  taking little interest in their shopping, resigning
  themselves to the purchase of anything, no matter
  how ugly, so long as it is cheap. Never was
  there a greater fallacy. Good taste should be
  the guiding spirit in the furnishing of the home,
  and good taste goes a great deal further than
  mere money in this respect. Tlie most beautiful
  homes are not necessarily those which have been
  furnished without any regard to cost ; rather are
  they those upon which care and trouble have
  been expended in making a judicious and taste-
  ful selection.
  
  A woman of refinement and taste will make a
  room in which the furnitiire largely consists of
  the results of her own handiwork and skiU look
  better and much more desirable than the room
  of the woman with unlimited wealth at her
  command, who does not possess the necessary
  taste to guide her in steering clear of mere
  vulgar display. Money is a most important
  factor in the furnishing of a home, it is true,
  but a very little money can be made to go a long
  way if only a httle trouble and care are exercised
  in the spending of it. A great deal, of course,
  will depend upon the resourcefulness of the
  young couple. Some men, for instance, have a
  taste for carpentering and carving, then how
  can this taste be more satisfactorily employed
  than in the furnishing of the home ? Pretty
  shelves and book-cases and even tables can be
  made in this way at a very trifling cost. Ordinary
  orange or soap boxes can be turned into wall
  
  
  brackets, boot cupboards, and even book-cases.
  Cosy window-seats and pretty ottomans can be
  turned out by the home upholsterer and car-
  penter at a trifling cost. It is wonderful what
  can be done with a few yards of chintz and a
  Uberal supply of enamel. Dainty hangings for
  impromptu curtain cupboards, wall draperies
  to hide ugly corners, cushions and window-
  curtains can be fashioned from the chintz by
  deft and skiJful fingers, whilst ordinary deal
  tables and shelves may be converted into very
  dainty pieces of furniture indeed by means of
  a good coating of enamel well applied. As a
  general rule, the homes which require the
  exercise of so much care, ingenuity, and abiUty
  to make a sura of money go a long way in the
  furnishing are those that give the most real
  satisfaction to their occupants, and what
  greater pleastire can there be than in the realisa-
  tion of the fact that the httle pinchings and
  contrivings have brought their reward. The
  young wife who hears a friend congratulate
  her on the appearance of a pretty rug which
  she has fashioned from a piece of carpet bought
  as a traveller's sample for a few sliillings at
  a furniture shop, will experience a much more
  genuine thrill of pleasure than will her richer
  sister who is complimented upon any article of
  furniture upon the purchase of which she has
  not expended a single thought.
  
  It should be every woman's aim, therefore,
  however small a sum she may have to invest
  on the purchase of fxirniture, to see that it is
  expended to the best advantage, both from the
  point of view of taste and also from that of
  suitabihty and wear. Do not aim at handsome
  effects which cannot be achieved with the
  small sum at your command; cheap imitations
  should also be shunned. Let what you have be
  good of its kind. It is better to buy one or two
  really good pieces of simple and unpretentious
  fixrniture and add to them by degrees, than to
  buy a quantity of cheap imitation which will
  be shabby in a year.
  
  A good deal of furniture is sold upon the hire
  system nowadays ; that is to say, that, after the
  payment of a certain stipulated small sum as a
  deposit by the purchaser the furnitiu?e is de-
  livered at his premises, and is paid for in monthly
  instalments until the pm-chase is complete.
  When a hire contract is entered into with a
  good and reliable firm the transaction often
  proves satisfactory, and for people who have
  not the command of a sum of ready money,
  however small, with which to buy their furni-
  ture it is a most convenient method, but
  in many other respects the liire system is
  open to objection. To begin with, it will mean
  a great strain upon the income of the young
  husband during the years in which he is fii'st
  beginning to reahse his added responsibihties,
  a strain which is apt to become a veritable
  burden in the case of those ups and downs of
  
  
  18
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  fortune to which every one more or less is
  liable. Should any reverse of fortune occur
  owing to which for a time he is obliged to sus-
  pend his payments, he is confronted with the
  probability of ha\'ing the furnitvire taken away,
  even though he should have paid off all but the
  leist few instalments. Again, when a person
  heis a fixed sum to spend, he knows he must
  keep within its Mmits, whereas when it is a
  question of payment by degrees he often ends
  by buying more than he can tifford. As a
  matter of principle, therefore, from the point
  of view of the young couple who axe just
  starting upon the management of a home, the
  hire system has much in its disfavour, and,
  how3ver small the sum available, it is better
  to paj' outright for the furniture, beginning
  married life clear of the money responsibiUties
  which would be otherwise involved. One can
  always begin in a small way, launching out
  fiu-ther as the savings accumulate or the income
  increases.
  
  A small flat with two bedrooms, a sitting-room,
  bath-room, and a kitchen can be very well
  fiimished for £50, and much less than that if the
  young couple are adept at contriving in the way
  already described.
  
  Young engaged couples who have to set about
  choosing furniture for their new home would do
  well to get some assistance in drawing up a
  list of their requirements. Knowledge of the
  ins and outs of furnishing is best attained by
  experience, and for this reason the bride's
  mother will often be able to make many useful
  suggestions.
  
  Having made out their list it must next be
  their aim to divide up the sum to be spent
  upon the various rooms in suitable proportions.
  For this they will have to acquire some know-
  ledge of the prices of the various articles, and
  for information in regard to this point they
  cannot do better than send for the catalogues
  of one or two of the best furnishing firms.
  Furniture catalogues in these enlightened days
  are not only true objects of art in regard to
  illustrations, but they usually contain all
  possible information in regard to the question
  of furniture, which makes it exceptionally easy
  for the buyer to make a suitable selection.
  Comprehensive lists axe drawn up containing
  details in regard to each article necessary in
  furnishing the home from the table in the dining-
  room to the saucepans in the kitchen, and all
  the prices are marked in plain figures.
  
  In ewldition, people are advised as to how to
  spend certain sums of money on their furniture
  to the best advantage. Nearly every furniture
  list contains schemes for furnishing flats and
  houses for sruns varying from £50 to £500 and
  upwards. These schemes are drawn up especi-
  ally for the use of people of average means who
  have a certain sum to spend and must keep
  ■within its limits.
  
  
  Furthermore, all the large firms show model
  houses on their premises completely furnished
  in accordance with the details in their cata-
  logues. A visit to any of these model houses is
  an education in itself, and nothing is calculated
  to be of greater assistance in giving reUable
  guidance to the shopper as to how her money
  may be spent. The model dwellings are com-
  pletely furnished in every detail, and in each
  room a list is usually hung up in some promi-
  nent position giving full particulars in regard
  to every piece of furniture necessary with the
  price of each separate article. The decorative
  scheme is complete, including fire-place and
  fire-irons, window drapery, curtains and wall
  paper, though the estimate in most cases does
  not include the latter. A careful study of
  these rooms both in regard to the colour
  scheme and also to the arrangement of their
  actual contents cannot fail to be a useful guide
  to any purchaser as to her requirements.
  
  Not only one but three or four furniture show-
  rooms should be visited. The shopper can have
  no better opportunity of studying really practi-
  cal furniture schemes, and even though she
  cannot afford to purchase furniture of the kind
  so displayed, she will gain many helpful ideas
  in planning out her own httle furniture scheme
  according to the limitations of her purse. (See
  Maples' Ninety Guinea Flat, p. 35.)
  
  FLOORING AND FLOOR COVERINGS
  
  Parquetry. - It should be ascertained that
  the floors are well levelled, smooth, and free from
  cracks and holes before laying down carpets.
  Plasticity and elasticity are very necessary
  attributes to all good flooring. It should also
  have a good surface capable of easy polish.
  Particularly where the floor, or at any rate the
  borders of the floors, axe stained and poUshed
  is the last quality necessary. Parquetry is the
  ideal flooring for hall and reception rooms, but
  its cost is very great, and for this reason it is a
  luxury to be enjoyed only by the favoured few.
  The cost of laying parquetry flooring in a
  moderately sized square hall of the kind so often
  seen in modern houses and flats might in many
  instances be met by economies practised in the
  general fvirnishing of the rooms. The first
  impressions gained of the interior of the house
  upon entering the hall goes a long way to help
  the visitor to form an opinion of the whole,
  and for this reason the question of hall decora-
  tion should never be relegated to the back-
  ground when the decorative scheme is planned.
  
  Where paxquetry is used for the entire flooring
  it should be of the best. The thin makes are,
  however, quite effective as surrounds for
  central carpets. They can be purchased at
  prices ranging from 3d. per foot and upwards.
  
  Carpets. - Tlie choice of carpets for a house
  must first of all depend upon the sum of money
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  19
  
  
  to be allotted to their purchase. This should
  not amoiuit to more than one-sixth of the sum
  allowed for furnishing. Where a house or flat
  has to be furnished for £90 to £100, for instance,
  not more than £15 should be spent on carpets,
  whereas out of a sum of £200 for furniture,
  the outlay on carpets should not be more than
  £30.
  
  It requires the exercise of no little forethought
  to make a small sum of money go a long way
  in the purchase of floor coverings. First and
  foremost cheap showy carpets should be avoided.
  One cannot expect good wear out of a very cheap
  carpet. It will very soon become faded and
  shabby looking, and nothing tends more to spoil
  the appearance of a room than a shabby carpet.
  For those with hmited purses there can be no
  more economical and, at the same time, more
  diirable floor coverings than plain felts and
  linoleums.
  
  Felts are now largely used as entire fitted
  floor carpets. They wear much better, and are
  much more eflPective in every way than the
  cheaper varieties of carpets, for whereas the
  latter are very seldom obtainable in really
  good colourings, the plain felts are to be had in
  all the best art shades and are most soft and
  harmonious in effect. They lend themselves
  admirably to the soft subdued colour schemes
  now so greatly in vogue, and act as a very
  effective background to furniture. When felt
  is used as a floor covering there should always
  be in addition one or two pretty rugs scattered
  here and there about the room. Felt is also
  largely used as a surround for a square carpet,
  many people preferring it to Hnoleum owing to
  the fact that it gives the room an appearance of
  greater warmth in winter. Oriental rugs show
  up especially well upon a plain felt carpet.
  Brussels, Wilton, and Axminster rugs are
  also very effective. Many a bargain in rugs
  may be picked up at the annual sales of
  any large furniture establishment. In many
  cases the large furnishing firms and carpet
  manufactxirers sell what axe known as
  " traveller's samples " of carpet. These run at
  times into lengths of a j'ard and over. They
  only require to be finished off with a little gallon,
  and very pretty and handsome rugs are thus
  made at the cost of a few shillings. Pieces of
  the very best Brussels, Axminster, and other
  well-known makes may be had in this way,
  and when the buyer is able to make a good
  selection, she will find that she has a much
  better rug than it would have been possible for
  her to procvire when buying in the ordinary
  way.
  
  Carpets wear much longer if an underlay is
  provided to keep them from direct contact with
  the floor. Plain grey felt is admirable for the
  purpose, and serves not only to preserve the
  carpet, but also to make it softer to the tread.
  A good underfelt may be had from Is. to
  
  
  Is. 4^d. per yard running from 46 to 54 inches
  in width. Bro-wn paper also makes a very good
  underlay, and may be purchased for 2d. a yard.
  What is known as felt paper is also suitable and
  costs 3d. per yard. A species of coarse canvas
  is also used for putting under carpet and may be
  purcheised for 4^d. a yard.
  
  Art square carpets as a rule do not require
  fastening to the floor, as the heavy
  furniture of a room would keep them
  in place. Heavy rich pile carpets, how-
  ever, require to be fastened here and
  there. The most handy fastening for a
  square carpet consists of a patent brass
  nail which fixes into a groove of the
  same metaL The groove is screwed into
  the floor, a hole being drilled into the
  latter to receive it. The carpet can
  thus be lifted when necessary with very Patent
  little trouble, the nails coming easily out Carpet
  of the grooves when it is pulled gently
  upwards (see illustration).
  
  Measuring Rooms for Carpets. - Most carpet
  manufacturers send representatives to take the
  measurements of their customers' rooms for
  carpets, but long distances and various other
  circumstances sometimes make it impossible
  
  
  BAY WINDOW
  
  
  Plan showing Method of Measuring Room
  for Carpet.
  
  for them to do so. The diagram here given
  shows how a room should be measured
  for carpet and surround. When ordering
  carpets a similar plan should be sent showing
  position of windows, doors, and fire-place, and
  giving the measurements in feet and inches.
  The dimensions should be accurately taken,
  though the plan need not be drawn to scale ;
  carpets of any kind can be made up from such a
  drawing.
  
  
  20
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Different Kinds of Carpets. - For good wear,
  artistic coloviring, and handsome appearance
  generally the various oriental carpets are un-
  equalled. Tliey are hand-made and the design
  and colouring ai'e so skilfully interwoven that
  they will be found to tone well with almost any
  colour scheme. Skill in designing is almost a
  tradition with the peasants of the East, for the
  various designs are handed down from father
  to son, and are woven from memory, the keen
  eye for designing and colouring being thus an
  hereditary gift.
  
  The carpets are sold in the eastern bazaars.
  Jlost large carpet -dealers in Europe have agents
  in the various well-known centres of the carpet
  industry who are entrusted with the purchase
  of carpets on behalf of their firm. Turkey
  carpets are very rich and handsome in appear-
  ance. Tlioy are favourite carpets for the dining-
  room, library, or study. The Anatolian Tvirkey
  carpets are particularly noted for their delicate
  colourings, especially in the lighter shades
  suitable for drawing-room carpets. Persian
  carpets have a particularly viaried range of
  colouring from the handsome rich tints suitable
  for dining-room and study, to the soft delicate
  tints for drawing-room use. They are also
  durable, being very close in texture. Indian
  carpets are lower in quality and consequently
  less expensive than most other oriental carpets.
  The patterns are worked on various light
  grounds for drawing-room wear and also
  darker grounds suitable for dining-room and
  library. The cheapest varieties should not be
  chosen as they do not wear well. The better
  qualities are, however, very satisfactory, as the
  pile of these is close and deep and the colouring
  light and harmonious.
  
  Brussels Carpets seem to retain a perennial
  hold upon the public favour. They make very
  beautiful and durable floor coverings, but a
  fair price should always be paid for them. In-
  crease of competition in the carpet trade has
  induced many manufacturers to place very
  cheap carpets upon the market, advertising
  them as " Best Brussels " and quoting very low
  prices for them. It is impossible to obtain a
  good " Brussels " at a low price ; 4s. 9d. a yard
  represents a good average figure for best
  Brussels carpets, and as a general rule not loss
  than 33. 9d. a yard should be paid if a really
  good quality carpet is desired. The pattern
  of a Brussels carpet always shows through on
  the wrong side. The carpets are made by
  •weaving thread through a canvas over wires,
  the latter being withdrawn after the carpet ia
  woven, leaving the loops which form the pile of
  the carpet. A good quality Brussels carpet
  can always be judged by the length of the loops
  or pile. These carpets may bo bought by the
  yard or in seamless woven squares.
  
  Axmlnster. - The real hand-made Axminster
  carpoi3 make luxurious and therefore costly
  
  
  floor coverings. Tliey take their name from
  the town of Axminster in Devonshire where
  they were first made. They have a rich deep
  pile and are woven in the most beautiful designs
  and colourings. More within the reach of the
  average purse are the machine-made Axminster
  Pile Carpets. These are to bo had in many
  qualities and in a great variety of colourings -
  in light tones sxiitablo for di'awing-room use,
  and in the deeper colourings suitable for dining-
  room and library, and may be pm-chased for
  from 4s. 6d. per yard. Tlie patent Axminster
  and the Crompton Axminster are the best of
  the maoliine-made varieties.
  
  Wilton Carpets. - The Wilton carpets are
  noted for theu* soft appearance and plush-like
  surface. Tliey are closer in texture, though
  shorter in pile than the Axminster carpets.
  They are made in a very similar manner to
  Brussels carpets with the exception that the
  wires are not taken away until the loops are
  cut. They are made in a variety of designs
  and colourings, the design in self colours being
  especially beautiful. Wilton carpets may be
  purchased by the yard or in seamless woven
  squares.
  
  Kidderminster Carpets. - These are reversible
  carpets without pile. They are mostly suitable
  for bedrooms. It is never advisable, however,
  to use them as fitted carpets, as the dirt gets
  very quickly through the carpet to the floor,
  remaining there in thick layers if the carpet is
  not frequently lifted. Kidderminster squares,
  with linoleum surrounds, are the best to use.
  
  Seamless Edderminster squares are now sold
  under a great many different names, each
  manufacturer having his own name for his
  special make of carpet. The carpets known as
  " Roman Squares " are well-known varieties of
  the Kidderminsters, as also are the Cheviot and
  Shetland squares.
  
  Tapestry Carpets are not unlike Brussels in
  appearance, but the pattern does not show
  through on the wrong side. They are inex-
  pensive, and may be had in many pretty designs,
  but are not suitable for hard wear.
  
  Velvet Pile Carpets. - Many varieties of velvet
  pile carpets are manufactured in imitation of
  Wilton carpets. They are inexpensive, but un-
  suitable for hard wear.
  
  Stair Carpets. - Stair carpets reqviire to be
  very carefully laid over undorfelt or stair-pads.
  A sufficient quantity should be bought to
  ensure an extra half yard for each flight of
  stairs. This will allow for a periodical shifting
  of the carpets at the treads about four times
  a year so that the Wear is evenly distributed,
  the extra half yard being always kept neatly
  folded under the last tread of each flight or
  under the carpet on the landing. The carpets
  will be found to wear much longer if this simple
  precaution is taken.
  
  It is always advisable if a saving can bo
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  21
  
  
  effected elsewhere to spend a little more money
  on stair carpets and to have them of as good
  a quality as possible. They are subjected to an
  enormous amount of wear and tear, and the
  very cheap kinds will soon become shabby
  looking. , Good pile carpets are the best for
  wear, Brussels, Wilton, and Axminster stair
  carpets being very effective. Tapestry carpets
  are also smtable and may be had at moderate
  prices.
  
  Plain felt in one of the art shades makes a
  very effective and economical stair covering
  especia^y suitable for a house furnished in soft
  subdued tones.
  
  Those to whom an inexpensive carpet is a
  sine qud non cannot do better than try the
  cord stair carpets sold by the Abingdon Carpet
  Co., of Thames WTiarf, Abingdon, which are
  both cheap and durable.
  
  Stair Rods for keeping the carpet in place on
  each tread are indispensable to the staircase
  eqtiipment. They are usually of brass and fit
  
  
  ^^
  
  
  Stair Eod aud Eyelets.
  
  into specially made eyelets. The thin round
  rods are the least expensive ; the price varies
  wth the degree of their thickness. The flat
  sexagonal brass rods are the most handsome,
  and add not a little to the appearance of a well-
  carpeted staircase.
  
  LINOLEUMS
  
  The inlaid linoleums are the best, as their
  colourings and designs are so worked into the
  materials that they cannot wear off or be
  obUterated. One of the best of the inlaid
  linoleums is that known as " Greenwich
  Linoleum." " Duroleum " is also very good
  and durable.
  
  The entire hall can be covered to advantage
  with Greenwich hnoleum or duroleum. The
  pattern should be very judiciously selected.
  Needless to say, floral patterns are quite out of
  place, the most suitable being the simple geo-
  metrical patterns in imitation of tiles or par-
  quetry. Linoleum requires to be very care-
  fully laid and should be pasted to the floor
  with the edges of each breadth fastened by a
  few headless brads.
  
  In many houses linoleum is largely used instead
  
  
  of carpets in all the bedrooms. It is certainly
  the most hygienic floor covering for a bedroom,
  as it does not accumulate dust and can be easily
  swept and washed, and it is at the same time
  the least expensive. In bedrooms carpeted with
  Hnoleum rugs are usually placed at either side
  of the bed and in front of the toilet table.
  Twelve square yeirds will be required to carpet
  a room 12 feet by 9 feet. The outlay will
  therefore be most moderate, and to those with
  inelastic purses this is a very important con-
  sideration.
  
  Linoleum is also a suitable floor covering for
  bath-rooms and niurseries. Cork carpet is also
  largely used for these rooms. It has the ad-
  vantage of being noiseless to the tread, and in
  the opinion of many has a wairmer appearance
  than hnoleima. It may be had at 2s. 2d. per
  yard, the shades in dark green and dark blue
  being particularly effective.
  
  CURTAINS AND BUNDS
  
  The decorative effect of a room can be made
  or marred by the selection of its ciurtains in
  regard to material, colour, and suitabihty to
  the various rooms in which they are placed.
  
  In dining-room and Ubrary, for instance.
  
  
  Portiere CurtainB.
  
  there shovdd always be curtains of tapestry,
  chenille, velvet, serge, or other similar materials.
  In the drawing-room curtains of dainty materials
  such as lace or silk and the various art linens
  
  
  22
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  are most appropriate, whilst light chintz,
  cretonne, lace, musUn, and all other Ught
  ■washable curtains are suitable for the bedrooms.
  The cornice poles from which the curtains
  are to be hung must also be suitably chosen.
  These will form an item in the general cost of
  window decoration which should not be over-
  looked. Ninepence per foot represents an
  average price for a brass pole one inch in
  diameter. For brass poles three inches in
  diameter 3s. 3d. per foot would represent a fair
  price. White enamelled cornice poles are
  suitable for drawing-room and other brightlj'
  furnished rooms and are cheaper than the
  brass ones. Mahogany poles three inches in
  diameter suitable for dining-room and study
  maj' be had for Is. per foot. For bay windows
  
  
  Casement Curtains.
  
  the prices are higher. Rings to match these
  poles are sold at prices also varying with their
  sizes.
  
  Portiere curtains are often hung over doors,
  both for decorative purposes and the exclusion
  of draughts. They should bo of materials such
  as chenille, velvet, silk, or serge, and should be
  hung by means of rings to a rod across which
  they can easily be drawn backwards and for-
  wards. Where there are curtain cupboards in
  the bedrooms, the hangings should always be of
  cretonne, linen, or other firm washable material
  substantial enough to keep out the dust.
  
  Casement Curtains, are now largely used
  instead of the ordinary roller blind, so casement
  blinds would be tlio more correct name to give
  them. They present a very pretty and decora-
  tive appearance and look best with casement
  windows, but can also bo used with sash windows.
  In th" latter case there must always be separate
  
  
  bUnds for both upper and lower sash. The
  casement cuilains (or bUnds) only reach to the
  window sills, and the ordinary side curtains
  are used with them. Cretonne, cliintz, case-
  ment cloths, silk and Bolton sheeting are the
  best materials for these blinds. The selection of
  both material and coloiu* will of course depend
  upon the decoration aiid upholstery of the room
  in which they are used.
  
  Arrangement of Curtains. - Much may be done
  to improve an ugly-looking window by the
  manner in which the curtains are arranged.
  A very narrow straight window may be made
  to look wider by extending the cornice pole a
  few inches beyond the window on each side.
  From this the curtains should hang straight
  without being looped up in any way. When
  two or three very narrow little windows come
  close to each other a top valance can be made
  to include them as one wide window. From
  either side should hang ciirtains of the same
  material as the valance, whilst lace casement
  curtains hung over the divisions of the other
  windows would serve to complete the one
  window illusion, giving a pretty casement effect
  to the whole. The casement window lends
  itself more readily than any other to decorative
  treatment. Special fabrics are sold by all
  fiu"niture dealers for this favourite type of
  window. In this connection it is interesting
  to note the great revival in old-fashioned
  fabrics including the actual repetition of the
  patterns of the quaint chintzes and printed
  hnens which were in vogue dviring the seven-
  teenth and eighteenth centuries.
  
  The alcoved casement window is always the
  most effective. Pretty casement curtains in
  two tiers can adorn the windows, whilst the
  broad recess may be occupied by a quaint old-
  world window-seat of the same material as the
  cm-tains and valance by which the alcove
  is enclosed.
  
  Blinds. - Venetian blinds, if of good qualitj',
  are always suitable and useful as tlie laths can
  be easily cleaned. Their use has to a great
  extent been superseded however by the more
  ornamental linen or holland blinds trimmed
  with lace edging and insertion and working on
  spring rollers. Very good quality blinds may
  be had for eight or nine shillings each, the cost
  of the roller depending upon the particular
  patent used. Inexpensive linen blinds suitable
  for bedrooms may be had for about four shillings.
  With most firms the prices quoted for the blinds
  include both the measuring and fitting. Blind
  materials are also sold by the yard for people
  who prefer to make and fix their blinds them-
  selves. Furniture firms usually send pattern
  books of these materials when applied for, giving
  the price per yard and also the price of the whole
  blinds including making and fixing.
  
  Mantelpiece Decoration. - The decoration of
  the mantelpiece and its surroundings must con-
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  23
  
  
  form with the general decorative scheme of the
  room. Period furnishing reqxiires that the
  cliimney-piece decoration should have a special
  treatment, and its decoration should therefore
  be placed in the hands of the firm which is
  supplying the rest of the fiirniture.
  
  The ugly gilt-edged mirror which formed the
  conventional chimney-piece decoration of the
  time of our grandmothers is now mercifully
  buried in obli\don. Artistic wooden chimney-
  pieces and overmantles combined now form part
  of the decorative equipment of most tastefully
  furnished hoiises. These are constructed of
  mahogany and oak or in other dark woodwork
  for dining-room and library, and in wood
  painted white for drawing-room and morning-
  room. The mantelpieces of bedrooms do not
  require the elaborate treatment given to those
  
  
  Illustration showing Artistic Chimney-piece
  and Club Curb.
  
  of the reception rooms. Either a picture or
  a small overmantle may be placed over the
  chimney-piece of the latter, and where the
  woodwork is carried up over the mantelpiece
  it is only carried up to a very small height.
  
  Where there ai'e no fitted overmantles in
  connection with the chimney-pieces of the
  reception rooms the latter must be bought
  separately. Very pretty overmantles may be
  purchased in oak, walnut, mahogany, and wood
  painted white.
  
  Mantelpiece drapery is seldom seen now, but
  at times it is absolutely necessary to hide an
  ugly chimney-piece. In these circumstances
  the material used should be as light and graceful
  in appearance as possible. Pretty liberty silks
  and satins in the delicate art shades make most
  effective draperies.
  
  Tiled hearths and marble fenders are much
  favoured in present-day house decoration.
  Brass and steel fenders should always be kept
  
  
  Fire-irons.
  
  
  well polished. A very ornamental type of
  fender is that known as the " Club Curb." This
  consists of plain brass or iron rails which reach,
  at times to a height of two feet and
  which are surmounted by an uphol-
  stered seat, usually of morocco.
  Sometimes the upholstery goes all
  round the top of the curb, but more
  usually the seats are only at the sides
  and corners. A pair of fire-dogs
  and the necessary fire-irons, i.e.
  shovel, poker, and tongs, should
  form part of the equipment of the
  fire-place. Very useful for morning-
  room, study, and bedrooms are the
  little combination set of fia-e-irons
  now sold, which fit on to a speci-
  ally constructed stand. These are
  inexpensive to buy and look very
  well. As the stand is of a good
  height the fire-irons can easily be taken from it
  without having to stoop as in the case of thљ
  ordinary fire-dogs.
  
  FURNISHING THE VARIOUS ROOMS
  
  The Dra wing-Room. - This is essentially the
  domain of the house mistress, and it is stamped
  as it Were with her own individuality. The
  woman of refinement and taste makes her
  personahty felt not only in the general furniture
  scheme of the room, but in the many dainty
  Uttle finishing touches without which there
  always seems to be something lacking in even
  the best furnished drawing-rooms. This some-
  thing is invariably absent from the drawing-
  room of the wealthy uncultured woman, who,
  though she may have had the good sense to
  give carte blanche to a reUable furniture dealer
  in regard to the choice of furniture, yet fails
  utterly in imparting that atmosphere of refine-
  ment conveyed by the subtle touch in the arrange-
  ment of details which is always characteristic
  of the drawing-room of the gentlewoman, how-
  ever poorly furnished it may be.
  
  All stiffness and awkwardmess of arrangement
  in drawing-room furniture should be avoided.
  There should be an air of daintiness and grace
  and at the same time of cosiness about the
  room. The drawing-room of to-day is not a
  room for show but a room for use. It is no
  longer thrown open on strictly state occasions,
  nor are children nowadays trained to look upon
  it as a sort of Bluebeard's chamber only to be
  entered upon occasions when both Sunday frocks
  and Sunday manners must be domied and the
  maxim " Little children may be seen, but not
  heard," most rigorously observed. Tliere are
  still some middle-clfiss people who keep their
  drawing-room as a show-room, only using it on
  " At Home " days and for other similar functions ;
  but such rooms always wear an air of stiffness
  and lack of comfort wliich is often reflected in
  
  
  24
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  the manner of the house mistress upon the rare
  occasions when she is called upon to sit in it in
  state to do honour to her guests.
  
  Pretty occasional tables and daintily up-
  holstered tapestry settees, one or two cosy
  tapestry easy-chairs, a tea-table, a d^a^ving-
  room cabinet, an escritoire, and a piano should
  be present in every well-furnished drawing-room,
  to say nothing of such ornamental accessories
  as tapestry screens, flower-pots on stands, and
  the innumerable ti-ifles which go to complete the
  furnisliing of a really cosy room. Needless to
  say, hea\'y furniture of all kinds should be
  banished ; everything in the room should be as
  dainty and artistic as possible.
  
  Inleiid mahogany and rosewood are largely
  used in the construction of present-day drawing-
  room furniture. There is much that is French
  in the modem style, wliich is of graceful and
  refined design. Furniture manufacturers seem
  to have taken as their groundwork some of the
  best characteristics of the old world styles,
  
  
  Comer Chair.
  
  
  Occasional Table.
  
  
  evolving from them a style particularly suitable
  for present-day needs. Drawing-room chairs
  are of a dainty spindle-legged design, the pretty
  little corner chair being especially typical of
  present-day drawing-room suites. Tables are
  small, light, and graceful. The needs of the
  slender purse are particularly well catered for
  by the modern furniture dealer. People of
  average means are no longer compelled to
  furnish their drawing-rooms with all sorts of
  odds and ends, and chairs which quarrel with
  each other in both colour and design axe now
  seldom seen in even the most poorly furnished
  rooms, as complete furniture suites in inlaid
  mahogany or satinwood can be purchased
  for quite a moderate svun. The less expensive
  suit<" do not contain so many pieces as the
  more expensive kinds ; sometimes only a settee,
  two small chairs, two comer chairs, and a round
  table are provided. In these circumstances
  the furnishing scheme must be completed by
  purchasing by degrees one or two upholstered
  arm-chairs, and, if possible, a small sum should
  be expended upon one or two dainty little
  occasional tables to match the rest of the suite.
  A cabinet and an escritoire might also be added
  as sooa as the purse allows. The settees pro-
  
  
  vided with drawing-room suites are always of
  the same spindle-legged pattern as the chairs,
  and an added air of cosiness will therefore be
  imparted bj' the addition of a pretty drawing-
  room Chesterfield or some other similar type of
  softly upholstered settee or couch. A jardiniere
  to match the furniture will also be effective ;
  and where a brass standard lamp mth a soft
  deUcately coloured silk shade, may be had,
  the effect of the pretty subdued light it gives
  at night is very pleasing. A little " tea com-
  panion," upon which plates of cake and bread
  and butter may be handed round at afternoon
  tea, is a piece of furniture the usefulness of which
  must be by no means overlooked. A tasteful
  fire-screen, preferably one draped in deUcate silk,
  liberty style, should be placed before the grate.
  Tlie clock should be in keeping with the general
  daintiness of the room. Very pretty designs
  may be had in the refined Sheraton and Chip-
  pendale styles for quite a moderate outlay.
  An art tapestry screen in a framework of
  mahogany or any other wood of which the
  furniture may be composed may also be added
  with effect. The drawing-room is essentially a
  room to which little extras may be added by
  degrees, but - and this is very important - the
  additions must always be in keeping T\ith the
  general furniture scheme.
  
  The larger the room the more advantageously
  can the daintiness of drawing-room furniture
  be displayed. It is a mistake, however, to
  crowd too much furniture into a small room, not
  only from the point of view of space, but owing
  to the fact that its effect will be completely
  lost and the room made to look smaller than
  it is.
  
  A small drawing-room should, if possible, be
  papered in white. A white satin striped paper
  with a very narrow floral frieze would be effec-
  tive. (For Drawing-room Decoration, see p. 15.)
  Water-colour sketches and delicate engravings
  are the most suitable pictures for drawing-room
  walls.
  
  A pretty Indian carpet with a light ground
  makes a very effective floor covering. Wilton,
  Brussels, and Axminster carpets in the lighter
  tones are also suitable (see carpets, p. 20).
  Where a seamless woven square carpet is
  used in a small room plain Japanese matting
  ■will be found to make a very good surround.
  
  Many drawing-rooms are furnished nowadays
  in reproductions of famous period styles such
  as Chippendale, Adam, Sheraton, Hepplewhite,
  Louis XV., or Louis XVI. Needless to say,
  where such a style is adopted everything must
  be in keeping. Chairs of one period must not
  be mixed up with tables of anotlicr, and a bureau
  of still another epoch ; wall papers and carpets
  must also be chosen in accordance with the
  particular furniture scheme.
  
  Arrangement of Furniture. - A great deal will
  depend upon the suitable arrangement of the
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  25
  
  
  room. The position of a piano, for instance,
  has spoiled the effect of many otherwise well-
  arranged drawing-rooms. Very often it is
  necessary to place an upright piano against the
  wall through exigencies of space. A more
  graceful effect, however, is usually obtained by
  placing it at a convenient angle. Where it is
  an old and shabby-looking instrument the face
  of it can be turned towards a corner of the room
  hidden from aU but the pianist, whilst the back
  can be draped in silk of a delicate art shade.
  Whenever an upright piano is placed with its
  back turned away from the wall it should be
  draped in this manner.
  
  Grand pianos give an air of " finish " to a
  drawing-room wliich is achieved by no other
  means. A pretty silk cover should be kept
  over the top if photograplis or ornaments of any
  kind are to stand upon it. It is bad taste to
  have too many ornaments or photogi-aphs on a
  piano, a panel photograph in a very handsome
  frame and one or two choice ornaments being
  quite sufficient. It requires
  a very large room to show
  off a grand piano to advan-
  tage. Demi -grands look very
  well, and the ' ' Baby Grands ' '
  are very suitable both for
  large and moderately siz;ed
  rooms. Piano-stools are not
  now inartistic as of yore.
  The high round piano-stools
  are things of the past ; more
  attention is now paid to both comfort and appear-
  ance in regard to this piece of furniture. The
  design pictured in our illustration is much in
  vogue at present.
  
  Choice of a Piano. - In choosing a piano four
  important things must be considered, i.e. size,
  volume of sound, tone, and touch. In connection
  with the first two the size of the room must be
  taken into consideration so that both size and
  volume of sound are in proportion. In regard
  to tone, where singing is an accomplishment in
  the family it must be seen that the piano has a
  good singing tone. The pianist of the family
  should also try it before it is purchased to see
  that it is in every way to his (or her) satisfaction
  in regard to touch. There are many makes of
  pianos noted for their soft beautiful tones, such
  as those bearing the names of Rud Ibach, Sohn ;
  Bechstein, Erard, and innumerable others.
  
  Hall, Staircase, and Landings. - Within recent
  years good taste in hall furniture has decidedly
  increased. There is a leaning towards the
  artistic in every way. Instead of the one time
  conventional combined hat-rack and umbrella-
  stand we find the quaint, old world monk's
  settle and the separate umbrella-stand and
  neat wall rack for hats and coats. Oak is a very
  favourite wood for hall furniture. Imposing
  looking richly carved oak settles with chairs to
  match are pieces of furniture upon which very
  
  
  Piano-Stool.
  
  
  large sums of money may be spent, but the needs
  of the shopper with the slender purse have been
  by no means overlooked in tliis connection.
  Plain artistically designed settles may be had in
  fumed oak for as small a sum as £1, Is. ; a neat
  fumed oak umbrella-stand can be purchased for
  six or seven shilhngs, whilst high-backed oak
  chairs may also be had for very moderate
  prices. Where there is an outer hall or vestibule
  both hat-rack and umbrella-stand should be
  
  
  Hat-Rack.
  
  placed there. A grandfather's clock is a very
  effective piece of hall furniture. It should always
  occupy a prominent position near the staircase.
  Mats to be placed outside thљ various room
  doors should not be overlooked when furnishing
  the hall. There should also be a good fibre
  mat in the vestibule.
  
  If the hall is a bright one some pictures can
  be displayed to advantage upon the walls, also
  any military or hunting trophies (see Hall
  Decoration, p. 16). Where there is a high
  white dado crowned with a projecting rail or
  
  
  Umbrella-Stand.
  
  sheK, one or two good pieces of china might be
  displayed upon this.
  
  Wliere the haU is carpeted staircase and
  landing carpets should match the hall carpet.
  In high houses, however, the flight of stairs
  leading to the servants' room may be covered with
  oilcloth. If a tenant is fortunate enough to
  seem-e a house with a tiled hall, she will be
  spared the expense of purchasing a floor -covering
  of any kind, for a few mats will be all that is
  
  
  26
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  necessary. One or two pictures may be hung on
  the walls of the stair"-ay if the hght is sufficiently
  good for them to be properly seen.
  
  WTiere there axe good landings these are
  capable of tasteful decorative treatment. In
  houses where there is a large alcoved landing
  leading from tho first flight of stairs to a side
  wing of the house, the alcove should bo prettily
  draped with curtains. A low-standing book-
  case enamelled wliite could bo placed upon the
  side facing the stairs with one or two choice
  pieces of art pottery displayed upon it. A
  small table and two chairs could occupy the
  curtained recess to the left. Tliose who are the
  fortunate possessors of some good piece of
  statuary might display it here to advantage.
  One or two tall J8u:dinieres contsuning palms
  
  
  Monk's Settle.
  
  ■would also be effective. Such a landing, if
  cosily furnished, can easily be used as a smoking
  lounge. We do not all possess large square
  landings, however, but even very tiny landings,
  if of the proper shape, can be gracefully treated
  by means of hangings and appropriately placed
  jsu'dinieres.
  
  There are so very many different types of
  halls and landings that it is rather difficult to
  lay down hard and fast rules for their treatment.
  The ordinary passage hall does not lend itself
  to much decoration. Very often there is only
  room for settle, hat-rack, and umbrella-stand.
  Chairs are really unnecessary where there is a
  good oak settle, but they should always form
  part of tho hall fiu-niture where there is none.
  
  The Lounge Hall. - This description covers two
  widely different types of hall. The large square
  hall of the country mansion, with its carved
  wood panelling, deep wide staircase, and hand-
  some furniture, need not hero be dealt with.
  Such halls aire only possessed as a rule by people
  with whom money is no object and who can
  afford to pay for the most ejqiert advice upon
  the question of furnishing. But there is another
  type of square haU which is often met with
  now a lays, i.e. that which forms a characteristic
  feature of tho modem type of bungalow or flat.
  
  
  In the smaller flats where there is only one
  sitting-room a hall of tliis kind has to do duty
  as another sitting-room or lounge. In these
  circumstances it should be furnished as much
  like a room as possible. Screens should be
  used to keep off the draught from tho front
  door, whilst curtains should hang from the doors
  of the rooms wliich lead out into the hall. A
  cork carpet in a sliade of axt green could be used
  as a floor-covering, with two or three warm cosy-
  looking mats scattered over it. Umbrella-stand
  and hat-rack should be banished away in some
  liidden corner. Near the fire-place might be
  placed a glass-fronted cupboard, painted wliite,
  in which either dinner or tea-set could be dis-
  played. If space permits there might also be a
  low wliite enamelled book-case, upon which one
  or two pretty vases in Wedgwood blue could
  stand. Two low chairs and a cushioned settee
  would complete the " sitting-room " illusion.
  A bright fire burning in the grate in winter will
  increase the homely and comfortable appearance
  of the hall sitting-room. In flats with oiJy one
  sitting-room such an arrangement wUl be found
  not only cosy but convenient. Care must be
  taken, however, to reduce draughts to a mini-
  mum. All doors leading on the hall should be
  kept closed when it is in use and the portieres
  drawn well over them.
  
  Dinlng-Room. - Large sums of money are very
  often spent upon dining-room furniture with
  very poor results. There is a tradition with
  most people that the dining-room must be
  sombre and heavy looking, and in the effort of
  living up to that tradition they often succeed
  in turning out a room which is so gloomy in
  appearance that to spend any amount of time
  in it is to become hopelessly depressed.
  
  This is a great mistake. The dining-room,
  it is true, must be furnished in a dignified
  manner, but cheerfulness must not be banished
  from it. We have gone past the days of the
  ponderoiis Victorian sideboard and hideous
  horse-hair chairs. All should realise the fact
  that our dining-rooms may be dignified and at
  the same time pleasing and artistic.
  
  There was a time when the cost of furnishing
  the simplest type of dining-room was so great
  that people of slender means could seluom
  afford to furnish the room outright, but were
  forced to pvirchaso the various articles by
  degrees. Nowadays things have changed -
  furniture manufactiirers supply complete suites
  at reasonable prices, as a visit to any of
  their show-rooms can prove, and, what is more,
  the workmanship is good and the design
  excellent.
  
  In former times the design of cheap furniture
  was seldom good, hence the public belief in the
  " cheap and naisty " theory which is still so
  widely spread. It is true iliat to obtain really
  good furniture one must pay a good price, but
  the fact remains that manufacturers and dealers
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  27
  
  
  >rodel Dining-Roora for small Flat (Maple).
  
  
  A Simple Bedroom {Heal d: Sotis).
  
  
  28
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  are studying more and more the needs of those
  to whom money is an object, recognising that
  it is not of people with unlimited wealth at their
  disposal with wliich to indulge their most ex-
  travagant tastes that the major part of the
  great army of shoppers is composed, but rather
  of those who have only a certain sum to spend,
  and who must necesstirily keep within its hmits.
  
  
  Diimer-"Waggon.
  
  First of all, the dining-room must be suitably
  decorated (see p. 15). A few well-chosen oil-
  paintings and family portraits (if any) may adorn
  the walls. Failing these some very good en-
  graxings in frames of the same wood as the
  furniture. A good Turkey carpet is the carpet
  par excellence for a dining-room, but we cannot
  all afford to indulge in luxuries of the kind.
  Let the carpet at any rate be as soft in
  appearance as possible, with a good pile. Oak,
  mahogany, and walnut are the principal woods
  utilised in the manufact\ire of dining-room furni-
  ture. Especially inexpensive, and at the same
  time good, furnitiore may be had in what is
  known as " fumed oak."
  
  At one time even the cheapest makes of
  sideboards cost a fair siun, and so very often
  this article of furniture had to be banished from
  the list of many a young couple furnishing on
  very small means. Nowadaj's a most artistic
  style of fumed oak sideboard, something akin
  to a Welsh dresser in appearance, may be
  obtained for an outlay of only a few pounds.
  This type of sideboard is very effective in dining-
  room decoration. It is a type also which is
  very fashionable at the present time. One or
  two pieces of china should always bo displayed
  on the shelves, Dutch fashion. Blue or blue
  and white china looks prettiest with oak. Of
  the expensive sideboards in the old Dutch styles
  richness of carving is the chief characteristic.
  In most of these glass in any shape or form is
  conspicuous by its absence.
  
  A dining-room can be well furnished at a
  cost of between £18 and £20, the furniture
  inclu'lmg an inexpensive fumed oak dresser of
  
  
  the kind described, some high-backed fumed
  oak chairs neatly upholstered in green leather,
  a good oak dining-table, a diiuier-waggon, or
  butler's tray, an easy-chair, a small writing-
  table, and the necosseu-y equipment in the way
  of cloth table-cover, curtains, cornice pole,
  fender, fire-irons, coal-scuttle, carpet and sur-
  round hearthrug. Where strict economy has
  to be practised the easy-chair and the writing-
  table may be omitted. Very inexpensive black
  iron coal-scuttles, gipsy pattern, may be pur-
  chased for a few shillings, and can be made to
  do duty whore a better kind cannot be afforded.
  A pretty cloth or art serge table-cover can be
  made at home for a very small outlay, and
  casement curtains may also be made for a
  trifling cost by the clever home worker. (See
  Furnisliing Lists, p. 30.)
  
  Morning and Breakfast-Room. - These two
  titles are bracketed together because in the
  generality of houses, where there are but three
  or four reception rooms at most, the terms
  " morning-room " and " breakfast-room " ere
  synonymous. The " breakfast " or " morning "
  room may be taken to indicate the most generally
  useful room in the house. It is writing-room,
  sewing-room, and school-room in turn. Many a
  morning is spent in this room by the busy house
  mistress in writing letters, going over accounts,
  and attending to innumerable small household
  details. It is also often the room where the
  elder children, emancipated from the nursery,
  prepare their lessons, and partake of that ever
  favovirite meal of childhood - the five o'clock
  tea.
  
  Tlie furniture for the morning-room or break-
  fast-room must therefore be chosen with due
  
  
  Gate-legged Table.
  
  regard to the uses to which it will be put. As
  meals are to be served in this room a sideboard
  will be necessary. This can be much smaller
  and of lighter design than that of the dining-
  room. Then there must be a table - a fair-
  sized round gate-leg table of fumed oak would
  be useful and at the same time inexpensive.
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  29
  
  
  &3 a good one may be purchased for about
  £3. Fumed oak chairs with rush seats may
  be purchased for from 12s. each. In addi-
  tion, there should be a large lounge easy-chair
  or two small tapestry arm-chairs, a small
  writing-table for the special use of the house
  mistress, and a book-case or some book-shelves
  for the children's school books.
  
  Wliere there are no cliildren, the morning-
  room Tvill be probably utilised as her own
  special room by the mistress of the house. In
  these circumstances she will be able to give
  full scope to her taste for dainty and graceful
  effects. Chairs may be upholstered in tapestry,
  pretty engra\'ings can be hung upon the walls,
  and, apart from the sideboard, which is a neces-
  sity in a breakfast-room, the whole scheme of
  furnishing may be such that it might be aptly
  termed a " boudoir."
  
  There are many possibiHties in the f\:rnishing
  of a morning-room, possibiHties which must
  always, however, be guided by individual cir-
  cumstances.
  
  The Library. - ^There should be an air of rest-
  fulness about the Hbrary, conducive to read-
  ing and study. A flat leather top desk with
  drawers on either side should be placed in a
  good light. The writing equipment should be
  complete in every way - inkstand, pen-rest,
  blotter and letter weight, a stand for note-
  paper and envelopes and telegram forms and
  postcards should all be there and should be kept
  neat and tidy. To go with this desk there should
  be a low desk-chair - the round leather up-
  holstered revolving-chair is the most comfort-
  able type. A very large arm-chair in which
  the master of the house can lounge at ease
  while reading one of his favourite works is also
  
  
  Flat Library Desk
  
  a necessity in the well -furnished library. Near
  this chair should be one of the ever-handy re-
  volving book-cases from which the reader may
  select a volume at will. A large stationary
  book-case will also be necessary. This should
  be with adjustable shelves in order that books
  of all sizes can be placed upon it. A very good
  sectional extending book-case may be purchased
  for a little over £3. One or two high-backed
  
  
  Hevolring Book-case.
  
  
  chairs should also be in the room, and a good
  hassock footstool should be placed neeir the easy-
  chair.
  
  In houses where there is Uttle money to spend
  upon book-cases and other similar articles of
  furniture, much may be done
  by the home worker to-
  wards its equipment. With
  a Httle knowledge of carpen-
  tering inexpensive shelves
  can be made and fitted
  round the walls. These
  should always have some
  sort of border, not only as
  a finish but to keep off the
  dust. It may be often
  found advantageous to pur-
  chase the writing-table from
  one of the large oflEice-fur-
  nishing firms, as very often
  
  these firms have second-hand goods which they
  are willing to sell at quite a moderate sum.
  Desk-chairs may often also be purchased in
  this way. A httle smokers' cabinet should also
  find a place upon the wall.
  
  There should always be dark curtains in the
  library - red or green are particularly suitable.
  Where there is a portiere over the door it should
  be of the same colour as the window curtains.
  (For Library Decoration, see p. 16.)
  
  Bedroom Furniture. - The stiffness, ugUness,
  and lack of comfort generally which character-
  ised the furnit-ure of the early Victorian era,
  was in no way more clearly demonstrated than
  in regard to furniture for the bedroom.
  Happily the heavy, cumbersome high chest of
  drawers, the ungainly wardrobe, and the deal
  muslin-bedecked table which, svu-mounted by a
  looking-glass of the most conventional pattern,
  did duty as toilet-table in even the best rooms
  of the average middle-class household, are now
  things of the past, at any rate with all those
  who prefer the present-day artistic furniture
  to the atrocities of the early Victorian tradition.
  There are still some people, it is true, who, whilst
  sparing neither trouble nor expense in the sviit-
  able furnishing of dining-room, drawing-room,
  and other reception rooms, barely give a thought
  to the furnishing of their bedrooms. So long
  as the reception rooms are nice anything will
  do for the bedrooms seems to be their guiding
  principle, and whilst money is spent ungrudg-
  ingly upon the decoration of the other rooms
  a totally inadequate sum is set apart for the
  furnishing of those rooms in which after all they
  spend a very considerable portion of the twenty-
  four hours.
  
  Happily in these enlightened days there are
  comparatively few people who take so de-
  cidedly unenlightened a view of things. With
  those who do, it must be presumed that tradi-
  tion dies hard and that they are simply carrying
  on the tastes of their grandmothers. Sensible
  
  
  30
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  people are keenly alive to the fact that, apart
  from the usual number of hours spent in the
  bedroom, intervals of illness are apt to occur
  in the hves of every one of us. In these cir-
  cumstances should not our bedrooms be as
  bright, cheery, and as pleasing to the eye as pos-
  sible ? Neither ungainly inartistic furniture
  nor hideous wall pa^^er will be conducive to the
  cheerfulness of an invalid in that period of con-
  valescence, during which a morbid and depressed
  state of mind will do more than anytliing else to
  retard recovery. On the other hand, a prettily
  decorated room, with a bright pleasing wall
  paper, tasteful furniture, however simple, and
  a cheerj- aspect have more influence in keeping
  up the spirits of the invalid and assisting her
  to a speedy recovery than one would generally
  suppose.
  
  The ideal bedroom has a sunny aspect.
  Tliere is something especially exhilarating
  about the morning sun. Care should be taken,
  however, to see that the rays of the sun do not
  beat down direct upon the forehead of the
  sleeper on those summer mornings when sun-
  rise occurs at a time when she has not com-
  pleted more than three-quarters of her full
  amount of sleep. Needless to say, suitable
  blinds should be provided for every bedroom,
  and these should be kept well lowered, or, if
  there is a casement window, the curtains should
  be drawn. When the plan of the room allows of
  such an arrangement, the bed should be placed
  so that the window does not face, but comes
  to one side of it. In this way the discomfort
  of the early morning glare will be avoided.
  
  It is also essential that the bed should not
  be placed in a draught. The head of the bed
  should never be facing the window, for instance,
  neither should the fire-place be on the same side
  of the room as the door. If only for purposes
  of ventilation, there should always be a fire-
  place in the bedroom - an open gas-fire is especi-
  ally useful, as it does away with the labour of
  setting fires and carrying up coals, and can be
  turned off and on as required without invohnng
  any trouble.
  
  WTien taking a house a Woman should be
  careful in looking over the bedrooms to note if
  they contain any fitted cupboards. Tliese are
  a boon in every household, and, painted a
  pretty white to match the woodwork, they
  tidd considerably to the ornamentation of the
  room. The presence or absence of these cup-
  boeirds should alwaj's form a consideration in
  the taking of a house. It is also advisable to
  study the structure of the walls. In many
  cases where cupboards are lacking there maj' be
  convenient alcoves where these may easily be
  fitted, or, if money is a consideration, they may
  be utilised for making pretty curtain cup-
  boards. Suitably placed alcoves are capable of
  treatn.ent, by which they may add considerably
  to the decoration of a room. An alcove just
  
  
  over the bed, for instance, lends itself to tasteful
  curtain drapery. Where one occurs over the
  window it may be treated in the same way.
  
  In the Queen Anne style of house especially,
  many of the quaint old-world casement windows
  are set into deep alcoves. What prettier effect
  may bo obtained than by furnishing the window
  with a dainty chintz-covered window-seat, and
  draping the alcove with head valance and
  curtains of chintz to match that used in the
  upholstering of the seat ?
  
  The furnishing of the bedroom should be
  studied first of all from the point of view of
  hygiene and comfort. Where there is a fitted
  carpet to the room, or a square carpet which
  goes under the bed, it should be seen that the
  mattress of the latter stands at a sufficient height
  from the floor to enable the dust to be easily
  taken from underneath it. There are many
  makes of bedsteads nowadays, more especially
  those of the various modern French styles,
  which are so low as to almost touch the floor,
  leaving little or no space between the floor and
  the mattress. Such a style of bed may be
  artistic, but it is certainly far from comfortable,
  and in no circumstances shoidd comfort be
  made to give way to art, the ideal furnituro
  being essentially that in which art and comfort
  are combined.
  
  Medical authorities have laid much stress
  upon the fact that carpets in bedrooms are
  merely harbingers of dust and dirt, and there-
  fore unhygienic. Tl:ey maintain that there
  should be no carpets under beds, as these cannot
  always be moved every day for sweeping purposes
  and dust is apt to accumulate there because un-
  seen. Bedroom manufacturers have, however,
  found a way out of this difficultj', and Messrs.
  Heal & Sons, of Tottenham Court Road, London,
  sell beds which are furnished with patent rails
  upon which they can be moved with the greatest
  ease.
  
  There is no doubt that linoleum is the best
  floor covering for a bedroom from the point of
  hygiene. It can be easily swept and washed,
  and one or two nice rugs will serve as a con-
  cession to the claims of comfort and warmth.
  
  The next best thing would of course be a
  square carpet with a linoleum or a stained floor
  surround. There are people who object, how-
  ever, to the cold look of the bare boards or
  of linoleum even if they only appear on the
  border of the room. In these circumstances a
  plain felt surround to tone with the carpet is
  very useful.
  
  The brass bedstead is much in vogue at the
  present day. It is not the cumbersome-looking
  object of yore, but a well-designed and useful
  piece of furniture. Wlien fitted with swinging
  Italian wings it can bo prettily draped with
  dainty cretonne or other artistic hangings to
  tone with the colour scheme of the room.
  Draperies of this kind suspended from wings.
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  31
  
  
  and wall draperies hung in artistic fashion from
  the wall against which the head of the bed stands,
  are the only form of bed-curtains used nowadays,
  excepting in the case of the old-time four-poster
  
  
  Bedstead on Metal Tramway.
  
  which is still to be found in many homes, and
  revivals of which many bed manufacturers are
  placing upon the market. Valances are as a
  rule Umited to the latter type of bedstead.
  
  The wooden bedsteads now on the market are
  artistic in every way and free from that ugliness
  which characterised those of Victorian days. They
  are no longer ungainly, cxmibersome pieces of
  furniture, too heavy to move and consequently
  difficult to clean. Fitted with all the most up
  to date improvements, including iron frames
  and wire mattresses, they do not now act as
  harbingers of dust and dirt. To the many
  hygienic disadvantages of the old-time wooden
  bedstead may be ascribed the subsequent craze
  for anything in metal, however ugly in pattern.
  Some of the most ornamental wooden bedsteads
  are those of inlaid mahogany in Sheraton style.
  Iron bedsteads can be had for the most moderate
  outlay. A white enamelled iron bedstead al-
  ways looks dainty and clean. It is one of the
  best and most useful types of inexpensive
  bedsteads, and looks especially well with brass
  tope. The ordinary low iron bedsteads are
  very suitable for servants' rooms.
  
  Bedding. - It is of the utmost importance that
  the bedding should be of the best. Many people
  are apt to study show more than comfort when
  furnishing their bedrooms, with the result that
  the important question of bedding is very often
  neglected. It never answers to purchase very
  cheap bedding, for the latter is apt to prove
  
  
  only too dear in the long run. A cheap mattress
  is not only uncomfortable, but it is an actual
  menace to the health.
  
  Woven wire spring mattresses with good
  horse-hair or wool over mattresses should be
  used where possible. Good hair mattresses,
  however, are apt to be somewhat costly, and
  therefore are not always within reach of the
  average purse. Good wool mattresses are in-
  finitely preferable to cheap hair ones. They
  should in all cases be purchased from a re-
  liable furniture dealer, preferably from a firm
  who make a speciality of bedroom furniture
  and bedding, for in this case good value is
  assured.
  
  In buying mattresses never be misled by
  an attractive covering, which too often hides
  much that is deficient in the quality of the
  material of which it is comprised. For this
  reason it is seldom ad\'isable to purchase what
  are described as " bargains " at sales. The
  common qualities of horse-hair mattresses are
  filled with various sorts of " short hair " which
  afford no hold to the " ties," and therefore tend
  to move and work into those uncomfortable
  " lumps " which so often turn a bed into a
  regular instrument of torture. On the other
  hand, the fine long horse-hair used in good
  
  
  Italian Wing-Drapery.
  
  mattresses gives a proper hold to the " ties "
  and is kept in place by them. The French
  mattresses, which contain a special quality of
  hair mixed with white wool, are exceedingly soft
  and comfortable. Cheap flock mattresses, which
  are made up from any sort of rags, shovild be
  alwaj's avoided.
  
  
  32
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  The wii-e mattress should be covered with a
  piece of ticking or Hessian to prevent it from
  rubbing the hair mattress which is placed over it.
  
  The colour scheme of a bedroom should be
  as bright and cheery as possible, and always
  chosen with due regard to the aspect of the
  room and to the furniture which it will
  contain (see p. 16). Whore the hygienic method
  of covering the floor with linoleum or cork
  carpet is adopted, care should be ta.ken to prevent
  t 1 3 room from having a bare appearance by
  putting down a number of warm and cosy-look-
  ing rugs of as good a quality as can be procured
  for the sum available. Everything that tonds
  to harbour dust and dirt should be absent from
  the bedroom. There should never be an excess
  of ornamental trifles and knick-knacks about
  the room. Girls are especially prone to collect
  these httle ornaments, to the despair of many
  a hard-working housemaid.
  
  Furniture. - The best-designed bedroom furni-
  ture of to-day combines much of the artistic
  effects of the famous epochs in furnitTore history
  with a strict attention to convenience of con-
  struction as necessitated by modern needs.
  Modern bedroom furniture manufacturers also
  make a special feature of reproductions from
  the antique. Needless to say, when a bedroom
  is furnished in accordance with a certain period,
  decoration, carpet, hangings, all must conform
  with this furniture scheme.
  
  Oak, naahogany, satinwood, rosewood are
  very favourite materials for bedroom suites.
  There is also a great vogue at present for white
  enamelled furniture. This fashion comes as
  something in the nature of a blessing in disguise
  for the woman with a slender purse, as the
  white enamelled suites show a wide range of
  prices, the cheaper kinds being procurable for
  a few pounds.
  
  Every furnitxire sviito should comprise a
  wardrobe, a dressing-table, a wash-stand and
  two chairs, although in some of the more
  inexpensive smtes only toilet table, chest of
  drawers, and wash-stand are included. When
  the latter is not fitted with rails for towels a
  towel-horse should be provided. It should be
  ascertained that the locks of drawers and
  wardrobe cupboards are in order, that the
  drawers open and shut easily, and that the
  inside of each piece of furniture is in as good
  condition as the outside. The wash-stand
  should have a marble top and be tiled at the
  back. A sheet of emdcca might also be fixed
  up at the back of the wash-stand instead of the
  ordinary " splasher " for the protection of the
  wall. A cosy easy-chair and a table should
  also be included in the bedroom furnit'ire
  where possible. Very daintily upholstered little
  tapestry arm-chairs may be obtained at quite
  moderate prices. For an inexpensively furnished
  room an ordinary basket chair painted to tone
  with the furnitiire and with pretty cretonne
  
  
  cushions can be made to answer the purpose.
  A box ottoman daintily upholstered in cretonne
  is a most useful piece of furniture, more especi-
  allj' in flats where the cupboard accommodation
  is necessarily limited. This inay be either
  purchased from a furniture shop or fashioned
  by the deft fingers of the home upholsterer.
  Pretty cretonne, chintz, lace, or other washable
  curtains are the most suitable for the bed-
  room. Heavy hangings of any kind should be
  avoided. The walls should not be covered with
  pictures - one or two engra\'ing8 in Ught-coloured
  frames will be sufficient.
  
  The toilet-table linen should always be fresh
  and spotless. The pretty duc'icsse sets con-
  sisting of a narrow lace-edged or hem-stitched
  toilet cover and mats are the most suitable
  for the present-day type of table. These sets
  are often used also for the wash-stand. They
  are apt to get very wet, however, if they are
  left on during the toilet ablutions, and for this
  reason most people prefer to do without them.
  The general equipment of the toilet-table in
  regard to pin-cushions (well supplied with pins),
  hat-pin and hair-pin tidies must not be neglected.
  Any silver displayed on the table should be kept
  clean and well polished. All these are details,
  attention to which will go a long way to secur-
  ing the cosy effect in bedroom decorations which
  some people find it so hard to achieve.
  
  
  THE DRESSING-ROOM
  
  The decoration of a dressing-room should con-
  form with that of the bedroom which it adjoins.
  It should contain a good roomy
  gentleman's wardrobe, a shaving-
  stand with mirror, also washstand
  and suit-case stand. A shaving-
  stand is to be preferred to the
  ordinary toilet-table, not only be-
  cause it takes up much less room,
  though this is an important con-
  sideration as dressing-room space
  is usually limited, but also be-
  cause a shaving-glass is much more
  easily adjusted to the correct angle
  required by the person shaving,
  and, being very light, it is easily
  moved to any convenient position.
  
  Toilet Ware. - Over-elaboration
  of design in toilet ware should
  be avoided in tastefully furnished Shaving-Mirror
  homos. Artistic yet simple pat-
  terns should be chosen. Patterns after the style
  of Wedgwood and Spode arc much favoured by
  those whose furnishing is on artistic lines. Plain
  colours and simple shapes go best with the
  present-day style of bedroom furniture. The
  self-coloured art wares are largely used, and
  with these the quaintly Hhapod ewer with a
  spout like that of a teapot is often seen. On
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  33
  
  
  the whole, the ewers of a more conventional
  design are preferable to these.
  
  In addition to the regular toilet set there
  should be a white china slop-pail, a water-bottle,
  and a glass in every bedroom.
  
  THE BATH-ROOM
  
  In the bath-room the sanitary fittings should
  be beyond reproach. In a rented house this
  will of course be the landlord's affair, so when
  looking over a house particular attention should
  be paid to the bath-room fittings. A good
  fitted iron bath of the latest type with taps
  for hot and cold water and waste and without
  any wooden casing is the best. Iron baths
  are preferable to the more luxurious porcelain,
  as the latter take a great deal of heat from
  the water, taxing the capacity of the kitchen
  range to the utmost, whereas with iron baths
  the heat of the water is retained. There are
  several methods of covering and finishing the
  interior surface of iron baths. Of these the
  porcelain enamel process is perhaps the most
  effective. Where this process has been applied
  the interior of the bath presents the same
  enamelled surface as earthenware - ^the enamel
  is also very durable.
  
  A fitted lavatory basin with hot and cold
  Water-supply is very desirable in a bath-room.
  Beyond the actual fittings very little furniture
  is required. There should be a towel-rail, a
  cane-seated chair, a stool, and a rack for sponges
  and soap to be hung on the wall next to the bath.
  One of the new bath-racks which fit across the
  centre of the bath to act as receptacle for the
  soap and sponge which the bather is actually
  using is also usefiil, as it does away with the
  necessity of reaching up whenever anything is
  required to the rack on the wall. A cork bath-
  mat and one or two warm bath-rugs are also
  necessary. There should also be a mirror on
  the wall, preferably the regulation bath-room
  mirror, with a drawer for brushes and combs.
  Cork carpet or linoleum are the best floor
  coverings for bath-rooms. (For Bath-room
  Wall Coverings, see p. 14.)
  
  FURNISHING A BED-SITTING-ROOM
  
  The bed-sitting-room represents the home of
  many a woman worker, who often takes more
  pride in the arrangement of the few simple
  articles she can call her own and the purchase
  of which in many instances have involved
  several little acts of self-sacrifice than does the
  possessor of the most luxurious furniture which
  money can buy.
  
  It is wonderful what good results may be
  achieved with comparatively little outlay in the
  furnishing of a room of the kind, but necessity
  nearly always proves " the mother of invention,"
  as the many ingenious yet simple contrivances
  
  
  which can Tdc resorted to in furnishing a bed-
  sitting-room will go very far to prove.
  
  The great object to be attained in furnishing
  a bed-sitting-room is to arrange it in such a
  manner that it gives no idea of a bedroom during
  the daytime. This result is not so difficult to
  achieve as one would suppose. Before taking the
  room, first of all ascertain that the wall -paper is
  not one of those glaring atrocities so often met
  with in the present-day lodging-house. If the
  room is suitable in every way and the wall-paper is
  the only drawback try and get the landlady to
  have it re-papered. If she is not disposed to do
  so offer to share part of the expense, which will
  not be much. Very simple and effective paper
  may be bought for an ordinary-sized room at
  an entire cost of from 15s. to 20s., including the
  work of hanging, and rather than put up with
  ugly WaU-paper it will be foimd better in the
  long run to bear the cost oneself, if the landlady
  is obdurate on the point.
  
  It is well to observe when taking the room
  if there are any cupboard fitments. A good
  
  
  The "Divan" Bed.
  
  roomy cupboard will save the purchase of a
  wardrobe which, besides being somewhat ex-
  pensive to buy, would go a long way towards
  destroying the sitting-room illusion during the
  day. If a wardrobe is a necessity then one
  of the plain inexpensive bamboo cupboards
  without any glass in front would be the best to
  purchase. If the cost of a carpet cannot be
  afforded, stain the floor with permanganate o£
  potash and polish it with bees'-wax and tur-
  pentine- ^the cost of this will be very trifling
  if you do the whole work yourself. Two or
  three pretty rugs may be purchased for a few
  sMUings each. A fairly good art square carpet
  for a small room may be purchased for about
  25s. ; with this only the surround of the floor
  need be stained.
  
  The furniture should include a bed which can be
  made to look as much like a couch in the daytime
  as possible - a perfectly flat bed of the camp
  variety without any upstanding head or foot -piece
  would do. With this there should be a good
  soft wool mattress. The bed should always be
  placed against the wall. In the daytime the
  bed-clothes can be neatly folded up and placed
  
  C
  
  
  34
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  nnderneath the mattress, and the whole can be
  covered with a pretty Indian rug. Arrange on
  this one or two cushions and the result is a
  very cosy and effective-looking eastern divan.
  Special couch beds are now largely sold by
  furniture manufacturers.
  
  A small plain deal table with one or two
  drawers may be purchased for five or six sliillings.
  This should be stained a shade corresponding
  
  
  Dwarf Cupboard.
  
  with the rest of the furniture of the room and
  placed against the wall, and a good-sized
  looldng-glass hung on the wall directly over it.
  The table will do duty as both toilet-table and
  writing-table. In the daytime the brushes and
  hand-mirror, together with the toilet-cover and
  mats, may be put aside in the drawer, their
  places being taken by a neat blotting-pad, an
  ink-stand, and the necessary writing materials.
  A dwarf cupboard could be made to do duty
  as a washstand, the toilet ware being placed in-
  side the cupboard during the daytime ; or, if the
  conventional wash-stand is preferred, this could
  be placed in a corner of the room and com-
  pletely hidden by a large screen.
  
  Then there must be a table large enough for
  meals. A round deal gate-leg table would be
  very useful, as the flaps can be let down and the
  table put on one side when the meal is not in
  progress. A large box ottoman in wliich clothes
  niay be kept should also form part of the fur-
  niture ; one or two smaller ones made out of
  sugar-boxes and upholstered in cretonne to
  match that of the ottoman would also be useful,
  acting as handy receptacles for millinery.
  
  At one side of the room there should be a low
  table or cupboard which can do duty as a side-
  board. The usefulneas of corner brackets and
  shelves in a room of this kind cannot be too
  highly estimated. A hanging corner cupboard
  with a glass door would bo especially useful for
  the display of a dainty afternoon tea service
  which cannot safely be trusted downstairs. Very
  many large general stores, such as Whiteley's
  in London, make a special feature of the sale
  of white wood articles for carving, poker work,
  or tnamelling. Very well-designed pieces of
  
  
  furniture may be had in this white wood at
  a comparatively smaU cost. Thirty shillings
  will purchase a pretty cliina cabinet in whito
  wood, wliilst a small book-case with glass doors
  may be had for even less, and a hanging book-
  case 27 inches liigh would cost from twelve
  to ^teon shillings. Small book-shelves and
  wall-brackets may be bought for from Is. Ud.
  and upwards. When properly stained or
  enamelled this furnitui-e looks very well indeed.
  For an extra change it can be stained at the shop
  where it is purchased
  
  Throe or four smaU chairs and one or two
  easy-chairs TsdU complete the furniture of the
  room. Upholstered tapestry arm-chairs may
  now be had for as Uttle as fifteen shillings.
  Wicker chairs when prettily upholstered can
  be made to look very cosy. When bought
  ready upholstered they necessarily cost more
  than when the work is undertaken at home.
  In the section upon home carpentery and up-
  holstery many useful hints are given in regard
  to the making of inexpensive little odds and
  ends for the home which the proud possessor
  ot a bed-sitting-room would do well to study.
  Pretty curtains and draperies, dainty table-
  
  
  Ottoman
  
  cloths, all can be made by the deft fingers of
  the woman who takes a pride in making her
  surroundings as cosy and dainty as possible,
  however heavily she may be handicapped in
  regard to means.
  
  Period Pamltnre.- Distinctive style in furnitiu-e
  IS becoming cultivated to a very great extent
  nowadays, and people who have the means with
  which to indulge their taste in this direction
  lilco to furnish at least one room in their house
  in accordance with one of the famous furniture
  periods. Genuine "* antiques " can as a rule be
  only indulged in by those with well-filled purses.
  Other people, however, may be fortunate enough
  to pos.sess one or two pieces of really good
  antique furniture which has come to them by
  inheritance. These should be cherished as
  articles of real value, and placed amongst
  surroundings in keeping with their character.
  
  A good piece of furniture is apt to prove some-
  what costly at times in the expenditure entailed
  by living up to it. A Louis XVI. cabinet, for
  instance, will demand that not only the rest of
  the furniture in the room but also the decora-
  tion be in the same style. It seems superfluous
  to remark that no woman of taste would allow
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  35
  
  
  such a piece of fiirniture to be placed in a room
  furniBhed in accordance with the early Victorian
  tradition.
  
  All women should have at least an elementary
  knowledge of the chai-acteristics of the various
  styles of fm-niture belonging to the famoixs
  epochs. Without this knowledge they are apt
  to make somewhat glaring errors when attempt-
  ing to fvirnish their rooms in accordance with any
  particular period. The study of the evolution
  of furniture has a fascination peculiarly its own.
  Through it the manners and customs of our
  forefathers may be traced step by step from the
  time when primitive man first began to carve
  out of wood or stone those crude implements
  suited to his needs, through the centuries of
  progression marked by the Gothic, Tudor,
  Jacobean and Georgian periods to the Victorian
  era (which last, strangely enough, marked a time
  of positive decadence in the art of furniture
  designs), and thence to the present day.
  
  The connoisseur does not need to concern
  herself with the styles of furniture which pre-
  vailed prior to the foxirteenth century, however.
  The needs of our ancestors in those days were
  too simple for the evolution of any really
  characteristic style, which could be adapted to
  present-day needs. The real evolution of
  artistic furniture in this country began with the
  Tudor period. Many Italian craftsmen, settled
  m England dtiring Henry VIII. 's reign, and the
  influence of the Italian Renaissance has left its
  mark upon the furniture of the period. The
  furniture of the " Jacobean " period has a
  dignity all its own. Many people like their
  dining-rooms ftirnished in this particular style,
  which prevailed during the reign of James I.,
  1603 - until the end of the reign of James II.,
  1685. It was during the eighteenth century,
  however, that English fvtrniture reached its
  greatest degree of artibcic perfection, and it is
  with this period, therefore, that collectors are
  most concerned. It gave birth to such artist-
  craftsmen as Chippendale, Adam, Hepplewhite,
  and Sheraton, whose names will ever live in the
  annals of furniture design. Contemporaneous
  with these famous English styles were the
  French styles of Louis XV., Louis XVI., the
  Directoire, and the First Enapire.
  
  As has been already remarked, during the
  Victorian era art in furniture went through
  a marked decadence. The furniture of this
  recent period is marked by its stiffness, un-
  gainliness, and general air of discomfort. It
  may safely be said that connoisseurs of the
  future will not readily advocate a revival of the
  Victorian style.
  
  Those who wish to make a study of the char-
  acteristics of the best periods in furniture cannot
  do better than read some good books upon the
  subject. Mr. Edwin Foley, in his book entitled
  " Decorative Furniture," traces the evolution
  of artistic furniture from the most remote times.
  
  
  explaining the main characteristics which dis-
  tinguish the art of each particular period. Much
  valuable assistance is given to the collector by
  the many coloured illustrations of the various
  styles wliich are to be found throughout the
  book. She should also make a point of visiting
  museums and other places where specimens of
  old furniture may be seen ; such as the Victoria
  and Albert Museum, South Kensington, London ;
  the Royal Scottish Miiseum, Edinbixrgh, and the
  Dublin Museum. For French decorative furni-
  ture in particular the Jones Collection, South
  Kensington Museum and the Wallace Collection,
  Hertford House, Manchester Square, should be
  visited.
  
  SOME FURNISHING ESTIMATES
  
  Tlie following Hsts, giving suggestions in
  regard to the best way of spending two fairly
  representative sums of money on the furnishing
  of a small house or flat, will prove useful to the
  young couple who are about to furnish a home,
  and who reqtiire guidance not only as to the
  furniture to be purchased, but also in regard
  to the cost of the various articles. The first
  Ust of this has been compiled by Messrs. Maple
  in connection with a ninety guinea model flat
  displayed at their show-rooms. The second
  scheme for furnishing a house for £300 has also
  been largely compiled from information obtained
  from the same firm -
  
  THE NINETY GUINEA FLAT
  
  The sum of ninety guineas is apportioned
  amongst the various rooms as follows : -
  
  £ s. d
  
  Dining-room 1853
  
  Drawing-room 22 17 6
  
  Bedroom 20 19 1
  
  Servant's room .4 3 3
  
  Bath-room 17 3
  
  Hall 343
  
  Kitchen . 2 1 5i
  
  Linens, blankets, &c 7 8 4
  
  China and glass 3 6 7i
  
  Electro-plate and cutlery .... 5 5 2
  Ironmongery 6 1 10
  
  £94 10 0
  
  
  The following lists give detailed expenditure
  for the various rooms : -
  
  DINING-ROOM
  
  £ 8. d.
  Seamless tapestry carpet (12 ft. by
  
  9 ft.) 266
  
  Linoleum surround (say) 8 yds. at
  
  Is. ip 9 0
  
  2 pairs casement curtains with rod
  
  and fittings 17 6
  
  Qoth table-cover ....... 10 0
  
  Black curb fender ...,,,. 76
  
  
  36
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  £ 8. d.
  
  Set of fire-irons 4 6
  
  Coal-sooop 10 0
  
  Fumed oak sideboard 4 8 6
  
  Dining-table (3 ft. 6 in. by 6 ft.) ..250
  
  1 Elbow-chair with rush seat ... 1 2 6
  4 Small chairs with rush scat at
  
  13s. 9d. 2 15 0
  
  Oak side-table 17 6
  
  1 Lounge easy-chair 13 6
  
  Hearth-rug 8 3
  
  
  £18 5 3
  
  
  Dra wing-Room
  
  , . £ 8. d.
  
  Axrmnstor pile carpet (12 ft. by 9 ft.) 4 4 0
  Linoleum surround (say) 10 yds. at
  
  Is. l^d 11 3
  
  2 pairs of Mapleton damask curtains
  
  with rods and fittings .... 1 6 U
  
  Curb fender ... 76
  
  Set of fire-irons 4 6
  
  Brass coal-scoop 10 0
  
  2 " Neston " easy-chairs upholstered
  
  in tapestry at 22s. 6d 2 5 0
  
  1 " Neston " settee upholstered in
  
  tapestry 1 18 6
  
  1 Arm-chair with tapestry seat ..110
  
  2 Small chairs with tapestry seat at
  
  13s. 9d 17 6
  
  Inlaid mahogany cabinet 4 15 0
  
  Inlaid mahogany centre table . . . 1 12 6
  
  Inlaid mahogany occasional table . . 9 9
  
  Mahoganj' escritoire 2 5 0
  
  
  £22 17 6
  
  
  Bedroom
  
  £ 8. d.
  Felt carpet planned to room (say) 12
  
  yds. at 38. 9d. 2 5 0
  
  2 pairs cretonne casement curtains with
  
  rods and fittings 18 4
  
  Curb fender 7 6
  
  Set of fire-irons 4 6
  
  4 ft. 6 ins. Bedstead, white and brass .18 9
  
  Wire-woven mattress 10 6
  
  Sanitary pad 5 9
  
  Extra thick wool mattress .... 1 1 1 6
  
  Feather bolster 10 0
  
  2 Pillows at 6s. 9d. . . . [ [ . * 13 q
  Decorated white bedroom suite, com-
  prising dressing-chest with jewel
  drawers, double wash-stand, ward-
  robe, bevel plate glass mirror,
  pedestal cupboard, towel-horse,
  
  and 2 chairs . 10 5 0
  
  Double set toilet ware 13 6
  
  Easy-chair 12 9
  
  Bed furniture 12 6
  
  
  £20 19 1
  
  
  Servakt's Bedroom
  
  Linoleum for covering floor .... 99
  
  Bedside rug ^ 3 q
  
  2 ft. 6 in. iron bedstead and wire mat-
  tress, wool mattress, pad bolster,
  and pillow complete .... 1 7 9
  
  Japanned oak wash-stand .... 53
  
  Simple set of toilet ware 3 6
  
  Japanned oak chest of drawers with
  
  dressing-glass fixed 15 6
  
  Cane -seated chair 2 6
  
  Japanned oak towel-rail 19
  
  Fender * 3 6
  
  
  £4 3 3
  
  
  Bath-Room
  
  Covering floor with linoleimi . . .
  
  Cane-seated chair
  
  1 pair casement curtains with rod and
  
  fittings
  
  Bath-mat ....
  
  
  8. d.
  4 6
  3 6
  
  
  17 3
  
  
  Hall
  
  1 pair casement curtains with rod and
  
  fittings
  
  Fumed oak umbrella-stand .
  Fumed oak hat-rack ....
  Linoleum for covering floor (say)
  
  Black fender
  
  Fumed oak settee . .
  
  
  6
  
  0
  
  15
  
  0
  
  6
  
  6
  
  11
  
  3
  
  4
  
  6
  
  1
  
  0
  
  £3 4 3
  
  
  Kitchen
  
  
  Id.
  
  
  16| yds. linoleum at Is
  4 ft. kitchen table . . .
  2 Kitchen chairs at 2s. lOd
  Kitchen fender ....
  
  
  d.
  3
  6
  
  
  £2 0 11
  
  
  Linens, Blankets, &c.
  
  1 pair blankets (84 by 104 in.) .
  
  1 Under-blanket
  
  1 White quilt [ ]
  
  1 Down quilt
  
  2 pairs cotton sheets at 10s. 6d.
  2 pairs pillow-cases at 2s. 4d. .
  
  1 pair blankets for servant's bed .
  1 Under-blanket
  
  1 Coloured quilt
  
  2 pairs cotton sheets at 58. 1 Id.
  
  1 pair pillow-cases
  
  
  £ 8. d.
  
  17 9
  
  4 6
  
  12 9
  
  17 6
  
  1 1 0
  
  4 8
  
  8 11
  
  2 11
  
  3 11
  11 10
  
  1 11
  
  
  THE HOUSE
  
  
  37
  
  
  2 Damask table-cloths (2 J by 2 yds.; £ s. d.
  
  at 5s. Ud 11 10
  
  6 Napkins for 3 9
  
  6 Huckaback towels for 4 9
  
  3 Bath towels at Is. lid 3 4^
  
  6 Servants' towels at 6^d 3 5
  
  6 Tea-cloths for 2 11
  
  6 Glass-clotlis for 2 6
  
  6 Dusters for 2 0
  
  2 Kitchen table-cloths at Is. ll^d. , 3 11
  
  2 Roller towels at Is. l|d 2 3
  
  
  £7 8 4i
  
  
  Cutlery
  
  6 Table knives for
  
  6 Small knives for
  
  1 pair meat-carvers
  
  1 pair game-carvers
  
  1 Steel
  
  6 Electro-plated table forks for .
  
  6 Electro-plated dessert forks for .
  4 Electro-plated table spoons for .
  6 Electro-plated dessert spoons for
  6 Electro -plated tea spoonB for . . .
  
  2 Egg spoons
  
  1 Butter knife
  
  1 pair sugar tongs
  
  2 Electro-plated sauce ladles at 2s. 6d.
  
  1 Electro-plated cruet with mustard
  
  spoon
  
  2 Electro-plated salt spoons at 9d. .
  Electro -plated teapot
  
  
  6
  
  3
  
  5
  
  3
  
  4
  
  9
  
  4
  
  9
  
  2
  
  0
  
  11
  
  3
  
  8
  
  3
  
  7
  
  6
  
  8
  
  3
  
  5
  
  3
  
  1
  
  8
  
  2
  
  6
  
  2
  
  0
  
  5
  
  0
  
  13
  
  G
  
  1
  
  6
  
  15
  
  6
  
  £5 5 2
  
  
  China and Glass
  
  £ s. d.
  
  Dinner service for six persons . . 16 0
  Tea and breakfast service for six
  
  persons 120
  
  Service of glass for 6 persons, viz. : 6
  port glasses, 6 tumblers, 6 sherry
  
  glasses, 2 decanters complete . 9 3
  
  Water-bottles and glass for bedroom 1 5
  
  Water-bottles and glass for servant . 10
  
  China and glass jor kitchen use -
  
  6 Plates, assorted sizes .... 16
  
  1 Vegetable^ dish 2 3
  
  3 Dishes for 2 9
  
  1 Sauce boat 6
  
  2 Breakfast cups and saucers at
  
  5^d 11
  
  2 Plates at 3d 6
  
  1 Sugar basin 4
  
  I Milk jug 7
  
  1 Salt cellar 3^
  
  2 Tumblers 5
  
  1 Set of 3 jugs 13
  
  2 Pie dishes 16
  
  
  2 Pudding bowls
  
  1 Teapot 6d., 2 store jars for Is. 5d.
  1 Bread pan
  
  
  a. d.
  1 2
  1 11
  1 3
  
  
  £3 6 7J
  
  
  Ironmongery {Kitchen List)
  
  1 Bath (galvanised)
  
  1 Bowl (hand)
  
  1 Bread grater
  
  1 Cake tin
  
  1 Chopping board
  
  1 Clothes horse
  
  1 Coal scuttle
  
  1 Coffee canister
  
  1 Coffee pot
  
  1 Corkscrew
  
  1 Colander
  
  1 Set of dish mats
  
  3 Dish covers : 1 each, 3s. 6d., 63. 3d.,
  
  7s
  
  1 Dvist pan o . .
  
  1 Egg slice
  
  1 Egg whisk
  
  1 Fish kettle
  
  1 Fish slice
  
  2 Iron spoons for ........
  
  3 Tea spoons , .
  
  1 Set steps
  
  1 Slop-pail
  
  1 Tea canister
  
  1 Tea tray
  
  1 Tin-opener " . .
  
  1 Toasting fork
  
  1 Glass tub (pulp) .......
  
  1 Nutmeg grater
  
  1 Gravy strainer
  
  1 Housemaid's box
  
  1 Tin kettle
  
  1 Iron kettle .........
  
  1 Knife board
  
  1 Knife tray
  
  3 Knives and forks (table) ....
  
  1 Galvanised pail
  
  2 Flat irons for
  
  1 Flat iron stand
  
  1 Flour dredger
  
  1 Flotu" tub
  
  1 Frying pan
  
  1 Funnel
  
  1 Paste board .
  
  1 dozen patty pans .......
  
  1 Pepperbox
  
  1 Plate basket
  
  2 Plate leathers
  
  1 I^tchen poker
  
  1 Rolling pin
  
  1 Salt box
  
  3 Iron saucepans, 1 each. Is. 4d., Is. 9d.,
  
  2s. 9d
  
  
  ".
  
  d.
  
  2
  
  6
  
  1
  
  0
  
  7
  
  8
  
  1
  
  4
  
  5
  
  0
  
  1
  
  11
  
  1
  
  0
  
  1
  
  9
  
  6
  
  1
  
  0
  
  1
  
  11
  
  16
  
  9
  
  1
  
  0
  
  8
  
  6
  
  3
  
  3
  
  8
  
  6
  
  7
  
  7
  
  0
  
  3
  
  0
  
  1
  
  3
  
  2
  
  9
  
  6
  
  6
  
  2
  
  6
  
  2
  
  1
  
  2
  
  2
  
  9
  
  1
  
  2
  
  3
  
  0
  
  7
  
  1
  
  8
  
  2
  
  9
  
  10
  
  1
  
  6
  
  6
  
  6
  
  2
  
  9
  
  1
  
  0
  
  3
  
  2
  
  3
  
  4
  
  4
  
  3
  
  0
  
  2
  
  0
  
  9
  
  6
  
  1
  
  9
  
  6 10
  
  
  38
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  £ 8. d.
  
  
  1 Enamelled saucepan 1
  
  1 Set skewers
  
  1 Soap-dish
  
  1 Towel roller and brackets .... 1
  
  1 Wire sieve
  
  3 Wood spoons
  
  Brushes-
  
  1 Hair banister brush 1
  
  1 WTiisk brush 1
  
  1 Long hair broom 2
  
  1 Carpet broom 2
  
  1 Dusting brush 1
  
  1 Nail brush
  
  1 Scrubbing brush 1
  
  1 Bass scrubbing brush
  
  2 Plate brushes for 1
  
  1 Set shoe brushes 2
  
  1 Set stove brushes 2
  
  1 Sweep's brush
  
  
  £6 1 10
  
  
  £300 HOUSE
  Summary
  
  £ a. d.
  
  Hall 9 13 3
  
  Dining-room 55 4 0
  
  Drawing-room (with piano) . . . . 84 13 3
  
  Moming-room 18 14 11
  
  Best bedroom 32 16 8
  
  Spare bedi-oom 19 8 5
  
  2nd spare bedroom 14 17 11
  
  Servants' bedroom 9 13 0
  
  Kitchen 4 7 2^
  
  Bath-room 1 14 3
  
  Plate and cutlery 9 0 0
  
  Linen and blankets 17 18 5
  
  China and glass 8 0 0
  
  Ironmongery and extra fittings . . 10 0 0
  
  £296 1 3^
  
  This leaves a balance of £3, ISs. 8^d., wliich
  will go towards any extra expenditvu-e upon
  clocks, cushions, portidres, and fancy table-
  covers which have not been included in our
  lists.
  
  DETAILED LISTS
  
  
  Haxl
  
  £
  18 yds. stair and landing carpet at
  
  4fl 3
  
  2 doz. rods, eyes and pins
  
  Covering floor with linoleum (say) 12
  
  yds. at Is. 6d
  
  Hat"ack
  
  Fumed oak settle 1
  
  
  d.
  
  
  12
  
  0
  
  16
  
  0
  
  18
  
  0
  
  8
  
  6
  
  1
  
  0
  
  Fumed oak umbrella-stand ....
  
  Rug
  
  1 pair casement curtains with rod and
  
  fittings
  
  Fender
  
  
  £ s.
  1 8
  
  
  17 6
  
  
  £9 13 3
  
  
  DiNEsra-RooM
  
  £ s. d.
  Axminster pile carpet 12 ft. by 12 ft. .040
  Linoleum surround (say) 12 yds. at
  
  Is. lid. 13 6
  
  2 pairs casement ciu-tains with rod and
  
  fittings .136
  
  Table-cover 15 0
  
  Pierced steel fender 110
  
  Set of fire-irons 9 0
  
  Coal-scoop 110
  
  Mahogany sideboard 8 17 G
  
  Mahogany 2-tier serving-table ... 2 10 0
  
  Dining-table 4 12 6
  
  6 mahogany small chairs upholstered
  
  in morocco at 22s. 6d 6 15 0
  
  Easy -chair upholstered in tapestry .440
  Easy-chair upholstered in tapestry .350
  Mahogany occasional table . . . . Ill 6
  
  Mahogany escritoire 4 116
  
  Mahogany book-case 7 10 0
  
  £55 4 0
  
  
  MOBNINQ-ROOM
  
  £ a. d.
  Seamless tapestry square carpet 12 ft.
  
  by 9 ft 2 6 6
  
  Linoleum surround 9 0
  
  2 pairs curtains with rod and fittings . 17 6
  
  Ciirb fender 7 6
  
  Set of fire-irons 10 0
  
  Coal-scoop 5 0
  
  4 small rush-seated fumed oak chairs
  
  at 13s. 9d. each 2 15 0
  
  Fumed oak sideboard 4 8 6
  
  Easy-chair 150
  
  Hearth-rug 8 3
  
  Gate-leg table 2 0 0
  
  Sectional book -case 3 2 8
  
  £18 14 11
  
  
  Drawing-Room
  
  £ a. d.
  Axminster pile carpet 10 ft. 6 ins. by
  
  9 ft 4
  
  Felt surroimd (say) 12 yds. at Ss. 9d. . 2
  
  Pierced fender 1
  
  Set of fire-irons
  
  Brass coal-scoop
  
  2 pairs casement curtains with rod and
  
  fittings 13 6
  
  
  4
  
  0
  
  S
  
  0
  
  1
  
  0
  
  12
  
  0
  
  11
  
  0
  
  THE HOU^E
  
  
  39
  
  
  Inlaid mahogany Sheraton cabinet .
  Inlaid mahogany writing ....
  
  Piano 1.* '
  
  Piano-stool with velvet cushion . •
  Inlaid mahogany circular table . . •
  Settee upholstered in tapestry . • ■
  
  Easy-chair № ' . ' ' '
  
  1 Inlaid mahogany elbow-chair . . .
  4 Inlaid mahogany small chairs at
  
  223. 6d
  
  1 Inlaid mahogany occasional table .
  
  Hearth-rug
  
  Screen
  
  
  8 17
  
  G
  
  2 17
  
  6
  
  40 0
  
  0
  
  1 2
  
  6
  
  2 5
  
  0
  
  5 7
  
  6
  
  2 12
  
  0
  
  1 17
  
  6
  
  4 10
  
  0
  
  1 6
  
  9
  
  18
  
  0
  
  3 2
  
  6
  
  Kitchen
  
  Covering floor with linoleum
  4 ft. kitchen table ....
  2 Kitchen chairs at 6s. 6d. .
  1 Windsor chair ....
  1 Carpet deck-chair . . •
  
  Alarm clock
  
  Coal hod
  
  Strong shovel
  
  Kitchen poker ....
  Bug
  
  
  £84 13 3
  
  
  £ 8. d.
  
  
  5
  17
  13
  8
  6
  5
  2
  2
  1
  5
  
  
  0
  9
  0
  0
  6
  6
  2
  
  H
  
  6
  6
  
  
  £4 7 2*
  
  
  Bath-Room
  
  Covering floor with Unoleum . . •
  
  Cane-seated chair
  
  Glass with drawer for brush and comb
  
  Bath rack
  
  Bath mat
  
  
  10
  3
  
  11
  5
  3
  
  
  d.
  0
  6
  6
  6
  9
  
  
  £1 14 3
  
  Bedroom
  w 12 ft. . .
  
  £ 8. d.
  . 3 12 0
  
  Double set of toilet ware ....
  
  Easy-chair . 12
  
  Hearth-rug
  
  Occasional table •
  
  1 set of bed draperies to match curtains
  
  Oval Sheraton mirror
  
  Screen
  
  Linen basket
  
  £32
  
  
  Linoleum surround (say) 12 yds. at
  Is. Hd
  
  Curb fender
  
  Set of fire-irons
  
  2 pairs casement curtains with rod and
  fittings 1
  
  4 ft. 6 in. brass bedstead ^
  
  Wire-woven mattress
  
  Sanitary pad
  
  Hair mattress -
  
  Feather bolster
  
  2 Pillows • • ■
  
  Inlaid mahogany bedroom suite, com-
  prising : - Wardrobe, dressing-
  chest with glass, washstand fitted
  with cupboard, and towel -rail and
  two chairs 12
  
  
  7
  
  6
  
  4
  
  6
  
  0
  
  0
  
  5
  
  6
  
  10
  
  6
  
  5
  
  9
  
  3
  
  9
  
  10
  
  0
  
  18
  
  0
  
  Spare Bedroom
  
  Caledon carpet 12 ft. by 9 ft. . . .
  
  Linoleum surround (say) 10 yds. at
  
  Is. Id. •
  
  2 pairs Mapleton damask ciirtains with
  
  rod and fittings
  
  1 set of bed draperies to match . . .
  
  Fender
  
  Set of fire-irons
  
  3 ft. White and brass bedstead . . .
  
  Wire-woven mattress
  
  Sanitary pad
  
  Hair mattress
  
  Bolster
  
  Feather piUow
  
  White bedroom suite, comprising : -
  
  Wardrobe, dressing-chest, with
  glass, washstand fitted with towel -
  rail and 2 chairs
  
  Single set toilet ware
  
  Hearth-rug
  
  Easy-chair
  
  Occasional table
  
  Linen basket
  
  
  Second Spare Bedroom
  
  £
  
  Fumed oak bedstead with wire spring
  mattress 2
  
  Sanitary pad
  
  Hair mattress 1
  
  Bolster
  
  Feather pillow * ' *
  
  Fumed oak smte comprising : - 2 ft.
  6 ins. wardrobe, 2ft. 6 ins. dressing-
  table, washstand, and one chair .
  
  Oak shaving-stand
  
  Easy-chair
  
  Set of toilet ware •
  
  2 pairs casement cm-tains with rod and
  fittings
  
  Clothes-basket
  
  Linoleum to cover floor (12 by 9) . .
  
  2 Rugs at 73. 6d. each
  
  
  £
  
  a.
  
  d.
  
  2
  
  14
  
  0
  
  10
  
  10
  
  1
  
  0
  
  U
  
  17
  
  6
  
  7
  
  6
  
  4
  
  6
  
  1
  
  5
  
  0
  
  7
  
  9
  
  3
  
  9
  
  1
  
  7
  
  6
  
  6
  
  0
  
  9 0
  
  
  7
  
  le
  
  0
  
  7
  
  11
  
  8
  
  9
  
  12
  
  9
  
  9
  
  9
  
  5
  
  11
  
  £19
  
  8
  
  5
  
  8. d.
  
  4 9
  
  3 9
  
  7 6
  
  6 0
  
  9 0
  
  
  15 6
  
  
  40
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Servants' Bkdroom (2 7naid8)
  
  £ s. d.
  Covering floor with linoleum ... 99
  
  2 Bedside rugs GO
  
  Two 2 ft. 0 ins, iron bedsteads and
  wire mattresses, wool mattresses,
  pads, Ijolsters, and pillows com-
  plete at £1, 73. 9d. each ... 2 15 6
  2 Painted chests of drawers at £1,
  
  9s. 6d. each 2 19 0
  
  2 Painted washstands at 12s. 6d. . . 1 5 0
  2 Painted dressing-glasses at 4a. 6d.
  
  each 8 9
  
  2 Painted chairs at 4s. 3d. each . . 8 6
  
  Double set of toilet ware 7 0
  
  Fender 3 6
  
  1 pair casement curtains with rod and
  
  fittings 10 0
  
  £9 13 0
  
  
  (For Ironmongery, see p. 37.)
  
  (For China and Glass, see p. 37.)
  
  (For Electro-plate and Cutlery, see p. 37.)
  
  
  LETTING A FURNISHED HOUSE
  
  Speaking generally, it is unad\asable to let a
  well -furnished house. To do so is to place your
  precious household goods at the mercy of
  strangers, who will not appreciate them or care
  for them as you do. Dilapidations and break-
  ages of various kinds are bound to occur, and
  even if their money value is received, there
  are some things that cannot be replaced in the
  owner's estimation.
  
  Very often, however, a woman finds it ab-
  solutely necessary to let her house. She may
  be called abroad, and might not care to leave
  the house shut up or in charge of a caretaker.
  Again, the finances for the annual holiday might
  depend to a great extent upon her abiUty
  
  
  to let it. In these circumstances, therefore,
  she must take the utmost precautions to ensure
  that it is lot to careful tenants. Tlie house
  should bo put in the hands of a good agent,
  who will see that all the formalities in regard
  to suitable references from the prospective
  tenant are proceeded with, and who can make
  judicious inquiries apart from these references.
  
  The agent will charge a commission upon the
  amount received for rental, together with fees
  for drawing up agreement and taking inventory.
  An inventory has always to be taken of every
  piece of furniture, plate, and linen left in the
  house. Wliere the house is large it may some-
  times take a whole day to go over this carefully.
  The mistress of the houso should see that this
  important piece of work is properly done, draw-
  ing the agent's attention particularly to articles
  she wishes to be carefully noted.
  
  It is usual to leave a certain small supply
  of plate and linen ; but the bulk of this with
  other cherished articles should be locked care-
  fully away. A very large cupboard or a room,
  sometimes both, should be reserved for locking-
  up piorposes, and the agent should see that the
  doors of these are carefully sealed.
  
  If the furniture is very good, never let the
  house to people with young children, as these
  are often responsible for a great deal of damage.
  Dogs, if not under proper control, also often
  cause a large amount of wear and tear. It is
  as well to have a clause inserted in the agree-
  ment that no dogs must be kept without the
  landlord's consent. This consent shovild not,
  however, be unreasonably withheld. Many people
  would not dream of taking a house without
  taking their pets with them. Let it be impressed
  upon the tenants, therefore, that they will be
  held responsible for any additional wear end tear
  which the keeping of these pets might entail.
  
  Before letting the house it should be thor-
  oughly cleaned from cellar to attic, and the
  chimneys should be swept. The tenant should
  also leave it as clean in every way as when he
  (or she) took up the tenancy.
  
  
  QUARTER DAYS
  
  
  English
  
  Lady Day Mar. 25
  
  Midsummer June 24
  
  Michaelmas 1 Sep. 29
  
  Christmas Dec. 25
  
  
  Scotch
  
  Candlemas Feb. 2
  
  Whitsuntide May 15
  
  Lammas Aug. 1
  
  Martinmas Nov. 11
  
  
  Half-Quarter Days
  Feb. 8, May 9, Aug. 11, and Nov. 11.
  
  
  MISTRESS AND SERVANTS
  
  
  There is an old and very true saying that " knowledge is power." Nowhere does this maxim
  more fittingly apply than in the case of the woman who is thoroughly acquainted with every
  detail of the work of the home, and knows how the various domestic duties can be most efficiently
  and, at the same time, most expeditiously performed.
  
  Even to the woman who is so comfortably endowed with this world's goods that she can
  afford to maintain a staff of highly trained servants at liberal wages, a knowledge of house-
  wifery is an invaluable asset. Then hers must be the brain to supervise and direct the smooth
  running of the household machinery, to see that each servant performs conscientiously and efficiently
  the work allotted to her, that the whole establishment is maintained in that perfect working order
  which is a typical feature of the good housewife's regime.
  
  In this section each phase of the servant question is carefully considered. The duties of the
  mistre&s in regard to the treatment and management of servants and the proper organisation and
  supervision of their work are clearly outlined, as are also the duties of each servant in accordance
  with the number kept. Useful information is also included in regard to the engagement of servants,
  prevailing scale of wages, allowances and hoHdays.
  
  
  DUTIES OF THE MISTRESS
  
  Knowledge of Housewifery Advisable. - Like
  every other profession the profession of home-
  making reqtiires a certain amount of training
  and apprenticeship. It is quite a mistaken
  notion to think that housewifery comes in-
  stinctively and naturally to every woman, and
  that the woman who is unfitted for any other
  career in life can stay at home and " keep house."
  Domestic skill can oni^' be acquired by training.
  
  Whatever other calling a girl or woman may
  choose to select, be it ntu-sing, teacliing, medi-
  cine, art, or any other of the professions open to
  women, both time and money are expended in
  order to qualify her for her career. Why should
  housekeeping be left out when training in this
  is just as essential, seeing that the happiness and
  comfort of so many will depend upon her fulfilling
  her duties in an intelligent manner ? A woman
  who has no knowledge of the right way to
  manage a house has no more right to marry and
  be responsible for her husband's worldly goods
  than a man would have to accept a post the
  duties of which he was qiiite ignorant.
  
  A servant is quick to grasp the fact when her
  mistress is not versed in the arts of domestic
  science, and quicker still to take advantage of
  the ignorance thus displayed. She knows that
  there is no trained eye to detect flaws in her
  work ; that a room half dusted will seldom
  evoke a protest - a table carelessly or slovenly
  laid will as often as not pass unheeded. The
  mistress will be made to suffer in many little
  
  
  ways for her ignorance in respect to house-
  hold duties until by bitter experience she will
  awaken to the realisation of the fact that know-
  ledge is indeed power, and strive to learn what
  she should have known when she first began to
  reign as mistress of her own home.
  
  To the girl who is destined to begin married
  life in such humble circumstances that she will
  not be able to afford to keep even a general
  servant, ignorance of the rules of household
  work is apt to become something in the nature
  of a calamity. An untidy, ill-kept home, to
  say nothing of iU-cooked meals, is not conducive
  to the good temper or cheerfulness of a husband,
  more especially when he comes home after a
  hard day's work to find chaos reigning supreme,
  and that atmosphere of discomfort which few can
  analyse, and only those who have experienced
  it can understand. Indeed, it may be said that
  many a little " rift within the lute " has been
  occasioned by nothing less prosaic than the
  lamentable ignorance of her household duties
  displayed by the young wife.
  
  Training in housekeeping may be acquired in
  different ways. Firstly, a young girl may be
  trained in her own home under a good mother
  or guardian, and this is the best training of all.
  The training may be given gradually tlu"Oughout
  early life by allotting her little home duties to
  perform and teaching her the importance of the
  small things on which the comfort of the home
  depends. Or, if the greater part of the girl's
  life has been spent away from home in a boarding-
  school, then the training may be given in a more
  
  
  42
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  concentrated form when the school life is over.
  The practical nature of a real home training is
  of much greater value them any isolated courses
  of lessons, which may be taken later on in life.
  Training can also be swxjuired at one of the
  numerous schools of Domestic Science now
  estabUshed in vai'ious parts of the countrj%
  and if only sufficient time is allowed this is
  another excellent way of learning various
  branches of household routine. Finally, know-
  ledge can be gained by experience, but this un-
  fortunately may be at the expense of needless
  worry and anxiety not only to oneself, but to the
  other members of the household as well.
  
  Modern housekeeping requires an expert and
  not an ignoramus, and there should be nothing
  degrading about having to look to the ways of
  one's household. In fact, it will generally be
  found that the better educated and the more
  intelligent a woman is, the higher will be her
  housekeeping capacities. A sound knowledge
  of household details does not tie one more to
  one's own four walls, but it enables one to get
  the best results with the least expenditure of
  time and energy.
  
  Oversight and Inspection. - ^It is the duty of
  the mistress to see that her house is kept as
  spotlessly clean as it is possible to make it.
  Etich part must receive her attention, not only
  the principal rooms of the house, such as the
  sitting-rooms and bedrooms, but the kitchen,
  scullery and servants' bedrooms as well.
  
  She must also see that food is neither wasted
  nor thrown away. This will necessitate a daily
  visit to the larder (see p. 101), and even the
  scrap-pail and dust-bin must not escape her
  notice. Constant watchfulness in this respect
  is all-important, and if a mistress thorouglily
  understands what ought to be, she will detect
  waste from the beginning and be able to put it
  right.
  
  Sinks and lavatories must also be included in
  the tour of inspection, and if there is any un-
  pleasant smell it must be seen to at once.
  
  It will also be the duty of the mistress to see
  that the locking up of the house at night is
  attended to - that all low windows and doors
  of unused rooms are locked and back and front
  doors bolted. She must see that silver is care-
  fully put away, and that all fires are in a safe
  condition to leave.
  
  Order and Arrangement. - The wheels of
  domestic mewliinery will not run smoothly
  unless the mistress is orderly and methodical
  in all her arrangements.
  
  She must first of all have a clear idea of what
  she wishes to have done, and then make her
  plan accordingly, so apportioning the work
  among the different workers that for each detail
  some one person is responsible. There must
  be a fair division of labour, so that too much
  does not fall to one person and not su£Scient
  to auotlier.
  
  
  There must also be a proper time for every-
  tliing and everything should be done in its time.
  Punctuality and method will contribute essen-
  tially to the comfort of the home, and if house-
  hold work is systematised there will be little
  fear of friction or neglect.
  
  It is impossible to draw out a model plan which
  will suit the requirements of all households, so
  much depends upon the size of the house, the
  number of the family, the style of living, and the
  means at disposal ; it therefore rests with each
  mistress to devise her own particular working
  scheme. She may not always succeed in
  attaining her ideal, but she can at least have
  a certain standard at which she aims and
  which she does her best to attain. This amount
  of method must not prevent departure from
  routine should circumstances require it. It
  must always be remembered that rules are made
  for people not people for rules, and the mistake
  must not be made of subordinating everything
  to the keeping of the manage.
  
  If there is one thing worse than an uncom-
  fortable and disorderly home, it is the house-
  hold where order and system are carried to such
  a pitch that all those pleasantly diverting pur-
  suits, which tend at times to upset the general
  arrangement of things, are reduced to a nunimuin
  in order to avoid unnecessary work, to save the
  carpets, keep the furniture in good condition,
  or something else of a like nature. This is to
  make a desert of a home.
  
  Order and system shovild be silent factors
  which do not obtrude themselves, necessities
  which are best kept out of sight, but which act
  none the less as drops of oil on the machinery
  of domestic routine.
  
  Daily Duties. - ^The duties of the mistress of a
  household are very numerous and very varied,
  and it will be well for her to try to draw out a
  plan and time-table of her own daily routine.
  
  The extent of her duties will naturally depend
  upon her income, the staff of servants at her
  disposal, and the size of her household.
  
  To house the members of her household in
  comfort and health, to feed them properly and
  nurse them in sickness, to keep household
  accounts, to engage servants and allot to tach
  their proper share of work, and to do the work
  herself when occeision requires, are amorig a
  few of the duties which ^v^ll rest upon her
  shoulders.
  
  Details of the variovis branches of work for
  which she will be responsible will bo found
  under their respective headings, such as The
  House, The Table, Nursing, &c., and it is hoped
  that the instructions there given will prove
  helpful to the woman who desires to be a real
  home-maker.
  
  The Duty of Cheerfulness. - Cheerfulness is one
  of the most valuable of possessions ; it is really
  the sunshine of life, the promoter of health and
  happiness. To be able to keep up the spirits
  
  
  MISTRESS AND SERVANTS
  
  
  43
  
  
  of those around us not only adds to the bright-
  ness of the home, but helps to make all duties
  comparatively light and easy. It is a woman's
  duty to make the life of the home as happy and
  gay as possible, and however depressed she may
  sometimes feel she ought to struggle against the
  feeUng and not damp the spirits of those around
  her.
  
  No one can be more trying than the person
  who continually gives way to low spirits, going
  about with a martyr -like expression, and making
  a habit of airing her grievances at every meal
  or family gathering. Such a person is a constant
  source of irritation to the other members of the
  household.
  
  Unfortunately, it is often upon the home-
  loving woman that the little worries, the small
  contretemps of daily life weigh most heavily.
  She takes it too much to heart if her house is
  not so spotlessly clean as she would like, or if
  her well -planned arrangements have been upset,
  and she finds it difficult to look at things from a
  right perspective.
  
  It requires some strength of will to grapple
  against this spirit of worrpng and getting
  depressed, but the home-maker ought to think
  of others before herself and do her utmost to
  keep these Uttle troubles in the background.
  
  Health and happiness are a thousand times
  more important than all the spotless homes in
  the world, and to worry over every speck of dust,
  over every broken dish, or such-Uke trifles will
  only result in greater miseries, broken-down
  nerves, and prematiu-e wrinkles and old age.
  
  Home Touches. - ^The duties of the mistress
  are not finished when the routine of household
  work is set agoing and cleanliness and order
  havo been established. The little finishing
  touches, the smal^ elegances, the tasteful
  arrangement, the special provision made for
  individual comfort must come from her or be
  wanting altogether. She must endeavovu" to
  make the rooms as pretty as possible and give
  to them an air of repose and restfulness. Who
  does not know the difference between a room
  that is merely kept in order by a servant and
  one in which the lady of the house takes an
  interest as weU. It is perhaps attention to the
  small tilings of the house that has the most to
  do with the comfort of it, and it is just these
  minor details that require the most thought, as
  they are outside the ordinary routine. If they
  are neglected or forgotten all the cosiness, all
  the home feeling and soothing influence will be
  gone and bare utility alone will remain.
  
  The true home-maker is also one who has the
  intuitive power of divining the tastes and feelings
  of others and who is ever ready to minister to
  their needs. With a ready tact she will put
  herself in the place of those around her, will be
  able to perceive their unspoken worries and
  disappointments, and sympathise with them
  ^vithout remark. She will even be able when
  
  
  occasion arises to shield them from unkindly
  notice or an ungenerous remark. Tact of this
  kind is perhaps innate, and yet much of it may
  be acquired by observation and kindly feeling.
  
  Women are the real home-makers, and it rests
  with them to make the four walls in which they
  live something more than a mere dwelling.
  
  Happy is the woman who can so surround her
  own fireside with the true spirit of home, as to
  make it the spot where the brightest and most
  desirable of everything is to be found, a harbour
  from all outside cares and worries ; she will find
  that not alone to herself, but to those around
  her as well, it has become the best place in the
  world.
  
  Duty towards Herself. - Last but not least, it
  is the duty of the mistress to take care of herself
  and attend to her health. However busy she
  may be, she ought to contrive to have a period
  of leisure and to be out of doors for some time
  every day. Self-sacrifice in the cause of duty
  may become almost a fetich with many women.
  No woman, however, is justified in making
  herself a domestic drudge. She confers no benefit
  upon any one by being a slave to her family and
  to her home. The best house-mistress is un-
  doubtedly the one who allows herself time for
  both relaxation and diversion, realising that with-
  out it not only her health, but also her nerves
  and her temper would suffer in the long run.
  
  The head of the house must also find time for
  her own toilet and make the best of her personal
  appearance. There is no occasion for her to
  wear costly apparel tinless she can afford it,
  but she must always be neat and wear what
  suits her and looks attractive. A lady cannot
  expect servants to look up to her and pay
  attention to their dress if she herself goes about
  in slovenly attire ; in this, as in everything else,
  she must be the example to be copied.
  
  Beyond the Home. - We often hear it said that
  if a woman does her duty in her own home this
  is all that can be expected of her. But this is
  a very narrow view to take of life, and such a
  limited existence is bad not only for the woman
  herself, but for the other members of her house-
  hold as well. In fact, the reason that so many
  heads of famiUes break down in health is because
  they wrap themselves up too much in the cares
  of their own household and worry so much over
  every trifle that it ends in their requiring a rest
  cure or something of the kind.
  
  A woman ought, as a responsible member of
  society, to use her powers to help and encoxu-age
  those beyond the borders of her own home.
  If she did this, even to a small extent, she
  would find that the strain of constantly thinking
  of household affairs was very much relieved,
  and that she gained strength for renewed effort.
  
  Then there are social duties to perform -
  the paying of calls, the giving of entertainments,
  the cultivation of friends, &c., and these are
  claims which cannot be neglected. If we shut
  
  
  44
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  ourselves up from our friends and live entirely
  within our o^m small circle we very soon become
  narrow-minded and end in being forgotten.
  
  ENGAGING SERVANTS
  
  There are several different ways of obtaining
  servants. If one can be heard of by recom-
  mendation, either tlirough friends or through a
  servant in one's employment, tliis is certainly the
  most satisfactory and easiest way, but it is only
  occasionally that one is favoured by such a
  chance.
  
  Then there is the registry oflBce, which may or
  may not be good. While there are offices of
  high standing, where business is done in an
  honest and upright manner, there are many
  others whose deaUngs can by no means be
  rehed upon. As a rule, city registry offices
  are of little use for supplying servants for the
  ordinary middle -class household, as they cater
  more for hotels and other large estabhshments ;
  and while they may have on their boolcs a long
  list of butlers, cooks, lady's-maids, parlour-
  maids, and other specialists in domestic service,
  the cook-general, house-parlourmaid, or general
  rarely seeks for a situation through that channel.
  A good suburban registry office may, on the
  other hand, render valuable assistance, especially
  if a girl belonging to a special district is required.
  
  A well-drawn-up advertisement inserted either
  in a local paper or in a good general newspaper
  with a wide circulation is one of the best means,
  and this method often enables one to have a
  better choice. The wording of the advertise-
  ment must be concise, and at the same time it
  must neither be vague nor misleading. A few
  particulars as to requirements should be given,
  and it should be stated whether the applicant
  is to write or to apply in person and at what
  hour. The following specimen advertisements
  may serve as a guide to those who are inex-
  perienced in this work : -
  
  General Servant. - For small flat, three in
  family, must understand plain cooking, no
  washing. Wages £16-£18. Good health and
  references essential. Apply after 4 p.m.
  
  Cook General. - Wanted immediately, small
  house, four in family. Wages £18-£20. Late
  dinner. Age 25-30. Apply after 7 p.m.
  
  Parlour- maid. - Wanted 1st July, good at silver
  and needlework, a little housework. Age 22-28.
  Wages £20-£25. Three servants. Apply
  
  Young girls trained in domestic work can also
  be obtained from charitable institutions, but
  this plan should not be resorted to unless one
  is prepared to devote a considerable amount of
  time and trouble to their training. Although the
  girls have had training of a kind in their institu-
  tion, they are as a rule quite unaccustomed to
  the nicfties of a private house, and are apt to
  be very uncouth in their manners. There is
  difficulty, too, in getting other servants to take
  
  
  kindly to a girl of this class, and not infrequently
  it proves an unhappy arrangement on both sides.
  
  It is always wise to have a personal interview
  with a ser\'ant before engaging her. This not
  only helps tlio mistress to judge of her character
  by her appearance, but it also enables the girl
  to see the house to which she may be asked to
  come, and gives her a better idea of the work
  that will be expected of her.
  
  The mistress should begin the interview by
  asking the maid some questions as to what
  experience she h£is had, how long she remained
  in her last place, and what reason she had for
  leaving it - what wage she had been hav-ing, and
  what she would now expect. Some inquiries
  should be made regarding the girl's family and
  also whether she has good health or not. Atten-
  tion should also be paid to her personal appear-
  ance, whether she is clean and tidy in her
  person, neatly and suitably dressed, and of a
  prepossessing manner. If the information thus
  obtained is in the main satisfactory, the mistress
  should next give an outline of the duties she
  would expect her to perform, and if after a little
  mutual conversation the arrangement seems
  hkely to suit both parties, details may be
  entered into a little more fully.
  
  A servant must never be engaged under false
  pretences, and it is never a wise plan to make
  things appear better than they really are. It is
  better policy to make it quite clear what will be
  expected in the way of work, so that there may
  be no chance of futiore misunderstanding.
  
  Some information should be given as regards
  the habits and customs of the family, the number
  of servants kept, and the amount of entertaining
  likely to be done. Tlie mistress should also
  state her wishes as regards dress, caps, aprons,
  &c., and whether she will allow visitors or not.
  The question of wages must also be discussed
  and a clear statement must be given as to what
  time will be allowed off and what holiday will
  be given, also what notice must be given
  should either party wish to terminate the
  engagement. If a cook is being engaged, there
  should be a clear understanding about perquisites.
  
  The first conversation in a matter of this kind
  counts for a great deal, and there is nothing like
  making everything clear at the outset.
  
  If a maid has been asked to come some dis-
  tance in order to have this interview, it is usual
  to pay her expenses.
  
  With regard to references, a personal inter-
  view with the maid's last employer should bo
  obtained if possible. There are a few occasions
  on which a written character may be safely
  accepted, but these should be the exception
  and not the rule, and written particulars should
  be accepted with a certain amount of caution.
  Besides, ladies will always give more information
  verbally than they will by writing, and there is
  always something to be gained by seeing the
  house in which the girl has been previously
  
  
  MISTRESS AND SERVANTS
  
  
  45
  
  
  employed, as this also serves as an index as to
  what has been expected of her in the way of
  service. In fact, it is never a very wise plan
  to take a servant who has been employed in
  a house out of one's own rank in life. For
  instance, a servant who has been employed by
  a lodging-house keeper, by small trades-people,
  or even in an hotel is not suitable for private
  service with gentlefolk, as she would be unac-
  customed to the ways of refined people. Each
  branch of service has its own standard, and
  what may be ideal in one Une of life, falls very
  far below the ideal in another.
  
  During the above interview the mistress should
  ascertain the reasons for the maid leaving her
  place and also her capacity for work. She must
  also make inquiries as to her moral character,
  whether she is clean, neat, good-tempered, also
  whether she has good health and is an early riser.
  
  If the answers to such inquiries prove to be
  satisfactory and the mistress considers the girl
  likely to suit her requirements, the next step
  is to write to the maid or to ask for another in-
  terview in order to fix the date of arrival, and
  to make the final terms of engagement. In
  Scotland and the North there is an old-fashioned
  custom of giving arles or earnest money as a
  token of engagement. The sum of 2s. or 2s. 6d.
  is given to the maid as seahng the contract.
  But this is merely an old custom and not a
  necessity.
  
  The usual custom of hiring a servant is from
  month to month ; this means that they are paid
  once a month and the engagement can be
  terminated on a month's notice. (See Law of
  Master and Servant, p. 377.)
  
  Character-giving. - Although a mistress cannot
  be compelled to give her servant a character, it
  is customary to do so when a girl is leaving her
  employment. The fact of refusing to grant a
  reference would almost imply inability to testify
  to any good qualities in the girl's character,
  and this would be most prejudicial to her future
  career.
  
  A character must not, however, be given
  lightly ; it is essential to state only what is true.
  There must be no exaggeration either of the good
  or of the bad points, and the mistress in search
  of a maid must be considered as much as the
  maid herself.
  
  A mistress has no right to hide some serious
  fault from a desire to give the girl a better
  chance, but she must be absolutely frank and
  impartial in every way. (See Law of Master and
  Servant, p. 377.)
  
  WAGES, ALLOWANCES, AND HOUDAYS
  
  Wages. - The wages of an indoor servant
  should be paid monthly, dating from the day
  the maid enters your service. Or, for con-
  venience sake, where there are several servants,
  a fixed date may be chosen, say the 1st of the
  month as general pay-day. In this case, the
  
  
  odd days when a girl arrives would have to be
  paid for separately. Wages must always be paid
  regularly, and under no circumstances should
  a servant be obhged to wait for her money.
  
  The amount payable as wages varies very
  much in different localities, and one has to
  conform very much to custom in a thing of
  this kind. The wages in town are usually
  higher than those paid in the country.
  
  The following table may serve as an approxi-
  mate guide as to what is usually paid : -
  
  Butler £45- £90
  
  
  Housekeeper
  
  Cook .
  
  Cook-general
  
  Parlour-maid
  
  Housemaid .
  
  House-Parlour-maid
  
  Kitchen-maid
  
  Scullery-maid. .
  
  General Servant .
  
  Lady's-maid
  
  Footman
  
  Valet .
  
  Tweeney
  
  Hall Boy .
  
  
  30- 80
  20- 40
  18- 25
  16- 25
  16- 20
  15- 25
  12- 20
  
  8- 14
  10- 25
  25- 50
  20- 30
  30- 50
  10- 16
  
  9- 12
  
  
  Licences. - An annual Hcence is required for
  each man-servant in addition to wages (see
  p. 384).
  
  Board Wages. - When servants are left in
  charge of a house during the absence of the
  family, or if they are sent away temporarily for
  the same reason, it is usual to put them on board
  wages. This means that in addition to their
  regular wage they are paid a sum ranging from
  7s. 6d. to 123. 6d. for a woman-servant, and from
  12s. to 15s. for a man-servant per week as food
  money. The amount varies according to the
  style of Uving, and the district in which they
  are Uving. Wlien several servants are left
  it is very usual for them to club together and
  for one, generally the cook, to do the catering ;
  but this is a matter of arrangement amongst
  themselves. If they are obhged to find their
  own accommodation as well as board, an extra
  allowance should be paid for lodging or the fare
  paid to their own homes.
  
  Food Allowances. - In a small household where
  only one or two servants are kept it is not
  usual to have food allowances. In fact, the
  less difference there is made between the meals
  of the family and those of the servants the better.
  
  When there are several servants it is very
  customary to make an allowance of such articles
  as tea, butter, and sugar, but here, again, unless
  there is a large estabhshment it is seldom wise
  to make a difference in the quaUty of these
  commodities, unless it be tea, where a special
  brand such as China tea is frequently used for
  the dining-room and another, better liked by
  the domestics, is given for kitchen use. Other-
  wise to give an inferior quality of anything to
  the servants only leads to discontent, and. the
  sa\'ing of expense is scarcely noticeable.
  
  
  46
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  The usual allowances for tea, butter, and sugar
  are the following : - J lb. tea, i lb. butter, and
  1 lb. sugar per week for each servant.
  
  As regards the different meals, the following
  is a very usual rate of allowances : -
  
  Breakfast. - Tea, bread and butter and por-
  ridge (if wished) with some little addition, such
  as dried fish, egg, or boiled bacon. There are
  some houses whore this addition is not granted,
  but this is poor fare when we consider that a
  girl is expected to do a morning's work on the
  strength of this early meal.
  
  Lunch. - This is not a recognised meal, but
  when breakfast is taken very early, a little
  bread and butter, with a cup of milk or a cup of
  cocoa, should not be denied, especially as some
  girls are unable to take much breakfast.
  
  Dinner. - Tliis meal is usually the same as the
  dining-room lunch or early dinner, and consists
  of moat with at least one vegetable, and pudding,
  or soup and cold meat with a little cheese or
  stewed fruit.
  
  Tea. - Bread and butter with a little jam or
  dripping cake in addition to tea.
  
  Sapper. - Cocoa or coffee with bread and butter
  and cheese, or the remains of any salad, savoury,
  or simple pudding left from dinner. Meat is
  never given unless there are men-servants, but
  a basin of soup may sometimes take the place
  of the cocoa or coffee.
  
  Laondry Allowance. - If the washing is not
  done at home, servants are usually allowed from
  Is. to Is. 6d. for their laundry bill ; if the lesser
  sum, some of the smaller articles would require
  to be washed by themselves.
  
  Holidays and Time Off Duty. - There is no hard-
  and-fast rule as regards this, and it is best for
  each mistress to arrange the naatter with her
  maids. The usual allowance is an evening or
  afternoon once a week with an afternoon and
  evening on alternate Sundays ; while a fort-
  night's holiday in the year is very general.
  
  TREATMENT OF SERVANTS
  
  It is most important that when a new servant
  arrives, the house, or her department of it at
  least, should bo in good order. It is very
  disheartening to have to commence by cleaning
  out cupboards and clearing away some one
  else's disorder before any good work can be
  started.
  
  In small houses the mistress should take the
  maid round and show her where her work
  will be. and whore she will find the necessary
  implements to perform it. A list of her duties
  should be written on a card and hung in some
  convenient place, such as the kitchen or pantry,
  and it will be just aa well to have the time off
  duty stated on the same card. The details of
  the m:"id'8 work should be given her by degrees.
  There is no use confusing the girl's mind by
  telling her too much at once; the necessary
  
  
  instructions for the first day^s work will be
  quite sufficient to begin with. For the first few
  days a Uttle patience and forbearance will be
  necessary until the girl learns the ways of the
  household and the wishes of her employer, and
  allowance must be made if everything is not
  done exactly as one would wish.
  
  Then, lat"r on, though a mistress cannot ex-
  pect perfection, it is her duty to see that the
  work is properly and regularly done, and if
  anything is wrong, to speak about it at once
  and not allow it to shp. This should always
  be done in a kindly spirit and without any
  show of temper. In fact, if she is very much
  annoyed about anything, it is much better to
  wait until the first feeling of vexation has passed
  over and she is able to speak calmly and firmly
  without showing unnecessary vexation.
  
  A servant should never be corrected before
  a third person, neither should a message of re-
  primand be sent through a child or a fellow-
  servant.
  
  Then, again, it is a bad plan to be constantly
  going after a servant and doing oneself any
  work that may have been slurred over or omitted.
  Tliis is fi-equently done to save oneself the
  trouble of speaking, but it will not make a
  capable nor a reliable maid. A girl ought to
  be given a reasonable amount of work to do
  and then held responsible for its fulfilment ;
  if it is found to be more than she can properly
  do it is much wiser to relieve her of some of it
  than to have the constant feeling of dissatis-
  faction.
  
  Above all things, a mistress must make an
  effort to be absolutely fair and consistent, and
  there should be nothing underhand in her deal-
  ings. By these means she will have a bettor
  chance of obtaining faithful service. A good
  servant likes to feel that there is a firm hand
  over her, and that the mistress notices whether
  her work is well or badly done.
  
  While reproof should be given when necessary,
  praise must not be withheld when work is well
  done. A word of commendation is very wel-
  come to all of us. To those who clean oufrooms,
  cook our food, brush our boots, &c., we cannot
  be too grateful, as, at the best, it is monotonuiis
  work, and one's maids are certainly due more
  consideration than is frequently given. They
  are not aU demons trjnng to " do us " at every
  turn, but human, often very human, and they
  should certainly be treated reasonably and their
  rights respected.
  
  As we exact and expect civility and courtesy
  from our maids it is only fair that we should
  render them the same. A fear of familiarity
  should never be an excuse for a curt answer, nor
  justify the omission of " please " from oui'
  requests, nor a word of thanks for any service
  rendered. Neither should we be reluctant to
  wish them the common salutations of " good
  morning " and " good night."
  
  
  MISTRESS AND SERVANTS
  
  
  47
  
  
  Servants who are treated with this courtesy
  of manner will, as a rule, like their place and try
  to render faithful service.
  
  It is also fitting that well-perfoi-med duties
  which tend to make the home happy and com-
  fortable should be rewarded by Utile kind-
  nesses- a gift now and then in acknowledgment
  of some special service or at a special season,
  such as Christmas or on return from a holiday,
  or an occasional hoUday or treat. A httle
  encouragement of this kind goes a long way
  towards making the drudgery of housework
  pleasant and easy.
  
  One should not be backward either in raising
  the wages of a girl who has worked well. If she
  has been in our service for a year or eighteen
  months, she is worth more than when she first
  came, and the rise will be appreciated so much
  more if it is given unsought. Then when a gift
  is given, let it be something that shows a httle
  kindly thought - a length of print, a mushn
  apron, or a pair of stockings are very useful and
  sensible, but they are not pretty, and every
  girl who is earning a fair wage ought to be able
  to afford these necessaries. How much nicer
  would be a Uttle handbag and ptirse, a pretty
  work-basket, a set of toilet brushes in a case,
  or sometMng which she would not Ukely buy
  herself, wliich would show the friendly thought
  and serve as a httle keepsake.
  
  There is much said nowadays about the dis-
  like of the lower classes for domestic service.
  One reason to account for this is the increased
  education which they receive in the elementary
  schools. This naturally creates a spirit of
  independence and a wish to rise in the social
  scale, which is not altogether unworthy. An
  employer, to be successful, must therefore take
  this new spirit into consideration and make
  allowances for it by respecting the rights of those
  who serve. Many mistresses fail to move with
  the times, and cannot see that the requirements
  of the working-classes are altering, and that
  more hberty and more wages is demanded.
  
  Fortunately, much is being done to raise
  domestic service to a higher level, and it de-
  pends very much upon the employers whether
  these efforts succeed or not. If the mistress
  herself despises household work, and allows it
  to be seen that she looks down upon those who
  do it, it will not be surprising if her domestics
  cultivate the same ideas. On the contrary,
  she ought to be able when necessary to take part
  in the household work without in any Way losing
  her dignity.
  
  A lack of leisure and want of privacy are other
  reasons for making domestic service unpopular.
  It frequently happens that a maid has no time
  she can call her own, and that she is continually
  under the eye of her employer. Now although
  there is no hmit regarding the working hours
  of a servant, beyond the fact that she must be
  allowed a sufficient time to sleep, this does not
  
  
  entitle us to demand service without relaxation.
  A certain amount of leisure must be granted
  and then strictly adhered to. An effort, too,
  should be made to make this leisure time happy
  by letting servants have a comfortable place to sit
  in. Often the only means of freedom from work
  is to go out of the house, no matter what the
  weather is hke. A few boolis or magazines or
  even the daily paper sometimes might be passed
  on to the kitchen with advantage.
  
  Then a certain amo\int of privacy is due,
  especially at meal times. Servants have a right
  to take their meals free from interruption, and
  they should not be called away if it can possibly
  be avoided. Although a mistress should feel
  free to enter her kitchen at any time, she ought
  to choose her times for doing so and not be con-
  tinually passing in and out. -
  
  Allowing a servant her independence does not
  prevent a mistress from taking a kindly interest
  in her affairs, and she must remember, too, that
  from the time the girl enters her house until the
  hour she leaves it, she is morally, although not
  legally, her guardian. It is an exception when a
  girl resents being spoken to as a fellow-woman,
  and yet some mistresses hesitate to do this
  and thus fail to win respect and affection.
  Servants should be encouraged to tell their little
  ailments, and to say at once when they are not
  feehng well. It should be seen that they go
  to bed in good time and that they take proper
  and sufficient food.
  
  It is especially necessary in the case of a
  young servant to exercise this supervision, and
  particularly so if she has been brought a long
  way from her own home and her own people.
  Then it will be the duty of the mistress to ascer-
  tain where she is going to spend her time off.
  In fact an " evening out " should scarcely be
  granted unless she has friends to go to or can
  go out with a fellow-servant. An effort should
  rather be made to let her go out during the day
  until she has made the acquaintance of some
  respectable girls with whom she can be trusted.
  
  A word might be said here about servants'
  bedrooms. The places in which some maids
  are asked to sleep are a disgrace to civilisa-
  tion, and not infrequently it is in the houses of
  the wealthy that the worst accommodation is
  found - underground bedrooms which, besides
  being dark and airless, are sometimes damp eind
  insanitary as well. For her own sake as well
  as theirs a mistress should see that her maids
  are provided with proper sleeping quarters, and
  each servant mtist have her own bed, a good
  mattress, and sufficient covering. The room
  itself should be hght and airy, and it must be
  cleaned and attended to in the same way as the
  other rooms of the house. A servant herself
  is not always fastidious and particular about
  her room, and will sometimes be lax as regards
  the cleaning of it, but none the less we must
  see that sufficient tirne is given to clean it and
  
  
  48
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  that our wishes in this respect are carried out.
  There is no reason either why the servants' bed-
  room should be the only ugly room in the house -
  a place to hang useless pictures and store un-
  sightlj' pieces of furniture. A pretty wall-paper
  or, better still, a washable distemper of a nice
  colour, a nice clean coverlet on the beds, tidy
  furniture, &c., is a training in itself and helps
  to increase the girl's seK -respect.
  
  And, finally, let us treat our servants with a
  spirit of trust and confidence, and we shall
  seldom have reason to regret it. For instance, a
  too strict locking up of daily necessaries is not
  always a good plan, as it shows a lack of con-
  fidence which a good servant will often resent,
  while a dishonest one will find a way of being
  dishonest whatever precautions we may take,
  and she is better out of the house. Besides,
  for one's own sake, it is bad to live in an atmos-
  phere of suspicion and watchfulness. Human
  nature is the same all round ; the best in us
  responds to trust, and the worst rises to the sur-
  fewje if we are constantly being rubbed the
  wrong way. Servants, like other people, would
  often do better if they were trusted more.
  
  DUTIES OF SERVANTS
  
  In drawing up a scheme of servants' duties
  it is not possible to make a plan wliich wiU
  suit all requirements, as every household has
  its own individual arrangements and no two
  are exactly ahke. All that can be done is to
  furnish a broad outline of the work which
  requires to be done, and the following para-
  graphs must be looked upon as suggestive only.
  It is to be hoped that they will serve as a guide
  to the inexperienced and help them with their
  manage until they have gained sufficient know-
  ledge to make their own plan.
  
  The amount of work to be done before break-
  feist by the different maids must depend upon
  the hour of that meal, and if before 8.30 or
  9 o'clock some of the duties put down in the
  following lists must be delayed until later in
  the morning.
  
  There has been little or no provision made for
  home washing, but where this is undertaken it
  must be looked upon as the special work of the
  day and time given for it in accordance with the
  amount to be done.
  
  The exact time for doing the various pieces
  of work has not been stated, because, as a rule,
  it is a bad plan to tie a worker down in this
  way and to say that a certain piece of work has
  to take a certain time, and so on ; it makes
  her grow into a sort of working machine, and
  takes away from her all responsibility.
  
  If the servant is active she has no inducement
  to work quickly if she finds that her spare
  moments are just filled up with more work, and,
  on the othor hand, if she is slow it is very dis-
  couraging to find that her work is never finished
  at the time oxi)ected.
  
  
  The Cook. - The cook, as her name impUes,
  is the one who prepares and cooks the food of
  the household. She is the chief servant in the
  kitchen, where she reigns supreme.
  
  There are different grades of cooks. First we
  have the Professed Cook, who is only found in
  lajge estabUshments. In former years a chef
  or man cook frequently filled this post, but
  women cooks have now come more to the fore,
  and a chef is rarely employed in a private
  manage. Tlie professed cook has always one
  or two maids under her - (kitchen-maid and
  scullery-maid) - to whom she assigns the cleaning
  of the kitchen premises, the preparation, and
  possibly the cooking of vegetables, the cooking
  and serving of servants' meals and also nursery
  meals if there are such, while she devotes herself
  to the higher branches of cookery only, assists
  the mistress in drawing up the necessary menus,
  and orders the stores required for her department.
  She does no cleaning nor housework, but is
  waited on by her underUngs.
  
  Then we have the Good Plain Cook, who in
  large households, where there are a number of
  meals to be served, will undertake all the cooking
  that is required and the cleaning of the kitchen
  and kitchen premises. Sometimes she will have
  the help of a charwoman once a week to do the
  heavy cleaning or scrubbing, or that of a
  " tweeney," a young girl who divides her time
  between the house and the kitchen, working
  generally londer the housemaid in the morning
  and under the cook from lunch time onwards.
  She may or may not undertake the cleaning of
  her own bedroom, but beyond that will do no
  work in other parts of the house.
  
  And finally we have the Cook-General, who is
  usually found in middle-class households, where
  only two or three servants are kept. Her
  duties extend somewhat beyond the kitchen.
  She is expected to take some share in house-
  work proper, such as the cleaning of the dining-
  room or library, the cleaning of the front hall,
  door-step, and brasses, and to give some assist-
  ance to the housemaid.
  
  Qualifications Necessary. - There are certain
  quaUties necessary to the making of a good
  cook, whatever her grade may be. She must
  first of all have some knowledge of cookery
  more or less extensive according to what is
  required of her. She should at least know
  thoroughly what she professes, and if it be only
  the simplest cookery, it must be good of its kind,
  palatable, and nicely served. She must also be
  punctual in all her duties, and especially so in
  the serving of meals. There is nothing which
  upsets the ways of a household so much £is having
  meals served at uncertain hours, and for this
  the cook is usually responsible.
  
  It is edso important that a cook be clean and
  tidy in her work. All the kitchen premises and
  utensils should be kept spotlessly clean, and
  while cooking is going on there should be tidy-
  
  
  MISTRESS AND SERVANTS
  
  
  49
  
  
  ing up and clearing away at the same time.
  An untidy and littered kitchen is very dispirit-
  ing for other servants, even if the cook herself
  does not mind the disorder. No good work
  can be done in a muddle ; in fact, the best cooks
  make the least mess and use the fewest utensils.
  The kitchen should be tidied up after every
  meal and made to look as bright and comfort-
  able as possible, especially in the afternoon
  when the heavy part of the day's work is usually
  over.
  
  A cook should also be an early riser. With her
  rests the lighting of the kitchen fire, upon which
  the hot-water supply for early morning baths,
  &c., depends, not to speak of the cooking of the
  breakfast. The amount of actual work done
  before breakfast will naturally depend upon the
  hour at which the meal is served, but unless
  an early start is made the cooking of the break-
  fast will be hurried and unsatisfactory, the
  water will only be tepid, and the rest of the work
  will be behindhand all day. The other servants,
  too, look to the cook as an example of what is
  required in this respect, and if she rises late
  the others wiU doubtless follow her lead.
  
  Method and forethought are also valuable
  quahties for a cook to possess, as by their practice
  the labours of the day can often be considerably
  lightened. In cooking so many little things
  can be prepared in advance, and if the bill of
  faxe is known a day beforehand one day's work
  can often be fitted in with another's. Then,
  when it comes to the actual cooldng of the meal,
  the cook must consider carefully what dish
  requires the longest time, and so arrange that
  everything is ready at the hour appointed.
  Forethought, too, in the ordering of stores and
  provisions may save many a worry and bustle
  at the last minute. Then, again, in the matter
  of breakfast it is often possible to prepare what
  has to be cooked the night before, so that if
  anything should happen in the morning to make
  her a httle late, the first meal may still be
  prepared with a calm mind.
  
  And last, but not least, a cook ought to have
  consideration for her fellow-servants, and al-
  though the kitchen is her domain, there is no
  reason why it should ever be a place where
  others are afraid to enter, and where she acts as
  tyrant. On the contrary, she should do her
  best to make the place cosy and comfortable
  for them, as it is often their only resting-place
  when they have a Uttle leisure to sit down. It
  is the cook's duty, too, to see that the kitchen
  meals are served properly, and while it is right
  that she should have no interference with the
  larder, she must pro\'ide a sufficient supply of
  well-cooked food and that which has been
  ordered bj' the mistress herself. A word of
  warning, too, is sometimes required to cooks
  who have young servants working under them,
  as they are often tempted to put an undue
  amount upon tliem, especially of the heavy
  
  
  work, while she herself does only what requires
  Mttle output of strength.
  
  Personal Appearance. - A cook should pay
  special attention to her personal appearance,
  and specially from the point of view of cleanH-
  ness and neatness. Her hair must at all times
  be neat and not allowed to come beyond bounds.
  There is nothing more revolting than to see a
  woman preparing food with her hair hanging
  round her head in an untidy fashion, or, what
  is worse still, brushing or combing her hair in a
  kitchen.
  
  A cook should always try to keep her hands
  in good condition, and they must always be
  washed before any cooking is commenced.
  Gloves should be worn when doing any dirty
  work, such as the flues, the grates, and the
  cleaning of tins. In winter-time, if the skin
  is inclined to become very rough, a little gly-
  cerine should be rubbed in occasionally.
  
  A dress of washing material, such as print,
  drill, or galatea should be worn in the early peurt
  of the day ; in fact, there is a large amount of
  cooking to be done in the evening, and as the cook
  is not expected to leave her kitchen, it is very
  usual for her to remain in her cotton dress.
  Or she may if she chooses wear a hght print
  dress in the morning, changing to a darker
  cotton one in the afternoon. Cotton, being
  easily washed, is a much more suitable material
  for Idtchen use than any woollen stuS.
  The dress must be short enough to clear the
  ground by two inches. White linen aprons
  with bibs should be worn while cooking, and
  these should be furnished with a good-sized
  pocket. White hnen sleeves, too, are sometimes
  slipped on, but a shorter dress sleeve or one
  that can be well rolled up is in many ways
  preferable, as the white sleeves to the wrist
  become very soon soiled, and in warm weather
  are very heating. A strong coarse apron should
  be donned while doing the rougher work or
  standing at the sink. A neat and simple cap
  should also be worn. If the cook has very Uttle
  cooking to do in the evening, it is usual for her
  to dress in a dark navy blue or black dress, and
  to wear a muslin apron hke the other house-
  servants. Tidy and comfortable shoes shoiild
  be worn at all times.
  
  Duties of the Cook. - It is the duty of the cook
  to do all the cooking that is required either
  single-handed or with the help of a kitchen-
  maid or scullery-maid. Then beyond this her
  duties will vary according to the mmaber of
  servants kept and the style of living of the
  household.
  
  Although it is impossible to draw out a plan
  which will suit all cases, the following table of
  duties may serve as a guide where the cook takes
  a share in the work of the house. In larger
  establishments where the cook's ser\'ices are
  entirely confined to the kitchen it is very easy
  to delete the other duties, and the order of the
  
  
  50
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  remaining work would continue in very much
  the same way.
  
  Duties of the Cook-General. - Rise at six, strip
  bed, and leave bodroom airing. Dowiistairs at
  6.30. Open up kitchen premises and air where
  necessary. Light kitchen fire and clean range.
  (If the boiler is not a self-filling one, it should
  be filled the night before.) Fill kettles with
  water, and if there is anything for breakfeist
  which requires long cooking, such as porridge,
  put this on to cook before leaving the kitchen
  and leave other tilings ready for breakfast as
  far as possible.
  
  Then go to dining-room, draw up bUnds and
  open windows, clean fire-place and light fire if
  necessary. Sweep room with carpet-sweeper,
  dust it carefully and fill coal-box. Sweep and
  dust hall, clean doorstep and brasses and shake
  mats.
  
  Then serve kitchen breakfast and prepare
  what is required for the dining-room. Clean
  gentlemen's boots and sweep any backstairs or
  passages.
  
  Qear away dining-room breakfast things, and
  take up crumbs. Wash all or some of the
  dishes.
  
  Tidy kitchen and larder, and be ready to
  receive mistress. In the forenoon prepare and
  cook early dinner or luncheon and prepare late
  dinner as far as possible. Dust and tidy cook's
  bedroom and commence any special work of the
  day.
  
  Answer the front-door bell untU 1 o'clock, wliile
  the housemaid is engaged upstairs, and attend
  to any messages which come to the back-door.
  
  Serve lunch, then kitchen dinner and wash
  up, leaving kitchen tidy. It is usual for the
  cook to wash the dinner service used in the
  dining-room, although glass and silver are done
  by the housemaid. Finish special work of the
  day, and dress if there is no late dinner or a very
  simple one. Kitchen tea.
  
  Prepare and cook late dinner or supper and
  coffee if ordered. Wash up (this can often be
  done while the meal is going on, and need not
  be a troublesome matter). Ivitchen supper.
  
  Leave everything tidy for the night and fuel
  ready for lighting fire in the morning. The back-
  door should be locked as soon as it is dark and
  windows the last thing before going to bod.
  Bed at 10 o'clock.
  
  Special Weekly Duties. - Besides the daily
  routine some special cleaning should be under-
  taken each day so as to keep all in order.
  
  This might be arranged in somewhat the
  following manner : -
  
  .Vo';u/av- Downstairs windows.
  
  rtte^dai/- Backstairs and passages.
  
  Wediiesday- Clean dining-room and hall alternate
  
  weelcs.
  77i"r"daj/- Clean tins, brasses.
  Frida}/- Larder and cupboards.
  .Saturday- Kitchen (flues before breakfast).
  
  
  Notes. - The above plan prc^iiipposos that the
  dining-room breakfast is at 8.30; if eai'Uer some
  of the housework must be left until that meal
  is over.
  
  It is sometimes customary for the cook-
  general to help the housemaid with the beds
  except when there are young ladies in the house,
  when they generally undertake this piece of work.
  
  The clearing of the breakfast-table and wash-
  ing of some of the dishes is also frequently done
  by the ladies of the house, especially if the family
  is large and only two maids are kept.
  
  The cook-general is often expected to do some
  washing, such as all the kitchen towels and
  dusters, her o\vn we.shing, and sometimes the
  flannel washing as well. When this is the case,
  this should be done on Monday or Tuesday and
  be regarded as the special work of the day. It
  should be started as early in the forenoon as
  possible, the cooking being made as simple as
  possible that day, and a little extra help might
  be given by members of the household.
  
  The cook-general is also expected to take the
  housemaid's duties when the latter has her
  evening out or her free time.
  
  The Nurse. - See under Section " The Child."
  
  The Housemaid. - A housemaid is employed to
  do work about the house and more especially
  in the bedrooms and sitting-rooms. This work
  will vary according to the number of servants
  kept and the style of hving. In larger estab-
  lishments where there are many bedrooms and
  a constant coming and going of visitors, there
  may be several housemaids - an upper house-
  maid and two or three under -housemaids. In
  this case the upper housemaid would be respon-
  sible for and supervise all the work done in the
  bedrooms and sitting-rooms, although most of
  the actual cleaning and all the rough work would
  be undertaken by the junior maids.
  
  The upper housemaid would do the lighter ami
  more difficult work in the principal rooms, would
  see that the bedrooms were properly prepared
  for guests, answer the bedroom bells, and
  attend to the wants of the ladies of the house.
  Sometimes she is required to act as lady's-
  maid to her mistress if there is no special maid
  for this purpose. She would take charge of
  the bed-linen, giving out the necessary supplies,
  and keeping an accurate account of the stock.
  She would also take charge of all curtains and
  hangings, cushion-covers and table-covers, see
  that the suitable articles were in use and all
  kept in good order. She might also have time
  for some of the mending.
  
  It would be her duty to take early tea and
  water into the principal rooms in the morning,
  and again give the necessary attendance in these
  rooms throughout the day and in the evening.
  
  Some of the locking up at night might also
  fall to her share.
  
  The under housemaids would do all the
  cleaning proper, such as the sweeping, dusting.
  
  
  MISTRESS AND SERVANTS
  
  
  51
  
  
  and scrubbing. The cleaning of the bath-
  rooms, lavatories, and housemaids' pantry, the
  cleaning of all grates and the Ughting of fires.
  If there is a school-room or nursery it would be
  the duty of one of them to do all the cleaning
  and waiting required in that department. The
  junior maid would also have charge of the
  servants' bedrooms and back staircase. The
  boot cleaning, too, would be shared by the under-
  housemaid unless there was a boy or man em-
  ployed for the purpose.
  
  In smaller households where only two or three
  servants are kept, the housemaid will have to
  do the work of the bedrooms single-handed,
  and the sitting-rooms are generally divided
  between the different maids. She may or may
  not have some mending to do ; this will depend
  upon the extent of her other duties,
  
  A single housemaid is also expected to give the
  parlour-maid some assistance in waiting at table
  and ans^^'e^ing of bells, and to take her duties
  during off-duty times.
  
  She will also have the cleaning of ladies' and
  any childreii's boots.
  
  The House-parlourmaid combines the duties
  of housemaid and tablemaid, and, in addition
  to her house duties, she will have charge of the
  table, i.e. the setting and clearing of the table
  for all meals, all the waiting required, and the
  washing of the silver, glass, and china. She
  should answer all front-door bells after one
  o'clock and might have to undertake a Mttle
  washing. The cook may or may not give some
  assistance -with the housework.
  
  Qualifications Necessary. - A housemaid must
  be clean, orderly, and an early riser. Much of
  the comfort of the household depends upon
  getting a fair amount of cleaning done before
  breakfast. She must b, quiet and unobtrusive
  in her work and make as little disturbance as
  possible with her cleaning. She must be polite
  and courteous in her manner and always respect-
  ful. She must also be methodical, arranging
  her work so that too much does not fall to one
  day and not sufficient to others.
  
  Dress and Appearance. - A housemaid should
  at all times be neat and tidy in appearance, and
  pay particular attention to her hair and the
  cleanUness and freshness of her person.
  
  In the morning she should be dressed in a
  neat print dress with a plain white apron with
  bib, a linen collar, and a simple cap with cambric
  frill. A coarser apron may be put on when
  doing any rough work, and a pair of gloves
  while cleaning the grates. In the afternoon the
  cotton dress should be changed for the orthodox
  dress of some black woollen material, plainly
  made, but neat fitting with tight sleeves and of
  a smart walldng length. A muslin apron should
  then be worn with a becoming cap and turn-
  down collar and cuffs visually fastened with
  bows of black ribbons. Quiet shoes should be
  worn at all times.
  
  
  Duties of tlie Housemaid. - (Three maids -
  cook, housemaid, and paj-lour-maid.) Rise at
  6 or 6.30, dress, turn down bed and leave room
  airing.
  
  Open up drawing-room or any other sitting-
  room under her care, clean fire-place, sweep
  and dust room, and light fire if necessary.
  Sweep and dust stairs. Take hot water to the
  bedrooms and early cups of tea if required.
  Prepare baths. Ivitchen breakfast. Clean front
  hall and doorsteps unless done by cook, clean
  any boots, make her own bed, and tidy bed-
  room.
  
  While family are at breakfast go into bed-
  rooms, and see that windows are open and beds
  left to air. Then empty slops and attend to the
  wash-stands. Make beds with the parlour-
  maid's help. Dust bedrooms and put them in
  order and then do special work of the day.
  
  Kitchen dinner. Dress. In the afternoon
  finish off any Ughter pieces of work which are
  not dirty, and do mending if required.
  
  Kitchen tea. In the evening take hot water
  to the bedrooms half-an-hour before dinner is
  served. Draw dowTi blinds, and Ught up at
  dark, closing windows if required.
  
  During dinner it is usual for the housemaid to
  do the carrying of the dishes from the kitchen
  to the dining-room and vice versci, so that the
  parlour-maid may never require to leave the
  room, and also to give what assistance she
  can with the waiting. When dinner is over,
  retiim to the bedrooms, empty slops, and give
  fresh supply of water, turn down beds and lay
  out clothes for the night ; remove any dirty
  boots and see that all is in order.
  
  Kitchen supper. Bed at ten o'clock.
  
  Special Weekly Work
  
  Monday- C\ea.n drawing-room and spare bedroom
  
  alternately.
  Collect and count washing.
  Tuesday- GXe^n two bedrooms.
  IFedn€"daj/- Clean servants' bedrooms and housemaid's
  
  pantry.
  Thiirsday-Cle&n bath-room, lavatory, and staircase.
  jPridai/- Clean library or morning-room and front hall,
  
  unless done by the cook.
  Saturday- Yat away linen from washing and make
  
  things generally tidy for Sunday.
  
  Duties of the House-parlourmaid. - (Two maids,
  cook general, and house -parlourmaid.) Rise at
  6 or 6.30, dress, turn down bed and leave
  room to air.
  
  Sweep and dust drawing-room or librarj',
  and light fire if required. (The dining-room is
  done by the cook.)
  
  Sweep and dust stairs. Take hot water to the
  bedrooms and call the family.
  
  Kitchen breakfeist. Lay sitting-room break-
  fast and clean boots, serve breakfast. Empty
  slops and see that beds are left airing. Ehist
  
  
  52
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  and tidy own bedroom. Clear brealdast-table
  and wash up, vuiloss this is done by the cook.
  Make beds with the assistance of the cook or
  some member of the family.
  
  Dust and tidy bedrooms and proceed to special
  work of the day. Dress by one o'clock. Set
  the table and serve lunch or eaaly dinner.
  
  Kitchen dinner. Clear the dining-room table,
  take up crumbs and leave room tidy. Wash
  up silver and glass and finish any light work.
  Answer front -door boll in the afternoon and
  evening and indoor bells all day.
  
  Prepare and take in afternoon tea. Kitchen
  tea. Wash up afternoon tea things.
  
  Draw down blinds, close windows (if required),
  and light up at dusk.
  
  Lay dinner-table and serve dinner. Wait at
  table, clear and w£ish up. Serve coffee if
  required.
  
  Attend to bedrooms, emptying slops, laying
  down beds, and removing any dirty boots.
  
  Ktchen supper. Bod at ten o'clock.
  
  Special Weekly Duties
  
  Monday - Clean drawing-room or spare bedroom alter-
  nately.
  Collect and count washing.
  Tuesday- Clea,n one or two bedrooms.
  Wednesday- Clean bath-room, lavatory, and staircase.
  r?"ur"iat/- Clean servants' bedroom and pantries
  Friday- C1ea.n silver and brasses.
  iSafwrdai/- Put away washing and tidy up generally.
  
  The Parlour-maid. - A parlour-maid or table-
  maid's chief duty is to look after the table and
  see to the serving of all meals. It is a very
  important position, and one which would be
  filled by a butler in houses where men-servants
  were employed.
  
  The parlour -maid takes the sole charge of the
  silver, glass, china, and other valuables in daily
  use, and is mistress of the pantry. She also has
  chsu-ge of the sideboard, the wine, cake, fruit,
  &c., and sees that fresh supplies are ordered as
  required.
  
  The care of the table-linen will be another of
  her duties. She must see that the table is
  suflBciently supplied, and that anacciu-ate account
  is kept of the stock. The mending, too, might
  be done by her if time permitted.
  
  A parlour-maid usually undertakes the cleaning
  of one or two sitting-rooms, usually the drawing-
  room and one other smaller room as well. She
  attends to the sitting-room fires, and lamps and
  candles if used.
  
  She answers the front-door boll throughout the
  day, unless relieved for part of the time by the
  housemaid, and announces all visitors.
  
  She may also be responsible for the floral
  decorations of the table and for the arrangement
  of lowers and plants throughout the house,
  vmlods the mistress herself undertakes this piece
  of work.
  
  
  If there is no man-servant the peu-lour-maid
  valets her master, attending to the brushing of
  his clothes and the cleaning of his boots. If
  there is no lady's-maid she may be called upon
  to wash up and do lace and other fine articles
  belonging to her mistress and also any fancy
  articles, such as d'oyleys and tray-oloths for
  table use.
  
  She might also be called upon to assist the
  housemaid with bed-making, and would do
  housemaid's duties in the latter's off-duty times.
  She is usually responsible for the shutting of
  the sitting-room windows .\t night and the
  front door, unless done by some member of
  the family.
  
  Personal Appearance and Requirements. - A
  parloior-maid should be tall and elegant in appear-
  ance and rather slight, so that she can move
  about easily and be graceful in her movements.
  The dress, wliich is similar to that worn by the
  housemaid, must be neatly made and fit well,
  and the apron, collar, cuffs, and cap must always
  be spotlessly clean, and especially so when the
  maid is waiting at table.
  
  A paxlour-maid should pay particular attention
  to her hands, in order to have them nice for
  giving attendance to the members of the family,
  and her hair should be neatly done without
  being too elaborate or fussy in style. She
  must be orderly and punctual in all her doings,
  and have a thorough knowledge of waiting at
  table and other table requirements.
  
  As a parlour-maid comes into such close con-
  tact with the family, the post can only be filled
  by a woman who is capable and conscientious,
  and who has the interests of her master and
  mistress at heart. Her manner must be
  pleasant and respectful at all times, she must
  know how to receive and address people of
  refinement, and be able to give in an intelligent
  way any information that may be required.
  
  Daily Duties of Parlour- maid. - Rise at 6 or
  6.30, according to time of breakfast. Dress,
  turn down bed and leave room to air.
  
  Open up sitting-rooms under her charge,
  light fires if necessary, and do the sweeping and
  dusting. Give any attendance required by the
  master of the house and clean his boots.
  
  Ejtchen breakfast. Then set sitting-room
  breakfast-table and make toast, tea and coffee
  unless done by the cook. Serve breakfast and
  wait if required. Finish any work in the sitting-
  rooms. Clear breakfast-table, take up crumbs,
  and leave room in order. Help housemaid with
  bods. (This might be done before the clearing
  of the table if breakfast is a very prolonged
  meal, but at the same time the beds should be
  left sufficient time to air.)
  
  Dust and put in order her own bedroom, un-
  less done by the housemaid. Wash up dishes,
  including silver. Sec that all cruets are filled
  ready for the next meal, also jam and sugar
  dishes attended to, and butter rolled or made
  
  
  MISTRESS AND SERVANTS
  
  
  53
  
  
  into pats. Attend to the sideboard and see
  that the necessary wine is decanted, and that
  fruit and cake dishes are clean and tidy. Make
  a note of any stores required. Attend to any
  floral decorations and water-plants. Attend
  to lamps and candles if used in the sitting-
  rooms.
  
  Dress by one o'clock, in time to lay luncheon
  table. IMake up sitting-room fire, and put
  room in order before setting the table. Serve
  luncheon and wait as required.
  
  Kitchen dinner. After dinner clear luncheon
  from sitting-room table, leave room in order,
  and wash up. If time permits, do mending in
  the afternoon or a little ironing. Take in after-
  noon tea and attend to all visitors. Light
  up sitting-rooms at dusk and draw down
  blinds.
  
  Kitchen tea. Prepare for dinner, lay table,
  and at the appointed time announce the meal
  in the drawing-room or sound a bell or gong.
  Wait at table either alone or assisted by the
  housemaid. Carve if required. Then clear and
  wash up. Serve coSee or any other refreshment
  that may be required.
  
  Kitchen supper. Bed at ten P.M.
  
  Special Weekly Duties
  
  3/onda2/- Collect and count table linen, wash out towels,
  
  dusters, wash-leathers, &c., and give special
  
  attention to plants.
  Tuesday- Clean drawing-room or other sitting-room.
  Wednesday- C\ea.n second sitting-room (moming-room
  
  or library) or assist housemaid with special
  
  cleaning.
  Thursday- CleSin silver.
  Friday- Clesin pantry and her own bedroom, or any
  
  brasses and other ornaments.
  Saturday- CoMiit and put away washing, general tidying
  
  up ana preparations for Sunday.
  
  The General Servant. - The general servant is
  employed to do the entire work of the house,
  except that which is undertaken by the mistress
  herself or some other member of the family.
  
  If the household consist of more than two or
  thi-ee persons it will be necessary for the mistress
  to give a considerable amount of help, if the
  work is to be done properly. She may either
  do the cooking or the lighter parts of the house-
  work, such as dusting, laying the table, washing
  of silver and glass, &c. ; this depends entirely
  upon her own tastes and inchnations.
  
  Although a general servant cannot be ex-
  pected to be an expert in all branches of house-
  hold work, she ought to have a good all-round
  knowledge and be able to cook simple dishes in
  a wholesome and appetising manner.
  
  Her work need not necessarily be harder than
  that of another servant who only performs
  special duties, but it must be systematically
  arranged, and she must be quick and active if
  the day's proceedings are to be carried through
  
  
  in a satisfactory manner. A general servant
  is not infrequently looked down upon as holding
  an inferior position, a sort of " jack of all trades
  and master of none " ; but this entirely depends
  upon the maid herself and upon the house in
  which she serves. If she does her work well,
  she is a most valuable person, and her position,
  if conscientiously fiUed, may become one of
  trust. If she has the good fortune to be em-
  ployed by a kind and considerate mistress, her
  life should be a very happy one. She will enter
  into much closer relationship with the family
  than it is possible to do where there are several
  servants, and she will get full credit for all her
  work. A good general is always particular
  about her personal appearance ; the fact of
  being busy should never be an excuse for having
  a dirty and dishevelled appearance ; in fact,
  this state only denotes a slovenly worker. It
  ought also to be a source of pleasiu-e to be
  dressed in good time in the afternoon. The
  dress should be that worn by any other house
  servant, i.e. a nice print dress in the morning,
  with a white linen apron, linen collar, and cap,
  and a black or dark blue dress in the afternoon
  with a muslin apron and more dressy cap. A
  coarse apron or overall should always be kept
  at hand to sUp on when doing any dirty
  work.
  
  Daily Duties. - ^Rise at 6 or 6.30, dress, turn
  down bed and leave room to air. Unbolt door,
  draw up bhnds and open kitchen and sitting-
  room windows. Light kitchen fire and tidy
  grate. FiU kettle and put on porridge if re-
  qtiired. Clean boots, sweep and dust sitting-
  room, lighting fire if necessary. Sweep and
  dust hall and clean doorstep and brasses. (If
  breakfast is at an early hour this may be left
  until later.) Prepare sitting-room breakfast and
  have kitchen breakfast.
  
  Empty slops and air bedrooms. Tidy and
  dust her own bedroom. Clear breakfast-table,
  wash up and tidy kitchen. Take orders for the
  day.
  
  Make beds with assistance, dust and tidy bed-
  rooms, and sweep and dust stairs. I^epare
  early dinner or lunch and do special work for the
  day. (If late dinner is the rule, the mid-day
  meal should be as simple as possible, and most
  of the cooking should be prepared in the
  morning.)
  
  Serve lunch and have early dinner. Clear
  and wash up. When kitchen has been tidied,
  change dress, attend to any light duties in the
  afternoon, and serve tea. Attend to all bells
  promptly. Serve supper or dinner at the hour
  appointed, and do what waiting is required.
  Clear and wash up and have kitchen supper.
  
  Light up at dusk, draw down blinds, and close
  windows as required. After dinner tvu-n down
  beds and attend to the bedrooms. Collect
  sticks and coals for the morning. Bed at
  ten P.M.
  
  
  54
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Special Weekly Duties
  J/OTuiai/- Wash towels and dusters, &c. (Heavy washing
  
  can scarcely be undertaken unless the maid
  
  is relieved of most of her other work for the
  
  forenooa.)
  TuAKfay- Clean drawing-room and dining-room alternate
  
  weeks.
  Wednesday- Cle&n bath-room, staircase, and hall.
  Thursday- Clean bedrooms.
  Friday- Clean pantry, larder, and any back premises,
  
  also siiver and tins alternate weeks.
  Saturday- Clean kitchen.
  
  The Housekeeper. - The housekeeper is the
  representative of hor mistress, and in large house-
  holds she fulfils the duties which naturally fall
  to the mistress herself in a smaller manage.
  This leaves the lady of the house free to attend
  to social and other claims.
  
  The housekeeper is second in command, and
  answerable only to the head of the house. She
  engages and dismisses servants and pays their
  wages - with the exception of the nurse and
  lady's-maid - arranges their work, and is respon-
  sible in every way for their appearance and
  behaviour and the fulfilment of their duties.
  
  The housekeeper is responsible for the proper
  keeping of the house in every part, and she
  sees to the needs and comfort of the whole family
  and domestic staff.
  
  She orders and gives out all stores, keeps
  £iccounts, and pays the bills. If there is a butler
  he reheves lier of some of those duties, and he is
  always responsible for the men-servants.
  
  The hoiosekeeper should see her employer at
  stated times in order to give in a report of the
  various departments, and also to receive her
  instructions and learn her wishes.
  
  The housekeeper has always her own sitting-
  room in which her meals are served by one of
  the under - maids, except dinner, which she
  usually takes with the other servants.
  
  Her sitting-room may be shared by some of
  the upper servants, such as the lady's-maid, the
  butler, and the valet.
  
  The Butler. - The position of butler is usually
  one of great trust. He is head of the men-
  servants, is responsible for the work of those
  under him, arranges their off-duty time, and
  often engages them as well.
  
  He has sole charge of the wine collar, and
  gives out the wine required, keeping a note of
  the stock, and frequently seeing to the buying
  in of supplies.
  
  To his care is confided the silver and otlier
  articles of value in daily use.
  
  He is responsible for the arrangement of all
  meals and the table appointments. He an-
  nounces when meals are ready, puts the dishes
  on the table or does the carving, pours out the
  wine, and waits assisted by a footman or parlour-
  maid.
  
  He is responsible for the care of the billiard-
  room and smoking-room or library, and the
  
  
  fires and lighting arrangements of the other
  rooms.
  
  If single-handed, his duties would be very
  much the same as those already detailed for the
  house-parlourmaid. If there is no valet he
  waits upon his master. He also looks after any
  carriage or motor rugs and lamps, and in the
  country would be responsible for shooting and
  picnic lunches.
  
  When there is no housekeeper the butler
  frequently pays the bills and does the marketing.
  He usually goes out every day.
  
  The butler is also responsible for the shutting
  up of the house.
  
  In the early part of the day his dress should
  be dark trousers and waistcoat and black tail
  coat, with a white front and collar and black tie
  - in the evening the regulation dress suit with a
  white tie.
  
  The Footman. - The footman is generally an
  all-round useful man and his duties may be
  very varied. If there is a butler, he would
  work under him, but in houses where he is the
  only man-servant his duties might be somewhat
  after the following : -
  
  He would clean boots and shoes, knives and
  windows, fetch coal and see to the filling of
  coal-scuttles and the keeping up of fires.
  
  He would lay the table and wait, assisted by
  a parlour-maid or housemaid, and wash up the
  silver, glass, and china after each meal.
  
  He would valet his master and go out with the
  carriage if required, attending to any rugs.
  
  The charge of lamps and window - plants
  would also fall to his share. He would answer
  bells, announce visitors, and take in afternoon
  tea.
  
  He would also be responsible for the locking
  up of the house at night.
  
  A footman may or may not wear livery. If
  this is not supplied it is usual to give two suits
  in the year, either new or from Ms master's
  wardrobe.
  
  The Lady's - maid. - Tlie lady's - maid devotes
  herself to the personal requirements of her
  mistress and looks after her needs in every
  way.
  
  She undertakes the charge of her wardrobe
  and sees that all her belongings are kept in
  good order and proper repair.
  
  She assists her mistress v.'ith her toilet, helps
  her to dress and undress, brushes and dresses
  her hair, selects and lays out the clothes she is
  going to wear.
  
  She does any packing and unpacking and
  travels with her mistress when required.
  
  She requires a bedroom for herself, which is
  sometimes fitted as a bed-sitting-room, where
  she can do her sewing and other work.
  
  She will keep her own and her mistress's
  room in order, do the dusting, and make the
  beds with some assistance ; but she will not
  be expected to clean grates nor do any hard
  
  
  MISTRESS AND SERVANTS
  
  
  55
  
  
  cleaiiijig, and she will take no part in general
  housework.
  
  If well filled the post of lady's-maid is no
  sinecure, as a varied knowledge is necessary to
  do all that is required. A woman who under-
  takes this work inust be able to sew well in
  order that she may both make and mend neatly.
  She must also have some knowledge of dress-
  making and millinery so as to be able to alter and
  renovate, to change the style of an evening dress,
  to make a tasteful bow, retrim a hat or bonnet,
  or give the necessary finishing touches to a
  lady's toilet. She must be a woman of taste,
  and be able to give advice as to the choice of
  dresses, &c.
  
  She ought to know enough laundry work to
  enable her to wash and do up laces and silks and
  musUn, wash shawls and feather boas, and other
  fancy articles.
  
  She must be a good hair-dresser, and if a
  fashionable coiffure is required, it is a good plan
  to take a lesson occasionally from a first-class
  hairdresser in order to learn the newest
  modes.
  
  If she travels with her mistress a knowledge
  of languages, especially French, is invaluable,
  and she should know how to make travelling
  arrangements, see to tickets and luggage, and
  be responsible for the exchange of money.
  
  A lady's-maid wears no uniform, but ought
  to be quietly and neatly dressed when in attend-
  ance on her mistress.
  
  Her manner must be pleasant and respectful,
  and she must know how to exercise self-control.
  As she comes into such close contact with the
  private life of her mistress, it is her duty to give
  her faithful and loyal service as long as she
  remains in her employment.
  
  The Valet. - The valet attends to the personal
  wants of his master just as the lady's-maid waits
  upon her mistress. He helps him with his
  dressing, and takes fxill charge of his wardrobe,
  brushes his clothes, cleans his boots, and attends
  to any repairs.
  
  He sees that his master's wash-stand and
  toilet-table are supplied with the necessary
  requisites, and is responsible for all his belongings
  being kept in order and in the proper place.
  
  He must know how to pack and unpack, and
  if he travels with his master he must know how
  to make all arrangements, take tickets, and see
  to luggage, &c.
  
  The valet is sometimes expected to give
  assistance in waiting at table.
  
  The Laundry-maid. - The laundry-maid is re-
  sponsible for the washing and dressing of the
  household linen.
  
  She will have full charge of the laundry, seeing
  that it is kept clean and in perfect order. Slie
  will also be responsible for all the Unen con-
  fided to her care.
  
  If the family is not large, she may be expected
  to take part in some of the housework as well.
  
  
  (For fuller details of her duties see Guide to
  Laundry Work, p. 271.)
  
  The Scullery-maid. - The scullery-maid ranks
  lowest amongst the kitchen servants, and if there
  is a kitchen-maid she works under her.
  
  A scullery-maid is employed primarily for
  cleaning all the dishes and utensils used in the
  kitchen ; she washes the kitchen floors and does
  the scrubbing. She will assist with the pre-
  paration of vegetables and be responsible for
  the keeping up of the kitchen fire.
  
  If there is no kitchen-maid, the scullery-
  maid will assist the cook and work under her
  direction.
  
  Although the work may be somewhat labori-
  ous, it is a good beginning for a young girl who
  aspires to be cook, and if she is quick and willing
  she may learn a great deal, and gradually rise
  to a better position.
  
  The Kitchen-maid. - A kitchen-maid is em-
  ployed to work under a cook, to be her apprentice
  as it were. She is responsible for many of the
  plainer dishes, thus leaving the cook free for
  more important duties. She prepares and
  serves the kitchen meals, and also cooks for
  the mu-sery and school-rooin if required.
  
  If there is no scullery-maid, the kitchen-maid
  will also undertake the cleaning of the kitchen
  utensils, the kitchen stove, and some of the
  kitchen premises.
  
  Provided a kitchen-maid serves under a good
  cook, this is the best way for her to learn the
  art of cooking.
  
  The Tweeny. - This is a title given to a young
  girl who divides her time between the house and
  the kitchen. In the forenoon she may work
  under the housemaid or the nurse and do the
  housework, and from lunch time onwards assist
  the cook. She does all the odd jobs and must
  be ready to make herself generally useful.
  
  The Hall Boy. - The hall boy or boy in buttons
  is sometimes kept in place of a single man-
  servant, and if clever and wilhng he may
  be an extremely useful member of the house-
  hold.
  
  He wiU be found of special value in the house
  of a professional man, such as a doctor or
  dentist, where there is much answering of bella
  required, and perhaps running of messages as
  well.
  
  A capable boy will soon learn to clean knives,
  boots, and windows, to fill coal-scuttles and
  look after fires. He will also be able to set
  the table, do some waiting and most of the
  wasliing up.
  
  The boy in buttons must be provided with
  clothes ; a Uvery suit of some dark cloth,
  navy serge, dark green, or dark crimson with
  the coat buttoning to the neck, and for
  doing cleaning or rough work he should
  have a cotton jacket of dark blue or striped
  drill or strong hoUand and some good stout
  aprons.
  
  
  56
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  HOUSEKEEPING WITHOUT A SERVANT
  
  In these days of flat life, when accommodation
  for housing a ser\'ant is very limited, it is often
  found more convenient to do without one
  altogether, or to manage with eitlier daily help
  or the ser\nces of a thoroughly competent
  worker once or twice a week.
  
  It ought to be quite possible for a newly
  married lady to undertake the work of a small
  flat with perhaps the occasional help of a char-
  woman, and to have time for other interests as
  well. Or if, as is often the case, two sisters or
  two friends live together, the work should be
  all the more easy to manage, as each can take
  her share of the household duties.
  
  Some knowledge of housekeeping is, however,
  necessary for the successful management of a
  " no servant " manage, and if one is entirely
  ignorant of the ways of doing things, it should
  scarcely be attempted unless absolutely necessary,
  as the results are not likely to be satisfactory.
  
  Good health is also a sine qua non, although
  no great phj^sical strength is required ; so much
  is done nowadays to make the work of a house
  simple, and especially the work in a flat. There
  are no stairs nor front door -step to keep in order,
  the cooking and water heating can be done by
  gaa, and all provisions, &c., can be brought to
  the very door without the trouble of going up
  and down stairs. Yet with aU the conveniences
  possible, success in the undertaking will depend
  to a large extent upon the order and method
  displayed in its organisation. The work must
  be planned carefully, or one will either be in a
  constant muddle, or be continually at it, and
  have time for nothing beyond the daily round of
  house duties.
  
  To begin with, the woman who does her own
  work must dress suitably when performing her
  household duties - a short sldrt, a cotton or
  other washing blouse, and a big apron or overall
  is the most suitable attire ; or a complete wash-
  ing dress might be worn if the weather is warm.
  A large overall to slip on over a good afternoon
  dress will also bo found useful.
  
  It will be well also to seciure as many labour-
  saving apparatus aa possible, such as gas-cooker,
  carpet-sweeper, knife-cleaner, mop for washing
  dishes, &c.
  
  Care.too, must be taken of the hands. Because
  a woman is her own maid-of-all-work this is no
  excuse for her being careless in this respect.
  Gloves should be worn as much as possible, and
  after doing washing up the hands should be well
  dried and a few drops of glycerine and rose-
  water should be rubbed into the skin.
  
  Do not commence by doing too much before
  breakfast. Unless one has been accustomed to
  early rising it is apt to knock one up for the rest
  of the day without any reason. Do not attempt
  to light fires and clean out a sitting-room before
  a meal has been taken. Sometimes it may be
  
  
  possible to prepare a certain amount the night
  before, and in any case there should be a small
  gas or even an oil-stove upon which the morning
  meal can be prepared. If the sitting-room has
  not a stove which can be lit without much
  trouble, there is no reason why the kitchen should
  not be pretty enough and tidy enough for the
  first meal to be taken there.
  
  On rising in the morning put on a large kettle
  of water. If there is porridge for breakfast this
  should have been soaked over-night in a double
  cooker. Put a light under this also. Then
  dress, and when ready let breakfast have the
  first attention, talcing time to have this meal
  leism-ely and in comfort. Next collect the
  dishes and clear the table, and either put the
  dishes to one side while the bedrooms and
  sitting-room are being done, or wash them up
  straight away.
  
  The sitting-room should be done next, as it
  will be as well to let the bedrooms air as long as
  possible. If a fire has to be laid, do this with
  order and method. Go over the floor with a
  carpet-sweeper, then dust every part and leave
  the window open. Next turn yovu- attention
  to the bedrooms, put these in order, and then
  sweep and dust the passage. Now return to
  the kitchen, wash up all the dishes, and sweep
  and dust. If breakfast has not been very late,
  all the cleaning should be finished by eleven
  o'clock, unless some special work has to be done,
  such as the thorough cleaning of a room, silver,
  brasses,   work this could also be fitted in.
  
  The cooking for the day should now be thought
  of, and although it is alwaj's possible to have
  meals at a restaurant, or to order various dishes
  from a caterer's, it must be remembered that
  this is an expensive way of living, and with the
  necessary knowledge of cookery it should be
  quite possible to have dainty little meals at
  home, and so feed well with very little trouble.
  The woman who does her own work will not
  require to spend much time considering what is
  in her larder ; she will no doubt have arranged
  in her own mind what the different meals have
  to be whilst doing her other work. All the
  cookery required should either be done in the
  morning or at least prepared as far as possible,
  so that what must be left for the evening will take
  very little time to get ready when required.
  Light utensils should be used, such as aliuninium,
  enamelled tin, or earthenware saucepans, as they
  are easier to handle and keep in order. One or
  two steamers would also be invaluable, as so
  much cooking can be done in these -nathout
  trouble and attention.
  
  After the mid-day meal it is a good plan to
  rest, even if only for half-an-hoiu", and then, after
  dressing, one ought to feel quite fresh to go out
  and turn one's thoughts in a different channel.
  The afternoon should be free from household
  
  
  MISTRESS AND SERVANTS
  
  
  57
  
  
  If the evening meal has been prepared in the
  morning it will not take long to get it ready, and
  haK-an-hour as an ordinary rule should be
  sufficient. Then if washing up in the evening
  is found awkward, there is no occasion to do
  more than the silver, which it is never wise to
  leave, and the other dishes, if they are not re-
  quired in the morning, could be packed up and
  washed with the breakfast dishes.
  
  Marketing. - The time for doing this will
  depend upon circumstances, and need not be
  rigidly fixed. If it is inconvenient to go out in
  the mornmg in the midst of the other work it
  may be possible to order in the afternoon for
  the following day, or another way is to arrange
  for the tradesmen to call, and for everything to
  be brought to the door at a certain time.
  
  Outside Help. - This may be obtained either
  daily or once or twice a week, according to
  circumstances and individual needs. If a
  young girl is engaged to come in for an hour or
  two every morning, she might do the washing \ip,
  prepare the vegetables, and attend to the other
  kitchen work, also clean the boots and stoves
  and assist with the rooms as well. Many prefer,
  however, to have more competent help even if
  it is not so often. A good worker for half a day
  could do all the hard cleaning, including the
  stoves, scrubbing of the kitchen, and thoroughly
  clean one or two rooms each visit. If the rooms
  can be prepared for her, and any ornaments and
  other trifles dusted and afterwards arranged, it
  will be a great saving of time, and in this way
  
  
  half the rooms could be cleaned one week, and
  
  the other half the next.
  
  Advantages. - Besides the actual saving of
  board and wages of an indoor servant there will
  be a feeling of independence. It will be possible
  to leave home for a day or a week without any
  need for worrying about the house. There will
  also be freedom from that feeling of close
  proximity to a servant which is impossible to
  avoid in a flat, and which destroys the sense of
  Hberty which is essential to the happiness of
  both parties.
  
  Warning. - ^It must be remembered that house-
  work must not crowd out everything else ; one
  mvist have time to read a little, rest a little, and
  keep in touch with the outside world as welL
  The economy that saves money at the expense
  of health and the capabihty of enjojrment is in
  reality one of the worst extravagances.
  
  Another point is that the housekeeper must
  remember to feed herself. If the mid-day meal
  is taken alone, she is only too apt to make it as
  meagre as possible to save trouble, and also to
  take it too qiiickly, whereas time would be well
  spent in eating something reaUy nutritious, and
  if the quantity is small the quality should be
  all the more carefully considered.
  
  One must also learn to do without many
  things, and not expect to live in the same style
  as those who have plenty of servants at their
  command, but this can quite well be done with-
  out falling into a slovenly way of living and
  losing any of the refinement of life.
  
  
  WAGES TABLE
  
  Giving the rates per Month, Week, and Day of Yearly Incomes from £10 to £50
  
  
  Year.
  
  Month
  
  Week.
  
  Day.
  
  Year.
  
  Month.
  
  Week.
  
  Day.
  
  £ 8.
  
  d.
  
  £
  
  s.
  
  d.
  
  £
  
  8.
  
  d.
  
  £
  
  s.
  
  d.
  
  £
  
  B. d.
  
  £
  
  6.
  
  d.
  
  £
  
  s.
  
  d.
  
  £
  
  8. d.
  
  10 0
  
  0
  
  0
  
  16
  
  8
  
  0
  
  3
  
  m
  
  0
  
  0
  
  H
  
  17
  
  0 0
  
  8
  
  4
  
  0
  
  6
  
  6^
  
  0
  
  0 Hi
  
  10 10
  
  0
  
  0
  
  17
  
  6
  
  0
  
  4
  
  Oh
  
  0
  
  0
  
  7
  
  17
  
  10 0
  
  9
  
  2
  
  0
  
  6
  
  Si
  
  0
  
  0 lU
  
  11 0
  
  0
  
  0
  
  18
  
  4
  
  0
  
  4
  
  2|
  
  0
  
  0
  
  n
  
  17
  
  17 0
  
  9
  
  9
  
  0
  
  6
  
  101
  
  0
  
  0 llf
  
  11 10
  
  0
  
  0
  
  19
  
  2
  
  0
  
  4
  
  5
  
  0
  
  0
  
  n
  
  18
  
  0 0
  
  10
  
  0
  
  0
  
  6
  
  11
  
  0
  
  0 llj
  
  11 11
  
  0
  
  0
  
  19
  
  3
  
  0
  
  4
  
  5i
  
  0
  
  0
  
  u
  
  18
  
  10 0
  
  10
  
  10
  
  0
  
  7
  
  H
  
  0
  
  1 Oi
  
  12 0
  
  0
  
  0
  
  0
  
  0
  
  4
  
  n
  
  0
  
  0
  
  8
  
  18
  
  18 0
  
  11
  
  6
  
  0
  
  7
  
  3i
  
  0
  
  1 Oi
  
  12 10
  
  0
  
  0
  
  10
  
  0
  
  4
  
  n
  
  0
  
  0
  
  8i
  
  19
  
  0 0
  
  11
  
  8
  
  0
  
  7
  
  3*
  
  0
  
  1 o|
  
  12 12
  
  0
  
  1
  
  0
  
  0
  
  4
  
  m
  
  0
  
  0
  
  8h
  
  19
  
  10 0
  
  ^
  
  12
  
  6
  
  0
  
  7
  
  6
  
  0
  
  1 0|
  
  13 0
  
  0
  
  1
  
  8
  
  0
  
  5
  
  0
  
  0
  
  0
  
  8|
  
  19
  
  19 0
  
  13
  
  3
  
  0
  
  7
  
  8
  
  0
  
  1 1
  
  13 10
  
  0
  
  2
  
  6
  
  0
  
  5
  
  2i
  
  0
  
  0
  
  9
  
  20
  
  0 0
  
  13
  
  4
  
  0
  
  7
  
  H
  
  0
  
  1 u
  
  13 13
  
  0
  
  2
  
  9
  
  0
  
  5
  
  3
  
  0
  
  0
  
  9
  
  21
  
  0 0
  
  15
  
  0
  
  0
  
  8
  
  1
  
  0
  
  1 If
  
  14 0
  
  0
  
  3
  
  4
  
  0
  
  5
  
  4i
  
  0
  
  0
  
  n
  
  22
  
  0 0
  
  16
  
  8
  
  0
  
  8
  
  5i
  
  0
  
  1 2J
  
  14 10
  
  0
  
  4
  
  2
  
  0
  
  5
  
  7
  
  0
  
  0
  
  9|
  
  23
  
  0 0
  
  18
  
  4
  
  0
  
  8
  
  m
  
  0
  
  1 3
  
  14 14
  
  0
  
  4
  
  6
  
  0
  
  5
  
  n
  
  0
  
  0
  
  9J
  
  24
  
  0 0
  
  2
  
  0
  
  0
  
  0
  
  9
  
  2i
  
  0
  
  1 3|
  
  15 0
  
  0
  
  5
  
  0
  
  0
  
  5
  
  n
  
  0
  
  0
  
  n
  
  25
  
  0 0
  
  2
  
  1
  
  8
  
  0
  
  9
  
  H
  
  0
  
  1 4^
  
  15 10
  
  0
  
  5
  
  10
  
  0
  
  5
  
  Hi
  
  0
  
  0
  
  m
  
  30
  
  0 0
  
  2
  
  10
  
  0
  
  0
  
  11
  
  6J
  
  0
  
  1 7|
  
  15 15
  
  0
  
  6
  
  3
  
  0
  
  6
  
  0|
  
  0
  
  0
  
  m
  
  35
  
  0 0
  
  2
  
  18
  
  4
  
  0
  
  13
  
  5i
  
  0
  
  1 11
  
  16 0
  
  0
  
  6
  
  8
  
  0
  
  6
  
  If
  
  0
  
  0
  
  10*
  
  40
  
  0 0
  
  3
  
  6
  
  8
  
  0
  
  15
  
  4i
  
  0
  
  2 2J
  
  16 10
  
  0
  
  7
  
  6
  
  0
  
  6
  
  H
  
  0
  
  0
  
  io|
  
  45
  
  0 0
  
  3
  
  15
  
  0
  
  0
  
  17
  
  3|
  
  0
  
  2 5i
  
  16 16
  
  0
  
  8
  
  0
  
  0
  
  6
  
  H
  
  0
  
  0
  
  11
  
  50
  
  0 0
  
  4
  
  3
  
  4
  
  0
  
  19
  
  2f
  
  0
  
  2 9
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  The object of the foUowing pages is to furnish the housewife with directions for the performance
  of such details of household work as ai-e not dealt with under special headings.
  
  The directions are the result of many years practical experience of everything pertaining to
  household management. ^ o x- e
  
  The various details of household work are dealt with separately under their own headings, and
  the many useful hints with regard to cleaning, &c., are the result of actual test
  
  It 13 hoped that the information given wiU afford valuable help to the harassed housewife in
  the little difficulties which are continually cropping up in the course of daily duties. If it does
  this the imssion of this section of the book will be abundantly fulfilled.
  
  
  THE CLEANING OF ROOMS
  
  Before beginning to clean a room of any kind
  it is very important that everything required for
  the work should be collected together, so that
  there need be no unnecessary running about to
  seek for tliis or that duster or brush. So first
  consider what has to be cleaned, and then take
  with you the necessary implements, seeing that
  everything is in order for the work to be carried
  out satisfactorily and systematically, with the
  least possible waste of time.
  
  TO CLEAN AND TIDY A BEDROOM
  
  Dally Work.- First draw up the blinds as far
  as they will go, being careful to keep them
  straight, and open the windows top and bottom.
  Then turn down the bed and spread out any
  night garments on a chair. Allow the room to
  au- for an hour at lea^t before the bed is made.
  During this time the slops may be emptied,
  towels hung up evenly, and any clothing or
  other articles left lying about the room put
  away in theu- places. It is always better if
  two people can make the bed. When this is
  neatly finished, fold up the night-dress or
  sleeping-suit, put it in a neat case, and lay it on
  the bed just beneath the pillow.
  
  If there has been a fire in the room attend to
  the grate next, being careful to make as little
  dust as possible.
  
  It will not be necessary to sweep the room
  every day, but the floor must be gone over
  with a short brush and shovel or with a carpet-
  sweeper, so as to take up any pieces or surface I
  dust. Be careful too that all fluff is removed
  from underneath the bed. Some people prefer '
  to have the carpet wiped over with a slightly
  damp cloth or leather.
  
  Then dust the room. Commence at one corner
  
  
  ss
  
  
  and go steadily round, dusting each article until
  every part has been done. Pay particidar at-
  tention to the toilet table. Lift each article
  and diist underneath it, arranging everything
  with order and taste.
  
  If the edges of the floor are pohshed or covered
  with hnoleum, rub them round with a shghtly
  damp duster, or, better still, with the flannel or
  cloth which has been used to rub up a polished
  floor. The latter will have the remains of a
  httle wax upon it, and will keep the floor in good
  condition.
  
  If a candlestick has been used, see that this is
  in order, putting in a fresh candle if required,
  and removing any old matches.
  
  Finally fill up the ewer and water-jug with
  fresh cold water, and lower the blinds and
  windows a httle if desired. Look round the
  room to see that everything is in order and
  that no duster or brush is being left beliind, and
  close the door quietly on leaving.
  
  Weekly or Thorough Cleaning.- Once a week,
  or at least once a fortnight, a bedroom will
  require a more thorough cleaning if it is in
  constant use.
  
  After the slops have been emptied, the bed-
  room ware and any gas globes should be carried
  away to a bathroom or housemaid's pantry,
  where they can be washed. If this is not con-
  venient, they must be covered over and washed
  afterwards in the room.
  
  Before making the bed, brush the mattress on
  both sides and well round the edges, as this is
  one of the best means of keeping away moths;
  Dust also the bedstead under the mattress and
  then make the bed, but do not put on the top
  cover ; this is better kept off until the cleaning
  is finished. Tuck up the valance all round, if
  there is one, and brush and pin back any
  curtains out of the way.
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  69
  
  
  Next lay some sheets of clean paper or a large
  towel on the top of the bed. Dust all ornaments
  (keeping aside any that may require washing)
  and other small articles, and lay them on the top
  of the bed over the paper, or towel. Shake and
  fold up the toilet cover, and all table-cloths
  and towels ; shake and remove any short
  window-blinds, and lay these also on the bed.
  Cover all with a large dust-sheet, which will
  hang well over the sides.
  
  Dust and remove from the room as many as
  possible of the small articles of furniture, and
  cover over what is left with dust-sheets or old
  newspapers. If any of the chairs are up-
  holstered, these should be brushed with a
  furniture brush before being covered. All
  clothing must be taken down from the back of
  doors and kept out of the room or under cover.
  
  Roll up all rugs or n^ats, and take them out-
  side to be beaten later on. If this cannot be
  done they must be brushed with a short brush
  in the room and then removed.
  
  If there has been a fire in the rooim, remove
  all the cinders and dost, but do not pohsh the
  grate until the room has been swept. Next
  close all windows and doors, and see that drawers
  too are shut.
  
  Sprinkle the carpet with tea-leaves or bran,
  and sweep it thoroughly. When the dust has
  all been collected in a shovel, the window should
  be thrown open and the room left for a httle
  while to allow the dust to settle.
  
  Meanwhile the dust in the dust-pan should be
  taken away and burnt at once. K left lying
  about it is very apt to be knocked over and the
  contents perhaps scattered around. The articles
  that have been outside can also have attention.
  The rugs should be brushed or beaten outside
  and carried back in readiness to be laid down,
  the ware in the batliroom washed, and the
  small fxirniture rubbed up.
  
  Then return to the room and finish off the
  fireplace, using a hearth- cloth.
  
  Roll up the dust-sheets, which should after-
  wards be shaken in the open air. One word
  about dust-sheets - too often these are used
  vmtil they reach such a dirty state as to be
  rendered almost useless. They should be
  washed whenever necessary.
  
  Tlie dusting may now be commenced. First
  mount a pair of steps, dusting all out-of-
  reach places, such as bhnds, curtain poles,
  inside of windows, pictures, top of wardrobe
  and door, &c. Then dust and polish, if neces-
  sary, the furniture that remains in the room ; also
  dust round the skirting board, panels of doors
  and floor where it is uncarpeted.
  
  When the dust has as far as possible been
  removed from the room, it is time to do any
  necessary washing. Wash the top of the wash-
  stand if it is marble, the tiles round the fire-
  place, the window ledges if they require it, and
  any finger-marks off doors. The windows and
  
  
  mirrors too if they require special cleaning
  should now have attention. Also finish off the
  edges of the floor in a suitable manner, accord-
  ing to whether they aie hnoleum, varnish, or
  matting.
  
  Now put back in their places the articles which
  were laid on the bed, let down the bed valance,
  and put the bed in order.
  
  Then bring back the things from outside and
  arrange everything in order. Supply the wash-
  stand with fresh water and new soap if required.
  
  Spare Bedrooms. - These will not require to be
  cleaned so often as the rooms that are in con-
  stant use. If they are aired and dusted regularly
  they ought to keep in good order without being
  tm-ned out more than perhaps once a month. Of
  course, this depends a good deal upon the locaUty
  in wliich a house is situated. A room in a
  smoky city will requii-e much more cleaning
  than one in a fresh country district.
  
  Note. - For details of the various operations,
  see under special headings.
  
  
  TO CLEAN A SITTING-ROOM
  
  The order and method for this is very much
  the same as for a bedroom, except of coiirse
  there is not the bed and wash-stand to attend
  to.
  
  Daily Work. - Draw up the blinds and open
  the window. Remove any table-covers, shake
  them and fold them up, and roll up the rugs
  (sometimes tliis is done over-night).
  
  If there has been a fire in the room, attend to
  that first. Lay down the hearth-cloth before
  commencing, and finish off the grat" com-
  pletely.
  
  Then with a dust-pan and short brush - or,
  better stiU, with a carpet-sweeper - go over the
  floor, taking up any crumbs and pieces and ail
  siu-face dust. Be careful to make 6is httle dust
  as possible. Lay down the rugs and brush them
  over also.
  
  Tlien take away the dust and burn it at once,
  also the contents of the waste- paper basket.
  
  Next dust the room ceirefully, commencing at
  one corner and going steadily round.
  
  If there is a poUshed or hnoleum surround
  to the carpet, wipe this round with a slightly
  damp duster and then with a dry one. Dust at
  the same time the sku*ting-boards. Replace the
  table-covers, and see that cushions, books, &c.,
  are all in order.
  
  To " Thorough-Clean " a Sitting-room. - A room
  that is in constant use will require to be cleaned
  more thoroughly once a week. A drawing-
  room or room that is only used occasionally will
  not require it so often. The mistress of the house
  must decide for herself how often it is necessary
  to turn it out.
  
  To Prepare the Room. - First remove all plants
  and flowers, and these sliould be attended to and
  
  
  60
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  arranged outside before they are brought back
  into the room.
  
  Pull up the blinds as far as they will go.
  Shake or brush the curtains, and pin them high
  up out of the way. Remove any short window-
  curtains, shake them and fold them up.
  
  Then dust thorougWy all ornaments, odd
  books, music, &c., and cither remove them from
  the room or cover them over on a table or side-
  board inside.
  
  Dust also and remove, if possible, all small
  articles of furniture.
  
  Roll up all rugs, and have them taken out of
  doors to be shaken or beaten later on.
  
  Take off all table-cloths and antimacassars,
  shake them and fold them up. Boat all cusliions,
  but not too roughly, and then cover all these
  small things with a dust-sheet.
  
  Upholstered furniture and footstools should
  be brushed, and all furniture which cannot
  be removed should be covered over with large
  clean dust-sheets.
  
  To Clean the Room. - Follow the same order
  for sweeping, dusting, and doing the grate as for
  a bedroom. (See 59.)
  
  After sweeping, and while the dust is settling,
  the things outside should be seen to. Rugs
  should be shaken, dirty ornaments and glass
  globes washed or cleaned, and any necessary
  polishing done.
  
  After the inside dusting is done, put back the
  furniture in its place, and put on table-cloths and
  antimacassars. Bring back all ornaments, &c.,
  take down the curtains and see that all is in order.
  
  Finally replace any plants and flower decora-
  tions.
  
  CLEANING OF HALL AND STAIRCASE
  
  Before commencing to clean these, close all
  doors leading into them. Take up all mats and
  have them shaken outside the house. In
  houses where there is much going up and down
  stairs the latter will require to be swept down
  daily, but with a quiet household it may be
  sufficient to sweep them two or three times a
  week, and to simply dust them on the other days.
  
  Begin at the top landing and work down-
  wards. If there is a long stretch of landing
  on any of the floors, this should be swept with a
  long broom or carpet-sweeper instead of the
  short brush, as it will save unnecessary kneeling.
  
  To sweep the stairs, take a banister or stair-
  brush and a dust-pan. A double brush, with
  bristles on one side and hair on the other, is the
  most convenient for the purpose. Sweep the
  top and front of each step, catching the dust in
  the dust-pan. Use the bristle side of the brush
  for the carpet and the soft hair side for the paint
  or varnish.
  
  When the bottom of the stair is reached take
  the dust away at once and have it burnt ; if left
  lying in the dust-pan it is very liable to be
  
  
  knocked over and spilt. And here a word of
  warning may be given about the danger of leav-
  ing cleaning materials on a stair ; most serious
  accidents have happened owing to carelessness in
  this respect.
  
  Allow the dust to settle before doing the
  dusting. Stairs and banisters will require to be
  dusted thoroughly every daj', and each banister
  rail should be done separately.
  
  The varnished or painted sides of stair and
  landing should be wiped first with a slightly
  damp rubber, as this will prevent the dust flying
  about, and then poUshed with a dry one.
  
  Doors, door-handles, and window ledges must
  also liave attention. Lay down the mats last
  of aU.
  
  Weekly Cleaning, - Once a week the stairs will
  require a more thorough cleaning.
  
  When sweeping the steps, pull out the ends of
  the rods and sweep away the dust from under-
  neath. The banisters too, if they are of wood,
  should be carefully brushed. If made of painted
  iron, they may be washed after the sweeping is
  finished with a wash leather wrung out of warm
  water and a very httle soap. Care itiust be
  taken to wring the leather rather firmly, so as to
  prevent drops of water falling on the steps.
  
  After the stairs have been thoroughly swept,
  and while the dust is settUng, the rods may be
  cleaned. While doing this an old newspaper
  or large duster should be laid on the steps to
  protect the carpet, and not more than one or two
  rods must be taken out at one time.
  
  Then after the steps and banisters have been
  carefully dusted, polish the hand-rail with a
  little furniture pohsh and the sides of the stairs
  and landing with floor polish, or bees' -wax and
  turpentine. If of varnished wood, or if of
  enamelled white paint, wash them carefully with
  a little plain soap and water, and rub up with a
  dry cloth.
  
  A stair carpet will require lifting more fre-
  quently than other carpets ; twice a year at
  least, and oftener, if there is much going up and
  down. When the carpet is up, the stops should
  be well scrubbed with a little carbohc soap before
  it is relaid.
  
  If there is a linen drugget over the stair
  carpet, this should be lifted frequently. Poll it
  up as gently as possible so £is not to disturb the
  dust. Then have it taken out of doors, well
  brushed and rubbed over with a damp cloth.
  The carpet underneath should be well brushed
  before laying it down again. Change the position
  of the drugget a little each time it is relaid, so as
  to ensure equal wear.
  
  To Clean the Hall. - The rugs having been re-
  moved, sweep the floor carefully, keeping the dust
  down as much as possible. Take the dust up in
  a dust-pan and have it burnt. Then allow the
  dust that has risen to settle, and dust all the
  furniture, skirting- boards and doors. If the
  hall is tiled or covered with linoleum, it ought
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  61
  
  
  to be washed once or twice a week, or as often aa
  necessary.
  
  The hall mats should be shaken or beaten out-
  side the back-door if possible, and they must not
  be relaid until the floor is dry. The door-steps
  must be washed every day (see p. 73), and as
  early in the morning as possible. If there is not
  time for much work before breakfast, then the
  steps can be done first and the hall left until
  later in the day. Empty the scraper, and black-
  lead it brightly. Polish all brass door-handles
  and plates ; those inside once a week and those
  outside every day.
  
  Once a week the furniture in the hall should
  be well rubbed up, all brass or other ornaments
  cleaned, gas globes washed, gas bracket dusted,
  and any windows and mirrors cleaned.
  
  Note. - For details of the various operations,
  see under special headings.
  
  THE BATHROOM AND LAVATORY
  
  To Clean Baths. - All baths should be thor-
  oughly well rinsed and wiped out after having
  been used. If the soapy scum which rises on
  the top of the water is allowed to he on them,
  they will be found much more difficult to clean.
  
  Enamelled Baths. - Empty or run out all the
  soapy water, and then let in some clean warm
  water. Take a flannel or soft brush and
  wash the sides and all over with this, using a
  little soft soap, or Sunlight soap if necessary ;
  but if the bath is in constant use this will not
  likely be required every day. If the enamel
  becomes stained or discoloured, dip the flannel
  in a little dry salt before applying it. Rinse
  with clean warm water if soap has been used,
  and then dry rith a cloth. This treatment
  should be sufficient to keep the bath in order,
  but if the enamel becomes very dirty use a
  little Sapolio along with the ordinary soap.
  Care must always be taken not to roughen the
  surface of the enamel, because if once the poUsh
  is spoilt it is much more difficult to keep it in
  order.
  
  A Porcelain Bath can be treated in the same
  way as above, but Brooke's soap may be used
  instead of Sapolio if the ordinary soap and
  water is not sufficient to make it clean.
  
  A Zinc Bath is a little more difficxilt to keep
  in order. It should be washed out as above,
  and, if much soiled, rubbed with a mixture of
  soft soap and Brooke's soap. Shred down some
  Brooke's soap and mix it In a saucer with some
  soft soap. Apply this to the bath with a flannel,
  rubbing it well in, rinse and dry thoroughly.
  Fine bath-brick dust mixed with a little paraffin
  is also an excellent thing for cleaning zinc, but
  it requires a lot of rinsing to get rid of the
  smell.
  
  The Water-closet Pan. - This should be well
  flushed out with water every day and brushed
  round with a special brush, which is kept for
  
  
  9i
  
  
  this purpose only. Then once a week at least
  a good pailful of hot soda-water should be
  poured in and the brush used again.
  
  If the pan has become discoloinred or a coating
  of fiir collected on the sides, empty out as much
  of the cold water as possible and scrub it well
  with sand and soft soap, or use a little coarse
  salt. If this is not sufficient to bring it into
  good condition, dissolve a penny-
  worth of spirits of salt in one quart
  of boiling water ; pour this into
  the pan and allow it to remain
  there for a short time. Then
  brush round vigorously and rinse.
  Care must be taken that the
  mixture does not touch the hands,
  as it is very poisonous and liable
  to burn.
  
  The lavatory brush should, if
  possible, be hung on a nail out-
  side the window. Each lavatory
  should also be pro\aded with a
  towel hung on to a nail by a
  loop.
  
  It is very important that no
  rubbish be put down the lavatory,
  such as bmrnt matches, hair com-
  bings, faded flowers, pieces of
  orange peel, &c. It must be
  remembered that the pipes are
  usually made with a bend, and
  such articles would be Ukely to obstruct them.
  Young servants shovild always be warned against
  throwing any scraps they find in the bedrooms
  into the slop-pail.
  
  The window of the lavatory shoiild always
  be kept open and the door shut.
  
  The Lavatory Basin. - If this is emptied im-
  mediately after use and rinsed with a little cold
  water, it will be easily kept in order. It is
  when dirty soapy water is allowed to remain
  in the basin that it becomes more difficult to
  clean. When necessEiry wash with hot water,
  soap, and a brush, using a little Brooke's soap
  or Sapolio if required for any stains ; rinse with
  cold water and dry with a cloth. Every day
  the taps ought to be dried and rubbed with a
  duster, and twice a week at least they sho\ild be
  polished with a little metal polish to keep them
  bright and shining.
  
  CARE OF CARPETS AND RUGS
  
  To Sweep a Carpet. - In these days of carpet-
  sweepers and suction dust-lifters much of the
  old-fashioned hand -switching has been done
  away with. A carpet-sweeper is now to be seen
  in almost every house, and it is certainly an
  immense saving of labour. The price varies
  from 10s. 6d. upwards. It is quick and simple,
  and takes up the dust where it lies instead of
  raising it to float about the room in an un-
  hygienic way. It must be rolled across the
  
  
  62
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  carpet with even strokes, and there is no occa-
  sion to press too heavily. Care must be taken
  not to use it near heavj' furniture, so as to avoid
  knocking it, and a brush will always be required
  as well to brush all corners and places where
  
  
  Carpet-Sweeper.
  
  the sweeper cannot reach. The sweeper must
  bo emptied each day after use, and any fluff,
  hairs, or thread ends removed from the brushes.
  If attention is not paid to this the sweeper will
  very soon become clogged and out of order.
  
  \V1ieu cleaning a carpet which has a thick pile,
  such as an Axminster, it is better to use a brush
  in preference to a sweeper, as the rollers on the
  latter are liable to leave marks on the soft
  surface.
  
  Patent suction diist-lifters or vacuum cleaners
  are also coming into use, but the really practical
  ones are still much too expensive for the ordinary
  private house.
  
  When none of these patent cleaners are avail-
  able, then a carpet must be swept. It will
  not be necessary to sweep it with a hard broom
  every day ; it will be sufficient
  /''~\^ just to go over it with a short-
  
  ^ \ handled brush and dust-pan,
  taking up any pieces or smface
  dust. Then once a week, or once
  a fortnight, according to how
  much the room is used, the carpet
  must be brushed more thoroughly.
  Cover up or remove as much of
  the furniture as possible. Shut
  down windows and close all doors
  before beginning to brush. Then
  sprinkle the floor all over with
  one of the following : clean bran
  slightly moistened, tea - leaves
  which have been washed and
  drained and mixed with a little
  coarse salt, or cabbage blades
  shred and mixed with coarse salt.
  Any of these will prevent the dust
  from flying about the room un-
  necessarily and also help to freshen the carpet.
  
  Thf n take a carpet broom or switch and brush
  all o\ er the floor with short sharp strokes. Com-
  mence at one of the corners and work methodi-
  cally, sweeping all the dust towards the fli'oplace
  
  
  short-handled
  Brush.
  
  
  or door. Sweep in such a direction as to flatten
  the pile, or tlie cau-pet will have a rough appear-
  ance and be apt to collect dust. The brush
  ought to be turned occasionally so as to wear it
  equally. The dust must be kept together sis
  much &s possible and not sent flying over the
  room. When brushing a tliick pile carpet, such
  as an Axminster or Turkey, be particular to
  brush the way of the pile, or the dust will only
  be swept into it. Collect all the dust together
  in a heap, brush into a shovel and take it away
  to be burnt. Then open the window, and leave
  the room for a short time before doing any
  dusting.
  
  To Revive the Colour. - If the carpet is old and
  somewhat faded, tlie colour may be somewhat
  revived by washing it over with a flannel wrung
  out of ammonia and water ; or if the cai-pet is
  soiled as well, wash over first with carbolic or
  Sunlight soap and water, and rinse with ammonia
  and water.
  
  To Remove Stains. - Ink. - As much as possible
  should at once be absorbed with a piece of
  blotting-paper. Then pour on some fresh milk,
  rub it in, and off, then take some more milk and
  repeat the process, finally wasliing with a little
  clean warm water. If this fails, which may be
  the case if the ink has been on the carpet for
  some time, try Sanitas, or one tea-spoonful of
  oxalic acid mixed in half a teacupful of water.
  
  Grease. - If it is candle grease, remove as
  much as possible with a spoon or bone paper-
  knife ; then place a piece of thick brown or
  blotting-paper over the stain and apply the
  point of a hot iron, allowing the grease to sink
  into the paper. Move the paper and repeat the
  process. Other grease stains may be removed by
  covering them with a paste made of Fuller's earth
  and water. Allow this to remain for twenty-
  four hours and then brush off. Black-lead stsuns
  can also be removed with Fuller's earth.
  
  Chiver's carpet soap is also very good for re-
  moving stains.
  
  To Beat Carpets. - If a carpet has to be beaten
  at home it should be taken into the garden and
  carried as far from the house as possible. If the
  distance cannot be very great, all windows and
  outside doors should be closed while the beating
  is going on to prevent the dust entering the
  house. Hang the carpet over a clothes-line with
  the wrong side out, and beat it well with strong
  canes or carpet- beaters. Care must be taken
  that there are no sharp points in the sticks which
  would be likely to injure the carpet. When the
  wrong side seems clean and no more dust rises,
  turn the carpet and repeat the same process on
  the right side. Then if there is some nice clean
  gresa, spread the carpet over it and sweep off the
  surface-dust with a strong broom. The carpet
  may even be drawn over the grass to freshen it.
  
  Rugs should if possible be taken out of doors
  to be beaten or brushed. If they are too heavy
  to be shaken by hand, they should be hung over
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  63
  
  
  a rope and beaten with a stick, or laid on the
  grass and brushed thoroughly. Wlien there is
  no garden or yard they must be swept in the
  room to which they belong. If much soiled, wa^h
  them over in the same way as carpets.
  
  White Skin Rugs. - If these are large it is wise
  to send them to a professional cleaner to be
  cleaned, as it is too much of an undertaking to
  attempt them at home, and the result is not Ukely
  to be satisfactory. A small skin rug can, how-
  ever, be washed without much trouble. Prepare
  a tub of warm water and make a strong lather
  with melted soap or soap powder, adding
  enough ammonia to make the water smell rather
  strongly. Put the rug into this and knead it well
  with the hands, or put it on to a washing-board
  and brush with a brush. Repeat the process
  in a second soapy water if the first is not sufficient
  to clean the rug. Rinse thoroughly in warm
  soapy water ; put it two or three times through
  the wringing-macliine. It is always better to
  leave a little soap in the skin, as this helps to
  keep it soft. Shake the rug well, in the open
  air if possible, and dry in a good wind or indoors
  in a warm atmosphere, but not too near a fire.
  Whilst drying the rug should be shaken and
  rubbed occasionally to keep the skin soft.
  
  Cocoanut- Fibre Door- Mats. - These should be
  beaten right side downwards, and on a green if
  possible. When very dirty, wash them "with hot
  water and soda and a very strong brush. Then
  dip the brush in salt and water and wash over
  again. The salt will help to keep the fibre stiff.
  
  GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR DUSTING
  
  It is very important that aU dust should be
  removed from oior rooms, not only because
  dusty rooms are uncon.fortable and unpleasant
  to look upon, but also because dust is one of the
  sources of disease when we inhale it into our
  lungs.
  
  The first point in dusting is to be provided
  ^vith the proper sort of duster. This should be
  made of some soft material that will gathpr up
  the dust, and something smooth that leaves no
  fluf?. In large families there is generally some
  old material that can be used for the purpose,
  such as remains of old curtains, or print dresses,
  old window-blinds, or even thin bed-covers, which
  have become too shabby to serve their original
  purpose. Cotton is as a rule better than Unen.
  A duster must always be hemmed. A ragged
  duster should never be used for fine work, as it is
  very likely to catch on to some ornament or
  pointed furniture and cause an accident. Old
  dusters can alwaj's be used up in the cleaning of
  grates, brasses, and the like.
  
  It is a good plan when dusting a room to work
  with two dusters, one slightly damp to gather up
  the dust, and the other dry to follow after and
  polish up. The aim in dusting must be to
  remove the dust and not merely to flick it from
  
  
  one part of the room to another. The duster
  ought to be rolled up into a sort of pad, the dust
  collected in it and then shaken out of the window
  from time to time. The work must be done
  on some distinct plan to ensure every part of
  the room having attention. Commence at one
  corner of the room and work steadily round it
  until every article has been dusted. High and
  out-of-reach places should be dusted first, as then
  any dust falling from the upper part will be re-
  moved when the lower part is being done. It
  is not only the tops of fm-niture and the places
  that are seen that require dusting, the backs of
  chairs, chair and table legs, the ledges of wains-
  coting, and other out-of-the-way places all
  require attention. When dusting a chimney-
  piece or table where small ornaments, &c., aje
  placed, Mft each article separately, dust it and
  also the surface tmderneath it before laying it
  down again. A furnitiu-e brush should be used
  for the dusting of ornamental fiu-niture.
  
  THE CJLEANING OF FURNITURE
  
  All furniture requires regular dusting to keep
  it in good order. A soft duster is necessary ;
  in fact, it is best when dusting and polishing
  to work with two dusters, one with which to hold
  the article of furniture, and the other to do the
  dusting and rubbing up. A soft brush will be a
  help for any twisted or ornamental parts.
  
  Upholstered fui-niture will also require a
  brush, and especial attention must be given to
  the crevices, and folds and buttons on chairs.
  Furniture brushes can be bought in many
  
  
  Kurniture Brushes.
  
  different patterns, and it is as well to choose
  the one that is best suited to the work to be
  done.
  
  It must be remembered when dusting and
  rubbing up furniture that more can be done by
  plenty of " elbow grease " than by any amount
  of furnitvu-e polish ; in fact, this latter is often
  used in far too lavish a manner.
  
  
  64
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  In addition to the regular dusting a more
  thorough cleaning and rubbing up will be re-
  quired at periodic intervals, and then some
  furniture polish may be applied. This may
  be prepared at home in one of the following
  ways : -
  
  (1) Put into a bottle equal quantities of
  boiled linseed oil and brown vinegar - shake
  together and use as required. This is very
  simple and very good.
  
  (2) Take equal quantities of linseed oil, tur-
  pentine, brown v-inegar and methylated spirits
  and mix all together in a bottle.
  
  :Many other formulas might be given, and
  melted bees' -wax is a very favourite ingredient,
  but although a good thing it requires an amount
  of very hard rubbing to remove the effect of
  its sticky properties. Furniture polishes may be
  bought ready prepared, and many of these are so
  good and so inexpensive that it is just a question
  whether it is worth one's while to go to the
  trouble of making one's own.
  
  Furniture polish must never be used until the
  furniture has been well dusted, or it will smear
  and clog. Shake the bottle before beginning,
  and apply a little with a flannel or soft cotton
  pad. Rub it well into the wood, and evenly
  according to the grain. It should never be used
  in excess. Afterwards rub off with a soft duster
  and polish with a second duster or chamois
  leather.
  
  When working with furnitxare polish be carefxil
  to place the bottle where it is not likely to be
  knocked over.
  
  At spring-cleaning time, or at least once a year,
  most furniture will be improved by being washed
  before polishing.
  
  Mahogany Furniture should be washed either
  with cold tea or with vinegar and water. Use
  a soft flannel or sponge for the plain pieces and
  a soft brush for any carved or ornamental parts.
  Dry and then polish as above.
  
  Oak Furniture. - A little warm beer is the best
  thing for washing this, as it improves the colovu".
  This is better than soap and water, and especially
  for old oak, as soap would spoil the appear-
  ance of the wood. When dry, polish with
  furniture cream.
  
  Highly Polished Furniture should be washed
  with methylated spirits and water. Put two
  table -spoonfuls of methylated spirits into three
  broakfast-cupfuls of warm water, wring a small
  sponge out of this and weish the furnitvire all
  over. Dry and polish with a chamois leather.
  No further polishing will be necessary.
  
  Pitch-Pine Furniture may be washed with warm
  water and a little soap, but care must be taken
  not to make it too wet.
  
  Stains on Furniture. - White Stains, which are
  duo to hot dishes having been placed upon the
  wood, can bo removed with spirits of camphor.
  Rub well in with a soft rag and then polish the
  wood in the usual way. Ink Stains can be
  
  
  removed by rubbing them with a little oxalio
  acid. Do not spread the acid over the wood
  more than is necessary. A cork is a good thing
  to use for the application. Wash off with warm
  water and then polish.
  
  Upholstered Furniture. - To clean this thor-
  oughly it should be well beaten and brushed in
  the open air. If the material with wliich it is
  covered becomes soiled and dirty, it may be
  considerably restored by rubbing it over with
  warm bran or fig-dust, which can be bought
  from any corn -dealers. Benzine will probably
  remove any obstinate stains.
  
  Leather Chairs. - These can be washed when
  dirty simply with soap and tepid water. Rub
  very Ughtly with a sponge, and then wipe off the
  soap and dry with a soft cloth. Very Uttle water
  must be used. When dry, poUsh with the
  Unseed oil and vinegar polish, or with an
  application of wliite of egg slightly beaten.
  
  White Wiclcer Chairs. - Wash with soap and
  warm water and a soft brush. Rinse off the
  soap, and rub the cane over with equal quantities
  of lemon juice and water, or with a pennyworth
  of oxalic acid mixed in two cupfuls of water ;
  this will help to whiten the cane. Put the
  chairs in the open air to dry.
  
  Grease stains may be removed from wicker
  by rubbing them with a little methylated spirits.
  
  FIRES AND FIREPLACES
  
  Before beginning to lay a fire or clean a grate,
  the hearth-rug, if there is one, should be rolled
  up and put on one side and a hearth- cloth
  laid down over the carpet. Any coarse close
  material will do for this, such as sacking, tick,
  or an old cretonne curtain ; but care must be
  taken to spread always the clean side next the
  carpet.
  
  Have at hand everything that will be required
  for the cleaning of the grate and the laying of
  the fire. Some old newspaper, dry sticks, and
  a supply of small coal ; a sweep's brush or
  grate brush, a small shovel, black-lead or other
  stove polish, with brushes for putting it on and
  polishing ; one or two dusters, the necessary
  materials for cleaning steel or brass, and a pair
  of gloves. The best plan is to keep all these
  in readiness in a housemaid's box, which is
  usually fitted with small divisions for keeping
  the different requisites, and is sometimes pro-
  vided with a cinder-sifter as well. A pair of
  gloves should always be worn, as there is nothing
  worse than black-lead for the hands, and there
  is no occasion to have them unnecessarily
  spoilt.
  
  First remove the fire-irons and place them on
  the hearth-cloth. Then clean out the fiireplace,
  using a piece of stick for the purpose, as this
  will make leas noise than the poker. Be careful
  to make as Uttle dust as possible. Next brush
  the back of the grate and inside the fireplace
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  65
  
  
  ■with the sweep's brush, and remove all ashes and
  cinders. The latter must be reserved for lajdng
  the fire, or if there are too many,
  biu-nt in the kitchen or boiler
  stove. The grate must now be
  thoroughly dusted before any
  black-leading or poHshing takes
  place.
  
  If the stove requires black-
  leading, apply a very little black-
  lead that has been moistened with
  water and a few drops of ttirpen-
  tine, by means of the black-lead
  brush. Or instead of black-lead
  a specially prepared stove polish
  may be used, such as Nixelene or
  EnameHne; and this is almost
  simpler and cleaner, as there is
  no danger of it being splashed
  over any siu:rounding tiles, or
  even on the carpet. Brush oS
  with a poUshing brush, and then
  finish ofi with a firm polisher. There is no
  occasion to use much black-lead or poUsh ; in
  fact, if a stove is in constant use, it will not
  likely be required every day ; a rub up with
  the polisliing brushes will be stifficient, except
  
  
  Sweei)^s Brush.
  
  
  Black-lead Brushes.
  
  perhaps once a week when the room is having
  a more thorough cleaning.
  
  The bajs of the grate wUl always require a
  little extra attention, and may reqiiire to be
  blackened more often.
  
  Next lay the fire. Many people never succeed
  in lajdng a fire that will burn well, because they
  pack it too tightly and do not leave enough space
  for the air to get through between the paper and
  sticks. Conunence by laying a few cinders at
  
  
  the foot of the grate with some lightly crumpled
  paper on the top. Next place in some sticks
  crossways, allowing some of the ends to rest on
  the bars of the grate, and then some more large
  cinders or small pieces of coal on the top. The
  fire should be made to slope backwards, so that
  when it is first hghted the smoke will not blow
  into the room. Fire-lighters may be used
  instead of ordinary sticks ; they are resined and
  burn up very quickly.
  
  If the front and sides of the grate are tiled,
  rub these over daily with a duster, and occasion-
  ally wash them with a flannel wrung out of warm
  water and a little sunlight soap ; rinse, dry with
  cloth, and polish with a chamois leather. If
  the tUes are stained, a httle Sapolio rubbed on
  the flannel and appUed rather dry will gene-
  rally remove the marks ; then wash over and
  finish as before. Do not use too much water
  when doing the cleaning, as it will be Uable to
  sink into the cement and ultimately loosen the
  tiles.
  
  Then finally clean the fender curb and fire-
  irons. If these are of brass, copper or steel, it
  will be s\ifiicient to rub them well with a dry
  duster or chamois leather each day, and to give
  them a more thorough cleaning, say once a
  week. (See cleaning of brass, steel or copper,
  p. 72.) If they are made partly of iron and
  partly of steel, &c., the iron part may be brushed
  over with the pohshing brushes, or a little
  Brunswick black may be used to the fender if it
  becomes very shabby. Black-lead must on no
  account be put on the handles of fire-irons.
  
  If an iron grate is not to be used for some time,
  it is a good plan to rub it up with a little Pvonuk ;
  this will not only keep it looking bright, but will
  prevent rust. Directions for use are given with
  each tin.
  
  If by any chance the grate has become rusty,
  rub well with a mixture of bath-brick dust and
  paraffin, then wash off and dry before polisliing.
  Grates that are seldom used are sometimes
  painted with Brunswick black to keeo them in
  good condition.
  
  CARE OF CHIMNEYS
  
  Chimney on Fire. - This can to a large extent
  be prevented by keeping the chimneys clean.
  Every chimney should be swept once or twice
  a year at least, and oftener if the fireplace is
  in constant use. Kitchen chimneys should bo
  swept oftener ; throe or four times a yeai' will not
  be too much if large fires are kept burning daily.
  
  In addition to the thorough cleaning given by
  the sweep, any soot which accumulates near the
  fireplace should be swept away with the sweep's
  brush when the different grates ai'e cleaned.
  
  If the chimney should catch fire the first thing
  to do is to close the door and •n-indow to prevent
  a strong current of air from increasing the flames.
  Then throw over the fire a few handf uls of salt,
  
  E
  
  
  66
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  ■when it will as a rvile burn itself out in a very
  short time.
  
  HOW TO SCRUB A ROOM
  
  The room must first be cleeired of as much
  furniture as convenient, and all rugs and pieces
  of carpet rolled up and put on one side. Then
  sweep the room with a soft broom, and remove
  aH the dust in a shovel.
  
  Have readj- a kneeUng-mat, a pail of warm
  water, a scrubbing brush, a piece of house
  flannel or a swab, and a little soft soap.
  
  Commence at the corner of the room farthest
  from the door. Wring the flannel out of the
  
  
  Scrubbing- Brush.
  
  ■water, and wet as much of the boards as the
  arm can conveniently reach. Put a httle soap
  on the brush and scrub each piece thoroughly
  backwsurds and forwards, and -with the grain of
  the wood. This loosens the dirt, and it is now
  important to have it removed. Wring the
  flannel again out of the water and wipe the
  portion of board that was scrubbed until all the
  soap is gathered up ; then dry with a coarse
  cloth. Do not make the boards wetter than is
  necessary to make them clean, especially if it is
  a floor that has a ceiUng underneath, and change
  the water as soon as it becomes dirty. Work
  methodically over every paxt of the floor until
  all is finished.
  
  If the wood is greasy, a little soda may be added
  to the water, and when washing boards that are
  much soiled a little sand used along with the
  soap win be a help. A bad stain can be usually
  removed from a floor by spreading it with a
  paste made of Fuller's earth and hot water,
  allowing it to remain overnight and then washing
  off.
  
  When finished, allow a good current of air to
  pass through the room to dry it ; or on a damp
  day it is better to have a fire burning, more
  especially if it is a bedroom or a room that will
  be used immediately.
  
  
  CARE OF POLISHED FLOORS
  
  These should bo swept and dusted every day.
  First remove as much as possible of the surface
  dust with a soft short-handled broom and dust-
  pan, or, if there is a large surface of flooring
  under treatment, a long broom can bo used.
  Then rub the floor with a dry duster, or what is
  
  
  better still, with a floor-duster. If there is much
  polished flooring to be kept in order, it is very
  important that the worker should not do it on
  
  
  Floor-Duster.
  
  her knees. Then once a week the floor should be
  pohshed.
  
  To Prepare Floor Polish. - Shred down I lb.
  bees' -wax, and put it into a jar v/ith ^ pint
  turpentine ; allow tliis to melt slowly in the oven
  or on the side of the stove, stirring occasionally
  with a wooden stick.
  
  Rub a httle of this on to the floor ■with a piece
  of flannel and then poUsh with a pad, which can
  be bought for the purpose, or ■with a floor-
  poUsher.
  
  Special floor poUshes can also be bought pre-
  pared, such as Ronuk, Jackson's C&mphorated
  
  
  Floor-Polisher.
  
  Pohsh, &c., and the use of one of these would of
  course save the trouble of making, but 't would
  come a little more expensive than the simple
  bees' -wax and tiurpentine.
  
  TO CLEAN LINOLEUM OR FLOOR-CLOTH
  
  Much washing and scrubbing is bad for the
  ordinary linoleum. It should be well swept
  every day, and only washed when necessary.
  Take a pail of warm water, some plain yellow
  soap, and a piece of house flannel, and wash the
  hnoleum with this. Wring out the flannel and
  take up as much of the moisture as possible.
  Then dry with a clean dry towel. If the linoleum
  is very dirty and requires a brush, then a soft one
  only must be used. The use of soda, ammonia,
  or washing powders must be avoided.
  
  
  ....r^
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WOKK
  
  
  67
  
  
  Greenwich Linoleum, which has the pattern
  all the way through, can be washed with warm
  water, a flannel, and a little Brook's soap. This
  revives the colour and makes it look like new.
  To give the linoleum a more finished appearance,
  it may be rubbed over with a little skimmed milk
  after washing and finished with a dry cloth ; or
  with a httle glue water made thus : - Take one
  ounce of glue powder or shredded glue, dissolve
  it in one pint of boiling water and allow it to
  melt, stirring occasionally with a stick. The
  linoleum may of course be pohshed if a brighter
  gloss is desired. (See Polished Floors, p. 66.)
  
  Indian Matting. - This should be washed on the
  floor with a strong solution of salt and water and
  then dried quickly with a soft cloth. Or, if it
  becomes very much soiled, take it up and scrub
  with soap and water and a moderately hard
  brush. Rinse on both sides and dry with a
  cloth or in the open air. If there are stains on
  the matting a little ammonia might be added to
  the water or some benzine applied to the spot.
  
  Care of Tiled Floors. - Sweep every day with a
  soft broom ; and once or twice a week, or oftener
  if necessary, wash them over with soap and
  water. Take some water in a pail and add to it
  a little soap powder or melted soap. Use either
  a house flannel or brush to wash with. If the
  tiles are very dirty a brush will be required.
  Rinse oS the soap, and then make as dry as
  possible with the flannel. A little Brook's soap
  or Sapolio will be useful for removing any stains.
  If it is desired to have a poUsh on the tiles, they
  may be rubbed over with a little milk after
  washing, or with Unseed oil and turpentine mixed
  in equal quantities.
  
  THE MAKING AND CABE OF BEDS
  
  However well chosen and hygienic a bed may
  be, if it is not well made, the cornfort of it will be
  greatly reduced, if not altogether spoilt.
  
  A bed must be thoroughly well aired every day
  for an hour at least before making. The windows
  of the bedroom should first be thi'own open top
  and bottom, the bed-curtains drawn back, if
  there are any, then the clothes stripped oS the
  bed one at a time and placed over the back of
  a chair or chairs. The pillows and bolster must
  be well shaken and beaten, and placed near the
  open window if possible, and then the mattress
  raised on its two ends so as to form an arch for the
  air to pass through. If there is a feather mat-
  tress, this should be laid over the end of the bed.
  
  In making a bed individual taste should always
  be considered. Some like all the surplus length
  of blanket doubled over at the top, while others
  like the covering only to reach to the shoulders ;
  and in the case of a feather-bed some like the bed
  made so as to slope towards the foot, and others
  prefer it perfectly flat, and so on. These may
  appear fads, but it entails no extra trouble to
  givo in to them - only a little thought; and
  
  
  attention to these small details may add very
  much to the comfort and real repose of the
  sleeper.
  
  It is always better and more expeditious if two
  people can be engaged in the making of the beds ;
  and needless to say their hands should be spot-
  lessly clean, and they should each wear a clean
  apron or overall.
  
  The mattress must be turned each morning
  - one day from top to bottom, and the next
  from side to side - so as to ensure equal wear.
  
  If there is a feather-bed, it must be thoroughly
  shaken to prevent lumps. Take the two op-
  posite corners and shake the feathers towards
  the centre, then the other two corners and do
  the same, and next the sides. When the feathers
  seem perfectly hght and free from lumps,
  smooth the mattress over, being particular to
  fill the corners with feathers. If any feathers
  shovdd come out during the process, it will
  generally be from a hole in the seam, and this
  should at once be attended to and sewn together
  with a needle and cotton.
  
  In laying the clothes on the bed each article
  must be put on separately, and not thrown on in
  a mass to save time. They must be put on
  evenly, allowing the same amount to come over
  each side of the bed and be tucked in all round.
  It is also most important to have them free from
  wrinkles or folds of any kind.
  
  When the mattress is arranged, next put on
  the binder or under-blanket. This should be
  wide enough to tuck in well at the sides of the
  bed, when it will hold the mattress together and
  make the bed smoother and more comfortable.
  The under-sheet is now put on and tucked in all
  round, and the bolster laid on the top at the
  head of the bed, unless no bolster-sHp is used,
  when the under-sheet must be left long enough
  to fold over the bolster and completely cover it,
  but this is not such a comfortable arrangement.
  Next, place on the top sheet with the wrong side
  uppermost, and the widest hem at the top to
  turn over the blankets. On the top of the
  sheets lay the blankets with the open end at the
  top (as it is easy then to throw off one fold if the
  occupant of the bed should find it too hot).
  Then a coverlet or sheet should cover all, and
  must be light in weight, as it is meant for night
  use. This should be turned in over the blankets
  at the top, and the end of the sheet tm-ned over
  it; the blankets are thus preserved from dust,
  and the bed has a more inviting appearance
  when it is turned down for the night. Then
  slip in the pillow or pillows on the top of the
  bolster without flattening them down, and on a
  double bed place the opening of the sHp to the
  inside of the bed. Lastly may be put on a
  pretty counterpane, which is removed at night.
  This should not be tucked in, but allowed to hang
  over the sides in graceful folds. If there is a
  centre pattern, be sure that tins comes to the
  centre of the bed, and any surplus length may bo
  
  
  68
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  laid in folds at the foot. If carefully folded up
  at night and eJways in the same folds, the
  counterpane will keep clean for quite a long
  time, and it adds very much to the dfiinty appear-
  once of the bedroom during the day.
  
  If an eider-dowTi is used it should be rolled up
  or folded double at the foot of the bed. Those
  •who like warmth without weight will find it a
  great advantage to make the bed with the eider-
  down between the upper sheet and the blankets.
  The warmth is thereby sensibly increased, and
  if the eider-down is well ventilated it is not
  unliealthy.
  
  If pillow shams and sheet shams are used,
  the pillows should be placed on the outside of
  the counterpane during tlie day, and the sheet
  sham slipped under the bed-clothes and arranged
  so that the embroidered edge rests on the
  counterpane.
  
  If there are curtains, draw these back and
  arrange the ends neatly on the pillows.
  
  Turning down a Bed. - First remove the
  eider-down ; tlien take off the counterpane and
  sheet and pillow shams, if there are such, and
  fold all these up very carefully, and place them
  where they will not be crushed nor sat upon.
  Then turn down the clothes about a foot or a
  foot and a half at the top of the bed, and one
  corner, or two corners if it is a double bed, may
  be turned back again towards the centre, but
  this is a matter of taste. It is also a question of
  taste whether the clothes be left tucked in at
  the sides or loosened. Let down and draw any
  curtains. See that pillows are nice and smooth
  and all straight and even, and then replace the
  eider-down, spreading it out over the bed this
  time.
  
  Care of Beds. - The strictest cleanliness must
  be observed as regards beds, not merely in
  the changing of the linen, but in the bed itself
  and everything about it.
  
  One hears of beds the spars of which are
  never dusted except at the annual period of
  spring cleaning, and sometimes not even then.
  We ought to remember that the dust in our
  houses, and especially in our bedrooms, is not
  only earth dust, soot, fraying of carpets and
  curtains, &c., but that there is a large admixture
  of animal matter, for our outer skin or cuticle
  is constantly peeling off and being removed ; and
  added to that, this dust if not removed becomes
  impregnated with noxious gases exhaled from our
  lungs and from the pores of our bodies, and
  poisons the air we breathe, thereby greatly
  lessening the beneficial effects of sleep. Every
  part of the bedstead should be carefully dusted
  once a week, a small brush being used if neces-
  sary. The best time for this will be before the
  bed is made on the day the room is thoroughly
  cleaned.
  
  ITie bedstead itself, and especially the under-
  part, should bo washed with warm water and
  carbolic soap at least once a year. If at any
  
  
  time insects should appear, the bedstead should
  be rubbed over with paraflSn or very strong
  ammonia.
  
  Japanned bedsteads may be revived by rub-
  bing them over with a little paraffin, and then
  poUshing with a leather or soft duster.
  
  Brass bedsteads should bo dusted daily, and
  occasionally rubbed over with a little sweet oil
  and polished with a leather. Metal polish
  should not be used, as the brass is lacquered.
  If this wears off it will reqxiire special treat-
  ment.
  
  If the mattresses and pillows have been
  covered with cotton slips (see p. 258), it is very
  easy to have these taken off and washed as soon
  as they become soiled. The bedding can then
  be thoroughly brushed and beaten, special
  attention being paid to the edges and to the
  little corners where the mattress is tacked down.
  If this can be done out of doors, so much the
  better.
  
  The mattresses ought to be taken to pieces
  and re- made every few years - not merely because
  they will, even with the most careful treatment,
  eventually form into hard lumps and hollows,
  but because they will really require to be pvu-ified
  from animal matter. Although it is possible to
  do this at home, this course is scarcely to be
  recommended. It is much wiser and simpler to
  send them to a good upholsterer.
  
  Blankets, too, must be washed or cleaned when-
  ever they require it. Once or t'wice a year will
  be sufficient under ordinary circumstances, pro-
  vided they have proper care in the way of airing,
  shaking, and being kept covered from dust ; but
  if they have been used in the case of illness they
  must of course be washed specially, and if thљ
  illness is an infectious one, disinfected as well.
  
  EMPTYING OF SLOPS AND CARE OF
  THE WASH-STAND
  
  The appliances necessary for tliis portion of
  household work are : a slop-pail, a can of
  boiling water in which a little soda has been
  dissolved, a small mop,
  two slop-cloths, and a
  glass- towel. The slop-
  pail used for carrying
  about is best made of
  enamelled tin, as it is
  easily kept in order and
  there is no danger of its
  breaking. It should al-
  ways bo fitted with a lid.
  
  The slop-cloths should
  be of some thin open
  material, which can be
  washed and dried easily. RIop-Pail.
  
  One must be used for the basin and wash-stand
  and the second for the chamber and bedroom
  slop-pail. It is important to keep each cloth
  for its special purpose.
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  69
  
  
  Commence by emptjdng everytliing into the
  slop-pail. Pour a little of the hot soda-water
  into the chamber, and aUow it to remain there
  while the wash-stand is being put in order.
  
  Rinse out the basin with clean water, using a
  little of the soda-water if necessary to remove any
  stain or soap-suds. Then pour a little clean
  water into the basin and rinse the tumbler and
  water-bottle, and dry them with the glass-towel.
  
  Next rinse any sponges or loofahs, &c., and
  either hang them up to dry or place them in a
  sponge basket. Then pour out the water, and
  wipe the basin thoroughly with its special cloth.
  Empty the ewer and wash it out if necessary.
  If rain water is used there is frequently a con-
  siderable amount of sediment which settles at
  the foot of the jug.
  
  Wipe also the wash-stand, Ufting each article
  and wiping it clean. Pay particidar attention
  to the soap-dish.
  
  Wash the chamber with the mop, using the
  water that has been standing in it ; rinse and
  dry with the special cloth. If there is a slop-pail
  belonging to the room, empty this also, wash
  with hot water, using the mop. Then rinse
  with cold, and dry with the chamber cloth.
  
  Finally fill up the ewer and water-bottle with
  fresh water. The former with soft water if
  available, and the latter with drinking water.
  It is very important that the ewer should be
  quite emptied every day ; if old water is allowed
  to remain and just a little fresh added, the
  water will very soon begin to smell. So let it all
  be jresh.
  
  Cover the slop-pail before taking it from the
  room, and have the contents emptied at once.
  Care too must be taken to keep tliis pail very
  clean and fresh. It should be rinsed out every
  day with hot soda-wa.er; rinsed, dried, and
  then left with the lid off to air. The lid should
  have the same treatment, and then be hung up
  until required again.
  
  The two slop- cloths should be washed every
  day and hung up to dry. The glass-towel if
  properly used ought to last a week.
  
  Once a week, usually on the day the bedroom
  is being turned out, the wash-stand, &c., wiU
  require a more thorough cleaning.
  
  The ware should be taken out of the room if
  possible and well washed in the housemaid's
  pantry or bath-room. Use hot water and a
  little paraffin soap or soap-powder. Pay par-
  ticular attention to the handles of ewer and
  chamber, and use sniall brush for the corners, if
  necessary. The inside of the ewer too must be
  washed as well as the outside, and a little soda-
  water may be required to remove discoloration.
  
  If the water-bottle has become stained and
  dim, it ought to have special treatment. (See
  p. 75.)
  
  Wash the wash-stand with a little soap and
  water, using a washing flannel or soft brush ;
  wipe off the soap and rub up with a towel. Then
  
  
  replace the ware, and supply with water and
  soap too if required.
  
  TO CLEAN WALLS AND CEILINGS
  
  Papered Walls, when they become dirty,
  should be thorouglily dusted. To do this, tie
  a clean soft duster over the head of a long-
  handled broom. Any soft broom will do, pro-
  vided the wall is not very high, in which case
  it is almost necessary to have a special waU-
  broom, or Turk's-head broom, which has a
  jointed bamboo handle,
  and can be shortened or
  lengthened as required.
  Sweep every part of the
  wall, moving the brush
  up and down in long
  straight lines, and be
  particxilar to remove all
  dust from any cornice or
  mouldings. The duster
  must be changed when
  it becomes dirty.
  
  If the paper has still a
  soiled appearance after
  dusting, it may be
  further improved by
  rubbing it all over with
  stale bread. Cut a
  plain dry loaf in four
  pieces, and rub the
  paper aU over with it.
  It will be necessary to
  mount on a pair of
  
  steps to do this. Commence at one of the top
  corners and rub with Ught even strokes, under-
  taking about a yard at a time. There is no need
  to rub very hard ; too much vigoiir would only
  destroy the surface of the paper. Go over each
  piece in a careful methodical way, and in the order
  most convenient to yourself. This manner of
  cleaning will make a considerable difference to
  dirty wall-paper.
  
  The ceiling of a room can be cleaned in the
  same way, and special attention must be given to
  the corners, where cobwebs so frequently lodge.
  
  Varnished Paper and Painted Walls may be
  washed ajter dusting. Take a pail of tepid water,
  and add to it enough melted soap to make a
  hght lather. Use a sponge, and wash the wall
  all over with this. Then carefully remove the
  soap with a second sponge or chamois leather
  wrung out of clear cold water. Leave the wall
  to dry without any further wiping.
  
  TO CLEAN WINDOWS
  
  Windows must never be cleaned in frosty
  weather, as the glass is then very brittle and
  would be liable to break as soon as moisture
  were appUed. Choose a dull di-y day when the
  sun is not shining upon them.
  
  
  Turk's-head Broom.
  
  
  70
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Painter's Brash.
  
  
  First dust the windows inside and out, axid
  also the woodwork surrovinding them. A
  painter's brush or any other soft brush is the
  best thing for the purpose. Then take some
  tepid water and add enough liquid ammonia to
  it to make it smell slightly, or a small quantity
  of paraffin. Wring a sponge or chamois leather
  out of tliis and wash over the
  window with it, paying particular
  attention to the sides and corners.
  Finish off with a linen duster
  or a dry chamois leather. No
  material of a fluffy nature must
  be used. Clean soft newspaper
  makes a very good polisliing-pad.
  Commence always at the top and
  work downwards.
  
  Paint or other stains can bo
  removed from the glass with a
  little vinegar or oxaUc acid.
  
  Various powders are now sold
  for cleaning windows without
  water, and these in many cases
  are found quite satisfactory.
  Directions for use are given with
  each special make.
  
  It must be remembered that
  no woman is allowed to sit or
  stand outside an upstairs window
  in order to clean it ; so that for large windows
  wliich cannot be cleaned from the inside, it
  will be necessary to employ a man. These
  men usually bring their own apparatus. The
  usual charge for cleaning is about 2d. a
  window.
  
  TO CLEAN BLINDS
  
  Venetian Blinds. - These ought to be thor-
  oughly dusted once a week. Let the blinds down,
  and by means of a pair of steps, dust all the
  webbing and the cords. Then with a soft duster
  dust each lath separately. Commence at the
  top and work downwards. Do one side first,
  all the way down, then turn the blind and dust
  the other side. Put the duster over the finger
  and rub well round the cords where they pass
  through the laths.
  
  Once a year, or even oftener, Venetian blinds
  should be washed. Take a basin or small pail
  of warm water in which a little soap and borax
  have been dissolved, wring a sponge out of this,
  and wash each lath separately. Then di[> the
  sponge into clean warm water and rub the soap
  off the wood. Dry with a soft towel. Or, if
  found ea-^ier, the laths may be removed. To do
  tliis, undo the knot at the foot of the cord which
  runs through the blind. Then pull out the cord
  and remove the laths. Wash them as above,
  and when thoroughly dry, put them back in
  thi ir place and lace the cord through them.
  
  Linen or Holland Blinds. - These should be
  dusted weekly. Let the blind down as far as it
  
  
  will go and with a soft duster wipe it well on both
  sides. Dust also the cord and roller.
  
  To clean them more thoroughly they should be
  taken down, laid flat on a table and well dusted
  on both sides. Then take some stale bread or
  bran, and rub this lightly and quickly all over
  the material. Dust off with a clean duster. If
  this is not sufficient to clean them, they will
  require to be washed. Unless the blinds are
  small in size, it is not wise to attempt this at
  home, as they really require special washing to
  give them a good gloss and keep them in shape.
  
  TO WASH PAINT
  
  Dust the paint first, using a soft brush for
  the purpose, as this is less likelj- to drive the
  dirt into the wood than a cloth. Then have
  ready at hand a pail of warm soft water, to
  wliich a little dissolved soap has been added,
  and a soft flannel ; a second pail of cold or tepid
  water with a sponge, and a soft cloth or chamois
  leather for drying. Wring the flannel out of
  the soapy water, and wash the paint gently with
  it. Do not use the flannel too wet, and be careful
  to avoid splashing the surrounding wall. Then
  rinse off the dirty soap with the sponge and
  tepid water, and this will prevent the wood having
  a smeary appearance. Finish off with the dry
  cloth or leather.
  
  Do not wet too much of the paint at one time ;
  if there is a large quantity of woodwork to be
  done iL will be a great advantage if two can be
  engaged at the work; one to wash, and the
  second to follow and do the rinsing and drjang.
  The water must be changed as soon as it becomes
  dirty.
  
  For varnished paint use tepid water only ; in
  fact for any paint care must be taken not to
  have the water too hot.
  
  Soda must never be used, but a little borax
  may be added with safety to water that is hard.
  Care must be taken, too, that the soap used is
  of a pure and simple kind. Good yellow soap,
  mottled soap, or carbolic soap are to be recom-
  mended. Then as regards the flannel, the
  ordinary house flannel is too rough, and house-
  keepers would do well to save up any pieces of
  old flannel, woven under-garments, old b'ankets,
  &c., for this purpose. The towels, too, that aro
  used must not be of a fluffy nature ; old huck-
  aback bedroom towels are excellent for the
  purpose.
  
  The woodwork in a house should bo washed at
  least twice a year. Flics and other insects lay
  their eggs along the crevices of doors andwindows,
  and by keeping these clean we can do much to
  avoid the arrival of these unwelcome visitors.
  Finger-marks and other marks should, of course,
  be removed as need arises ; a little benzine
  applied on a flannel, or simply a gentle rub with
  a soapy sponge, will be sufficient. All hard rub-
  bing must be avoided.
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  71
  
  
  White Enamel Paint. - The following is a very
  good preparation for cleaning this special kind
  of paint : -
  
  Take one gill of vinegar, one gill paraffin, and
  half -gill linseed oil, and shake them together in a
  bottle. Apply this to the paint with a clean
  sponge or soft flannel and the result will be
  excellent. No washing is required.
  
  
  TO CLEAN MARBLE
  
  When marble is in good condition, it can be
  kept in order by simply washing it with soap and
  water, rinsed off and then dried. This would
  apply to marble wash-stands and slabs which are
  in frequent use.
  
  A chimney-piece which is not cleaned so often
  may require a httle stronger treatment. Dust
  it first, and in this case a Uttle shredded Brook's
  soap or SapoUa used along with ordinary yellow
  soap or soft soap will be efficacious, and a
  brush should be used for any ornamental
  parts. Al"7avs rinse off the soap, and take a
  second water if necessary. Dry with a cloth
  and polish with a chamois leather. Black or
  grey marble may be rubbed over with a
  little linseed oil after washing to give it a
  gloss.
  
  If the marble is stained, the appearance of it
  may be improved by the following treatment : -
  Take 1 oz. powdered chalk, 1 oz. powdered
  pumice-stone and 2 ozs. soda - pound these
  together and pass them through a sieve. Then
  make them into a paste with boiling water, and
  spread this over the marble, especially over the
  stained parts. Allow it to remain overnight,
  and wash off as before.
  
  Another way of cleaning marble is to coat it
  all over with a layer of thick hot-water starch
  (see p. 280). This starch penetrates in+o all
  the cre%'ices and absorbs the surface dirt. Wlien
  dry it will scale off in large pieces, bringing the
  dirt away with it. Then wash with soap and
  water and dry as before.
  
  Oxalic acid, too, will sometimes remove a stain,
  but it must be rubbed on and washed o2 again
  very quickly, as it will discolour the marble if
  allowed to remain. If a stain is very deep-
  seated the only sure way of eradicating it is to
  have the marble repolished.
  
  Marble Statuary should be washed with soap
  and water only. Sunlight or paraffin soap is
  good, but nothing of a gritty nature must be
  used. The washing should be done with soft
  brushes, small ones being used for any corners
  or intricate parts. The water must be changed
  whenever it becomes dirty, and care must be
  taken t(. rinse off all soap. Allow the marble
  to dry, and then polish with a leather or soft diy
  brush.
  
  Marble statuary may also be eleaned with a
  paste of starch as above.
  
  
  TO CLEAN PICTURES
  
  The Glass. - To clean the glass of pictures,
  dust it first with a soft silk or muslin duster.
  Then put one tablespoonful of methylated
  spirits into a small basin of warm water (about
  two breakfast-cupfuls), wring a sponge out of
  this and wash the picture glass all over. Be
  careful not to wet the frame when cleaning the
  corners and edges. Pay particular attention to
  any fly-marks or other stains. Then dry with
  a fine towel and polish with a chamois leather.
  
  Oil-Paintings. - These require very careful
  treatment. They should be dusted frequently
  with an old silk handkerchief or feather brush,
  but if the latter is used one must make sure
  there are no sharp pieces of quill or wire fasten-
  ings which might scratch the canvas. The
  picture must be taken down to be cleaned
  thoroughly. First of aU it should be dusted,
  back and front. Then sponge the oil-painting
  very carefully with a fine sponge or piece of
  cotton-wool wrung out of lukewarm water.
  Soap must on no account be used. Rub the
  svirface over Ughtly and quickly, and do not
  allow it to remain wet longer than is needful.
  Dry with a fine cloth or chamois leather. This
  can of course only be done to oil-paintings that
  have a coating of varnish over them, as it is the
  varnish only that will bear the washing. If
  this gets rubbed or worn off, the picture must
  be dusted only. If an oil-painting becomes
  very much discoloured and dirty through age,
  it is better to send it to an expert to have
  scientific treatment, as trying different things
  at home might easily end in injuring the picture.
  
  Brass Picture-Chains. - These become very
  dirty after they have been exposed to the atmos-
  phere for some time, but they can be made to
  look quite fresh again by the following treat-
  ment : - Brush them first with a soft brush, so
  as to remove as much of the dust as possible.
  Then plunge them into a pail of boiling water
  to which a good handful of soda has been added,
  and allow them to remain until that is cold.
  Next wash them in clean hot water with soap
  and a brush, rinse and hang them up to dry.
  Finally they may have a rub with the chamois
  leather.
  
  Gilt Picture-Frames. - If the frames are made
  of inferior gilt they wiU not endure much clean-
  ing. Dust them carefully with a soft brush, and
  if the gilt has chipped off in places it may be
  touched up with a little gold paint, which can be
  bought at any oil-shop.
  
  To clean good English gilt frames, dust them
  first with a soft brush or silk handkerchief, then
  wash gently with a small fine sponge wrung out
  of equal quantities of methylated spirits and
  water. Or a camel's-hair brush may be used
  instead of the sponge. Dry with a chamois
  leather.
  
  A little onion water applied with a spongo
  
  
  72
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  sometimes helps to restore the colour of the
  gilding, and also keeps off flies.
  
  Prepare it thus : - Remove the skin from two
  or three onions and boil them in two breakfast-
  cupfuls of water until all the goodness is ex-
  tracted. Strain through a very fine strainer or
  piece of muslin and use warm.
  
  JAPANESE JRAYS OR PAPIER-
  MACHE ARTICLES
  
  •Clean these by washing them gently with a
  sponge wrung out of tepid water. Tlien dry
  with a cloth and poUsh with a little dry flour
  rubbed on with a soft dtister or chamois leather.
  
  TO CLEAN MIRRORS
  
  First remove all dust. Then take a basin of
  tepid water and add enough ammonia to make
  it smell slightly. Wring a sponge or chamois
  leather out of this, and wash the glass all over,
  going carefully round the edges and into the
  corners to avoid wetting the frame, and especially
  if it is a gilded one.
  
  Dry with a soft towel, and polish with a
  chamois leather or old sUk handkerchief.
  
  If the mirror has not been cleaned for some
  time, and is smeared and stained, instead of
  washing it, make a paste with fine whitening and
  methylated spirits, and rub this well over the
  glass with a piece of flannel. When dry, rub
  oS with a duster and polish as before.
  
  For gilt frames see p. 71.
  
  TO CLEAN STEEL
  
  If steel is rubbed daily with a dry duster or
  leather, and so kept free from dust and moisture,
  it ought tў retain its brightness for a considerable
  time. When it requires extra cleaning, use very
  fine emery paper ; No. 0 is best. Rub the steel
  backwards and forwards with this, and always
  in the one direction. Cross-rubbing will not
  polish properly. Emery powder, fine bath-
  brick dust or crocus powder made into a paste
  with paraffin or methylated spirits are all good
  things for the cleaning of steel. These should be
  applied with a piece of flannel and well rubbed on
  to the metal. Then a little of the dry powder
  used for polishing and the chamois leather for
  the final rub up.
  
  The emery paper is, however, cleaner and
  simpler to use, and unless the steel is allowed to
  get into bad condition, it ought to be sufficient
  to keep it in excellent order.
  
  TO CLEAN BRASS
  
  There are many different materials used for
  the cleaning of brass, but perhaps nothing is
  better than fine bath-brick dust or powdered
  
  
  rotten-stone made into a paste with a littlo
  paraffin or oil of turpentine. Apply tliis with
  a flannel, rubbing the brass well ; then rub off
  with a second flannel, using a little dry powder,
  and polish with a duster or chamois leather.
  There are also many modern polishes that can
  be used, but with some of them the result,
  although good to begin with, is not lasting ;
  the brass tarnishes and becomes dim very
  rapidly.
  
  Tlie " Blue-bell " polish is one to be recom-
  mended, and it has the advantage of being very
  clean to use. Directions for its use are given
  with each tin. If a paste of any kind is used,
  care must be taken that none of it is left sticking
  to the brass.
  
  Outside brasses may be kept from tarnishing
  by rubbing them over with a Uttle vaseline after
  cleaning.
  
  Benares Brass should be washed in very hot
  soapy water, and well rubbed with a flannel or
  soft brush. If the brass is greasy, add a little
  borax to the water, then rinse in hot water and
  dry with a towel. If the brass still remains
  stained or discoloured, rub it over with the
  squeezed half of a lemon and wash again.
  Finally polish with a chamois leather. It is
  better not to use any polishing paste for chased
  work, as it is almost impossible to remove it
  entirely ; but a Uttle dry whitening may be
  used to poUsh with, if it is very carefully
  brushed off.
  
  Lacquered Brass requires very careful treat-
  ment, and especially so if it is not of a very good
  quality, as the appUcation of paste and a great
  deal of rubbing would then be liable to remove
  the lacquer, wliich is only a sort of varnish which
  can quickly be worn off.
  
  Lacquered articles should be rubbed up fre-
  quently with a leather, and if this is not sufficient
  to keep them in order, wash them in warm
  water with soap and a flannel. Then dry and
  polish. Soda must never be used when washing
  lacquered goods, but a little borax may be added
  if the water is hard.
  
  THE CLEANING OF BOOKS
  
  Books should be kept as free from dust as
  possible. If the book-case is covered with glass
  this is comparatively easy, but when the books
  are placed on open shelves they will require
  more attention. Care should be taken to
  always cover them with a dust-sheet before any
  sweeping is done in the room. Then from time
  to time, or as often as necessary, the books should
  bo removed from the shelves and thoroughly
  dusted. Take them two at a time, and clap
  them together to disperse the dust, then dtist
  them gently with a very light duster or soft
  clothes' -brush. The dust must not be rubbed
  into the leaves. The shelves, too, should be
  dusted before the books are returned to them.
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  73
  
  
  THE CABE OF A PIANO
  
  The most important point is to protect it
  from all damp. It should never be in a tempera-
  ture under 60 dogs. Falirenheit, therefore it Ls
  unwise to have it standing in a room where there
  is no fire in winter. Great heat is also injiu-ious.
  
  A piano should never be placed against an
  outside wall, unless it can be protected in some
  way, neither should it stand in a direct draught.
  
  A strip of felt or a pad of silk is sometimes
  placed over the keyboard to protect it from
  damp and dust.
  
  It is a bad plan to pile books and ornaments
  on the top of a piano, as any weight is apt to
  spoil the tone of the instrument. A flower vase
  with water should be especially avoided, as
  there is always the danger of the water being
  spilt and soaking between the keys.
  
  Pianos should be carefully dusted with a soft
  cloth or silk duster, and polished when neces-
  sary with a chamois leather. Any marks on
  the keyboard may be removed with a damp
  chamois leather, but soap and water should
  never be iised.
  
  A piano, whether it is in use or not, should be
  tuned regularly by a competent tuner. An
  arrangement can be made for this to be done
  periodically, generally four times a year, for a
  very moderate charge. This will preserve the
  instrument and keep it at the necessary pitch.
  
  BRASS CHANDELIERS OR GAS BRACKETS
  
  Keep these free from dust with a soft brush or
  duster. When they become soiled, wash with a
  sponge wrung out of vinegar and water. Dry
  with a soft cloth, and polish with a chamois
  leather.
  
  TO CLEAN BRONZE ORNAMENTS
  
  These must never be washed. Dust with a
  muslin or silk duster, and use a soft brush for any
  ornamental part. If this is not sufficient to
  make them clean, sponge the ornaments with
  stale beer, using a small sponge, and when dry,
  polish with a chamois leather.
  
  TO CLEAN IVORY
  
  Wash in lukewarm water with plain yellow
  soap, using a soft brush if necessary to remove
  dirt from any carved parts. Rinse and dry.
  Then polish with a chamois leather. If the
  ivory is stained, rub with a Uttle salt and vinegar,
  or salt and lemon juice, after wasliing ; rinse and
  dry as before.
  
  Or, if the ivory is discoloured, lift it out of the
  soapy water and stand it in the sun. Before it
  becomes dry, repeat the process if necessary. It
  must not be allowed to remain dry in a hot sun,
  or it will warp. Rinse and dry as before.
  
  
  Kneeling- Mat.
  
  
  TO CLEAN DOOR-STEPS
  
  First sweep away all the dust with an old
  broom kept for the purpose. Then take a pail
  of cold or tepid water, a piece of strong floor-cloth
  or swab, and some rough hearth-stone, which can
  be bought at the rate of two or three pieces for
  a penny. A kneeling- mat must always be used.
  Wring the cloth out of
  the water, and wet over
  as much as is con-
  venient of the steps at
  one time. Then rub
  over with the stone
  evenly backwards and
  forwards, and not in
  curves.
  
  Next wring the cloth again out of the water,
  and wipe the stone again to prevent it having a
  patchy appearance when dry. Then go on to
  the next piece of step and do it in the same way,
  and so on until all is finished. The sides and
  front of the steps must also have attention.
  
  In frosty weather a handful of salt should be
  put in the water, and this wiU prevent its
  freezing.
  
  GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR
  " WASHING UP "
  
  Before commencing the actual washing of
  dishes, &c., a certain amount of preliminary
  arrangement is necessary. First of all, one
  must see that a plentiful supply of hot water is
  available. If there is a hot- water supply in the
  house, this is a simple matter if the fire is first
  attended to, but if only a side boiler or kettles
  are to be relied on, some looking ahead will be
  necessary to see that these are filled in time,
  and then refilled, when once they have been
  emptied, in order to cause no delay in having
  to wait for the water to boil.
  
  Then everything that requires washing must
  be collected together and put within easy reach.
  The contents of dishes on which food has been
  served must be put away on clean plates or basins.
  All scraps of food, crumbs, remains of mustard
  or jam, &c., must be removed from plates ;
  slops must be poured out of teacups or coffee-
  cups ; remains of tea and tea leaves from the
  teapot, and so on.
  
  If this were not done before starting the
  washing, the water would not only become un-
  necessarily dirty and require more frequent
  changing, but the work itself would be dis-
  agreeable.
  
  Arrange all articles of one kind together,
  plates of different sizes in neat piles, saucers by
  themselves in another pile, cups by themselves,
  and so on.
  
  Silver and glass ought to be kept apart on a
  tray, or in the case of the former in a plate-
  basket, until they can be washed. They must
  not be mixed up with other dishes.
  
  
  74
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Knives should be placed blades downwards
  in a washer or jug of hot water. (See p. 76.)
  
  If attention is paid to these small points,
  *' wasliing up " will be a much simpler affair
  than if it were just started in a muddle. Much
  time too will be saved, as all unnecessary turning
  round and walking about with wet and soapy
  hands ^^•ill be avoided.
  
  Two basins or small tubs will be necessary for
  the wasliing, one for hot water and the second for
  a cold or tepid rinsing water. For silver, glass
  and fine china, a small wooden or pulp-ware tub
  is best, as this is less liable to scratch or break
  fine articles ; but for ordinary dishes, and
  especially greeisy dishes, zinc or tin is preferable,
  Eis it can bo kept clean more easily.
  
  If the water is hard, it must be softened with
  a little soda or borax, and a little soap or soap-
  powder must be used if required. Care must,
  however, be taken to avoid unnecessary extrava-
  gance in the employment of these materials; there
  is frequently considerable w£iste caused by their
  needless use, and this must be guarded against.
  
  With regard to dish-cloths, these are best
  made of some open material which will not re-
  tain the grease, such as thin old towelUng, or a
  cheap canvas-like material sold for the piirpose.
  
  Some people prefer a mop or dish-,brush
  instead of the dish-cloth, and both are useful.
  
  When all is arranged, commence with the
  glass and silver, and when these are out of the
  way start on the cleanest and least greasy of
  the dishes. If there are two people to do the
  work, then one can wash while the other does
  the drying.
  
  The water must be changed whenever it
  becomes dirty ; continuing to wash in the dirty
  water would only result in smeary dishes, with
  probably an unpleasant smell. This is one of
  the most important points to pay attention to.
  
  Another very important point is the use of dry
  and clean towels. The thickness of the towel
  must be regulated according to the kind of
  article being dried. Glass, silver, and china will
  require fine smooth towels without a fluffy
  surface, while coarser dishes will require a
  coarse and stronger material. In all cases
  the towels must be clean and free from grease,
  and as they become wet should be hung near the
  fire to dry.
  
  Finally, when the " washing up " is finished
  and everything put away in its place, the dish-
  cloths or flannels that have been used must be
  washed out and hung up to dry, and also any
  towels that require it. The tub or basin must
  be well washed and rinsed and set on end to air.
  All then will bo clean and ready when wanted
  again, and a pood worker is recognised by
  attention to these small details.
  
  3ee also detailed directions under special
  articles.
  
  For the washing of kitchen utensils, see pp.
  92-94.
  
  
  CARE OF SILVER
  
  The daily care of silver is much more import-
  ant than the thorough cleaning which is given to
  it at stated intervals. In fact, if a Uttle extra
  time were spent over the regular washing and
  drj-ing, the " thorough cleaning," as it is called,
  need not be oftener than once in tliree weeks or
  a month.
  
  The keeping of silver requires a good deal of
  care, but it is not difficult if the work is done
  with method, and attention paid to a few special
  points.
  
  Table silver should be washed as soon as
  possible after it has been used. A papier
  mache or wooden tub is the best for the purpose,
  as then there will be Uttle danger of it scratching
  the silver. Take water as hot as the liand can
  bear, add a few drops of ammonia and enough
  melted soap, " lux " or soap-powder to make a
  nice lather. Wash the silver in this, using a
  piece of flannel or soft towelling to rub it with.
  Rinse in clean hot water, and dry with a finљ
  towel whUe the silver is still warm. If allowed
  to he wet, it will be difficult to remove the water-
  marks. For this reason, if a large quantity of
  silver is being done, it is better not to start it all
  at one time, but one lot can be finished as far as
  the rinsing, and the second lot put to soak in
  the soapy water while the first lot is being dried.
  When dry give each article a good rub up with
  a chamois leather, and then arrange the silver
  neatly and in order in the plate-basket, or on a
  tray ready to put away.
  
  Throughout the process the greatest care
  must be taken not to scratch the silver, and
  with this in view it is really better if forks can be
  kept by themselves. In the case of real silver,
  a careful worker will first lay a towel or piece of
  flannel on the tray on wliich the silver is drained,
  and, in fact, never allow it to touch a hard surface,
  which might be liable to injure it.
  
  Another important point to remember is, that
  both towel and lather must be perfectly clean
  and free from grease, and in the case of the
  former it must be changed when it becomes too
  damp. A wot towel is practically useless.
  
  From time to time the silver will bo improved
  by having a more special cleaning. One of the
  best things to use for this is fine Spanish whiten-
  ing or some good plate powder and liquid
  ammonia.^ Put a little whitening (not more than
  one dessert-spoonful at a time) into a saucer
  and mix into a perfectly smooth paste with the
  ammonia. It should be of the consistency of thin
  cream. Apply tliis to the silver with a piece of
  soft flannel, rubbing each article well, and
  especially the parts which are most likely to be
  
  1 Elkington & Co. Ltd., Birmingham, sell a plate powder
  which ia thoroughly to be recommended. It is free from
  mercury, and does not contain chalk in any form. Chalk is
  very injurious to silver and electro-plated articles from its
  cutting nature, and unfortunately forma the basis of many
  of the plate powders in existence.
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  75
  
  
  stained. Allow this to dry on the silver, then
  rub ofE with a second piece of flannel, using a soft
  silver brush whereVer necessary to remove the
  whitening. Forks require special attention, as
  the powder is apt to lodge between the prongs.
  The " Selvyt " fork polisher is useful for this
  purpose. Tlien polish well with the
  chamois leather. When finished, it
  must not be handled more than
  necessary.
  
  There are many other plate
  powders which can be used in place
  of the whitening, but care must be
  taken to use one that is thoroughly
  reliable, as so many of them are
  mixed with mercixry, which is in-
  jiirious to the plate. Rouge and
  hartshorn powder are both very
  good, but unless the former is care-
  fully removed it looks bad. Methy-
  lated spirits may be used instead
  of ammonia, and will be found very
  satisfactory, but when once a good
  method is adopted it should be
  Silver Brush adhered to, as it is easier for the
  worker and better for the silver.
  Silver forks and knives with ivory handles
  should not be allowed to soak in water,
  or at least the handles must be kept out of
  the water, or the heat will melt the cement
  which fixes them together. The best plan
  is to hold them in the hand while washing
  and to place them in a jug for rinsing with
  enough boiling water to reach just up to the
  handles.
  
  Egg spoons that have become very much
  stained with the suJphur from the egg should be
  rubbed with a little fine dry salt and then
  washed.
  
  A silver teapot may be washed in the same
  way, only if it has a wooden handle or
  wooden or ivory rings on the handle, it must
  not be allowed to soak in hot water. A teapot
  must on no account be left standing with the
  remains of tea and tea-leaves in it, but should
  be emptied and rinsed out with boihng water as
  soon as possible after use. When it begins to
  have a discoloured appearance inside or to
  smell musty, fill it to the brim with boiling
  water, and add a piece of washing-soda. Qose
  down the lid and let it remain thxis all night.
  Next day pour out the soda-water, wash with
  soap and water, using a small brush, and rinse
  thoroughly. A teapot must be dried inside
  as well as outside, and left with the hd open
  until quite free from moisture.
  
  Silver should be exposed as Uttle as possible
  to the action of the atmosphere, more especially
  in damp foggy weather, when it will very readily
  tarnish. That which is in daily use should
  be kept either in a baize-hned plate-basket and
  covered with a piece of felt or flannel, or in a
  baize-lined drawer covered in a similar way.
  
  
  Articles that are not in constant Tzse shotild
  be kept in the lined C£ises, or in bags made of
  flannel or chamois leather.
  
  A lump of camphor stored with silver will
  help to preserve its brilliancy.
  
  Britannia Metal Goods. - Messrs. Dixon and
  Sons, manufacturers, Sheffield, have kindlj-
  suppHed the following directions for cleaning : -
  Rub the article all over with a piece of woollen
  cloth, moistened with sweet oil, and then apply
  a Httle pounded rotten-stone, or polishing paste,
  with the finger till the polish is produced ; after
  which, wash it well with soap and hot water, and
  when dry wipe off smartly with soft wash-leather
  and a httle fine whiting. This simple method
  will effectually preserve the colour.
  
  By attending to the above, Britannia metal
  goods are warranted to stand their colour any
  duration of time.
  
  THE WASHING OF GLASS, WATER-
  BOTTLES, DECANTERS, &c.
  
  Glass requires very special care if we want it
  to look nice. Tumblers should be washed first
  in warm water, with a very Uttle soap or a few
  drops of ammonia, using the fingers or a fine
  cloth to rub them with. Then rinse them in
  clear cold water and place them upside down on
  a tray to drain. Use a very fine towel for drying,
  as one tli^t is fluffy would leave small particles
  on the glass. Care must be taken, too, that the
  towel is dry and free from grease, or it would give
  the glass a smeared appearance. A final polish
  with a chamois leather is sometimes given ; but
  this is objected to by some people, because they
  think it gives the glass a taste. Wlien a tumbler
  has been used for milk or any other Hquid of
  a greasy nature, it should be filled with cold
  water as soon as possible to prevent the grease
  sinking into the glass and making it troublesome
  to wash.
  
  Wine-glasses should be treated in the same
  way as tumblers, only the greatest care must bo
  taken in the drying, because of the slender stems.
  
  If a Httle vinegar is added occasionally to the
  water in which table glass is rinsed, it will give it
  an extra brightness.
  
  Moulded or Cut-glass Dishes. - When washing
  these use a hght lather of soap and warm water,
  and a few drops of ammonia as weU, if the articles
  are very dirty. A soft brush, too, will be found
  useful for removing any dust or dirt from the
  crevices. Always rinse well in clear cold water
  to remove all trace of soap, and dry and polish
  as before.
  
  Water-bottles and Decanters. - WTien these
  become stained or discoloured, they may be
  treated in one of the following ways : - Fill the
  bottle half -full of warm soapy water, and put in
  some pieces of brown paper, some tea-leaves or
  small pieces of raw potato ; let it soak for some
  time, shaking it occasionally, then pour out.
  
  
  76
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  rinse and drain. Crushed egg-shells or fine sishes
  used along with a little soap are also very good.
  If none of these are enough to remove the
  discoloration, try vinegar and coarse salt -
  one part salt to two parts vinegar, undiluted
  with water (this can be used more than once) ;
  allow them to remain
  some hours in the bottle,
  then pour out and rinse
  and dry as before. Some-
  times a brush is an assis-
  tance in the washing of
  decanters.
  
  If tlio stoppers become
  
  fixed in wine decanters,
  
  it is a good plan to poiur
  
  a few drops of oil round
  
  the neck and place the
  
  ^k/g^ \\\ decanter near the fire, and
  
  ■^^B .^-^ ^" ^ short time try to
  
  ^^Es ^^Su loosen it gently ; if it
  
  ^^^B ^^^tI ^^^^^ sticks, wash it in
  
  ^^^^B ^^^^ warm water and repeat
  
  ^H^B ^^^^ ^^^ process.
  
  ^T^^ ^ Sometimes a few gentle
  
  ^ taps ■with another stopper
  
  Bottle-Brushes. "^l^ ^^Ip to loosen the
  
  fixed one. Glycerine,
  
  too, is a good thing to use instead of oil.
  
  Flower Vases should be washed inside with a
  small brush, and if stained, treated in the same
  way as decanters.
  
  TO WASH CHINA AND OTHER DISHES
  
  Tea Dishes. - If these are in daily use, it wiU
  be sufficient to wash them in hot water with a
  soft dish-cloth ; rinse in cold or tepid water and
  dry with a fine towel. If the water is very hard,
  a little borax or soap-powder may be added to it,
  but soda must never be used for fine -coloured
  china, and especially if there is any gilt on it.
  Excessive rubbing, too, must be avoided when
  finely painted china is under treatment. The
  water must not be used too hot, and the china
  should not be put in until the heat has been
  tested with the hand. If the water is too hot for
  the hand to rest in, it is too hot for the china.
  Commence with the cups, then the saucers, and
  lastly the plates and any jugs or basins. Par-
  ticular attention must bo given to the handles of
  cups and jugs to see that thoy are clean.
  
  Care, too, must be taken in the drying of fine
  china ; it will require very gentle handling.
  
  Tea stains may be removed from cups and
  teapots by rubbing them with a little common
  salt, or by rubbing a little Brook's soap on a
  flannel, and then applying it to the mark. This
  will also remove burnt stains from meat-dishes
  or pie-dishes.
  
  China Ornaments which are washed only
  occasionally will require a little more rubbing,
  and the addition of soap to tho water will be
  
  
  a necessity. A soft brush will also be found
  useful when washing any intricate parts. After
  wtishing, rinse well ; drain, dry, and polish with
  a channiois leather.
  
  Dinner Dishes. - As these are stronger and
  generally more greasy than other cliina, the
  addition of a little soda to the
  water in which they are washed
  will bo advisable, except in tho
  case of gilded ware, when borax
  or soap-powder must be used
  instead.
  
  When using soda in the water,
  it is a good plan to use a small
  mop instead of a cloth to wash
  with ; the hands will not then
  require to come into such direct
  contact with the water. Plates
  and other dishes must always
  be washed on both sides, and
  must always be rinsed in clean
  cold or tepid water before being
  put aside to drain. If there is
  a rack, the plates may be put
  straight out of the rinsing water
  into that, and a certain amount
  of drying will thus be saved.
  They should be taken down
  when dry, and rubbed over lightly with a
  clean dry cloth to give them a polish.
  
  
  Dish-Mop.
  
  
  THE CARE OF KNIVES AND STEEL
  FORKS
  
  Soiled knives must never be put into a basin
  or tub of hot water and allowed to soak, as this
  would melt the cement or glue in the handles,
  and cause the blades to come apart.
  
  Stand them blade downwards in a knife-
  washer or jug with sufficient hot water to reach
  just up to the handles, and add a small piece of
  soda. Allow them to soak for some Uttlo time,
  then wipe them well, handle and blade, with
  a dish-cloth, and dry them carefully with a
  towel or coarse cloth kept for the purp<^se. If
  an ordinary towel is used, the greatest care
  must be taken that the knives do not cut it, as
  this accounts for many holes whicli appear far
  too soon in kitchen and pantry towels.
  
  With regard to polishing the knives, tliis can be
  done either on a board or in a knife -cleaning
  machine. These latter can now be bought for
  a few shillings, and they aro certainly a great
  saving of labour, but care must be taken in
  their use. Tho knives must in all cases be put
  in clean and free from grease, and tho machine
  must be turned gently and not more than is
  necessary. If the knife-board is used it is a
  good plan to remove the worst stains from the
  knives, and especially from the points, before
  beginning to rub them on the board. This may
  be done either with a piece of raw potato dipped
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  77
  
  
  in bath-brick dust or knife-powder and rubbed
  on the knife, or with a piece of cork used in the
  same way. This will lessen the rubbing con-
  siderably and lessen the wear and tear of the
  knife. Then sprinkle the knife-board with a
  little of the powder, and rub the knife quickly
  and lightly backwards and forwards on this.
  Any pressure must be brought to bear on the
  back of the knife rather than on the sharp edge,
  and the point must never be rubbed down. The
  knives must finally be weU dusted to free them
  from all powder, and must be kept in a dry
  place.
  
  Should the ivory or bone handles of Icnives
  become stained or discoloured, they may be
  improved by rubbing them with a cut lemon and
  a little dry salt, or vinegar and salt, then wipe
  off with a damp flannel and dry. Fine emery
  powder moistened with a Httle water and applied
  with a flannel is also a good thing to use for
  stains.
  
  When knives are not to be used for some
  time, it is a good plan to rub the blades with
  sweet oil and then to roll them, one by one, in a
  piece of flannel or felt, and in such a way that
  they do not touch each other. This is especially
  necessary in damp districts, because if once rust
  is allowed to attack the steel the appearance of
  the knife is spoilt.
  
  Steel Forks must be treated in the same way
  as knives, only instead of rubbing them on the
  board apply the knife -powder or bath-brick
  with a piece of flannel. Particular care must be
  taken to dust well between the prongs.
  
  THE CARE OF LAMPS AND OIL-HEATING
  STOVES
  
  If lamps are used in a household, the care of
  them should be in the hands of one person, and
  unless there is a capable maid who has time to
  devote herself to the work, it is really better for
  the mistress to undertake this duty herself. The
  Value of a lamp depends upon its being properly
  attended to, and if it is allowed to smoke and
  smell, it is not only worse than useless, as far as
  light is concerned, but there is nothing more
  disagreeable.
  
  To begin with, lamps must be cleaned and
  filled by daylight, as there is always a certain
  amount of danger in working with oil by artificial
  light. Needless to say, this must not be done on
  the kitchen table, nor where any fine work is in
  progress, as lamp-oil stains are very difficult to
  eradicate. If a small table cannot be reserved
  for ihe purpose, then the best plan is to use an
  old tray or a piece of thick mill-board.
  
  A lamp in daily use should be filled tliree
  parts full every morning, as it is dangerous to
  use when the oil is very low in the reservoir or
  container. The oil should be poured in by
  means of a feeder, and not from the can itself,
  for in the latter case it would be apt to come
  
  
  out by jerks and be spilt over, or the lamp would
  be made too full. It is very important also to
  use oil of a good quality. In fact, it is no
  economy to buy cheap oil, as it not only gives
  an inferior Ught and burns more quickly, but it
  is also more dangerous to use. Good oil should
  give a white light, have no smell, and be as clear
  as water.
  
  Then with regard to the wick ; it is of the
  utmost importance that this fits the biirner
  well, and it should be just long enough to reach
  the bottom of the reservoir. A wick should
  last for three months, after that time it is best
  to renew it, when the end to be lighted should be
  dipped in the oil first. As a rule the wick should
  not require cutting, but should be turned low
  and the uneven charred part gently rubbed off
  with a piece of card-board and the surface made
  smooth with the top of the tubes. If it stiU re-
  mains uneven, it may then be trimmed carefully
  with a pair of lamp scissors. After this any
  bla<3k pieces of wick must be removed from the
  burner, and the outside of the lamp rubbed first
  with a piece of newspaper and then a soft rag,
  until free from oil.
  
  From time to time, both the reservoir and the
  burner will require to be thoroughly cleaned.
  The reservoir should be emptied of all oil and
  washed out with warm suds to which a few drops
  of ammonia have been added. Rinse thor-
  oughly, and then turn upside down in a warm
  place to dry. When the burner becomes
  clogged and dirty, it should be taken to pieces
  (care being taken to notice how it is fixed
  together), and put into an old saucepan with
  a lump of soda and enough cold water to cover
  it. Bring to the boil, and boil for half-an-hour.
  Then rinse in warm water, and use a brush if
  necessary to remove any charred wick. When
  quite clean place in a warm place, or a cool oven
  to dry. The lamp must not be refilled until
  both reservoir and burner are quite dry, or the
  oil will splutter.
  
  Pains must be taken to keep both the chimney
  glass and the globe very clean and bright. The
  chimney should never be washed, but may be
  cleaned with lamp -brushes, or a pad of chamois
  leather or felt fastened to a stick. The Selvyt
  lamp -cleaner is a most useful article for tliis
  purpose. If the glass becomes marked or very
  much soiled, a Httle methylated spirits may be
  used to remove the stains. The outer globe
  should be dusted every day and occasionally
  washed in warm water with a little soap, then
  rinsed and dried with a glass-cloth.
  
  If a lamp biu-ns badly or smells, it is generally
  due to one of the following causes : -
  
  (1) It has been filled too full, and the oil when
  heated expands and runs over the sides.
  
  (2) The receiver and burner have not been
  wiped after filling.
  
  (3) The wick does not fit properly, or it has
  been badly trimmed.
  
  
  78
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  (4) Inferior oil has been used.
  
  (5) The lamp -glasses are not clean.
  
  When hghting the lamp, turn up the wick only
  slightly and keep it burning low until the
  chimney is thorouglily heated ; then turn it up
  as far as it N%-ill go without smoking.
  
  When not in use the wick must be kept low,
  otherwise the oil oozes up tlu-ough it and over
  the sides.
  
  To extinguish a lamp (if there in no patent
  extinguisher attached), turn down the wick
  until it is level with the tube, and blow quickly
  across the top of the cliimney.
  
  The best lamps are fitted with a patent burner
  which permits of the lamp being blown out with
  safetj% or, if overturned, will extinguish itself
  at once. Should an accident, however, happen
  and the oil be spilt and catch fire, it must be
  remembered that water poured over it would only
  spread the flame. The best thing to do is to
  throw sand or earth on the burning oil, or to
  smother the flame with a thick rug. Door and
  window should immediately be shut.
  
  The same remarks apply to the keeping of oil-
  stoves. It is almost impossible to prevent their
  smelling a little, but with proper care this smell
  should be so reduced £is to be almost imper-
  ceptible.
  
  TO CLEAN BOOTS
  
  Boots should never be cleaned when damp.
  If they have been brought in very muddy, they
  should be wiped with a damp flannel or a small
  wet brush. Then put on to boot-trees, or if
  these are not available, stuff the inside with
  some crumpled newspaper, and this will help
  to keep the boots in good shape. Never put
  boots close to the fire to dry, as too rapid drying
  will harden, and perhaps crack the leather. It
  is much better if they can be allowed to dry
  slowly in a warm atmosphere. If the leather
  should become hard, a little vaseline or sweet oil
  may be applied. This should be rubbed well in
  and then off again with a piece of flannel.
  
  It is very important that the inside of boots
  should be kept clean during the process of
  cleaning. For this reason it is a good plan to
  cover the hand that is placed inside the boot
  with a clean duster. Gloves, too, should be
  worn to protect the hands. Thanks to the
  many good boot polishes which can now be
  obtained, the old-fashioned liquid blacking,
  which was liable to be spleished or spilt where it
  was not wanted, is now a thing of the past, and
  boot-cleaning may be quite a clean and tid3'
  occupation. So much so that many ladies
  who do not keep a lady's-maid prefer to
  clean their own shoes, and especially those of a
  fine quality. In fact all the necessary requisites
  can be kept in a very small tin box, and cause no
  inconvenience anywhere.
  
  First remove all dust or mud with a brush -
  then with a piece of flannel or an old stocking-
  
  
  leg, apply a little boot-polish, rubbing it well in
  and all over the boot, not forgetting the heels and
  the back part. Then polish with a polishing-pad ;
  one covered with velvet or selvyt cloth is best.
  
  When boots are new and they are found
  difficult to polish, a few drops of paraffin added
  to the paste will bo found a help.
  
  Brown Boots should be cleaned in the same
  way, using brown boot-polish instead of black, or
  the ordinary bees' -wax and turpentine (see p. 66)
  does very well. Stains may be removed with
  lemon-juice or methylated spirits, or with the
  inside of a banana skin.
  
  Patent Leather Boots require rather different
  treatment. Wipe them first with a damp sponge
  and dry them. Then rub over with a flannel
  dipped in a little milk. When the leather
  becomes shabby it is better to use one of the
  special polishes sold for the purpose at any
  bootmakers ; or a small quantity of vasehne
  well rubbed in will keep them soft and bright.
  The edges of the soles should be blackened.
  
  White Shoes. - Those made of canvas or drill
  should be cleaned with pipeclay or whitening
  mixed to a creamy consistency with cold water,
  then applied evenly with a sponge or piece of
  soft rag. Place the shoes in the sun to dry, and
  then hghtly brush off any superfluous powder.
  White kid shoes should be cleaned with a special
  dressing sold for the purpose.
  
  CARE OF BRUSHES
  
  House Brushes should all be soaked in cold
  water for some hours, and then well dried before
  they are used. This prevents the hairs or
  bristles from coming out, and increases the dura-
  bihty of the brush.
  
  When house-brooms and such-like become
  dirty, they should be washed. Put a little
  boiling water in a pail, and add a handful of soda
  to it. Then pour in cold or tepid water until the
  pail is three parts full. Take the brushes one at
  a time, carefully remove from them all fluff,
  thread ends, hairs, &c., and work them up and
  down in the soda-water. Rinse thoroughly in
  cold water and shake well to get rid of as much
  moisture as possible. Dry in the open air or
  hang up in a warm atmosphere.
  
  Brushes should never be left lying or standing
  on their bristles. Small brushes can be hung up,
  and the longer brooms should be kept in a rack.
  No pieces of wool nor fluffy matter should be left
  sticking to the bristles.
  
  It is also very important that brushes be kept
  for the special purpose for which they are in-
  tended, and not used for all and sundry purposes.
  
  EXTERMINATION OF PESTS
  
  Beetles. - These objectionable insects infest
  usually the ground floor and kitchen premises
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  79
  
  
  of houses. They disappear in the daytime and
  come out at night through the cracks in the
  flooring, and they multiply so rapidly that
  
  
  Brush-Hack.
  
  sometimes they can be counted by the thousand.
  They will attack food of all kinds, and the
  leather of boots and shoes ; in fact, everything
  that comes in their way.
  
  Many different kinds of traps have been in-
  vented, and they all serve their purpose for the
  time being, but one of the safest and surest
  methods of extermination is the use of " Blatol."
  Spread this paste upon pieces of thick paper
  about three or four inches square. Lay these
  at night in the places most frequented by the
  beetles. Remove the papers in the morning
  and burn them. Lay fresh papers with the paste
  every night for a week, or more, then every
  second or third night until all the beetles have
  disappeared. The " Blatol " so effectively de-
  stroys them, and at the same time so com-
  pletely dries them up, that their dead bodies do
  not emit the slightest smell.
  
  Fleas. - Strict cleanliness, good ventilation and
  plenty of light and sunshine are the greatest
  enemies of this kind of pest. Fleas flourish in
  warmth, dirt and darkness ; these are just the
  conditions which favour their development.
  
  If a bed becomes infested, the best thing is to
  have the mattress brought out into the sunshine
  and thoroughly brushed. The blankets, too,
  should have the same treatment. Then the bed-
  stead itself should be well washed with carbohc
  soap and water, and also the flooring under the
  
  
  bed. Tlirow the windows of the room well
  open and let it be thoroughly aired. Various
  powders are also used for the destruction of
  fleas, and most of these contain the plant sub-
  stance " PjTethrum," which has accordingly
  been popularly known as " Fleabane." This
  can be bought in powder form from any chemist,
  and other ready-made insect powders can also
  be obtained. Lumps of camphor laid between
  the bedclothes, or carried in a small muslin bag
  on the person, is also a preventive, but the chief
  destroyer of all is cleanliness.
  
  Moths. - It is very important that all moths on
  the wing should be destroyed as soon as they
  are seen. They lay their eggs in all kinds of
  woollen materials, carpets, blankets and bedding,
  upholstered fxirniture, &c.
  
  Any article that is hkely to be attacked should
  be brushed frequently, and special attention
  should be paid to them in the month of September,
  which is about the time when the eggs are laid,
  and then again in the month of March, when
  the insect is still in a dormant state.
  
  Care, too, must be taken of woollen things that
  are laid away for any length of time. They should
  be well brushed, and then folded up in a news-
  paper or sown into cotton with something
  aromatic, such as cloves, caraway seeds, camphor,
  naphtha balls, or sprigs of the common bog
  myrtle put between the folds of the material as
  preventive. The moths seem to disUke the
  printer's ink on the newspaper, and they won't
  eat through cotton. When a mattress or
  piece of upholstered furniture is once really
  attacked by moths it will require to be sent
  away to be professionally stoved and cleaned.
  
  Bugs. - These are rarely found in clean and
  weU-kept houses, although occasionally through
  accident they may be introduced. They must
  bo attacked at once, as they breed very rapidlj%
  Whenever their presence is noticed in a bed-
  room, the bedding must have the most careful
  attention. The mattress shovild be well brushed,
  and especially in the corners and crexices, where
  eggs may possibly be laid. Then the bedstead
  itself should be taken to pieces, thoroughly
  washed with hot water and carbolic or paraffin
  soap. Wlien dry, paint it over with turpentine
  and allow it to air. Any woodwork too that
  seems to be infested should be painted over
  with turpentine.
  
  A formaline lamp left burning in the room is
  very good for fumigating.
  
  Mice. - The best plan is to starve them out.
  All eatables should be enclosed, and nothing
  left uncovered that would supply them with food.
  A cat or small dog which is a good mouser are
  also preventives. A trap, too, is often very
  effectual in catching a stray mouse here and
  there, and in frightening away others. There
  are many different kinds, but perhaps the old-
  fashioned make, which catches the animal alive,
  are the most humane ; others, which are supposed
  
  
  80
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  to kill instantaneously, often succeed in only
  half doing it, and so caxising unnecessary
  Buffering.
  
  There are different poisons too which can be
  bought for the destruction of mice, of wliich
  phosphorus paste is perhaps the best ; but care
  must be taken in using them, and especially if
  there are domestic animals in the house.
  
  Rats. - WTien rats enter a house, it is often
  a sign of insanitary drainage, and if that is the
  case the wrong must be seen to at once, and
  the necessary repairs carried out. Or it may be
  that the house is in the close proximity to a
  stable, and the rats have made their way into
  the house through some holes. A trap is some-
  times of good service for catching the rats, and
  directions for baiting them are usually given
  with each special kind. Poisoning is another
  method ; but this must be done with caution, and
  especially if there are any domestic animals in
  the house. Another danger of poisoning is
  that the dead bodies of the rats sometimes
  decompose under the flooring, and cause a very
  bad smell. A small dog, a terrier, sometimes
  keeps them away most effectively.
  
  If the rats become numerous, a rat-catcher
  should be employed, who will hunt the rats out
  with trained ferrets. When once the vermin
  have been got rid of, all holes by which they
  have entered should be carefully filled up with
  cement or plaster.
  
  Flies. - When flies are numerous, it is a good
  plan to wash the windows and window ledges
  with a strong solution of carbolic, or if the smell
  is an objection, sprinkle with Persian powder at
  night, and then sweep up in the morning. Fly -
  papers will also catch a number, but they are
  rather disgusting things to use. They should if
  possible be put in out-of-the-way places, such as
  the tops of cupboards. A very simple fly-paper can
  be made by spreading treacle or honey on brown
  paper, and sprinkling it with Persian powder
  or other insect poison. Fly-papers prepared
  with some sticky substance to which the flies
  adhere and endure a slow torturing death should
  be avoided- Another good way of getting rid of
  flies when they become numerous is to disinfect
  the room \\-ith sulphur.
  
  The blow-fly, which is larger than the common
  house-fly, is the kind most to bo dreaded, as it
  is a great enemy in the larder. It frequently
  lays its larvae in meat, which causes it to de-
  compose very quickly. In hot weather all
  meat should be examined when it is received,
  and if anything is suspected, it should be care-
  fully washed \^-ith a solution of Condy's fluid and
  water. The proportions to use will be found
  printed on the bottle. The meat should then
  be well sprinkled with pepper or other spice,
  wliich will help to keep the flies away. It is a
  good plan to fasten a piece of muslin or fine
  gauze over the larder window to prevent the
  flies entering.
  
  
  Ants. - These are very troublesome creatures
  to get rid of when once they infest a house, and
  sometimes different remedies have to be tried
  before one succeeds. One of the best is to find
  the opening through which the ants come, drop
  in some quicklime, and wash it over with boiling
  water. A strong solution of carbolic acid or
  spirits of camphor might also be tried, as ants aro
  very averse to strong smells. Or, again, some
  petroleum or tobacco juice poured over their
  nests is sometimes effectual.
  
  SPRING CLEANING
  
  Every year, as soon as the cold days of winter
  are over, and the promise of fine weather bids
  fair to be reahsed, the thoughts of the busy
  housewife turn towards preparations for the
  inevitable " Spring Clean." There are still
  some people who look upon this yearly cleaning
  as a perfectly unnecessary fetish before which
  the housewife bows down in deference to a mere
  time-honoured tradition. This point of view
  is erroneous, and those who share it show but
  httle knowledge of the art of housewifery.
  However clean a house is kept, and however
  regularly the various rooms go through their
  daily and weekly cleaning, it is always necessary
  to have a special cleaning from cellar to garret
  once a year at least. This is not intended to
  take the place of the daily or weekly cleaning,
  but rather to supplement it, and to give an
  opportunity of attending to such matters as can
  most conveniently be seen to at this season,
  when all necessary renovation, papering and
  whitewashing can also be undertaken.
  
  This annual cleaning need not necessarily take
  place in the spring - the time may be arranged
  according to the convenience of the household ;
  but spring is the season which appeals to most
  people as being the most natural time for hav-ing
  a good " turn out." After a long winter, things
  have put on a dark and dingy appearance, and
  seem very much out of keeping with the fine
  weather and the bright sunsliine. There is a
  desire to get rid of all dark curtains and other
  hangings that have been in use all tlirougii the
  wintry months of the year, and to replace them
  with something Light and pretty, and to give
  things generally a fresher appearance.
  
  The best time for this cleaning is the beginning
  of May, when fires are reqmred less regularly, and
  the weather is likely to remain fine. If, however,
  the autumn or summer suits the arrangements
  of the household better, it is by no means
  necessary to adhere to any rigid rule.
  
  A spring cleaning may be hard work while it
  lasts - a few days of undesirable toil ; but there
  is another side to the picture. What a feeling of
  satisfaction and air of content there is when all
  is accomplished, and how fresh and bright the
  rooms look after they have had their yearly
  overhauling, and put on their spring dress.
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  81
  
  
  The spring is also the tirae to see to any repairs
  and renovations, as, for instance, the re-covering
  of any furniture which has grown shabby, the
  re-gilding of any picture-frames which require it,
  the mending of all locks and door-handles, and
  so on. Then a new shelf or cupboard might be
  put up here and there, and any Httle additions
  made which might add to the comfort of the
  home. Deficiencies in stock, too, should be
  replenished, broken and cracked dishes discarded
  or given away, and numbers and sets of things
  made up as completely as possible, so that the
  work of the house may start anew with a suffi-
  ciency of materials and implements.
  
  Importance of Method. - In former times
  the advent of the annual spring cleaning was
  looked upon with positive terror by the un-
  fortunate householder. To him it represented
  a period when he would return home from his
  hard daily work in the city to find a tired,
  untidy-looking, cross-tempered wife, furniture
  heaped pell-mell in all the passages, pails of
  water and scrubbing brushes at every turn, and
  curl-papers bristling in the hair, and a liberal
  display of smuts upon the face of " !Mary Jane."
  His evening meal, more often than not, would
  have to be taken haphazard in the kitchen,
  where pots and pans and other culinary para-
  phernalia in the various stages of the cleaning
  process would not add to the comfort of his
  surroundings. Small blame to the man who
  under these circumstances would seek refuge
  in the comfort and cheerful society to be found
  at his club !
  
  In these days of up-to-date cleaning con-
  trivances such a state of affairs should be inex-
  cusable, yet in many houses to-day the words
  " Spring Cleaning " and " Discomfort " are still
  synonymous. The extent to which cleaning
  becomes a nuisance depends very much upon
  the way in which the work is performed. Some
  system should be decided on beforehand, and a
  haphazard way of doing things must be avoided.
  By the exercise of a Uttle foresight much time
  and worry may be saved, and method, organi-
  sation and thoroughness will bring the work to
  a speedy conclusion. For instance, if painters,
  joiners, plumbers, or any other workmen are
  likely to be required, they ought to be engaged
  in good time ; the services of the sweep too
  must be retained, and if extra help is required,
  a charwoman must be engaged.
  
  Before the work is started in real earnest, the
  housewife should make sure that she has in
  stock a good supply of all the necessary cleaning
  materials, such as carbolic soap, soft soap, soda,
  soap-powder, borax, amimonia, methylated
  spirits, bees' -wax, &c., and also a sufficiency of
  towels, cloths, dusters and brushes to carry on the
  work. Of course the ideal way to do a spring
  cleaning is to have the house emptied of all its
  occupants, except only those who are taking
  part in the work. Then the correct order in
  
  
  which to do it would be to commence at the top
  of the house, and to work downwards, beginning
  with the lumber-room, if there is one, then the
  bedrooms, next the sitting-rooms, bath-room
  and lavatory, finishing with the kitchen, cellars,
  and any outhouses. In the case of a flat a
  different order may perhaps be taken. If this
  ideal plan cannot be followed, then it is best to
  do the cleaning by degrees, and not to plunge the
  whole house into discomfort by undertaking the
  whole performance at once. In fact, some
  mistresses find it more convenient to clean half
  the house in the spring and the other half in the
  autumn, or even to clean only a single room now
  and again. In this way it does not seem such
  a formidable undertaking for servants.
  
  Each day's work should be carefuUy planned.
  Too much must not be undertaken at a time, but
  only what can be done without undue effort.
  There is never anything to be gained by over-
  taxing one's strength. A point should be made
  of ha\'ing comfortable meals served all the time,
  as without this the end of each day would
  simply mean exhaustion.
  
  There will be a great saving of time when the
  actual cleaning begins if all cupboards and
  drawers can be turned out beforehand. When
  they have been emptied of their contents, the
  insides should be scrubbed out with carboHe
  soap and warm water, and then left some time to
  air. Meanwhile the contents should be looked
  over, and all rubbish disposed of. The remainder
  should then be dusted, brushed or washed,
  according to the nature of the various articles,
  and put in gc/od order. Then the shelves and
  drawers should be neatly lined with clean paper,
  and the contents put back in an orderly fashion.
  Any winter coats or dresses which are not likely
  to be required for some time should be well
  brushed, and if possible hung in the open air
  for some hoiirs ; then carefully stored with
  some preparation which will keep the moth
  away. (See p. 314.) Winter curtains should
  undergo the same treatment.
  
  Books, and book-cases too, and stands with
  music, should all be cleaned and sorted out
  beforehand, and any magazines or pamphlets
  that are of no further service destroyed, or sent
  to some hospital for the use of the patients.
  
  Spring Cleaning a Bedroom. - The first thing
  to do before ha\nng a room spring cleaned is to
  make it as empty as possible. If it is a bedroom,
  the bedding should first be seen to. All the
  coverings, including the covers of mattress and
  pillows, should be sent either to be cleaned or
  washed. Then if there is a garden to wliich
  things can be taken easily, everything which
  requires shaking and brushing should be taken
  outside, such as mattress, pillows, cushions,
  rugs, upholstered chairs (unless too hea^'y to be
  moved), &c.'; and after they have been cleaned
  either left in the open air or in an adjoining
  passage until the room is ready to receive them.
  
  P
  
  
  82
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  All pictures, ornaments, and small articles of
  furniture should be dusted before they are
  removed from the room, to avoid having dust
  carried to another part of the house ; and that
  wliich must bo left because of its size or weight
  must be dusted first, and then carefully covered.
  If there is a nailed-down carpet, this must be
  lifted, and folded up carefully to prevent the
  dust flying about, and then taken away to bo
  cleaned or beaten. The floor should then be
  sprinkled with a Uttle wet saw-dust or bran,
  swept with a soft brush, and the dust burnt at
  once.
  
  Should the cliimney require sweeping, this
  should now be done, the sweep having been
  engaged beforehand. It is well also to see that
  the work is properly carried out, and that the
  brushes have been carried up the whole length
  of tlie chimney.
  
  When this is finished, the room is now ready
  for any papering and painting that may be re-
  quired, and must perforce be left in the painters'
  hands until their work is completed. If nothing
  of this kind is necessary, the cleaning must be
  done in the following order : - First, get rid of all
  dust by dusting all walls, curtain poles, blinds,
  and woodwork ; secondly, black-lead and polish
  the grate ; and thirdly, do all the washing that is
  required, such as woodwork, marble, furniture,
  including windows, bedsteads, floors, &c. Then
  the room ought to be left to air and dry with
  door and window wide open.
  
  Meanwhile the articles of furniture, &c., out-
  side can have attention, and as far as possible
  everything should be cleaned before it is brought
  back into the room. When everything is dry,
  all necessary polishing should be done. Pictures
  can then be re-hung, and everything as far as
  possible returned to its proper place. The carpet
  should of course be re-laid as soon as it is ready ;
  only if tlois hsis been sent to the cleaners, it may
  be necessary to wait for two or three days.
  
  Fresh curtains should then be put up, clean
  chair-covers, and cushion-covers where they are
  needed, and dainty touches given to make every-
  thing look pretty.
  
  A Sitting-room. - The order in which a sitting-
  room is " spring cleaned " would be very much
  the same as that followed for a bedroom (with
  the exception of the bed), but there will probably
  bo more furniture and odds and ends to attend to.
  
  Hall, Staircase and Bath-room. - It is always
  well to leave the staircase and bath-room until
  all the other rooms are finished, as there will of
  necessity be more tramping up and down the
  former while the cleaning is going on, and the
  latter has frequently to bo used for the washing
  of ornaments, bedroom ware, &c. The walls
  of the bath-room should always be of a washable
  nature, and then the cleaning is a very easy
  matter, as it simply means that every part must
  be washedfrom the top downwards, finishing with
  thefloor. If the bath itself has become veryehabby
  
  
  it should bo re-enamelled. Tliis can be done at
  home, although as a rule home enamelling is
  not very satisfactory, and if the extra expense can
  be afforded, it is much bettor to have it done by a
  skilled workman. When the washing is finished,
  the door and window should be left open to dry
  and air tlie room, and then the polishingof brasses,
  woodwork and floor should be undertaken.
  
  The hall and staircase is a more difficult
  undertaking. The rugs and stair-carpets having
  been removed, and all pictures, &c., taken from
  the walls and moved out of the way, the first thing
  to see to will be the cleaning of the walls. If
  they are very high, it is scarcely work that can
  be undertaken by maid-servants, especially if
  tlie walls require wasliing ; if it is simply a matter
  of dusting them down with a long broom, it may
  be possible. The stairs, railings, and banisters
  must next be well brushed and washed, and also
  the floor of the hall and any passages. Wash
  also any pieces of furniture that require it, in-
  cluding gas globes, flower-pots and ornaments.
  Next polish all woodwork, stair-rods, brasses
  and furniture, and lay the ceu-pet and rugs last
  of all.
  
  The Housemaid's Pantry. - In a well-appointed
  house where there are several servants there is
  generally a small room set aside for the house-
  maid's requirements. It is usually upstairs in
  close proximity to the bedrooms. This little
  
  
  Housemaid's Box.
  
  room should contain all that the housemaid
  will require for cleaning purposes, (oeo list
  on page 83.)
  
  It should be fitted up with a sink and be
  supplied with hot and cold water. There should
  also be a shelf at a convenient height for holding
  hot-water cans, hot-water bottles, dust-sheets,
  &c., and, if room, a rack for hanging brushes and
  a small pulley or towel -rail for drying the various
  cloths. It will also be convenient to have a
  small cupboard in which cleaning materials
  could be kept in jars, also paper and sticks for
  lighting fires. A small solid table would also
  be most useful if space permits, as on this the
  housemaid could do any special cleaning of
  silver or brass required for the bedrooms and
  also the brushing of clothes that come under her
  care. A few hooks should be put up along the
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WORK
  
  
  83
  
  
  edge of the shelf and at the sink, as they will be
  found handy for hanging up small articles, such
  as taper-holder, bottle brushes, sink brush,
  tin jug, &c.
  
  The following is a list of the articles wliich the
  housemaid's pantry might contain : -
  
  A housemaid's box, a slop-pail, a pail for
  housework, a pair of steps, a kneeling-mat, a
  dust-pan, hot-water cans, hot-water bottles, a
  large can for carrying water, a tin jug, a soap-
  dish.
  
  Brushes. - A carpet switch, a long broom, a
  small short-handled broom, a banister brush,
  a wall-broom, a carpet-sweeper, a fvuriiture
  brush, boot brushes, black-lead brushes, two
  scrubbing brushes, a bottle brush, hearth brush,
  clothes' brush.
  
  Cleaning Materials, &c. - Wasliing soda.
  Brook's soap or Sapolio, yellow soap, polisliing
  paste, furniture polish, boot polish, turpentine,
  ammonia, bees' -wax, coarse salt, emery paper,
  black-lead, paper and sticks, or fire-lighters,
  matches, taper in holder.
  
  Towels, &C. - Dusters, glass towels, slop-
  cloths, washing cloth, swabs, coarse towels for
  drying floors, &c., old soft towels for drying
  paint, two chamois leathers, pieces of flannel for
  cleaning purposes, dust sheets, hearth cloth,
  grate cloths, a pair of gloves.
  
  A REMOVAL
  
  Introductory. - Thanks to modern enterprise
  on the part of removal contractors, this does not
  require to be the dreaded affair it was in days
  gone by. Although a removal is undeniably
  somewhat of an undertaking, it can be robbed of
  many of its terrors if it 's put into the hands of a
  reliable firm, and the preliminaries are arranged
  with some thought and care.
  
  Of course, if money is no object, it is quite
  possible to step out of the old house in the
  morning and spend the day enjoyably in town,
  or with friends, and to walk into the new home in
  the evening to find there that one's belongings
  have been bodily transported and placed in
  position, leaving very little to bo done except
  the arrangement of personal belongings to one's
  own liking, and other small details.
  
  But this expeditioiis and easy way of manag-
  ing the business means money, and we are not
  all lavishly endowed with this world's riches.
  People of modest means must be prepared to
  buckle to when such an important affair as a
  removal is on hand, and undertake some of the
  work and arranging themselves.
  
  Thought, advice and experience can, however,
  do mu';!h io lessen discomfort, and prevent chaos,
  and the more carefully the order of the removal
  is planned the easier the change of house will be.
  
  Making the Contract. - The first point to
  decide is how the furniture has to be removed,
  and by whom. It is always best to choose ex-
  
  
  perienced removers, for although the initial ex-
  pense may appear more, the ultimate sa\'ing in the
  avoidance of breakages and kindred annoyances
  is unquestionable. It is better, if possible, to
  choose a firm near at hand, who will send a re-
  presentative to look at the things and furnish
  an estimate free of charge. He will also
  tell you what arrangements it is necessary to
  make, and what preliminaries must be attended
  to. Removals can now be conducted to all
  parts of the United Kingdom in vans of the
  most improved construction (pantechnicons),
  and all risks and responsibihties are undertaken.
  The charge will depend on the quantity and
  quahty of the furniture, and upon the distance it
  has to be moved.
  
  Preliminaries in the Old House. - Before the
  actual removal takes place there are certain
  preUminaries which must be attended to, both in
  the old house and in the new.
  
  One very important point to attend to before
  lea\'ing the old house is to turn out all the
  rubbish. Clothes that are of no further use,
  broken and hoarded crockery, damaged and
  soiled knick-knacks, old saucepans and kettles,
  empty bottles and jam-pots, all should be dis-
  posed of ; in fact everything should be done to
  avoid the carriage of dirt and worthless stuff.
  Old papers should, however, be kept, as these
  will be found useful when packing.
  
  Then all the furnitiu-e should be sorted oufc
  and considered with a view to its place in the
  new abode, and that which is unsuitable should
  be sold or otherwise disposed of. It sometimes
  happens that an incoming tenant will only be
  too pleased to buy odds and ends of furniture,
  and even a carpet or two.
  
  Furniture which requires repairing, cleaning
  or re-covering, and pictures requiring new frames
  or re-gilding, should be sent away to have the
  necessary attention, and not returned until the
  new house is ready to receive them. The decora-
  tion and colouring of the new house must of
  course be borne in mind when choosing any
  new upholstery, and shades must be chosen
  which will tone well with the new surroundings.
  
  All carpets should be hfted and sent awaj' to
  be beaten or cleaned, according to what is
  necessary. Ciu-tains, too, which require cleaning
  or dyeing, and any heavy extra washing, such as
  bed-covers, spare blankets, &c., should be sent
  from the old house, and returned to the new, as
  in this way some of the removal expenses will
  be saved.
  
  Of coiirse this means a certain amount of
  dismantling beforehand, but upon the whole
  it is better to have the discomfort before the
  removal rather than after it has taken place.
  Once in the new quarters one is naturally
  anxious to get settled as quickly as possible,
  and it is annoying to have to wait for this or
  that to arrive upon the scene.
  
  Preliminaries in the New House. - The business
  
  
  84
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  of a removal can be very much simplified if one
  can obtain possession of the now house some
  time before it is necessary to move into it. The
  house can then bo made ready, and entered with
  comfort.
  
  First of all, every chimney should be swept.
  Tlien whatever whitowasliing, papering or
  painting that is necessary should be done.
  It is fortunate for a new tenant when the
  landlord undertakes to do up the house
  throughout, and will give the choice of papers
  and colouring.
  
  When the workmen have finished, it will next
  be necessary to have all the floors scrubbed with
  carbolic soap, soda and a brush, and under no
  circumstances should one be satisfied with the
  superficial cleaning given by the painters, or even
  by the late tenants. Grates and windows can
  then be cleaned, and if it is winter time, coal
  should be ordered in and fires put on so as to
  thoroughly dry and air the rooms. The hghting
  and heating arrangements should be carefuUy
  tested and necessary alterations made, as it is
  most annoj-ing later on to have to disturb carpets
  or linoleum for the sake of laying a new gas-
  pipe or an electric wire. The water-pipes and
  taps should also be seen to, and the cistern
  thoroughly cleaned out.
  
  Then the question of floor covering should be
  considered. It is an immense help if all linoleum
  and any nailed-down carpets can be laid before
  the furniture is brought in. This is really
  the secret of being quickly settled. When once
  the carpets and linoleum are satisfactorily laid,
  then the furniture can be brought in with the
  happy feeling that it will not require to be moved
  again. Besides, it is much easier to fit and lay
  down a large carpet in an empty room than it is
  when heavy furniture has to be lift/od and moved
  from one place to another. Of course, if the
  carpets consist merely of small squares or large
  rugs, it would be wiser to defer laying them until
  later on in the proceedings. Linoleum in any
  C€we, and especially that which surrounds a
  room, should be put in position previous to the
  moving in of the furniture.
  
  Then with regard to curtains and blinds, if
  any of these can be put up beforehand, it will
  greatly add to the comfort of the first few days,
  even although the old house has to be robbed of
  them a trifle sooner in consequence.
  
  Packing. - While years ago it weis deemed
  necessary to pack all furniture, to tie wisps of
  straw round the legs of tables and chairs, and
  even sew each article into a sheet of sacking in
  order to preserve it from ill-treatment, now one
  can confidently leave the tables, chairs, and such-
  like to the removal men, who are in most cases
  trained specialists to the work. The largo vans,
  or pantechnicons, take most things, and especially
  the heavier articles of furniture, just as they are.
  It is also bettor to leave the packing of glass,
  china, and other breakables to the men, who will
  
  
  bring the necessary crates and straw for the
  purpose. They will be much more hkely to
  avoid breakages than any amateur packer,
  however careful he (or she) may be. It must
  be remembered too, that a removal contractor
  can only be held responsible for things he has
  packed himself, and not for those packed by the
  owner.
  
  Of course there are always a few things which
  can be packed beforehand, and if all small things
  can be stowed away in portable cases, the
  actual removal is done in a very short time.
  Books, for instance, can be safely packed ; they
  should be dusted first, and then put in cases
  lined with paper. Any precious volumes with
  fine or delicate bindings should be wrapped
  separately in paper, in order to prevent them
  from being scratched or rubbed. In the case
  of large heavy books, it is better to make them
  up in bundles, and put a piece of cord round
  them. If they have a valuable binding, they can
  be wrapped in paper as well. The packages
  must not be made too heavy. Music too may bo
  tied up in the same way.
  
  Clothing and personal belongings should also
  be packed. These will go very well in boxes
  and drawers. The latter can quite well be
  utilised, as the men simply carry out the different
  pieces of the chest, and put them in position
  again in the van, and nothing can come to harm.
  A towel or large cover should be laid over the
  contents and well tucked in. Household Unen
  should be packed away in the same manner.
  If there is no room for blankets and eider-downs,
  they can be made into a bale which can easily
  be lifted. Silver and other valuables should be
  put in a chest, and securely fastened.
  
  The Removing. - This shoiild always be com-
  menced early in the morning, at six o'clock in
  the summer, and at eight o'clock in the winter at
  the very latest. Althoiigh everything may be
  left to the workmen, as a rule, it is better for the
  members of the household to take a share in
  order to expedite matters. In fact, if the re-
  moval is to be got over rapidly, the only way is
  for each one to give assistance where h'^ or she
  can.
  
  Beds and bedding should always be sent in
  the first van, and placed where they will come
  to hand easily at the other end. Things should,
  as far as possible, leave the old house and arrive
  at the new in the sequence in which it is most
  convenient to handle them.
  
  As soon as the packing into the van is well
  on its way, a responsible person should, if
  possible, act as pioneer and start for the new
  house, so as to be on the spot when the first van
  arrives to direct the carrying in of the furniture.
  If this cannot be done, then each piece of furni-
  ture should bo marked, or labelled, so as to in-
  dicate the room for which it is destined. As
  far as possible, each article should be carried
  to its own room and nowhere else ; and in fact it
  
  
  GUIDE TO HOUSEHOLD WOKK
  
  
  85
  
  
  may, in many cases, be actually put down in its
  proper place.
  
  A strip of coarse matting should be laid over
  each carpet, to prevent the meia's feet making
  marks.
  
  It is a good plan to get every bed that is to
  be slept in put up and made early in the evening,
  and then, even if it is ten o'clock before the last
  vanful of furniture is unloaded, one can shut the
  door and feel that at least a place of repose is
  secure. Otherwise, one is inclined to go on
  working at other things until a late hour, when
  there is httle strength left to make a bed far
  less put one together.
  
  The question of refreshment on the day of
  removal is also an important one. It is often a
  saving of time if the men can be provided with
  a lunch of bread and cheese, and beer or coffee ;
  and if it is intimated to them beforehand that
  this will be ready at a certain hour, it will save
  their time going off to some pubhc-house in
  order to get refreshments.
  
  A good tea at the other end should also be
  provided, if at aU possible.
  
  For the members of the family, cold refresh-
  ments, supplemented by hot drink, must suffice,
  and those who are not strong enough to support
  this frugal r6gime should be out of the way, if
  possible, on the removal day. Of course it
  sometimes happens that kind friends come
  forward and invite the party to a comfortable
  meal, and this of course is an untold blessing,
  not only from the point of view of the mere
  food question, but in regard to the respite
  afforded from the bustle and hurry of the
  day's work. Then at the other end, if a maid
  can be sent over in good time to light a fire and
  take a picnic basket wii/h her with necessaries
  for tea, this little meal will prove a comfortable
  welcome to the new home.
  
  Settling Down. - As soon as the bedrooms
  have been put fairly straight, it is perhaps best
  to give one's first attention to the sitting-rooms
  and kitchen, as when once these are in order
  and meals can be served with comfort, the worst
  of the removal is practically over.
  
  The stair carpet and hall rugs should be put
  down last of all, when all the carrying and extra
  walking backwards and forwards is at an end.
  
  Then there will no doubt be extra furniture
  required, and additions of various kinds to
  make, but it is just as well not to hurry the
  buying of new things, as it is much more easy
  to judge what is needed when everytiiing is in
  its place, and one has been in the house for a
  few days.
  
  It will of course be weeks before all the odds
  and ends are put finally in their places, but
  these trifles do not matter, and once the real work
  of removal is over and the new house begins to
  look ship-shape, it should only bo a pleasure to
  arrange the various trifles and knick-knacks to
  one's liking.
  
  
  SHUTTING UP A HOUSE
  
  If a house has to be shut up for three months
  or longer, it is better to lift all carpets, and to
  take this opportunity of having them sent away
  to be cleaned or beaten. Take down aU curtains
  and other hangings, shake them well and fold
  them up neatly. Remove all chair-covers, table-
  covers, antimacassars, &c., brush or shake them,
  and fold them up hkewise. Keep the furniture
  as much as possible to the centre of the room,
  where it will be safe from damp or soot, and
  cover everything with dust-sheets or large sheets
  of paper. Any valuable pictures should either
  be taken down from the walls or covered with
  fine gauze or muslin, to preserve them from dust.
  Light and fragile articles, such as ornaments and
  clocks, should also be covered in tins way.
  
  All soiled Unen should be collected and sent
  to the wash if possible.
  
  Close and fasten aU windows, and leave nothing
  open where rain can enter.
  
  Grease any metal fenders or fixe-irons with
  mutton fat, draw them away from the fixe-place,
  and cover them over.
  
  Turn off the gas from the main, and leave all
  waste-pipes connected with the water open.
  
  No food must be left behind, wliich would be
  hkely to smell or encourage mice and other
  vermin. Kitchen premises especially should be
  left well swept and as clean as possible.
  
  All valuables, such as silver and jewels, shovild
  be packed in a strong box and sent to the bank.
  
  Pull down all blinds, or if there is danger of
  their being spoilt with the sun, cover the windows
  with brown paper, fastening it up with strong
  drawing-pins. Close and bolt the shutters, and
  shut and lock all doors.
  
  Notice should also be given to the poUce that
  the house is closed, and they will give it special
  attention.
  
  WHAT TO DO IF FIRE OCCURS
  
  Fire accidents, large or small, are liable to
  occur in every house, and one ought to be pre-
  pared to take the necessary precautions to pre-
  vent the spreading of the flames.
  
  In the case of a partial fire, speedy action may
  be the means of putting it out at once. For
  instance, if a curtain catches fire, which fre-
  quently happens owing to its too close proxi-
  mity to a gas-bracket, it should be pulled down
  quickly (provided the person who does so is
  clothed in a woollen dress), and the flames
  crushed out with a piece of carpet or a rug, or,
  if the damage has not gone very far, they might
  be beaten out with a rug or wet cloth.
  
  A wet blanket or cloth is valuable for beating
  out flames wherever they are, or if the fire is
  on the ground water may be pom-ed over it. A
  syphon of soda-water is also a good fii'e-extin-
  guisher, and in the case of sudden fire, Jire
  
  
  86
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  grenades are excellent, and no large household
  should be without them. All that is necessary
  is to break the glass globe and sprinkle the con-
  tents over the burning place.
  
  Burning oil, as in the C£ise of a lamp being
  overturned, should be extinguished by tlirowing
  sand, earth, or ashes over it. Water would only
  help to spread the flames.
  
  If a person's clothing should catch fire the
  wearer ought to at once tlirow herself down on
  the floor and roll over and over, first wrapping
  herself in a rug or any other heav-y woollen
  article if anything of the kind is handy. If,
  when the accident occurs, another person is
  present, the latter should endeavour to ex-
  tinguish the flames by covering the victim with
  any hea%'y wooUen articles in reach, pressing
  them well over her and forcing her to maintain
  a recumbent position. Heavy table-clotlis are
  amongst the best things to smother the flames.
  It is a fatal thing for the burning person to rush
  out and call for help : as long as the upright
  position is retained the flames will spread, and it
  is always the face and upper parts which will be
  the most severely attacked.
  
  In all cases of fire the doors and windows
  should be kept closed as much as possible, as any
  draught only helps to fan the flames ; smoke
  follows the current of air, and flames follow the
  smoke.
  
  If the fire is of a more serious nature, the alarm
  should be given at once and the fire-engines sent
  for. Every effort must be made to escape and
  to help others to escape by the first means of
  egress. If aroused at night to find the house on
  fiire, wrap yourself in a blanket or rug and get
  
  
  out of the room at once. If the room is full of
  smoke tie a wot towel or handkerchief or even a
  wet stocking over the nose and mouth, and this
  will exclude the smoke and still permit of breath-
  ing. If the smoke is so dense that you are
  unable to stand upright, crawl along on the hands
  and knees, as the clearest air is always next the
  floor.
  
  Should the ascent and descent of the stairs be
  impossible, try to make your way to the window
  of a front room and if there are others in the
  house try to get them to do Ukewise. Unless
  some one is in the burning room the door should
  not be opened, and no attempt must be made to
  extinguish the fire until life has been saved.
  
  On no account should you throw yourself
  from the window, and if in extremity and
  no assistance is at hand tear up the sheets
  and tie the pieces together to form a rope,
  allowing good ends so that the knots will not
  slip. Fasten one end to a bedstead or other
  heavy piece of furniture near the window. Then
  slip the improvised rope out of the window and
  let yourself down hand under hand, taking
  advantage of the knots to keep yourself from
  slipping too quickly.
  
  Those who are helpless to let themselves down
  should have the end of the sheet tied round
  their waist and be lowered through the window.
  A mattress should if possible be thrown out of
  the window, as this might be the means of
  softening a fall if the sheet should happen to be
  too short.
  
  The most important thing in all cases of fire
  is not to lose one's presence of mind and not to
  waste a moment in taking action.
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  This article deals with all that a housewife should know in regard to the management of the
  culinary department of her household. Useful hints are given as to the suitable ftirnishing and
  efficient cleaning of the kitchen premises, care of the kitchen range, and cooking by gas, electricity,
  and on oil-stoves. Each aspect of the commissariat department has also been considered, including
  such iniportant questions as the marketing and storing of provisions. The article concludes with
  a complete calendar of meat, fish, poultry, game, fruit and vegetables in season, which has been
  compiled for the purposes of easy reference.
  
  
  HOW TO FURNISH A KITCHEN AND
  1 SCULLERY
  
  The furnishings and fittings of the kitchen
  premises are very important - so much of the
  comfort of the household depends upon this de-
  partment and the way in which it is managed
  that it is well worth while to fit it up comfort-
  ably and suitably. When we consider that ser-
  vants not only have to live in a kitchen as we
  live in our dining-room and drawing-room, but
  that their weekly " afternoons " or " evenings
  out " constitute the only change they have from
  their surroundings, we ought to try to give the
  room in which they spend so much of their
  time as homeUke an appearance as possible.
  
  It often happens, however, that people who
  are most particular about having the other
  rooms of their house dainty and comfortable
  grudge the bare necessaries when anything in
  connection with the kitchen is concerned.
  
  The kitchen itself should be bright, airy,
  and roomy. Unfortunately, it is not always
  possible to have all these conditions fulfilled,
  especially where there are underground premises
  and an area, and the kitchen -window looks
  out on to a stone wall, but in such cases
  the best must be made of a bad job and
  a few additional inside comforts must make
  up for the want of outside dew. Sometimes
  the hght in premises of this kind may be in-
  creased by having the oatside wall painted
  white or a light cream colour.
  
  The ventilation must be good, and in addition
  to the doors and windows it is well to have a
  ventilator placed in the wall above the height
  of the window to allow the fumes of cooking to
  escape.
  
  The sanitary arrangements should also be
  carefully attended to, and there must be a good
  supply of water.
  
  The kitchen ought to be within easy reach
  
  
  87
  
  
  of the dining-room, and yet so placed that the
  odours of cooking do not reach other parts of
  the house. The larder and storeroom should
  also be close at hand to avoid any vmnecessary
  going backwards and forwards from one place
  to the other.
  
  Walls and Ceilings. - The ceiling of the kitchen
  ought to be smoothly plastered and then white-
  washed. This whitewash must be renewed
  every year, not only for cleanliness, but also to
  give more light. For the waUs glazed tiles are
  the ideal covering, as they can so easily be
  washed, or a high-tiled dado with distemper or
  other suitable finish above. But both these
  methods of wall -covering prove somewhat ex-
  pensive, and people of moderate means have
  to content themselves with sometliing a Httle
  cheaper. The walls may be washed all over
  with a simple distemper, and as this process
  costs very Uttle the distemper may be renewed
  whenever it becomes dirty. Pretty Hght
  colours, such as buff, pink, pale blue, or pale
  green are the most effective. Varnished paper
  makes another appropriate covering ; it leists
  well, looks bright, and can very easily be cleaned ;
  or, again, the Sanitary or so-called Washable
  paper might be used - this is less expensive than
  varnished paper, but it will not last so well nor
  stand so much cleaning. Specially prepared
  paints, such as Ripohn, Sanalene, and Muraline
  are also to be recommended ; they are to be had
  in a variety of shades, and make a kitchen look
  very pretty. Tlie woodwork in the kitchen
  should either be painted the same colour as
  the walls in a darker shade, or with wliite paint
  or a light oak stain.
  
  The Floor. - Tlie flooring of a kitchen varies
  very much according to locality. In some
  parts of the country we find red flags, in others
  glazed tiles, in others red or yeUow bricks, con-
  crete, or wooden boards, &c. Wlien the floor
  consists of flags, tiles, or bricks it does not, "is
  
  
  88
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  a rule, require fxirther covering, eis it can be
  easily washed, and one or two rugs or mats for
  standing on 6ire all that is necessary. But when
  there is a wooden floor it is important to cover
  it with some material that is easily washed, as
  boards soon become soiled and are very difficult
  to keep in order. Good linoleum is the best
  kitchen floor -covering, and one with a pattern
  is to be preferred to a perfectly plain one, as
  it does not show meirks so quickly. Inlaid
  linoleum is the best, as its pattern is ingrained
  in the material, and although the initial outlay
  is greater it comes cheaper in the end, as it is
  so much more durable than the other makes.
  (See also p. 21.)
  
  Fixtures. - The number of immovable fixtures
  in a kitchen varies considerably with the style
  of the house - they usually comprise a dresser,
  shelves, cupboards, a pulley for hanging up
  towels, &c., a roller for towel, gas or electric
  fittings, bells, sink and kitchen range or stove.
  
  The dresser is really the kitchen sideboard,
  and as a rule it is fitted against one of the walls
  and belongs to the house. If it has to be made
  to order, take careful
  measurements of the
  wall space you can allow
  and have it made to fit.
  The upper part is usually
  made with grooved
  shelves, on which the
  plates and dishes of the
  dinner-service are kept,
  or it may be fitted with
  shelves for jars with
  hooks along the edge of
  the shelf on which to
  hang small utensils. The
  top part of the dresser
  gives room for soup-
  tiu-een, vegetable dishes,
  sauce-boats, knife-tray,
  weights and scales, &c.
  - beneath there should be two or three drawers
  for holding spoons, knives, &c., and kitchen
  towels, while the lower part is fitted up with
  cupboards for holding dishes and the larger
  cookery utensils. If the kitchen is small, make
  the most of it by using the walls. It is a good
  plan to have a shelf carried roimd all the
  available wall space, and just as high as a
  servant can reach. When a number of hooks
  Kre required a strip of wood might be fixed
  below the shelf, and nails or hooks put into that.
  It is a bad practice to drive nails into the
  wall itself, as they are sure to come out and
  bring some of the plaster with them.
  
  Then there should be a well-constructed sink.
  Stone-ware or tiled sinks are the best, as they
  are the easiest to clean and keep in good order.
  The back of the sink should be made of some
  material which will not spoil with the splashing
  of the water; if not already fitted with tiles.
  
  
  Kitchen Dresser.
  
  
  a sheet of zinc might be fitted up or a sheet of
  " Emdeca," wliich is an imitation of tiles and
  very practical. (See p. 14.) Above the sink
  should be a plate-rack in which plates can be
  drained, and the necessity of drying thus avoided.
  Underneath might be one or two shelves or a
  
  
  Plate-Eack.
  
  small cupboard for keeping cleaning requisites
  - and at the right-hand side of the sink a
  sloping grooved board on which to lay dishes.
  Sec, to drain. A flap table might also be
  arranged at the side on which to place dishes
  when they are dried if table space is scanty.
  
  If there is a separate scullery this would
  naturally contain the sink, &c., and here all
  the washing up would be done. Tlio walls of
  the scullery should be lined with shelves,
  and as much as possible made of the available
  space. Tlie shelves on wliich saucepans are
  placed shoTjld be sparred, as this allows the air
  to get inside to dry them. If there is not much
  room for sheKdng, a saucepan-stand which can
  be placed either in kitchen or scullery is often
  found most valuable. A small cupboard or
  shelves underneath the sink
  wiU be found useful for keep-
  ing cleaning materials. Tlie
  scullery, like the kitchen,
  should be light and well
  ventilated, and unless the
  floor is tiled or flagged it
  should be covered in the
  same way.
  
  Cupboard accommodation
  is also most valuable in a
  kitchen. If this is inade-
  quate, it is sometimes pos-
  sible to have a cupboard
  fitted up on the wall for
  holding a small store of
  provisions. A recess or a
  corner can also be utilised Saucepan-Stand.
  for this purpose, and a joiner
  will be able to fit up a few shelves with a
  simple door at a very small cost.
  
  Every kitchen should be supplied with a
  pulley on which to dry kitchen towels (unless
  those can be hung elsewhere) and also a roller
  with brackets on which to hang a roller-towel.
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  89
  
  
  The lighting of the kitchen is another im-
  portant point, and the light, whether it be gas
  or electricity, should be so arranged as to make
  it possible to see clearly both at the table and
  at the stove.
  
  The Kitcheu Range. - The most important
  fixture of all is the kitchen range. It is impos-
  sible to do good cooking vfithout a good stove.
  The open grate limits one's sphere of work con-
  siderably, and there is always the risk of getting
  food smoky and saucepans dirty. It is certainly
  best for roasting (a roast never tastes so well
  as when cooked in front of an open fire), also
  for broiling and grilUng, but with these its
  merits end. An open range is scarcely to be
  seen now in modern houses, the kitchener or close
  range has taken its place.
  
  There is an endless variety of kitcheners, all
  more or less similar but going under different
  names. A tenant has not usually a choice in
  this matter, but before taking a house it should
  always be seen that a proper stove has been
  provided and that it is in good working order.
  
  In choosing or bujdng a stove, do not look
  out for the cheapest kind procurable, but buy
  one of a thoroughly good make, and have it
  well fitted up. The material must be good.
  Cheap stoves are usually made of some Hght
  metal which wears out very quickly, causing
  great waste of fuel and much annoyance as
  well, while a weU-constructed one will be made
  of malleable iron, wrought iron or steel.
  
  A good stove should be provided with an
  adjustable bottom, which can be raised or
  lowered according to the size of fire required.
  Thus, when the stove is not being used for
  cooking purpose? the fire may still be kept in
  and the water wai'ineo, but with a very small
  consumption of fuel. There should also be a
  well-ventilated oven, a good boiler and water-
  supply, and a plate-rack on wliich to warm
  dishes.
  
  The best type of stove is usually convertible
  into an open range, and a cheerful fire can be
  arranged in the evening by simply sliding back
  the top plate, .i.
  
  It is a good plan to have a light screen made
  which can be hooked on to the front of the fire,
  as this serves as a great protection when any one
  has to stand near the stove to stir a sauce or
  do other cooking.
  
  Very often the reason why a kitchen range
  does not burn well is that it is not understood.
  It is important, therefore, that both mistress
  and servant should thoroughly understand the
  working of it, and also the method of cleaning
  before the stove is condemned as being in-
  efSciont. For cleaning, see p. 91.
  
  Furniture. - For the ordinary kitchen there is
  very Uttle movable fiu-niture required. Tlie
  table is the chief article, and this ought to bo
  as large as is convenient. If there is not much
  floor space available it is better to have it
  
  
  made with flaps, wliich can easily be put down
  when not in use. It ouglit to bo made of plain
  unpainted deal, and should be of a convenient
  height to work at and very steady on its legs.
  Ivitchen tables are generally made oblong with
  one or two drawers at the ends, which are
  always an advantage. Sometimes too a narrow
  shelf is put underneath on which articles can
  be placed when cooking is being done, thus
  keeping the table itself more clear.
  
  In larger kitchens a second table wiU always
  be found useful - a smaller and hghter one wliich
  can be moved about, or even a collapsible one
  wluch can be put aside when necessary.
  
  A fender may also be required and a simple
  curb is all that is necessary, although one made
  of steel will of course bo more ornamental. In
  very small kitchens the fender might be dis-
  pensed with altogether, and a hght
  screen hooked on to the front of the
  fire to prevent the cinders faUing out
  will take up much loss space. A
  strong poker, coal shovel and scuttle
  should also be provided. The best
  shape of scuttle is that known as a Coal-Hod.
  coal-hod ; it takes up little room,
  and is not easily knocked over like the scoop
  shape. The flue-rake and flue-brush are gener-
  ally supphod as part of the stove.
  
  The chairs should be of plain varnished wood,
  and the nimiber wiU depend upon how many
  maids there are - ^there should be one for each and
  one over. Tlian if the Idtchen is used as the
  maid's sitting-room, there ought to be one or two
  comfortable chairs for resting in the evening.
  Strong wicker ones or the hght-coloured Windsor
  ai'm-chairs are both suit-
  able- or even camp-chairs
  ■with a strong carpet cover
  might be used, as they can
  be folded up during the day
  and put out of the way.
  In any ca;Se it should be
  remembered that our maids
  require something a little
  better than a straight-
  backed wooden seat when
  their day's work is over.
  
  One or two strong rugs
  should also be supplied -
  
  sometliing of a nice bright colovu*. Pieces of
  stout carpet neatly bound at the edges will
  serve the purpose very well. A rule should
  be made that these rugs are rolled up at night
  and not put down again until the prmcipal
  work in the kitchen is finished the following
  day.
  
  A dark serge cloth might also be supplied
  to cover one of the tables and give it a less
  forbidding appearance.
  
  The arrangement of the window depends
  very much upon the style of the house. As a
  rule, a short muslin curtain across the Mrindow
  
  
  Windsor Chair.
  
  
  90
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  %
  
  
  is all that is necessary and all there is room for.
  Madras or strong washing muslin is tho best
  to use for the purpose, or, if preferred, a light
  casement cloth ; but it must be of a material
  that will wash well and not lose its colour in the
  tub. The curtain should be simply made with
  a hem top and bottom. If tho window is wide
  it may be better made in two parts with a
  division in tlie middle, but, if narrow, it will
  look better in one piece. The curtain should be
  half as wide again as the width of the window
  to allow for fulness. A hght brass rod should
  be fitted across the window at a convenient
  height and the curtain fixed to that either by
  means of small rings or by slipping the rod
  through the upper hem of the curtain. If the
  kitchen is large and the window wide, short side-
  curtains, of some pretty cretonne, linen, or
  casement cloth might add very much to the
  comfortable appearance of the room. These
  are easily washed, and, provided they arc
  not made too long, they will not be found an
  inconvenience. A simple brass or bamboo rod
  should be fixed across the window and the
  curteiins attached to that by means of rings sewn
  on to the upper hem or heading. By this
  means the curtains can easily be slipped off
  when they require wasliing.
  
  A good clock must not be forgotten when
  furnishing the kitchen - either one to hang on
  the wall above the kitchen mantelpiece or a
  small aliirm clock, wliich can easily be caxried
  about or taken to the maid's bedroom at
  night.
  
  Utensils. - The number and kind of utensils
  must be determined somewhat by the size and
  circumstances of the household.
  
  Unless there is a kitchen-maid it is a mistake
  to buy a largo quantity of utensils which require
  polishing and keeping bright. In fact, it is
  never wise to buy too many to begin with ; the
  more you have the more there will be to keep
  in order, and when means are limited and
  service difficult to procure it is much wiser to
  start with what is strictly necessary and add
  by degrees to the supply.
  
  In small houses and flats the kitchen utensils
  must be reduced to a minimum. Shelf accom-
  modation is scarce and there are few if any
  cupboards ; large and heavy saucepans would
  then be quite out of place and a multifarious
  collection of moulds and dishes only in the way.
  At the same time it is unreasonable to expect
  dainty cooking to be done without implements,
  and every facility should be given to those who
  undertake the work.
  
  It will generally be found that the better the
  cook the fewer utensils she will require, but
  still maids have difJerent ways of working, and
  it is always wise to give them what they ask
  for within reasonable limits.
  
  And, again, when service is short an effort
  should be made to give as many labour-saving
  
  
  appliances as possible, such aa a knife -cleaner,
  a mincing machine, a gas stove or gas ring, &c.
  
  Whatever is bought should be good of its
  kind. Buy plain and well-made articles and they
  will l£ist a lifetime.
  
  Saucepans. - Except for a large estabUshment
  where cooking has to be done in big quantities
  it is a mistake to invest in a number of heavy
  iron saucepans. One or two will be quite
  sufficient. The others might be made of steel,
  copper, aluminium, enamelled tin, or fire-proof
  w£ire.
  
  Both steel and copper saucepans are excellent
  and very durable, but they are expensive to buy,
  and those made of copper are liable to verdigris
  unless well looked after.
  
  Tlie enamelled tin saucepans will be found
  most useful, but they should be bought in a
  good quality. The hard grey enamel lasts
  better than the white, and will stand any
  amount of hard wear. The cheap make of
  this kind of saucepan should be avoided, as
  the lining soon begins to crack and peal off
  and then they become dangerous to use.
  
  Aluminium saucepans are also to be recom-
  mended, and they are rapidly supplanting all
  others made of metal, as they are absolutely
  safe from all fear of verdigris and they do not
  rust. They are easily cleaned (see p. 93), and
  nothing could be hghter to handle.
  
  Then there are the clay terrines and brown
  stoneware saucepans, so dear to the heart of
  the French housevnfe, and which are coming
  more and more into favour in this country
  (see p. 148).
  
  When once a trial has been made of the
  lighter style of saucepan, there will seldom be
  a return to the heavy iron make which are such
  a labour to clean, not to speak of the lifting.
  
  The following list of utensils with approxi-
  mate prices may prove useful to those who are
  starting housekeeping for the first time. It is
  suitable for a small house with one or two
  servants.
  
  s. d.
  
  1 Galvanised bath 2 2
  
  1 Galvanised pail 10
  
  I Tin enamelled basin 10
  
  1 Fish-kettle 3 3
  
  1 Frying-pan 10
  
  1 Iron stewpan 2 0
  
  1 Iron saucepan 19
  
  2 Enamelled saucepans. Is. 3d., Is. 9d. . 3 0
  or 2 Earthenware saucepans .... 2 0
  
  or 2 Aluminium saucepans 3 6
  
  1 Iron kettle 3 6
  
  1 Tin kettle 16
  
  1 Wire sieve 12
  
  1 Cooking board 2 3
  
  1 Pot-rest 3
  
  1 Rolling-pin 6
  
  1 Flour dredger 6
  
  1 Sugar dredger 6
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  91
  
  
  8. d.
  
  1 Funnel 3
  
  1 Cork-screw G
  
  1 pair of scissors 10
  
  1 Tin-opener 4
  
  2 Oven tins 14
  
  1 Cake tin 8
  
  1 Tray 2 0
  
  1 Sink tidy frorn 6J
  
  1 Gridiron or hanging grill 1 4|
  
  1 Steamer 6 0
  
  1 Set of skewers 6
  
  1 Grater 7
  
  1 Poker 9
  
  1 Egg whisk 6
  
  1 Soap dish 4
  
  1 Jelly mould 10
  
  1 dozen patty pans 4
  
  1 Palette knife 10
  
  1 Cook's knife 13
  
  2 Table knives and forks 1 10
  
  1 Potato knife 4^
  
  2 Iron spoons 6
  
  2 Wooden spoons 5
  
  2 Dessert spoons 8
  
  2 Tea spoons 4
  
  1 Toasting fork 4^
  
  1 Gravy strainer 10
  
  1 Knife-board 10
  
  1 Pepper and salt box 9
  
  1 Shovel 6
  
  1 Coal-scuttle 1 11
  
  1 Roasting tin and stand 16
  
  1 Long broom 16
  
  1 Yard broom 14
  
  1 Set shoe brushes 2 9
  
  1 Set stove brushes 2 9
  
  1 Sweep's brush 9
  
  2 Scrubbing brushes 16
  
  1 Nail brush 2
  
  2 Egg-brushes 3
  
  1 Sink brush 6
  
  1 Dish mop 4i
  
  3 Jugs 1 O'
  
  2 Pie dishes 16
  
  2 Pudding bowls 12
  
  1 Large mixing bowl 10
  
  2 Breakfast cups and saucers .... 11
  
  0 Plates assorted 16
  
  3 Dishes 2 9
  
  1 Sugar-basin 4
  
  1 Salt-cellar 3
  
  1 Lemon squeezer 4|
  
  Jars and tins will also be required for kitchen
  use, but it is seldom necessary to buy these.
  
  The following might be added if means allow -
  
  6. d.
  
  1 Mincing machine 4 8
  
  1 Spring balance 5 0
  
  1 Meat-saw 2 6
  
  1 Knife-sharpener 10
  
  1 Box-cutter 10
  
  
  8. d.
  
  6 Small moulds 10
  
  1 Frying basket 16
  
  1 Set of steps 5 0
  
  1 Omelet pan 16
  
  2 Sandwich cake tins 10
  
  1 Preserving pan 4 0
  
  2 Fancy moulds 3 0
  
  1 Pestle and mortar 3 0
  
  1 Fish slice 8
  
  1 Vegetable presser 16
  
  1 Flour tub or crock 2 6
  
  The above does not include utensils for
  laimdry work. See under special heading.
  
  If the housemaids' utensils are not separate,
  the following brushes, &c., will be required iii
  addition for household use : -
  
  8. d.
  
  1 Plate brush 9
  
  1 Carpet whisk 2 6
  
  1 Double banister bnosh 2 9
  
  1 Dust pan 10
  
  Note. - If there are several servants they
  should be allowed inexpensive crockery and
  glass for their own table use apart from the
  dishes used for cooking.
  
  The Cleaning of the Kitchen and Kitchen
  Utensils. - The kitchen may be cleaned either
  all in one day or by degrees. The latter method
  is generally found the most convenient, as it is
  less obtrusive and does not upset the comfort
  of the house so much. The saucepans and tins
  may be cleaned one day, cupboards and windows
  another, larder, passages, and outside premises
  another, flues and range another, with the
  scrubbing of the floors and tables, &c., to follow.
  
  This is entirely a matter of arrangement
  and must be planned to suit the ways and cir-
  cumstances of each individual household.
  
  An effort shoiild be made to have the cleaning
  done early in the day or at a time when there is
  no special cooking to attend to.
  
  Instructions for the various cleaning opera-
  tions will be found below. (See also Duties of
  the Cook, p. 49.)
  
  How to Clean a Kitchen Range - Weekly
  Cleaning. - A large strong apron, or overall, a
  pair of gloves, and a cap which covers the heiir
  should be worn when doing this piece of work.
  The kitchen, too, should be prepared by remo%-ing
  or covering with a dust-sheet or sheets of
  paper anything that is likely to be soiled with
  dust. Remove any kettles and saucepans from
  the top of the range and put the fender, plate-
  rack, and fire-irons to one side. Put down a
  hearth cloth and have sweep's brush, flue rake
  and brush, shovel and black-lead brushes in
  readiness. Commence by raking out the fire,
  and be particular to pass the rake well to the
  back to get all the cinders out of the boiler
  flue. Brush out oil cinders and ashes and
  save the former for making the fire later on.
  
  
  92
  
  
  THE wo:man's book
  
  
  To clean the flues commence at the top.
  Open the dampers and the httle doors or slides
  at the entrance to the flue or flues. Pass the
  flue brush up as far as it will go, then to the sides
  and tlien downwards, working it well against
  the side of the flue. The loose soot will all fall
  downwards to the back of the stove and will be
  removed later on. In a large stove there may
  be two or even three flues and each one must
  bo done in the same way. Brush the top of
  the dampers and brush the flue doors or slides
  and put them back in place.
  
  Now remove all rings and tops from the
  top of the stove and brush all the soot oflE
  the top of the oven with the sweep's brush,
  letting it fall either down the side of the oven
  or into the fire-place - the former is the simpler.
  Also pass the flue brush down the sides and back
  of the oven if there is an opening. Brush the
  under -side of all the top pieces and put them
  back in place. If there is a boiler or second
  oven at the other side of the range the top and
  sides of this must be cleaned in the same way.
  Every part must be freed from soot, and always
  work from the top downwards.
  
  \Vhen the top part is finished remove the httle
  door or shde wlaich will be found underneath
  the oven, put a good-sized shovel below it, pass
  the flue rake in at the hole and draw out all the
  soot. Repeat the same at the other side if
  necessary. The soot must be taken outside at
  once, and if there is a garden it should be kept
  for manuring purposes.
  
  Next dust the stove all over, and if the top is
  greasy wash it with hot water and soda. Thor-
  oughly dust or brush out the oven. If the
  shelves £ire greasy wash them out with hot water
  and soda, then whiten thfem with a paste of
  whitening and water, which will give them a
  nice clean appearance.
  
  To Black-lead the Stove. - Apply the black-
  lead very lightly with the black-lead brush, com-
  mencing with the highest part of the stove and
  doing a small piece at a time. Brush ofi with
  the hard briish and polish with the polisher
  (see p. 65).
  
  If there are tiles at the back of the stove
  these must be washed over with a soft cloth,
  soap, and water, or, if stained, with Brook's soap
  or sapolio.
  
  Clean all steel parts with fine emery paper or
  with fine bath-brick dust made into a paste with
  paraflin (see p. 72).
  
  Lay the fire, using the cinders along with some
  small coal, sticks, and paper.
  
  Sweep the hearth, wash it over with warm
  water, and whiten with soft sandstone. Put
  back the fender, fire-irons, &c., and put a light
  to the fire if required.
  
  Dally Cleaning. - The fire should be well raked
  out every day, the top of the stove brushed with
  the sweep's brush and polished with the stove
  bnishes. Black-leading should not be required
  
  
  more than once a week, except perhaps on the
  special parts which tire much used.
  
  Rub up the steel parts with emery paper, or
  wipe them with a soft duster or selvyt cloth,
  and clean the hearth.
  
  If properly done, the flues should not require
  cleaning more than once a week, but if a largo
  fire is kept constantly bui'ning it may be neces-
  sary to brush over the top of the oven more
  frequently - sometimes, too, in the case of small
  stoves the flues require cleaning more than once
  a week. This must bo regulated according to
  how the stove burns.
  
  Cleaning Saucepans. - Clean saucepans form
  one of the first essentials of good cooking. " You
  can judge a workman by liis tools " cannot be
  better appUed than to a cook, as no woman
  who has any pride in her profession would put
  up with such a thing as a dirty saucepan. They
  ought to be her special pride and care.
  
  Now that saucepans are used almost entirely
  on gas-stoves and close ranges whore there is
  no smoking from an open fire, there is no excuse
  for having tho outside coated with soot or black
  grease which comes off on everything that
  touches it. The handle and outside of the
  saucepan should receive the same attention as
  the inside.
  
  As soon as a saucepan is finished with, it
  should be filled with warm water and left soaking
  until it can be cleaned.
  
  Care must be taken not to pour cold water
  into a hot enamelled saucepan or there will be
  danger of cracking the hning ; in fact it is
  always a risky thing to do if the pan is very hot.
  Saucepans should be cleaned as soon as possible
  after they are taken from the fire and never
  allowed to remain dirty overnight except under
  very special circumstances.
  
  The method of cleaning will depend somewhat
  upon the Idnd of saucepan, but the rule that they
  must be properly clean and fi'ee from taint of
  any kind apphos to all.
  
  If the contents of a saucepan have become
  burnt boil some hot water and soda in it before
  attempting to do the cleaning.
  
  No saucepan must be laid away before it is
  perfectly dry unless it is placed wliere the air
  can reach the inside, tis on a sparred shelf.
  
  Iron Saucepans. - Wash them well in hot
  water and soda, scrubbing inside and out with
  a pot brush. Use a little sand, if necessary,
  to make them clean. Tlie sand must be used
  almost dry or it will not have so much power.
  When clean, rinse thoroughly so as to get rid
  of any grit and dry with a coarse cloth.
  
  Enamelled Saucepans. - Wash well in hot
  water and soda, and then apply a little Brook's
  soap or sapolio to take off any marks or dis-
  coloration. Salt or fine silver sand may also
  be used, or even crushed egg-shells ai'o very
  good for whitening the enamel. Rinse thor-
  oughly and dry with a cloth.
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  93
  
  
  Tin and Steel Saucepans. - Clean in the same
  way as enamelled saucepans.
  
  Earthenware Saucepans. - Wash first in hot
  soapy water, then apply a little fine sand or
  sapolio, if necessary, to remove any marks.
  Rinse thoroughly and dry with a stout cloth.
  
  Copper Saucepans. - These require very special
  care, as, if once neglected, they are apt to har-
  bour verdigris, wliich is very poisonous. For this
  reason the tinned linings should always be kept
  intact, and directly there are signs of wear and
  the copper begins to show through the saucepans
  should be sent away to be re -tinned.
  
  Clean the inside of copper saucepans with a
  mixture of soft soap and Brook's soap or soft
  soap and fine silver sand apphed with a piece of
  flannel or soft cloth wrung out of warm water.
  For the outside use the skin of a lemon dipped
  in bath-brick dust, or salt and vinegar applied
  with a flannel. Well rinse the saucepan with
  hot water and dry quickly and thoroughly.
  The outside may be further polished by rubbing
  it up with a little dry whitening.
  
  Aluminium Saucepans. - Wash well with hot
  soapy water, using a little silver sand if necessary
  to remove any discoloration or burnt matter.
  Rinse thoroughly first in hot and then in cold
  water and then dry with a soft cloth. Soda
  must on no account be used with aliiminium
  ware, and patent cleaning mixtures should also
  be avoided. The outside may be polished
  occasionally with metal polish.
  
  The vessels should not be scraped, nor
  should the liglit brown enamel which will form
  inside be disturbed, as it is not only quite
  harmless, but adds considerably to tho life of
  the articles.
  
  Wooden Articles. - An effort should be made
  to make kitchen tables, boards, and wooden
  utensils as white as possible. The following
  will be required for cleaning them : a pail or
  basin of warm water, a piece of house flannel,
  scrubbing brush, sand, soap, and a stout cloth
  for drying. Wash the wood over with the
  flannel wrung out of warm water. Rub a little
  soap on the brush, dip in sand and scrub with
  the grain of the wood. Rinse weU in order to
  remove all grit and dry quickly with a clean
  cloth. Soda should not be used, as it tends to
  discolour the wood. Sand helps to whiten it.
  
  ^Vlien cleaning a kitchen-table the legs should
  not be forgotten. If plain wood they may be
  scrubbed in the same way as the top, but if
  painted they must only be wiped over with a
  damp flannel and di-ied.
  
  Wooden utensils must not be put too near a
  fire to dry or they will warp ; they ought to be
  placed upright where the air will get round
  them.
  
  Sieves. - A sieve should be cleaned as soon as
  possible after it has been used. If any substance
  is allowed to harden on it the cleaning will be
  much more diflficult. Wash thoroughly with a
  
  
  little hot water and soda and scrub well with a
  bnish. If it is a wire sieve hold it up to the
  light and see that none of the Httle holes are
  blocked up. Be particular also to scrub well
  round the sides where the rim joins the surface
  part. Rinse well and dry with a strong cloth.
  The sieve should then be put in a warm place
  to dry. If this is not attended to a wire sieve
  will become rusty and a hair one coated with
  mildew.
  
  Sieves mxist always be kept in a dry and clean
  place.
  
  Tin Lids, Moulds, and Dish Covers. - Hot water
  with a little soap powder or plain soap should
  be used for wasliing these. They must be well
  rinsed and then dried at once.
  
  Saucepan lids should be washed or at least
  well wiped with a cloth each time after use.
  The rim must have special attention, as any
  grease from a stew or such-hke wiU lodge there.
  It is a good plan to give all saucepan lids a good
  washing once a week.
  
  A brvish may be used when washing fancy
  moixlds of any kind. When the insides become
  difficult to clean the moulds should be put into
  a saucepan with hot water and a little soda, and
  boiled for half-an-hour. This will loosen any
  matter or burnt pieces which may adhere to
  them. They may also be secured with a little
  silver sand, or Brook's soap may be used to
  remove any discoloration. Thorough rinsing
  wiU be necessary.
  
  All tinned goods must be well dried before
  being put away, as they are liable to rust.
  
  Polishing. - Tins that are put up for show may
  be polished to make them look bright, but this
  should never be attempted before making sure
  that they are quite free from grease. IMake a
  smooth pastљ with a Httle whitening and water
  - rub this on the tins with a piece of flannel, and,
  when dry, rub off with a duster. A soft brush
  may be used to remove the whitening from any
  corners. The inside of moulds should never
  be polished.
  
  A few drops of ammonia may be added to the
  whitening, but as the tinning of some moulds and
  lids is very tliin, strong cleansers should as a rule
  be avoided.
  
  Zinc. - Sometimes the surround of a sink is
  covered with zinc, and tliis may be cleaned in
  the following way : Scrub first with hot soapy
  water to which a little soda has been added.
  Rinse and dry. The zinc may then be polished
  with a little whitening mixed to a paste with
  turpentine. Apply with a piece of flannel,
  and when dry rub off with a duster.
  
  To Clean Floors, Linoleum, &c. - See " Work
  of the House," p. 66.
  
  Baking Tins. - Wash well in very hot water
  with a little soda in it, using a strong brush and
  a little sand if necessary. Rinse well and dry
  with a coarse cloth. If a roasting-tin has
  become very brown and is hard to clean, let it
  
  
  u
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  soak in hot water and soda for an hour or two
  to soften the burnt substance.
  
  Kitchen Knives and Forks. - Wipe these with
  a cloth wrung out of liot water to remove any
  grease, but do not allow them to lie in hot water,
  wliich would tend to loosen the handles. Then
  rub off any stains with a little Brook's soap or
  sapoho applied rather dry on a piece of flannel.
  Rinse off and dry with a knife-cloth. It is not
  necessary to polish kitchen knives on a knife-
  board ; it only wears them vmnecessarily.
  
  Kitchen Cloths. - At the end of the day all
  cloths which have been used and are soiled
  should be washed in soapy water with a little
  soda ; then thoroughly rinsed, wrung out, and
  hung up to drj'. At the end of the week they
  ought to be laid aside in order to have a more
  thorough washing with the rest of the household
  linen (see p. 276), and a fresh supply put into
  use.
  
  Pudding Cloths. - After a pudding cloth has
  been used it should be tlirown into hot water
  with a little soda and allowed to soak for half-
  an-hour or so. Then wash out and rinse with
  care until no trace of the soda water remains.
  Dry in the open air if possible. Fold up care-
  fully and keep in a clean place. A pudding
  cloth must only be used for its own special
  purpose. If the above process is not sufficient
  to make the cloth clean it ought to be boiled
  in a saucepan for half-an-hoirr with hot water
  and a small piece of soda and then rinsed in the
  same way. The use of soap and soap powder
  should bo avoided as far as possible.
  
  Jelly Cloths. - Wash in the same way as
  pudding cloths.
  
  Care of the Sink. - This is a very important
  matter in the management of the kitchen and
  scullery, and a sink left in a dirty and greasy
  state, especially the last thing at night, will at
  once denote a careless and untidy worker.
  
  Every sink should be provided with a sink
  basket or tidy and a sink brush. The former is
  
  
  Sink Bafiket.
  
  xised to place over the opening to keep back any
  tea-leaves, vegetable parings, or other refuse
  which might block the pipe. An old colander
  will servo the purpose very well.
  
  Do not throw anything but water down a sink,
  anf' if the water is greasy flush it well afterwards
  with hot soapy water. It is a good plan also to
  pour down some very hot soda and water when
  the washing up is finished.
  
  If water in which vegetables have been cooked
  
  
  is not kept for making soup, it should never be
  poured down a sink, as it would cause an un-
  pleasant smell, but should bo emptied straight
  into a drain or outside in the garden.
  
  An effort should be made to keep the pipe and
  trap (an elbow -like bend in the pipe just below
  
  
  Sink Brush.
  
  the sink) in good order by preventing grease and
  refuse collecting in them. If tliese become
  choked and clogged an unnecessary expense
  must be incurred to have them cleared out, not
  to speak of the annoyance. Do not be afraid
  of plenty of hot water when washing up ; it is
  greasy luke-warm water which clogs the pipe
  sooner than anything.
  
  WTien the washing up is finished the sink
  should be well scrubbed out with some hot
  water and soda and a little soap, rinsed with hot
  water, and then finally the cold pipe should be
  allowed to run. If the sink is discoloured, use
  a Uttle sand or Brook's soap. The sink brush
  and any dish clothes must also be washed out
  and hung up to dry. Also any tub or basin that
  has been used for weishing up.
  
  Refuse. - In every household there must
  necessarily be a certain amount of rubbish to
  dispose of consisting of ashes, sweepings from
  floors, broken crockery, old tins, food remains,
  &c.
  
  Part of this refuse should be put into a dust-
  bin or ash-pit, with either of which every house
  should be provided, while the remainder should
  be burnt.
  
  The ash-pit is more frequently found in country
  districts where the removal of rubbish cannot be
  so frequent as in towns. It is usually built of
  brick or stone and should be well cemented and
  placed at some distance from the house.
  
  The best kind of dust-bin is one made of
  galvanised iron and round in shape. The size
  wiU depend upon the needs of the hou&ohold,
  but it is better to have two, if necessary, of a
  medium size than one that is too heavj' to be
  lifted. Those dust-bins are very often provided
  by the landlord and belong to tlie house.
  
  There should always be a hd to fit the dust-
  bin to prevent damp from entering or dust from
  flying about. It should be placed at least a
  few feet from the house and never near a win-
  dow, and it must be removed and thoroughly
  emptied by the dustman twice or at least once
  a week.
  
  Nothing but dry refuse should be put into a
  dust-bin unless it can be emptied very frequently,
  as damp favours decomposition and very soon
  causes an unpleasant and very unhealthy smell.
  Animal and vegetable refuse in this case is better
  burnt, and if there is a kitchen range in use it
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEX
  
  
  Ud
  
  
  should not be a difficult matter to dispose of all
  vegetable payings, tea-leaves, and such -like by
  this means.
  
  There are two ways of burning food remains.
  They may either be dried slowly at the back of
  the fire or underneath the grate, after which
  they will burn quite readilj% or they may be
  put into the stove in small quantities when the
  fire is very bright and hot enough to consume
  them quickly. If refuse is put on to a low fire
  in a damp condition it will cause a most un-
  pleasant smell.
  
  Needless to say, it is the duty of the mistress
  to see that nothing is thrown out or burnt
  except that which is absolutely of no value.
  In some houses the dust-bin is one of the most
  fruitful soiu-ces of waste. (See Law in regard to
  Removal of Refuse, p. 382.)
  
  COOKING BT GAS
  
  Gas Stoves. - There is much to be said in favour
  of a gas stove, and if properly managed it can
  be a great saving of time, labour, and expense.
  It can either be used to supplement a kitchen
  range where there is a large amount of cooking
  to be done, or in small houses it can be made to
  take the place of a coal stove altogether.
  
  It is especially useful in flats where ladies
  very often have to do all their own work or the
  
  
  Breakfast Cooker.
  
  greater part of it themselves, and where actual
  labour mtist be reduced to a minimum.
  
  If the whole stove is not required and the
  oven part would be of Uttle or no use, a small
  griller or even a gas ring is often a great com-
  fort and saving. It can be placed on the top
  
  
  Gas Boiling Ring.
  
  of the range or on a small table in the scullery,
  and will often save the keeping up of a fire for
  the sake of boiling a kettle or doing some light
  cooking in the evening. A httle griller would
  also be found a great boon in the morning when
  an early breakfast has to be prepared, as it will
  
  
  not only boil a kettle but make toast or grill
  fish or bacon at the same time. A very nice
  griller and boiler can be bought for 7s. 6d. or
  8s. 6d., wlxile a small boiling ring will only
  cost two or three shillings plus the india-rubber
  tubing (6d. to 9d. per foot) required for attaching
  it to a gas bracket.
  
  Gas stoves can be had in different sizes and
  various makes. Improvements are constantly
  being made, and there is great competition
  among the different makers as to who will pro-
  duce the most perfect article. Before bujdng
  one it is a good plan to go to one of the Gas
  Company's offices or exhibitions where all
  the different kinds of stoves are displayed, and
  where they can often be seen in actual use.
  The newest make of gas cookers is well raised
  above the floor, which saves a great deal of un-
  necessary stooping, and also does away with the
  necessity of having a slab on which to place the
  stove for the sake of protection. Those with
  enamelled Hnings are the most easily kept in
  order. The size chosen must depend upon the
  amount of cooking to be done and the oven
  space required, and also upon the size of the
  kitchen. It is a mistake to have one larger
  than necessary, as it always means a greater
  consumption of gas to heat the oven, &c.
  
  Tlie price of gas stoves runs from about £4
  to £12 according to size, while they can also be
  hired at a rental of about 2s. 3d. per quarter
  and upwards. In fact, in many cases it is
  better to hire than to purchase, as the Gas Com-
  pany not only supply the stove but keep it
  in repair, and will change it when desired for one
  of another description.
  
  It is very important to have a gas stove
  properly fitted up and to see that there is the
  necessary ventilation. The work should be
  put into the hands of a capable workman,
  because tmless the pipe to which the stove is
  connected is of the right size and there is suffi-
  cient pressure of gas, the stove will not work
  properly. It is sometimes a good plan to have
  a separate meter for the gas stove in order to
  regulate the consumption of gas.
  
  How to Use a Gas Stove. - It is also very
  important to know how to use a gas stove,
  otherwise there may be great waste of gas and
  many spoilt dishes.
  
  Tlie Gas Companies give special demonstra-
  tions all over the country where the working
  of the various stoves is fully explained and a
  cookery lesson given at the same time. Tliey
  are also beginning to send out lady demonstrators
  to private houses to show how each part of the
  stove should be used in order to secm-e the best
  possible results for the smallest consumption of
  gas ; but the hints given below may be of use
  to those who cannot avail themselves of these
  special lessons.
  
  Every gets stove is provided with several
  biu-ners on the top and each btirner has a special
  
  
  96
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  tap in connection witli it. There will also be a
  special tap for the oven.
  
  A taper is preferable to matches for lighting
  the gas.
  
  Do not turn on more taps than are actually
  required at one time, and be careful to tiu-n off
  the gas directly you Imve finished using it.
  V\lien about to uso the oven open the door
  first, turn on the gas, and then apply the light.
  Be sure that all the little burners inside are
  lighted and on both sides. If they shoiild become
  clogged with grease or other matter the little
  holes must be cleared with a needle or fine wire.
  Never keep the gas burning longer than is neces-
  sary- for instance, when once the contents of a
  kettle or saucepan have come to the boil the
  merest flicker of light will keep them simmering.
  
  The large round burner should not be used
  when the smaller one is sufficient. Then, again,
  when the griller is being used a saucepan or
  kettle of water should always be placed on the
  top to utilise the top heat as well as that of
  imderneath.
  
  Gas maj' also be economised by using a steamer
  or patent cooker (see p. 148) in which several
  different articles can bo cooked one above the
  other with only one jet of gas underneath. It
  is also a waste of gas to use hea\'y saucepans,
  as they require an unnecessary consumption of
  gas to bring them to the boil. Steel, aluminium,
  and enamelled saucepans are all suitable, also
  the fireproof china and the glazed earthenware
  ones. The saucepans must also be clean at
  the foot ; if there is a coating of soot or black
  grease it acts ais a non-conductor of heat, and
  this again will cause a waste of gas. It is always
  better, if possible, to keep a separate set of
  saucepans for a gas stove and not to use them
  indiscriminately for a gas cooker and a coal
  stove.
  
  Tlie flame of gas must not be allowed to blaze
  up the sides of a saucepan, but only underneath.
  
  When once the oven has been properly heated
  the light should for most purposes be turned
  down half way, and in some cases even lower.
  Then the cooking should be so arranged that
  when the oven is lighted it should be made use of
  to the fullest extent, two or three dishes being
  cooked in it at the same time. For instance,
  if there is a small roast it may be cooked on a
  roasting-tin on the bottom shelf, while such
  things as a milk pudding, potato or macaroni
  pie, baked potatoes, or stewed fruit might be
  cooking above. Or, when pastry is being cooked,
  cakes or scones might be cooked at the same
  time. It would not, however, do to cook pastry
  with a roast, as the air of the oven would be too
  moist. It is a waste of gas to light the oven to
  cook one dish.
  
  To Grill. - A special prill pan is supplied with
  every gas stove, and this can be used for many
  purposes, such as for cooking a chop, steak,
  kidneys, bacon, fish, or in fact anything that
  
  
  could bo cooked on the ordinary grill. Very
  good toast can also be made vmder the grill.
  
  Place the grill pan under the griller, hght the
  gas and wait until the griller is red hot before
  putting the meat or whatever is being cooked
  underneath. Then proceed eis for ordinary
  griUing (see p. 107), turning the meat and reduc-
  ing the heat as required.
  
  To Make Toast. - The gas should bo turned
  down after the griller is once hot. Tlie bread
  must be watched very carefully and turned
  when necessary. The toast must not be made
  too quickly or it will be soft and heavy.
  
  To Use the Oven. - A gas oven generally con-
  tains two or three grid shelves and always one
  solid shelf. The latter is used to throw down
  the heat, and is placed above anything that
  requires browning. Nothing should bo placed
  on the soUd sheK or it will burn, with the excep-
  tion of Uquid things or anything that can be
  placed in a tin of water. The top of the oven
  is always the coolest part. When dishes in
  course of baking are becoming too brown before
  being sufficiently cooked, the solid shelf should
  be removed altogether.
  
  It used to be thought necessary to place a tin
  of water at the foot of the oven, but this is not
  the CEise.
  
  When roasting meat the joint should either
  be hung on a hook attached to a bar which runs
  across the top of the oven or put on a roasting-
  tin placed on one of the grid shelves at the
  lower part of the oven. If the former method
  is adopted the shelves of the oven will require
  to be removed and nothing else can be cooked
  at the same time. The thickest part of the
  joint must always be hung downwards. Heat the
  oven well before putting the meat in, and after
  the first ten minutes reduce the gas one-half or
  even more according to the amount of pressure ;
  follow in fact the general rules for roasting
  (see p. 165).
  
  When baking cakes the oven should first be
  thoroughly heated and then the gas turned
  down more or less according to the special kind
  of cake, and whether it requires a moderate or
  hot oven. Place the cake or cakes on the grid
  shelf and below the browning shelf, and gradu-
  ally reduce the heat until the cakes are ready.
  If the cake is large it may be bettor to keep out
  the solid shelf altogether and even to cover it
  over with a double piece of kitchen paper to
  prevent its taking too much colour. With
  large cakes, too, it is a good plan to leave them
  in the oven for about half-an-hour after the gas
  has been turned off, and to let them dry slowly
  in the gradually reducing heat. The same rules
  will apply to the baking of pastry.
  
  If a little care is taken and attention given
  to details a gas oven is really very easy to
  manage, and after a little practice one becomes
  quite exi>ert at regulating the heat to a
  nicety.
  
  
  FOOD AN"D THE KITCHEN
  
  
  97
  
  
  How to Clean a Gas Stove - Weekly Cleaning. -
  
  Put down a hearth-cloth and have in i-eadiness
  a pail of hot water and soda, one or two strong
  cloths or swabs, and black-lead brushes, &c.,
  for cleaning purposes. Remove the bars from
  the top of the stove and wash these in the pail
  of hot water, using a brush if necessary. Wash
  the top of the stove, being very careful to make
  the burners clean ; sometimes it may be neces-
  sary to clean out the httle holes with a piece
  of wire or a fine skewer if they have become
  clogged. Wash also the tray under the burners,
  the oven shelves, the sides of the oven, which
  are sometimes fitted with movable linings, and
  the tin which stands at the foot. If there are
  enamelled linings, as in some of the stoves, a
  little salt or Brook's soap may be used for
  cleaning purposes and also for the oven tin to
  remove any brown marks or other discoloration.
  
  Then black-lead the bars, the top and body of
  the stove, and put back the different parts in
  their proper places. Polish the brass taps with
  metal polish, rub up the steel with fine emery
  paper, and the stove is finished.
  
  Daily Cleaning. - If the stove is thoroughly
  cleaned once a week it will not require black-
  leading the other days ; it will be sufficient to
  give it a good brush over with the harder
  polishing brush, to wash the tray underneath
  the biu-ners, and the oven tin if the oven has
  been used.
  
  Neither grease nor any kind of food which
  may have been spilled during cooking should
  ever be allowed to remain on a gas stove, but
  must be washed off at once with a cloth wrung
  out of hot water and soda, otherwise an un-
  pleasant smell will be caused the next time the
  gas is used.
  
  COOKING BY ELECTRICITY
  
  Although we have long been accustomed to
  electricity as a Hghting agent and even for
  heating purposes, electric cooking stoves have
  not yet become common. There are, however,
  several different makes to be had, and the pi'ice
  of some of them is by no means prohibitive.
  
  One of the simplest and most economical
  stoves on the market is the " Tricity " cooker ;
  it is so simple, so easily regulated, so perfectly
  controlled and so safe that it cannot fail to
  appeal to those who try it. There are different
  types of this stove - The Single Cooker, The
  Duplex Cooker, and the Extension Cooker,
  while the ovens are sold separately.
  
  The Single Cooker can be used for grilling,
  toasting, boiling, steaming, stewing, heating
  irons, airing clothes, or as a radiator to warm a
  room. The round plate on the top of the stove
  is raised to a dull red or lesser heat controlled
  by means of two switches, and any degree of
  heat from " very hot " to " low simmering "
  can be obtained.
  
  
  Electric cturent is brought to the stove
  through a flexible steel-covered cable which
  ensures absolute safety. The cable is ten feet
  in length and is attached to a wall -plug. The
  
  
  "Tricity" Stove.
  
  1. Single Boiler. 2. Oven. 3. Extension Boiler.
  4. Grill Pan. 5. Toaster.
  
  cooker can easily be moved when desired within
  the range of the length of the cable, and, when
  in use, should be placed upon a table or on a
  wooden pedestal as shown in engraving. It
  should be a convenient height for working at.
  
  Special sets of cooking utensils are sold for
  use with this cooker. They are qtiite simple, in
  both metal and earthenware and without wires
  of any kind, but one important point about
  them is that each article is absolutely flat at the
  base so as to obtain good contact with the hot-
  plate and thus make the cooking more rapid and
  economical.
  
  The Duplex Cooker has two hot-plates, and its
  uses are the same as those of the Single Cooker.
  
  The Extension Cooker has also one hot-plate,
  and is generally used in conjunction with one of
  the other cookers or to give top heat to the oven.
  It is also useful alone for boiling, stewing, and
  similar simple operations.
  
  Ovens too can be bought in two sizes, and are
  heated by being placed on the top of a Single
  or Duplex Cooker. Tlie larger size is quite
  sufficient for the needs of the average household.
  
  The following is the working cost of the
  " Tricity Cooker " with electricity at a Id. a unit.
  
  1 Penny runs a " Tricity " hot-plate for 5 hours
  
  at lowest heat.
  1 Penny runs a " Tricity " hot-plate for IJ hours
  
  at greatest heat.
  
  Full particulars regarding price, use, &c.,
  can be obtained by writing to the makers, the
  Berry Construction Co., Ltd., Chaxing Cross
  House, London.
  
  COOKING ON OIL STOVES
  
  A small oil stove may sometimes be a con-
  venience when neither gas nor electricity ia
  within reach. In summer, when a big kitchen
  
  Q
  
  
  98
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  fire is not required, a stovo of tlus description
  will often perform all the cooking opcratioiis
  necessary. Being independent of any fittings,
  it can be moved about at will, and placed
  wherever it is most convenient. Sometimes,
  too, in country quarters where the kitchen
  range is inadequate for the cooking required, an
  oil stovo will bo found of valuable assistance,
  and it can e^•en be used in an out-house if the
  kitchen is small and inconvenient.
  
  Tliey are to bo had in various sizes, ranging
  from a small stove on which only one saucepan
  or kettle can be placed, to a large family stove
  with oven, boiler and accommodation for several
  saucepans as well. It is important to buy a
  stove of a thoroughly good make, and of late
  years there have been so many improvements
  made in their construction that they are more
  easily regulated and there is less danger of their
  smoking than formerly.
  
  It is always well to see the stove at work
  before buying it, and to obtain full instructions
  as to its use, as with each special make there are
  certain points which require explanation. One
  of the greatest objections to oil stoves is their
  smell, but tliis can be to a large extent, if not
  altogether, avoided by proper management
  and care.
  
  To secure the best results, care must be taken
  to keep the stove very clean and to use good oil.
  The wicks, too, must fit properly and be kept free
  from all charring. Tlie oil-receivers should be
  well filled before using the stove, and the oil
  must not bo allowed to biirn too low.
  
  It is also important to stand the stove out of
  a draught, and for this reason, as well as for the
  sake of convenience, it is better to raise it above
  the ground. It may be placed either on a simple
  four-legged stand or if it is a portable stove it is
  a good plan to have a box made which will serve
  at the same time as packing-case and a stand
  upon which to place it when in use. (For
  Cleaning and Trimming, see p. 77.)
  
  COAL AND OTHER FUEL
  
  Arrangement of the Coal Cellar. - A good-sized
  coal cellar is always an advantage in a house, as
  there will then be room to store not only a
  quantity but also at least two different kinds of
  coal. The contents of the cellar should be so
  arranged that each kind can easily be found,
  and a supply of slack or coal dust should also be
  kept in one corner.
  
  \\Tien a fresh supply of coal is ordered it must
  not be thrown in on the top of the old dust,
  but this should first be scraped to one side and
  used along with the larger pieces. If this is
  onco buried there becomes an accumulation of
  dust in the cellar which is never used up.
  
  A strong coal shovel should be kept in the
  cellar, also a hatchet for breaking the coal when
  necessary. A large lump of coal should always
  
  
  be broken on the gi'ound and not on the top of
  other coal, which would in all probability pro-
  duce an unnecessary amount of small coal and
  dust.
  
  The Buying of Coal. - Coal is always cheaper
  if it can bo bouglit in largo quantities - by the
  sack or bag is one of the most expensive ways
  in which it can be procured. Naturally the
  amount ordered must depend upon the accom-
  modation there is for storing. The prices are
  generally much cheaper in summer than in
  winter, and, if convenient, there is a distinct
  advantage in laying up a store at this time of
  year. Diu-ing the months of June, July, and
  August is the most advantageous time to buy.
  Sometimes it is possible to make an arrangement
  with the coal company that if the purchase is
  made in the summer the coal will only be
  delivered a ton or half a ton at a time as
  required.
  
  It is important to buy the right kind of coal
  for the different ranges or fire-places. Range
  nuts or cobbles are excellent for kitchen use, and
  it would be most extravagant to use finer coal
  for this purpose. Coke, which is cheaper than
  coal, is often burnt along with the range nuts.
  A larger and better kind of coal will lie required
  for use in the sitting-rooms. The housekeeper
  should see that the coal with which she is
  supphed does not contain too much dust. A
  careful watch should always be kept on this.
  
  Coal should always be ordered from a good
  reliable merchant, and, if possible, from a depot
  in one's own neighbourhood so as to avoid any
  extra charge for carriage. The price of coal
  fluctuates very much according to the supply.
  It is also affected by laboiu- disputes involving
  strikes, lock-outs, &c., and is, as a rule, cheaper
  in localities which are in close proximity to a
  coal-field.
  
  Householders who live in flats should ask for
  their coal to be delivered in half -sacks, as these
  are easier to carry up a number of stairs.
  
  Economy in the Use of Coal. - An extravagant
  use of coal is one of the greatest soiu"ces of waste
  in a house, but, with careful management, much
  can be done to economise in this direction with-
  out in any way reducing the amount of comfort
  to be gained from the fires.
  
  Fortunately the construction of stoves and
  grates has been very much improved of late
  years, and what are known as slow combustion
  stoves are fitted up in all the modern houses.
  Small coal should always be burnt along with
  the large. A ton of coal always produces a
  certain amount of dust, but if this is not suffi-
  cient an extra amount can always bo ordered
  by the sack.
  
  When a room is not in actual use or when the
  weather is mild and it is yet advisable that the
  fire be kept in, a lump of coal should be put on
  when the fare is rather low and then a good
  shovelful of damp slack placed on the top.
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  99
  
  
  Tlais is called " backing the fire," and by this
  means it can be kept in for several hours, and
  when a blaze is wanted a little breaking up with
  the poker is all that is necessary. Continual
  poking is also a cause of waste ; the less a fire
  is touched the better, and if it is desired to keep
  the room at an equal temperature the fire should
  never be allowed to burn too low, but a few
  pieces of coal put on gently from time to time
  with a sprinkling of dust.
  
  Sometimes the fire-place in a room is unneces-
  sarily large, and this can be remedied by the
  use of fire-bricks, which will reduce the space
  and at the same time throw out heat. Clay
  balls are sometimes used for the same purpose.
  Briquettes are also used to economise coal.
  They are made of coal dust moistened and formed
  into blocks. Used along with a Uttle moistened
  slack they will keep a fire in for hoirrs, even all
  night, and they are a great convenience in this
  way. The only disadvantage to their use is
  that they cause a lot of dust when broken up.
  
  Cinders should also be utilised. The larger
  cinders in the room -fires should be used when
  laying the next fire, while the smaller ones
  which have been sifted from the ashes can always
  be used in the kitchen-fire or in a boiler-fire .if
  one is used.
  
  Wood. - Logs of wood are frequently used as
  fuel, and in country districts a supply of logs
  can often be had quite cheaply, and they make a
  nice cheery fire in the winter. In town, however,
  they are not as a rule any cheaper than coal.
  Firewood can be bought quite cheaply in
  bundles, but even with this extravagance should
  be avoided. One bundle should be made to
  light two fires ; in fact, with care it can be made
  to serve for three. Tuere are also different
  kinds of firelighters to be had, and sometimes
  these are cheaper than the bundles of wood as
  they light the fire more easily, especially if the
  coal is of a hard make.
  
  THE LARDER
  
  A hoiise of any considerable size usually con-
  tains a larder in which perishable food can be
  kept, and the importance of this room cannot be
  over-estimated. The ideal arrangement is to
  have it in two parts, so that dairy produce may
  be kept separate from butcher -meat, &c.
  
  Position. - Whenever possible the larder
  should have a northerly or easterly aspect and
  comparative absence of bright sunshine. It
  is important, too, that it should be conveniently
  near the kitchen, although not near enough to
  be influenced by the heat of the range. It
  should never be placed near a lavatory ; neither
  shovild the window overlook that part of the
  premises where the gulleys to receive the contents
  of the waste-pipes are placed.
  
  Arrangement and Fittings. - The ceiling should
  be lime- or white-washed. The walls too, if they
  
  
  are not tiled, should be lime- or white-washed or
  painted with some sanitary paint which can
  easily be washed.
  
  The shelves aie best made of stone, marble, or
  slate, although wooden ones are sometimes fixed.
  In any case it is well to have a slab of slate or
  marble on wliich special things, such as butter
  and milk, can be placed to keep them cool.
  
  Window-sills shoiold be Uned if possible with
  glazed tiles, and the floor should be of stone or
  tiles (red flags) or concrete.
  
  Ventilation. - There should be one or more
  windows with which to ventilate the larder.
  If there are two one should be glazed to let in
  Ught and the other should be fitted with wire
  gauze or perforated zinc, fine enough to exclude
  all flies. If there is only one window it should
  be kept open constantly, and a piece of musHn
  should be stretched tightly across it to keep
  out fhes and dust. There must be a through
  ventilation, and sometimes it is advisable to have
  one of the panels of the door fitted with perforated
  zinc in order to secure the necessary draught.
  Or sometimes perforated bricks are let into the
  walls, which help considerably to ventilate the
  larder.
  
  The door of the larder should fit securely.
  
  Requisites for the Larder. - Strong hooks
  securely fixed in the ceiUng or himg from
  rods of iron running from
  side to side of the larder,
  from wliich to hang meat,
  game, &c. ; a few smaller
  hooks fixed to the shelves
  or walls ; a wiie rack,
  baskets or wooden boxes for
  vegetables; bags of netting
  for lemons ; a bread-pan, a
  large earthenware pan for
  milk with a piece of muslin
  as a covering ; wire covers
  for cold meat, odd cups,
  basins, plates and dishes,
  also a few muslin bags for
  holding meat, hams, &c.,
  and some improvised meat-safes made of muslin
  bags stretched out by wooden hoops.
  
  A refrigerator is an advantage in a larder
  but by no means a necessity, except in lai'ge
  estabUshments or in houses where ices are
  largely used (see Ices).
  
  Temperature. - This should not exceed 50№
  Fahr. in simimer, nor fall below 38№ Fahr. in
  winter.
  
  Cleaning the Larder. - Absolutљ cleanliness must
  be maintained in the larder by daily and
  weekly cleaning.
  
  Daily Cleaning. - ( 1 ) Wipe over the shelves with
  a damp cloth and put food not being used
  immediately for cooking on clean plates and
  dishes.
  
  (2) Wipe over the floor also with a damp
  cloth or with a brush with a damp cloth or swab
  
  
  Vegetable-Kack.
  
  
  100
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  tied over it (sweeping and dusting must never
  be done •while food is in the larder, as it simply
  raises the dust to lot it fall afterwards on the
  food).
  
  (3) Wipe out the bread-pan.
  
  (4) Burn any scraps not quite fresh of fish,
  bones, vegetables, &c.
  
  Weekly Cleaning. - A special day should be
  chosen for tliis : -
  
  ( 1 ) R-emovo all food from the larder.
  
  (2) Sweep and dust walls and floor ; gather
  up dust and burn.
  
  (3) When dust has settled, dust and scrub
  shelves, using cfl,rbolic soap, or if the weather is
  hot some disinfectant may bo added to the
  water, such as carbolic, Jeyes' Fluid, Sanitas, or
  Izol.
  
  (4) Scrub floor with soft soap or carbolic soap
  and water.
  
  (5) Leave door open to dry floor, &c. When
  dry replace the food on clean dishes.
  
  (6) Thoroughly wash out bread-pan and leave
  it to dry and air before returning the bread.
  
  (7) In hot weather place bowls of charcoal or
  disinfectant and water on the shelves.
  
  Occasionally -
  
  (1) WTiitewash or limewash the ceiling about
  every six months.
  
  (2) Scrub wire gauze or perforated zinc of
  windows and doors with disinfectant or carbolic
  soap and water.
  
  (3) Scald and scrub meat-hooks and wire
  meat-covers.
  
  (4) Wash muslin covers when necessary.
  
  (5) Fill up any cracks or mouse-holes with
  cement and place traps when necessary.
  
  Treatment of Various Kinds of Food - Meat,
  Game, and Poultry. - All uncooked meat should
  be hung. If there is a cut side keep this upper-
  most to prevent the juice running out. Examine
  the meat carefully each day and wipe it with a
  cloth to keep it dry. It may also be dusted
  over with a little flour. The marrow should be
  removed from the bone of such joints as a
  sirloin, ribs of beef or loin of mutton, before the
  meat is hung up.
  
  If there is any sign of taint cut off the infected
  part and burn it, then wash the meat with a
  weak solution of Condy's fluid and water, vinegar
  and water, or borax and water. If there is a
  danger of flies attacking the moat, pepper it
  well and hang it up in muslin ; or if there is a
  danger of the meat not keeping, it may bo
  partially cooked.
  
  Frozen meat should be well thawed before
  cooking ; it should be taken from the larder and
  kept in a warm kitchen for an hour or two.
  
  Cooked meat should be lifted out of the gravy
  with which it has been served and put on a dry
  plate covered over with a meat-screen.
  
  If game or poultry has to be kept some time
  it should not be plucked, as the feathers are a
  protection from fliee. Tie a piece of string
  
  
  tightly round the nock to exclude the aii and
  liang it up. A Uttle charcoal may also be put
  inside the vent to help to preserve it. This may
  bo made by putting a piece of wood in the oven
  and letting it remain until it is quite black. It
  should be hung in a current of air and well
  sprinkled with pepper if there is any danger of
  flies. If there is anj' sign of taint the feathers
  should be removed and the bird washed in salt
  and water or vinegar and water. Repeat if
  necessary and then rinse in fresh water.
  
  The length of time game should be kept
  depends partly on the weather and partly on
  individual taste, some people not caring to eat
  it until it smells distinctly high, while others
  prefer to use it comparatively fresh.
  
  To Keep Suet. - If there are any glands or
  kernels to be scon these should be removed, also
  any parts which show discoloration, as these
  very soon become tainted and spoil the rest. If
  the suet has to be kept for several days it is a
  good plan to bury it in flour. If it is put into
  the flour-bin it will not impart any flavour to the
  contents.
  
  Ham and Sides of Bacon. - Hang in muslin
  bags dusted with pepper or ginger to keep off
  the flies. If they are to be kept a long time the
  bags should be made of calico, or strong brown
  paper may be used for wrapping them in.
  
  Lard. - Keep in a closely covered crock or
  basin.
  
  Bones (for stock). - If unable to use at once
  bake sharply in the oven for a few minutes.
  
  Stock and Soup. - See p. 118.
  
  Fish. - Fish should always be placed in the
  coolest part of the larder - on a marble or slate
  slab if possible. It is always better if it can be
  used fresh, but when necessary to keep it for
  a day or two sprinkle liberally with salt, or in
  hot weather it may be wrapped in a piece of
  muslin wrung out of vinegar and water. Dried
  fish should be hung on a rod or hook.
  
  Farm Produce - Butter. - Keep in an earthen-
  ware crock, cover with a piece of muslin wrung
  out of salted water and then with a tight-fitting
  lid. If there is a largo quantity of butter to bo
  stored it should be packed very tightly in the
  crock so as to leave no
  room for air to get down
  the sides. Place the
  crock in a cool, dark,
  and airy place.
  
  To keep fresh butter
  in hot weather a butter-
  cooler should be used;
  this is made with a
  cover into which is
  poured a little water.
  Failing a butter-cooler
  
  place the butter in a bowl standing in a larger
  bowl of cold water. Cover it with a piece of
  muslin, allowing the ends of the muslin to dip
  into the water. The water, which should be
  
  
  Butter-Cooler.
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  101
  
  
  changed daily, is soaked up by the musUn and
  thus kept constantly wet.
  
  Butter must not be put near any strong-
  smelling substance as it quickly absorbs any
  flavotir.
  
  Cheese. - A cut piece of cheese should be
  wrapped in grease-proof paper or in damp
  muslin and kept in a cheese dish or jar or tin in
  which there is a little ventilation. A large piece
  of cheese ought to be turned frequently and the
  rind rubbed occasionally with a cloth to prevent
  moisture collecting. A ripe cheese must be
  watched carefully to see that it is not attacked
  by the cheese fly.
  
  Milk and Cream. - Strict cleanHness is the
  first necessity. The jug or basin in which the
  milk is kept must be thoroughly scalded and
  rinsed with cold water. Milk should always be
  kept covered, and, Uke butter, it should not be
  put neao" anything with a strong smell, as it
  readily absorbs" odovu-s. It is a bad plan to mix
  milk - a fresh lot should never be added to some
  that has been in the house several hours. In
  hot weather the milk should be scalded if it has
  to be kept for several hours. Stand the jug
  containing it in a large saucepan of water and
  heat to almost boiHng -point, or tliis may be done
  in a double saucepan. A pinch of carbonate of
  soda or powdered borax may be added to the
  inilk to preserve it, but this spoils the flavovu*.
  The same care must be taken with cream. If
  it is scalded as above it will keep sweet for
  several hours. A lunnp of sugar will also help
  to preserve it.
  
  Eggs should be kept in a basket or on an
  egg-stand where they do not touch each other.
  If there is room for storing, the thrifty house-
  keeper will buy a quantity of eggs in the spring
  and store them for winter use. They can be
  preserved in one of the following methods : -
  
  (1) Place them in an air-tight box between
  layers of coarse salt. Tlie small end of the egg
  should be placed downwards and they must
  never touch each other. Put a layer of salt
  two inches deep on the top, cover with a thick
  piece of caUco or strong paper, and then a tight-
  fitting lid. This must be kept in a cool place.
  
  (2) Grease the eggs (they must be very fresh)
  over with lard, oil, or any pure fat and place them
  on a tray with a layer of bran above and below.
  
  (3) Pack in lime, in the same manner as for
  salt, only this renders them so brittle that they
  are unfit for boiling.
  
  (4) Lay them in a bath of water glass. Water
  glass can be bought for about 4d. per pound, and
  full directions for its use are printed on each tin.
  
  Bread. - Bread should be kept closely covered
  in an earthenware bread-pan with a hd, or in an
  enamelled iron bin. It must never be put away
  while hot, but should be allowed to cool where
  the air can circulate freely round it.
  
  The pan or crock must bo wiped out regixlarly
  in order to free it from all musty crumbs, and
  
  
  once a week or once a fortnight thoroughly
  scalded, and then allowed to become cool and
  dry before the bread is returned to it.
  
  Bread can also be kept well if it is placed in a
  clean cloth and placed on a shelf.
  
  What to do when there is no Larder. - In many
  small houses and flats there is no proper larder,
  and one cupboard has to serve the purpose of
  larder and storeroom and sometimes as a place
  for keeping dishes as well.
  
  When this is the case the quantities ordered
  must be as small as possible and cleanUness and
  order are all the more necessary. If the shelves
  are made of wood it is a good plan to have them
  covered with white oil -cloth, as this can so easily
  be wiped over or washed. In addition to tliis
  cupboard, a meat-safe should be provided and
  placed either outside or in a cool place. Need-
  less to say, it should not be placed anywhere near
  a lavatory. A small meat-safe can occasionally
  be fixed to the outside ledge of the kitchen
  window. If it is out of doors the top must be
  protected from rain by a covering of wood or
  galvanised iron, and it must be scrubbed out
  every week and just as carefully as an inside
  cupboard.
  
  FaiUng a meat-safe, small cane and muslin
  cages should be bought in which meat can be
  hung up in any cool and well-ventilated place.
  They are very inexpensive to buy, or they can
  even be simply constructed at home by making
  a bag of musUn di-awn in at top and bottom.
  Place a plate at the foot and keep out the sides
  with hoopf- of cane lightly tackod in position.
  
  Economy in the Larder. - No housekeeper
  should dispense with a daily visit to the larder.
  A survey of this department will help her in
  ordering the meals of the day besides acting as
  a stimulus to the cook to avoid waste and keep
  things in good order.
  
  The chief points to notice when inspecting the
  larder are : -
  
  (1) What food there is left from the previous
  day's meals, and how best it can be made to re-
  appear at table.
  
  (2) What scraps there are for the stock-pot
  and odds and ends of fat that can be rendered
  down.
  
  (3) The condition of any meat or game that is
  being hung.
  
  (4) The condition of the bread-pan - if there
  are any scraps that will require to be used up.
  
  (5) What new provisions will be required.
  
  (6) That the larder itself is as tidy and fresh
  as it ought to be, and that plates on which food
  rests, as well as any basins and jugs, are all clean.
  
  STORING FRUIT AND VEGETABLES
  
  Vegetables. - When vegetables are only bought
  in small quantities as required thej'^ should be
  kept in baskets or a vegetable rack and stored
  in a cool place - ^the floor of the larder or cellar
  
  
  102
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  is the best. Potatoes alone, carrots and turnips
  together, and green and other special vegetables
  by themselves. Onions, ehalots, chives, and
  garlic are best hung up by strings or in a net bag
  and kept away from other food.
  
  Parsley and niint sliould be kept with the
  Btalks in water, and the water changed every
  day.
  
  Tomatoes should be kept on a plate or spread
  out on a shelf without touching each other.
  
  To Store Vegetables. - Although vegetables
  are at their best when freshly gathered, they can
  wlien necessary be kept for a limited period.
  \\lien potatoes axe bought in large quantities
  and stored through the winter, they should be
  kept in a dry dark cellar and covered with straw
  to keep off the frost. If kept in a bright or
  damp place they will spoil and become milled
  and withered. Rub off all sprouts and shoots
  as they appear. Examine frequently and re-
  move any that show signs of decay. In the
  country potatoes are sometimes stored in a deep
  liole in the ground lined with straw and banked
  up with sand.
  
  Artichokes caii be treated in the same way.
  Carrots, Beetroots, and Parsnips may be pre-
  served in dry sand or earth in a dark cellar.
  
  Turnips should be allowed to lie on the floor
  of a dark cellar.
  
  Vegetable Marrows and Cucumbers will keep for
  some time if they are hung up by the stalk in a
  cool situation.
  
  Small Cabbages too, if they are sound and
  firm and cut before the frost touches them, can
  be preserved for a few weeks if they are spread
  on a stone floor in the dark.
  
  Herbs. - If these can be bought fresh in the
  summer time it is best to dry them quickly
  beside the kitchen fire. Then strip off the
  leaves and rub them through a fine sieve. The
  different kinds should be kept separate and
  stored in air-tight boxes or bottles.
  
  Fruit. - If only bought in small quantities,
  such fruit as apples, pears, plums, apricots, and
  oranges should be wiped
  and spread out on a tray,
  on the shelves of the store-
  room or larder, or on a
  special fruit -stand.
  
  Bananas and grapes
  should be hung. Softer
  fruits, such as currants
  and berries, should only
  bo bought as required and
  then used at once.
  
  Lemons should bo wiped
  dry and hung up in nets,
  or if laid on a shelf they
  should be turned every
  day.
  
  All fruit should be kept in a cool place and
  out of the sun, unless it is a kind which requires
  further ripening.
  
  
  Frnlt-Stand.
  
  
  When Apples have to be stored in large
  quantities for winter use, they should be dry,
  sound, and not too ripe. They should be spread
  out on slielvos in a fruit-room or an attic that
  does not admit too much sunshine. They should
  not be allowed to touch each other and any
  decaying ones should be instantly removed.
  Rough-skinned apples, such aa russets, keep
  best.
  
  Pears, if not ripe, may bo kept in the same
  way or hung up by the stalks.
  
  THE STORE-ROOM OR STORE-CLOSET
  
  If a small room can be set aside for the storage
  of groceries and other household commodities
  it will be a great convenience to the careful
  housewife, and if she has some knowledge as to
  the stocking and general management of that
  store-room she will feel a sense of pride in keeping
  it well plenished and in good order.
  
  A store-room should be dry and airy, tidy and
  weU arranged. A room with a northern or
  eastern aspect is the best. It should be as near
  the kitchen as possible in order to avoid un-
  necessary carrying, end not in the vicinity of
  a sink or closet.
  
  If a small room is not available a good-sized
  cupboard can serve the purpose, and goods, &c.,
  must be bought according to the acoommodation
  for keeping them and individual requirements.
  
  Fittings and Arrangements. - The store-room
  should have its walls and ceiling white-washed
  or coated with sanitary paint, which can be
  easily washed. The walls and floor should be
  examined for any cracks, and if there are such
  they shoiild be carefully filled up with cement
  to prevent the entrance of mice, beetles, and other
  vermin. Tlie floor should be well boarded and
  either left uncovered or covered with linoleum.
  
  If there is an outside window it should be
  covered with wire geuze or fine perforated zinc
  through which no flies can enter.
  
  The walls should befitted with plenty of shelves,
  and if these can be graduated in size it will be
  found an advantage ; broader shelves below to
  hold the bulkier and heavier articles, and narrower
  ones above for those that are lighter. It is a bad
  plan to have the shelves so wide that the jars
  and other receptacles have to bo placed one be-
  hind the other ; it will be a case of " out of siglit
  out of mind," and it will bo impossible to see
  at a glance what the store-room contains. The
  shelves should be covered with white or brown
  oilcloth, which is easily wiped down or washed.
  This can be fastened in position with drawing-
  pins if there is difficulty in making it lie flat.
  
  If space permits it will be found a great con-
  venience to have a small inner cupboard with
  one or two drawers, also a strong steady table
  with a pair of scales or balance.
  
  A few hooks along the edges of the shelves
  will also bo useful for hanging such articles aa
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  103
  
  
  can be suspended, and they sometimes lielp to
  eke out an otherwise Hmited space.
  
  Requisites. - Besides the stores and pro-
  visions it will be found useful to liave the
  following articles in the store-room : -
  
  (1) A dust-pan and brush and one or two
  dusters for keeping the shelves, floor, &c., in
  order.
  
  (2) A supply of paper, brown and white,
  string, pen and ink, and some labels or adhesive
  papers. A drawer in the table or cupboard
  might be utilised for these or a special corner
  of the shelves.
  
  (3) Jars, canisters, boxes, and bottles for
  keeping the various stores. Any odd jars and
  
  boxes, &c., can be used for the
  piirpose as long as they are sound
  and have tight-fitting lids or
  saucers to cover the tops very
  closely. Empty biscuit-boxes, jam
  or pickle jars, can be utilised for
  the purpose. For those who can
  afford something daintier there are
  many kinds of store jars to be
  bought both in earthenware and
  enamelled tin with the names of
  the various groceries, &c., printed on the outside,
  from about Is. each according to size. Glass jars
  with lids are also nice for groceries that are bought
  in small quantities, such as almonds, preserved
  fruits, cocoanut, chocolate, &c., and neat tin
  boxes or a small chest for keeping the various
  spices. Receptacles that have no printed name
  must be neatly labelled to show the natiure of the
  contents.
  
  (4) A slate and pencil for noting down what
  stores require replenishing should be hung in a
  convenient place in the store-room, or a store
  
  
  Store Jar.
  
  
  ^
  
  rrf
  
  > ,
  
  M\
  
  =:
  
  P;
  
  =i
  
  ^i
  
  ^
  
  if
  
  g8"8
  
  V
  
  ; ""
  
  " ^ '
  
  s
  
  store Indicator.
  
  indicator may be piirchased for about 3s. This
  useful little remembrancer gives a printed list
  of the different stores on a neat frame, and a
  system of pegs and holes indicates what is
  required.
  
  (5) A few implements will also be required -
  a pair of scissors, a cork-screw, a knife, a tin-
  opener, two or three spoons of different sizes,
  a few scoops, and a cheese and soap-cutter.
  
  (0) It will also be found useful to keep a small
  tool-box in the store-room containing a hammer.
  
  
  s&w, gimlet, screw-driver, a pair of pincers,
  chisel, and a tiseful supply of nails, hooks, and
  tacks.
  
  Grouping the Stores. - ^In arranging the store-
  room the various articles must be grouped
  methodically according to their kind and in
  such a way that they can be easily found. Keep
  a special shelf or corner for cereals, another for
  the different kinds of sugar, another for jams
  and preserves, another for bottled goods, and
  so on.
  
  If there is a small cupboard this might be
  reserved for a medicine cupboard, or for special
  articles or poisons, which are better kept under
  lock and key. There should also be a special
  corner for wine if there is no separate wine
  cellar, and a special corner for cleaning requisites.
  
  Then if there are drawers these might be used
  for kitchen paper, dishpapers, cutlet frills,&c.,and
  another one for an extra supply of dusters, dish
  cloths, floor cloths, &c., while the nails and hooks
  can be utilised for such articles as can be hung.
  
  Articles such as tea and coffee, cheese and soap,
  must not be placed near each other, as the smeU
  and flavour may be imparted from one to the
  other. Nothing must be kept in paper parcels,
  and every jar, canister, box, &c., must be
  clearly labelled on the outside. The heavier
  jars should be placed on the bottom shelf or
  on the floor, if dry, and those in constant use
  readiest to hand.
  
  Cleaning the Store-room. - The store-room must
  be kept very tidy. The jars ought to be taken
  down periodically and thoroughly dusted, and
  the shelves dusted and washed over before they
  are retiirned. When necessary, the jars should
  be washed out and well dried before being
  refilled. The table and floor shoTild also be
  scrubbed when they require it, and everything
  kept in good order. If the stores are dropped
  about in an untidy manner it will only encourage
  mice and insects. It is important also that the
  store-room should be well aired.
  
  Giving out Stores. - Stores should be given out
  regularly, either daily or weekly and at a fixed
  date. They should be checked when they come
  in, and the consumption should be strictly
  regulated, or the method of bujdng in quantities
  will be found an extravagant one.
  
  There are two ways of checking consumption :
  one method is to keep all stores and pro\asions
  under lock and key and to give them out by
  weight and measure. Tliis method is exact, but
  it does not always answer ; it is more suitable
  for a public institution or for a large establish-
  ment than for a small private house. It is often
  a cause of worry and annoyance, and is apt to
  cause friction between mistress and servants.
  As a rule, good servants will work most willingly
  in houses where they are trusted, and if we
  begin by calculating measure for measure with
  them they will doubtless do the same with us.
  Servants who are inclined to be wasteful will
  
  
  104
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  waste by ounces just as easily as they can by
  pounds.
  
  Still, it is not wise to have large quantities
  out at one time for general use. Smaller jars
  can be filled with the different stores for daily
  consumption wthout actually doling them out
  by the ounce and half ounce and so much
  for each person. Some things, such as butter,
  tea, and sugar, it is very usual to measure out
  for kitchen use, and where there are several
  servants this is a wise plan and is thought
  nothing of (see p. 45).
  
  Another way of checking consumption is by
  means of the weekly bills. Each housekeeper
  must draw up her o\vn estimate as to how much
  should be spent upon certain things and then
  make an effort to keep within its limit (see
  p. 365).
  
  GENERAL NOTES ON STORING
  
  Tea and Coffee should be kept in air-tight
  canisters or in a lead-lined chest.
  
  Dry Groceries. - Keep in covered earthenware
  Jars.
  
  Starch. - Keep in a cool place and well covered,
  as air turns it powdery.
  
  Soda and Salt. - Keep in a wooden or tin box
  with a lid. Damp is bad for them; it forms
  them into blocks.
  
  Spices. - Keep in air-tight tins or in a spice
  chest.
  
  Flour. - Keep in a wooden or enamelled bin.
  Sometimes the bin is divided, and one portion
  can be used for household flour
  and the other for Vienna flour.
  If the floor is of stone or damp the
  bin must be raised.
  
  Jams, Pickles, Bottled Fruits, &c.
  must be kept in a cool place as
  they are liable to ferment. If the
  store-room is hot they should bo
  placed noar the floor.
  
  Soap. - Cut in blocks with an
  old knife or soap - cutter and
  stack up with a space between each block.
  
  Candles. - If store-room is warm rub with
  methylated spirits to harden them.
  
  Biscuits and Cakes. - Keep in tin boxes with
  tight-fitting lid.
  
  CARE OF WINES
  
  Wines require a great deal of attention, and
  their preservation in a state fit to drink largely
  depends upon the treatment they receive. Any
  carelessness or neglect is sure to bo followed by
  deterioration in quality, and the loss of those
  properties which can only arrive at perfection if
  the maturing process is allowed to proceed under
  conditions which are favourable to their growth
  and development.
  
  The Wine Cellar. - The collar should bo under-
  
  
  Enamelled Bin.
  
  
  ground if possible, as it will then Ije less affected
  by variations in temperature. It should be
  cool, dry, and well ventilated without any
  strong draughts. Tho walls are generally made
  of brick or stone and white-washed, and the
  shelves or bins of wood or iron.
  
  Ceire should be taken to see that the di'ainage
  is good and that no foul air enters. The windows
  or holes to admit light should be small, as any
  sunshine would rai.se the temperature which
  ought to be kept uniform. The thermometer
  should stand about 65№ Fahr. and there should
  be no variations. If at any time it is necessary
  to raise the temperature artificially, gas must
  on no account be employed, as the vitiation of
  the air which results is injiu-ious to the wine -
  an oU lamp or small oil stove is better.
  
  Apart from any artificial heating there will
  always be a slight difference in the degree of
  warmth between the top bins and the lower
  ones, owing to the tendency of warm air to rise,
  and in consequence of this care must be taken
  to arrange the different varieties of wines in
  separate parts of the cellar according to their
  indi\'idual requirements as regards heat.
  
  Binning Wines. - Bins are the open divisions
  in the cellar in which the wine is placed. They
  may either be fixtures in
  the cellar or may be
  bought separately and
  placed on the floor ; if
  the latter is done, care
  must be taken that the
  bin stands steadily or the
  wine will be disturbed.
  
  In arranging the wines
  it must be remembered
  that all wines cannot be
  treated alike.
  
  As a rule, it is best to
  bin the light varieties such
  as Hock, Moselle, and all
  sparkling varieties at the bottom. Clarets and
  Burgundies in tho middle, and Sherry and Port
  and other fortified wines at the top.
  
  The bottles must be placed in the bins Iiori-
  zontallj', as the wine would soon deteriorate
  were they allowed to stand upright. When
  binning port tho bottles should be so placed
  that tho chalk or white paint-mark is uppermost
  on account of the sediment.
  
  Tlie corks of wine bottles should be examined
  for signs of decay, because if once they become
  faulty and the air can penetrate the wine will
  be spoilt.
  
  Wine should bo consumed as soon as possible
  after the bottle has been opened. The lighter
  wines are hardly fit to di-ink if they are kept for
  even two or three days after being decanted,
  although the fortified wines, such as sherry
  and port, will last rather longer. (See also Service
  of Wines, p. 248.)
  
  Ale, Stout, and Cider. - ^These beverages require
  
  
  Wine Biu.
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN"
  
  
  105
  
  
  a temperatui-e of about 50№ Fahr. Tlie bottles
  should be allowed to stand upright a few days
  before use. Stout should not be kept in the
  house too long, as it is liable to generate too
  much gas. If beer is kept in a cask, a stand
  should be provided in order to raise it about
  a foot from the ground. A cask should be so
  placed that there is a space all round it to
  enable of its being examined from time to
  time. It must also be perfectly steady and
  wedges of wood used, if necessary, to keep it from
  shaking.
  
  Spirits (Whisky, brandy, rum, and gin). -
  Spirits are best stood upright, and when in
  bottles require very little attention.
  
  Australian Wines. - These wines are easily
  handled, being sold in flagons with screw stoppers.
  Care should be taken to keep the stoppers
  screwed up very tightly, because if the air is
  allowed to get to the wine it is liable to turn
  it acid.
  
  When no Wine Cellar is Available. - ^If there
  is no wine cellar in wliicli. to keep a supply,
  wine must be bought in smaller quantities and
  just enough for immediate reqtiirements. A
  corner of the store cupboard or some down-
  stairs cellar can sometimes be utilised for
  
  
  Wine Cabinet.
  
  keeping a moderate supply of bottles, and for
  convenience sake a small bin might be fitted up.
  Or a wine cabinet is sometimes found useful,
  especially in flats and small houses. They are
  fitted with a strong lock and key, and one
  to hold four dozen bottles can be bought for
  about 30s.
  
  MARKETING
  
  General Hints. - It requires a considerable
  amount of forethought and common-sense to
  do really good marketing, to buy just what is
  necessary for the needs of the household, to
  secure cho best value for one's money, and to
  be economical in the true sense of the word
  \sithout being parsimonious.
  
  Whether we have much money or little at
  our disposal it always requires some care to lay
  it out to the best advantage, and the less there
  
  
  is the more necessity there will be to make the
  most of it.
  
  Money is often wasted and time lost by the
  hoiisekeeper not knowing how to choose and
  order food. It requires some experience to do
  it well, but with common-sense and good will
  the art of marketing is easily acquired.
  
  Each purchase should be thoughtfully con-
  sidered, and when means are scarce money must
  not be frittered away on any trifle which may
  strike the fancy and has no real value.
  
  It is always best to deal with good reliable
  shops and not to be continually hunting after the
  cheapest market. Try, if possible, to patronise
  the shops in yoiu- immediate neighbourhood,
  and preferably those in which there is a big
  turnover, where articles are being constantly
  sold out and renewed. Avoid shops where the
  goods are not kept in an orderly and cleanly
  condition, or where they are exposed to the
  dust and dirt of the street, or to be touched and
  handled by every passer-by.
  
  However small the income may be, it will
  never be found economical to buy goods of
  inferior quahty in order to save a few pence.
  Aim rather at secvu-ing good material of its kind
  and at avoiding luxuries, except as an occasional
  treat when they can be afforded.
  
  In order to ascertain whether or not you are
  being charged a fair price for your provisions,
  try to obtain a price list from two or three good
  shops and then compare them.
  
  It is the duty of every mistress to see that her
  merchandise is good ; there is no virtue in
  allowing short weight and inferior quality nor
  in permitting oneself to be imposed upon in any
  way. One only gets thљ best attention by ex-
  pecting and demanding it.
  
  Previous to making out her order the mistress
  should go tlirough the larder and store-room and
  make a note of what is requii-ed, always bearing
  in mind the bill of fare for the day. Sometimes
  it is possible to order for two days at a time or
  to order always one day ahead to ensiu-e having
  the provisions in the house in good time in the
  morning. This is often necessary in houses
  where a very early dinner has to be provided for,
  and it enables tlie cook, or whoever undertakes
  the cooking, time to start her preparations
  directly the breakfast tilings are cleared away.
  
  Whenever possible, the mistress of the house
  or housekeeper should do her own shopping,
  not necessarily every day, but certainly occasion-
  ally. In this way the tradesmen get a better
  idea of her likes and dislikes and can generally
  serve her better. Variety will be suggested
  by what she sees in the shops, and a knowledge
  of what things are in season is more quickly
  obtained. With meat especially she will get a
  bettor joint or more suitable piece of meat for
  her purpose if she sees it cut and weighed tlian
  if she simply L^ft it to the butcher's discretion.
  At the fishmonger's, too, a personal visit is a wise
  
  
  106
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  plan, as tlio price of fish varies so much, and even
  from day to day according to tlie weather and
  other circumstances. The more plentiful kind
  will always be the cheapest for the time being,
  and it will generally bo found that it is the best
  as well.
  
  Shopping should be done as etu-Iy as possible,
  as there is generally a better selection in the
  forenoon and provisions are fresher.
  
  If this personal shopping cannot be managed
  by the mistress of the household and there is no
  responsible person to whom the business may be
  deputed, a duplicate order book should be used.
  A sepfirate list for each tradesman should be
  written out in duplicate form, giving exact
  quantities requirec^ and price if possible. The
  tradesmen can then send for their orders, one
  list being given to them and the other retained
  for reference and for the purpose of chocking
  the house books. This is a safer method than
  that of giving haphazard verbal orders to
  message boys.
  
  Small vouchers or weight bills should accom-
  pany all goods sent from the shops, and these
  should be used for checking the various items.
  (For Payment of Bills, House Books, &c., see
  pp. 365-66.)
  
  GENERAL NOTES ON ORDERING GROCERIES
  AND PROVISIONS
  
  When ordering stores there are several points
  to be considered besides the ordering of what
  is actually requii'ed. We must consider in
  addition what will keep well, what space there
  is for storing it, what we can afford, and whether
  or not it is the best season for a large purcheise.
  
  The slate or indicator will help us as regards
  what is wanted, as when each article is finished
  or nearly so the fact ought to be noted and then
  that article included in the next order.
  
  It must be remembered that articles bought
  in small quantities are often dearer in proportion
  than when purchased in large quantities ; not
  only is the price per pound less, but the weight
  of paper and paper -bags is saved.
  
  Good-keeping things should always be bought
  in large quantities where the purse is not very
  straitened and where space is not a consideration.
  
  As there is generally a cheap and a dear
  season an attempt should be made to benefit by
  the former by buying in as large a store as
  possible of any special commodity that will keep
  well and for which there is likely to be use.
  
  All things having a strong taste or smell, such
  as spices, essences, coffee (when ground), &c.,
  should be bought in small quantities, as they are
  apt to deteriorate.
  
  .Ul Grains and Cereals, Soda and Salt, may bo
  bought in moderate supplies according to the
  needs of the household.
  
  Sugar may also be bought in considerable
  quantities, although moist sugar must bo
  
  
  watched, as it sometimes becomes infected with
  sugar mite. Cano sugar is the best for all
  preserving purposes ; jams made with it will
  keep longer and have a better coloiu- than if
  beetroot sugar were used. Beetroot sugar is,
  however, quite good for other sweetening
  purposes.
  
  Tea should be bought in moderate quantities.
  It should be well twisted and the leaves not too
  small. Tlie special blend to use is entirely a
  matter of taste.
  
  Dried Fruits will also keep well and should be
  bought in the autumn when the new fruit comes
  in. Figs, however, must be carefully looked
  over, as they often become infected with small
  maggots.
  
  Soap improves with keeping and may safely
  be ordered in large quantities. The drier it is
  the less it will waste when used. There ai-e
  many different kinds - ^plain yellow soap, mottled
  soap, paraffin soap. Sunlight soap, and carbolic
  soap are all useful for household purposes ; also
  the soft soap, which should be bought in large
  tins and given out as required.
  
  Candles will also improve with keeping.
  
  Tinned Foods. - Choose tins that are in perfect
  condition and free from rust. There should be
  no bulges, which are a sign of fermentation ; the
  tops and bottoms should be rather concave.
  Foods preserved in earthenware or glass jars are
  better and safer than tinned ones, but they
  generally cost more money.
  
  Cheese and Butter must always be chosen by
  the taste. Cheap butter should be avoided - it
  is better to use good dripping or lard for cooking
  purposes than inferior butter.
  
  The choice of cheese is entirely a question of
  taste. For a moderately priced cheese some of
  the American cheeses similar to our Cheddar
  cheeses are to be recommended, also the round
  Dutch cheeses. In choosing such cheeses as
  Stilton, Grorgonzola, and Roquefort, select one
  that combines moisture with green mould.
  Cream cheeses must always be bought very
  fresh and used at once.
  
  Eggs if fresh are clear when held up to the light ;
  if stale there is a dark spot or cloudy-looking
  part. They may be tested by putting tnem in
  salt and water - 1 ounce salt to 1 pint water ;
  eggs that float in this are not good. They
  should not be too light, and when shaken the
  inside should not float about. When eggs are
  cheap it is sometimes a good plan to buy in
  large quantity and store them for the winter.
  (See p. 101.)
  
  Ham. - Choose a short thick leg with a
  moderate amount of fat. The rind should be
  rather thin and the bone fine. Tlie quality
  may be tested by running a pointed knife or
  skewer in close to the bone ; when withdrawn it
  should not bo greasy nor have an unpleasant
  smell, but, on the contrary, be clean and have a
  good flavour. Hams vary in price according to
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  107
  
  
  the manner of curing and special reputation. In
  England the Yorkshire and Cumberland hams
  are generally considered the finest and still
  command a good price, although some of the
  southern cotmties produce hams by no means
  inferior. In Scotland, the Dumfries and Gallo-
  way hams rank among the best, and Irish hams
  from Belfast are much prized. Canadian and
  Danish hams are also in the market in large
  quantities, and although the flavour is not con-
  sidered so delicate as that of the home-cured
  variety, their moderate price recommends them
  to those who have to study economy.
  
  Bacon must be fresh and free from rustiness.
  The fat should be very white ; the lean should
  adlaere closely to the bone and be of a nice red
  colour, and there should be as little gristle as
  possible.
  
  The following diagram mil give a general idea
  of the way in which a side of bacon is usually
  cut in England ; there wiU of coiirse be sub-
  divisions to make smaller pieces. What is
  known as " streaky " bacon and the flank are
  considered the finest, but, being much in demand,
  they fetch a high price. The back and loin are
  also prime pieces, while the fore-end and gammon,
  although not so fine in texture, do excellently
  for boiled bacon.
  
  
  Side of Bacon.
  
  
  1. Collar.
  
  2. Back.
  
  3. Loin.
  
  4. Corner.
  
  
  5. Gammon.
  
  6. Flank.
  
  7. Streaky.
  
  8. Fore-end.
  
  
  HOW TO CHOOSE MEAT
  
  General Hints. - It is very important to buy
  meat from a good butcher, and one who can be
  thoroughly trxisted.
  
  There are certain signs by wliich the quahty
  of the meat can generally be judged. The
  texture should be firm and moderately elastic,
  and, when pressed, should not leave the imprint
  of the finger. If the flesh is flabby and moist
  and has an unpleasant odour it is not good.
  
  The lean part should be finely grained, and the
  fat, wluch should not be in any undue propor-
  tion, should be free from kernels, brown spots,
  and streaks of blood.
  
  The meat of most animals that have died a
  natural death or by accident should be avoided.
  
  Good meat does not waste much in cooking,
  and when left on a dish the juice should not
  exude from it in any quantity.
  
  
  Besides these general points to be remembered
  each special kind of meat has its indivndual
  character by wliich it can be judged.
  
  Beef. - The best kind of beef is of a nice red
  colour, almost a cherry red, and the lean has a
  marble appearance, being slightly intergrained
  with fat. The fat is a pale yeUow colour, not
  mottled, and the suet hard and dry. It is fine
  and smooth in textiu-e, with rather an open
  grain. There should be little or no gristle
  between the fat and the lean, as this generally
  indicates that it is the flesh of an old animal.
  Beef of a dark colour with very yellow fat should
  be avoided.
  
  Beef is more nourishing and strengthening
  than mutton, but not so easy of digestion. Ox
  beef is better than cow beef and generally
  fetches a higher price. Bull beef is very coEirse,
  and is never sold by a good butcher.
  
  Beef should be well hung before it is used
  to make it tender ; the time it should hang wUl
  depend upon the weather, and it must never be
  allowed to become high.
  
  Mutton. - The best mutton is pltimp and
  small-boned. The quality depends very much
  upon where the animal has been reared, and also
  upon the age at which it is killed ; the mountain-
  fed sheep are considered the best, and from four
  to six years old is the best age for killing, only a
  farmer can rarely afford to keep his sheep so
  long, and they are generally killed between two
  and three years of age.
  
  The lean of mutton is not so red in colour as
  beef, but has a darker and browner hue. It
  should be firm, close in textiire, and not inter-
  grained with fat. The fat should be hard and
  very white and waxy. Mutton, like beef, should
  be well hung.
  
  Lamb is paler in colour than mutton, and
  the fat is pearly white. When fresh, the veins
  in the neck end of the fore-quarter have a
  bluish tinge, and when stale these develop a
  greenish hue. In the hind-quarter the kidneys
  should be examined ; if they are flabby with an
  unpleasant smell the meat is stale.
  
  A piece of the caul, a thin transparent-looking
  membrane, should be sent with each joint of
  lamb to wrap round it and protect it when
  cooking.
  
  The New Zealand or Canterbury Iamb is much
  cheaper than the home grown, but as far as
  taste is concerned it is more like mutton, as
  it seems to lose its characteristic flavour during
  the process of freezing.
  
  The flesh of lamb is tenderer than that of
  mutton, but it is more watery and not so nutri-
  tious. Lamb cannot be hung for very long.
  
  Pork. - Pork requires very careful choosing
  as it is more subject to diseeise than perhaps
  any other animal food, and unless one is sure
  of its source it is safer to leave it alone. The
  flesh should be of a pinky white colour, smooth,
  finely grained, and firm to the toucli. The skin
  
  
  108
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  must not be too thick. Tlie fat sliould be
  pearly white with no black specks nor kernels.
  Small pork is the best. It is much more difficult
  to digest than either beef or mutton, as it con-
  tains such a large proportion of fat.
  
  Veal is the flesh of the calf. It should bo
  very pale in colour, firm, and closely grained.
  The fat should be white, and if that which sur-
  rounds the kidney is hard and without smell
  the meat is in good condition. Veal is not so
  nutritious as beef and it is more difficult of
  digestion. Like all other young moats, it should
  not l:>e hung verj' long.
  
  Venison is the flesh of deer. Tlie lean should
  be finely grained and dark in colour. The fat
  should bo plentiful and of a creamy white
  appearance.
  
  The age can be judged by the hoof ; in the
  young animal the cleft is small and smooth,
  while in the older one it has become much
  deeper and more rugged.
  
  Venison should be hung as long as possible,
  but it must be frequently examined. Its fresh-
  ness can be tested by running a knife or skewer
  into the bone at the haunch ; if when withdrawn
  it smoUs well and is not sticky this is a sure
  sign of good condition.
  
  The flesh of the buck is considered superior to
  that of the doe.
  
  Suet. - This must be very fresh and of good
  quaUty. The solid fat, which surrounds the
  kidney, either beef or mutton, is considered the
  best. Beef suet should be cream coloured or
  pale yellow and mutton suet very white and
  waxy. Both should be very firm and dry.
  
  Internal Meats. - All inside meats such as
  tripe, liver, kidneys, sweetbreads, &c., must be
  bought very fresh and used at once.
  
  CALENDAR OF MEAT IN SEASON
  
  Beef, Mutton, and Veal are in season all the
  year round.
  
  Lamb. - House lamb from January to May,
  grass lamb from May to September, and New
  Zealand lamb all the year round.
  
  Pork. - All the year round, but best from
  September to May.
  
  Venison. - Buck venison from May to October,
  doe venison from October to end of January.
  
  DIFFERENT JOINTS OF MEAT AND
  THEIR USES
  
  The cutting up of meat varies somewhat
  according to locality and also according to the
  special demands of the people with whom the
  butchers have to deal.
  
  The following diagrams will give an idea of
  how the different animals are cut up by English
  butchers, and m.ay also be of assistance to the
  housewife in knowing what pioco to order for
  the special purpose she has in view.
  
  
  BEEF
  
  
  f^
  
  
  Diagram showing niofle of cutting up Beef
  in England.
  
  
  ].
  
  Sirloin.
  
  :o.
  
  Fore Ribs.
  
  2.
  
  Rump.
  
  11.
  
  Middle Ribs.
  
  3.
  
  Aitchbone.
  
  12.
  
  Chuck Ribs.
  
  4.
  
  Buttock.
  
  13.
  
  Leg of Mutton Piec
  
  5.
  
  Mouse Buttock.
  
  14.
  
  Brisket.
  
  6.
  
  Veiny parts.
  
  15.
  
  Clod.
  
  7.
  
  Thick Flank.
  
  16.
  
  Keck.
  
  8.
  
  Thin Flank.
  
  17.
  
  Shin.
  
  9.
  
  Shin.
  
  18.
  
  Cheek.
  
  The Sirloin. - This is the best part for roasting,
  but it is somewhat expensive. It is usually
  divided into three pieces varying in weight
  according to the size of the animal. The middle
  cut is considered the best, as it has the largest
  amovmt of undercut. The piece next the ribs
  has very little undercut, and the one next the
  rump is a joint difficult to carve, as it has a piece
  of bone on one side.
  
  The sirloins from both sides of the animal
  not cut asunder form what is called the baron of
  beef, corresponding to the saddle in mutton.
  This is a joint rarely seen nowadays, but was
  famous at banquets in the days of our ancestors.
  
  The fillet or undercut of tlie sirloin is the most
  tender part for entries or fillets of beef.
  
  Ribs. - The cuts from the ribs are also good
  for roasting, those nearest the sirloin being
  the best. Various sizes of joints can be cut
  according to special requirements. It is more
  economical to have the bone removed and used
  for soup and the meat itself rolled. One or
  two ribs treated in this way make a neat little
  roast for a small family. \Vhen a large cut of
  the ribs is ordered and roasted whole, it is better
  to havo the thin end cut off and used for a
  separate dish, otherwise it becomes overcooked
  before the thicker part is ready. The piece of
  ribs next the shoulder is better stewed or braised
  than roasted.
  
  The Rump. - ^This is divided into three parts
  - the middle, the silver-side, and the chump end.
  The middle is an excellent piece of fleshy meat
  for any purpose. Some of the best steaks are
  cut from tliis part ; it is also a first-rato cut for
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  109
  
  
  pies, for rolled beef, or for a tender stew. The
  chump end is also good for stewing. Tho silver-
  side is very often salted and is good for boiling.
  
  Buttock or Round. - This is another very fleshy
  piece of meat vath little bone. It is one of
  the best pieces for braising or boiling, and
  is often salted. It can also be roasted, but,
  although economical, it is not so fine in flavour
  as the ribs or sirloin.
  
  Aitch Bone, or Edge Bone. - This is a cheap
  piece of meat, but as it contains a large propor-
  tion of bone and wastes very much in cooking
  it is not really economical. It is an awkwardly
  shaped joint and very difficult to carve. It is
  generally boiled and sometimes salted.
  
  Brisket. - This is also sold at a low price,
  and is used principally for boiling or stewing.
  It is rather fat, but is excellent when salted and
  boiled and then served cold.
  
  Flank. - The thick flank is one of the most
  economical parts to buy, as it contains no bone
  and verj^ little fat. Suitable for braising, stew-
  ing, and boiling. The thin flank contains much
  more fat, and is best salted, boiled, and eaten
  cold.
  
  The Clod and Sticking Piece are both some-
  what coarse and only suitable for soup or cheap
  stews.
  
  Shin. - This is also coarse grained and very
  gelatinous. It is excellent for stock and soup.
  The top part will also make an economical stew
  if slowly and carefully cooked.
  
  Cheek. - Only suitable for stews and for
  making soup. As it contains so much bone it
  is not really economical.
  
  Cow Heel is very gelatinous, and is iised
  principally for making jelly, or, along with
  iTieat, as a foundation for soups. It can also be
  carefully boiled or stewed and then eaten with a
  good and piquant sauce.
  
  Tail. - This is somewhat expensive. It is
  used for making soups, and can also be stewed
  or braised.
  
  Heart. - This is rather coarse and very in-
  digestible, but it can be made palatable by
  being stuffed and very carefully roasted or
  braised.
  
  Tongue is usually salted and then boiled
  and served cold, or served hot with a good
  sauce, or cut in sUces for an entr^.
  
  Tripe. - The inner lining of the stomach.
  It is usually sold partially prepared, although in
  Scotland it requires many hours' boiling. It is
  very tender and easily digested, and for this
  reason is frequently ordered for invalids.
  
  There are several different kinds of tripe
  popularly known as " honeycomb," " blanket,"
  " double " or " book " (because it is like the
  leaves of a book), and " reed " the dark -coloured
  portion.
  
  Liver. - This is a cheap piece, and is nutritious
  for those who can digest it. It requires careful
  cooking.
  
  
  Kidneys.^Used for making soup. Can also be
  stewed, although rather indigestible.
  
  Midriff. - A thin fleshy piece which runs across
  the middle of the animal. It is rich in flavour
  and is very good for stews or beef-steak pudding.
  
  Sweetbread. - In the ox tliis part is coarse, and
  can only be made palatable by careful cooking.
  
  
  VEAL
  
  
  Mode of cuttlnc up a Calf.
  
  
  1. Loin.
  
  2. Chump end of Loin.
  
  3. Fillet.
  
  4. Hind-knuckle.
  
  5. Fore-knuckle.
  
  6. Neck (best end).
  
  
  7. Shoulder.
  
  8. Blade-bone.
  
  9. Breast.
  
  10. Flank.
  
  11. Head.
  
  
  Veal, which is the flesh of the calf, is cut up
  into the following different joints : -
  
  The Fillet. - One of the finest pieces, very
  fleshy with little or no bone. Can be used for
  any pvu-pose. The best cutlets are cut from
  this part. It is high priced, but not over
  expensive, as there is practically no waste.
  
  The Breast. - If boned, stuffed and rolled,
  this part makes a nice little joint for roasting.
  It can also be braised or stewed. Entrees are
  also prepared from this piece.
  
  The Loin. - One of the best pieces for roasting,
  also for chops.
  
  The Neck. - A good joint for breiising or
  stewing. Can also be roasted. The best end
  may be cut into chops. The scrag-end is more
  suitable for broth.
  
  Knuckle. - This is a favourite part for soup
  or broth and is much used in the making of
  white stock. The fore-knuckle is more tender
  than the hind-knuckle and is often stewed or
  boiled and served with a good sauce.
  
  Head and Feet are sometimes served to-
  gether as a hash, b\it, being rather insipid in
  flavour, they require a good sauce. They can
  also be used for pies, when some ham should be
  added, and for different entr^s. The head is
  iised for soup- Mock Turtle Soup - and the feet
  for maJking jelly - Calf's Foot Jelly.
  
  
  110
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Sweetbread. - This is considered a great
  delicacy, and is generally expensive. It is much
  iised for entrees, and is a favourite dish for
  invalids. The throat Bweotbrcad, which is the
  thymus gland of the calf, is considered inferior
  in quality to the heart sweetbread.
  
  Kidney. - Generally sold along with a piece of
  the loin and roasted. Can also be used separ-
  ately in the same way as sheep's kidneys.
  
  Brains. - A \ory delicate morsel for entr6es.
  
  Liver and Heart. - Can be used in the same way
  as sheep's hver and heart.
  
  MUTTON
  
  The following diagram will give an idea of the
  different joints into which mutton is cut : -
  
  
  Diagram showing mode of cutting up a Sheep.
  
  
  1. Leg.
  
  2. Loin.
  
  3. Chump end of the Loin.
  
  4. Neck (best end).
  
  5. Scrag.
  
  
  6. Shoulder.
  
  7. Breast
  
  8. Head.
  
  9. Shank.
  10. Trotter.
  
  
  The Leg. - This is one of the most economical
  cuts for boiling or roeisting, as it is lean with a
  small amount of bone in proportion to its size.
  It is too large a joint for a small family. It is
  sometimes a good plan to have it cut in two
  pieces and to roast one piece and boil or stew the
  other. \Vlien a piece of the loin is cut along
  with the log it is called the haunch.
  
  The Loin. - This is generally divided into two
  parts, the best end and the chump end, or
  even subdivided into separate cutlets or chops.
  The loin makes one of the finest and most
  delicate roasts, but it is not economical owing to
  the large proportion of fat and bone. If ordering
  for a roast it must be well jointed by the butcher
  or it will be found difficult to carve, or sometimes
  the chine bone, the bone which runs down the
  centre of the back, is sawn nearly off and then
  removed altogether after cooking. The double
  loin from both sides of the animal is called the
  saddle. It is considered a very fine joint, but
  too large for an ordinary household.
  
  
  The Necii. - The best end of the neck is also
  used for cutlets. It is an excellent piece
  for broiling and braising, as it is tender and
  delicate in flavour. The scrag-end, wliich Ues
  nearer the liead, is a cheap piece of an awkward
  shape and contains a good deal of bone. It is
  only suitable for broth or plain stews as it is
  impossible to cut it in neat pieces.
  
  The Shoulder. - This is another good joint for
  roasting, and some people prefer it to the leg.
  It is perhaps more delicate in flavour, but is
  inchnod to be fat. It can aiao be braised or
  boiled.
  
  The Breast. - Is a cheap piece of mutton with
  much fat and skin. If boned, stulTed, and
  rolled it makes quite a nice little roast. It is
  also very suitable for Irish stew where the
  potatoes absorb some of the fat.
  
  The Head and Trotters are generally sold at
  a low price, but they make excellent broth,
  and can also be served as a dish by themselves
  with a good sauce or made into a pie and served
  cold.
  
  The Pluclc. - This consists of the heaxt, liver
  and lungs, which are often sold together. In
  Scotland they form the foundation of haggis.
  The lungs, or lights, are very inferior, and by
  themselves are seldom used, except perhaps as
  cats' meat. The heart is sometimes sold by
  itself, and is very good stuffed and roasted.
  The hver can also be bought separately, and is
  generally fried or sauteed along with a httle
  bacon.
  
  Kidneys. - These are very dainty morsels
  and are a favourite breakfast delicacy. They
  axe generally broiled or stewed, and are also used
  along with beef in pies and stews. The Iwn
  roast often contains one of the kidneys.
  
  LAMB
  
  When lamb is large it is usually cut up and
  used in the same way as mutton, but when small
  it is cut in quarters. The fore-quarter consists
  of the neck, shoulder, and breast, and the hind-
  quarter of the leg and the loin.
  
  If the hind-quarter makes too large a joint the
  upper part may be cut into chops and served as
  one dish, while the lower portion will make a nice
  little roast or may be steamed and served with a
  good sauce. Or a larger -sized piece may be cut
  off the top and made into a stew or braised.
  
  The fore-quarter may be divided in the same
  way, the breast piece being stewed or braised
  and the shoulder roasted. The chops from the
  neck may also be cut off separately and either
  broiled or fried or used for hotch-potch.
  
  Lamb's Head can be used in the same way as
  sheep's head and is more delicate in flavour.
  
  Lamb's Fry, consisting of the liver, sweetbread,
  and heart, is generally cut in slices and fried.
  The sweetbreads alone are considered a great
  delicacy and are much used for entr^s.
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  111
  
  
  PORK
  
  
  Diagram showing different cuts of Pork.
  
  1. Spare Kib. 4. Fore-loin.
  
  2. Hand. 5. Loin.
  
  3. Spring or Belly. 6. Leg.
  
  The usual joints of fresh pork are the follow-
  ing :-
  
  The Loin is generally scored and roasted.
  Pork chops are also cut from this part.
  
  Leg. - Another piece for roasting. The skin
  must always be scored by the butcher, or it
  would be impossible to carve the joint. It is
  sometimes salted and then boiled.
  
  The Hand and Spring or Belly. - These parts
  are rather fat, and are usually salted. They
  are best boiled and served cold.
  
  Head. - Usually salted. Can be made into
  brawn or boiled and served cold.
  
  Feet (Pettitoes) can be cooked in various
  ways. Usually boiled or stewed.
  
  The Tongue should be pickled and then served
  in the same way as sheep's tongue.
  
  VENISON
  
  The finest joint for roasting is the Haunch.
  The Loin and Neck are also good roasting pieces.
  
  The Shoulder and Breast are better stewed or
  made into a ragoHt. Chops are usually cut from
  
  the loin or neck and steaks from the leg,
  
  t №
  
  FROZEN MEAT
  
  Large quantities of meat are now imported
  from abroad in a frozen condition and sold
  in this country at a considerably lower price
  than that of home production. New Zealand,
  Australia, the United States, S. America, and
  Canada all send us in supplies.
  
  The prejudice against tlois kind of meat has
  to a large extent disappeared, and it is certainly
  an immense boon to those who cannot afford
  the high prices asked for our home-fed meat.
  
  Needless to say, this foreign meat does not
  equal British meat as far as quality and flavour
  are concerned ; the process of freezing apparently
  takes away from its goodness, but with careful
  thawing and good cooking it compares very
  favourably with the more expensive joints, and
  
  
  in many cases it requires an experienced palate
  to detect the difference.
  
  Mutton and lamb seem to suSer less than beef
  from the process of freezing. That known as
  Canterbury lamb is the best. When ordering
  frozen meat it must be remembered that it will
  not keep in warm weather without a refrigerator.
  
  HOW TO CHOOSE FISH
  
  General Hints. - Fish to be good ought to be
  in season.
  
  Moderately -sized fish are better than very large
  ones, especially those which are thick and plump
  in proportion to their size. A short thick fish is
  always better than one that is long and thin.
  
  There are several signs by which its freshness
  can be judged ; the fish should be firm and stiff,
  and when held up the tail should not droop ; but
  this alone is not sufficient sign, as fish kept on
  ice will retain its rigidity although several days
  old, so we must look for other signs as well.
  
  The gills in fresh fish are a bright red, the eyes
  are bright and not sunken, and the scales also are
  bright and can be easily removed when rubbed.
  
  A flat fish should never be bought without
  looking at both sides, and especially the grey
  side, as this betrays any want of freshness more
  quickly than the white.
  
  A plaice, for instance, can always be judged
  by its spots ; when fresh they are a bright red,
  and after it has been kept some time they take
  a brownish hue.
  
  In choosing cut fish, such as cod, halibut, or
  salmon, &c., the flesh should have a firm appear-
  ance with a close grain; if it looks fibrous and
  watery it is not good.
  
  Never choose fish that is bruised or has the
  skin broken, as it will not keep well.
  
  CALENDAR OF FISH IN SEASON
  
  January. - Barbel, bream, brill, carp, cod,
  dory, eels, flounders, gurnet, haddock, halibut,
  hake, herring, hng, mackerel, perch, pike, plaice,
  skate, smelts, soles, sprats, sturgeon, tench,
  thornback, turbot, whitebait, whiting.
  
  Crabs, crayfish, lobsters, mussels, oysters,
  scallops, slirimps.
  
  February. - Bream, brill, carp, cod, dory, eels,
  flounders, gurnets, haddock, halibut, herring,
  ling, mackerel, mullet, plaice, perch, pike,
  salmon, skate, smelts, soles, sprats, sturgeon,
  tench, thornback, trout, turbot, whitebait,
  whiting.
  
  Crab, crayfish, lobsters, mussels, oysters,
  prawns, scallops, slii-imps.
  
  March. - Bream, brill, carp, cod, eels, flounders,
  gurnets, haddock, halibut, herring, ling, mackerel,
  mullet, pike, salmon, skate, smelts, soles, sprats
  (tench until 15th), thornback, trout, tiu-bot,
  whiting, whitebait.
  
  
  112
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Crabs, crayfish, lobsters, mussels, oysters,
  pra'wns, scallops, shrimps.
  
  April. - Bream, brill, chub, conger eel, cod,
  dory, flounders, gurnet, haddock, halibut, herring,
  ling, mackerel, mullet, plaice, salmon, shad,
  skate, smelts, soles, sturgeon, turbot, trout,
  whitebait, whiting.
  
  Crabs, crayfish, lobsters, mussels, ojrsters,
  prawns, scallops, shrimps.
  
  May. - Bass, brill, cod, dace, dory, eels,
  gurnet, hake, halibut, herring, ling, mackerel,
  mullet, salmon, shad, skate, smelts, soles,
  sturgeon, trout, turbot, whitebait, whiting.
  
  Crabs, crayfish, lobsters, prawns, scallops,
  shrimps.
  
  Jane. - Bass, bream, brill, carp, chub, cod,
  dace, dory, eels, flounders, gurnets, halibut,
  hake, haddock, herring, lampreys, mackerel,
  mullet, porch (after 15th), pike, plaice, salmon,
  shad, soles, tench, trout, turbot, wliitebait,
  whiting.
  
  Crabs, crayfish, lobsters, prawns, shrimps.
  
  Joly. - Bass, bream, brill, carp, chub, dace,
  dory, eels, flounders, gurnets, haddock, hake,
  halibut, herring, mackerel, mullet, perch, pike,
  plaice, salmon, sea-bream, shad, smelts, soles,
  tench, thornback, trout, turbot, whitebait,
  whiting.
  
  Crabs, crayfish, lobsters, prawns, shrimps.
  
  August. - Bass, bream, brill, carp, chub, dace,
  dory, eels, flounders, giu-nets, haddock, hake,
  halibut, herring, lamprey, mackerel, mullet,
  plaice, perch, pike, salmon, sea-bream, shad,
  soles, tench, trout, turbot, whitebait, whiting.
  
  Crabs, crayfish, lobsters, prawns, shrimps.
  
  September. - Bass, bream, brill, carp, cod,
  chub, dace, dory, eels, flounders, gurnet, had-
  dock, hake, halibut, herring, lampreys, mackerel,
  mullet, perch, pike, plaice, salmon, sea-bream,
  shad, smelts, soles, tench, trout, turbot, white-
  bait, whiting.
  
  Crabs, crayfish, lobsters, oysters, shrinaps.
  
  October. - Bream, brill, carp, cod, dory, eels,
  flounders, gurnet, haddock, halibut, herring,
  mackerel, mullet, perch, pike, plaice, salmon,
  sea-bream, skate, soles, smelts, tench, turbot,
  whiting.
  
  Crabs, crayfish, lobsters, mussels, oysters,
  scallops, shrimps.
  
  November. - Bream, brill, carp, cod, dory,
  flounders, eels, gurnet, haddock, halibut, herring,
  mackerel, mullet, perch, pike, plaice, salmon
  (Dutch), skate, smelts, sprats, soles, tench,
  turbot, whiting.
  
  Crabs, crayfish, lobsters, mussels, oysters,
  scallops, shrimps.
  
  December. - Brill, carp, cod, eels, flounders,
  gurnets, haddock, halibut, herring, mackerel,
  mu'let, perch, pike, plaice, salmon (Dutch),
  sea-bream, skate, smelt, sprats, soles, tench,
  whiting.
  
  Crabs, crayfish, lobsters, mussels, oysters,
  scallops, shrimps.
  
  
  ON CHOOSING GAME AND POULTRY
  
  General Rules for Choosing Poultry. - AH
  
  poultry when young should have smooth and
  pliable legs, with the scales overlapping very
  slightly. The spur on the leg must be short and
  not prominent, and the feet should be soft and
  rather moist. If the spur is large and the legs
  hard and dry the bird is no longer young. The
  flesh should be smooth and without long hairs.
  Wlien choosing a bird that has not been plucked
  it should be seen that the plumage is smooth and
  downy with soft young feathers under the wing
  and on the breast. If freshly killed the eyes
  will be clear and not sunken ; there will be no
  discoloration of the flesh and the vent will be
  hard and close.
  
  When poultry is bought quite fresh it may bo
  hung for a few days, but should not be dfaw n
  until about to be used. It must never be over-
  hung, and when it shows the least sign of turning
  green it is unfit for food.
  
  Fowls. - The comb should be smooth and of a
  bright red colour. For roasting choose a fowl
  with black or yellow legs, as they are supposed
  to be more juicy and to possess a better flavour.
  For boiling, choose one with white legs, as the
  flesh will likely be whiter.
  
  A fowl for roasting, frying, or grilling should
  be young and tender, but for boiling, braising,
  or stewing an older one may be taken, as old
  birds are generally cheaper, and long slow
  cooking makes them tender.
  
  Geese and Ducks. - Young birds have yellow
  feet and bills with few bristles ; as they get older
  they become darker and redder, although the
  wild duck has small reddish feet even when
  young. The feet should be white and smooth
  and without wrinkles. A goose must always
  be eaten young ; when over twelve months old
  it is not good for table use.
  
  Pigeons. - A dark-coloured one is thought to
  have the highest flavour, and a light-coloured
  one the most delicate. The legs should be of a
  pinkish colour ; wlien they are largo and deeply
  coloured the bird is old. The tame pig'^on is
  smaller than the wild species and is better for
  cooking. Tame pigeons shou'd be cooked at
  once as they soon lose their flavour, but wood
  pigeons may be hung for a few days.
  
  Turlieys. - A good turkey will be recognised by
  the whiteness of its flesh and its smooth black legs.
  Tlie wattles should be a bright red, the breast
  full and the neck long. Beware of those with
  long hairs and flesh of a violet hue. A moderate-
  sized bird should be chosen. A hen is preferable
  for boiling on account of the whiteness of the
  flesh, and the cock is usually chosen for roasting.
  
  If freshly killed it should be kept for at least
  three or four days before cooking or it will
  neither be white not tender. It should be hung
  up to bleed.
  
  Norfolk turkeys eire considered the best.
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  113
  
  
  Game. - It is rather more diflBcult to choose
  game than it is to choose poultry, as the birds are
  usually sold unplucked, but still some of the
  same signs will hold good. The young birds
  are known by their smooth and pUable legs and
  short rounded spurs. The feet should be supple
  aVid moist and easily broken. The feathers
  also help to indicate the age of the bird, as when
  young there are soft and downy ones under the
  wing and on the breast. The plumage of the
  young bird is even and soft, the long feathers
  of the wings are pointed, while in the older bird
  these become round and the colours are usually
  brighter.
  
  The condition of the bird can be judged by
  turning back the feathers of the breast and seeing
  if it feels pkunp and hard ; it should also weigh
  hea%'y for its size.
  
  As regards the time for keeping game, it is
  impossible to lay down any definite rules. To
  begin with it depends very much upon in-
  dividual taste, those who have it seldom as a
  rule Uking it higher than those who are con-
  stantly having it. Then old birds can be hung
  for a longer time than young ones, and again
  the weather must be taken into consideration ;
  close muggy days will not be so good for keeping
  purposes as those which are dry and cold.
  
  Game should be hung unplucked and un-
  drawn and in a current of air if possible. It
  must be remembered that if it is required to
  taste high when cooked, it should smell almost
  offensively so beforehand.
  
  Water birds should always be eaten fresh, as
  their flesh, being of an oily nature, very soon
  becomes sour.
  
  Hares and Rabbits. - When young the claws
  are long and pointed, the cleft in the jaws is
  very narrow, the teeth are small and white, and
  the ears can easily be torn. The small nut
  under the paw should also be well developed.
  When the animal is old the claws become
  roimded and rough, the cleft in the jaw deepens,
  the front teeth are long and yellow, and the ears
  become tough and dry, and the little nut under
  the paw disappears.
  
  Rabbits, like poultry, should be used fresh.
  Choose one that is plump and short-necked, and
  the flesh should be stiff without any discolora-
  tion. Wild rabbits are generally preferred to
  tame ones, as they are considered to have a better
  flavour. The flesh of the tame rabbit is wliite
  and more delicate. A rabbit should be paunched
  before it is hung up.
  
  Hares, on the contrary, require to be well hung
  - at least a week - and should not be paunched
  until about to be used.
  
  CALENDAR OF POULTRY AND GAME IN
  SEASON
  
  The following will be found useful for ready
  reference : -
  
  
  January. - Capons, capercailzie, chickens,
  ducks, fowls, geese, hares, larks, landrails,
  partridges, pheasants, pigeons, pintail, plover,
  pullets, snipe, tiu-keys, wild-fowl, widgeon,
  woodcock.
  
  February. - Capons, capercailzie, chickens,
  ducks, fowls, geese, hares, larks, landrails,
  partridges, pheasants, pigeons, pintail, plover,
  ptarmigan, pullets, prairie-hen, rabbits, snipe,
  turkeys, teal, wild-fowl, widgeon, woodcock.
  
  March. - Capons, capercailzie, chickens, ducks,
  fowls, geese, guinea-fowls, hares, landrails, orto-
  lans (partridges, pheasants, and plover until
  middle of month), prairie-hens, ptarmigan,
  pigeons, pullets, quail, rabbits, ruffs and reeves,
  snipe (until 15th), teal, turkeys, widgeon, wild-
  fowl, woodcock.
  
  April. - Capons, chickens, ducks, ducklings,
  fowls, guinea-fowls, goshngs, hares, leverets,
  ortolans, prairie-hens, pigeons, ptarmigan, quail,
  rabbit, ruffs and reeves.
  
  May. - Capons, chickens, ducks, ducklings,
  fowls, guinea-fowls, gosHngs, green geese, hares,
  leverets, ortolans, pigeons, ptarmigan, pullets,
  quail, rabbits, rufis and reeves.
  
  June. - Capons, chickens, ducks, ducklings,
  fowls, guinea-fowls, gosUngs, green geese, hares,
  hazel hens, leverets, ortolans, pigeons, puUets,
  quails, rabbits, ruffs and reeves, turkey poults,
  wheatears.
  
  July. - Capons, chickens, ducks, duckhngs,
  fowls, green geese, gosUngs, hares, leverets,
  ortolans, pigeons, plover, pullets, quail, rabbits,
  ruffs and reeves, turkey poults, wheatears.
  
  August. - Capercailzie, capons, chickens, wild
  and tame ducks, duckhngs, fowls, geese, gos-
  Ungs, grouse (on I2th), hares, larks, leverets,
  pigeons, plover, pullets, quails, rabbits, smpe,
  teal, turkey poults, woodcock, wheatears.
  
  September. - Capercailzie, capons, chickens,
  wild and tame ducks, fowls, geese, grouse, haxes,
  larks, leverets, moor-game, partridges, pheasants,
  pigeons, plovers, pullets, rabbits, snipe, t\irkeys,
  turkey poults, teal, widgeon, woodcock, wheat-
  ears.
  
  October. - Black game, capercailzie, capons,
  cliickens, wild ducks, fowls, geese, grouse, hares,
  larks, partridges, pheasants, pigeons, pintails,
  plover, ptarmigan, pullets, rabbits, snipe,
  turkeys, turkey poults, teal, widgeon, wood-
  cock.
  
  November. - Black game, capercailzie, capons,
  chickens, wild and tame ducks, fowls, geese,
  grouse, hares, larks, landrails, peu-tridges,
  pheasants, pigeons, pintails, plover, ptarmigan,
  pullets, rabbits, snipe, turkeys, turkey poults,
  teal, widgeon, woodcock.
  
  December. - Black game, capercailzie (until
  20th), capons, chickens, ducks, fowls, geese,
  grouse (until 18th), hares, landrails, larks,
  partridges, pheasants, pintail, plover, ptarmigan,
  rabbits, snipe, teal, turkeys, turkey poxilts,
  \vidgeon, woodcock.
  
  
  in
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  THE CHOOSING OF FRUIT AND
  VEGETABLES
  
  Although it does not require much experience
  to tell when fruit and vegetables are fresh, it
  does require some attention and care to see that
  one is served with the proper article.
  
  Vegetables are never so good as when pro-
  ciired fresh from a garden, and when one is
  not the happy possessor of a piece of ground
  it is sometimes possible to make an arrange-
  ment with a gai'dener or farmer to send a
  supply two or three times weekly, if not
  daily.
  
  If vegetables and fruit have to be bought from
  a shop personal choice is always preferable to
  a written order. The greengrocer or fruiterer
  is naturally anxious to get rid of his stock, and
  it is not to be wondered at if he tries to dispose
  of the articles he has had longest before selling
  those which are fresh.
  
  The careful housewife will, however, insist
  upon getting wliat is really fresh and will accept
  nothing that is doubtful.
  
  Salads and other green vegetables especially
  are only good when newly gathered ; if they
  have been IjHng packed one on top of the other
  for any length of time they become unwhole-
  some, and this is often the cause of green vege-
  tables disagreeing with people who have a weak
  digestion.
  
  Cauliflowers should be close and very white,
  and those of a medium size are best; avoid
  those that have a greenish colovu-.
  
  Brassels Sprouts and Cabbages should be close
  and firm with plenty of heart. Young cabbages
  are the most delicate in flavour.
  
  Cucumbers and Vegetable Marrows should also
  be firm, and those of a medium size and straight
  in form are to be preferred to the twisted and
  overgrown specimens.
  
  Tomatoes must not be over-ripe. Tlio home-
  grown red tomatoes are best for salads and for
  eating raw, while the foreign ones, which are
  cheaper, are excellent for cooking purposes.
  
  Peas and Beans are best when they are young,
  especially if they are to be served separately as
  vegetables to accompany meat. The older ones
  can be served in soups and stews.
  
  Celery should be chosen of a medium size, and
  tlie stalks must be very stiff and close -together.
  The whiter it is the better.
  
  Root Vegetables, unlike green vegetables, may
  bo kept for some time without suffering in any
  way ; they must, however, bo firm and not
  withered or shrunken. Some kinds, such as
  potatoes, carrots, turnips, and parsnips can even
  be stored for -winter use (see p. 102). Potatoes,
  for instance, can often be bought very cheaply
  by the sack in the summer, and there may bo a
  distinct advantage in laying in a store at this
  season. There must, of course, bo the proper
  accommodation for keeping tliom, and the
  
  
  greatest care must be taken to see that they axe
  sound and good when bought.
  
  It is always best to buy the vegetables that
  are in season ; they are then at their cheapest
  and best. The early and forced varieties rarely
  have the same flavour as those of maturcr growth
  and should not be bought by the tlirifty house-
  wife for the ordinary bill of fare.
  
  The same care must be taken in the choice of
  fruit, and only that which is perfectly sound
  should bo accepted. Wlien it is to be eaten raw
  it ought to be fully ripe without being over-
  much so.
  
  CALENDAR OF FRUIT IN SEASON
  
  January. - Almonds, apples, bananas, chest-
  nuts, figs, grapes, lemons, medlars, nuts, oranges,
  pears, pines, Spanish nuts, walnuts, &c.
  
  February. - Almonds, apples, bananas, chest-
  nuts, figs, grapes, lemons, medlars, nuts,
  oranges, peaches, pears, pines, rhubarb (forced),
  Spanish nuts, walnuts, &c.
  
  March. - Almonds, apples, bananas, chest-
  nuts, figs, grapes, lemons, melons, nuts, oranges,
  peaches, pears, pines, rhubarb (forced), Spanish
  nuts, walnuts, &c.
  
  April. - Almonds, apples, bananas, dried fruits,
  figs, grapes, nuts, oranges, pines, rhubarb, &c.
  
  May. - Almonds, apples, apricots (forced),
  bananas, cherries (forced), dried fruits, figs,
  grapes, green gooseberries, melons, oranges,
  pears, pines, rhubarb, &c.
  
  June. - Almonds, apples, apricots, bananas,
  cherries, currants, figs, gooseberries, grapes,
  melons, nectarines, poaches, pears, pines, rasp-
  berries, rhubarb, strawberries, &c.
  
  July. - Almonds, apricots, bananas, cherries,
  currants, damsons, figs, gooseberries, grapes,
  melons, nectarines, oranges, peaches, pears,
  pineapples, plums, raspberries, strawberries, &c.
  
  August. - Almonds, apricots, bananas, cherries,
  cobnuts, currants, damsons, figs, filberts, grapes,
  greengages, medlars, melons, mulberries, nectar-
  ines, oranges, peaches, pears, pines, plums,
  raspberries, strawberries, walnuts, &c.
  
  September. - Almonds, apples, apricots, bana-
  nas, cherries, cobnuts, damsons, figs, filberts,
  grapes, greengages, melons, medlars, mulberries,
  nectarines, oranges, peaches, pears, pines, plums,
  quinces, walnuts, &c.
  
  October. - Almonds, apples, apricots, bananas,
  cobnuts, cranberries, cocoanuts, damsons, figs,
  filberts, grapes, medlars, melons, nectarines,
  oranges, peaches, pears, pines, quinces, walnuts,
  &c.
  
  November. - Almonds, apples, bananas, chest-
  nuts, cocoanuts, cranberries, figs, filberts,
  grapes, melons, nuts (various), pears, pines,
  pomegranates, plums (Californian), quinces,
  walnuts, &c.
  
  December. - Almonds, apples, bananas, cheat-
  nuts, cocoanuts, cranberries, figs, filberts, grapes.
  
  
  FOOD AND THE KITCHEN
  
  
  115
  
  
  melons, nuts (various), oranges, pears, pines,
  plums (Californian), pomegranates, rhubai'b
  (forced), walnuts, &c.
  
  CALENDAR OF VEGETABLES IN SEASON.
  
  January. - Artichokes, beetroot, broccoli,
  Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cardoons, carrots,
  celery, chervil, cress, cucumbers, endive, leeks,
  lettuce, onions, parsnips, potatoes, salsify,
  savoys, spinach, tomatoes, turnips.
  
  February. - Artichokes, beetroot, broccoli,
  Brussels sprouts, cabbage, celery, chervil, cress,
  cucumbers, endive, greens, leeks, lettuce, mush-
  rooms, potatoes, onions, parsnips, salsify,
  Scotch kale, savoys, sorrel, spinach, tomatoes,
  turnips.
  
  March. - Artichokes, asparagus, beetroot, broc-
  coli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cardoons, carrots,
  cauliflower, celery, chervil, cucumber, endive,
  greens, horse-radish, leeks, lettuce, muslirooms,
  onions, parsnips, new potatoes, radishes, savoys,
  spinach, sea and Scotch kale, turnips, tomatoes,
  watercress.
  
  April. - Artichokes, asparagus, beetroot, cab-
  bage, cauliflower, celery, cucumber, endive,
  eschalots, leeks, lettuce, mushrooms, spring
  onions, parsnips, new potatoes, radishes, sea-
  kale, spinach, sprouts, tomatoes, turnips.
  
  May. - Artichokes, asparagus, beans, beetroot,
  cabbage, new carrots, cauliflower, chervil,
  cucumbers, endive, lettuce, leoks, mxishrooms,
  mustard and cress, peas, new potatoes, spring
  onions, radishes, sea-kale, spinach, turnips,
  watercress.
  
  June. - Artichokes, asparagus, beans, beetroot,
  new carrots, cucumbers, endive,
  
  
  greens, leeks, lettuce, mushrooms, parsnips,
  peas, new potatoes, spring onions, radishes,
  sea-kale, spinach, tomatoes, turnips, vegetable
  marrow, watercress.
  
  July. - Artichokes, asparagus, beans, beetroot,
  broad beans, cabbage, carrots, cauUflower,
  chervil, cress, cucumber, endive, leeks, lettuce,
  mushrooms, spring onions, peas, new potatoes,
  scarlet runners, spinach, tomatoes, turnipg,
  vegetable marrow, watercress.
  
  August. - Artichokes, beans, beetroot, cabbage,
  carrots, cauliflower, celery, cress, cucumbers,
  endive, leeks, lettuce, muslirooms, peas, pota-
  toes, salsify, scarlet runners, spinach, tomatoes,
  turnips, vegetable marrow, watercress.
  
  September. - Artichokes, beans, beetroot, cab-
  bage, carrots, cauliflower, celery, cress, cucumber,
  endive, leeks, lettuce, mushrooms, parsnips,
  peas, salsify, scarlet runners, spinach, sprouts,
  tomatoes, turnips, vegetable marrow, water-
  cress.
  
  October. - Artichokes, beetroot, cabbage,
  carrots, cauUflower, celery, cucumber, greens,
  leeks, lettuce, mushrooms, parsnips, savoys,
  scarlet runners, Spanish onions, spinach, sprouts,
  tomatoes, turnips, vegetable marrow, water-
  cress.
  
  November. - Artichokes, beetroot, Brussels
  sprouts, carrots, celery, cress, cucumber, greens,
  leeks, lettuce, parsnips, savoys, Spanish onions,
  spinach, tomatoes, turnip tops, watercress.
  
  December. - Artichokes, beetroot, broccoli,
  Brussels sprouts, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower,
  celery, cucumber, greens, leeks, parsnips, salsify,
  savoys, Scotch and sea-kale, Spanish onions,
  tomatoes, turnip tops, vegetable marrow,
  watercress.
  
  
  IMPERIAL WEIGHTS AND MEASURES
  
  
  Avoirdupois Weight
  
  
  16 drachms (dr. )
  
  16 ounces
  
  28 pounds
  
  4 quarters . .
  
  20 hundredweights
  
  
  14 pounds
  8 stones
  112 pounds
  
  
  make 1 ounce (oz.).
  ,, 1 pound (lb.).
  " 1 quarter (qr.).
  " 1 hundredweight
  (cwt.).
  1 ton.
  
  
  make 1 stone.
  
  " 1 hundredweight.
  " 1 hundredweight.
  
  
  Liquid Measure of Capacity
  
  4 gills make 1 pint (pt.).
  
  2 pints ,,1 quart (qrt.).
  
  4 quarts , 1 gallon (gal.).
  
  
  Dry Measure of Capacity
  
  2 gallons make 1 peck (pk.).
  
  4 pecks " 1 bushel (bush.).
  
  8 bushels " 1 quarter (qr.).
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  It is a very mistaken idea that good cooking is necessarily an expensive matter. On the contrary,
  it is the skilful cook who literally " gathers up the fragments that nothing may be lost," and the
  careless one who looks upon them aa trifles not worthy of consideration.
  
  We as a nation are very much behindhand in our cooking arrangements, and it is only now that
  we are beginning to realise that training in the subject should form an important branch of every
  girl's education.
  
  It is Hamerton who says that " Intellectual labour is in its origin as dependent upon the art of
  cookery as the dissemination of its results is dependent upon paper-making and printing. Cookery
  in its perfection - the great science of preparing food in the best way suited to our use - is really the
  most important of all sciences and the mother of the arts."
  
  In the following paragraphs elaborate dishes which require the skill of a professed cook, very
  expensive dishes and dishes which take a long time to prepare have been purposely excluded, and
  only those given which are within the power of the amateur and home-worker. It cannot be too
  emphatically ui'ged, however, that to ensure success great care is needed in the preparation of every
  dish.
  
  The cook, whether professional or amateur, owes something to the author of the recipes she uses,
  and that debt is not discharged if the recipes are carelessly read and carelessly followed. Nearly
  every one has heard the remark, " I am sure I don't know why the dish is like this - the recipe must be
  ^\Tong." The recipe cannot reply : can only defend itself by success, and so in the interests of fair
  play it ought to receive just treatment. Accuracy in the weighing and measuring of ingredients must
  be strongly insisted upon. Cooking may be an art, but it is also a science, and to ensure success we
  must be exact. There must bo no guess-work. An ounce more or less may bring ruin on your
  labours.
  
  Let all your materials be good of their kind, and do not of set purpose substitute one ingredient
  for another.
  
  See also that the fire is in good condition for the cooking required of it, or that the oven is in a
  fair way to be at the right heat by the time you are ready to use it.
  
  Lastly, do not scorn those little details of arrangement which add nothing to the taste, but only
  to the tastcfulness of the dish. A little fresh parsley, a lace-edged paper, a sprinkling of sugar, &c.,
  may make all the difference between a tempting and an untompting dish.
  
  STOCKS, SOUPS, AND PUREES
  
  
  GeDeral Remarks on Stocks and Soups. - It is
  quite an art to make a good soup, but it is an
  art easily mastered if only a little care and
  trouble are expended upon its acquirement.
  
  There are few things, whether fish, flesh, fowl
  or vegetable, which will not lend themselves to
  soup-making. The variety of soups is very
  great ; in fact, it has been reckoned that there
  are over half a thousand different recipes. This
  number, however, is obtained by giving a separ-
  ate) title to every separate variation of a com-
  bination. For example, clear stock, which is
  the basis of so many clear soups, will take a
  different name from each special garnish or
  flavouring that is added to it, and the same
  throughout with the other soups - the slightest
  
  
  variations will furnish the occasion for a dis-
  tinctive name. When the numerous recipes come
  to be examined, it will bo found that, broadly
  speaking, they can be classified under one of the
  three following headings : -
  
  (1) Clear Soups and Broths.
  
  (2) Thickened Soups.
  
  (3) Purees.
  
  An explanation of these different classes of
  soups is given below, along with a few typical
  recipes, which ought to serve as a guide to the
  other varieties.
  
  The excellence of the soup will depend to a
  largo extent upon slow and steady cooking and
  to the judicious introduction of the flavouring.
  Although all soup should bo sufficiently seasoned
  
  
  116
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  117
  
  
  before it is sent to table, salt must always be
  added with care, as an over -salted soup can be
  relished by no one.
  
  In the following recipes the approximate
  amount of liquid required is always given, but
  the exact quantity will depend somewhat upon
  the rate of cooking. If the soup becomes too
  much reduced by boiling and, consequently, too
  thick, more water or stock must be added to
  make up the original allowance.
  
  Tlie vegetables, too, are always spoken of as
  'prepared, and full directions for doing this will
  be found under the heading of " Vegetables."
  
  STOCK
  
  Stock is the foundation of nearly all soups,
  and it can be made from fresh meat, bones,
  fish, vegetables, or scraps of cooked meat and
  bones, &c.
  
  For the better soups, such aa clear soup and
  good whito soup, fresh meat is required, while
  second stock or general stock will serve as the
  foundation for many of the ordinary soups, and,
  besides furnishing the Hquid part of stews,
  whether white or brown, it wiU go a long way
  towards making gravies and sauces a success.
  
  There are different kinds of stock, i.e. brown,
  white, and fish stock, meat boilings and general
  stock. Of brown stock and white stock both a
  first and second stock can be made.
  
  Brown stock is made principally from beef with
  sometimes a little veal or some chicken bones
  added.
  
  White stock is made from any white meat such
  as veal, rabbit, or chicken.
  
  First stock is the first boiling of the meat and
  vegetables.
  
  Second stock is produced by putting the meat
  and vegetables on to boU a second time with
  fresh water.
  
  Fish stock, as its name implies, is made from
  fish or fish trimmings.
  
  Meat boilings is the name given to the water
  in which a joint of meat, fowl, or rabbit has
  been boiled.
  
  General stock is made from scraps of meat,
  bones, and vegetables, and drawn from a stock-
  pot.
  
  PmST STOCK FOR CLEAR AND BROWN
  
  SOUPS
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  3 lbs. Shin of Beef or 2 lbs.
  
  Shin of Beef and 1 lb.
  
  Knuckle of Veal. •
  
  3 quarts Cold Water.
  1 Carrot.
  1 Turnip.
  1 tea-spoonful Mixed Herbs
  
  or a sprig of Thyme,
  
  Marjoram, and Basil.
  
  Method,
  
  
  2 small Onions.
  2 or 3 sticks of Celery or J
  tea-spoonful Celery Seed.
  2 dozen Peppercorns.
  8 Cloves.
  
  1 blade of Mace.
  
  2 Bay Leaves.
  A few Parsley Stalks.
  . dessert-spoonful Salt.
  
  Wipe the meat with a damp cloth.
  
  
  a very sharp knife and cut the meat into small
  pieces, keeping back any fat, but using the skin.
  Put the bones and meat into a stock-pot or
  large goblet with the cold water and salt, and
  if time permits let them soak for half-an-hour ;
  then put the pan on the fire, and bring the
  contents slowly to tire boil. Simmer slowly
  for haK-an-hour, and then remove any scum
  that may be on the top. If you begin the
  skimming too soon, the best part of the stock
  is removed. Next add the vegetables, prepared
  and cut rather small, and the herbs, celery seed,
  and peppercorns, &c., tied in a small piece of
  muslin. Simmer slowly from four and a half to
  five hours, never letting it go oif the boil ; then
  strain through a hair sieve or cloth stretched
  over a colander into a basin, and stand until
  cold.
  
  A darker-coloured stock may be obtained by
  frying the meat in a little dripping or butter
  before pouring on the water ; but the present
  fashion is to have clear soups pale in colour.
  
  Meat boilings may be used instead of water
  for making this stock, and any uncooked chicken
  bones would improve the flavour. Do not
  throw away the meat and vegetables left after
  straining, but put them on again with same
  quantity of water as before, and boil again
  for Second Stock,
  
  FIRST STOCK FOR WHITE SOUPS
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3 lbs. Knuckle of Veal or
  2 lbs. Knuckle of Veal and
  1 lb. Neck of Mutton.
  
  3 quarts Cold Water.
  
  J Carrot.
  
  i Turnip.
  
  1 Onion.
  
  12 White Peppercorns.
  
  
  1 stick of Celery, or J tea-
  spoonful Celery Seed.
  
  6 or 8 Cloves.
  
  J tea-spoonful Mixed Herbs
  or a small sprig of Thyme,
  Marjoram, and Basil.
  
  1 blade of Mace.
  
  2 Bay Leaves.
  
  
  and removo all marrow from the bone. Take
  
  
  1 dessert-spoonful Salt.
  
  Method. - Make in the same way as first
  stock for brown soup (see above), but use
  fewer vegetables, as they tend to discolour the
  stock. Rabbit or chicken may be used instead
  of, or along with, the veal. Any white meat
  will do. A piece of lean ham or a small ham-
  bone will improve the flavour.
  
  A second stock may be taken from the meat
  and bones.
  
  SECOND STOCK
  
  After first stock is made, the meat and vege-
  tables should be put on again with the same
  quantity of water and boiled as before.
  
  It has not the same fresh flavour as first
  stock, but it is most useful in the making of
  sauces and gravies, and of many soups for
  which very good stock is not required.
  
  Second stock is generally a stifier jelly than
  first, as more of the gelatine becomes extracted
  from the bones.
  
  Sometimes the meat and vegetables are fried
  
  
  118
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  in a little dripping first. This gives the stock
  a darker colour and a richer flavour.
  
  FISH STOCK
  
  
  or a sprig of Thyme, Mar-
  joram, and Biisil.
  
  A few Parsley Stalks.
  
  1 dozen Peppercorns.
  
  3 Cloves.
  
  1 blade of Mace.
  
  1 Bay Leaf.
  
  1 dessert-spoonful Salt.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  2 lbs. of White Fish or Fish
  Bones and Triroiuiugs.
  
  2 quarts Cold Water.
  
  1 small Carrot.
  
  1 small Turnip.
  
  1 Onion.
  
  1 stick of Celerj' or J tea-
  spoonful Celery Seed.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Mixed Herbs
  
  Method. - Any white fish or trimmings of
  white fish, such as haddocks, cod, halibut,
  plaice, flounder, ling, "&c., may be used for
  fish stock. Fish such as mackerel, herring,
  and salmon are of too oily a nature and too
  strong in flavour. By fish trimmings is meant
  the bones, heads, fins, and skins of fish. If a
  light-coloured stock is wanted, avoid using too
  much dark-coloured skin. Wetsh the fish or
  trimmings thoroughly in cold water, and cut
  them into small pieces. Put them into a fish-
  kettle or large goblet with the water and salt.
  Put the lid on the pan, and bring to the boil ;
  then skim well, and simmer about fifteen
  minutes before adding the vegetables. As more
  scum rises remove it, or the stock will be
  cloudy in appearance. Prepare the vegetables,
  cut them rather small, and add them to the
  stock with the herbs, celery seed, pepper-
  corns, &c., tied in a small piece of miislin.
  Simmer slowly from three to four hours, then
  strain into a basin.
  
  This stock may be used as a basis for all fish
  soups and fish sauces.
  
  A whiter stock may be obtained by using
  half milk and half water, fewer vegetables, and
  by straining after half-an-hour's slow simmering.
  
  VEGETABLE STOCK
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 Onions.
  
  2 medium-sized Carrots.
  
  1 medium-sized Tuniip.
  
  2 sticks Celery.
  2 quarts Water.
  Salt.
  
  8 oz. Lentils.
  
  
  A sprig of Parsley.
  
  " Thyme.
  
  ,, Marjoram.
  12 Black Peppercorns.
  1 blade Mace.
  3 or 4 Cloves.
  
  
  Method. - Prepare the vegetables and cut
  them in pieces. Put them in a saucepan with
  the water and seasoning, and boil all together
  for two or three hours. More water must bo
  added if the liquid becomes too much reduced.
  Skim well, strain, and it is ready for use.
  
  ^ote. - Almost any kind of vegetable may
  be used for making this stock, and the more
  variety the better. The trimmings and even
  the parings of vegetables can be utilised in
  this way, only care must be taken to see that
  they are thoroughly clean and fresh.
  
  
  GENERAL STOCK- THE STOCK-POT
  
  In every household where moat is used every
  day a stock-pot sl\ould be in general use. A
  regular stock-pot is inade of tiiined copper, tinned
  iron, aluminium, or cast iron. In large houses
  where much cooking is done it is better to havo
  one fitted with a tap, which will permit of the
  
  
  Stock-Pot.
  
  liquid being drawn off when required without dis-
  turbing the fat, which rises to the top. For small
  households an ordinary tinned or silicated sauce-
  pan will serve the purpose very well, or what is
  known as a digester, which is made of cast iron
  with a close-fitting hd. This latter is not ex-
  pensive, but it has the disadvantage of being very
  hea%'y. An earthenware casserole or marmite
  is also to be recommended for small quantities
  of stock ; it is very clean, and it is easy to keep
  the coni^ents simmering at a gentle rate.
  
  All scraps of meat, cooked or uncooked, bones
  and pieces of vegetable, poultry giblets and
  rinds of bacon, should be kept for making stock.
  
  
  Earthenware Casserole.
  
  Remains of gra^^ too should be saved for the
  same purpose, although no tliickenod sauco
  must be added, as it would cloud the stock.
  
  Look over the scraps carefully and see that
  they are all clean and free from taint. Break
  up the bones, remove any fat from the meat,
  and cut the vegetables in small pieces. Put
  them into the stock-pot with cold water to cover
  them, or the water in which meat or vegetables
  (except potatoes or cabbage) have been cooked
  may be used. Add a little salt, put on the lid,
  and bring the contents slowly to the boil. Then
  keep the stock slowly simmering at an even
  temperature, taking off the lid from time to
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  119
  
  
  time in order to remove the scum. A few
  washed and crushed egg-shells put into the
  stock will help to clear it. One whole day's
  cooking will be sufficient, and at night it must
  be strained through a hair sieve into a basin
  and allowed to cool. The stock-pot should be
  thoroughly washed before it is used again.
  
  Tlie bones and any pieces of meat of value
  may be put on the next day with any fresh
  scraps, but not the vegetables if they have been
  boiled for long, because when the flavour of
  these has been extracted they become worse
  than useless, and only absorb the meaty
  flavours.
  
  Nothing must be added to a stock-pot Txnless
  it is quite clean and contains some goodness.
  Little bits must not be added at odd times, but
  only when the stock-pot is put on for the day ;
  all other pieces should be saved for the next
  day's use.
  
  Stock should always be made the day before
  it is required, as by this means the fat can easily
  be removed.
  
  To Remove Fat from Stock. - Have in readiness
  two iron spoons, a basin of boiling water, a
  cloth, and a small basin or dish into which to
  put the fat.
  
  Heat the spoons in the boiling water, and
  use first one and then the other to skim off the
  fat. The spoons, being hot, melt the fat, and
  make it much more easily removed.
  
  When as much as possible has been taken off
  with the spoons, dip the end of the cloth into
  boiling water, and wipe the stock over with
  this until quite free from grease. If the stock
  is not a jelly, pieces of kitchen paper must
  be passed over the t-^p of it instead of the
  cloth.
  
  Do not remove fat from stock or soup until it
  is about to be used, as it keeps out the air and
  helps to preserve it.
  
  GLAZE
  
  Glaze can either be bought by the oiince or
  made at home from stock. Glaze, as a rule, costs
  2d. per ounce, and this quantity will be sufficient
  to glaze an ox-tongue or a fair-sized piece of meat.
  Put the glaze into a small saucepan with sufficient
  water or stock to cover it, and allow it to melt
  slowly over the fire. Or put it into a jar with
  a very little water or stock, and stand the jar in
  a saucepan of boiling water until the glaze is
  melted. It will then be ready for use.
  
  Home-made glaze can be very easily procured
  in houses where there are large quantities of
  stock anil bones at disposal. Any good brown
  stock can be used, and the second boilings from
  meat and bones is almost preferable to freshly-
  made stock, as it is more gelatinous. Free the
  stock from all grease, and put at least one quart
  into a saucepan. Allow tliis to boil quickly with
  the lid off the pan until reduced to about half
  
  
  a pint, skimming when necessary. Tlien strain
  through a very fine strainer or piece of muslin,
  and reduce again in a aimaller saucepan until
  the glaze becomes as thick as treacle, when it
  will be ready for use.
  
  If not required at once, it should be poured
  into a jar, and if a little melted lard is poured
  over the surface the glaze will keep good for
  weeks. In fact, this is a very good way of pre-
  serving any surplus stock, as a little glaze is
  useful at all times for enriching soups and sauces
  as well as for coating meat, &c., and, diluted with
  water, it will again take the form of stock.
  
  To Glaze Meat. - Have the glaze prepared as
  above and in a melted condition, but not too
  hot. Use a small paint-brush or egg-brush, and
  paint the meat all over with it in even straight
  strokes. If one coating is not sufficient allow
  the first one to cool, and brush the meat over
  again as before. Meanwhile keep the glaze in
  a melted state by putting the pan or jar con-
  taining it in a saucepan half full of hot water.
  
  Do not waste any glaze that is left, but pour
  it carefully into a clean jar ready for future
  use, and rinse the brush and saucepan with
  boiling water, which pour into the stock-pot.
  
  CLEAR SOUPS AND BROTHS
  
  Clear Soups (Consommes). - The basis of these
  soups is good brown stock, which is clarified
  according to directions given on page 120.
  While first stock is always to be preferred for
  the purpose, it is quite possible to utilise good
  second stock, only the soup thus obtained is
  liable to be rather gelatinous in flavour and
  somewhat lacking in that fresh meaty taste,
  which is one of the chief characteristics of good
  conso)7i7ne.
  
  The different clear soups take their distinctive
  name from the garnish that is added to them.
  There may also be some variation in the meat
  used for the stock - as in clear game, oxtail,
  or txirtle soup, &c.
  
  Clear soups are amongst the most expensive
  soups to make, and at the same time they sire
  the most generally used, especially if a dinner
  consists of several courses, as they are hght
  and strengthening without being rich and
  satisfying.
  
  A good consomme should be of a rich amber
  colour, and this must be obtained without
  the addition of caramel, which would spoil the
  flavom*.
  
  Broths. - A Broth differs from a clear soup in
  that it is unclarified, and the meat with which
  it is made is either served in the soup or lifted
  out and served as a separate course.
  
  There is usually a garnish of rice or barley
  and cut-up vegetables, or the vegetables may
  be cut in larger pieces and served as an ac-
  companiment to the meat.
  
  A broth is a very substantial soup and qviite
  
  
  120
  
  
  THE \VO]\IAN'S BOOK
  
  
  unBuited as the prelude to a long dinner. It
  forms almost a meal in itself and is excellent as
  a luncheon dish, especinlly in cold weather or
  for a nursery dinner. It is always acceptable
  too to those who have been working in the open
  air or engaged in sports. It is one of the niost
  ecoaoroical forms of soup.
  
  Clear Soup
  (Fr. Consomm6)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 quart good Brown or First
  
  Stock.
  6 OS. lean Juicy Beef.
  
  
  1 lump of Sugar.
  
  1 white and shell of Egg.
  
  
  Method - Carefully remove all fat from the
  top of the stock, and put it into a clean lined
  or copper saucepan. Wipe the beef with a
  damp cloth, and shred it down finely with a
  knife, or put it through the mincing macliine,
  removing all fat and skin. Add this to the
  stock with the white of the egg and the shell
  well washed. Whisk these over the fire with a
  wire whisk until the soup just comes to boiling
  point. Then remove the whisk and let it boil
  well up. Draw the pan to the side of the fire
  where the soup will keep warm, but not siijamer,
  and cover it over with a plate or saucepan lid.
  Let it stand from ten to fifteen minutes. Tie a
  
  clean cloth on to
  a soup - stand or
  the four legs of a
  chair tm-ned up-
  side down, letting
  it fall slightly in
  the middle so as
  to form a bag.
  Pour some boiling
  water through the
  cloth into a basin
  to thoroughly heat
  the cloth. Put a
  clean diy basin
  underneath, and
  pour the soup
  gently through the
  cloth. The soup
  will not be clear
  the first time, as it
  gets shaken with the straining, so change the
  basin and pour the soup through again, repeating
  this process until the soup runs through quite
  clear. In reheating add a lump of sugar,
  which makes the soup sparkle.
  
  Notes. - The various consommes take their
  names from the different garnishes that are
  addr>d to this soup.
  
  The following are a few of the many vsirleties : -
  Consomme & la Brunoise. - A garnish of cooked
  carrot, turnip, celery, leeks - cut in dice.
  
  Consom.m4 A la Celestine. - With fine slu-eds of
  savoury pancake.
  
  
  For clearing soup.
  
  
  Consomme d la Crecy. - Garnish of Httle balls
  of glazed carrot.
  
  Cori^omtni d'Orleans. - Garnish of small green
  and wliite quenelles.
  
  Consomme d la Florentine. - ^With cheese
  quenelles.
  
  Consomm4 A V Impiratrice. - Garnish of poached
  eggs.
  
  Consommi d la Jardinilre. - With mixed
  vegetables cut in pretty shapes.
  
  Consonwii Jerusalem. - Witii little balls of
  cooked Jerusalem artichokes.
  
  Consomme d la Julienne. - With different
  vegetables cut in long thin strips.
  
  Consomme aux Pdtes d'ltalie. - With Italian
  paste in fancy shapes.
  
  Consomme d la Printaniire. - With spring
  vegetables and young green peas.
  
  Consomme Royale, - With rounds or dice of
  custard.
  
  When the garnish is made of vegetables these
  should be cooked separately and only added to
  the soup at the last. Root vegetables should
  be cooked in a little stock and seasoned with
  salt and a pinch of sugar. The stock should
  then be allowed to reduce to a glaze. Fine green
  vegetables, such as green peas, asparagus points,
  or French beans, should simply be steamed or
  boiled carefully in a little water.
  
  Various fancy cutters can be bought for cutting
  vegetables in fancy shapes.
  
  For quenelles use a small quantity of nicely
  made quenelle meat, put it into a forcing-
  bag and force out fancy shapes or small balls
  on a greased tin, then poach in boiling stock or
  water.
  
  ItaUan paste or macaroni must also be cooked
  and rinsed in cold water previous to adding it
  to the consomme, otherwise it would destroy
  the clearness of the soup. There are scores of
  garnishes for clear soup besides those given
  above ; in fact, new names are constantly being
  invented, and a special event or a passing fashion
  will furnish the occasion for a new name, which
  in most cases means only a very small variation
  in a well-known soup.
  
  Chicken Broth
  
  (Fr. Bouillon de Poulet)
  
  
  1 table-spoonful chopped
  
  Parsley.
  Pepper and salt.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  1 Chicken.
  
  2 or 3 pints Cold Water.
  1 table-spoonful Rice or
  
  crushed Tapioca.
  
  Method. - Draw and singe the chicken, and
  make it very clean. The inferior part^ will do
  quite well for making the broth. The breast
  may be cut off and reserved for some other dish.
  Cut the rest of the chicken into joints first, then
  take all the meat from the bones and cut it into
  small pieces. Chop the bones and wash any
  part which does not look perfectly clean. Keep
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  121
  
  
  laack any soft fat, but use the skin. Wash the
  neck well, and let it soak in cold water and salt
  for some time to draw out the blood. Open the
  gizzard and remove the bag of stones from the
  inside, then wash it well, pulUng off all the fat
  skin from the outside. Remove the gall-bag
  very carefully from the liver, cutting it away
  with a pair of scissors, and wash the liver well.
  Also wash the heart and scald the feet, letting
  them lie in boiling water for a short time, and
  then scrape them well.
  
  Take a clean lined saucepan, put into it the
  meat, bones, skin, neck, Uver, gizzard, heart,
  and feet. Add the salt and enough cold water
  to well cover all ; the quantity depends upon
  the size of the fowl used. Put the lid on the pan
  and bring slowly to the boil, then skim several
  times until the broth looks quite clear. Allow
  the broth to simmer from four to five hours until
  the goodness is well extracted from the bones, &c.,
  skimming when necessary. Strain the broth
  through a fine strainer or hair sieve, and let it
  stand till cold. Then remove all fat from the
  top of the broth, return to a saucepan, and
  thicken according to taste. If rice is used, wash
  it well and cook in the broth until tender. If
  tapioca, bring the broth to the boil, sprinkle in
  the tapioca, and cook for ten minutes, until
  quite clear. Season to taste, and add the chopped
  parsley last. If small pieces of chicken are liked
  served in the soup, the best plan is to lift some
  of the nice pieces out of the broth as soon as
  they are cooked, but before all the goodness is
  extracted, and reserve these for returning to the
  broth just before serving. A more economical
  broth can be made by using a piece of mutton
  or veal along with the chicken.
  
  Sometimes the chicken is kept whole and
  served as a separate course ; in this case small
  pieces of vegetable or thinly sliced leeks might
  be cooked with it, and the rice or tapioca added
  about half-an-hour before serving.
  
  Note. - A more highly flavoured broth may
  be made by cooking small pieces of vegetable
  along with the chicken.
  
  Cockle Leekie
  
  An old cock, along with a plentiful supply of
  leeks, is generally used for this soup, hence the
  name. Make in the same way as chicken broth
  (see above), allowing double the quantity of
  water and rice and six or eight leeks.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  Hotch Potch
  
  
  2 quarts Mutton Broth.
  Equal quantities of young
  
  Carrots, Turnips, and
  
  Spring Onions.
  1 Lettuce.
  1 Cauliflower.
  
  
  1 pint Green Peas.
  
  1 dessert-spoonful chopped
  
  Paraley.
  1} lbs. Lamb or small Mutton
  
  Cutlets.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Put the mutton broth or water in
  "which some mutton has been boiled into a sauce-
  
  
  pan, and bring it to the boil. Clean some young
  carrots, turnips, and onions ; cut the carrots
  and turnips into very small neat pieces, and the
  onions into thin sUces. About one teacupful of
  each will be required. Put them into the sauce-
  pan with the broth, and boil quickly for half-an-
  hoiir. Trim the chops neatly, removing most
  of the fat ; add them next with the flower of
  the cauliflower broken into small pieces, and
  the lettuce finely shred. Simmer the soup
  slowly for one hoiir longer, then add the peas,
  and cook until they are soft. Add the parsley
  last, and season with pepper and salt.
  
  Mutton Broth
  
  {Fr. Bouillon de Mouton)
  Ingredients -
  
  IJ lbs. Neck or Knuckle of (" 1 dessert-spoonful of chopped
  
  Mutton. Parsley.
  
  3 pints Cold Water. A small piece each of Carrot,
  
  1 table-spoonful Rice or Turnip, Onion, and Celery.
  
  Barley. I Pepper and salt.
  
  Method. - Wipe the meat, and cut it awaj'^
  from the bone and into small pieces, removing
  any superfluous fat. Prepare the vegetables,
  and cut them into small neat pieces. Put the
  meat, bones, and water into a saucepan with a
  little salt, put on the lid, and bring slowly to
  the boil. Sldm well ; add the rice well washed,
  or the barley washed and blanched, and the
  prepared vegetables. Simmer from two to
  tliree hours, or until the vegetables are well
  cooked. Remove the bones, and any grease
  from the top of the stock; add the parsley, pepper,
  and more salt if necessary before serving.
  
  Another way of making this broth is to keep
  the meat whole and to serve it as a separate
  course with a httle of the liquid broth strained
  round it. The vegetable should then be added
  in rather larger pieces and used as a garnish to
  the meat. The broth itself may also be finished
  differently. After the meat and vegetables
  have been removed, switch it for a few minutes
  with a wire wliisk, then beat up an egg in a
  basin, pour it into the soup-tureen and pour
  the soup slowly on to it. This makes a very
  delicious soup.
  
  Pot au Feu
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lbs. shin of Beef or shoulder
  
  of Beef.
  i quarts Cold Water.
  
  2 oz. crashed Tapioca or
  Sago.
  
  2 Carrots.
  1 Turnip.
  1 Parsnip.
  
  
  3 sticks of Celery.
  
  3 Leeks.
  
  A bunch of Herbs.
  
  1 Cabbage.
  
  20 Black Peppercorns.
  
  6 Cloves.
  
  1 small blade of Mace.
  
  Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Break up the bones, wipe the meat
  with a damp cloth, and tie it into shape with a
  piece of tape. Put them into a large saucepan
  or earthenware casserole with the water, and
  bring to the boil. Add one dessert-spoonful of
  
  
  122
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Bait, and skim well. Tlien simmer very gently
  for two hours. Meanwhile have all tho vegetables
  carefully cleaned and prepared, and, with the
  exception of the cabbage, cut them in moderate-
  sized pieces and tie them in a piece of muslin.
  When the meat has simmered the required time,
  add the vegetables to the pan, with a bunch of
  herbs and the spicos, also tied in a piece of
  musUn. Simmer gently for two hours more.
  Then add the cabbage, cleaned and trimmed,
  cut in two, and tied together with string. Cook
  again imtil the cabbage is tender from half to
  three-quarters of an hour. Tlien lift out tho
  meat on to a hot dish, undo the tape, garnish
  with the vegetables, and pour some of the liquid
  round as gravy. Serve the cabbage separately
  in a vegetable dish, remo\'ing the string. Re-
  move the herbs and spices from the stock in the
  pan, sprinkle in the sago or tapioca, and cook
  until transparent about fifteen minutes. Season
  to taste, slvim well, and serve in soup-tureen.
  
  Note. - Pot au Feu is the favourite dish in
  many French households.
  
  Spring Soup
  
  {Fr. Potage Printaniere)
  
  Make in the same way as Hotch Potch (p. 121),
  omitting the meat.
  
  Veal Broth
  
  (Fr. Bouillon de Veau)
  Make in the same way as Mutton Broth (p. 121).
  
  THICKENED SOUPS
  
  Thickened soups can be made of fish, meat,
  or vegetables, and they generally have some
  stock as their basis. The stock may be either
  brown, white, fish, or vegetable, according to the
  nature of the soup, or sometimes a mixture of
  stock and milk, or milk and water is used.
  
  Some starchy or farinaceous material, such
  as flour, arrow-root, cornflour, tapioca, &c.,
  generally supplies the thickening property, or,
  in the case of the richer soups, a liaison or com-
  bination of eggs and cream is used.
  
  Portions of the substance of which the soup is
  made are frequently served in it as in kidney
  soup and ox-tail soup. Care must be taken
  not to make those soups too tliick.
  
  
  Cabbage Soup
  
  Ingredients -
  1 Cabbage.
  
  1 small Onion or Ixsek.
  1 quart Meat Boilings.
  i pint Millc.
  
  1 table-siKX)nful crushed
  Tapioca.
  
  Method. - Wash the cabbage well in cold
  water, and remove the coarse outside leaves and
  any hard pieces of stalk. Separate all the leaves.
  
  
  I tea-spoonful chopped
  
  Parsley.
  Some crofttons of Toasted
  
  Bread.
  White Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  and let thorn soak in cold water and salt for
  half-an-hoiu". Then drain the water away, and
  slired the leaves finely. Put the shred cabbage
  into a saucepan of fast-boiUng water, salted in
  the proportion of one dessertspoonful to the
  quart, boil quickly for five minutes, and then
  drain. Slice the onion or leek very thinly, and
  chop it finely, put it into a saucepan with the
  cabbage and stock or meat boilings, and simmer
  for twenty minutes. Add tho milk and crushed
  tapioca, and cook for ten minutes longer, or
  until the tapioca turns quite clear. Add the
  parsley just before serving, and season to taste
  with white pepper and salt. Put some small
  croiitons of toasted bread into tho soup-tureen,
  and pour the soup, boiUng hot, over them.
  
  Calf's Tail Soup
  
  (Fr. Potage de Queue de Veau)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  2 Tails.
  
  3 pints White Stock,
  i pint Milk.
  
  IJ oz. Butter.
  
  IJ oz. Flour.
  
  A Bay Leaf.
  
  Some Parsley Stalks.
  
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  
  2 Yolks.
  
  1 gill of Cream. .
  
  J Carrot.
  
  A small piece of Turnip.
  
  1 Onion.
  
  6 Cloves.
  
  1 glass of Sherry.
  
  1 oz. grated Parmesan.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the tails, and cut them into
  pieces about IJ inches long ; put them into a
  saucepan with sufficient cold water to cover
  them, bring to the boil, and pour the water away.
  Rinse out the saucepan, and return the pieces
  of tail to it with the stock, bring to the boil
  again, and skim well. Add the vegetables all
  carefully cleaned, and cut in small pieces, the
  bay leaf, cloves, nutmeg, and parsley stalks.
  Put the lid on the pan, and simmer slowly from
  one and a half to two hours, or until the meat
  wiU slip quite easily from the bones ; then strain
  through a wire sieve into a basin, and remove
  all fat from the stock. Melt the butter in a
  saucepan, but do not brown it, add the flour,
  and mix smoothly together with a wooden spoon ;
  then pour on tho stock, stir over the fire until
  boiling, and allow it to boil about five minutes.
  
  Boat up the yolks of eggs in a basin with the
  cream, add the sherry, and strain these into tho
  soup, stirring all the time. Add the pieces of tail
  and seasoning to taste, but do not boil again.
  Put the grated cheese into tho soup -tureen, and
  pour the boiling soup on to them.
  
  Note. - The cheese may bo omitted.
  
  Cauliflower and Lettuce Soup
  
  (Fr. Potage de Choufleur et de Laitues)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  a large Cauliflower.
  1 small Lettuce.
  1 quart Meat Boilings or
  Second White Stock.
  
  
  1 oz. crushed Tapioca or
  
  small Sago.
  1 oz. Butter.
  White Pepper .ind Salt.
  1 dessert-spoonful chopped Parsley.
  
  Method. - Use the wliito part only of the
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  123
  
  
  cauliflower. Cut it into small pieces, wash in
  cold water. Then scald in fast-boiling water
  for five minutes and drain.
  
  Put the stock into a saucepan, and bring it to
  the boil. Throw in the pieces of cauliflower, and
  boil them until tender, about half-an-hour ; then
  add the milk, the butter, and the lettuce cut in
  fine short shreds. Sprinkle in the tapioca or
  sago, and cook all together for ten minutes
  longer, stirring frequently. Season to taste, and
  add the parsley at the end.
  
  Curry Soup (White)
  
  {Fr. Potage au Cari (Blanche))
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  IJ pints White Stock or
  
  Meat Boilings.
  1 table-spoonful Curry
  
  Powder.
  
  1 oz. Cornflour.
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Cream .
  1 yolk of Egg.
  
  
  1 table-spoonful chopped
  
  Parsley.
  Pepper and Salt.
  Squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  Small pieces of Chicken or
  
  Rabbit.
  Boiled Rice.
  
  
  Method. - ^Any light stock, or the water in
  which a fowl, rabbit, or piece of veal has been
  boiled, will do for this soup. Put the stock into
  a saucepan, and bring it to the boil. Put the
  curry powder and cornflour into a basin, add
  the milk graduallj' to them, mixing with an iron
  spoon until smooth. Add this to the stock, stir
  until boiling, and simiuer for ten minutes. Then
  draw the pan to the side of the fire, and strain
  in the cream and yolk of egg mixed together.
  Season to taste, and sprinkle in the parsley. If
  possible, add smie small pieces of cliicken or
  rabbit. Stir the soup over the fire until almost
  boiling. Do not boil, or the yolk of egg will
  curdle. Squeeze in the lemon juice, and pour
  the soup into a hot soup-tureen. Serve with
  plain boiled rice, on a separate dish (see p. 157).
  
  Lettuce Soup
  
  {Fr. Potage de Laitues)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  2 large Lettuces
  i lb. Spinach.
  
  2 or 4 Spring Onions.
  
  3 oz. Butter.
  
  
  2 pints light Stock.
  1 or 2 yolks of Eggs,
  i gill of Cream.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the vegetables, drain and cut
  in fine shreds. Put them into a stewpan with
  the butter and seasoning, and cook them over
  the fire for ton minutes, stirring all the time with
  a wooden spoon. Add the stock, wliicb mny
  either be vegetable stock or boilings from meat,
  and simmer from three-quarters of an hour to
  one hour. Draw the saucepan to the side of
  the fire and add the yolk of egg and cream
  mixed together. The soup must not boil
  again.
  
  
  Mock Turtle Soup
  
  {Fr. Potage do Faasse Tortue)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J Calf's Head.
  
  J quart Cold Water.
  
  
  1 glass Sheery.
  } tea-spoonful Celery Seed.
  
  2 Bay Leaves.
  1 blade of Mace.
  A sprig of Parsley, Tliyme,
  
  and Marjoram.
  Pepper and Salt.
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  Force-meat Balls.
  
  
  4 Carrot.
  i Turnip.
  
  1 Onion.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  2 oz. Cornflour.
  6 Cloves.
  
  3 oz. lean Ham or a Ham-
  bone.
  
  Method. - ^Wash the head well, removing the
  brains, which are not used in the soup, but may
  be kept for some small savoury dish. Take
  away all the gristle from the nostrils, and let the
  head soak in cold water, with a handful of salt
  in it, for half-an-hour at least. Then blanch it
  - that is, put it into a saucepan with cold water
  to cover it - bring to the boil, pour the water
  away, and wash the head again in cold water.
  Cut all the flesh from the bones, and tie it in a
  piece of muslin. Put it with the bones and
  water into a large saucepan, and let it simmer
  gently, skimming occasionally, for three and a
  half hours. Then strain the stock through a hair
  sieve, and let it stand till cold. Melt the
  butter in a saucepan, have the vegetables and
  ham cut into small pieces, and fry them in it
  with the herbs and spices. Let them get a nice
  hght brown colour, and stir well to keep them
  from burning. Then add the cornfloiir, and
  mix it smoothly in. Remove all fat from the
  top of the stock, pour it into the saucepan, and
  stir until boiling. Add pepper and salt to taste,
  and simmer slowly for one and a half hours.
  Remove any scum that may rise. Strain through
  a hair sieve into a basin, rinse out the saucepan,
  and return the soup to it to reheat. Add the
  wine and lemon juice, and serve in it force-meat
  balls (see p. 179) and small pieces of the heeid
  cut into dice.
  
  Oyster Soup
  {Fr. Potage aus Huitres)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 doz. fresh Oysters or 3 doz
  
  tinned Oysters.
  2 pints White or Fish Stock
  1 oz. Butter.
  1 oz. Flour.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  
  1 gill of Cream.
  
  2 yolks of Eggs.
  1 tea-spoonful
  
  Essence.
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice,
  White Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Anchovy
  
  
  Method. - Put the oysters into a small sauce-
  pan with their outi liqiior, bring them almost to
  the boil, then strain, saving the hquor. Beard
  the oysters (that is, remove the piece like a
  fringe that encircles them), cut them in two, and
  put them aside for serving in the soup. Put the
  beards into a saucepan with the liquor and the
  stock, and let them simmer for half-an-hour, to
  extract all the flavour from them. If the stock
  is not previously well flavotired, small pieces of
  
  
  124
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  the different flavouring vegetables should also
  be cooked in it. Strain tlirough a fine hair
  sieve or piece of muslin, and rinse out the sauce-
  pan ready for use. First melt in it the butter,
  being careful it does not brown, add to it the
  flour, and mix together until quite smooth.
  Pour on the stock, and stir constantly over tho
  fire until boiling. Skim if necessary. Season
  to taste with a little white pepper, salt, ancho\^
  essence, and a pinch of cayenne. Beat up the
  yolks of eggs in a basin with the cream, draw the
  pan with the soup in it to one side of the fire,
  and strain them into it, stirring all the time.
  Reheat, but do not boil again. Add a squeeze
  of lemon juice. Put the oysters into the soup-
  tureen, pour the soup over them, and serve.
  
  Sorrel Soup
  
  (Fr. Potage d'Oseille)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. Sorrel.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  2 oz. Totato Flour.
  
  IJ pints ^^'hite Stock.
  
  Method. - Wash the sorrel very carefully, and
  then shake it as dry as possible in a sieve or
  colander. Cut it into fine shreds with a sharp
  knife. Melt the butter in a saucepan, and, when
  hot, put in the sorrel, and cook it over the fire
  for ten minutes. Then add the potato flour,
  and stir for a few minutes with a wooden spoon,
  being careful the contents of the pan do not
  discolour. Add the white stock, and stir until
  boiling. Put the Md on the pan, and simmer
  slowly for twenty minutes. Add the milk or
  cream, and season to ttiste with white pepper
  and salt. Remove the crust from a French roll,
  and dry it in the oven. Then break it in pieces,
  and put them in a soup-txireen. Pour the soup
  boiling hot over them, and serve.
  
  
  Turtle Soup
  
  Potage h la Tortue)
  
  
  i pint Milk or 1 gill Cream.
  The crust of French Roll.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  {Fr.
  
  Ingredients -
  
  \\ lbs. Knuckle of Veal.
  ij lbs. Shin of Beef.
  J lb. sun-dried Turtle.
  4 quarts Cold Water.
  1 small Carrot.
  } Turnip.
  
  1 Onion.
  J lb. le.in Ham.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  24 Black Peppercorns.
  
  Method. - Buy the turtle four or five days
  before tho soup is wanted. Wash it well in
  warm water, and soak it in water for three
  days at least, until it is well swollen and com-
  paratively soft. Change the water every twelve
  hours. On the fourth day commence to make
  the soup. Wipe the beef and the veal, and cut
  them both into small pieces, removing as much
  
  
  8 Cloves.
  
  1 blade of Mace.
  
  2 Bay Leaves.
  
  A sprig of Parsley, Thyme,
  
  and Marjoram.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  1 glass Madeira.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  2 oz. Cornflour.
  
  
  fat as possible. Put the pieces into a large
  saucepan with the cold water, the ham cut in
  small pieces, and the turtle tied in a piece of
  muslin. Bring slowly to the boil, and skim well.
  Add all the vegetables, cut in small pieces, and
  the herbs, and simmer the soup slowly for
  twelve hours, removing any scum as it rises.
  Strain through a hair sieve and lot it stand till
  cold. Remove carefully all fat from the top
  of the stock, and cut the turtle into neat square
  pieces. Melt the butter in a saucepan, and let
  it get slightly brown, then add the cornflour
  and mix until smooth, pom* on the stock, and
  stir luitil boiling. Boil for a few minutes, and
  skim if necessary. Season with pepper and
  salt, and add the wine and lemon-juice. Serve
  the pieces of turtle and small force-meat balls
  in the soup (see p. 179).
  
  PUREES
  
  A pur^ is perhaps the simplest and most
  economical kind of soup. It differs from other
  thickened soups in that its thickening is effected
  by rubbing the meat, fish, vegetable, or other
  ingredients of which it is composed through a
  sieve and serving them in the soup.
  
  A puree can be made of almost any vegetable,
  whether fresh or dried, and of meat, game, fish,
  and some farinaceous substances such as rice,
  barley, macaroni, &c. Either stock, milk, or
  water, or a mixture of all three will supply the
  liqmd portion.
  
  Tlie ingredients of which a puree is composed
  must always be simmered slowly until qxiite
  soft and pulpy in order to facilitate the sieving
  process. Although a pur6e is never so smooth
  and soft as when rubbed tlirough a hair sieve,
  when time and labour have to be considered a
  wire one must suflice. In all cases it will be
  found ad\'isable to rub the mixture tlii'ough a
  wire sieve before putting it tlirough the hair
  sieve, as the use of the latter alone is a most
  laborious undertaking. Always when sieving
  have two spoons in readiness, one to do the
  rubbing through and the other for scraping the
  sieve imderneath. Stand the sieve with the
  narrow rim uppermost within a basin. The
  basin must not be so small that the sieve
  covers tho rim. Pour a small quantity of the
  mixture on the top of the sieve and commence
  the rubbing through. Put two fingers on the
  bowl of the spoon and rub through with the
  edge. Moisten the mixture with some of the
  liquid part of the soup when necessary, and
  from time to time remove what adheres to the
  lower side of the sieve with the second spoon.
  What comes through is called the pur6e.
  
  As little as possible should be left on the top
  of the sieve when the work is finished, and upon
  the patient rubbing through the success of the
  soup will depend.
  
  In the case of a meat pur^e it will simplify
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  125
  
  
  the work if the meat is pounded in a mortar
  with a little of the Uquid before sieving.
  
  A puree can always be rendered richer by the
  addition of some cream and one or two yolks
  of eggs just before bringing it to table.
  
  A p\ir6e should be of the consistency of thick
  cream, and is usually served with croutons of
  bread, or with " pulled " bread served on a
  separate dish.
  
  Croutons of Bread. - Use bread not less than
  one day old, and rather close in texture. Cut
  the bread into sUces one quarter of an inch
  thick, take off the crust, then cut it into strips
  one quarter of an inch wide, and then across
  into even squares. Or the sUced bread may be
  cut into fancy shapes with a vegetable cutter.
  These may either be fried in boiling fat, in
  clarified butter in a frying-pan, or soaked in
  stock and browned on a greased tin in the
  oven. Drain well on kitchen paper before
  serving. Tliey should be crisp, dry, and of an
  amber colour.
  
  Croutons can also be made of scraps of pastry
  cut in fancy shapes, and either baked or fried.
  TTiey may, if liked, be sprinkled with a little
  grated Parmesan.
  
  Pulled Bread. - This may be either bought
  ready or prepared in the following way : take
  the inside crumb of a French roll, pull it with
  the fingers (it must never be cut) into small
  pieces, and brown these in a slow oven until of
  a nice amber colour.
  
  PUREES MADE FROM FRESH VEGETABLES
  
  ArticLake Soup
  
  (Fr. Puree d'Artichauts)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Jerusalem Artichokes.
  
  1 oc. lean Ham.
  
  1 stick Celery or J tea-spoon
  
  ful Celery Seed,
  1 oz. Butter.
  1 Bay Leaf.
  Some Parsley Stalks.
  
  Method. - First wash and brush the artichokes,
  then put them into a basin with clean cold water
  and peel them carefully, changing the water as
  soon as it becomes dirty. Throw the artichokes
  as they are peeled into another basin of clean
  cold water, with a little vmegar or lemon-juioe
  in it, in order to preserve their colour. Skin
  and slice the onion tliinly, wash and brush the
  celery and cut it into shi-eds, and cut the ham
  into small pieces. JVIelt the butter in a lined or
  enamelled saucepan, add the axtichokes, drained
  and cut in thin slices, also the onion, ham, celery,
  bay leaf, and pai-sley stalks. Put the lid on
  the pan and cook over the fire for about ten
  minutes, shaking the pan occasionally to prevent
  the contents biu-ning. Tlien add the stock,
  white pepper and salt, and let all simmer gently
  
  
  1 small Onion.
  
  IJ pints White Second Stock.
  
  i pint Milk and 1 tea-spoon-
  ful Flour or 1 gill of Cream
  and 2 yolks of Eggs.
  
  White Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  from one to one and a half hours, or until the
  artichokes are quite soft. Rub the soup through
  a hair sieve into a basin, then rinse out the
  saucepan and return the soup to it to reheat.
  Put the floiu- into a basin, and add the milk
  gradually to it, mixing until qmte smooth. Add
  this to the soup, and stir over the fire tmtil
  boiling. Continue boiling for a few minutes,
  and add more seasoning if necessary.
  
  If cream and yolks of eggs are used for thicken-
  ing, omit the flour and milk. Beat the yolks of
  eggs and cream together in a basin, strain them
  into the soup, stirring all the time, and do not
  boil the soup again or it will curdle.
  
  Note. - Tliis soup should be white in colour.
  If it turns green, the ai'tichokes have not been
  carefully prepared, or it has been made in an
  iron saucepan.
  
  Carrot Soup and Turnip Soup
  
  (Fr. Puree k la Cr6cy et Puree de Navets)
  Both are made in the same way as Potato
  Soup (p. 126), substituting 1 lb. carrots or 1 lb.
  turnips for the potatoes. The addition of a little
  cream wiU be an improvement to these soups.
  
  Celery Soup
  
  (Fr. Puree de Celeri)
  
  Make in the same way as Artichoke Soup
  
  (see above), substituting a head of celery for the
  
  artichokes. The celery must bo very carefully
  
  washed and brushed and then cut in fine shreds.
  
  Onion Soup (White)
  (Fr. Puree aux Oignons)
  Ingredients -
  
  3 Spanish Onions.
  
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  
  1 quart Meat Boilings.
  
  1 Bay Leaf.
  
  ^Vhite Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Skin and scald the onions in boiling
  water for a few minutes. Slice them down as
  tliinly as possible from the top to the root. Melt
  the butter in a saucepan, put into it the onions,
  bay leaf, blade of mace, and parsley stalks ;
  put the lid on the pan, and cook for ten minutes
  without browning. Then pour on the meat
  boilings, simmer until quite soft, about one
  and a half hours, and rub through a fine wire
  or hair sieve. Rinse out the saucepan, and
  return the soup to it. Break the floiu* gradually
  with the milk, add this to the soup, and stir over
  the fire until boiling. Boil five minutes, and
  season to taste. A Uttle cream is an improve-
  ment to this soup, and grated Parmesan cheese
  may be served with it.
  
  Onion Soup (Brown)
  
  Make according to preceding recipe, but brown
  the butter or dripping and then brown the
  
  
  1 blade of Mace.
  
  1 oz. Floui' or Rice Flour.
  
  I pint Milk.
  
  A few Parsley Stalks.
  
  
  126
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  li pints Stock
  
  Boilings,
  i pint Milk.
  repper and Salt
  A few Parsley Stalks.
  
  
  onions in it, being careful they do not blacken
  or the soup will have a disagreeable taste. Omit
  the milk, but add the flour broken with a Uttlo
  stock.
  
  Note. - 1 dessert-spoonful of sheiry may be
  added.
  
  Parsnip Soup
  
  {Fr. Puree de Panais)
  
  Make according to directions given for
  Potato Soup (see below), using 1 lb. parsnips
  instead of the potatoes.
  
  Potato Soup
  
  (Fr. Puree de Pommes de Terre)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Totatoes. \\ pints Stock or Meat
  
  1 stick of Celery or i tea-
  
  spoonfiil Celery Seed.
  1 Onion or 2 Leeks.
  1 Bay Leaf.
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  
  Method. - Wash and brush the potatoes, peel
  them very thinly, removing any black specks,
  and then weigh them. Cut them down into
  very thin slices, and let them he in cold water
  for a short time. Wash and shred the celery,
  and skin and slice the onion thinly. Melt the
  butter or dripping in a saucepan, strain the
  potatoes, and add them to it with the prepared
  onion and celery. Put the lid on the pan, and
  cook over the fire for a few minutes without
  burning. Then pour on the stock or meat
  boilings, and simmer slowly from one to one
  and a half hours, or until the potatoes are quite
  soft. The soup must be stirred frequently, as
  it is most liable to burn, and should it become
  too thick, more water must be added. Then
  rub as much as possible through a fine wire or
  hair sieve into a basin, rinse out the saucepan,
  and return the soup to it to reheat. Add the
  milk and more seasoning if necessary.
  
  Note. - Any remains of cold cooked potato
  may be used up in this soup, and a small ham-
  bone cooked in it is an improvement.
  
  The addition of two or three tomatoes will
  make a nice change from time to time.
  
  Tomato Soup
  (Fr. Puree do Tomates)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 tin or 10 or 12 fresh
  
  Tomatoes.
  3 pints Second Stock or
  
  Liquor from the tin.
  1 Onion.
  1 Carrot.
  i Turnip.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  12 Peppercorns.
  
  
  6 Cloves.
  
  1 lump of Sugar.
  
  1 oz. Rice Flour or crushed
  
  Tapioca.
  1 oz. lean Ham or a small
  
  Ham-bone.
  1 blade of Mace.
  A sprig of Parsley, Tliyme,
  
  and Marjoram.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Melt tho butter in a saucepan, and
  put into it the ham cut in small pieces, the onion
  
  
  thinly sliced, and tho herbs tied together in a
  bunch. Fry these for a few minutes over the
  fire, letting them colour sUghtly. Then add
  the tomatoes, cutting them into slices if they
  are fresh, the other vegetables cut into small
  pieces, and the rice flour, cloves, peppercorns,
  maco, and salt. Mix these well for a few
  minutes, and add tlio stock or liquor from tho
  tin. Allow the soup to simmer slowly from
  three to four hours, until tho vegetables are
  thoroughly soft, and then rub through a fine
  wire or hair sieve into a basin. Rinse out tho
  saucepan, and return the soup to it to reheat ;
  add the sugar, lemon juice, and more salt if
  necessary. A little milk or cream may also
  be added.
  
  Vegetable Marrow Soup
  
  (Fr. Puree de Courge)
  
  Follow the directions given for Potato Soup
  (see above), substituting vegetable marrow for
  the potatoes. Wash the marrow, then peel,
  weigh, and cut it down into tlain sUces, but do
  not remove the seeds.
  
  
  PUREES WITH NUTS
  Almond Soup
  
  (Fr. Puree d'Amandes)
  
  Use the recipe given for Chestnut Soup (see
  below), allowing J lb. sweet almonds, weighed
  after peeUng, instead of the chestnuts, and add
  half a teacupful of bread-crumbs. Blanch and
  chop the almonds and pound them in a mortar
  with a few drops of water. Put thorn into a
  saucepan with the bread-crumbs, stock, &c., and
  proceed as in the last recipe.
  
  White Chestnut Soup
  
  (Fr. Puree de Marrons)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  j lb. Chestnuts, weighed
  
  after peeling.
  1 quart White Stock.
  1 gill of Cream or J pint
  
  Milk.
  
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  A small blade of Mace.
  White Pepper and Salt.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  A few Parsley Stalks.
  
  
  Method. - Weish the chestnuts and cut a small
  piece off the end of each. Throw them into hot
  water, and boil for ten minutes. Then skin them
  and put them into a lined saucepan with the
  stock and a small blade of mace. Simmer for
  one hour or more until tho chestnuts are quite
  tender ; then rub them through a fine wire or
  hair sieve, using the stock to moisten them.
  Rinse out the saucepan, and return the chestnut
  pur6e and stock to it. Add tho milk or cream,
  and boil for ten minutes until quite smooth.
  Add white pepper, salt to taste, and a pinch of
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  127
  
  
  cayenne. If too thick, more milk or stock naust
  be added.
  
  PUB^S MADE FROM DRIED SEEDS
  Pea Soup
  
  [Fr. Puree de Pois)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Split Peas.
  
  2 pints Cold Water or Meat
  Boilings.
  
  1 oz. Dripping or Butter.
  
  1 Onion.
  
  A few Parsley Stalks.
  
  
  A small piece of Carrot and
  Turnip.
  
  2 sticks of Celery or J tea-
  spoonful Celery Seed.
  
  A pinch of Sugar.
  
  1 Bay Leaf.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Put the peas into a basin, wash
  them well in cold water, and remove any dis-
  coloured ones that float on the surface. Then
  pour over them the two pints of cold water
  or meat boilings, cover the basin with a plate,
  and let them soak ovenoight. Next day strain
  off the water and keep it for making the soup
  with. (A certain amount of noiu-ishment is
  always drawn out of the peas by soaking, and it
  would be wasteful to throw this water away.)
  Prepare the vegetables and cut them into thin
  slices. Melt the dripping or butter in a saucepan,
  add to it the peas and sUced vegetables, and stir
  them over the fire until the fat is thoroughly
  absorbed. This is called sweating the vege-
  tables ; it softens them, and makes them cook
  more easily. Next pour on the liquid in which
  the peas were soaked, stir well for a few minutes,
  and let it come to boiling point. Remove any
  scum that may rise, add pepper and salt to taste,
  and if using celeiy seed, add it now tied in a
  small piece of muslin. Allow the soup to simmer
  slowly from two to three hours, or until the peas
  are quite soft and pulpy. Stir the soup occa-
  sionally to prevent it sticking to the foot of the
  pan and burning, and if it should become too
  thick whilst cooking, add a little more water.
  When well cooked, rub through a wire or hair
  sieve into a basin, rinse out the saucepan, and
  return the soup to it to reheat. Add more
  seasoning if necessary, and serve with dried mint
  finely powdered and sifted.
  
  Note. - ^A Uttle boiled milk or cream is some-
  times added at the end ; it has a softening effect.
  The water in which a piece of ham, pickled pork,
  or salt beef has been boiled, if not too salt, does
  very well for making this soup. One tea-spoonful
  of curry powder may be added.
  
  Both Lentil and Haricot Bean Soup {Fr. Puree
  de Lentilles et Pur^e de Haricots Blancs) can be
  made in the same way as above. For the
  Lentil Soup either the red Egyptian or the
  green German Lentils can be used, and they
  will take rather a shorter time to cook than
  split peas. In making Haricot Bean Soup it is
  as w^ell to omit the carrot and turnip if a very
  white soup is wanted, and a little boiled milk
  added at the end is always an improvement.
  
  
  Some Parsley Stalks.
  
  A Bay Leaf.
  
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  
  1 dessert-spoonful chopped
  
  Parsley.
  1 blade of Mace.
  
  
  PUREES OF FISH
  
  Fish Soup
  
  (Fr. Puree de Poisson)
  Ingredients -
  
  2 lbs. White Fish or Fish
  Trimmings.
  
  3 pints Cold Water.
  2 Leeks.
  
  A small piece of Carrot.
  A small piece of Turnip.
  ^ATiite Pepper and Salt.
  1 stick of Celery.
  
  Method. - Any white fish can be used for tliis
  soup, such as whiting, flounder, haddock, or
  cod, trimmings of fish or a cod's head. Wash
  the fish well and cut it into small pieces ; put
  it into a saucepan -with the cold water (which
  should cover it), add a little salt, and bring to
  the boil. Skim well and boil for about ten
  minutes. Then remove a few nice pieces of
  fish, free from skin and bone, and reserve them
  for serving in the soup. Prepare the vege-
  tables and cut them into small thin pieces,
  add them to the soup with the bay leaf, parsley
  stalks, and blade of mace. Let all simmer
  slowly from one and a half to two hours. If
  a cod's head is used, longer time will be required.
  When well cooked, strain through a fine wire
  sieve into a basin, rubbing through a Uttle of
  the fish and vegetables, being careful that
  none of the bones are rubbed through. Rinse
  out the saucepan and melt the butter or dripping
  in it, then add the flour and mix smoothly
  together. Pour in the soup and stir until boil-
  ing ; add the milk, chopped parsley, and small
  pieces of fish, and bring to the boil again.
  Season to taste with white pepper and salt.
  The yolk of an egg may be put into the soup-
  tureen and the soup poured boiling hot on to
  it, stirring all the time ; or it may be served
  with small egg balls in it.
  
  PUREES OF MEAT
  
  Chicken Soup
  {Fr. Potage de Volaille)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 Chicken.
  
  2 quarts Cold Water.
  I Carrot.
  
  A small piece of Turnip.
  1 blade of JIacc.
  1 oz. Butter.
  J oz. Flour.
  1 stick Celery.
  
  
  1 Onion or Leek.
  
  1 gill of Cream, or } pint
  
  Boiled Milk.
  Pepper and Salt.
  1 Bay Leaf.
  A few Parsley Stalks.
  1 oz. lean Ham or a small
  
  Ham-bone.
  
  Method. - Pi'epare the cliicken in the same
  way as for chicken broth, p. 120, and, if wished,
  keep back the breast for serving in some other
  way. Put all together into a clean lined pan,
  with enough cold water to well cover - about
  two quarts ; add a little salt, and bring slowly
  
  
  128
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  to the boil. Then skim well and add the vege-
  tables, cleaned and cut in small pieces, the bay
  leaf, blade of maco, and peirsley stalks. Simmer
  slowlj' from five to six hours until reduced about
  one-third, remo\nng any scum that may rise.
  When cooked sufficiently, strain tlirough a hair
  sieve into a basin, and let it stand till cold.
  Remove all fat from tlio top of the stock. Take
  some of the pieces of meat from tho chicken,
  pound them well in a mortar, then rub tlirough
  a wire sieve, and moisten wth some of the
  hquid whilst rubbing through. Melt the butter
  in the saucepan, add the flour and mix until
  smooth. Then pour in the soup and the pur6e,
  bring to the boil and pour in the cream or boiled
  milk. Sesison to taste with white pepper and
  sjJt. A yolk of egg may also be used if liked.
  Put the yolk in the soup -tureen and pour the
  hot soup on to it, stirring all tho time.
  
  Notes. - Tlie breast of the chicken may be
  cooked in the soup, and then lifted out, cut into
  small pieces, and served in the soup when ready.
  
  The soup may be garnished with some cooked
  green peas, a little finely chopped parsley or
  chervil.
  
  Rabbit Soup (Fr. Puree de Lapin) can be made
  in the same way, but the rabbit should be
  sdlowed to he in salt and water for an hour
  before it is cut up, to remove the strong taste.
  Some nice little pieces of rabbit may bo lifted
  out after they have cooked for about aji hour
  and reserved for serving in the soup.
  
  Hare Soup
  
  {Fr. Potage de Lievre)
  Ingredients -
  1 Hare.
  
  1 lb. lean Beef,
  } lb. lean Ham.
  
  2 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  2 Onions.
  
  A small piece of Turnip.
  2 sticks of Celery.
  A bunch of Herbs.
  1 J oz. Flour or 2 oz. Oatmeal
  
  
  24 Black Peppercorns.
  6 or 8 Cloves.
  1 blade of Mace.
  
  1 Bay Leaf.
  
  2 quarts Cold Water.
  1 glass Port Wine.
  I tea-spoonful Jamaica
  
  Pepper.
  Salt.
  
  Method. - Skin and paunch the hare, saving
  the liver and as much of the blood as possible.
  Then wash the hare, dry it, and cut it into small
  pieces. Wipe the beef with a damp cloth, and
  cut it and the ham into small pieces. Melt the
  butter or dripping in a saucepan, put in the
  pieces of hare, meat, ham, and onions thinly
  sUced, and fry all those over the fire from ten
  to fifteen minutes ; then pour in the water,
  bring to the boil, and skim well. Add the other
  vegetables cut into small pieces, the herbs,
  peppercorns, cloves, mace, bay leaf, and a little
  salt. Let all simmer gently from four to five
  hours ; then strain through a hair sieve into a
  basin, and let the soup stand until cold. Remove
  the fat carefully from the top of tho stock, put
  some of the meat from the hare into a mortar,
  pound it well with a little of tho stock, and rub
  
  
  it through a fine wire sieve. Return the soup
  to the saucepan with the sieved hare. Break
  the flour with a httle of the stock, add it to the
  soup, and stir until boiling. Boil for a few
  minutes, adding Jamaica pepper, black pepper,
  and more salt if necessary. If oatmeal is used
  for thickening, put it into a basin with half a
  pint of cold water ; lot it stand for half-an-hour,
  stirring occasionally, and then strain off the
  hquid part into the soup, keeping back the
  oatmeal ; bring to the boil, and boil for a few
  minutes. The oatmeal gives the soup a soft,
  velvety taste. The wine and blood should be
  added to the soup just before serving, but do
  not boil again, or the soup %vill curdle.
  
  Serve small force-meat balls (see p. 179), to
  which the liver of the hare cooked and chopped
  has been added, in this soup.
  
  PUREES OF FARINACEOUS FOODS
  Cream of Barley Soup
  
  (Fr. Potage a la Creme d'Orge)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 quart of Chicken or Veal
  Boilings.
  
  2 oz. fine Pearl Barley.
  1 oz. Butter.
  1 gill of Cream or i pint
  
  
  Boiled Milk.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  1 Onion.
  
  J inch Cinnamon Stick.
  
  1 Bay Leaf.
  
  A few Parsley Stalks.
  
  
  Method. - Use the fine barley for this soup.
  Wash it well in cold water. Put it into a sauce-
  pan with cold water to cover, bring to the boil,
  strain and rinse again with cold water. This is
  to blanch or whiten the barley. Rinse out the
  saucepan, and return the barley to it with the
  meat boiUngs, or thin white stock. (The water
  in which a fowl, rabbit, or piece of veal has been
  boiled can be used for this soup.) Add the
  onion, thinly shced, the bay leaf, cinnamon, and
  parsley stalks. Simmer for two hours, or until
  tho barley is quite cooked. Then rub as much
  as possible through a tammy cloth or hair sieve.
  Return this piu-^e to the pan with the butter,
  and add the cream or boiled milk. Sea.^un to
  taste, and stir over the fire until boiling.
  
  A few cooked green peeis or asparagus points
  may be added.
  
  Cream of Rice Soup
  
  {Fr. Potage au Riz)
  
  Follow the same dii-ections as for Barley Soup,
  using half teacupful of Patna rice instead of
  the barley. The rice will not require to be
  blanched, and one hour will be sufficient to
  cook it.
  
  Macaroni Soup
  
  {Fr. Potage Macaroni)
  
  Follow the same directions as above, allowing
  2 oz. macaroni insteewi of the barley. The
  macaroni will not require to be blanched, and one
  and a half hours will be sufficient to cook it.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  129
  
  
  PUREES OF GREEN VEGETABLES
  Asparagus Soup
  
  (Fr. Puree d'Asperges)
  Ingredients -
  
  50 beads of Asparagus. 1 Bay Leaf.
  
  1 quart White Stock. Pepper and Salt.
  
  1 gill of Cream. 1 oz. lean Ham.
  
  2 yolks of Eggs. A few Parsley Stalks.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  Method. - Wash the asparagus in cold water,
  scraping the stalk ends lightly with a knife.
  Cut off the points, reserving them for serving
  in the soup, and sUce down the remainder into
  pieces of about an inch in length. Melt the
  butter in a saucepan, and add the asparagus to
  it with the ham cut in small pieces, the bay leaf
  and parsley stalks. Put the U'd on the pan,
  and shake it gently over the fire for a few
  minutes until the butter is absorbed. Then
  pour in the btock, and add a little white pepper
  and salt. Simmer slowly from one and a half
  to two hours, or until the asparagus is quite
  tender. Then rub as much as possible through
  a hair sieve. Return the soup to the pan to
  reheat. Beat up the yolks of eggs and cream
  in a basin with a fork ; draw the pan with the
  soup to the side of the fire, and strain them in,
  Stirling all the time. Tlien stir carefully over
  the fire until the yolks thicken, on no account
  letting the soup boU. Have the asparagus
  points cooked separately. (Steam them gently
  about half-an-hour or until tender.) Put them
  in the soup -tureen and pour the hot soup over
  them. The soup should be of a delicate green
  colour, and if necessarj a little spinach green
  must be added- care being taken not to overdo
  the colouring.
  
  Note. - The yolks of eggs may be omitted
  and cream only used, or the cream omitted and
  a little milk added to the yolks.
  
  Brussels Sprout Soup
  
  {Fr. Puree de Choux de Bruxelles)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Brussels Sprouts. i 1 gill of Cream or } pint
  
  1 quart White Stock. I Boiled Milk.
  
  AS'hite Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Trim the Brussels sprouts, cutting
  away any decayed or discokurod leave?. Wash
  well, and let them steep in a basin of cold water,
  with a few drops of vinegar, for half-an-hoiu*.
  Then drain and tlurow into a saucepan of fast-
  boiling water (salted in the proportion of one
  dessert-spoonful to one quart), adding also a
  small piece of washing soda. Boil quickly with
  the lid off the pan from fifteen to twenty minutes,
  removing any scum that may rise. Do not
  overcook the sprouts, or their colour will be
  destroyed. When ready, drain and rub through
  a fine wire bieve. Put the stock into a sauce-
  
  
  pan, add the Brussels sprout puree, cream or
  milk and seasoning, and make quite hot, but
  do not boil again.
  
  Green Pea Soup
  {Fr. Piiree de Petits Pois)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 pint Shelled Peas.
  1 handful of Pea SheUs.
  1 small Lettuce.
  A few sprigs of Parsley.
  White Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  3 Spring Onions.
  
  A sprig of Mint.
  
  1 lump of Sugar.
  
  IJ pints Second White Stock.
  
  1 gill of Cream.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the shells well, and cut them
  into pieces. Wash and shred the lettuce, and
  wash and sUce thinly the onions. Put all these
  into a saucepan of boiHng water salted in the
  proportion of one dessert-spoonful to a quart,
  salted ; boil for ten minutes, and strain off the
  water. Put the stock into a saucepan, and
  bring it to the boil. Add the scalded vegetables,
  the peas, mint, and parsley, and boil all together
  until tender, about half-an-hour. Then rub
  through a hair sieve into a basin. Rinse out
  the saucepan, and retmrn the soup to it to reheat.
  Add tlie cream, and season to taste with white
  pepper and salt.
  
  Note. - A few leaves of spinach may be added
  to this soup, and sometimes a few of the peas
  are cooked sepeirately, and served whole in the
  soup.
  
  Water-cress Soup
  
  {Fr. Potage au Cresson)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  2 bunches Water-cress.
  
  li smaU bunch Spring
  
  Onions.
  i pint Haricot Beans.
  White Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  1 quart Cold Water.
  
  li oz. Butter.
  
  1 table-spoonful chopped
  
  Parsley.
  1 or 2 table-spoonfuls Cream.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the beans in cold water. Put
  them into a basin with one quart of cold water,
  cover with a plate, and let them soak overnight.
  Next day put them into a saucepan with the
  water in which they were soaked, and boil until
  quite soft, about three hours. Then rub through
  a fine wire or hair sieve into a basin, and make
  up this puree to one quart \\-ith boihng water.
  Wash and pick the wat€r-cress,carefully remo\'ing
  the stalks, and shred it finely with a knife.
  Wash the onions, remo\ang the roots and most
  of the green part. SUce them also thinly.
  Melt the butter in a saucepan, put the greens
  into it, and stew them gently for about ten
  minutes, until they are just beginning to change
  colour. Then pour on the haricot pur^, and
  sinuner from fifteen to twenty minutes. Add
  the cream, pepper, salt, and the chopped parsley
  just before serving.
  
  Note. - Lettuce, sorrel, endive, or any green
  vegetable may be shredded and used in the
  making of this soup.
  
  
  130
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  FISH AND FISH ENTRIES
  
  
  How to Clean Fish. - The thorough cleansing |
  of 6sh is essential to its wholesomeness. When
  it is bought from a fishmonger it is generally so
  far prepared, but if caught or obtained from a
  fisherman it will require very careful cleaning
  before it can be cooked. Some fish, such as
  haddock, whiting, or cod, require to be cut
  open before they can bo emptied, while others,
  such as sole or plaice, can have the entrails drawn
  out tlirough the gills. Be careful not to dis-
  figure the fish, but clean it thoroughly, and see
  that no blood or black skin is left inside. If
  there is a roe tliis should be allowed to remain
  if the fish is small, but if large it must be removed
  and cooked separately. If the fish feels sUmy,
  rub it well ■"-ith a Uttle salt. Scales should be
  scraped off with a knife, scraping from the tail
  upwards, and the fish well rinsed afterwards.
  If the scales are very hard to remove, as is
  sometimes the case with fresh-water fish, dip
  the fish in boihng water for a moment. In
  cutting off the fins, cut from the tail upwards
  with a pair of scissors. The fins of turbot
  and skate may be left on, as they are very
  gelatinous and are considered a luxury. In
  taking out the eyes, if the skin over them is
  tough, cut it first with a pair of scissors, and
  then the eye can easily be pulled out, or pushed
  out from the inside. Fish that have a strong
  muddy flavour should be soaked in salt and
  water before being cooked.
  
  General Rules for Cooking Fish
  
  Boiling. - Boihng is best suited to large uncut
  fish or to thick pieces of fish such as salmon,
  hahbut, cod, Hng, hake, and turbot. This
  method of cooking is not to be recommended
  for small fish or for thin shces of fish. Fish
  should never be skinned for boihng, and when
  whole the head is left on ^vith the eyes taken out.
  Turbot should be scored across on the black
  side to prevent the white side cracking. All
  fish, with the exception of salt fish, should be
  put into water that is very hot, but not actually
  boihng ; or it is better still if fish stock can bo
  used instead of water. Salt the liquid in the
  proportion of 1 oz. of salt to a gallon and two
  table-spoonfuls of \anegar to the same quantity.
  The latter is added to keep the flesh white and
  fimn, or lemon juice may be used if preferred.
  Always weigh the fish before boiling ; eight
  minutes to the pound and eight minutes over is
  tiie time usually allowed, but no hard-and-feist
  rule can be laid down, as the time very much
  depends upon the shape and thickness of the
  fish. A fish-kettle is the best utensil to use for
  boiling fish, where you have a drainer which
  enables you to hft out the fish easily without
  
  
  breaking it. Have enough water or stock in
  the fish-kettle to cover the fish and no more ; if
  too much is used the skin of the fish will be hable
  to crack ; and add salt and vinegar in the above
  proportions. Place the fish on the drainer and
  lower it gently in. If a fish-kettle is not to be
  had, a stewpan must be used. An old plate
  should bo placed inside, and the fish tied in a
  piece of muslin or cheese-cloth. Allow the fish
  to simmer slowly for the required time. If
  allowed to cook too quickly the outside will
  be broken before the inside is ready. All
  scum that rises must be removed. If allowed
  to settle on the fish it will spoil its appearance.
  When the fish is ready, the flesh ^vill have lost
  its clear appearance, and will look white and
  opaque. The flesh will also leave the bone easily.
  Be sure to cook the fish sufficiently, or it will be
  unwholesome, and at the same time do not
  overcook it or it will be flavourless. Lift the
  fish out of the water as soon as it is ready, and
  drain it well. Never keep it hot in the water.
  If it has to be kept warm for a time, place the
  drainer, with the fish on it, across the fish-kettle,
  and cover over with a clean cloth. Dish on a
  strainer, and serve with appropriate sauce and
  garnish.
  
  Steaming. - Fish may be cooked by steam in-
  stead of boiling it. It is a slower process, but
  the flavour of the fish is retained better than by
  boiling, especially in smaller pieces of fish.
  The fish is placed in a steamer which fits on to
  a saucepan, and success depends upon keeping
  plenty of water boiling under it.
  
  Slices of fish, small skinned whiting, or fiillets
  of fish can be cooked to perfection both as to
  flavour and substance by steaming, whereas
  boihng would render them woolly and tasteless.
  If it is only a small quantity of fish which
  requires cooking it may be steamed on a plate.
  Grease the plate with butter and lay the fish
  neatly on it. Season to taste and squeeze a
  little lemon juice over the top. Put a piece of
  well-greased paper on the top and cover with
  a second plate or the saucepan lid. Place this
  on the top of a saucepan of boihng water and
  allow it to remain from twenty to thirty minutes,
  or until the fish is sufficiently cooked. The
  liquid on the plate should be served with the
  fish or made into a sauce with a httle flour and
  butter, and then poured over the fish.
  
  Note. - This is an excellent way of serving
  fish for an invalid.
  
  Frying (French or Wet Frying). - This is cook-
  ing in a large quantity of fat, sufficient to cover
  the article to be fried. Clarified fat, oil or lard
  may be used for the purpose. The fat must be
  put into a plain iron stewpan, neither tinned nor
  enamelled, as the great heat would destroy the
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  131
  
  
  lining. Success depends upon getting the fat
  to the right degree of heat. It must be quite
  still. If it bubbles it shows that it contains
  water, which must pass off by evaporation before
  the fat can reach the required heat. A blue,
  smoky vapour should also be seen rising from it.
  It should then be used at once, or drawn back
  from the fire, to prevent its burning and making
  an unpleasant smell.
  
  This method of frying is sviitable for small
  fish such as smelts or small pieces of filleted fish,
  such as filleted haddock, sole or plaice. Larger
  pieces of fish which require more cooking must
  be done by a slower process. (See Dry Frying
  below.)
  
  Fish to be fried must first be made as dry as
  possible by wiping it gently with a cloth and
  then by dusting it with flovtr. Any loose flour
  which does not adhere should be shaken off.
  The fish should then be further protected from
  the fat by being egged and bread-cr\imbed or
  dipped in frying batter (see p. 195).
  
  Do not put too many pieces into the pan at
  one time, as they will cool the fat too much, and
  always bring it to boiling point again before
  adding more fish. If the fat is not sufficiently
  hot, it will soak into the articles fried, and make
  them greasy instead of crisp. Either a frying-
  baaket or a perforated spoon must be used for
  lifting out the fish. Let them fry a brown colour,
  and always drain on kitchen paper before
  serving. Always dish fried fish on a d'oyley or
  dish-paper. The fat must not be left on the
  fire when finished with, but should be strained
  through a piece of muslin into a tin basin, and
  put aside for further use If care is taken of it
  in this way it will keep for a long time, and wiU
  not be found an extravagance.
  
  Dry Frying. - This is suitable for larger pieces
  of fish, such as cod or salmon steaks, and whole
  whiting or haddocks, which require a longer
  time to cook than French frying allows for.
  Dry frying means frying in a saute or frying-
  pan with a small quantity of fat. The fat must
  be made smoking hot before the fish is placed in
  it, so that the outside is sealed up, and the juice
  and flavour retained. Brown the fish first on
  one side, then turn over with a knife or fish slice,
  and brown on the other. When cooked, Uft out
  and drain on paper. Serve on a hot dish with
  a fish-paper or d'oyley on it.
  
  Broiling. - Tliis is cooking lish on a grill either
  in front of or over a nice clear fire. Herring,
  mackerel, trout, haddock, red mullet, &c., may
  all be cooked in this manner. They may be
  prepared ip either of the following ways : -
  
  1. Wash and clean the fish, cutting off the
  heads and fins, and dry them lightly in a cloth.
  Then score the skin across three times on each
  side to prevent it cracking during the process of
  cooking. Season the fish with pepper and salt,
  and brush it over with oil or melted butter, or
  allow it to soak for an hour in a mixture of oil
  
  
  and vinegar with a little chopped parsley and
  shallot ; or
  
  2. The fish may be spUt open, the bone re-
  moved and then Mghtly coated with flour or fine
  oatmeal. The latter is most suitable for herring,
  mackerel, or trout. A coating of egg and
  bread-crumbs may also be used if hked.
  
  Thoroughly heat the gridiron, grease it well,
  and lay the fish on it. Keep the fish rather
  near the fire while cooking or it uill become
  flabby. Cook it from seven to ten minutes
  according to the thickness of the fish, and turn
  it once at least during the process. When
  finished it should be nicely browned on both
  sides and show the marks of the grill. Serve
  at once with cut lemon and small pats of Maitre
  d'Hotel Butter. If there are any roes belonging
  to the fish these may be cooked on a tin in the
  oven and used as a garnish.
  
  Note. - Fillets of fish, such as salmon, turbot,
  or sole, are sometimes wrapped in a heart-shaped
  piece of greased paper with a spoonful of any
  good sauce and grilled thus. They may also be
  soaked or marinaded in a mixture of oil, &c.,
  as above, previous to being wrapped up. They
  should be served in the paper (en papilloUes).
  
  To Skin and Fillet Fish
  
  A Haddock. - First wash the haddock in cold
  water, and cut off all the fins.
  
  Make a sUt in the skin up both sides, so that
  it can easily be removed.
  
  Make a cut across the skin just below the
  head, and commence at the flap part.
  
  Loosen the skin there, keeping down the flesh
  with the knife, and beginning very carefully ;
  then pull downwards towards the tail.
  
  Turn, and do the other side in the same way.
  
  To fillet it, remove the flesh cleanly from the
  bones on both sides of the fish.
  
  Commence at the open side of the fish, slipping
  the knife along close to the bone, and laying the
  flesh backwards, but do not separate it from the
  other side.
  
  Tui-n, and do the other side in the same way.
  
  A fiUeted haddock should be in one piece.
  
  A Sole or Plaice. - First wash the fish, and cut
  off all the fins.
  
  Lay on a board with the tail end nearest to you.
  
  Make a cut across the skin just above the tail,
  slip a knife under it, and commence raising the
  skin from the flesh.
  
  Then with the right thumb loosen the slun
  all the way up the right-hand side.
  
  Loosen up the other side in the same way,
  this time using the thumb of the left hand.
  
  Hold the tail of the fish firmly down on the
  board ; take hold of the loosened skin with a
  cloth, and pull it off quickly, dra^sing it upwards
  towards the head.
  
  The white skin may be removed in the same
  way, but this is frequently left on.
  
  
  132
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  To fillet the fish, make a cut straight down
  the middle of the back to the backbone.
  
  Then remove the flesh, first from one side and
  then from the other.
  
  Two fillets ai-e taken from each side.
  
  It will be fomid easiest to raise the first fillet
  from the left-hand side of the fish, working from
  the head towards the tail ; and then to turn the
  fish round, and to raise the second fillet, working
  from the tail towards the head.
  
  Turn the fish right over, and do the other side
  in the same way.
  
  Not€. - Filleting is really best leeirnt by watch-
  ing a fishmonger or other competent person
  at work.
  
  Cold Fish Re-dressed
  
  It is wonderful the variety of Uttle dishes
  wliich can be made out of the scraps of cold
  cooked fish. Either smoked or fresh fish may
  be utiUsed in this way and made to appear
  again in an appetising form. The smallest
  pieces should not be thrown away, even two or
  tiiree table-spoonfuls will suffice to make a fish
  omelet, or, with the addition of some potatoes or
  rice, enough fish-cakes for two or three persons.
  
  Wlienever possible, the skin and bone should
  be removed from the fish while it is still warm,
  as when cold the gelatine in the fish hardens and
  it becomes more adhesive. Cooked fish very
  soon becomes dry and then hard, so it is better
  to keep it covered with a plate or basin and to
  use it as soon as possible.
  
  The removing of the bones must be done with
  the greatest care, as it is just the very small
  bones which are so difficult to see which some-
  times get into the tliroat and cause trouble.
  It is often an improvement to use a little smoked
  or salt fish along with the fresh ; it gives more
  flavour to the dish.
  
  Fillets of Cod au Gratin
  
  
  (Fr. Cabillaud au Gratin)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  IJ lbs. of Cod.
  2 oz. Butter.
  1 Shallot.
  1 tea-spoonful
  Parsley.
  
  
  chopped
  
  
  6 or 6 Button Mushrooms.
  2 table- spoonfuls Bread-
  crumbs,
  i Lemon.
  I'epper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - A piece from the tail end of the
  cod is best, for it is the most tender. Remove
  the skin and the bono, and cut the fish into
  neat fillets. Mix together the bread-crumbs, the
  shallot, par-sley, and mushrooms finely chopped,
  a little grated lemon rind, pepper and salt, and
  melt the butter in a small pan. Grease a dish
  which can stand the heat of the oven, sprinkle
  over it some of the mixture, then place on the
  dish a few fillets of cod with a little lemon juice,
  melted butter and more mixture, then more
  fish, and so on until all is used. Stand the dish
  
  
  in a tin containing water, and bake in a moderate
  oven for half-an-hour, basting the fish occasion-
  ally ■with the butter on the dish. Serve hot.
  A little white wine may be added.
  
  Note. - Other kinds of fish, such as halibut,
  haddock, whiting, or even smelts, may be pre-
  pared in the same waj'.
  
  
  Cod Baked in Batter
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Cod.
  
  2 oz. Flour.
  IJ gills Milk.
  
  1 Egg.
  
  
  1 tea-spoonful chopped
  
  Parsley.
  Pepper and Salt.
  1 02. Butter or Dripping.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the cod, dry it, and cut into
  small neat pieces, free from skin and bone.
  Place these at the foot of a greased pie-dish,
  and sprinkle them with a Uttle wliite pepper
  and salt. Then make the batter according to
  directions given on p. 192. If time permits,
  let this batter stand for a short time. It gives
  the flour time to swell, and makes it hghter.
  Then pour it over the fish, and wipe round the
  edges of the pie-dish. Bake in a moderate oven
  from twenty to thirty minutes until the batter
  is well risen and nicely brown, and the fish feels
  tender. Serve as soon after it is taken from
  the oven as possible.
  
  Notes. - Any white fish may be used instead of
  cod, or the remains of cold cooked fish may bo
  utilised.
  
  Half a tea-spoonful of finely powdered mixed
  herbs may be used in addition to or instead of
  the parsley.
  
  The dish may be made richer by adding a few
  oysters, shrimps, or sUces of hard-boiled egg.
  
  Cod's Roe (To Boil)
  
  {Ft. Laitance de Cabillaud)
  
  Required -
  
  Cod's Roe. I Vinegar.
  
  Boiling Water. White or Parsley Sauce.
  
  Salt. >
  
  Wash the roe well in cold water, but do not
  let it soak, then tie it up in a piece of muslin
  or a pudding cloth, to prevent it breaking. Put
  it into a saucepan or fish-kettle of slowly boiling
  water, salted in the proportion of one table-
  spoonful to one quart of water, and add a few
  di'ops of vinegar. Tho water should just cover
  the roe. Simmer slowly from fifteen to twenty
  minutes according to size. When ready, Uft
  the roe out, and let the water drain well from it.
  Serve on a hot dish with white or parsley sauce
  poured over it, or on a folded serviette, and
  hand the sauce sepcu-ately.
  
  Cod's Roe (Fried)
  {Fr. Laitance de Cabillaud)
  
  Cut cooked cod's roe in half-inch shoes, coat
  them with a Uttle flour, and fry in a small
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  133
  
  
  quantity of butter or clarified fat. Serve
  garnished with parsley.
  
  Note. - If wished the slices may be egged and
  bread-crumbed before frying.
  
  Salt Cod with Parsnip Pur^e
  
  {Fr. Morue a la Puree de Panais)
  Ingredients -
  1 lb. Salt Cod.
  3 or 4 Parsnips.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  2 or 3 table-spoonfuls thick
  
  Cream.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Soak the fish overnight in cold
  water, then take it out and wash it well in clean
  cold water. Put it into a saucepan with cold
  water to cover it, and let it boil slowly until it is
  quite tender, about one hour. Then drain it,
  remove the skin and large bones, put it on to a
  dish, and keep it warm while the pur6e is being
  prepared.
  
  Boil the parsnips luitil quite tender, then
  drain and rub them through a fine wire or hair
  sieve. Reheat this pvir6e with the butter,
  pepper, salt, and a Uttle cream. Pour it over
  the fish, and garnish with a little very finely
  chopped parsley.
  
  Note. - Instead of the parsnip puree a good
  egg sauce may be poxired over the fish.
  
  Dressed Crab (Cold)
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  1 Crab (boiled).
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Cream or
  Salad Oil.
  
  1 table-sp. White Vinegar.
  1 tea-spoonful Tarragon
  Vinegar.
  
  
  1 tea-spoonful made Mustard.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  2 table-spoonfuls white
  Bread-crumbs.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  
  Method. - Pick the meat from the crab, keep-
  ing back the unwholesome part near the head.
  Scrub the shells thoroughly to receive the mix-
  ture, dry and grease it ^vith a little oil or butter.
  Chop the meat from the crab very finely, being
  very careful to remove any small pieces of shell.
  ]VIix all the ingredients together in a basin,
  and season rather highly w^th pepper, salt, and
  cayenne. Return this to the prepared shell,
  and garnish with sprigs of parsley, thin slices
  of lemon, and the small claws. Serve on a
  folded d'oyley or dish -paper.
  
  Note. - Dressed crab may be served in a fancy
  china dish instead of the crab shell.
  
  Dressed Crab (Hot)
  
  {Fr. Crabe au Gratin)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 Crab (boiled).
  
  2 oz. Bread-crumbs.
  2 table-sp. Melted Butter,
  
  Cream, or Salad Oil.
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  Pepper and Salt.
  1 tea-spoonful Vinegar or
  
  Lemon Juice.
  
  
  1 tea-spoonful chopped
  Parsley.
  
  A little grated Lemon Kind.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Anchovy
  Essence.
  
  A few browned Bread-
  crumbs.
  
  \ oz. Butter,
  
  
  small pieces of shell. Put this into a saucepan
  with all the other ingredients except the browned
  bread-crumbs and half ounce of butter. Season
  rather highly with pepper, salt, and cayenne.
  Make the mixtiu-e thoroughly hot over the fire,
  and return it to the shell prepared as above.
  Sprinkle the browned bread-crumbs over the
  top, and put the butter on in smaU pieces.
  Bake in the oven or in front of the fire for about
  fifteen minutes. Serve on a d'oyley or dish-
  paper, and garnish with parsley and small
  slices of lemon.
  
  Note. - If hked, two table-spoonfuls of tomato
  pur6e may be added.
  
  
  Fish Cakes
  
  {Fr. Croquettes de Poisson)
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. cooked Fish.
  
  J lb. cooked Potatoes.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 yolk of Egg.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  
  1 tea-spoonful
  
  Essence.
  Pepper and Salt.
  A little Flour,
  
  Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  Anchovy
  
  
  and
  
  
  Method. - ^The remains of any cold cooked fish
  may be used for making fish-cakes. Free the
  fish from all skin and bone, then weigh it. Chop
  it finely, being most careful to remove any small
  bones, which might be most dangerous if left
  in. Sieve the potatoes, or put them through
  a vegetable presser, and chop the parsley very
  finely. Melt the butter in a saucepan, then add
  to it the fish, potatoes, parsley, yolk of egg,
  and seasonings, and mix well together over the
  fire. Turn out on to a plate, smooth over with
  a knife, and set aside to cool. \Vhen the mixture
  feels firm, divide it into ten or twelve small
  pieces. Flour the hands, take one piece at a
  time, and roll it into a ball, laying them as they
  are formed on a slightly floured board. Then
  with a knife, also floured, flatten them slightly,
  and shape them into neat round cakes. Egg
  and bread-crumb them, and fry in boiling fat
  to a nice brown coloiu*. Drain well, and serve
  piled high on a hot dish with a dish-paper under
  them, and garnish with parsley.
  
  Note. - Well-boiled and dried rice may be
  used instead of potatoes.
  
  
  Method. - Chop the meat finely, removing any
  
  
  {Fr.
  Ingredients -
  i lb. uncooked Fish.
  1 oz. Butter.
  1 oz. Bread-crumbs.
  1 gill of Jlilk.
  AVTiite Sauce.
  
  
  Fish Cream
  
  Creme de Poisson)
  
  
  1 gill Double Cream.
  
  1 white of Egg.
  
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Weigh the fish, free from skin an-i
  bone, and slired it down finely with a knife.
  Put it into a mortar, and pound it well. Rinse
  out a small saucepan with cold water, to prevent
  the mixture sticking to it. Put into it the
  
  
  134
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  butter and the milk, and bring them to the boil
  over the fire. Then add the bread-crumbs, and
  stir with a wooden spoon over the fire until the
  bread-crumbs swell and tlie mixture thickens.
  Add tliis mixture to the fisli in the mortar, pound
  well together, and rub tlirough a wire sieve,
  scraping the sieve underneath.
  
  Put the mixture into a basin, and season to
  taste. Beat up the white of egg with a knife
  on a plate imtil stiff, and whip the cream in a
  beisin with a wire whisk until tliick. Add both
  these to the fish mixture, and stir them in as
  lightly as possible with an iron spoon. Pour
  the mixture into a well-greased mould. The
  mould must not be more than half -filled. Twist
  a piece of greased paper over the top of it, and
  steam slowly for half-an-hour, or until firm to the
  touch. Tvirn out carefully on to a hot dish, and
  pour ancho\-y or white sauce round it.
  
  Note. - This may be steamed in a border
  mould, and the inside afterwards filled with
  green peas, or oysters mixed with a little of the
  sauce.
  
  Fish Cuny
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. cooked Fish.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 small Apple, or
  
  1 stick of Rhubarb.
  
  1 small Onion.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Currj- Towder.
  
  Method. - Melt the butter in a saucepan and
  add the onion and apple or rhubarb cut in small
  pieces. Cook until a nice brown colour, and
  add the chutney, curry powder, rice flour,
  pepper and salt. Stir until boiling and then
  simmer slowly for twenty minutes. Rub the
  sauce through a sieve and return it to the sauce-
  pan to re-heat. Add the fish, broken in flakes
  and free from skin and bone. Allow it to got
  thoroughly hot, and add the lemon juice at the
  last. A little cream is an improvement. Serve
  boiled rice separately.
  
  Fish Custard Puddings
  
  
  i tea-spoonful Chutney.
  
  1 gill Fish Stock.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Rice Flour.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  2 whites of Eggs.
  
  1 dessert-spoonful chopped
  
  Parsley.
  A little Coralline Pepper.
  Feppar and Salt.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  I lb. cooked Flah.
  i pint Milk.
  4 yolks of Eggs.
  1 tea-spoonful Anchovy
  Essence.
  
  Method. - Grcstso very carefully about six
  dariol moulds or tiny basins, and decorate each
  one at the foot with a little finely-chopped parsley
  or coralline popper. Free the fish from all skin
  and bone, and then weigh it. Chop it rather
  finely, and about half-fill the moulds. Make a
  custard with the eggs and milk. Beat up the
  6ggs, yolks and whites, in a basin, and add the
  milk. Season with white popper, salt, and
  anchovy essence. Strain and pour over the
  fish. Place the moulds in a tin with boiUng
  
  
  water to reach half-way up the sides, cover
  with greased paper, and poach in the oven or
  on the top of the stove until the custards are
  sot, about fifteen minutes. Turn out and
  serve hot.
  
  Note. - Tliese are excellent made with cold
  salmon.
  
  Fish Cutlets
  
  {Fr. Cotelettes de Poisson)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  1 tea-sp. Anchovy Essence.
  Pepper and Salt.
  Egg and Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  J lb. cooked Fish.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  1 gill Milk or Fish Stock.
  
  1 yolk of Egg.
  
  Method. - Free the fish carefully from all skin
  and bone, then weigh and chop it finely. Melt
  the butter in a saucepan, add the flour, and mix
  with a wooden spoon until smooth ; then poxir
  in the milk or fish stock, and stir until the
  mixtm-e boils and draws away from the sides of
  the saucepan. Remove the pan from the fire,
  add the fish, yolk of egg, and seasonings, and
  mix well together. Tm-n the mixture out on
  to a plate, smooth over with a knife, and set
  aside in a cool place until firm. Divide into
  eight equal-sized pieces, and finish in the same
  way aa lobster cutlets (p. 137).
  
  Fish Omelet
  {Fr. Omelette au Poisson)
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. cooked Fish. I 2 Eggs.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley. I Pepper aud Salt.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  Method. - Free the fish from skin and bon.j,
  and chop it finely. Separate the yolks and
  whites of the eggs. Put the yolks into a
  medium-sized basin, and the whites on to a
  plate. Add to the yolks the chopped fish,
  parsley, pepper and salt, and work these well
  together with a wooden spoon until of a creamy
  consistency. Beat up the whites of the eggs
  on the plate with a broad-bladed knife until so
  stiff that you could turn the plate upside down
  without the whites falling off. Remove the
  wooden spoon from the basin, and with an iron
  one stir into it the beaten whites lightly and
  thoroughly. Molt the butter in an omelet pan,
  and poiu" the mixture into it, scraping out the
  basin as quickly as possible. Stir the mixture
  round \^'ith an iron spoon until it begins to set,
  stirring mostlj' on the surface, and not scraping
  the foot of the pan. Then hold it a little longer
  over the fire vmtil the omelet is nicely browned
  on the under-side. Slip a knife under it, and
  double over first from one side and then from
  the other towards the centre. If not quite
  cooked on the top, hold it in front of the fire for
  a minute or two. Then turn it on to a hot dish
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  135
  
  
  with a fish-paper on it, and serve as quickly
  as possible.
  
  Note. - One or two table-spoonfuls of cream
  added to the mixture is an improvement.
  
  
  J lb. cooked Potatoes.
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  A little Milk.
  
  
  Fish Pie with Potatoes
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. cooked Fish.
  1 gill White Sauce.
  1 hard-boiled Egg.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Break the fish into flakes, free from
  skin and bone, and put it into a greased pie-
  dish. Sprinkle with white pepper, salt, and a
  Uttle lemon juice, and put the egg cut in slices
  on the top. Make the sauce by melting ^ oz.
  butter in a small pan, add ^ oz. flour and mix
  until smooth, pour in 1 gill of milk or fish stock,
  and stir until boiling and thick. Season to
  taste, and pour this sauce over the fish and egg.
  
  Melt the butter or dripping in a saucepan,
  have the potatoes sieved, and add them to it ;
  season with white pepper and salt, and moisten
  with a Uttle milk. Pile this on the top of the
  fish, &c., and smooth over with a knife. Mark
  up the sides with a fork or the point of a knife,
  and brush over with milk or beaten egg. Bake
  in a moderate oven until nicely browned, and
  serve hot.
  
  Gateau of Fish and Bice
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  4 lb. Carolina Rice.
  
  i pint Fish Stock or Milk.
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  J lb. Fish (cooked).
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Grated rind of i Lemon.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  1 tea-spoonful chopped
  
  Parsley.
  A little Coralline Pepper.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the rice, and put it into a
  saucepan with the milk or stock. Allow it to
  cook slowly until quite soft, adding more liquid
  if necessary. Then add to it the fish chopped,
  the butter, pepper, salt, and grated lemon rind.
  Beat up the eggs and add them, mixing well.
  Then grease a plain mould or basin, and decorate
  it with chopped parsley and a little coralline
  pepper ; pour the mixture into this ; cover with
  greased paper, and steam slowly from one to
  one and a half hours, until Qira to the touch.
  Turn out on a hot dish, and serve with or
  without sauce.
  
  Fish Pie with Macaroni
  {Fr. Poisson au Macaroni)
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. J'ish, cooked or un-
  cooked.
  J lb. Macaroni.
  * pint White Sauce.
  \ oz. Butter.
  
  
  Lemon Juice.
  
  A little grated Lemon Bind.
  Pepper and Salt.
  1 table-spoonful Bread-
  crumbs.
  
  Method. - Put the macaroni into a saucepan of
  hot water and boil until quite soft, drain, and
  
  
  chop it rather small. Remove all skin and
  bone from the fish, and cut it into small pieces,
  or if cooked, break it into flakes. Grease a pie-
  dish, and put in half the fish, seasoning with
  pepper, salt, a Uttle grated lemon rind, and
  lemon juice. Next put in half the macaroni
  and half the sauce, then the remainder of the
  fish, more seasoning, and the rest of the macaroni
  and sauce. Sprinkle the bread-crumbs over the
  top, and place the butter on in small pieces.
  Wipe round the edges of the pie-dish, and bake
  in a moderate oven for fifteen minutes if the fish
  is cooked, or half-an-hoiir if uncooked fish is
  used. Brown the pie nicely on the top, and
  serve hot, garnished with sprigs of parsley.
  
  Note. - A few oysters, picked shrimps, or
  hard-boiled egg, cut in sUces, may be added to
  this pie.
  
  Another very good pie can be made by
  using cooked and sieved potatoes in place of
  the macaroni.
  
  Steamed Fish Pudding
  {Fr. Ponding de Poisson)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 tea-sp. Anchovy Essence.
  
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  Pepper and Salt.
  Anchory or Parsley Sauce.
  
  
  i lb. cooked Fish.
  2 oz. Bread-crumbs.
  1 oz. Butter.
  1 gill Milk.
  lEgg.
  
  Method. - First grease a plain mould or basin,
  or several small moulds, with clarified butter,
  and sprinkle the chopped parsley over the
  inside. Free the fiish from all skin and bone,
  and chop it finely. Put it into a basin with the
  bread-crumbs, pepper, salt, and anchovy essence.
  Put the milk and butter into a small saucepan,
  bring them to the boil, and then poiu* over the
  ingredients in the basin. Let these soak for a
  few minutes, then add the egg well beaten.
  IMix together, and pour into the prepared mould
  or moulds. Cover with gi-eased paper and
  steam from ten to fifteen minutes if in small
  movilds, and for half-an-hour if done in one
  large mould. When ready, the mixture should
  be fijrm to the touch. Turn out on to a hot
  dish, and serve with anchovy or parsley sauce
  poured round.
  
  Potato and Fish Timbale
  
  {Ft. Timbale de Poisson)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  J lb. cooked Potato.
  1 yolk of Egg.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  2 table-sjwonfuls grated
  Cheese.
  
  Seasoning.
  
  
  2 table-sp. white Bread-
  crumbs.
  \ lb. cooked Fish.
  2 t&ble-sp. 'NMiite Sauce.
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  Seasoning.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the potatoes, add to them the
  butter molted, the yolk of egg, cheese, and
  seasonings. Mis well together, and if not
  
  
  136
  
  
  THE WOMAIs^S BOOK
  
  
  sufficiently moist add a very little milk. Butter
  a basin or plain mould, and sprinkle it with the
  bread-crumbs. Lino the bottom and sides -with
  the potato mixture, keeping back a Uttlc for
  the top. Then remove all sldn and bone from
  the fish, mix it vrith the wliite sauce, and add
  parsley and seasoning to tasto. Hard-boiled
  egg cut in pieces, oj'sters, ancho\'y, or mush-
  rooms may bo added. The mixture must not
  be too moist. Put it into the prepared mould,
  and cover with the rest of the potato mixture.
  Make the top very smooth with a knife. Bake
  in a moderate oven about forty minutes. Place
  a hot dish on the top, invert the mould, and let
  it stand a few minutes. Then carefully with-
  draw the mould. Serve plain or with white
  sauce.
  
  Scalloped Fish
  
  {Fr. Coquilles de Poisson)
  
  Ingredients -
  } lb. cooked Fish.
  
  
  1 gill Whit-e Sauce.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  VMiite Pepper and Salt
  
  
  1 table-spoonful browned
  
  Crumbs.
  J oz. Butter.
  Some Scallop Shells.
  
  
  Method. - Flake any nice white fish (herring
  or mackerel would be too rich) into neat pieces.
  Season the fish with white pepper, salt, and
  a few drops of lemon juice. Butter some clean
  scallop shells and sprinkle \\-ith a few bread-
  crumbs. Put in a spoonful of sauce •with some
  of the prepared fish on the top, and continue
  putting in fish and sauce in layers until the
  shells are full. Ck)ver the top with bread-crumbs
  and a few tiny pieces of butter. Bake in a
  moderate oven imtil nicely browned and serve
  very hot.
  
  Notes. - A little grated parmesan or a few
  oysters or picked shrimps may be added to the
  sauce if wished, and a little cream is always an
  improvement.
  
  A fireproof dish may be used instead of the
  scallop shells.
  
  Stuffed Fillets of Haddock
  
  {Fr. Filets d'Eglefin Farcis)
  Stuffing -
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 small filleted Haddocks.
  
  I'epper and Salt.
  
  Lemon Juice.
  
  2 table-spoonfuls browned
  
  Bread-ciTimbs.
  Maitre d'Had Butter.
  Anchovy or I'araley Sance.
  
  
  2 table-sp. Bread-crumbs.
  1 tea-sp. chopped I'arslty.
  1 dessert-spoonful melted
  
  Butter.
  Grated I-emon Kind.
  Pepper and .Salt
  A little Milk.
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the fish with a clean cloth,
  end cut them in half lengthways. Lay them
  out on a board with the side which the skin
  was taken off uppermost, and sosison each piece
  with white pepper, salt, and a little lemon juice.
  Prepare the stuffing as directed on p. 169,
  lay a little on each fillet, and roll them
  up, commencing at the thick end, and rolling
  
  
  towcu-ds the tail. Stand them up on a greased
  tin, cover with a piece of greased paper, and
  bake in a moderate oven about fifteen niinutes,
  or imtil the fish has lost its clear appearance,
  and looks quite wliite. When ready, roll the
  pieces in some fine browned bread-crumbs,
  coating them well. Place them on a hot dish,
  pour some anchovy or parsley sauce round,
  and put a small pat of maitre d'hotel butter on
  the top of each.
  
  Smoked Haddock Balls
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  6 oz. cooked Smoked
  
  Iladdock.
  6 oz. cooked or sieved
  
  Potatoes.
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  1 hard-boiled Egg.
  
  
  1 yolk of Egg.
  
  A little Milk.
  
  I'epper and .Suit.
  
  A little Flour.
  
  E^g and Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  Method. - Chop the fish finely, being most
  careful to remove all skin and small bones.
  Chop also the hard-boiled egg and sieve the
  potatoes. Melt the butter or dripping in a
  saucepan, and put in the potatoes, fish, and
  hard-boiled egg. Add the raw yolk of egg,
  and season to taste with pepper and salt. Mix
  all together over the fire, and if too dry add a
  little milk. Turn the mixture on to a plate,
  and then form into balls. Egg and bread-
  crumb, and fry in boiling fat.
  
  Smoked or Finnan Haddock Stewed in Milk
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 Smoked Haddock.
  i pint Milk.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  J oz. Flour.
  Pepper.
  Sippets of Toast.
  
  
  Methods. - Dip the haddock into boiling water
  for a minute or two, then remove the skin and
  all fins. Cut the fish in neat-sized pieces, put
  them into a saucepan with the milk, and simmer
  slowly about fifteen minutes or until the fish
  is quite tender. Then lift out the pieces of
  fish, and keep them hot on a dish. Work the
  butter and flour together on a plate with a
  knife, and when thoroughly blended add them
  to the milk in the pan. Stir over the fire, and
  cook a few minutes. Add a pinch of pepper,
  and strain this sauce over tlie fish. Geumish
  with sippets of toast, and serve hot.
  
  Halibut with Tomatoes
  (Fr. Fletan aux Tomates)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  ]} lbs. Halibut
  3 or 4 Fresh Tomatoes.
  1 table-spoonful Flour.
  Pepper and Salt
  
  
  I Juice of J a Lemon.
  2 table-spoonfuls
  crumbs.
  I i oz. Butter.
  
  
  Bread-
  
  
  Method. - Wash the halibut, and cut it into
  small neat pieces free from skin and bone.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  137
  
  
  Put the flour on to a plate, and coat each piece
  of fish lightly with it. Let the tomatoes soak
  in boihng water for a few minutes, then hft
  them out, dry, and skin them. Put them on
  a plate and cut them in shoes. Grease out a
  pie-dish with a little butter, lay in a few pieces
  of fish, and season with pepper, salt, and lemon
  juice. Over these put some of the tomatoes,
  then more fish and seasoning, and so on until
  all is in. ]\Iake the top layer tomatoes ; sprinkle
  the bread-crumbs over last of all, and put the
  butter on in small pieces. Bake in a moderate
  oven from three-quarters to one hour, and brown
  nicely on the top. When ready remove from
  the oven and wipe round the edges of the pie-
  dish. Place the pie on a dish, and serve very
  hot.
  
  Halibut (Mayonnaise of)
  
  (Fr. Fletan a la Mayonnaise)
  
  Required -
  
  Halibut. I rarsley, Lobster Coral or
  
  Xfayonnaise Sauce. I Salad to garnish.
  
  Method. - Boil a nice middle cut of halibut,
  being careful not to overcook it, or it will lose
  its shape. Drain well, and remove the skin.
  When quite cold, Uft on to a clean dish, and
  pour over enough Mayonnaise sauce to coat it
  nicely. Garnish with some finely chopped
  parsley or lobster coral sprinkled lightly over
  it, and rovmd the dish arrange some sprigs of
  parsley or some nice leaves of lettuce or cress.
  
  Cucumber or tomato salad would make a nice
  accompaniment to this dish.
  
  Note. - Cold halibut c an also be served quite
  simply without the sauce. It should be prettily
  garnished and accompanied with salad.
  
  Fresli Herring au Gratin
  (Fr. Harengs au Gratin)
  
  
  Required -
  
  4 fresh Herring.
  
  1 dessert-spoonful chopped
  
  Parsley.
  Mustard Sauce.
  
  
  1 dessert-spoonful chopped
  
  Mushrooms.
  1 oz. Butter.
  Browned Crumbs.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Butter a gratin dish rather thickly
  with some of the butter, and sprinkle over the
  foot half the parsley and half the muslirooms.
  Have the herring nicely cleaned and trimmed,
  remove the heads, and score the skin across in
  several places. Lay the fish in the dish, season
  them well, and sprinkle with the remainder
  of the parsley and muslirooms. Cover with
  browned bread-crumbs, and put the rest of
  the butter in small pieces on the top. Bake in
  a moderate oven about twenty minutes, and
  .serve with mustard sauce (if Ukod) in a sauce-
  boat.
  
  
  Pickled Herring
  
  (Fr. Harengs Marines)
  Required -
  
  3 or 4 Herring.
  1 table-spoonful Flour,
  i tea-spoonful powdered
  Mace.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  4 or 5 Cloves.
  
  12 Peppercorns.
  
  Brown Vinegar and Water.
  
  
  Method. - Wash and clean the herring, cutting
  off the heads and the fins, and scraping the
  skin well with a knife. Dry them in a cloth,
  and then spUt them open, and remove all the
  bones. Cut each herring in two lengthwaj'S.
  Put the flour, pepper, salt, and mace on to a
  plate, and mix them well together. Dip each
  piece of herring into this, and roll them up from
  the tliick end towards the tail. Pack them into a
  greased pie -dish, putting them in two layers if
  necessary. Pour round them in equal quantities
  water and brown vinegar, enough to half fill
  the dish. Put in the cloves and peppercorns.
  A bay leaf may also be added. Place small
  pieces of dripping here and there over the top,
  and bake in a moderate oven for one hour.
  Set aside till cold. Serve as many pieces of
  fish as will be required at one time on a clean
  dish, pour a httle of the hquid round them,
  and garnish with parsley. Herring done in
  this way will keep for several days. More
  xanegar should be added if required. Do not
  let the fish become too dry.
  
  Note. - Mackerel may be prepai'ed in the
  same way.
  
  Lobster Cutlets
  (Ft. Cotelettes de Homard)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 table-spoonftil Cream.
  
  A sijueeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  Spawn or CoraL
  
  \ oz. Butter.
  
  Egg and Bread-cnimbs.
  
  
  1 Hen Lobster.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  li oz. Flour.
  
  1 gill "Water }- Panada.
  
  or Fish
  
  Stock.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Remove all the flesh from a boiled
  lobster, and chop it very finely, carefully keep-
  ing back any little pieces of shell. Pound some
  spawn or coral in a mortar with the half ounce
  of butter, and rub it tlirough a hair sieve. Tlus
  is called lobstor butter.
  
  Make a panada by putting the butter and
  water or stock into a saucepan, and when they
  boil, stirring in the flour. Mix well with a
  wooden spoon vmtil perfectly smooth and well
  cooked. Tlien add the lobster, the lobster
  butter, cream, and seasonings. Jlix well
  together, and turn out on a plate to cool.
  ^Vhen cold and firm, form the mixtiu-e into
  small cutlet-shaped pieces, using a little flour
  to enable you to shape them more easily. Then
  egg and bread-crumb thorn and fry in hot fat
  to a golden brown. Drain well on kitchen
  
  
  138
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  paper, and stick a small piece of the feeler or a
  piece of parsley stalk into the narrow end of
  each to represent a bone. Dish in a circle on a
  hot dish with a dish paper iinder them, and
  garnish with fried parsley.
  
  Note. - Crab Cutlets may be made in the
  same way.
  
  Mussels a la Poulette
  {Fr. Moules a la Poulette)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 quart Mussels.
  
  1 Onion.
  
  A few sprigs of Parsley.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  I pint ^^'hite Wine.
  
  
  i oz. Butter.
  
  i oz. Flour.
  
  1 dessert-spoonful chopped
  
  Parsley.
  1 yolk of Egg.
  
  
  Method. - Choose small mussels ; they are
  the most deUcate. Scrape the shells carefully
  with a knife, and wash weU in cold water,
  changing the water several times until the
  mussels are quite free from grit. Put the
  mussels into a saut4 pan or shallow stewpan,
  with the onion thinly sliced, sprigs of peirsley,
  white wine, pepper and salt. Cover the pan,
  put it on the fire, and toss the mussels occa-
  sionally. When the shells open, the mussels
  are done. Drain them, and strain the liquor
  into a basin. Remove the shells from the
  mussels and carefully remove the piece which
  looks like a weed. Melt the butter in the pan,
  add the floiu*, and mix until smooth with a
  wooden spoon. Poiir in the strained liquor,
  and stir until boiling. Add the yolk of egg and
  chopped parsley, and allow the sauce to thicken,
  but do not boil again. Put in the mussels to
  re-heat and serve at once.
  
  Oyster Souffles (Baked)
  {Fr. Petite Souffles d'Huitres)
  Ingredients -
  
  IJ dozen Oysters. 1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 Whiting. 1 oz. Bread-crumbs.
  
  2 Eggs. 1 gill Oyster Liquor, Milk,
  2 table-spoonfuls Cream. or Fish .Stock.
  
  ■\Miite Pepper and Salt. A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  A pinch of Cayenne. A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  Mctlwd. - Put the oysters into a saucepan
  with their liquor, bring to the boil and strain.
  Then remove the gristle, and break them into
  small pieces with a fork. Scrape the flesh from
  the whiting, free it from all skin and bono, and
  pound well in a mortar. Melt the butter in a
  small pan, add the oyster liquor and bread-
  crumbs, and stir over the fire until the mixture
  thickens. Add this panada to the whiting in
  the mortar, pound again for a few minutes,
  and then rub through a fine wire sieve. Put
  the sieved mixture into a basin, and add the
  oysters, yolks of eggs, soeisoning, and cream.
  Mix well. Beat up the whites of eggs to a stiff
  froth on a plate, and stir them lightly into the
  
  
  mixture with an iron spoon. Pour into small
  greased souffl6 case^, cliina or paper, and bake
  in a moderate oven for about fifteen minutes,
  until well risen and firm to the touch. When
  ready, garnish with sprigs of parsley, and serve
  quickly.
  
  
  Perch (To Stew with Wine)
  
  {Fr. Perche au Via Blanc)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3 or 4 Perch.
  
  WTjite Stock and Sherry.
  
  2 Bay Leares.
  
  A few Parsley Stalks.
  
  1 small Onion.
  
  2 or 3 Cloves.
  
  
  I 1 oz. Butter.
  1 oz. Flour.
  1 tea-spoonful
  
  Essence.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Aachovy
  
  
  Method. - ^Wash and clean the fish thorouglily,
  scrape well to remove the scales, and cut off
  the fins. Lay the perch in a stewpan with
  equal quantities of sherry and stock to cover
  them. Add the bay leaves, cloves, parsley
  stalks, and onion thinly sUced. Season with
  pepper and salt, put the lid on the pan, and
  stew slowly until tender, about twenty minutes.
  When ready, lift the fish carefully on to a hot
  dish, and strain the hquid into a basin. Put
  the butter into the pan, and let it melt over the
  fire. Add the flour, and mix with a wooden
  spoon until smooth. Then pour in the strained
  liquor, add the anchovy essence, and stir over
  the fire until boiling. The sauce must be of a
  consistency to coat the fish. If too thin, allow
  it to reduce for a few minutes ; if too thick,
  add more stock or sherry. Pour this over the
  fish, and serve hot.
  
  Note. - Perch may also be boiled or fried.
  
  
  Red Mullets au Gratin
  (Ft. Rougets au Gratin)
  Ingredients -
  
  2 Red Mullete.
  i glass of Sherry.
  1 tea-spoonful Ketchup.
  1 tea-si)oonful Anchovy
  
  Essence.
  
  3 or 4 Button Mushrooms.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  chopped
  
  
  1 tea-spoonful
  
  Parsley.
  } tea-sp. chopped Union.
  Orated rind of | a Lemon.
  1 table-spoonful browned
  
  Bread-crumbs.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Wash and clean the mullets, cutting
  off the heads and fins, and dry them in a cloth.
  Greeise a gratin dish with some of the butter,
  and sprinkle over it half the chopped parsley,
  mushrooms, and onion, and a little grated lemon
  rind. Score the fish across once or twice with
  a knife, and lay them on the top. Sprinkle
  with popper and salt and the remainder of the
  chopped ingredients. Pour over the wine,
  ketchup, and anchovy sauce, and cover with
  browned bread-crumbs. Put the rest of the
  butter in small pieces on the top, and bake in a
  moderate oven about twenty minutes. Wipe
  the dish, and garnish with parsley before serving.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKEKY
  
  
  139
  
  
  Russian Fish Pie
  {Fr. Pat^ de Poisaon a la Russe)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  J lb. White Fish.
  
  1 tea-spoonful chopped
  
  Parsley.
  1 hard-boiled Egg.
  Vhite Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  1 table-sp. White Sauce.
  
  A little grated Lemon Rind
  
  and Lemon Juice.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  Kough Puff Pastry.
  
  
  Method. - The fish for this pie may either be
  cooked or uncooked according to the kind used.
  Cod, halibut, or turbot would require to be
  cooked first, but such fish as haddock, sole, or
  whiting may be used raw. Break or cut the
  fish into small neat pieces and put them on
  a plate. Seeison with pepper, salt, cayenne,
  grated lernon rind and lemon juice. Add the
  white sauce and hard-boiled egg cut in small
  pieces and mix all carefully together.
  
  Make the proportion of pastry with ^ lb. of flour
  (see p. 164), and roll it out to a square shape and
  about one-tighth of an inch in thickness. Trim
  the edges with a sharp knife, reserving the scraps
  for decorating the pie. Put the fish mixture in
  the centre of the square, wet the corners of the
  pastry with cold water or beaten egg and fold
  them upwards, making them meet and overlap
  slightly in the centre Uke a handkerchief sachet.
  Press the joins well together and brush the pie
  over with beaten egg. Decorate the top with
  some leaves cut out of the scraps of pastry
  that were trimmed off. Brush over the leaves
  also with beaten egg and lift the pie very care-
  fully on to a greased baking-tin. Bake in a
  good oven from three-quarters to one hoiu",
  until the pastry is thoroughly cooked and of a
  brown colour. Serve h >t garnished with parsley.
  
  Notes. - Cooked salmon may be used for this
  pie.
  
  Sometimes a little cooked rice is mixed with
  the fish.
  
  A few oysters or picked shrimps may be added.
  
  Salmon (Mayonnaise of)
  
  {Fr. Mayonnaise de Saumon)
  Required - Decorations -
  
  A middle cut of Salmon. Lobster, Coral, TruflBe,
  
  Mayonnaise Sauce. Parsley, Lettuce, Endive,
  
  Aspic Jelly. or Cucumber.
  
  Method. - Boil a nice cut of salmon, remove
  the skin, and let it become cold. Put it on to
  a clean dish, and coat with thick Mayonnaise
  sauce, to which liquid aspic heis been added in the
  proportion of half gill to half pint of sauce. Use
  the sauce in a setting condition, covering the
  fish all over, and then set aside until filrm.
  Garnish with anytlung suitable, such as lobster,
  coral, truffle, parsley, lettuce, endive, cucum-
  ber, &c. A border of chopped aspic will make
  a pretty finish to the dish.
  
  Notes. - ^Remains of cold salmon may be used
  for this dish. The fish ought to be flaked, piled
  liigh on a dish, and then coated with sauce.
  
  
  Potted Salmon
  
  
  Ingredients -
  \ lb. cooked Salmon.
  2 oE. Butter.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Anchovy or
  Shrimp Essence.
  
  
  J tea-spoonful Vinegar.
  Pepper and Salt.
  A pinch of powdered Mace.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  
  Method. - Free the salmon from all skin and
  bone, and then weigh it. Put it into a mortar
  with most of the butter melted, and season to
  taste and rather highly. Pound well until
  smooth, and then rub through a sieve. Pack
  this smoothly into a small pot or jar, and run
  the rest of the butter over the top, which will
  preserve the mixt\u-e and prevent it from be-
  coming dry. This makes dehghtful sandwiches,
  when a little thinly sliced cucumber or small
  cress would be an improvement.
  
  Note. - Other fish, such as cod, halibut, brill,
  or mackerel, may be used in the same way.
  
  
  Required -
  i dozen Scallops.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Fried Scallops
  {Fr. Coquilles Frits)
  
  
  A little Flour.
  
  Egg and Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the scallops and cut them in
  two pieces. Dry them with a httle flour and
  then coat with egg and bread-crumbs. Fry a
  nice brown colour in boiling fat, drain and serve
  garnished with cut lemon and parsley.
  
  
  Scalloped Scallops
  
  
  Required -
  
  Scallops.
  Pepper and Salt.
  Lemon Juice.
  
  
  WTiite Bread-crumbs.
  A little chopped Parsley.
  Butter.
  
  
  Method. - Choose perfectly fresh scallops, open
  and remove them from the shells. Cut off the
  beards and black part, and wash them thoroughly.
  Wash and scrub the deeper shells and dry them.
  Grease them with butter, and sprinkle a few
  white bread-crumbs over. Lay three scallops
  into each shell, and season them with pepper,
  salt, lemon juice, and a little chopped parslej'.
  Cover with more bread-crumbs, and put some
  small pieces of butter on the top. Brown
  quickly in a hot oven or before the fire. Serve
  on a hot dish \%-ith a dish paper under them,
  and garnish %vith cut lemon and parsley.
  
  Shrimp Patties
  
  {Fr. Petits PAtes de Crevettes)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  J lb. picked Shrimps.
  2 table-sp. WTiite Sauce.
  
  1 tea-sp. Shrimp Essence.
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Cream.
  
  Method. - Heat the sauce, add the shrimps
  and seasoning and mix well. Poiu* in the cream
  and make thoroughly hot before using.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt
  
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  Rough Puff or Puff Pastry.
  
  
  uo
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  To niake the Patties. - ilake the pastry cases
  according to directions given on p. 165 (first
  or second method), and fill thorn witli the
  shrimp mixture. Put on the lids of pastry and
  garnish with sprigs of parsley. Serve on a
  liot dish with a d'oyley or dish-paper under
  them.
  
  Note. - Lobster or Oyster Patties can be made
  in the same way, using small pieces of cooked
  lobster or oysters instead of the shrimps.
  
  The wliite sauce shovdd be made, if possible,
  with fisli Steele.
  
  
  Sole a la Bechamel
  {Fr. Sole a la Bechamel)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 Sole.
  
  J 02. Butter.
  
  i oz. Flour.
  
  il gills Fish Stock.
  
  
  1 table-spoonful Cream.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  Decoration.
  
  
  Method. - Prepare and cook in the same way
  as Sole au Parniesan (see below), omitting the
  cheese and adding a little cream to the sauce.
  Decorate with chopped parsley, chopped truffle,
  hard-boiled and sieved yolk of egg or lobster
  coral, or alternate strips of each.
  
  Sole au Gratin
  
  (Ft. Sole au Gratin)
  
  Prepare and cook in the same way as red
  mullets au gratin.
  
  Fillets of Sole au Parmesan
  
  {Fr. Filets de Sole au Parmesan)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 Sole.
  
  2 oz. grated Parmesan.
  Pepper and Salt
  
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  
  J oz. Butter.
  
  J oz. Flour.
  
  li gills Fish Stock.
  
  A little Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Method. - Skin and fillet the fish. Wash the
  trimmings and bones, and put them into a
  saucepan with one gill of water and one gill of
  milk, a small piece of onion, a bay leaf, a blade
  of mace, and some parsley stalks. Simmer
  slowly for fifteen minutes, and strain this stock
  
  
  ready for use. Trim the fillets neatly, and lay
  them on a board v^-ith the side from which the
  skin was taken uppermost. Season with popper,
  salt, and a squeeze of lemon juice. Double
  each fillet over lengthways, place them on a
  greased baking-tin, cover with greased paper,
  and bake from ten to fifteen minutes. Make
  a sauce with the butter, flour, and stock and
  season with pepper, salt, and caj'enne. The
  sauce must be thick enough to coat the fish.
  Add most of the cheese to the sauce, but do not
  boil again. Dish the fillets on a hot dish, one
  leaning against the other ; povir the sauce over,
  and sprinkle the rest of the cheese on the top.
  Brown in the oven and serve hot.
  
  Note. - Fillets of any other white fish may be
  prepared in the same way.
  
  
  Whitebait (to Fry)
  
  (Fr. Blanchailles)
  
  
  Required -
  
  
  Whitebait
  
  
  Flour
  
  
  Method. - ^These fish must be perfectly fresh,
  and should be carefully looked over and put
  into water with a lump of ice in it, and kept
  there until required. Have ready on the fire a
  saucepan of boiling fat or oil (see French Frying,
  p. 130). Put two or three table -spoonfuls of
  flour on the centre of a clean cloth, di'ain some
  of the wliitebait free from water in a colander,
  and then shake them lightly in the flour.
  Empty the bait without delay into a frying
  basket, and shake well to let the loose floiir drop
  out. Plunge it into hot fat and let the fish fry
  for a minute or two. Then lift out the basket
  of fish and lot the fat re-heat ; put in the fish
  a second time and fry till crisp and lightly
  browned. If there is a quantity of whitebait
  to be cooked it is a good plan to fry it all the
  first time and lot it drain, and give it the second
  frying just when it is required. Serve garnished
  with quarters of lemon and fried parsley, and
  hand brown bread and butter separately.
  
  Note. - Devilled Whitebait is prepared by
  sprinkling the fish ^vith black or red pepper
  b<3fore the final frying.
  
  
  SAUCES- SAVOURY AND SWEET
  
  
  General Notes on Sauce-malcing. - Sauces are
  easily made if the rules for making them are
  closely followed and the various ingredients
  carefully measured to the exact quantities given
  in the recipes.
  
  The basis of most sauces is butter and flour
  cooked together, which makes a thickening. This
  thickening is frequently called a " roux." If for
  a white sauce, the flour and butter are not
  
  
  coloured ; if for a brown, the butter is first allowed
  to take colour and then the flour is cooked until
  brown. To this thickening is added the liquid
  and seasoning suitable to the dish with which
  the sauce has to be served. After the liquid is
  poured on to the thickening the sauce must be
  stirred constantly until boiling or it will be
  lumpy. Sauces frequently have a raw taste
  owing to the flour in them not being properly
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  141
  
  
  cooked. No sauce is ready as soon as it
  thickens ; it must boil at least three minutes.
  The thickness of the sauce can be regulated
  according to the purpose for wliich it is to be
  used by adding more or less liquid.
  
  When wine is required allow the sauce to boil
  for two or three minutes after it has been added
  in order to blend the flavour. If cream is added
  let it boil in the sauce for a minute or two. Be-
  fore adding yolks of eggs to a sauce, draw the
  saucepan to the side of the fire and drop them
  in one at a time, stirring briskly, and do not boil
  again. When lemon juice is added to any sauce
  containing milk or cream, add it last of all, and
  do not boil again. Strain aU sauces before \ising
  except those which have a chopped ingredient
  served in them such as caper, parsley, egg
  sauce, &c.
  
  The best sauces are usually rubbed through a
  hair sieve or wrung through a tammy-cloth, to
  make them perfectly smooth and velvety in
  appearance. The washing of the tammy-cloth
  must be carefully attended to, or it is apt to
  give the sauce an unpleasant flavour.
  
  To Keep Sauces Warm. - Stand the saucepan
  containing them inside another pan of hot water
  and cover the sauce with a Ud to prevent a skin
  forming on the top. With very thick sauces a
  little water may be run over the top.
  
  
  Sauce AUemande
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 pint Velout^
  (p. 146).
  
  
  Sauce
  
  
  3 yolks of Eggs.
  J oz. Butter.
  
  
  Method. - Put the velout^ sauce into a sauce-
  pan, and let it boil nntil reduced one-foiu'th.
  Then di'aw the pan to the side of the fire, and
  add the yolks of eggs and butter. Stir briskly,
  and cook for a minute or two over a slow fire.
  Do not boil again, or the sauce wiU curdle.
  Strain tlirough a fine strainer or tammy before
  using.
  
  Anchovy Sauce
  
  {Fr. Bemre d'Anchois)
  
  
  1 dessert-spoonful Anchovy
  
  Essence.
  White Pepper and Salt to
  
  taste.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J oz. Butter.
  
  \ oz. Flour.
  
  i pint Fish Stock or 1 gill
  
  of Milk and 1 gill of
  
  Water.
  
  Method. - Melt the but<.er in a small lined
  saucepan, add the flour, and mix smoothly with
  a wooden spoon. Cook for a minute or two over
  the firo without discolouring, and then draw the
  pan to tho side before adding the liqiiid. Fish
  stock will give tho sauce a better flavour ; but if
  that is not to be had, use milk and water. Add
  the liquid gradually, then return the pan to the
  fire, and keep stirring constantly until boiling.
  Add the anchovy essence, and season to taste
  with white pepper and salt.
  
  Note, - Preserved anchovies may be used
  
  
  instead of the anchovy essence. Three or four
  will be required for the above quantity of sauce.
  Lift them out of the oil in which they are pre-
  served, dip them for a minute into warm water,
  and then scrape o2 the silver skin. Pound
  them in a mortar, and rub through a wire or hair
  sieve. Scrape the sieve well underneath, and
  add this paste to the sauce.
  
  Apple Sauce
  
  [Fr. Sauce aux Pommas)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  3 or 4 Apples.
  
  J oz. Butter.
  
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  
  i gill of Water.
  1 table-spoonful
  Sugar.
  
  
  Brown
  
  
  White Pepper and Salt
  
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the apples with a cloth, then
  peel, core and sUce them thinly. Put them into a
  lined saucepan with the water, sugar and nutmeg.
  Let them stew slowly until reduced to a pulp
  and stir frequently with a wooden spoon. Add
  the butter and mash them until smooth or rub
  through a hair sieve. Make thoroughly hot
  before serving.
  
  Bechamel Sauce
  {Fr. Sauce Bechamel)
  Irigredients -
  li oz. Butter.
  IJ oz. Flour.
  
  1 pint Seasoned Milk.
  J gill Cream.
  
  Method. - Melt the butter in a lined saucepan,
  add tho floor, and mis smoothly with a wooden
  spoon. Cook for a minute or two over the fire,
  but do not brown. Di'aw the saucepan to one
  side of the fire, and add the milk all at once.
  Return to the fire, and stir constantly xmtil
  boiling. Add the cream and seasoning, and
  cook for a minute or two longer. Remove the
  saucepan from the fire before adding the lemon
  juice, and strain before using.
  
  Note. - Seasoned Milk - (1) Put as much milk
  as is required into a lined saucepan, with a small
  piece of carrot, turnip, onion, and celery, a bay
  leaf, one or two cloves, and a few parsley stalks.
  Let the saucepan stand by the side of the fire
  until the milk is well seasoned, then strain and
  cool before using.
  
  (2) More or less milk may be added, according
  to the thickness of the sauce required. If con-
  sidered too rich, the cream may be omitted.
  
  (3) If used for masking meat, this sauce must
  have two or three leaves of gelatine or somo
  aspic jelly added to it.
  
  Black Butter
  {Fr. Beurre Noir)
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  1 table-spoonful Vinegar.
  
  Method. - Melt the butt"r in a small saucepan,
  and stir it briskly until it becomes quite brown.
  
  
  1 dessert-sp. Minced Parsley.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  142
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  but not burnt. Mince the parsley rather |
  coarsely, throw it in, and add the v-inegar and
  seaisoning. Simmer a minute or two and the
  sauce will be ready for serving.
  
  Black butter is frequently served with fish.
  
  
  (Fr.
  Ingredients -
  
  i pint Milk.
  
  2 oz. Bread-crumbs.
  } amall Otiion.
  
  3 or 4 Cloves.
  
  
  Bread Sauce
  Sauce au Pain)
  
  
  J oz. of Butter or
  1 table-spoonful Cream.
  ■\Miite Pepper and Salt.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  
  Method. - Rinse out a small lined saucepan with
  cold water and put into it the milk and the piece
  of onion stuck with cloves. Set this by the side
  of the fire and simmer very gently until the milk
  is well flavoured. Then remove the onion and
  cloves and eidd the bread-crumbs, which must
  be finely made by being rubbed through a wire
  sieve. Stir over the fire and cook slowly until
  the bread-crumbs swell and thicken the sauce.
  Add the butter or cream and season to taste
  with white pepper, salt, and a pinch of cayenne.
  
  Brown Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce Espagnole)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 02. Butter.
  
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  1 pint Brown Stock.
  
  1 small Onion.
  
  A small piece of Carrot and
  
  Turnip.
  1 stick of Celery or J teasp.
  
  Celery Seed.
  
  
  1 dessert-sp. Ketchup.
  1 tea-sp. Harvey's Sauce.
  A small sprig of Thyme,
  
  Parsley, and Marjoram.
  1 Bay Leaf.
  1 blade of Mace.
  3 or 4 Cloves.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Melt the butter in a small stewpan,
  and let it brown. Add the onion, skinned
  and cut, in thin sUcos, and stir until it is
  brown. Add the flour, and brown it also.
  Then draw the stewpan to one side, pour in
  the stock, and stir over the fire until boiling.
  Boil for a few minutes, and remove all scum with
  an iron spoon. Have the other vegetables pre-
  pared and cut small, and add them next with the
  sesisonings. If celery seed is used, tie it in a piece
  of muslin. Simmer the sauce slowly for at least
  half -an -hour, stirring occasionally, and skimming
  when neoessarj'. Strain through a fine strainer
  or tammy-cloth, and ro-heat before using.
  
  Note. - If the stock used is well flavoured,
  some of the seasonings and vegetables may be
  omitted-
  
  A few chopped mushrooms and a sliced
  tomato may be added if wished, also a little
  wine.
  
  Tliis sauce is the foundation for many other
  brown sauces, as for instance : -
  
  Sauce aux Olfves. - Cook one dozen or more
  turned olives in a glass of sherry and add half
  pint brown sauce.
  
  Sauce Mad^re. - Add one glass Madeira and
  
  
  one tea-spoonful lemon juice to half pint of
  brown sauce.
  
  Sauce Piquante. - Cook one table-spoonful
  chopped capers, one tea-spoonful chopped
  shallot, one table-spoonful chopped gherkin,
  in lialf gill %'inegar, add half pint of brown sa\ice
  and just before serving one dessert-spoonful
  chopped parsley.
  
  Caper Sauce
  
  Sauce aux Capres)
  
  
  1 table-spoonful Capers.
  1 table-spoonful Vinegar.
  White Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  {Fr.
  Ingredients -
  
  3 oz. Butter,
  i oz. Flour.
  
  J pint Fish Stock or Meat
  Boilings.
  
  Method. - Melt the butter in a small lined
  saucepan, being careful it does not brown. Add
  the flour, and mix until smooth with a wooden
  spoon. Cook a minute or two, then draw the
  pan to the side of the fire, and pour in the liquid.
  Return to the fire, and stir constantly until
  boiUng. Add the capers, roughly chopped, and
  season to taste with white pepper and salt. Boil
  two or three minutes longer, and add the vinegs*
  last.
  
  Celery Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce C6\6n)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  3 gills White Stock or Milk.
  
  
  1 head of Celery.
  White Pepper and Salt.
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Cream.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the celery, cut it in shreds, and
  stow it slowly in the stock or milk until tender.
  Then rub as much as possible through a hair or
  fine wire sieve. Melt the butter in a saucepan,
  add the flour and cook two or three minutes.
  Poizr in the celery puree and stir until boiling.
  Add seasoning to taste and the cream at the
  last.
  
  Chaudfrold Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce Chaudfroid)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  } pint Bechamel or Velout6 I 2 or 3 table-spoonfuK liquid
  Sauce (see Kecipes). I Aspic,
  
  Method. - Add the aspic to the sauce, boil for
  a few minutes, and strain or tammy before
  using.
  
  Note. - This sauce is used for coating large or
  small joints of meat, and care should be taken
  to get it of the right consistency. If too thin,
  it will not look well ; and if too thick, it will
  have a lumpy appearance.
  
  If aspic is not to be had, dissolve two sheets of
  gelatine in a little water or stock, and strain it
  into the sauce.
  
  Brown Chaudfrold Sauce can be made in the
  same way, substituting brown sauce for the
  white and adding about a quarter of an ounce
  meat glaze.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  143
  
  
  Chestnut Sauce (White)
  {Fr. Sauce aux Marrons)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  i lb. Chestnuts.
  
  3 gills White Stoclc
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Cream.
  
  
  Kind of J Lemon.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Remove the brown outside skin
  from the chestnuts, and throw them into a sauce-
  pan of boiling water. Boil for a few minutes,
  then drain and peel off the inside skin. Put
  them back into the saucepan with the stock and
  thinly peeled rind of half lemon, and simmer
  slowly for one hour or longer until the chestnuts
  are quite soft and pulpy. Rub them and the
  stock through a hair sieve with a wooden spoon,
  and return again to the saucepan. Add the
  cream, season to taste, and stir until boiling.
  Serve very hot.
  
  Note. - Brown chestnut sauce may be made by
  using half a pint of brown sauce and one gill of
  brown stock instead of the white stock and
  cream.
  
  Cranberry Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce aux Canneberges)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Cranberries. i 1 teacupful Water,
  
  i oz. Brown Sugar. I
  
  Method. - Pick and wash the cranberries and
  stew them slowly with the water until reduced
  to a pulp. Stir them frequently while cooking
  and add the sugar at the last. Sometimes a
  little port wine is added before serving.
  
  Curry Sauce
  {Fr. Sauce Carl)
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  
  J oz. Rice Flour.
  
  3 gills of Stock.
  
  1 Onion.
  
  1 lump of Sugar.
  
  
  1 tea-sp. Curry Powder.
  
  1 tea-sp. Chutney.
  
  1 small Apple.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Method. - Peel and chop the apple, and skin
  and slice the onion very thinly. Melt the butter
  or dripping in a small stewpan, put in the apple
  and onion, and fry them for a few minutes.
  Next add the curry powder, rice flour, and
  chutney, and mix well together with an iron
  spoon. Add the stock, and stir until boiling.
  Season to taste with pepper and salt, and let the
  sauce simmer for half-an-hour, or until the apple
  and onion are qmte soft. If a smooth sauce is
  wanted, rub through a sieve before using, and
  return to the saucepan to re-heat. Add the
  lemon juice and sugar just before serving, and
  a table-spoonful of cream would be a great
  improvement.
  
  Note. - A stalk of rhubarb, or a few green
  gooseberries, may bo used instead of the apple.
  
  
  1 table-sp. bottled Chutney.
  1 tea-spoonful Mustard.
  1 table-sp. Worcester Sauce,
  1 table-spoonful Marsala.
  
  
  Devilled Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce au Diable)
  Ingredients -
  J pint Brown Stock.
  i oz. Butter.
  i oz. Jblour.
  i tea-sp. Bed-currant Jelly.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Chili Vinegar.
  
  Method. - Melt the butter in a stewpan and
  brown it slightly. Add the flour, and niix until
  smooth. Then draw the stewpan to the side of
  the fire and pour in the stock, stir again over the
  fire until boiling, when the other ingredients may
  be added. (The mustard should be mixed into
  a smooth paste with the Worcester sauce.)
  Cook all slowly from ten to fifteen minutes, and
  strain before using. Add salt if necessary.
  
  Dutch Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce Hollandaise)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. Butter. i A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  1 table-spoonful Vinegar. Salt and Pepper.
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Water. A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  2 yolks of Eggs. 1
  
  Method. - Put the water, vinegar, and yolks of
  eggs into a saucepan, place the pan in another
  saucepan of hot water, and stir over the fiire
  constantly until the sauce thickens. Draw the
  pan to the side of the fire, and add the butter in
  small pieces, letting each piece melt before
  another is added. The sauce must not boil, or
  it will curdlt). Add the lemon juice, and season
  to taste. Tarragon vinegar may be used instead
  of plain, and is preferred by many.
  
  Egg Sauce
  {Fr. Sauce aux CEufs)
  Ingredients -
  5 oz. Butter. 1 hard-boiled Egg.
  
  3 gills Milk or Fish Stock. ^^^lite Pepper.
  J oz. Flour. Salt.
  
  Method. - Make a sauce with the butter, flour,
  and liquid. Chop the hard-boiled egg finely,
  and add it to the sauce, with white pepper and
  salt to taste. Boil two or tliree minutes longer,
  and the sauce is ready.
  
  Note. - A plainer sauce maj' be made by using
  half water and half milk. Sometimes the wliito
  only of the egg is used, and the yolk rubbed
  tlirough a sieve, and used to decorate whatever
  the sauce is poured over.
  
  Gooseberry Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce aux Groseilles)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  J pint Green Gooseberries.
  1 gill ^^^lite Sauce.
  1 dessert-spoonful Sugar.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  J gill of Water.
  
  
  Method. - Top and tail the gooseberries, and
  wash them in cold water. Put them into a stew-
  
  
  144
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  pan with half a gill of cold water, put the lid on
  the pan, and simmer slowly for half-an-hom-, or
  until the gooseberries are quite soft, then rub
  tlirough a hair sieve. Put the white sauce into
  a saucepan, add to it the gooseberry pulp, the
  butter and seasoning, mix well together, and stir
  over the fire until boiling.
  
  NoU!. - Rhubaj-b sauce may be meule in the
  same way.
  
  Horse-Radlsh Sauce
  {Fr. Sauce au Puaifort)
  Ingredienta -
  2 table-spoonfuls grated
  
  Horse-radish.
  2 table-spoonfuls Vinegar.
  
  
  1 tea-sp. Castor Sugar.
  1 tea-sp. made Mustard.
  Tepper and Salt
  
  
  Metlwd. - \Vasli and scrape the horse-radish
  until it is quite white, then grate it on a grater.
  Put it into a basin with the other ingredients,
  and mix well together. A little thick cream
  added is a great improvement. Serve in a
  sauce tureen.
  
  Note. - K this sauce is to be served with hot
  fish or meat, heat by standing the basin con-
  taining it in a saucepan of hot water. Do not
  boil or it will curdle.
  
  
  1 tea-spoouful Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Mattre d'Hotel Butter
  
  Required -
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley. I
  
  Method. - Put all on to a plate, and with a
  knife work them well together, to form a neat
  pat. Stand the plate slightly on end, that the
  lemon juice may run out of the butter again ;
  and set in a cool place or on ice until wanted.
  
  The parsley should be very green and very
  finely chopped to make this butter look well.
  
  Mayonnaise Sauce
  {Fr. Sauco Mayonnaise)
  Ingredienta -
  
  2 yolks of Eggs.
  About 1 gill Salad Oil.
  1 tablesp. White Vinegar.
  1 table-spoonful Tarragon
  
  Vinegar.
  
  
  White Pepper and Salt.
  1 tea-sp. Chili Vinegar.
  \ tea-sp. made !Mustard.
  A pinch of Sugar.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  
  Method. - Take a basin largo enough to hold
  IJ pint (the size of the basin is important), and
  twist round the foot of it a cloth ^vrung out of
  very cold water to keep it steady and cool while
  mixing the sauce. Divide the yolks very care-
  fully from the whites of the egg, and put them
  into the basin with the pepper, salt, mustard,
  and sugar. (The sugar may be omitted if not
  liked.) Mix these well together with a wooden
  spoon or small wire whisk. Cut a small wedge
  fri m the cork of the salad-oil bottle, largo enough
  to allow the oil to come out, drop by drop, when
  it is hold up. Keep stirring the yolks all the
  time with the right hand, and dropping in the
  oil from the bottle with the loft, until the sauce
  is so thick that it is stirred with difficulty. One
  
  
  gill is about the usual quantity required for two
  yolks, but there is no necessity to measure it.
  Next add the vinegars gradually, and mix well.
  
  Notes. - If this sauce is not kept cool, or the
  oil mixed in too quickly, it will cvirdle. It
  cannot bo made in a hurry. If it should curdle,
  the fault 7nay be rem.edied by putting a fresh
  yolk into another basin and adding the sauce
  very slowly to it, stirring all the time. A whiter
  sauce can be made by using lemon juice instead
  of vinegar.
  
  More or less vinegar may be added to the
  sauce according to taste, and according to the
  purpose for which it is to be used.
  
  If used for dressing a salad, it should be
  tliinned down considerably with vinegar. If
  used for coating joints of meat, a little liquid
  aspic is usually added to make it stiffen.
  
  If this sauco has to be kept for several hours
  before using, cover the basin containing it with
  a cloth wrung out of very cold water. This will
  prevent a skin forming on the top. If bottled
  and kept in a cool dark place, it will bo good for
  a week or longer.
  
  Be particular to use good oil. If the taste of
  the oil is not liked, two table -spoonfuls of thick
  whipped cream may be stirred into the sauce
  at the last, which will tone down the taste. Or
  cream may bo used instead of the oil.
  
  Melted Butter
  {Fr. Beurre Fondu)
  
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Ingredients - •
  
  2 oz. Fresh Butter.
  
  Pepper and Salt. |
  
  Method. - Put the butter into a lined sauce-
  pan, and melt it gently over a slow fire. It
  should not lose its creamy appearance. Add
  the lemon juice and a little pepper and salt.
  Serve in a hot tureen.
  
  Mint Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce Menthe)
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  2 table-sp. finely chopped
  
  Mint.
  1 table-sp. Brown Sugar.
  
  
  2 table - spoonfuls boiling
  
  Water.
  1 gill Brown Vinegar.
  
  
  Method. - Put the sugar into a basin or sauce
  tureen, pour over it the boiling water and stand
  until dissolved. Wash the mint, which should
  be young and fresh, pick it from the stalks and
  chop finely. Mix all the ingredients together
  and stand two or three hours before serving.
  
  
  Mushroom Sauce
  Sauce aux Champignons)
  
  
  {Fr
  Ingredienta -
  k pint Brown or Madeira
  Sauce.
  
  
  1 gill tinned Mushrooms..
  1 tea-spoonful Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Metlwd. - Cut the button mu.№hroom in halves,
  and let them boil quickly in a little water for
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  145
  
  
  seven or ten minutes. Then strain and put
  them into half a pint Brown or Madeira sauce.
  Let them continue to simmer in the sauce for ten
  minutes, and add the lemon juice at the last.
  
  Note. - If fresh mushrooms are used they
  should be picked, washed, cut in small pieces,
  and then stewed for a short time in brown stock
  before the sauce is added to them.
  
  White Mushroom Sauce may be made in the
  same way as above, using white sauce instead of
  the brown.
  
  Mustard Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce Moutarde)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 oz. Butter. 1 tea-sp. Chili Vinegar.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Flour. 1 gill Water.
  
  1 tea-spoonful dry Mustard. Salt.
  
  Method. - Melt the butter in a small saucepan
  without discolouring it, add the flour and
  mustard, and mix until smooth with a wooden
  spoon. Poui in the wat/cr, stir until boiling, and
  cook three minutes. Add the vinegar and salt,
  and serve hot.
  
  Onion Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce Soubise)
  Ingredients -
  
  i pint "White or Bechamel I White Pepper and Salt.
  
  Sauce. A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  3 or 4 large Onions. 1
  
  Method. - Skin the onions, put them into a
  saucepan with boiling water and a little salt,
  and boil quickly for one hour, or until tender.
  Then drain toell and chop them finely. Put this
  onion pur6e into a saucepan with the sauce,
  bring to the boil, am/! reduce if necessary.
  Season to taste with white pepper, salt, and a
  pinch of cayenne.
  
  Note. - A smoother sauce may be made by
  rubbing the onions through a sieve after chopp-
  ing. One or two table-spoonfuls of cream are
  an improvement.
  
  Oyster Sauce
  
  (Fr. Sauce aux Huitres)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  i pint Milk or Fish Stock.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  1 dozen Oysters and their
  
  Liquor.
  J gill Cream.
  White Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  A pinch of Cayeune.
  
  Method. - Remove the beard and gristle from
  the oysters. Cut each oyster in two, and scald
  them in their own liquor - ^that is, bring them to
  the boil and strain. (Keep the liquor for flavour-
  ing the sauce.) Put the beards and trimmincs
  of the oysters into a saucepan with the milk,
  and simmer for a few minutes to extract the
  flavour. Tlicn strain the milk and oyster hquor
  through muslin, and keep them for making the
  sauce. The trimmings of the oysters may now
  
  
  be thrown away. Then make a sauce with the
  butter, flour, and strained liquid. Season to
  taste and put in the cream, add the oysters and
  lemon juice last.
  
  Parsley Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce Maitre d'Hdtel)
  Ingredients -
  
  J oz. Butter.
  i oz. Flour.
  
  } pint Fish Stock or Meat
  Boilings.
  
  Method. - Make a sauce with the butter,
  flour, and liquid. Add the parsley, pepper, and
  salt, and boil two or three minutes. Squeeze
  in the lemon jmce just before serving.
  
  
  1 des.-sp. chopped Parsley.
  White Pepper and Salt.
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Poulette Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce Poulette)
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  1 pint Velout6 Sauce. | 1 des.-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  3 or 4 Mushrooms. | 2 or 3 yolks of Eggs.
  
  Method. - Chop the mushrooms, and simmer
  them in the sauce for about fifteen minutes.
  Then draw the saucepan to the side of the fire,
  and add the yolks of eggs and parsley. Cook
  for a minute or two, but do not boil again.
  
  Shrimp Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce aux Crevettes)
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  I oz. Butter.
  
  J oz. Flour.
  
  i pint Milk or Fish Stock.
  
  
  1 gill of picked Shrimps.
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Make a sauce with the butter, flour,
  and fish stock. Pick the slirimps, and add
  them, with white pepper and salt to taste.
  Squeeze in the lemon juice before serving.
  
  Tartare Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce Tartare)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J pint Mayonnaise Sauce.
  
  1 table-sp. chopped Parsley,
  
  
  1 table-sp. chopped Capers.
  1 table-spoonful chopped
  Gherkins.
  
  
  Method. - ^Make the Mayonnaise according to
  directions given for that sauce, and add to it
  the above ingredients.
  
  Tomato Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce aux Tomates)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  } oz. Butter.
  J oz. Rice Flour.
  5 or 6 Tomatoes.
  1 oz. lean Ham.
  J pint Stock.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  A small piece of Carrot,
  Celery, Turnip, Onion.
  
  A sprig of Thyme, Mar-
  joram, and Parsley.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  1 lump of Sugar.
  
  
  Method - Melt the butter in a small stewpan,
  put into it the ham and vegetables cut in small
  
  
  146
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  pieces, and fry them a few minutes. Wipe the
  tomatoes, and cut them in slices on a plate.
  Add them next to the saucepan with the rice
  flour, and mix well. Pour in the stock, and stir
  until boiling. Season to taste ^\'ith pepper and
  salt, and simmer slowly for at least half-an-hour,
  stirring occasionally. If the sauce becomes too
  thick, add more stock. Strain through a fine
  strainer, hair sieve, or tammy, re-heat, and add
  a squeeze of lemon juice and a lump of sugar.
  
  Note. - Tinned tomatoes may be used instead
  of fresh, and these will not require sUcing. If
  the stock is well flavoured, the vegetables may
  be omitted.
  
  Velout6 Saace
  
  (Fr. Sauce Velout^)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 oz. Butter. I A few drops of Lemon Juice.
  
  J oz. Flour. White Pepper and Salt.
  
  J pint White Stock. | A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  Method. - JIake in the same way as wliite
  sauce, using the stock instead of milk.
  
  White Sauce
  
  
  Ingredients -
  J oz. Butter.
  i oz. Flour,
  J pint Milk.
  
  
  {Fr. Sauce Blanche)
  
  
  White Pepper.
  
  Salt.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Method. - Melt the butter in a small lined
  saucepan, add the flour, and mix smoothly with
  a wooden spoon. Cook for a minute or two
  over the fire without discolouring, then draw
  the pan to the side and pour in the milk. Retiu-n
  to the fire, and keep stirring constantly until
  boiling. Boil for two or three minutes so as to
  thoroughly cook the flour, and season to taste
  with white pepper and salt. Remove the pan
  from the fire before adding the lemon juice.
  
  Note. - A plainer sauce can be made by using
  half milk and half water. If required for fish,
  fish stock may bo used instead of milk.
  
  Cornflour is sometimes used instead of flour.
  
  SWEET SAUCES
  
  Apricot Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce a rAbricot)
  Ingredients -
  
  ll gills Apricot Purie. I 1 dessert-spoonful Sugar,
  
  i oz. Arrowroot. ' 2 or 3 drops of Carmine.
  
  J gill Water.
  
  Method. - Make the pur6o from tinned apricots
  by rubbing four or five pieces through a hair
  sieve and making up the quantity with the
  Bvrup. Put this pur(5e into a small lined sauce-
  pan, ewid to it the arrowroot broken with the
  cold water, and stir over the fire until it boils
  and thickens. Add the sugar, flavouring, and
  enough carmine to make it a pretty pink colour.
  Cook two or three minutes longer, and serve.
  
  
  Brandy Sauce (1)
  
  (Fr. Sauce au Cognac)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 oz. Butter. IJ gills Water,
  
  i oz. lloor. i glass Brandy.
  
  1 oz. Sugar.
  
  Method. - Melt the butter in a small lined
  saucepan, add the flour, and mix with a wooden
  spoon until smooth. Draw the pan to one side,
  and pour in the water ; then return to the fire
  and stir constantly until boiling. Add the
  brandy and sugar, and boil a few minutes longer.
  
  Brandy Sauce (2)
  
  
  i glass of Brandy.
  1 oz. Sugar.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 yolks of Eggs.
  
  h gill Cream.
  
  J gill Water. |
  
  Method. - Put all the ingredients into a basin,
  and stand the basin in a saucepan of slowly
  simmering water. Whisk the contents with a
  fork or small wire whisk from six to eight
  minutes until thick and frothy, when the sauce
  will be ready. Do not boil, or it will curdle.
  
  Chocolate Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce au Chocolat)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 gill Milk.
  
  1 oz. Chocolate.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Sugar.
  
  
  1 yolk of Egg.
  
  4 or 5 drops of Vanilla
  Essence.
  
  
  Method. - ^Rinse out a small lined saucepan
  with cold water, and put into it the milk and
  chocolate, either grated or shred down finely
  with a knife. Simmer until quite dissolved.
  Mix the yolk of egg and sugar together in a
  ba.sin, and pour the chocolate gradually on to
  them. Retiu-n to the saucepan, and stir over
  the fire until almost boiling. Remove at once,
  and add the flavouring.
  
  Custard Sauce
  
  {Fr. Creme Cuite)
  Ingredients -
  
  2 yolks of Efrgs. 1 dessert-spoonful Sugar.
  
  1 white of Egg. A few drops of Flavouring.
  
  i pint of Milk.
  
  Method. - ^Rinse out a small lined saucepan
  with cold water, put the milk into it, and let it
  heat over the fire. Put the yollcs and white of
  egg into a beisin with the sugar, and mix them
  well together with a wooden spoon. Then pour
  the hot milk gradually on to them, stirring all
  the time, and mix thoroughly. Return all to
  the saucepan, and stir very carefully over the
  fire until the sauce thickens. On no account
  must it be allowed to boil, or it will curdle.
  Have ready at hand a clean basin and a strainer.
  As soon eis the sauce shows signs of thickening,
  and it is almost boiling, remove the pan from the
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  147
  
  
  fire, continue stirring for a second or two, then
  strain into the basin. Add flavouring to taste.
  To keep the sauce warm, stand the basin con-
  taining it in a saucepan of hot, not boiling water.
  Note. - The sauce may be made richer by
  using more yolks of eggs and no whites.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. Fresh Butter.
  i oz. Castor Sugar.
  2 whites of Eggs.
  
  
  Hard Sauce
  
  
  A few drops of Vanilla or
  1 dessert-spoonful Brandy,
  Sherry, or Liqueur.
  
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  2 or 3 drops of Carmine.
  
  
  Method. - Warm the butter very slightly in a
  basin, but be careful not to oil it. Sieve the
  sugar over it, and beat these two together with
  a wooden spoon until they are -vevy white and
  light. Then add the whites of egg whipped to
  a stiff froth, and beat again for a few minutes.
  Flavour to taste, and set the sauce in a cool
  place or on ice to harden. Serve as cold as
  possible.
  
  Jam Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce au Confiture)
  Ingredients -
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Red Jam.
  1 gill of Water.
  1 oz. Loaf Sugar.
  
  Method. - Put the water, sugar, and jam into a
  small lined saucepan, and let them boil quickly
  for a few minutes, skimming if necessary. Add
  the lemon juice and two or three drops of carmine.
  Strain before using.
  
  Note. - Raspberry or strawberry jam is to be
  preferred for making this sauce.
  
  A little wine may be udded.
  
  Lemon Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce Citron)
  Ingredients -
  
  i oz. Arrowroot IJ gills Water.
  
  Bind and juice of i Lemon. J oz. Butter.
  1 oz. Sugar.
  
  Method. - Wipe the lemon with a damp cloth
  and grate off half the rind on to the top of the
  sugar. Grate very lightly, being most particular
  
  
  not to take any of the white, as it is bitter.
  Work the lemon rind and sugar together until
  they are well blended. Break the arrowroot
  with a little of the water, then add the rest of the
  water, and pour into a saucepan. Stir over the
  fire until boiling, add the lemon sugar, and the
  lemon juice strained, and cook for a few minutes.
  Break the buttc in small pieces, and put it in
  just before serving.
  
  Orange Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce a 1' Orange)
  Ingredients -
  
  J oz. Arrowroot I Juice of 1 Orange.
  
  1 oz. Sugar. J 2 table-spoonfuls Water.
  
  Method. - Squeeze and strain the orange juice
  into a saucepan. Break the arrowroot with the
  water, and add it to the orange juice. Stir these
  over the fire until boihng, then boil for a few
  minutes and add the sugar. If too thick, a
  little more orange juice may be added. Strain
  before using.
  
  Pineapple Sauce
  
  {Fr. Sauce a I'Ananeis)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J gill Pineapple Syrup.
  
  2 oz. Pineapple.
  I oz. Sugar.
  A few drops of Carmine.
  
  Method. - Strain the pineapple syrup into a
  small saucepan, and add all the other ingredients.
  Boil for a, few minutes, and remove any scum
  that rises.
  
  Sweet White Sauce
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Water or
  
  Wine.
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  1 dessert-spoonful of Sugar.
  A little Flavouring.
  
  
  1 oz. Butter,
  i oz. Flour.
  i pint Milk.
  
  Method. - ^Make in the same way as white
  sauce (p. 146), adding sugar instead of pepper
  and salt.
  
  Wine Sauce
  
  Make in the same way as Brandy Sauce, using
  one wine-glassful of sherry instead of brandy.
  
  
  VEGETABLES AND SALADS
  
  
  General Notes on Vegetables
  
  To havi vegetables in perfection they should
  be cooked very soon after they are taken from
  the gi-ound. If freshly gathered out of the
  garden they should be washed just before they
  are cooked, but when bought in the shops, it
  is often necessary to soak them in water for
  some time that they may regain some of their
  original freshness.
  
  
  To secure a good colour and flavour in vege-
  tables when cooked, careful dressing and pre-
  paration beforehand are essential. Earthy
  roots, such as potatoes, turnips, carrots, "&c.,
  must be both well scrubbed and thoroughly
  rinsed in cold water before peeling.
  
  All vegetables, such as cauliflower, cabbage,
  sprouts, &c., which may contain slugs, must
  be soaked in cold water with vinegar in it for
  some time before cooking.
  
  
  148
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Coarse or discoloured leaves and any daxk
  or decayed spots should be removed from all
  vegetables before cooking.
  
  Throw aU vegetables as they are prepared
  into cold water.
  
  To Prepare Vegetables
  
  A Carrot. - Wash in cold water, brushing well
  with a vegetable brush. Then cut oS the top
  and any green part, and with a knife scrape
  the outside lightly until the carrot is quite clean.
  Scrape from the thick end downwards, and do
  not take off any more than is necessary, as the
  best part of the carrot lies on the outside.
  Throw into clean water until required.
  
  A Turnip. - Wash in cold water and brush well
  with a vegetable brush. Then with a knife
  cut off the top, and peel rather thickly, as far
  as a yellow line which will be seen a little way
  in from the skin. The outside of the turnip
  is hard, indigestible, and bitter in flavour.
  Throw into clean water until wanted.
  
  An Onion. - Cut off the root and top, and
  remove all the brown outside skin. If the
  strong flavour is objected to, put the onion into
  a small basin with a pinch of salt, or small piece
  of washing soda. Cover it with boiling water,
  and let it stand for at least five minutes. The
  water in which it soaks turns quite green in
  colour.
  
  Note. - The preparation of other vegetables
  will be described under their special headings.
  
  The Cooking and Serving of Vegetables
  
  As a rule the ordinary cook pays far too little
  attention to this branch of cookery, although,
  thanks to the growing popularity of vegetari-
  anism, more efficiency in this department of the
  culinary art is now demanded.
  
  Vegetables boiled in water {cuit & I'eau), as
  often as not without salt, and served, or rather
  tmnbled, into a vegetable dish without further
  attention would be looked down upon with
  Bcom by the French housewife and reg8U"ded as
  something almost savage.
  
  Take, for example, the potato, which is one of
  our most useful vegetables and without which
  no dinner is thought to be complete- why is it
  that in nine cases out of ten it is the boiled
  potato wo see ? Simply because our cooks do
  not exercise a little ingenuity and seldom care
  to bestow a little extra trouble on so simple a
  dish. In fact the throwing away of cold cooked
  potatoes is one of the commonest forms of waste
  in the kitchens both of the rich and of the poor ;
  and yet the variety of wa5's in which a potato
  can be cooked and a cold one re-cooked are
  almost legion.
  
  The cooking of vegetables requires as much
  care as the cooking of moat or the turning out
  of a pudding, and the simplicity of the opera-
  
  
  tion should not be an excuse for slovenliness;
  a vegetable must be taistefully seasoned, well
  served, and temptingly arranged, with an eye
  to colour. Those little attentions will give a
  special air of finish to the simplest cuisine, and
  a well-prepared vegetable, instead of forming a
  mere adjunct to another dish, can often be served
  Bs a separate course, thus saving a joint or
  avoiding the necessity for another meat dish.
  
  Steaming of Vegetables
  
  This is one of the best and most successful
  ways of cooking vegetables. The old-fashioned
  method of boiling them in a quantity of water
  and then throwing that water
  away h£is much to condemn it,
  as so many of the valuable
  properties are lost in the water.
  
  A steam cooker is a most
  valuable addition to any kitchen
  - there are several different
  makes, and the prices range
  from 5s. upwards, according to
  the number of steamers. Tliey
  axe particularly viseful and
  economical on a gas stove,
  where one light will serve to
  cook meat, fish, one or two
  vegetables, and a pudding if
  necessary. The time for steam-
  ing will depend upon the kind
  of vegetable and also upon
  its freshness. Full instructions
  for use are generally given with
  each kind of steamer. See also under separate
  recipes.
  
  
  Hatchings' Patent
  Cooker.
  
  
  Vegetables Cooked "En Casserole"
  
  This is another excellent method for cooking
  the lighter vegetables, and various recipes are
  
  
  Fireproof Pot.
  
  given to show how a vegetable may be both
  cooked and served up in this clean and useful
  fireproof cooking-pot.
  
  Vegetarianism
  
  It is impossible to deal with vegetarianism
  fully in a book of this kind. The subject is
  one which opens out so many important ques-
  tions that it would require a book itself in order
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  149
  
  
  to do it justice. Suffice it to say, however, that
  it does not do to give up a meat diet suddenly
  and live on vegetables such as one finds in
  the ordinary English cuisine. There must be
  something to take the place of meat if the body
  is to be built up as it ought to be, and any one
  wishing to follow this regime could not do
  better than write to some speciahst such as
  Eustace IMiles, Chandos Street, London, who will
  supply pamphlets and give all particulars about
  a non-meat diet, or to the Reform Food Co.,
  4 Furnival Street, Holbom, London, who will
  also give valuable information about a special
  vegetai'ian diet.
  
  Globe Artichokes (to Boil)
  
  {Fr. Artichauts au Natural)
  
  Cut the stem off even with the leaves, remove
  the haxdest bottom leaves, and cut about an inch
  off the others at the top, thus making an open-
  ing in the centre of the artichoke. Wash the
  artichokes thoroughly, and soak them in cold
  water \rith a few drops of \anegar in it for
  half -an -hour, to draw out any insects. Lift
  them out, rinse in cold water, and place upside
  down in a colander or sieve to drain. Have
  ready on the fire a deep saucepan tliree psirts
  full of boiling water salted in the proportion of
  one dessert-spoonful of salt to one quart of water.
  Put the artichokes into this, and boil quickly
  for half-an-hour or longer. To ascertain when
  they are ready, pierce with a skewer or triissing
  needle, which should enter easily, or try if the
  leaves can easily be removed. Drain well, cut
  them in halves or quarters with a sharp knife,
  remove the hard inside or " choke " with a
  spoon, and dish on a folded napkin.
  
  Different sauces may be served separately,
  ti^ dish taking its name from the sauce, thus : -
  
  
  Served '*h -
  
  
  French
  
  
  llelted Butter- Artichauts au Beurre.
  Bechamel Sauce- Artichauts a la Bechamel.
  Dutch Sauce- Artichauts i la HoUandaise.
  Or cold with Oil and Vinegar- Artichauts a. I'Huile.
  
  Note. - Only the bottom of the artichoke and
  base of the leaves are eatable.
  
  Jerusalem Artichokes with White Sauce
  
  {Fr. Topinambours h la Sauce Blanche)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 to li lbs. Jerusalem Arti- i J pint White Sauce,
  chokes. I
  
  Methol. - First wash and brush the artichokes
  thoroughly, and tlirow them into clean cold
  water. Then peel them carefully with a small
  knife, and as each one is done, tlirow it into
  another basin of fresh cold water with a few
  drops of vinegar or bmon juice to preserve the
  colour. Do not allow the water in which the
  artichokes are being pooled to become too dirty ;
  
  
  change it if necessary. Have ready on the
  fire a Uned or earthenwaie saucepan with just
  sufficient boihng water to cover the artichokes,
  and salted in the proportion of one tea-spoonful
  to one pint of water. Drain the artichokes and
  throw them into this, and cook them gently
  with the Ud on the saucepan from fifteen to
  twenty minutes, or until they can be pierced
  fairly easily with a skewer. Or put them into
  a double cooker and steam them for half-an-
  hour. Strain off the water, pour in the white
  sauce, and finish the cooking over a slow fire.
  A Httle finely-chopped parsley may be added
  at the last, or one or more tablespoonfuls of
  grated Parmesan.
  
  Note. - They can also be served with brown,
  tomato, or HoUandaise sauce.
  
  Asparagus
  
  (Fr. Asperges)
  
  Choose the asparagus with fresh purple points
  and wliite stalks. If the cut end is brown and
  dry and the heads droop, the asparagus is stale.
  It may be kept for a day or two by standing the
  stalks in a jug of cold water, but is better used
  fresh. Cut the asparagus aU one length, scrape
  the white part hghtly with a knife, and wash
  in cold water. Tie with tape into bundles of
  eight or ten, keeping the heads all one way.
  
  
  Asparagus Cooker.
  
  and cook in a steamer over boihng salted water
  until the vegetable is tender, from thirty to forty
  nrunutes. Or what is better still, cook it in an
  asparagus cooker •nliich has an arrangement
  whereby the stalks only are in the water wliile
  the points are cooked by steam. When eis-
  paragus is done, which is ascertained by press-
  ing the points with the fingers, it should be
  taken up at once, else it will become flabby and
  spongy. Drain well and send it to table on a
  folded napkin or in an asptiragus dish.
  
  Asparagus may be served witli many different
  sauces.
  
  Served with - Frcixch
  
  Melted or oiled Butter- Asperges au Beurre.
  White Sauce - Asperges a la Sauce Blanche.
  Dutch Sauce- Asperges Ji la HoUandaise.
  Or cold with Oil and Vinegar- Asperges ii I'HuUe.
  
  
  150
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Beetroot (to Boll)
  {Fr. Botteravos au Naturel)
  Required -
  
  Beetroots. I Salt.
  
  Boiling Water. I
  
  Method. - Wash tho beetroots very gently and
  carefully. On no account must the skin be
  broken, or tho juice will run out, and the colour
  of the beetroots be spoilt. Put them into a
  saucepan of boiling water large enough to hold
  them without breaking. Add salt in the pro-
  portion of one dessert-spoonful to one quart,
  and boil gently with the lid on the pan. Tliey
  will take from two to three hours to cook, accord-
  ing to age and size. To test them, hft them
  out of the water, and press them with the finger ;
  they should feel rather soft. Never pierce a
  beetroot with a fork. When ready, drain, and
  put them on a plate. If to be served hot, peel
  them quickly, cut in thin slices, and arrange
  these in a hot vegetable dish, and pour white
  or any other suitable sauce over. Small beet-
  roots may be served whole.
  
  Broad or Windsor Beans (to Boil)
  
  (Fr. Feves)
  
  Beans to be nice must be young and freshly
  gathered. They should not be shelled until
  about to be cooked. After shelling, wash and
  drain them. If old, the skins should also be
  removed before cooking. To do this, put the
  beans into a basin with boiUng water to cover
  them, stand for a few minutes, then drain, and
  remove the skins. Throw into a saucepan of
  fast-boiling water, salted in the proportion of
  one dessert-spoonful to a quart, and boil rapidly
  until tender. They will take from fifteen
  minutes to half-an-hour, according to age and
  size. Any scum rising on the water must be
  removed. When ready, drain in a colander,
  return the beans to the pan with a small piece
  of butter, season with pepper and salt, and shake
  over the fire for a few minutes. Beans are
  frequently served as an accompaniment to
  boiled bacon, but should always be cooked
  separately.
  
  Broad Beans k la Poulette
  
  (Fr. Feves a la Poulette)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 pint Shelled Beans.
  1 gill White Stock.
  Pepper and Salt.
  A pinch of .Sugar.
  i oz. Butter.
  
  Method. - Prepare tho beans (removing the
  skins), boil until tender and drain well in a
  colander. Melt tho butter in a small stowpan,
  add the flour, and stir over the fire for two
  or three minutes ; then povir in the stock.
  
  
  J oz. Flour.
  
  1 gill of Cream.
  
  1 yolk of EKg.
  
  \ tea-spoonful Mixed Herbs.
  
  
  and stir until boiling. Put in the beans,
  season with pepper, salt, and tho herbs very
  finely powdered. Simmer five or ten minutes,
  then draw the pan to the side of tho fire ; add
  the yolk of egg and cream, stir and make
  thoroughly hot, but do not boil again. Sorvљ
  at once in a hot vegetable dish.
  
  Brussels Sprouts
  (Fr. Choux de Biuxelleb au Bourre)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Brussels Sprouts.
  Boiling Water.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the Brussels sprouts carefully,
  and trim them, cutting away any outside dis-
  coloured leaves. Make a sUt across the stalk
  of each to allow them to cook more easily,
  and as they axe prepared, throw them into a
  basin of clean cold water with one tea-spoonful
  of vinegar added, to draw out any insects.
  Let them soak in this from twenty to thirty
  minutes, then rinse and drain in a colander.
  Cook them in a perforated steamer (see p. 148)
  until quite tender, about half-an-hoiu*. Test
  them by trying if they can easily be pierced
  with a fork, and do not overcook them. When
  ready, drain well. Melt the butter in the pan,
  toss the sprouts in this, sprinkling them with
  pepper and salt, and serve very hot. Sometimes
  a little cream is added.
  
  
  Carrots ^ la Flamande
  
  (Fr. Garottes a la Flamande)
  Ingredients -
  
  J gill Cream.
  1 yolk of Egg.
  \ tea-spoonful
  
  Parsley.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  chopped
  
  
  6 or 8 young Carrots.
  
  Boiling Water.
  
  Salt.
  
  i gill Water.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  Method. - Wash and scrape the carrots very
  lightly, cutting off the green tops. Put them
  into an earthenware casserole with boiling water
  to cover them and salted in the proport-'on of
  one dessert-spoonful to one quart ; boil ten
  minutes, and strain. Then cut the carrots into
  thin slices, and return them to the casserole
  with the butter, half gill of water, pepper, and
  salt. Put on the Ud, and simmer for twenty
  minutes. When the carrots are tender, add the
  yolk of egg and cream, beaten together, and
  the chopped parsley ; stir carefully over the
  fire until thick, but do not boil. Serve hot
  en casserole.
  
  Cabbages with Butter
  
  (Fr. Choux au Bourre)
  
  Take one or two young cabbages and trim
  them carefully, removing the outside leaves and
  any discoloured parts. Cut in three or four
  pieces according to size and wash in plenty of
  cold water. Then soak in cold water with a
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  151
  
  
  few drops of vinegar to draw out any slugs,
  and rinse again in fresh cold water. Place the
  prepared cabbage in a steamer, sprinkle with
  salt and st"am from three-quarters to one hour,
  or until tender. Score across with a knife and
  serve in a hot dish with a good pat of salt butter
  on the top.
  
  Cauliflower with White Sauce
  
  (Fr. Choufleur a la Sauce Blanche)
  Required -
  
  1 Cauliflower. I Salt.
  
  Boiling Water. I White Sauce.
  
  Method. - Select a fresh cauliflower with firm,
  close head. Trim off the thick part of the stalk,
  and nearly all the leaves, only leaving on a
  few of the smaller ones to protect the flower.
  Make a cut across the stalk in both directions
  so that it may cook more easily. Wash the
  cauliflower in plentj' of cold water, and then
  let it lie ioi half-pn-hour in fresh cold water,
  to which one tea-spoonful of vinegar has been
  added, to draw out any insects. Cook it in a
  steamer until the flower feels tender but not
  broken from thirty to forty minutes. When
  ready, lift it out, drain for a minute or two,
  and serve in a hot vegetable dish with white or
  any other suitable sauce poured over it.
  
  Cauliflower with Cheese
  
  {Fr. Choufleur au Fromage)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 Cauliflower. I 1 gill of Water.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  1 oz. Flour.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  Method. - Prepare and cook the cauliflower
  as above, drain and break it up into small,
  neat pieces. jNIake a sauce with the butter,
  flour and water, adding the cream, seasoning
  and rather more than half the cheese. Butter
  a fireproof fancy dish, and arrange in it the
  cauliflower and sauce in alternate layers.
  Sprinkle the remainder of the cheese over the
  top, pour a little melted butter over and place
  the dish in the oven to brown.
  
  Note. - The remains of cold cooked cauliflower
  may be used up in this way.
  
  Chestnuts
  {Fr. MjuTons)
  
  These may be prepared in different ways and
  make a good winter vegetable. Wash the nuts
  and make a slit in the skin at the stalk end.
  Put them into boiling salted water and cook
  them until tender from twenty to thirty minutes.
  Then drain, remove the skins, and serve them
  quickly with a little melted butter, salt, and
  wliite pepper. Or they may be served in a
  good brown or tomato sauce.
  
  A Chestnut Pur6e too is very good as an
  
  
  2 table-spoonfiils Cream.
  2 oz. grated Parmesan
  Cheese.
  
  
  accompaniment to roast fowl or beef. Cook
  the nuts as above and rub them through a sieve.
  Re-heat with a Uttle butter, seasoning, and
  enough brown sauce to bind all together and
  make the mixture of a right consistency.
  
  Celery with Cream (to Stew)
  
  (Fr. Celeri a la Creme)
  Required -
  
  
  1 head of Celery.
  
  i pint "White Stock
  
  Broth.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  i gill Cream.
  
  i oz. Butter.
  
  i oz. Flour.
  
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the celery and cut it in con-
  venient-sized pieces. Put the stock or broth
  into a saucepan, and when hot put in the celery
  and parboil it. Then strain, and naake a sauce
  with the butter, flour, and stock. Add the
  cream, season to taste. Retiirn the celery to
  the saucepan and allow it to simmer slowly
  in the sauce until it is quite tender. A few
  sippits of toast or a little chopped parsley may
  be used as a garnish. Or the celery may be
  cooked and served en casserole.
  
  
  Required -
  
  Celery.
  
  A little Flour.
  
  
  Celery (to Fry)
  {Fr. Celeri Frit)
  
  
  Egg and Bread-crumbs.
  Frying Fat.
  
  
  Method. - Prepare the celery, cut it in short
  lengths, ard cook in salted water until fairly
  tender. Drain it well, and spread the pieces
  out on a cloth to dry. Dip the pieces first into
  a little flour, coating them hghtly ; then egg
  and bread-crumb them and fry in boiling fat
  until a nice brown colour, and drain well on
  kitchen paper. Dish them up, cross bars, on
  a hot dish, with a d'oyley or dish paper under
  them, sprinkle liberally with grated Parmesan,
  and garnish with parsley.
  
  Note. - Frjnng batter may be used instead of
  egg and bread-crumbs.
  
  Cucumber
  
  (Fr. Concombre)
  Cook in the same way as vegetable marrow
  (see p. 159).
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  
  Curried Vegetables
  
  {Fr. Legumes en Caii)
  
  Curry Sauce (see p. 143).
  
  Any kind of cooked Vegetable.
  
  Boiled Rice.
  
  
  Method. - Any cooked vegetable may be used
  for a curry, such as turnip, carrot, cauliflower,
  vegetable marrow, beans, &c., or a mixture of
  vegetables. If large, cut them in smedl neat
  pieces. Make the curry sauce rather thick.
  When made, put the cooked vegetables into it.
  
  
  152
  
  
  THE wo]sl\:n's book
  
  
  and let them simmer for a few minutes, so sa
  to get thoroughly heated and flavoured with
  the sauce. Serve on a hot dish with a border
  of boiled rice (see p. 157) round, or the rice may
  be served in a separate dish.
  
  Egg-Plant (to Fry)
  {Fr. Aubergine Frit)
  Required -
  
  Egg-plant I Frying Fat.
  
  Egg and Bread-crumbs. 1
  
  Method. - Cut the egg-plant in sUces about a
  quarter of an inch thick. Peel the slices, and
  let them soak in strong salt and water, propor-
  tion one table-spoonful to one pint, for two hours
  to remove the bitterness. Drain and wipe each
  slice dry in a towel. Egg and bread-crumb the
  slices, and fry in boiling fat luitil nicely browned.
  Drain on kitchen paper, and serve piled up on a
  hot dish with a d'oyley or dish paper under
  them. Garnish with parsley.
  
  Note. - Egg-plants should be fresh and glossy
  looking when piu-chased, or the cooking of them
  ■will not be successful.
  
  They may also be split and baked simply
  with a little butter,
  
  Egg-PIant (Stuffed)
  {Fr. Aubergines Farcies)
  Required -
  2 Egg-plants.
  2 table-spoonfuls
  
  
  Bread-
  crumbs.
  
  1 table-spoonful chopped
  Ham or Tongue,
  
  1 tea-spoonful chopped
  Onion.
  
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 dessert-spoonful chopped
  
  Mushrooms,
  Pepper and Salt.
  Some beaten Egg.
  A little grated Lemon Rind,
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the egg-plants, and cut them
  in half lengthways. Scoop out the meat,
  leaving the rind about half an inch thick, that
  the shape may be firm. Melt the butter in a
  small saucepan, add the chopped onion, and
  cook a few minutes. Then add the bread-
  crumbs, ham or tongue, mushrooms, parsley,
  and the pulp from egg-plants chopped finely.
  Season with popper, salt, and a little grated
  lemon rind, and add sufficient beaten egg to
  bind all together. Sprinkle the inside of the
  egg-plants with broad-crumbs, popper and salt,
  and fill up with the mixture. Spread a few
  more crumbs on the surface of the mixture, and
  place the pieces on a greased tin or saut6 pan.
  Cover with greased paper, and bake in a moderate
  oven for one hour. Serve hot on a folded
  d'oyley.
  
  Endive (Dressed)
  {Fr. Chicoree)
  
  
  Required -
  
  2 or 3 Endives.
  
  Boiling ^yate^.
  
  Salt
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  1 table-spoonful Cream.
  Lemon Juice.
  Pepper and Salt
  
  
  Method. - Wash the endives carefully, sepa-
  
  
  rating the leaves and removing any decayed
  parts. Let them soak for half-an-hour in clean
  cold water, to which one tea-spoonful of vinegar
  has been added to draw out any insects. Then
  drain and steam according to directions given
  on p. 150, until the loaves feel quitљ tender,
  from twenty-five to thirty-five minutes. Next
  chop the endives finely, or rub through a wire
  sieve ; the latter mode is preferable. JIake hot
  again in the pan with the butter and cream,
  and season to taste with pepper, salt, and a
  squeeze of lemon juice. Dish in the shape of
  a pyramid in a hot vegetable dish, scoring up
  the sides with a fork, and decorate with sippets
  of toast or slices of hard-boiled egg.
  
  Note. - Lettuce may be cooked in the sajne
  way.
  
  Flageolets
  
  Wash the flageolets, and let them soak in cold
  water overnight. Next day drain, and put
  them in a saucepan with fresh cold water, and
  boil slowly until tender (about two hours).
  Then serve in the same way as green peas
  (see p. 153),
  
  Note. - ^They are good also as a puree made in
  the same way as puree of green peas.
  
  Freoch Beans
  
  {Fr. Haricots Verts au Naturel)
  
  Choose young fresh beans ; when old they
  are tough and stringy when cooked. First wash
  them well in cold water, then cut off the heads
  and tails, and a thin strip on each side of the
  bean to remove the strings. Lay several
  together, and cut them into thin strips length-
  ways or across in a slanting direction into
  lozenge -shaped pieces. As they are cut drop
  them into cold water, with a small quantity
  of salt in it. Have ready on the fire a saucepan
  of boiling water, salted in the proportion of one
  dessert-spoonful to one quart ; drain the beans
  well, and tlirow them into this. Boil quickly
  from twenty to thirty minutes with the lid off
  the saucepan, removing any scum as it rises.
  When the beans are ready they will sink to
  the bottom of the pan, and must be taken off
  the fire at once. Drain well in a colander,
  return them to the pan, and shako over the
  fire to dry up the moisture from the beans ;
  add a small piece of butter, popper and salt,
  and keep moving the pan until the butter is
  melted, and the beans thoroughly hot. Do not
  stir the beans with a spoon, as it is apt to break
  them. Serve them up as quickly as possible.
  Very young beans are sometimes cooked whole.
  Scarlet runners may be cooked in the same way.
  
  Sometimes a little lemon juice and some
  finely chopped parsley are added to the beans ;
  they are then called French Beans a la MaJtre
  d'Hotel {Fr. Haricots Verts a la Maltre d'Hotel).
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  153
  
  
  Green Peas
  
  (Fr. Petits Pois au Naturel)
  Required -
  
  
  J peck Peas.
  1 oz. Butter.
  1 or 2 sprigs of Mint.
  
  
  White Pepper and Salt.
  1 tea-spoonful Demerara
  Sugar.
  
  
  Method. - Shell the peas a very short time
  before they are to be cooked, otherwise they
  become hard. Wash them in cold water and
  drain well. Put them into a lined or earthen-
  ware saucepan with just sufficient boiling water
  to cover them, add the mint, salt, and sugar,
  and simmer slowly with the lid off the saucepan
  until the peas are nearly tender, from twenty
  to thirty minutes. Add the butter, sprinkle
  with pepper, and allow them to finish cooking,
  shaking the pan occasionally. Lift out the
  mint and serve the peas very hot. A little
  chopped parsley may be added.
  
  Green Peas with Lettuces
  
  {Fr. Petits pois aux Laitues)
  
  Cook the peas as above, adding one or two
  young lettuces cut in shreds. If desired a
  thickening maj be added made of two yolks of
  eggs beaten up with two table -spoonfuls of
  milk or cream. The mixture should not boil
  after these are added, but must be gently stirred
  to cook the eggs.
  
  Green Pea Pur^e
  
  {Fr. Puree de Petits Pois)
  
  When the peas become too old for serving
  whole, they can very well be made into a pur^e.
  Boil them in salted water until tender, then
  drain and pass them through a sieve. Return
  them to the saucepan with a good piece of butter
  and enough hot milk or cream to moisten.
  Add seasoning and a very little sugar. This
  may either be served separately along with meat,
  or kept fairly tliick and pressed through a
  forcing bag as a garnish for the centre of an
  entree or as a fancy border.
  
  Note. - Dried green peas may be used, but
  they require soaking and long boiling to make
  them tender.
  
  Haricot Beans ^ la Maitre d'Hotel
  {Fr. Haricots Blancs a la Maitre d'Hotel)
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. Haricot Beans. I i oz. Butter.
  
  1 small Onion. 1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  Cold Water. 1 White Pepper and Salt
  
  Metltod. - Wash the haricot beans, and let
  them soak in cold water overnight to soften
  them. Next day put them into a saucepan
  with plenty of cold water, and the onion skinned
  and cut in foiu-. Let them boil from two to
  two and a half hours, or until they feel qmte
  soft. The time will vary according to the age
  and size of the beans used. If the water boils
  
  
  away while they are cooking, add more cold
  water. Keep the lid on the pan, and let the
  water boil steadily all the time. When ready,
  drain in a colander, and lift out the pieces of
  onion. Return the beans to the pan, and let
  them stand by the side of the fire with the lid
  partially off, to allow them to dry ; then add
  the butter, parsley, pepper, and salt. Shake
  the beans over the fire for a minute or two, and
  serve them hot. Do not stir with a spoon, as
  it is apt to break them. A squeeze of lemon
  juice is sometimes added, or they may be served
  with parsley sauce poured over them.
  
  Note. - The water in which the beans have
  been cooked should be reserved for making a
  sauce or put into the stock-pot.
  
  Haricot Bean Rissoles
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. cooked Haricot Beans.
  
  1 oz. Dripping.
  
  1 Onion.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  lEgg.
  
  A little Flour.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  Method. - ^Rub the beans through a wire sieve,
  and add to them the butter, seasoning, and
  enough beaten egg to bind all together. Allow
  the mixture to cool, then form it into balls with
  the aid of a little flour. Egg and bread-crumb
  these, and fry them in boiling fat to a nice brown
  colour. Drain on kitchen paper, and serve the
  fritters hot garnished with parsley.
  
  
  Required -
  \ lb. Crones.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Japanese Crones
  
  {Fr. Crones Japonaises)
  
  
  1 table-spoonful Cream.
  Salt and Pepper.
  
  
  Method. - ^This is a vegetable wliich has not
  yet become very popular, but it is very light,
  and well worth eating. Crones have a slight
  resemblance to Jerusalem artichokes, only they
  are very much smaller. Trim the ends of the
  crones, and wash and brush them well in cold
  water. Warm the butter in an earthenware
  saucepan, put in the crones, and cook them
  in the oven from twenty to thirty minutes,
  shaking them from time to time. Add the
  cream and seasoning a few minutes before
  serving.
  
  Note. - ^They must not be overcooked or the
  flavour will be spoilt.
  
  A good whitљ sauce with cream may be added
  at the last, or the crones may be served in small
  scallop shells with the sauce over and a little
  grated Parmesan on the top.
  
  
  Stewed Leeks
  
  {Fr. Poireaux au Jus)
  
  I Some light Stock.
  I Pepper and Salt
  
  
  Required -
  6 Leeks.
  J oz. Butter.
  
  Method. - Trim off the root, the green ends,
  and the outer leaves of the leeks. Split them
  
  
  154
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  down the middle, wasli thorougUy, and lot them
  lie in cold water with a little vinegar for half-
  an-hour. Then drain, cut in convenient-sized
  pieces, and wash again in fresh cold water.
  Put the looks into a Uned or earthenware sauce-
  pan with enough stock to cover thorn, and stew
  slowly until they are quitљ tender, from thirty
  to forty minutes. Allow the stock to reduce
  until there is just sufficient to serve as gravy.
  Seeison \^4th salt and pepper, and add a small
  piece of butter just before serving.
  
  Lentils k la Bretonne
  
  {Fr. Lentilles a la Bretonne)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  li tea-cupfuls of Lentils. 3 t"a-cupfuls of Cold Water.
  
  2 ox. Ilam Fat. 1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  Pepper and Salt, 1 Shallot (finely chopped).
  
  Method. - Wash the lentils in several waters.
  Put them into a basin with three cupfuls of cold
  water. Cover over and soak all night. Next
  day put them into a saucepan with the water
  in which they have been soaked, the ham fat
  (cooked or uncooked) cut in very small pieces,
  the shalot, a pinch of pepper, and a very little
  salt. Simmer slowly for two hours until you
  have a smooth thick puree. It will be necessary
  to stir from time to time, and if the mixture
  becomes too dry, to add more water. Add the
  parsley at the last, and serve very hot.
  
  Macaroni and Walnut Scallops
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  2 oz. MacaronL
  
  3 oz. shelled Walnuts.
  
  1 tea-sp. Chopped I'arsley.
  Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  I 1 oz. Butter.
  1 table-siwonful Brown or
  Tomato Sauce.
  1 Salt and Pepper.
  
  
  Method. - Cook the macaroni and cut it into
  half'inch lengths. Roast the walnuts for a few
  minutes and chop them
  moderately fine. Mix these
  two together with the sauce,
  parsley, and seasoning.
  Then grease out a few scallop
  shells and sprinkle thom with
  bread-crumbs. Fill them with
  the mixture, sprinkle with
  more bread-crumbs, and put
  the butter in small pieces on the top.
  
  
  Scallop SheU.
  
  
  Mushrooms (to Stew)
  {Ft. Champignons au Jus)
  Ingredients -
  
  ) lb. ifushrooms.
  i oz. Butter.
  1 gill of Stock.
  1 tea-spoonful Flour.
  
  
  1 table-spoonful Cream.
  Pepper and Salt.
  A slice of Toast.
  Lemon Juice.
  
  
  cloth. If small, they may be left whole ; but
  if large, cut in pieces, it will make a neater
  dish. Put them into an eaxthenwaro casserole,
  and sprinkle with pepper, salt, and a good
  squeeze of lemon juice. Put the lid on the pan,
  and stew very slowly for ten minutes. Add the
  stock very gradually to the flour in a basin,
  mixing with a spoon until quite smooth ; poiu*
  tliis in beside the ntiuslu-ooms, and stir until
  boiling. Stew ten or fifteen minutes longer,
  add the cream at the last, and serve very hot.
  
  Mushrooms (Stuffed)
  
  (Fr. Champignons Farcis)
  Ingredients -
  
  6 or 8 medium-sized Mushrooms.
  
  6 or 8 crotitons of Fried or Toasted Bread.
  
  Stuffing -
  
  J oz. Butter.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Onion.
  
  Trimmings of Mushrooms.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  1 table-sp. Bread-crumbs.
  1 table-sp. Stock or Gravy.
  1 dessert-spoonful chopped
  Ham or Tongue.
  
  
  Method. - Peel the mushrooms, and cut off
  the ends of the stalks. Wash them in cold
  water with a little salt in it, and then dry in a
  
  
  Meilwd. - Peel the mushrooms and cut off the
  stalks. Throw them into a basin of cold water
  and salt, and let them soak a few minutes.
  Then remove and dry them. Trim them all onљ
  size, keeping these trimmings to add to the
  stuffing. Place the muslirooms, with the black
  side uppermost, on a greased baking-tin, and
  then make the stuffing. Chop the onion, mush-
  room trimmings, and ham, all very finely. Melt
  the butter in a small pan, add to it the chopped
  ingredients, and cook for a few minutes. Tlien
  add the bread-crumbs, seasoning, and stock,
  and cook a few minutes longer. Put a little of
  this stuffing into each mushroom, cover them
  over with greased paper, and bake in a moderjitљ
  oven for ten minutes. Put a dish paper on to
  a hot dish, arrange the fried croutons of bread
  on this, and then stand a musliroom on the top
  of each. Garnish with parsley, and servo as a
  vegetable entremet or savoury.
  
  Nuts and Nut Foods
  
  Nuts of various kinds are now becoming quite
  a popular food, and instead of being used as a
  mere adjunct to our dessert course they can be
  made to take an important part in otir diet.
  
  They are among the most nourishing of our
  vegetable foods, and potatoes and nuts are said
  to have boon the principal diet of the monks in
  many of the old monasteries.
  
  Nuts are frequently found difficult of digestion,
  but this is partly owing to their being taken at
  the end of an already substantial meal, or be-
  cause they have not been properly prepared nor
  masticated.
  
  Tlicy form a very good substitute for meat for
  those who choose to adopt a non-flesh diet, as
  they contain a large amount of proteid matter
  which is valuable for building up the tissues and
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  155
  
  
  enriching the blood. They are also rich in oil,
  which supplies us with heat for the body.
  
  Tliere are quite a variety of nuts now on the
  market, both shelled and unshellod, such as the
  hazel, cashew, Brazil, peanut, walnut, almond,
  pignolia, chestnut, filbert, &c. Rlixed nuts are
  also sold for about Is. 2d. the pound.
  
  There are also various nut foods to be had
  from the different nut food specialists, along with
  special recipes for their use.and several kinds of
  nut butter, which form very good frying media.
  
  For those who go in for nut cookery to any
  extent, a nut mill will be found invaluable. The
  price of this little machine is from about Is. 6d.
  upwards, and if the nuts are first slightly roasted
  and then ground they are more likely to have a
  good flavour than those bought in the ground
  form.
  
  Nut Omelet
  Ingredients -
  
  3 Eggs. I A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  J lb. shelled Brazil Nuts. ' Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Make in the same way as savoury
  omelet (see p. 186), adding the nuts finely grated
  to the eggs. When the omelet is cooked, sprinkle
  a few ground nuts over the top and brown
  slightly.
  
  Nut and Potato Rissoles
  Ingredients -
  
  
  i lb. Cooked Potatoes,
  i lb. Mixed Nuts.
  ■1 oz. Butter.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Milk or
  
  ■^Vhite Sauce.
  1 table-sp. grated Parmesan.
  Egg and Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  A little Flour.
  
  Method. - Roast the nuts slightly and put them
  through the mill. Meli the butter in a small
  saucepan, sieve the potatoes and add them to
  it with the prepared nuts, milk, and seasoning.
  Mix thoroughly, and turn on to a plate to cool.
  Form into balls with the help of a little flour ;
  egg and bread-crumb and fry in boiling fat. (See
  Potato Balls, p. 156.)
  
  Onions " en Casserole "
  
  (Fr. Oignions en Casserole)
  Required -
  
  3 Spanish Onions. I Pepper and Salt.
  
  IJ oz. Ihitter or good Beef A pinch of Nutmeg.
  Dripping. I
  
  Method. - Skin and scald the onions. Then
  remove some of the outer part, mince this rather
  finely, and place it in the casserole with the fat
  and seasoning. When hot place in the whole
  onions, put on the lid, and cook slowly from
  one and a half to two hours until tender.
  
  Parsley (to Fry)
  
  {Fr. Persil Frit)
  Required -
  I'arsley. | Boiling Fat or Oil.
  
  Method. - Wash the parsley and pick it, leaving
  the stalks about an inch long. Lot it lie between
  
  
  the folds of a cloth until dry, and then put it
  into a wire frjdng basket. Have ready on the
  fire a saucepan of deep fat or oil (see French
  Frying, p. 131), deep enough to cover the
  parsley. Plunge the parsley into this for a
  second or two, and Uft it out. The moisture in
  the parsley will make the fat bubble up, and if
  kept in too long will make the fat come over the
  sides of the pan. When the fat becomes quite
  still, plunge the parsley in again for a second or
  two, and it will be ready. It ought to be quite
  green and crisp. Turn on to kitchen paper and
  drain well.
  
  Note. - ^This is used as a garnish for frierl
  dishes, such as fried fish, rissoles, croquettes, &c.
  
  Pease Pudding
  
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  A pinch of Sugar.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. Split Peas.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 Egg. 1
  
  Method. - Wash the peas well, remove any
  discoloured ones, and soak overnight in cold
  water. Tie them loosely in a cloth, lea\dng
  room for them to swell, and put them into a
  saucepan with a good pinch of salt and enough
  boiling water to cover them. Boil quickly
  from two to two and a haK hoiirs, or until the
  peas are quite soft. Keep them well covered
  with water all the time. When ready, take
  them up and drain. Tiirn the peas out of the
  cloth, and rub them through a wire sieve or
  colander. Add the butter, egg, well beaten,
  pepper, salt, and a pinch of sugar. Beat all well
  together for a few minutes until the ingredients
  are thorouglily mixed, then tie up tightly in
  a floured cloth. Boil the pudding for another
  half-hour, turn on to a hot dish, and serve as
  an accompaniment to salt beef or pork.
  
  Potatoes (to Steam)
  
  Required -
  
  Potatoes. I Salt.
  
  Boiling Water. |
  
  Method. - Steaming is one of the simplest and
  best ways of cooking potatoes. First wash and
  brush the potatoes well in cold water, to get rid
  of all the earth, and tlirow them into a basin of
  clean cold water, ready for peeling. With a
  potato-knife peel them as thinly as possible, and
  with the point of the knife remove all the " eyes "
  or black species, and keep tlie potatoes in water
  until they are wanted. Have them all of one
  size. If some are larger than others, cut them
  in two or tliroe to make them equal. Put them
  in a steamer and sprinkle with salt. Place the
  steamer on the top of a saucepan of boiling
  water, and put the lid on. Keep the water in
  the saucepan underneath the potatoes quickly
  boiling the wb.ole time. If tlie potatoes are
  steamed in their skins, peel them before they are
  quite ready, and then return them to the steamer
  
  
  156
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  to finish cooking. They will require from thirty
  to forty minutes, according to their size and
  kind. \Vlien they can be pierced easily with a
  skewer, cover them •with a clean cloth, remove
  the steamer from the water and stand it in
  a warm place until the potatoes are dry and
  mealy. Ten minutes should bo sufficient.
  
  Mashed Potatoes
  Ingredienla -
  
  } lb. cooked Potatoes. I 2 or 3 tablc-spoonfuls Milk.
  
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping. [ White Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - The potatoes should be well cooked,
  dry and floury. Rub them quickly through a
  wire sieve or put them through a vegetable
  pressor. Melt the butter or dripping in a sauce-
  pan and add the potatoes to it. Season to taste
  with white pepper and salt, and add the milk.
  Mis well together and pile up in the form of a
  pjTamid on a greased tin or platљ that will stand
  the heat of the oven. Smooth over and mark
  with a knife or fork, and brush over with milk
  or beaten egg. Bake in the oven until nicely
  browned, and then with a fish slice or broad knife
  slip the pudding on to a hot vegetable dish.
  
  Note, - The yolk of an egg may be added to
  the mixture, or cream may be used instead of
  milk.
  
  Potato Rice
  
  {Fr. Pommes de Terre au Neige)
  
  This dish is made by putting freshly boiled
  potatoes through a vegetable pressor or wire
  sieve, and letting them fall on to a hot vegetable
  dish. The potato grains resemble rice and
  make a good accompaniment to stewed or
  roast meat.
  
  Potato Balls
  
  {Fr. Croquettes de Pommes de Terre)
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. cooked Potatoes.
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  White Pepper and .Salt.
  
  
  Frying Fat.
  
  1 yolk or i a whole Egg.
  
  Egg and Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  Method. - Rub the potatoes through a wire
  sieve, or press them through a vegetable pressor.
  Melt the butter or dripping in a saucepan, and
  put the sieved potato into it. Seeison with white
  pepper and salt, and add one yolk of egg or half
  a whole egg well beaten (the other half may be
  used for egging and bread-crumbing). Mix all
  well together, and tiom the mixture on to a
  plate to cool. Then flour the hands slightly and
  roll the mixture into small balls of equal size and
  free from cracks. Egg and broad-crumb these
  ba'ls, and fry thorn until nicely browned in
  boiling fat. Do not put too many into the fat
  at one time, or they will cool the fat so much
  that it will soak into them and cause them
  to burst. After frying, drain well on kitchen
  paper, and serve on a hot dish with a dish paper
  under them, and garnish with parsley.
  
  
  1 yolk and 2 whites of ]
  Frying Fat.
  
  
  Note. - ^This mixture may be made into
  different shapes, such as cutlets, conos, or small
  rolls. A little chopped parsley, chopped ham
  or tongue, or grated cheese may bo added to
  the mixture.
  
  Potato Fritters
  
  {Fr. Beignets de Pommes de Terre)
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. cooked Potatoes.
  1 oz. Butter.
  I'epper and Salt
  
  Method. - Prepare the potato mixture as
  above, adding the whites of eggs beaten to a
  stiff froth at the last and mixing them in very
  lightly. Drop the mixture in pieces about the
  size of a walnut into boiling fat, and fry until
  nicely browned. Lift out with a perforated
  spoon on to kitchen paper ; drain well, dish on
  a dish paper or folded napkin, and garnish
  with parsley.
  
  Potatoes (to Fry)
  {Fr. Pommes de Terre Fritos)
  Required-
  
  Potatoes. I Frying Fat or Oil.
  
  Salt. I
  
  Method. - Wash and peel the potatoes. Cut
  them into thin slices as nearly the same size as
  possible. Make them quite dry in a cloth, and
  put them into a frying basket. Have ready
  some deep fat and make it moderately hot, but
  not boiUng. Plunge the potatoes in and cook
  them at a moderate rate until tender and
  slightly coloured. Then Uft them out, drain
  them, and let them get partly cold. Replace
  the fat on the fire, and when it steams return the
  potatoes to it and shake them about until they
  are crisp and nicely browned. Drain quicldy
  and sprinkle with salt. These potatoes are
  usually served with grilled chops or steaks.
  
  Potato Chips and Ribbons. - Choose large,
  smoothly shaped potatoes. Dry them well after
  they have been washed and peeled.
  
  For Ribbons cut the potatoes first in slices
  half an inch in thickness. Then take ono slice
  at a time and with a small knife peel slowly
  round and round it, cutting the ribbons so thin
  that you can see the knife tlurough them, and
  making them as long as possible. Do not throw
  them back into the water ; keep them lying on
  the cloth until it is time to cook them. Some of
  them may be tied into bows or knots. The
  drier they are the more easily they will fry.
  
  For Chips cut the potatoes first into thin
  slices, then across into strips or chips. Cook
  both these in the same way as above.
  
  
  New Potatoes
  
  
  Required -
  1 lb. Potatoes.
  1 gill light Stock.
  Salt.
  
  
  1 or 2 oz. Butter.
  1 tea-spoonful
  I'arsley.
  
  
  chopped
  
  
  Method. - Wash and peel the potatoes veiy
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  157
  
  
  thinly (unless this is done they will not absorb
  the butter). Put them into a stewpan or
  earthenware dish with the stock and a little
  salt if necessary. Cover with the lid and cook
  in a moderate oven for twenty or thirty minutes,
  or until sufficiently cooked. Strain off any
  stock that may be left, add the butter and
  parsley, and toss over the fire for a few minutes.
  Serve very hot.
  
  
  Required -
  
  Patna Kice.
  Salt.
  
  
  Rice (to Boil for Curries)
  
  
  Boiling Water.
  
  
  Method. - Patna rice is the best to use for
  curries. It is a long, slender grain, pointed at
  the ends. Well wash it in several waters until
  the last water that is poured off looks qmte
  clean. Have ready on the fire a saucepan, three
  parts full of freshly boiling water, add salt to it
  in the proportion of one dessert-spoonful to a
  quart, and throw the rice into tliis. Boil quickly
  with the lid off, stirring it frequently with a fork
  to prevent the rice sticking to the pan, and also
  that it may be well tossed about with the water.
  Cook from twelve to fifteen minutes, or until
  the grains will rub down easily, when one is
  tested between the finger and thumb. Then
  strain tlirough a sieve or strainer, and finish
  cooking and drying it, either by putting it back
  into the saucepan by the side of the fire, or
  lea\dng it on the sieve, which may be placed
  on the rack above the fire, or on a plate in a
  moderate oven. While drying stir hghtly with
  a fork every now and then to keep the grsiins
  separate.
  
  Neapolitan Rice
  
  (Fr. Riz a la Napolitaine)
  Ingredients - ■
  
  J lb. cooked Kice. 1 oz. Butter.
  
  2 Tomatoes. Pepper aud Salt.
  
  2 oz. grated Cheese.
  
  Method. - Have the rice well cooked, the
  tomatoes rubbed through a hair sieve and the
  cheese grated. Melt the butter in a fireproof
  dish, add the other ingredients, and stir together
  over the fire. Season to taste and serve very
  hot in the casserole.
  
  Salsify (to Fry)
  
  (Fr. Salsifis Frit)
  Required -
  
  Salsify. Frying Fat.
  
  Flour. Pepper and Salt.
  
  Egg and Bread-crumbs.
  
  Method. - ^^Vash the salsify and scrape the
  roots gently to rid them of their outside coating.
  Throw them into cold water to wliich a little
  lemon juice or vinegar has been added to
  preserve the colour. Then boil them in salted
  
  
  water until just tender, and drain carefuUy so
  as not to break them. Finish in the same way
  as fried celery (p. 151).
  
  Note. - Salsify may also be served in any
  smtable sauce according to directions given for
  JerusaJem Artichokes (p. 149).
  
  Sea- Kale
  
  {Fr. Chou Marin)
  Cook in the same way as celery (see p. 151).
  
  Sorrel
  {Fr. Oseille)
  This must be very fresh to be good. It can
  be cooked according to directions given for
  cooking spinach. Sometimes it is mixed with
  equal quantities of spinach, or with a few leaves
  of lettuce.
  
  Spinach (to Boil)
  
  (Fr. Epinaxds au Naturel)
  
  
  Required -
  
  1 lb. Spinach.
  } oz. Butter.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Lemon Juice.
  
  Sippets of Toast or Fried
  Bread.
  
  
  Method. - Spinach reduces so enormously in
  cooking that one pound will make a very small
  dish. Double the leaves lengthways and strip
  off the stalks. Then wash the spinach thoroughly
  in several waters until qtoite free from grit. It
  is a vegetable which requires most particular
  washing, growing as it does so near the ground.
  It is very earthy, and takes a great deal of water
  to make it clean. Handle it as lightly as possible,
  as touching it too much with the hands causes
  the leaves to lose all their crispness. Put it
  into a saucepan, without any water except
  that which adlieres to the leaves, sprinlde it
  with salt, and put the Lid on the pan. Spinach
  is the only green vegetable which is cooked with
  the lid on the pan ; but, as no water is used,
  were the lid left off, evaporation would be so
  great that the spinach would soon burn. Tlie
  green of it is so intense that there is no fear of
  its discolouring unless it is cooked too long.
  Cook until it is quite tender, from twenty to
  thirty minutes, stirring frequently with a spoon.
  When ready, drain well on a fine wire sieve with
  a basin below it, and press out as much water
  as possible with the back of a wooden spoon.
  Then remove the basin, put a clean dry plate
  underneath the sieve, rub the spinacli through
  on to tlais, and scrape the sieve well under-
  neath. Retiun the spinach to a saucepan,
  with the butter, pepper and salt if necessary.
  Stir over the fire until thoroughly hot, and add
  a squeeze of lemon juice. Arrange it in a neat
  pyramid on a hot dish, marking it up the sides
  with the back of a fork, and garnish round the
  base with sippets of toast or fried bread, a few
  slices of hard-boiled egg, or some cooked beetroot
  
  
  158
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  cut in fancy shapes, unless served as a garnish
  to meat, when the croutons should be omitted.
  
  Spinach with Cream
  (Fr. Epinards a la CrCme)
  
  Prepare in the same way as above, adding
  two or tliree table -spoonfuls of cream at the
  last.
  
  Note. - A garnish of poached eggs or some
  tliin slices of nicely fried ham or bacon is a
  very nice accompaniment to tliis dish.
  
  Stewed Spaghetti
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  J lb. Spaghetti.
  
  i pt. TeAl or Chicken Broth.
  
  
  1 oz. Butter,
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Spaghetti is a very fine form of
  Italian paste, and it is considered more dehcate
  than macaroni. Break the spaghetti into small
  pieces, and put it into a small saucepan with
  the broth or any good light stock. Allow it to
  simmer slowly from fifteen to twenty minutes
  until soft and the liquid is all absorbed. Then
  add the butter, and season to taste. The sieved
  pulp of one or two tomatoes may be added for
  a variety, or poached eggs may be served on
  the top of the spaghetti. A httle grated cheese
  too may be added.
  
  Sweet Potatoes .
  
  This vegetable is not as yet very well known
  in this coimtry. It resembles the common
  potato in size and appearance, and can be
  cooked in the same way. Or, the following two
  recipes are very good.
  
  Sweet Potato Pie
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. cooked Sweet Potatoes.
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Browned
  Crumbs.
  
  
  i pint well-seasoned White
  
  Sauce.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Method. - Cut the potatoes in slices and
  arrange them in a greased pie-dish in layers
  with the white sauce. Sprinkle the crumbs
  over and place the butter in small pieces on the
  top. Bake in a moderate oven for twenty
  minutes.
  
  Sweet Potatoes with Cream
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. cooked Sweet Potatoes. I } oz. Flour.
  
  2 oz. Butter. 1 table-spoonful chopped
  1 g:n Cream. | Parsley.
  
  Method. - Stir the butter and fiour in an
  earthenware dish until they form a paste. Add
  the parsley and cream and then the potatoes
  cut in slices. Season to taste and serve very
  hot en casserole.
  
  
  Tomatoes a I'Americaine
  
  
  2 table-sp. Bread-crumbs.
  2 table-sp. grated Cheese,
  i oz. Butter.
  I'eppcr and Salt.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  6 small Tomatoes.
  1 gill Tomato Sauce.
  1 tea-sp. Curry Powder.
  1 tea-spoonful Ked Currant
  Jelly.
  
  Method. - Choose small firm tomatoes, not
  over -ripe. Put them into boiUng water for a
  minute or two, then Uft them out, dry and peel
  them. Then grease a fireproof dish, and place
  the tomatoes in it. Sprinkle thnm with half
  the crumbs and cheese, and a little pepper and
  salt. Add the curry powder and red-currant
  jelly to the tomato sauce (see p. 145), and pour
  this over the tomatoes. Put the remainder of
  crimibs and cheese on the top, then the butter
  in small pieces, and bake in a moderate oven
  about twenty minutes. Serve hot. This dish
  may be geirnished with rolls of bacon.
  
  Tomatoes au Gratin
  {Fr. Tomates au Gratin)
  
  
  Ir^redients-
  
  J lb. Tomatoes.
  2 oz. Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Put the tomatoes into a basin, cover
  them ^Tith boiUng water, and let them stand for
  a few minutes. Then take them out, dry them,
  and remove the skins. Cut them in sUces,
  keeping them on a plate, so as not to lose any
  of the juice. Grease a small pie-dish or gratin
  dish, and put half the tomatoes at the foot of it.
  Sprinkle with pepper and salt, and put in half
  the bread-crumbs, and half the butter in small
  pieces. Then lay in the rest of the tomatoes,
  season them, and put the remainder of the
  bread-crumbs and butter on the top. Wipe
  round the edge of the dish, and bake in a quick
  oven from fifteen to twenty minutes. Serve
  in the dish in which it is cooked.
  
  Tomatoes (Stuffed)
  {Fr. Tomates Farcies)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  5 medium-sized Tomatoes.
  J'epper and Salt
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  3 table-sp. Minced Meat.
  
  2 tal)le-sp. Bread-crumbs.
  1 Shallot
  
  
  A little Stock.
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  A few browned Bread-
  crumbs.
  5 croutons of Fried Bread.
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the tomatoes first with a
  cloth, tlion remove the stalk, and make a small
  round hole at that end. With the end of a
  teaspoon, scoop out the soft part from the inside,
  and put it into a basin. Be very careful whilst
  doing this not to break through the skin of the
  tomatoes, and do not make the sides too thin.
  Sesison the inside \v-ith pepper and salt, and turn
  them upside down on a plate to drain. The
  soft pEirt from the inside must be strained or
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  159
  
  
  rubbed through a sieve, and kept for moistening
  the stuffing. The best meat to use for stuffing
  the tomatoes is ham, tongue, or chicken, but any
  nicely cooked meat will do. Melt the butter in
  a small saucepan, add to it the shallot, very finely
  chopped, and cook it slowly over the fire for a
  few minutes. Then add to it the meat, white
  bread-crumbs, and parsley mixed well together,
  season to taste, and moisten with the liquid from
  the tomatoes, and a httle stock if necessary.
  Cook over the fire to swell the bread-crumbs,
  and then fill up the tomatoes with this stuffing.
  Do not fill them too full or they will biirst whilst
  cooking. Sprinkle a few browned bread-crumbs
  over the top, and place thom side by side on a
  greased baking-tin. Cover with greased paper,
  and bake in a moderate oven until they feel
  tender, from fifteen to twenty minutes. Put
  the fried cro^itons of bread on to a hot dish
  with a dish paper on it, lift the tomatoes care-
  fully on to this, and garnish with parsley.
  
  Note. - -If liked, sauce, brown or tomato, may
  be served round the tomatoes or separately.
  
  A little grated Parmesan cheese or chopped
  mushrooms may be added to the stuffing.
  
  Small stuffed tomatoes axe sometimes used as
  a garnish for meat dishes.
  
  Young Turnips In Butter
  
  {Fr. Navets au Caramel)
  
  
  Required -
  
  6 or 8 young Turnips.
  
  Salt.
  
  A pinch of Cinnamon.
  
  
  Butter.
  
  A pinch of Sugar.
  
  
  Method. - Prepare the turnips and steam them
  until half cooked. Then take them up and put
  them into a casserole with a little butter, sprinkle
  with salt, and add the sugar and cinnamon.
  Put on the lid and cook slowly until the tvu-nips
  are tender. They should be turned gently from
  time to time to be a nice golden brown coloixr
  when ready.
  
  
  Required -
  
  Turnips.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Mashed Turnips
  
  
  Butter.
  
  
  Method. - Prepare as many turnips as required
  and cut them into mediun^, -sized pieces. Cook
  them in a perforated steamer, or, if old,
  boil in salted water until thoroughly tender.
  The time will depend upon the age and freshness
  of the turnips, from £ of an hour to li hours.
  When qiute tender drain them thoroughly and
  retvu-n to a dry saucepan. Mash them with a
  fork or potato -beater until free from lumps,
  and add butter in the proportion of ^ oz.
  to each cupful. Season to taste and serve in a
  hot vegetable dish in the form of a pyramid,
  marking up the sides with the back of a fork.
  
  
  Vegetable Marrow with White Sauce
  
  {Fr. Courge a la Sauce Blanche)
  Required -
  
  1 Vegetable Marrow. I White Sauce (see p. 146).
  
  Boiling Water. | Salt.
  
  Method. - Wash the marrow, cut it in quarters,
  remove the seeds, and peel it very thinly. If
  large, cut it into neat-sized pieces, and throw
  them into cold water until wanted. Then place
  the pieces in a steamer and cook them until
  tender from ^ to | of an hour. Serve in a
  hot vegetable dish with white sauce or any other
  suitable sauce poured over it.
  
  Note. - The marrow may be boiled in milk,
  and the milk afterwards used for making the
  sauce.
  
  Vegetable Marrow with Cheese
  
  {Fr. Courge au Fromage)
  
  Method. - Cook the marrow as above and
  finish according to directions given for cauli-
  flower with cheese (p. 151).
  
  GENERAL NOTES ON SALAD-MAKING
  
  Nearly all vegetables and meats may be used
  as salads.
  
  Cooked vegetables must not be pulpy but
  firm, in order that they may be cut in slices or
  fancy shapes.
  
  All green vegetables should be young and
  crisp, and must be carefully washed in cold
  water to free them from dust and insects.
  
  The main thing to observe in the washing of
  green vegetables, such as lettuce, endive, cress,
  &c., is to handle them very lightly ; if too much
  touched their crispness is destroyed.
  
  It is also imiDortant to have the vegetables
  well dried after washing ; if any
  water is left on them the dress-
  ing will not adhere, but will run
  to the bottom of the dish, and
  both salad and dressing will be
  poor. Green salad vegetables
  should be shaken in a sieve or
  wire basket first and then tossed
  lightly in a cloth.
  
  There are few vegetables
  which cannot be used as a
  salad. Among the most ap-
  propriate may be named lettuce,
  endive, mustard and cress, wat"r-cress, toinatoes,
  celery, cucumber, spring onions, radishes, &c.,
  various cooked vegetables, such as beetroot,
  cauliflower, French or haricot beans, asparagus,
  carrot, turnip, potatoes, Spanish onions, &c.
  
  Poultry and game of any kind, ham, tongue,
  or, in fact, any tender, well-flavoured meat cut
  in small pieces may be used.
  
  Fish too, such as salmon, turbot, halibut, sole,
  cod, lobster, crab, oysters, &c.
  
  
  Salad Basket.
  
  
  160
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  A few hints on the preparation of the various
  salad vegetables may be useful.
  
  Lettuce. - Cxit off the root and remove any
  coarse and discoloured outside leaves, and trim
  away any decayed parts from the inside ones.
  Sepeurate the rest of the leaves one from the
  other, trim off the hard pieces of stalk, and
  tlirow them into a basin of fresh cold water.
  Wash lightly in tliis, and then take a second
  clean cold water, and wash again. If rather
  limp let the lettuce soak for half-an-hour or
  so in cold water, then shako as dry as possible
  in a sieve or wire basket, and toss lightly in a
  towel. Tlie larger leaves of the lettuce may be
  cut across in fine slireds with a knife, and the
  smaller ones used as a garnish. Many people
  object to use a knife and prefer to tear the leaves
  in pieces with the fingers, but if a sharp knife is
  used, and it is quickly and lightly done, it really
  does no harm, and the lettuce looks much bettor.
  
  Endive. - Prepare in the same way as lettuce.
  
  Mustard and Cress. - Wash in several waters,
  removing all black seeds. If rather Ump, soak
  for half-an-hour in cold water. Shake in a wire
  sieve or basket, and then in a cloth until dry.
  
  Water-cress. - From the nature of its growth,
  it requires most careful cleansing, or it may
  prove most harmful. Remove all fibres and
  deca3'ed leaves from the stalks. Then wash
  carefully in several waters, and shake dry.
  
  Radishes. - Cut off the tops and wash well in
  cold water, rubbing off all black with the fingers.
  If large, they may be scrubbed with a brush.
  Dry in a towel. Tlicso may either be served
  whole in a salad or cut in thin slices.
  
  Carrot and Turnip must be cooked, but not
  too soft, well drained, and cut in dice or fancy
  shapes.
  
  Spring Onions. - Cut off the roots, part of the
  green tops, and the outside skin. Wash well,
  letting the water run between the leaves. Dry
  in a cloth, and serve whole or cut in tliin slices.
  
  Celery. - Use the white inside part for salads.
  Divide the stalks, and brush each part in cold
  water with a vegetable brush. With a knife
  remove any brown or discoloured parts, and, if
  limp, soak for a short time in cold water. Then
  dry and serve in a celery glass or cut in shreds
  in a sal6kd.
  
  For prep8U"ing the other vegetables see under
  the special salads.
  
  TO SERVE A SALAD
  
  A salad should bo served as cold as possible,
  and the dressing should not bo mixed with it
  long before it has to be eaten.
  
  A special spoon ought to be used for mixing
  the dressing in horn, wood, or ivory. Silver
  is apt to promote verdigris.
  
  The dressing itself may be made hours before,
  and even sufficient for two or three days made at
  one time and bottled ready for use.
  
  
  Although exact quantities have been given
  for the various salad dressings, diversity of taste
  must bo considered. There are two typical
  dressings, i.e.. Vinaigrette sauce or French dress-
  ing, made of oil and xnnegar, and Mayonnaise.
  The former is the simpler and more wholesome
  of the two, and that most frequently used on
  the Continent. Mayonnaise is as a rule more
  appreciated by the English people.
  
  When a salad is served along with other dishes
  the French dressing is the more suitable, but
  for such salads aa chicken, lobster, game, &c..
  Mayonnaise is generally used, as these are as a
  rule served as a separate course.
  
  Never use any but the best oil, and if not
  using it frequently buy it in small quantities,
  as it is apt to become rancid. Keep it in a cool
  dark place. Cream may always take the placo
  of salad oil.
  
  The variety of ways in which a salad may
  be garnished is endless, and although special
  garnishes are specified in the following recipes,
  they can of course be altered according to the
  season of the year and to suit indi\'idual taste.
  
  A salad may either be served in a salad bowl,
  a glass dish, or in one of the various fancy china
  dishes which can now be bought for a very small
  sum. It is also customary to serve salads in
  small dishes, allowing one to each person.
  
  SALAD DRESSINGS
  French Dressing or Vinaigrette Sauce
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  Salt
  
  i tea-sp. made Mustard.
  
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Salad Oil.
  1 table-spoonful Vinegar.
  White Pepper.
  
  Method. - This dressing is frequently made at
  table in or over the salad bowl. If it is pre-
  pared beforehand it should not be poured over
  the salad until the time of serving. Mix the
  salt, popper, and mustard together, and add the
  oil gradually. When these are well blended
  and the salt dissolved add the vinegar. A
  pinch of cayenne and a little sugar may be
  added. Sometimes a toa-spoonful of Tarragon
  vinegar is put in, and by some people more oil
  is preferred.
  
  Salad Dressing
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  2 hard-boiled Yolks.
  I tea-sp. made Mustard.
  White Pepper and Salt.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  A pinch of Sugar.
  
  
  3 tea-spoonfuls Salad Oil or
  
  Cream.
  2 table-spoonfuls Vinegar.
  1 dessert-spoonful Tarragon
  
  Vinegar.
  
  
  Method. - ^Rub the hard-boilod yolks through
  a sieve, and put them into a basin with the
  seasoning. Mix well together, and add the oil
  gradually, stirring all the time. Then add the
  vinegar, a little at a time, and mix well. The
  sauce should be of the consistency of cream.
  
  Note - If the dressing is to bo used for fish
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  161
  
  
  or lobster salad, a tea-spoonful of anchovy or
  shrimp sauce is an improvement. The hard-
  boiled whites of eggs may be shred and used as a
  garnish for the salad.
  
  Potato Dressing
  
  
  1 table-spoonful Vinegar.
  J tea-sp. made Mustard.
  A pinch of Sugar.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  2 table-spoonfuls boiled and
  sieved Potatoes.
  
  3 table-spoonfuls Salad Oil.
  White Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Put the potato into a basin with
  the seasoning, and mix well together. Add the
  oil gradually, stirring all the time, and then pour
  in the vinegar. A little Tarragon vinegar may
  be added. Cream may be substituted for the
  oil.
  
  Celery Salad
  
  {Fr. Salade de C61eri)
  Required -
  
  1 head of Celery, Salad dressing.
  
  Oarnish -
  
  Parsley, Beetroot, or Small Cress.
  
  Method. - Remove the outside stalks from
  the celery, reserving these for flavouring stocks
  or soups, and use the white inside part for the
  salad. Separate the stalks, and wash and brush
  them well in cold water. If time permits, let
  these lie for half-an-hour in cold water, then lift
  out and dry in a cloth. With a sharp knife
  cut the celery across in shreds, and also shred
  the white . of egg left from the salad dressing.
  Mix these lightly together, put them in a salad
  dish, and pour the dressi'^g over.
  
  Garnish with a little finely-chopped parsley,
  smaU sprigs of parsley, the green tops of the
  celery, small cress, or beetroot cut in fancy
  shapes. Curled celery may also be used as a
  garnish.
  
  To Curl Celery. - Cut a few firm sticks of celer^
  into pieces about four inches in length. Then
  with a sharp knife cut these in fine strips, like
  a fringe, about three inches from the top, and
  leaving about one inch at the foot as foundation.
  Lot these lie in cold water for half-an-hour, or
  until they have a curled appearance, and use
  as a. gaornish.
  
  Chicken Salad
  
  (Fr. Salade de Volaille)
  Required -
  
  Some cooked Chicken.
  
  1 Lettuce.
  
  1 or 2 sticks of Celery.
  
  
  Some small Cress.
  A few Radishes.
  Mayonnaise Sauce (p. 144).
  
  
  Method. - Cut the cliicken in dice, removing
  the skin. Wash the lettuce and celery. Dry
  well and cut them in shreds. Mix these with
  the chicken, half the cress, and a little Mayon-
  naise. Pile high on a salad dish, and pour some
  more Mayonnaise over the top. Garnish with
  
  
  the small leaves of lettuce, radishes, and the
  remainder of the cress.
  
  Note. - Endive may also be used as a garnish,
  Smd cucumber used instead of celery. A hard-
  boiled egg cut in pieces may be added.
  
  Crab Salad
  
  {Fr. Salade de Crabe)
  
  
  Required -
  
  1 Crab (boiled).
  
  1 Lettuce.
  
  1 bunch of Water-cress.
  
  
  1 hard-boiled Egg.
  
  1 Tomato.
  
  French Dressing (p. 160).
  
  
  Method. - Pick aU the meat from the crab and
  shred it finely, carefully removing all pieces of
  shell. Wash and dry the lettuce and cress, and
  slired them finely. Mix these in a basin with
  the crab and salad dressing, and season rather
  highly with pepper and salt. Pile this mixture
  in a salad dish, and garnish with the tomato
  and hard-boiled egg cut in pieces.
  
  Note. - Mayonnaise sauce may also be used
  for this.
  
  Fisli Salad
  (Fr. Salade de Poisson)
  
  Make in the same way as crab salad, using
  neat little flakes of cooked fish instead of the
  crab. A little cucumber or a few radishes may
  be used as a garnish.
  
  Cucumber Salad
  
  {Fr. Salade de Concombre)
  
  
  3 or 4 Spring Onions.
  French Dressing (p. 160).
  
  
  Required -
  
  1 Cucumber.
  
  White Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Peel and slice the cucumber as thin
  as a sheet of note-paper. Wlien doing this
  always commence at the thick end and slice
  towards the stalk ; if done the opposite way,
  the cucumber will have an exceedingly bitter
  taste. Lay these sUces on a plate with the
  onions washed and thinly sliced, and sprinkle
  them rather liberally with salt. Cover \vith
  another plate, stand for half-an-hour, and then
  pour off the water that has exuded from them.
  This tends to make the salad more digestible.
  Arrange the slices neatly in a salad dish and
  pour the dressing over.
  
  Note. - The oil may be omitted and vinegar
  only used, and water-cress may take the place
  of the onions.
  
  Frencli Bean Salad
  
  {Fr. Salade de Haricots Verts)
  Required -
  
  1 breakfast-cupful of cooked
  
  French Beans.
  1 tea- spoonful finely chopped
  
  Parsley.
  
  Method. - Have the beans cut in slireds and
  as dry as possible. Mix them with the parsley
  
  L
  
  
  i tea-spoonful finely pow-
  dered Herbs.
  French Dressing (p. 160).
  
  
  162
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  and mixed h"rbs finely powdered. Arrange
  neatly in a salad dish, and pour the dreesing over.
  
  Game Salad
  (Fr. Salade de Gibier)
  Make in tlie same way as chicken salad, and
  use Ttulare sauce instead of Mayonnaise.
  
  Haricot Bean Salad
  
  {Fr. Salado do Haricots Blancs)
  
  Prepare in the same way as French bean
  
  salad (p. IGl), using small cooked haricot beans
  
  instead of French beans. Garnish with tiny
  
  sprigs of parsley or some curled celery.
  
  Lobster Salad
  
  {Fr. Salade de Homard)
  
  Prepare in the same way as oyster salad
  (see below), using some nice pieces of cooked
  lobster in place of the oysters. It may be gar-
  nished with slices of hard-boiled egg and bvmches
  of sliced cucumber and radish.
  
  Mixed Salad
  
  For this take as great a variety of Balad
  vegetables aa you can get, according to the
  season of the year, and a suitable proportion
  of each.
  
  Such vegetables as finely shred lettuce and
  endive, spring onions thinly sliced, tomatoes
  peeled and cut in pieces, sUced beetroot, sliced
  cucumber, shred celery, mustard and cress,
  radishes, small pieces of cooked carrot and
  turnip, &c., &c., are suitable. Mix well with
  any of the salad dressings, axid garnish according
  to taste.
  
  Oyster Salad
  
  {Fr. Sedade aux Hultres)
  
  Required -
  
  1 dozen Oysters.
  Cayenne Pepper.
  Salt
  Mayonnaise Sauce.
  
  Metiiod. - Wash, drain, and shred the lettuce
  very finely, and arrange a bed of this on six
  little china dishes. Put two oysters in each,
  
  
  1 Lettuce.
  
  A little Cress.
  
  Small slices of Lemon.
  
  
  and sprinkle with cayemie pepper aud salt.
  Then coat the oysters with some thick Mayon-
  naise, and garnish with small cress and a
  small slice of lemon. Tliis salad is sufficient
  for six pei-sons. The quantities can of course
  be increased or reduced at pleasure.
  
  Note. - This may also bљ served on one larger
  dish. '
  
  Potato and Beetroot Salad
  
  {Fr. Salade de Pommes de Terro eu Betterave)
  Required -
  
  
  1 tea-spoonful finely chopped
  
  ShaUot
  Potato Dressing (p. 161).
  
  
  4 or 5 cooked Potatoes.
  1 cooked Beetroot.
  1 tea-spoonful finely chopped
  Parsley.
  
  Method. - Potatoes for a salad should be rather
  waxy, not mesdy - new potatoes are best. Cut
  them into neat slices, and trim the slices with a
  round cutter. Peel and slice the beetroot, and
  arrange it in a salad dish in alternate rows or
  circles with the potato. Sprinkle with finely
  chopped parsley and shallot, and pour the
  dressing over.
  
  Note. - A little grated horse-radish may be
  mixed with the dressing, and some water-oreas
  used aa a garnish.
  
  Tomato Salad
  
  {Fr. Salade de Toraates)
  
  
  Required -
  
  3 or 4 Tomatoes.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Shallot.
  French Dressing (p. 160).
  
  
  Method. - First peel the tomatoes. To do this
  either soak them in a basin of very hot water for
  two or three minutes, or put them in a wire
  basket and plunge them into boiling water for
  a minute. The latter method is better ; it does
  not soften the tomatoes so much. Remove the
  skins very carefully with a small knife, and if
  time permits allow the tomatoes to become quite
  cold before cutting them up. Then slice them
  rather thinly and, if large, cut the slices in two.
  Place these slices very neatly on a salad dish,
  sprinkling them with chopped parsley and
  shallot. Pour the dressing over.
  
  Note. - Mayonnaise sauce may be used instead
  of the plain salad dressing, and the shallot may
  be omitted.
  
  
  PASTRY AND PASTRY-MAKING
  
  
  General Notes on Pastry -making. - The making
  of pastry requires a considerable amount of
  pract'oe, and failure at first must not discourage
  the bjginner. The following rules must be care-
  fully attended to : -
  
  Use only the best materials, and if an
  economical pastry is wanted use good dripping
  or lard in preference to inferior butter.
  
  
  See that all the utensils used, such as board,
  rolling-pin, and basin are particularly clean and
  cool. Clean hands are also imperative. If the
  hands are inclined to bo very warm wash them
  some little time before beginning the pastry in
  very warm water. Make the pastry in as cool a
  place as possible ; the colder it is kept during
  the making the lighter it will be. Roll the
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  163
  
  
  pastry lightly and press equally lightly with
  both hands.
  
  Never rub little pieces oS the fingers on to
  the pastry, as, when cooked, they will form hard
  lumps ; but clean the hands back into the basin
  with a Uttle dry flour.
  
  Never allow pastry to stick to the board, but
  lift it occasionally on the rolling-pin and dust
  some flour underneath. If anything has stuck
  to the board, scrape it off carefully with a knife
  before beginning again. Always sprinkle flour
  over the board and pastry tlirough a flour-
  dredger ; it makes it finer and hghter.
  
  If the rolling-pin sticks to the pastry dust a
  little flour over it, and brush it off again lightly
  with a small brush kept for the piirpose. Never
  roU a quantity of dry flour into pastry as it
  gives it a white pasty appearance.
  
  The exact amount of water to use is not given
  in the recipes, as so much depends upon the
  consistency of the butter and also upon the
  flour used. The finer the flour the more water
  it will take up.
  
  However well pastry is made it will not be
  a success unless the baking is carefully attended
  to and the oven properly heated. If the oven
  is not hot enough the butter will melt and run
  out of the pastry before the starch grains in the
  flour have time to burst and absorb it. This
  makes the pastry heavy.
  
  When the pastry is well thrown up and nicely
  browned, cover it over with kitchen paper and
  remove it to a cooler part of the oven until
  sufficiently cooked. Before baking pastry in
  any oven you should thoroughly understand the
  heating of it, as the hottest part of one may be
  the coolest part of anc+her. Never slam an
  oven door, but open and close it gently and not
  oftener than necessary.
  
  Flaky Pastry
  
  Proportions -
  
  10 oz. Flour. A pinch of Salt.
  
  7 oz. Butter. Cold Water.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  Method. - Weigh the butter, and let it lie for
  some time in cold water before using it. Sieve
  the flour and salt into a clean dry basin, and add
  the lemon juice. Lift the butter out of the
  water, and squeeze it dry in a clean floiu-ed
  cloth. Divide it into four equal pieces. Take
  one of these pieces and rub it into the flour with
  the tips of the flngers and thumbs until quite
  free from lumps. Then add sufficient cold
  water to form all into one lump. Mix with the
  hand as lightly as possible, and turn out on to
  a floured board. Knead lightly until free from
  cracks, and then roll out into a long narrow
  strip. Take one of the remaining portions of
  butter, and with the point of a knife spread it in
  small pieces and in even rows all over the pastry.
  Now flour the surface lightly, and fold the paste
  exactly in three. Turn the pastry half round.
  
  
  bringing the joins to the right-hand side. Press
  down the folds sharply with the rolling-pin, so
  as to enclose some air. Roll out the pastry
  again into a long narrow strip, and proceed as
  before until the two remaining portions of butter
  have thus been used. If the butter becomes
  soft during the rolling, lay the pastry aside,
  for a short time, before completing the process.
  The last time roll out the pastry to the desired
  thickness, and if it reqmres widening, turn it
  across the board and roll across. Never roll in
  a slanting direction, or the lightness of the pastry
  will suffer.
  
  This pastry is not quite so rich as puff pastry.
  It may be kept for several days in cold weather
  if wrapped in greased paper or in a damp cloth.
  
  Puff Pastry
  
  {Pr. Feuilletage
  Proportions -
  
  i lb. Flour. A squeeze of Lemon Jalce.
  
  i lb. Butter. Cold Water.
  
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  Method. - Weigh the butter, and let it lie in a
  basin of cold water for some time before using it.
  Sieve the flour and salt into a clean dry basin,
  and add the lemon juice to them. Lift the
  butter out of the cold water and dry it lightly
  in a floured cloth. Take a quarter of this and
  rub it into the flour with the tips of the fingers
  and thumbs until there are no lumps left, then
  mix with cold water into a stiffish dough.
  Turn this on to a floured board and work it well
  with the hands until it will no longer stick to the
  fingers and forms a perfectly smooth dough.
  Then roll it rather thinly into a square or round
  shape. The butter to be used should be as
  nearly as possible of the same consistency as the
  paste. Form it into a neat flat cake, and place
  it in the centre of the pastry. Fold it up rather
  loosely, and flatten the folds with a rolling-pin.
  Then roll out the pastry into a long narrow strip,
  being careful that the butter does not break
  through. Fold it exactly in three, press down
  the folds, and lay the pastry aside in a cool place
  for a quarter of an hour at least. This is caUed
  giving the pastry one " turn " and seven of these
  is the number usually required for puff pastry.
  The next time the pastry is rolled, place it with
  the joins at yovu* right-hand side, and the open
  ends towards you. Give it two " tiu-ns " this
  time, and again set it aside in a cool place for
  at least fifteen minutes Repeat this until the
  pastry has had seven rolls in all, one roll or turn
  the first time and after that two each time with
  an interval between. The object of this cooling
  between the rolls is to keep the butt<"r and
  fioiu- in distinct and separate layers, in which it
  is the function of the rolling-pin and folding to
  arrange them, and on which the lightness of the
  pastry depends. After it has received its last
  roll, it is better to be laid aside for some time
  
  
  164
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  Cold Water.
  
  
  before using it, then roll to the thickness re-
  quired. Tliis pastry will keep for several days
  in cold weather if wrapped in a piece of well-
  greased paper.
  
  Rough-Pufl Pastry
  
  Proportions-
  
  i lb. Flour.
  
  } lb. Butter or Lard.
  
  A piDch of SalU
  
  Method. - Prepare the butter as above, and
  sieve the flour and salt into a clean dry basin,
  and add the lemon juice to it. Put the butter
  into the basin, cover it well over with the
  flour, and then break it into pieces the size
  of a hazel-nut. Have some very cold water
  in a jug ready for mixing with, and make a
  well in the centre of the flour and butter. Mix
  very lightly with the right hand or with a
  knife, pouring the water in gradually with the
  left until you have added sufficient to bind all
  together. Flour the baking-board and turn the
  dough out on to it. Flour the rolling-pin and
  roll the dough out very carefully into a strip
  about three-quarters of a yard in length and
  from seven to eight inches wide. Lift occasion-
  ally while rolling, and dust some flour underneath
  the pastry to prevent it from sticking to the
  board. Roll the pastry on the one side only,
  do not turn it over, and roll in short quick
  strokes always from you. When rolled to tlie
  required length, fold it in tliree, and press down
  with the rolling-pin. Turn the pastry half
  round, bringing the joins to the right-hand side,
  and roll again in the same way as before. Fold
  again in three, half turn and roll again, repeating
  this until the pastry has had three rolls and three
  folds. The fourth time of rolUng out, roll to
  the size and shape required for use.
  
  Note. - If the pastry becomes very soft while
  polling, it should be laid away in a cool place
  before completing the process. It is improved
  by being kept for a few hours before using. In
  cold weather it will keep for several days if
  wrapped in a piece of greased paper. This pastry
  may be mswle richer by using 6 oz. of butter in-
  steeul of 4 oz. to J lb. flour. An egg well beaten
  may be used for mixing with along with a little
  water.
  
  Short Crust
  Proportione -
  
  } lb. Flour.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Caator Sugar.
  
  i lb. Butter.
  
  Method. - Rub the flour and sugar through a
  wire sie' e into a clean dry basin. Add a squeeze
  ot lemon juice, and if fresh butter is being used,
  a pinch of salt also. Put in the butter, cover
  it well over with the flour, and break it in
  pieces. Then rub together lightly with the
  tips of the fingers and thumbs until as fine as
  
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  Cold Water.
  
  
  bread-crumbs. Next make a well in the centre
  of these dry ingredients, and add cold water
  very gradually with the left hand whilst mixing
  with the right. Mix with the hand or with a
  knife. Use very little water in the mixing of
  thi.s paste, or it will be tough instead of short.
  Flour the pastry -board sliglitly, lay the dough
  on it, and work lightly with the hands until free
  from cracks. Then floiu- a rolling-pin, press
  down the pastry first, then with sharp quick
  strokes roll it out to the thickness required.
  This pastry only requires one roll. Roll it on
  the one side only, and be careful it does not
  stick to the board.
  
  Notes. - The above is a fairly rich paste, and if
  a plainer one is wished, use only 3 oz. of butter,
  or substitute lard or dripping for the butter.
  
  The pastry may be made richer by using
  rather more butter, 6 oz. to ^ lb. flovir, and the
  yolk of an egg beaten up with a little water for
  mixing.
  
  The quantities given will make a pastry quite
  suitable for all ordinary purposes.
  
  Tliis is one of the most wholesome Idnds of
  pastry. The butter is so thoroughly mixed with
  the flour, that the latter is more thoroughly
  cooked and is more digestible than in some of
  the flaky pastries.
  
  Plain Short Crust
  
  
  } tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  Cold Water.
  
  
  Proportions -
  
  i lb. Flour.
  
  4 oz. Lard or Dripping.
  
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  Method. - Make in the same as above. A
  little castor sugar should be added if the pastry
  is to be used for a sweet dish.
  
  Suet Pastry
  
  
  } tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  Cold Water.
  
  
  Proportions -
  
  1 lb. Flour.
  
  i lb. Suet
  
  i tea-spoonful Salt.
  
  Method. - Weigh the flour carefully, add the
  salt and baking powder to it, and rub these
  tlirough a wire sieve into a clean dry basin.
  Remove the skin from the suet, shred it very
  finely with a sharp knife, and then weigh it.
  Put it on a chopping-board, and sprinkle it with
  some of the flour already weighed out. Then
  chop it very finely, using enough flour to prevent
  it sticking to the board and knife. The finer it
  is chopped, the better the pastry will be. When
  ready, mix it thoroughly with the flour in the
  basin, rubbing all the ingredients hghtly together
  with the tips of the fingers. Then make a well
  in the centre of these drj' ingredients, and add
  enough cold water to form into a smooth soft
  dough. Turn out on to a floured board, leaving
  the beisip "' 'e clean. Work lightly with the
  hanr' " , .P e from cracks, then flour a rolling-
  pi' ''^^ n^ak^Qg t to the thickness required.
  ,/
  
  
  /■
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  165
  
  
  Note. - Buttermilk or sweet milk may be used
  instead of water for mixing.
  
  Half the quantity of flour may be omitted,
  and \ lb. bread-crumbs used in its place.
  
  To Make Patty Gases
  
  First Method. - Take | lb. of puff pastry that
  has had seven rolls, and roll it out to J inch in
  thickness. Let it rest for fully five minutes
  before cutting, to allow for slu-inking, or the
  patties will be oval instead of round in shape.
  Then take a cutter 2\ inches in diameter, and
  stamp out as many rounds as possible from the
  pastry. Do not cut too near to the edge of the
  pastry, as it is usually of rather uneven thickness
  there. Mark the middle of these rounds to
  about half their depth with a cutter 1| inch in
  diameter, a border being thus left outside the
  centre cut of about \ inch in width. The pastry
  should be icy cold when cut, or it will not rise
  evenly. Lay the rounds on a baking-tin, keeping
  them as much to the middle of this as possible,
  a precaution which also promotes their rising
  evenly. Brush over the tops with beaten egg,
  being careful not to touch the edges, as the egg
  would harden the pastry and prevent it rising.
  
  Bake in a hot oven for twenty minutes, or
  until the pastry is well risen and nicely browned.
  If on taking the patties out of the oven one side
  is found to be higher than the other, press the
  
  
  tops gently into place at once before they have
  time to stiffen, using if necessary a little beaten
  egg on a brush to make them stick. When the
  patties are ready, lift off the inner circle of
  pastry and remove the uncooked paste from
  the interior to make room for the filHng. If Uds
  are wanted for the cases, roll out the remainder
  of the pastry to about J inch in thickness, and
  stamp out rounds for covers with the smaller
  of the two cutters used for the patties. Bake
  these on a separate tin, as they vnW take a shorter
  time to cook. About ten minutes should be
  sufficient.
  
  Second Method. - Use either rough puff or
  flaky pastry, rolling it out to rather more than
  J inch in thickness. Let it rest for a few minutes
  to allow for shrinking, and cut into rounds with
  a plain or fluted cutter 2\ inches in diameter.
  From half of these rounds cut a hole in the
  centre IJ inch in diameter. Moisten the edges
  of the whole rounds with egg or water, and lay
  the rings on the top. Place the patties on a
  baking-tin, and prick the centres with a fork to
  prevent them rising. Brush over with beaten
  egg, and bake in a hot oven for twenty minutes.
  On another tin put the small rounds cut from the
  centre of the rings, brush them over with beaten
  egg, and bake about ten minutes. These will
  serve as covers. Wlion the patties are ready,
  fill up the hollows in the centre with any mixture,
  and put on the lids.
  
  
  MEAT AND MEAT DISHES
  
  
  SIMPLE METHOD OF COOKING MEAT
  
  BAKING AND ROASTING
  
  Roasting, properly speaking, is cooking in
  front of an open fire, but owing to the limited
  accommodation and the construction of the
  stoves in modern houses, this method of cooking
  has become almost a thing of the past, and
  baking, or roasting in the oven, has almost
  entirely taken its place.
  
  The rules for both are practically the same.
  The meat to be roasted should be weighed and
  well wiped with a damp cloth, but never washed.
  If frozen meat is being used the joint should be
  allowed to thaw slowly in a warm kitchen for
  Bome hours before it is cooked.
  
  The tin used for roasting should, if possible,
  be a double one, the under one being large
  enough to hold a little water, wliich will prevent
  the dripping in the upper portion from becoming
  too hot and acquiring a burnt taste. The meat
  should be placed on a small stand or trivet in the
  baking-tin to prevent it soaking in the dripping
  and becoming sodden. The tin should be large
  enough to hold the meat comfortably without
  projecting over the edges.
  
  
  The first point in baking or roasting is to
  expose the meat to a high temperature for ten
  minutes in order to harden the outside and form
  
  
  Double Koasting-Tin.
  
  a coating, as it were, to prevent the escape of the
  juice. Then the heat must be reduced and the
  cooking continued until the joint is sufficiently
  roasted.
  
  During the process of cooking the meat ought
  to be basted with dripping or butter at intervals
  of 15 to 20 minutes to prevent its becoming
  dried up. If the meat is not sufficiently fat
  in itself a little extra dripping or butter should
  
  j be added or kept in a jar on the top of the stove.
  
  I The spoon used for basting ought to be laid on a
  
  
  166
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  plate to prevent the drops of grease soiling the
  stove.
  
  There are one or two patent roasting-tins now
  on the mau-ket which save tlie trouble of basting ;
  one which bfistos the meat automatically \  out any trouble, and another where no attention
  is required for either turning or basting.
  
  It is very important that the oven should be
  clean and well ventilated, otherwise the operation
  of roasting will cause a most unpleasant smell.
  
  It is impossible to lay down any exact rule
  regarding the time for roasting meat, as the form
  and thickness of the joint must always be taken
  into consideration. A thin long piece of meat
  would naturally take a shorter time to cook
  than a thick soUd piece of equal weight. The
  approximate time for cooking beef and mutton
  is 15 minutes to the pound and 15 minutes over,
  and for pork, lamb and veal, 20 minutes to the
  pound and 20 minutes over ; but common-sense
  and experience will be found to be the best
  guides. Beef and mutton may be left rather
  underdone if fancy dictates, but wliite meats are
  unwholesome unless thoroughly cooked. If the
  joint is large and thick it should be turned upside
  down during part of the time to ensure the under
  part being sufficiently cooked.
  
  When the meat is ready lift it on to a hot dish
  and keep it hot while the gravy is being made.
  Pour the dripping from the tin into a jar and add
  a small quantity of boiUng w-ater. Then with
  an iron spoon scrape down any glaze or meat
  juice which adheres to the side of the tin and add
  stilt to taste. Never add colouring. If a large
  quantity of gravy is required, a little stock
  may be necessary, but any with a strong pro-
  nounced flavour of vegetables should be avoided.
  The pure juice of the meat is the best gravy.
  Remove any grease from the surface of the gravy
  with a piece of kitchen paper. Strain some of it
  round the joint, and serve the surplus in a sauce-
  boat, as it is awkward for the carver if the dish
  is made too full.
  
  BOILING
  
  Although this is one of the simplest methods
  of cooking meat, it is one which frequently meets
  with failure. Instead of ha\ing a tender joint
  full of juice, a piece of meat both tough and
  tasteless will be served up. Boiling is best
  suited to large joints ; in fact, nothing under three
  or four pounds should be attempted.
  
  If it is fresh meat, wipe and weigh the joint
  the same as for rotisting and then plunge it
  into a saucepan with sufficient boihng water to
  cover \t. Boil quickly for 5 minutes to form a
  casing on the outside of the meat, then draw the
  saucepan to one side and allow it to simmer only
  until sufficiently cooked. There should be just
  a gentle bubbling on the surface of the water ;
  if boiled hard the meat will be leathery and taste-
  less.
  
  
  Salt in the proportion of one table-spoonful to
  a gallon of water should be added to the water,
  and any scum that rises should be carefully
  removed. Suitable vegetables, such as caa-rota,
  turnips, or parsnips, should be cooked along with
  the meat.
  
  Salt meat should be put into cold or tepid
  water to begin with in order to soften it and
  draw out some of the salt. In fact, if it is very
  salt it is a good plan to soak it in cold water for
  some time before cooking. The time for boiling
  will vary from 20 to 30 minutes to the pound and
  20 or 30 minutes over according to the kind and
  shape of the meat. It must be borne in mind
  that boiled meat should never be underdone,
  and it is better to err on the safe side and give
  it too much time than to undercook it.
  
  If the meat is to be served cold, it should be
  allowed to cool in the water in which it was
  cooked.
  
  The usual gravy for boiled joints is some of
  the liquor in which they are cooked A tasty
  sauce can also be served separately, such as
  caper sauce, or onion sauce with boiled mutton,
  bechamel sauce with boiled lamb, horse-radish
  sauce or tomato sauce with boiled beef, &c.
  
  The remainder of the liquor in which the
  meat has been cooked should be reserved for
  making soup.
  
  BRAISING
  
  Take a stewpan with a tight-fitting lid and
  place a few slices of fat bacon at the foot. On
  the top of this put a layer of carrot, turnip,
  onion, and celery cut in dice and in equal pro-
  portions. Season with pepper, salt, and a small
  bunch of herbs. Pour in enough stock or water
  to reach tiie top of these ingredients and bring
  to the boil. Place the meat to be braised on the
  top and cover with greased paper so as to keep
  down the steam, and cook slowly at the side of
  the fire or in the oven. This method of cooking
  makes tough meat tender and of good flavour.
  The time will depend upon the size and kind of
  meat.
  
  FRYING
  
  Dry Frying or, properly speaking, Saut61ng, is
  cooking in a shallow pan with a small quantity of
  fat. The fat should be made quite hot and then
  the meat placed in and cooked on both sides.
  Chops and steaks can be cooked in this way, but
  they will not be so digestible as when grilled.
  
  Deep Frying or Frying Proper. - Proceed in the
  same way as for fish by this method (p. 131).
  
  STEAMING
  
  Both meat and poultry can be steamed by
  placing them in a double cooker or patent
  steamer, or even in a jar jjlaced in a saucepan of
  boiling water. It is a slow method of cooking
  and most suitabl" for tender pieces of meat.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  167
  
  
  There must be plenty of steam or the process
  will not be a success.
  
  STEWING
  
  Stewing means cooking in a small quantity of
  liquid at a low temperature. It is one of the
  most economical ways of cooking, firstly because
  there is nothing lost, any juice that is drawn
  from the meat being served in the gravy.
  Secondly, because the coarser and cheaper
  pieces of meat may be used as the long slow
  cooking makes them tender ; and, thirdly, very
  little fuel is required and very httle attention
  when once the stew has been set going.
  
  A stew is generally a mixtiu-e of meat and
  vegetables, and success depends very much upon
  the careful seasoning and blending of flavours.
  Examples of several different kinds of stews will
  be fovmd in the following recipes.
  
  A stew may be cooked in a stewpan or in a jar
  in the oven. A double saucepan is also very
  useful for this mode of cooking or the saucepan
  containing the stew may be placed in a larger
  one containing hot water. The lid should be
  removed as seldom as possible, and it should fit
  the saucepan or jar tightly so as to avoid all
  waste through evaporation.
  
  The time for stewing will depend upon the
  kind of meat used and the size of the pieces.
  
  Stevrlng in Earthenware. - This method of
  cooking is becoming very popular, and the simple
  clay casseroles which can now be bought in so
  many different shapes and sizes are admirably
  adapted to the purpose. They have much to
  recommend them from the point of view of
  cleanliness ; they are easily cleaned and there is
  no danger of rust. They are also economical
  as far as fuel is concerned, as their heat-retaining
  power being so great they wUl simmer for hours
  over a gentle heat without burning the food.
  They are not expensive to buy, and if proper care
  is taken of them they will last a long time.
  
  Food cooked in them is usually served in the
  pot, hence the term " En Casserole," and therein
  lies part of the novelty. A folded serviette may,
  if liked, be pinned round the outside, but some
  of the pots are so quaint and ornamental, this
  rather spoils the effect.
  
  There are different kinds of ware for cooking
  purposes now on the market ; besides the all
  brown clay-pot there is the brown and green
  tire-proof ware with white or yellow linings and
  the all white fire-proof china.
  
  Little rechauffes of meat, fish, and poultry
  can all be served up " en casserole," and it is
  also an excellent method of stewing fruit.
  
  BROILING OS GRILLING
  
  This is cooking on a hot gridiron either over or
  under a bright clear fire. The process can only
  be applied to small thin pieces of meat, which
  
  
  will cook quickly, such as chops, steak, kidneys,
  joints of game and poultry, &c.
  
  The meat chosen must always be of the best
  quaUty, otherwise it ^dll be tough and uneatable.
  It is impossible to obtain that red juicy appear-
  ance which is essential to a good steak or chop
  with inferior meat.
  
  The state of the fii'e is one of the next points of
  consideration. It ought to consist of glowing
  red embers, without any smoke or flame. A
  handful of salt sprinkled over it sometimes
  helps to disperse any smoke.
  
  Place the gridiron, which must be very clean,
  over the fire and allow it to become hot, then
  grease it with a piece of fat or suet held on the
  end of a fork. The gridiron must be placed or
  held in a slanting position and from three to six
  inches above the coals, according to the intensity
  of the heat. Lay the meat on it and let one side
  cook while you count ten at about the same rate
  as the ticlang of a clock, then turn with the
  steak tongs or the blades of two knives and cook
  the same length of time on the other side, and
  repeat the process until the meat is sufficiently
  cooked. The regular turning is very important,
  as it means slower cooking and prevents the
  surface from being burned.
  
  The time must be regulated by the thickness
  rather than by the weight of the meat, and ex-
  perience alone can teach when the chop or steak
  is done to a nicety. Touch is the best guide.
  If, when pressed with the back of a fork, the meat
  feels spongy and very elastic it is still in a raw
  state ; if, on the other hand, it is hard and without
  resistance it is overcooked. Tlae aim must be to
  hit the happy medium and serve the meat well
  browned on both sides before that puffed appeaj-
  ance has disappeared and all the steam of the
  juices has escaped through the crust.
  
  Broihng can also be done in a hanging gridiron
  in front of a clear fire, but the result is not so
  satisfactory.
  
  When a gas stove is used the grilling is done
  underneath the light instead of on the top (see
  p. 96). A little water put in the dripping tin
  will prevent the fat catching fire.
  
  BEEF AND MUTTON
  Boiled Salt Beef
  
  Choose a nice piece of salt beef, aitchbone,
  rotmd or brisket, and bind it up firmly with a
  piece of tape to prevent it having a ragged
  appearance when cooked. (For Boiling Salt
  Meat, see p. 166.)
  
  It is usual to cook vegetables along with this
  meat. Prepare a supply of carrots, turnips, and
  onions in proportion to the size of the meat ;
  keep the onions whole, cut the carrots into three
  or four pieces lengthwise, and the turnips in
  thick slices. Wlien the meat has come to the
  boil add the vegetables, or if the meat is very
  large put them in rather later so that they do not
  
  
  168
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  become too much cooked. Small dumplings are
  also a favourite accompaniment to tliis dish.
  
  For servang lift the meat on to a hot dish and
  remove the tape. A silver skewer may be put
  in to keep the meat together. Garnish with the
  vegetables and dumplingrs placed alternately
  round the dish. Strain a little of the liquid
  round and serve an extra supply in a sauce-boat.
  
  A dish of green vegetables may be served
  separately.
  
  Dumplings to Serve vrlth Meat
  IngredienU -
  
  
  4 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  A little Water or Milk.
  
  
  6 oi. Flour.
  
  2 oz. Suet.
  
  1 tea-gpoonful Salt. I
  
  Method. - Chop the suet and mix it lightly
  with the flour, salt, and baking powder. Bind
  all together with water or milk and knead lightly.
  The dough must be soft without being sticky.
  Make it up into small balls and cook them from
  ten to fifteen minutes beside the meat. The
  water must be kept simmering all the time they
  are in. Serve at once, or they will be heavy.
  
  Roast Beef
  
  (Fr. BcEuf Roti)
  
  The best joints for roasting are the sirloin
  and the ribs. The round and aitchbone can
  also be cooked in this way, but to be successful
  the meat requires to be very tender. If a large
  sirloin has to be roasted it is a good plan to cut
  a piece off the thin end and either stew or cook
  it in some other way, as if roasted with the
  rest of the joint it is apt to become overcooked
  before the other part is ready.
  
  Ribs of beef are often better boned and rolled
  before roasting ; it makes a neater joint and is
  more economical, as the bones Asith all their
  goodness can be used for soup. (For Roasting
  and Making the Gravy, see p. 165.)
  
  A little shredded horse-radish may be used as
  a garnish, or horse-radish sauce may be served
  separately. Yorkshire pudding (p. 193) and roast
  or baked potatoes are the usual accompaniments.
  
  
  Grilled Steak
  
  The steak must be cut from a well-hung juicy
  piece of meat. The beet are from the rump or
  fillet or from the tender part of the round. The
  steak should be cut from IJ to IJ inches in thick-
  ness. Wipe it with a damp cloth and trim off
  any superfluous fat. Beat the meat slightly
  with a cutlet bat and then make it as shapely aa
  possible. If small round steaks are required, it is
  best to use the fillet cut in slices. Moisten both
  sides of the meat with a little salad oil or melted
  butter, place it on a well-heated gridiron and
  cook according to directions given for broiling.
  
  
  The time will vary from twelve to fifteen
  minutes according to the thickness of the meat,
  and also upon wliether it is liked very underdone
  or well cooked. Serve at once on a very hot
  dish and put a pat of maitre d'h6tel butter on
  the top. The heat of the meat should melt the
  butter and the parsley should look fresh and
  green.
  
  A little water-cress may be iised as a garnish,
  or a few small baked tomatoes may be put round
  the dish. Potato chips or balls should be served
  separately.
  
  Braised Round of Beef
  
  (Fr. Boeuf k la Casserole)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  3 lbs. Round of Beef.
  2 oz. good Dripping.
  Trimmings of Ham
  
  Bacon.
  1 Carrot
  
  
  1 Onion.
  
  Bunch of Herbs.
  1 pint Stock.
  Seasoning.
  
  
  Metlwd. - Put the dripping and some trim-
  mings of ham and bacon into a stewpan, and,
  when melted, put in the vegetables cut in pieces
  and the seasonings. Tie the meat into a neat
  shape with a piece of tape, and when the contents
  of the saucepan are hot place it on the top with
  any bones or scraps round the sides. Put on the
  lid and cook slowly for twenty minutes until the
  meat has taken colour. Add the stock and, if
  Hked, a glass of white wine. Cook slowly from
  three to four hours untU the meat is thoroughly
  tender. Lift it on to a hot dish, remove the
  tape, and keep it warm while the gravy is pre-
  pared. If the liquid in the saucepan has reduced
  very much add a little stock, and strain into
  another saucepan. Boil for a few minutes,
  remove any grease from the top, pour some of
  this gravy round the meat, and serve the re-
  mainder separately.
  
  A puree of potato is a good accompaniment
  with this dish.
  
  Scotch Collops
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. lean juicy Beef.
  
  2 table-sp. Bread-crumbs,
  
  1 oz. Beef Dripping, Butten
  
  or Bacon Fat
  1 Onion.
  
  
  J pint Stock.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  1 tea-sp. Flavouring Sauce.
  
  1 Slice of Toast.
  
  
  Method. - Have the meat minced along with a
  small proportion of fat. Melt the one ounce of
  fat into a stewpan, and, when hot, put in the
  onion finely chopped and the meat. Pound well
  with a Mooden spoon until nicely browned. Add
  the stock and seasoning and simmer slowly for
  half-an-hour. Add the bread-crumbs about ten
  minutes before it is ready, so as to absorb the
  grease. Serve garnished with small crotltona of
  toast.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  169
  
  
  Haricot of Ox-Tail
  {Fr, Queue de Boeiif en Haricot)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 Ox-tail.
  
  1 pint Brown Stock.
  
  1 Carrot, 1 Turnip, and 1
  
  Onion.
  A sprig of Parsley, Thyme,
  
  and Marjoram.
  1 Bay Leaf.
  1 stick of Celery.
  
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  2 oz. Flour.
  Pepper and Salt.
  1 glass of Claret.
  
  GarnWi.
  
  Fancy shapes of Carrot and
  
  Turnip or Glazed Onions.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the tail, and cut it in pieces,
  removing any superfluous fat. Put them into
  cold water, and bring to the boil. Boil for ten
  minutes, then strain and rinse the pieces of tail.
  Dry them well, and coat them with the flour.
  Melt the butter in a saucepan ; when smoking
  hot put in the tail, and fry a nice brown colour.
  Add some small pieces of vegetable, the herbs,
  stock, and seasoning. Cover the pan, and
  simmer slowly from three to four hours, skimming
  when necessary. When the tail is tender lift
  the pieces on to a hot dish. Skim the sauce,
  add the wine, and strain through a fine strainer
  over and round the tail. Garnish with fancy
  shapes of carrot and turnip which have been
  cooked separately.
  
  
  Beef Creams
  
  (Fr. Cremes de Bceuf)
  
  
  Ingredienta-
  
  i lb. lean juicy Beef.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Pur^e of Spinach or Potato.
  
  1 table-sp. Brown Sauce.
  
  lEffg.
  
  
  2 table-sp. whipped Cream.
  1 des.-sp. chopped Parsley.
  1 des.-sp. chopped Mush-
  rooms.
  Brown or Piquante Sauce.
  
  
  1 gill Stock.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Panada
  
  I 2 oz. Flour.
  
  
  Method. - Greaae six or seven small entree
  moulds, and decorate them at the foot with
  chopped parsley and mushrooms.
  
  To Prepare the Cream. - ^Remove all skin and
  fat from the meat, and pass it through the
  mincing machine. Make a panada with the
  stock, butter, and flour ; put the stock and
  butter into a saucepan, bring them to the boil,
  and sprinkle in the flour. Then mix until
  perfectly smooth, and cook thorouglily. Put
  this panada into a mortar with the meat, brown
  sauce, egg, and seasoning. Pound well, and rub
  all through a wire sieve. Add the cream and
  the remainder of the parsley and mushrooms.
  Mix lightly, and fill up the prepared moulds.
  Place these in a shallow pan or tin with a double
  fold of paper at the foot. Pour in enough boiling
  water to come half-wayup the sides of the moulds,
  and cover with greased paper. Steam slowly for
  
  
  fifteen minutes, or until the creams feel firm to
  the touch. Lift them out, and allow them to
  stand for a minute or two. Then unmoxild
  them carefully, and dish on a puree of potato or
  spinach and poiu" brown sauce or piquante
  sauce round.
  
  
  Required-"
  
  
  Beef Olives
  
  Force-meat
  
  
  IJ lb. Beef (cut thin).
  
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  J pint Stock.
  
  1 dessert-spoonful Ketchup.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  3 table-sp. Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  1 table-sp. chopped Suet or
  
  melted Butter.
  1 tea-sp. chopped Pargley.
  i tea-sp. mixed Herbs.
  Pepper and Salt.
  Egg or Milk to bind.
  
  
  Method. - First prepare the force-meat. Put
  the bread-crumbs into a basin, and add to them
  the parsley, herbs, suet or butter, pepper and
  salt. Mix all together, and add enough milk or
  beaten egg to bind, but do not make the mixture
  too moist.
  
  Wipe the meat with a damp cloth and cut it
  into oblong-shaped pieces, suitable for rolling
  up, and as much one size and shape as possible.
  Any nice pieces of meat that are too small or
  ragged to make into rolls may be cut up and
  rolled inside the other pieces, also some small
  pieces of hard fat. Spread out all the strips of
  meat on a board, put some of the force-meat into
  the centre of each, and roll them up. Tie round
  with a piece of coarse thread or fine twine, and
  roll them in the flour. Melt the dripping or
  butter in a stewpan, and when smoking hot put
  in the rolls of meat and keep turning them over
  with a spoon until they are browned on all sides.
  Lift them out on to a plate as they are ready,
  and when all are done, pour away the fat from the
  pan and add the stock. Add also the seasonings,
  bring to the boil, and skim well. Return the
  rolls of meat, put the Ud on the pan, and simmer
  very slowly from one and a half to two hours, or
  until the meat feels quite tender.
  
  To Serve. - Lift out the beef oHves on to a hot
  dish, remove the strings, and arrange them
  neatly down the centre of the dish. Strain the
  gravy over and round. Garnish with a little
  very finely chopped parsley, green peas, or carrot
  and turnip cut in fancy shapes.
  
  Note. - Some finely chopped ham or tongue
  may be added to the stuffing, also a little
  chopped onion if desired. Or a tiu-ned ohve,
  an oyster, or some chopped mushrooms may be
  put inside. Sometimes sausage meat is used
  instead of the above force-meat. The beef olives
  may, if liked, be dished on a border of potatoes
  or spinach.
  
  Instead of cutting the meat in pieces it may
  be made in one large roll. Veal olives can be
  done in the same way.
  
  
  170
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Russian Steaks
  {Fr. Biftecks 4 la Russe)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. tender Steak.
  i lb. Fillet of Veal.
  1 small Shallot
  
  chopped.
  lEfor.
  
  
  finely
  
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Egg and Bread-crumbs.
  
  2 oz. clarified Fat.
  Tomato Suuce.
  
  
  Method. - Remove all skin from the meat, cut
  it in pieces, and pass it twice tlirough the
  mincing machine. Then put it into a basin, and
  add the shallot, parsley, and seasoning. Moisten
  with the egg well beaten, and mix well. Spread
  the mixture on a plate, and allow it to set for
  half-an-hour. Then di%'ide it into eight or ten
  equal-sized pieces. Form each piece into a
  round flattish cake, using flour to prevent the
  mixture from sticking to the board, and egg and
  bread-crumb them. Then flatten the steaks
  with a knife and re -shape them. Melt the fat in
  a frying-pan. When smoking hot, put in the
  steaks, and fry them first on one side and then
  on the other until nicely browned. They will
  require fully ten minutes to cook. Drain them
  well, and serve in a circle on a hot dish. Pom-
  tomato sauce round.
  
  Note. - These steaks may, if liked, be dished
  on a border of potatoes (p. 156), and green peas
  used as a garnish.
  
  Tripe with Tomatoes
  {Fr. Tripes a I'ltaiienne)
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  \i lbs. dressed Tripe,
  li 02. Butter.
  
  1 cupful Tomato Sauce.
  
  2 table sp. Orated Cheese.
  
  
  i lb. Mushrooms.
  
  Stock.
  
  2 table-sp. Bread-crumbs.
  
  Seasoning.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the tripe in warm water and
  cut it in thin strips. Put it into a stewpan with
  the mushrooms peeled and sliced, the butter,
  seasoning, and enough light stock to cover.
  Stew slowly until the tripe is tender, add the
  tomato sauce and cook a few minutes longer.
  Arrange the stew in a fire-proof dish, sprinkle
  the bread-crumbs and cheese over the top, and
  brown in the oven.
  
  Boiled ToDgue with Caper Sauee
  
  (Fr. Langue de Boeuf - Sauce aux Cfipres)
  
  Rehired -
  
  1 Fresh ToDgue. A bunch of Herbs.
  
  1 Carrot. Salt.
  
  Turnip. Caper Sauce.
  1 On.oD stack with Cloved.
  
  Method. - Trim the tongue, removing any un-
  tidy-looking pieces from the root end. Put it
  into a saucepan with cold water to cover, bring
  to the boil and boil for ten minutes. Strain and
  rinse away any scum with fresh water. Cov"r
  
  
  the tongue again with M'arm water, add the
  ti'immings, and, when boiling, add the vegetables
  cut in pieces and the other seasonings. Cook
  slowly for four hours or until the tongue is qviite
  tender, then lift it up on a hot dish ; remove the
  skin and cut it in halves without quite severing
  the pieces. Make some caper sauce (see p. 142),
  adding to it two yolks of eggs and mask the
  tongue with this.
  
  
  Stuffed and Roast Shoulder of Mutton
  
  Required -
  
  A shoulder of Mutton.
  
  4 oz. Bread-crumba.
  
  IJ oz. chopped Suet.
  
  A little grated Lemon Rind
  
  
  1 table-sp. chopped Parsley.
  A little Milk, or 1 Egg.
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  
  Method. - Remove the bone from the mutton,
  wipe it well with a damp cloth, and season with
  pepper and salt. Then prepare the stuffing : -
  Put all the dry ingredients into a basin, and
  season to taste. A little finely chopped ham
  or tongue may be added or some finely powdered
  herbs. Add enough beaten egg or milk to bind
  all together into a stiffish paste. Place this in
  the centre of the mutton and either sew it in or
  strap it into shape with a piece of tape. Weigh
  the joint and then roast according to directions
  given on p. 165.
  
  Remove the tape or sewing-cotton before
  serving and keep in shape with a silver skewer.
  Pour a plain gi*avy round and garnish with
  small baked tomatoes.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  \\ lbs. of Mutton.
  1 lb. Potatoes.
  3 Onions.
  A little Parsley.
  
  
  Hot Pot
  
  
  2 Sheep's Kidneys.
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  }"pint Stock.
  Pepper aud Salt.
  
  
  Method. - This dish should be cooked and
  served in an earthenware pot. Trim the meat
  and kidneys and cut them into small neat pieces.
  SUce the onions thinly and scald them in boiling
  water a few minutes. Peel the potatoes, cut
  a few of them in halves or quarters, and slice
  the remainder rather thickly. Arrange the in-
  gredients in layers in the dish, seasoning each
  with a little pepper and salt. The last layer
  should be the pieces of potato. Pour in the
  stock and put the butter or dripping in pieces
  on the top. Cover with the lid or twist a piece
  of strong paper over the top, and cook in the
  oven from one and a half to two hours. About
  half-an-hour before serving remove the cover
  and allow the top to become a nice brown
  colour. Sprinkle with finely chopped parsley
  and serve in the dish.
  
  Note. - Beef or veal may be used instead of
  mutton. A few mushrooma may bљ added if
  liked.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  171
  
  
  Dutch Stew
  
  
  Ingredients -
  Ij lbs. Mutton.
  1 tender Cabbage.
  1 gill warm Water.
  
  
  4 or 5 Potatoes.
  1 Spanish Onion.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the meat and cut it in con-
  venient-sized pieces. Put it into an earthenware
  stewpan, add water and seasoning, and simmer
  for half-an-hour. Then add potatoes sliced and
  cabbage carefully prepared and cut in six or
  eight pieces. Replace the lid and stew from
  three-quartei-s to one hoiu" longer. Add more
  seasoning if necessary and serve in the casserole.
  
  Note. - Any bones shovdd be stewed with the
  meat and lifted out before serving.
  
  Mutton Cutlets
  (Fr. Cotelettes de Mouton)
  Required -
  li lb. best end of the Neck
  
  of Mutton.
  Pepper and Salt
  Egg and Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  Frying Fat.
  A Potato Border.
  Brown, Tomato, or Piquante
  Sauce.
  
  
  Method. - For mutton cutlets the meat shoiild
  be very small, and the butcher should be in-
  structed to saw off the chine bone, since when this
  is done the cutlets can be easily divided without
  the aid of a saw or chopper. Wipe the meat
  first with a damp cloth, then cut it with a very
  sharp knife, allowing a bone to each cutlet.
  (This quantity should make five.) Trim off
  the fat, leaving only a narrow rim, and scrape
  one inch of the bone at the end quite clean to
  allow of a cutlet fiiU '^ing put on afterwards.
  Scrape also the bone on the inner side, and if
  too long and unsightly, chop a piece off from
  each, but make all the cutlets as nearly as
  possible the same shape and size.
  
  Season them with pepper and salt, brush over
  with well-beaten egg, and coat with finely made
  bread-crumbs. Put the cutlets on a board and
  re -shape them with a clean dry knife, and remove
  all crumbs from the inside bone. Then lay them
  on a dish or tin with a double paper under them,
  and they are ready for cooking.
  
  To Cook the Cutlets. - Melt about two otince
  of clarified fat in a frjdng-pan, and allow it to
  become smoking hot over the fire. Then lay in
  the cutlets, and fry them rather slowly, first on
  one side and then on the other, until they are
  nicely browned. They will require from eight
  to ten minutes to cook. Drain them well on the
  kitchen-paper before dishing.
  
  To Serve the Cutlets. - Arrange a border of
  mashed potatoes on a hot dish and arrange
  the cutlets on the top of this, one leaning
  against the other, and with all the bones to
  the inside. The ends of the bones may be gar-
  nished with small cutlet frills. Pour brown,
  tomato, piquante, or any other suitable sauce
  round. (See Sauces.)
  
  Uotea. - ^The outleta may be dished in a straight
  
  
  1 small Apple.
  J pint Stock
  A little Chutney.
  Pepper and Salt.
  Boiled Eice.
  
  
  row down the dish instead of in a circle. Spiiiacli
  may be used in place of potato, or the cutlets
  may be dished without either.
  
  Green peas, small baked tomatoes, or a
  macedoine of vegetable may be put in the centre
  as a garnish.
  
  Curry of Kidneys
  Ingredients -
  4 or 5 Sheep's Kidneys,
  i oz. Butter.
  1 dessert-sp. Kice Flour.
  1 tea-sp. Curry Powder.
  1 table-spoonful Cream.
  1 small Onion.
  
  Method. - ^Melt the butter in a stewpan or
  eaxthenware casserole, put in the kidneys, split
  and skirmed, and cook them for a few minutes.
  Skin and slice the onion very thinly, peel and
  chop the apple, and put these two into the pan
  with the kidneys. Fry for a few minutes, then
  add the rice flour, cm-ry powder, chutney,
  pepper, and salt. Mix weU, and pour in the
  stock. Allow the kidneys to stew slowly in this
  sauce until they are quite tender, from half to
  three-quarters of an hovu-. Add a httle cream
  at the last, and serve with boiled rice.
  
  Note. - Veal kidney may be used instead of
  sheep's, but it will take rather a longer time to
  cook.
  
  Grilled Sheep's Kidneys
  {Fr. Rognons de Mouton Grille)
  Ingredients -
  
  6 Sheep's Kidneys. Croiitons of Fried Bread or
  
  IJ oz. Butter. Buttered Toast.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - ^The kidneys must be very fresh.
  Take off the thin skin which covers them, and
  spht them open without separating the two
  parts. Remove the white tube or duct, and cut
  away the fat from the middle. Hold the kidneys
  open and pierce them from one side to the other
  with small wooden or silver skewers. Melt the
  butter and brush the kidneys over with it,
  season them with pepper and salt, and sprinkle
  them with a few bread-crvunbs. W^arm a grid-
  iron, grease the bars, place the kidneys on it
  with the cut-side downwards, and grill over a clear
  fire for about eight minutes. Turn the kidneys
  frequently whilst they are cooking. When done,
  place them on a hot dish, with a croflton under
  each, and remove the skewers if they are wooden
  ones. The hollows in the kidneys may be filled
  with mSitre d'hotel butter and devil sauce may
  be served separately.
  
  Sheep's Tongues k la Maddre
  
  {Fr. Langues de Mouton a I'ltalienne)
  Ingredients -
  
  4 Sheep's Tongues I 1 pint Madeira Sanoe.
  
  IJ pint Stock. I
  
  Method. - Sheep's tongues may be bought
  either fresh or pajrtially boiled. If freah, soak
  
  
  172
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  them in salt and water for two or three houra,
  and then rinse them. Put them into a stowpan
  with enough well -flavoured stock to cover them,
  and simmer slowly about two hours or until
  tender. If partially cooked, the tongues will
  not require soaking, and from half to three-
  quarters of an hour will be sufficient to cook
  them. When ready take them up, remove the
  skin, trim the roots, and cut each tongue in
  tliree lengthways. Put them into a ste%vpan
  with the sauce, and simmer for ten minutes.
  Tlien dish the pieces of tongue neatly, and pour
  the sauce over.
  
  Lamb Cutlets with Chestnuts
  
  {Fr. C  
  Ingredients -
  
  8 or 9 Larab Cutlets 1 oz. Butter.
  
  Pepper and Salt. A pinch of Salt.
  
  2 oz. Butter. A pinch of Sugar.
  
  Brown Sauce. Water.
  
  1 lb. Chestnuts. A little Stock or Milk.
  
  Method. - Prepare the pur6e of chestnuts
  (p. 126), and keep it warm.
  
  Trim and cook the cutlets in the same way as
  mutton cutlets (p. 171), and arrange them in a
  crown on a hot dish with the pur6e of chestnuts
  in the centre. Pour a good brown sauce (not
  too thick) round the dish.
  
  Ragout of Lamb with Green Peas
  
  (Fr. Ragotit d'Agneau aux Petita Pois)
  Ingredients -
  
  2 lbs. Breast or Neck of
  Lamb.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  1 table-gpoonful Flour.
  
  1 pint Shelled Peas.
  
  
  1 Lump Sugar.
  
  Seasoning.
  
  Some light Stock.
  
  A sprig of Mint.
  
  A small bunch of Herbs.
  
  
  Method. - Cut the meat in neat pieces and
  sprinkle it with the flour. Melt the butter in a
  Btewpan, put in the meat and brown it slightly.
  Add the seasonings, peas, and enough light stock
  or meat boilings to cover. Stew slowly for
  one and a quarter hours or until the lamb is quite
  tender. Lift out the mint and herbs before
  serving. One or two table-spoonfuls of crram
  added to it at the last will be an improvement.
  
  Note. - Veal or mutton may be cooked in the
  same way.
  
  
  Lamb
  
  's Fry
  
  (Ft. Foie et Fressure d'Agneau)
  
  y ngrp(ii^nts^~~'
  I.amb's Fry.
  
  1 Onion.
  
  Parsley.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  Lemon Juice.
  
  Method. - Wash and dry the fry, then cut the
  liver in sUcea and the heart and lungs in small
  pieces. Melt the butter in a stewpan, add the
  
  
  onion finely chopped, and fry it a hght brown
  colour. Then put in the heart and lungs and
  stir them over the fire for seven or eight minutes.
  Add the liver and seasoning and cook for ten
  minutes longer or until all is well browned.
  Sprinkle with parsley, add the lemon juice, and
  serve very hot. This dish is suitable to serve
  en casserole.
  
  PORK AND VEAL
  
  Pork Cutlets
  
  (Fr. Cotelettes de Pore)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  5 or 6 Pork Cutlets. i 1 table-spoonful Flour.
  
  Seasoning. 1 Fried Apples.
  
  Method. - The cutlets should be taken from
  the loin or best end of the neck and must not
  be more than half an inch in thickness. Trim
  them neatly, removing most of the fat, and try
  to make them of uniform shape. Season with
  pepper and salt and coat lightly wnth flour.
  Melt some of the fat trimmings in a frj'ing-pan,
  and fry the cutlets in this. Cook slowly, turning
  them three or four times. Serve them on a very
  hot dish and garnish with fried apples.
  
  Fried Apples. - Cut some rather acid apples
  in quarters. Remove the core, but not the
  skin. Then fry the pieces in butter until tender
  but not broken.
  
  Note. - Apple sauce may be served instead of
  the fried apples.
  
  To Boil a Ham
  
  (Fr. Jambon Bouilli)
  
  Soak in lukewarm water at least twelve hours
  before cooking, then scrape it and weigh it.
  Put it into a saucepan with sufficient lukewarm
  water to cover it (if the ham is very salt, cold
  water will be better), bring to the boil, and
  skin well. Then simmer slowly until the ham
  is cooked. Allow from twenty-five to thirty
  minutes to the pound according to the kind and
  thickness of the ham. It is ready when the skin
  peels off ea.sily. A few vegetables may be
  cooked with the ham if liked, or sometimes a
  pint of ale or a gill of brown vinegar is added
  to give the ham a more mellow flavour. If the
  ham is to be served cold, allow it to cool in the
  water in which it was boiled. Then remove the
  rind and trim the fat. Sprinkle with brown
  bread-crumbs and brown sugar, and, if liked,
  stick in a few cloves. Place in the oven for a
  few minutes to brown. Fasten a paper frill
  round the knuckli^.
  
  If the ham is to be served hot, lift it from the
  water when cooked, and remove the skin. Then
  place it in the oven for a few minutes, and brush
  it over with liquid glaze. Serve with greens,
  Brussels sprouts, spinaoh, green peas, &c.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  173
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  \ Pig's Head (salted).
  
  2 Onions.
  
  6 Cloves.
  
  1 dozen Peppercorns.
  
  1 blade of Mace.
  
  
  Brawn
  
  
  A sprig of Parsley, Thyme
  
  and Jilarjoram.
  1 Carrot.
  1 Turnip.
  Cold Water.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the head thoroughly in tepid
  water, and remove all gristle and soft parts from
  the nostrils. Rinse well in cold water. Then
  put the head into a large saucepan with sufficient
  cold water to cover it, and bring slowly to the
  boil. Skim well, and add the vegetables cut in
  pieces and the herbs tied in a piece of muslin.
  Simmer slowly from three to four hours until the
  flesh will leave the bones easily, and skim when
  necessary. Then strain the liquid into a large
  basin and put the head on a dish. Next day cut
  the tongue and the meat from the head into small
  pieces, removing gristle and any superfluous fat.
  
  Skim all fat carefully off the stock, and return
  it to a saucepan with the bones from the head.
  Boil quickly until reduced to about half the
  quantity, and then strain over the meat. Let
  this stand until slightly cooled, add more
  seasoning if necessary, and then pour into
  wetted moulds. Set aside until cold, and when
  firm, turn out on a dish and garnish with parsley.
  
  Notes.- li Uked, the moulds may first be
  decorated with sUces of hard-boiled eggs.
  
  The feet may be cooked along with the head
  if wished.
  
  Breast of Veal Stuffed and Roasted
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  3 or 4 lbs. Breast of Veal.
  6 oz. Bread-crumbs.
  3 oz. chopped ,Suet.
  i Lemon Rind Grated.
  2 oz. Cooked Ham.
  
  
  Seasoning.
  
  1 des.-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  lEgg.
  
  A little Milk.
  
  
  Method.- Remove all the bones from the veal
  (these rnust be kept for making stock of soup).
  Then trim and season the meat and lay it out
  on a board with the skin side underneath
  Prepare the stuffing as for roast shoulder of
  mutton (p. 170), adding to it the ham chopped
  finely. Spread the stuffing over the veal, roll
  up and fasten securely with a needle and fine
  string Then flour the meat and roast it care-
  fully, basting well. When ready Hft the roll on
  to a hot dish, remove the sewing, and pour thin
  tomato or brown sauce round. Garnish with
  rolls of bacon (p. 174).
  
  
  Ingredients
  
  
  Steamed Veal with Celery
  
  
  2 lbs. Fleshy Veal.
  \ lb. Bacon.
  A few Parsley Stalks.
  1 Onion.
  
  
  1 Head Celery.
  Seasoning.
  Parsley Sauce.
  
  
  Method. - Trim the veal and bind it up with
  a piece of tape. Put it into a double cooker with
  
  
  the bacon cut in strips, the parsley stalks, and
  seasoning. Use the white part only of the
  celery, cut it in small pieces and the onion in
  quarters. Add these to the veal and steam
  slowly for two hours or until the veal is tender.
  Lift it on to a hot dish, remove the tape, place the
  vegetables, &c., round and smother in parsley
  sauce made with white stock.
  
  Jellied Veal
  
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  Grated Bind of half Lemon.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Fillet of Veal.
  \ lb. fat Bacon.
  
  1 gill Jelly Stock.
  
  2 hard-boiled Eggs.
  
  Method. - Take a plain tin mould and decorate
  the foot of it with a few slices of hard-boiled egg
  and a little chopped parsley. Wipe the veal
  with a damp cloth, remove all skin and bone,
  and cut it into small neat pieces. Remove all
  skin and gristle from the bacon, and cut it into
  narrow strips. Mix the veal and bacon together
  on a plate with the remainder of the eggs cut in
  pieces and the seasonings. Pack this mixture
  loosely into the prepared mould, melt the stock,
  and pour it over. Should the stock not be
  sufficiently stiff, dissolve a little gelatine in it
  first, and if no stock is at hand, boil the bones
  from the veal for about half-an-hotir with a
  little water and small pieces of flavouring
  vegetables, then strain. Fill up the mould with
  the stock, cover over with greased paper, and
  bake in a slow oven for two hours, iviien
  ready, the veal should feel quite tender when
  it is tested with a fork. If necessary, fill up the
  mould with a httle more stock, and set aside to
  cool. When wanted, turn out on a dish, and
  garnish with parsley or some fresh salad.
  
  Note. - Rabbit may be prepared in the sajne
  way.
  
  Veal Olives
  
  Prepare and cook in the same way as beef
  oUves, adding a Uttle chopped ham and grated
  lemon rind to the stuffing.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  
  Veal Cream
  {Fr. Creme de Veau)
  
  
  } lb. Fillet of Veal.
  1 oz. raw Ham.
  1 gill thick Cream.
  1 gill Bechamel or Velout^
  Sauce.
  
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  Grated rind of J Lemon.
  
  
  Velout^ or Bechamel Sauce, Green Peas.
  
  Method. - Wipe the veal, cut it in small pieces,
  and put it twice through a mincing machine with
  the ham. Put this minced meat into a mortar,
  add the eggs, sauce, and seasonings. Pound all
  well together, and rub through a fine wire sieve.
  Put this puree into a basin. \Vhip the cream
  lightly and mix it with the pvu-6e of meat. Pour
  
  
  174
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  all into s well-greaeed mould or moulds. The
  moulds must not be more than three-quarters
  filled. Place them in a saucepan resting on a
  double fold of kitchen-paper. Pour in enough
  hot water to come half-way up the sides, cover
  with greastxl paper, and steam very slowly until
  the cream faels firm to the touch. About three-
  quarters of an hour if a large mould, from fifteen
  to twenty minutes if the moulds are small.
  
  Turn out carefully, and coat with bechamel
  or velout^ sauce, and garnish with green peas.
  
  Note. - ^This may be made richer and of a more
  delicate texture byusing 1 J pint of cream with the
  purfe of meat, and no sauce and no eggs. Or,
  plainer, by using i pint sauce, one or two eggs,
  and no cream. The mixture, especially when
  containing much cream, must be steemied very
  gently.
  
  Veal and Ham Cutlets
  {Fr. Cotelettes de Veau)
  
  
  Bread-crumbs.
  Fat for frying.
  A Border of Potatoes
  
  Spinach.
  Brown or Tomato Sauce.
  Slices of Lemon.
  
  
  IngredietUa -
  
  ) lb. Fillet of VeaL
  
  3 or 4 oz. of Bacon.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  lEgg.
  
  A little grated Lemon Bind
  
  and Lemon Juice.
  1 tea-sp. melted Butter.
  
  Method. - Have the veal cut in a slice about
  
  Linch thick. Wipe it with a damp cloth, and
  at it slightly with a wetted cutlet bat or rolling-
  pin. Trim it into nice oblong-shaped pieces, free
  from skin and bone, and squeeze a very Uttle
  lemon juice over each. Beat up the egg on a
  plate, and add to it pepper, salt, the chopped
  parsley, grated lemon rind, and melted butter.
  (The butter is added to soften the veal.) Brush
  over each of the cutlets with this, and then
  bread-crumb them. Press the bread-cn.imbs
  well on with a knife, re-shape the cutlets neatly,
  and lay them on a tin or dish with double paper
  imdor them ready for frying.
  
  Have the bacon cut in thin slices, remove all
  rind and rust from it, and roll it up into neat
  little rolls. Place these on a skewer, and cook
  them on a tin in the oven for about ten minutes
  while tJi9 cutlets are being fried.
  
  To Cook the Cutlela. - Fry in a small quantity
  of fat in a frying-pan (see p. 166). They will
  take from ten to twelve minutes to cook and
  should bo well done. Drain on paper.
  
  To Serve the Cutlets. - Make ready a border of
  spinach or potatoes on a hot dish, and dish the
  cutlets along the top, one leaning against the
  other. Pour some brown or tomato sauce round,
  and place the rolls of bacon in the centre or
  round the sides. Cut one or two thin slices of
  lemon, quarter these slices, and place a piece of
  lemon between eskch cutlet.
  
  Note. - Tlie cutlets may be served without the
  border of potatoes or spinach, and green peas
  or any other suitable vegetable used as a gsuTiish.
  
  
  Stewed Veal Kidney
  
  (Fr. Bognons de Veau Saut^)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 cupful of good Stock or
  Gravy.
  
  
  3 Veal Kidneys.
  2 oz. Butter.
  1 small Onion.
  Pepper and Salt.
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  
  A few Mushrooms.
  
  Juice of i Lemon.
  
  1 des.-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 gill Button MuBhroomB.
  1 tea-spoonful Ketchup.
  1 table-spoonful Sherry.
  
  
  Method. - Remove the skin from the kidneys,
  and cut them in halves lengthwise. Take out
  the white nerve from the centre, and cut each
  half into thin slices. Melt the butter in a small
  stewpan, add the onion finely chopped, and
  brown it slightly. Then put in the kidneys,
  pepper and salt, and stir briskly over the fire
  untU the pieces are aU equally coloured. Sprinkle
  with the flour and mix well. Add the stock and
  wine, and stir until boiUng. A few muslirooms,
  sliced and cooked with the kidney, will be an im-
  provement. Cook slowly from fifteen to twenty
  minutes, and add the lemon juice and parsley
  at the last.
  
  Calf's Liver Sautd
  (Fr. Foie de Veau Saut6)
  Ingredients -
  1} lbs. Calf s Liver.
  1 table-spoonful Flour.
  1 teacupful Stock or Gravy.
  Pepper and Salt.
  A little finely chopped
  Parsley.
  
  Method. - Wash the Uver well in several waters
  and dry it in a cloth. Then cut it in slices
  
  1 inch in thickness, and coat these very lightly
  with flour. Melt the butter in a frjang or saut6
  pan. When quite hot, put in the liver, and fry
  gently for twenty minutes, until the liver is a
  nice brown colour and thoroughly cooked. Lift
  the pieces on to a plate, and pour away all fat
  from the pan. Pour in the gravy, add the
  mushrooms cut in halves and the seasonings,
  and stir for a few minutes. Then return the
  liver, and cook it for five minutes in the sauce.
  Dish neatly with the gravy poured over and
  round, and sprinkle with a little finely chopped
  parsley.
  
  Note. - Tlio mushrooms may be omitted.
  
  Calves' Brains In Saace
  
  (Fr. Cervelles de Veau en Sauce)
  Ingredients -
  
  2 or 8 sets Calves' Brains.
  White Stock.
  I oz. Butter.
  I oz. Flour.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  2 yolks of Eggs.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  6 rounds of Fried Bread.
  
  
  Method. - The brains must be very fresh.
  Blanch them and remove any clots of blood and
  fibre. Put them into a saucepan with white
  stock to cover and simmer gently for twenty
  minutes; then strain. Make a sauce with the
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  175
  
  
  butter, flour, and about half a pint stock from
  the brains. When well cooked, add the yolks
  of eggs, seasoning, and lemon juice. Reheat the
  brains in this, but do not boil again. Serve on
  small rounds of fried or toasted bread and
  garnish with chopped parsley.
  
  Note. - Sheep's brains may be cooked in the
  same way.
  
  Calf's Feet with Poulette Sauce
  {Fr. Pieds de Veau a la Poulette)
  Ingredients -
  
  2 Calf's Feet. I 1 pint Poulette Sauce.
  
  2 plDts White Stock. I
  
  Method. - Put the feet into a saucepan with
  cold water to cover them, bring to boiling point,
  and throw the water away. Rinse well and
  return the feet to the saucepan with enough
  light stock or meat boilings to cover them, and
  simmer gently for four hoiu-s. Then remove the
  bones, and press the feet between two dishes
  with a weight on the top untU they are cold.
  Cut them into small neat pieces and simmer for
  five minutes in the sauce. Serve garnished with
  crolitons of toast.
  
  Braised Sweetbreads
  
  (Fr. Ris de Veau, braisee)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 pair Calf 8 Sweetbreads. Jpint Browu Sauce.
  
  1 Carrot. A Croiiton of Bread.
  
  1 Turnip. Chopped Parsley.
  
  1 Onion. J pint Stock.
  
  Method - To Prepare the Sweetbreads. - Wash
  them well and then soak in salt and water for
  at least half-an-hour. Then rinse and put it
  into a saucepan with enough cold water to cover.
  Bring to the boil and pour the water away.
  Throw the sweetbread again into cold water,
  and trim off all fat with the fingers. Tlien press
  between two plates until cold.
  
  To Braise the Stveetbreads. - Prepare the
  vegetables, cut them in rough pieces, and put
  them into a stewpan. Pour the stock over and
  warm slightly. Then lay the sweetbread on
  the top, cover with greased paper, and braise
  carefully from thirty to forty minutes. When
  the sweetbread is tender, lift it out and place it
  on a croflton of fried bread in an entree dish.
  Brush it over with liquid glaze, and pour the
  sauce round. Garnish with, button mushrooms
  which have been cut in halves and warmed in a
  little stock. Sprinkle some very finely chopped
  parsley over.
  
  Sweetbreads " en Casserole "
  (Fr. Ris de Veau en Casserole)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 pair Calf 8 Sweetbreads.
  
  White Stock.
  
  A Bunch of Herbs.
  
  1 Onion.
  
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  } oz. Flour.
  A little Cream.
  Seasoning.
  
  
  Method. - Prepare the sweetbreads as in last
  
  
  recipe, and, after pressing, cut them in neat
  pieces. Put them into an earthenware sauce-
  pan with white stock to cover them, an onion
  cut in pieces, and a small bunch of herbs. Simmer
  for three-quarters of an hoiir or until tender ;
  then strain and make a sauce with the butter,
  flour, and stock. Return the sweetbread with-
  out the herbs, &c., and stew a few minutes
  longer. Season to taste and add cream at the
  last. Serve in the saucepan.
  
  Galantine of Veal
  
  (Fr. Galantine de Veau)
  Ingredients -
  
  3 or 4 lbs. Breast of Veal. lb. Ham or Tongue.
  
  1 lb. Sausage Meat. 2 hard-boiled Eggs.
  
  Seasoning. TrufileB.
  
  Glaze. Aspic Jelly.
  
  Method. - Prepare the meat as in breast of
  veal stuffed and roasted. Season the sausage
  meat rather highly and spread it on the top.
  Cut the hard-boiled eggs in pieces lengthwise
  and the tongue or ham in strips, and place these
  in rows on the top of the sausage meat. Two or
  three truffles and a few pistachio nuts may also
  be put in if wished. Roll and sew up the meat,
  then tie it in a cloth very firmly and in the shape
  of a bolster.
  
  Put the bones from the veal into a saucepan
  with stock or water to cover them and a few
  pieces of flavouring vegetable. Bring this to
  the boil, put in the roll of veal, and cook slowly
  from two and a half to three hours.
  
  When done, lift it out, and if, owing to the
  shrinking of the meat, the cloth looks wrinkled,
  take it off and re-roll it, and press till cold
  between two boards or dishes with a three or
  four poimd weight on the top.
  
  When cold, take the galantine out of its cloth,
  and trim the ends. Brush over the surface with
  a little melted glaze, and apply two coatings if
  necessary.
  
  Serve garnished with aspic jelly or some nice
  salad.
  
  GAME AND POULTRY
  To Roast a Fowl
  {Fr. Poulet Rdti)
  
  Have the fowl trussed for roasting, which
  may be done either before the fire or in the
  oven. In either case the breast of the fowl
  should be covered over -with a piece of greased
  paper or some slices of bacon, to prevent it from
  taking too high a colour. Keep the fowl well
  basted with butter, dripping, or bacon gra^'y.
  The time will depend upon the age and size of
  the fowl ; a chicken will take three-quarters of
  an hour, a fowl from one to one and a half hours
  to cook.
  
  When the fowl is ready lift it on to a hot dish,
  remove any trussing string or paper and pour
  
  
  176
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  away any grease that may nin on the disli.
  GamiBh with water-crees seasoned with lemon
  juice and salt.
  
  A nice gra\'y should always be served \\-ith the
  fowl. Pour away the fat from the tin in which
  it W£i8 roasted and add one cupful of stock or
  water. Stir over the fire mitil boiling, rubbing
  down any browning from the tin. Season nicely
  and serve in a sauce-boat. Breewi sauce may also
  be served with the fowl.
  
  The best accompaniment to roast poultry is
  a well-made salad, although many people still
  prefer hot vegetables.
  
  Not€. - Instead of the above sauce, chestnut
  or muslu-oom sauce maj- be used.
  
  It is no longer the fashion to stuff a fowl with
  veal force-meat, but it may be filled with shelled
  chestnuts before cooking.
  
  To Steam a Fowl
  
  First rub the fowl over with a piece of cut
  lemon to keep it wliite, sprinkle it with salt
  and wrap it in a sheet of buttered paper. Put
  it into a double saucepan or steamer (see p. 148)
  and cook from one and a half to two and a half
  hours according to age and size.
  
  When sufficiently tender lift it on to a hot
  dish and remove the paper and string. Mask
  it with parsley, oyster, bechamel, egg, or celery
  sauce and garnish with little rolls of bacon or
  hard-boiled egg. There should be sufficient
  sauce to coat the fowl and to cover the flat part
  of the dish.
  
  Fricassee of Fowl
  (Fr. Fricassee de Poulet)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 tender fowl.
  Cold Water.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  Pepper and .Salt
  
  1 table-Bpoonful Flour.
  1 pint ^^^lite Stock
  1 glass White Wine.
  
  
  A bunch of Herbs.
  
  6 Button Onions.
  
  3 or 4 Cloves.
  
  2 yolks of Eggs.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  1 oz. Kresh Butter.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  
  Method. - The colour of the fowl for this dish
  should be very white, therefore it is sometimes
  blanched before cooking it, although this cannot
  be said to improve the flavour. Cut the fowl
  into neat joints, remo^nng as much of the skin
  as possible. Warm two ounces of butter in a
  stewpan. Add the fowl, salt, and pepper.
  Colour for a few minutes over the fire, but do
  not let it take a deep tint. Add the flour, and
  one pint of hot white stock. Stir until boiling
  to prevent lumps ; add the herbs, onions, one of
  them pierced vfiih cloves, and the wine. Put on
  the lid, and simmer gently for one hour at least,
  or until the fowl is tender. The sauce should
  have reduced one -half. Then strain and return
  sauce to saucepan. Add the yolks of eggs,
  lemon juice, fresh butter, and parsley, but do
  
  
  Ciicumber, Radishes,
  
  Tomatoes.
  Aspic Jelly.
  
  
  not boil again. Serve garnished with crodtons
  of fried bread.
  
  Notes. - This may be cooked in an earthen-
  ware pot and served en casserole.
  
  Rice cooked in stock may be served separately.
  
  Chaudfroid of Chicken
  (Fr. Chaudfroid de Volaille)
  Ingredients -
  
  Cooked Chicken.
  White Chaudfroid Sauce.
  Mayonnaise Sauce.
  Some Green Salad.
  
  Decorations (see below).
  
  Method. - Cut the chicken into neat joints,
  removing as much of the skin as possible. Place
  the joints on a draining tray or on a dish tvu-ned
  upside down, and coat them all carefully with
  white chaudfroid sauce (see p. 142). Give them
  two coatings of the sauce if necessary. Then
  decorate the joints lightly and tastefully. For
  this may be used small fancy shapes of tongue
  or truffle, finely chopped truffle or ham, tiny
  sprigs of chervil, chopped parsley or yolk of
  egg, fancy shapes of the red part of radishes,
  tiny pieces of tomato, &c. Do not overload the
  joints -with decoration, and use colours that will
  blend well together. After decorating, run a
  little aspic jelly over each joint, so as to give
  them a glossy appearance, then let them set.
  
  Slired some green salad, mix it with any re-
  mains of decoration and a little chopped cliicken
  (any trimmings will do for this), and moisten
  with mayonnaise sauce. Pile this in the centre
  of an entree dish, and arrange the joints of
  chicken round it. Decorate with chopped aspio
  jelly, more salad, and thin slices of radish or
  cucumber.
  
  Mayonnaise of Chicken
  (Fr. Mayonnaise de Poulet)
  
  Prepare in the same way as chaudfroid of
  chicken, using mayonnaise sauce instead of
  chaudfroid sauce.
  
  Aspic Jelly
  (Fr. Aspic)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  li pints Water or Meat
  
  Stock.
  1 pill Sherry.
  
  1 gill assorted Vinegars.
  
  2 oz. Sheet Gelatine.
  Rind of 1 Lemon.
  Juice of 2 Lemons.
  A small piece of Carrot.
  A small piece of Turnip.
  1 stick of Celerj' or tea-sp.
  
  Celery Seed.
  
  Method. - Take a clean lined saucepan and
  rinse it out with hot water. Put into it the
  
  
  1 tea-spoonful Salt.
  A sprig of Thyme.
  
  A sprig of Marjoram.
  A few Parsley Stalks.
  
  2 or 3 Bay Leaves.
  1 blade of Mace.
  
  The whites and shells of
  
  2 Eggs.
  20 White Peppercorns.
  6 Cloves.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  177
  
  
  water or stock (which must be quite free from
  grease) and the gelatine cut in small pieces.
  If the stock is a jelly, less gelatine may be used.
  Add the vegetables, prepared and cut in pieces,
  the herbs tied together with fine string or thread,
  and the smaller seasonings tied in a piece of
  musUn. Add also the sherry, whites of eggs,
  and the shells washed and crushed. To measure
  the vinegars, take half a giU bro^vn malt vinegar,
  nearly half a gill of Tarragon vinegar, and make
  up the remainder with ChiU vinegar. Or less
  brown vinegar may be used and some spiced
  vinegar added. Add the vinegars to the other
  ingredients, with the salt, lemon rind peeled off
  very tliinly, and the juice strained. Whisk all
  together over the fire until a good froth rises
  and the jelly is almost boiling. Allow it to boil
  up as high as it will without boiling over, then
  draw the saucepan gently to one side of the fire,
  when the jelly will keep warm without simmering,
  and cover it with a lid or plate. Allow it to
  stand for ten minutes, and then strain.
  
  Any kind of cloth will do for straining the
  jelly, as long as it is not too close in texture and
  is kept for the purpose. Tie the cloth to a jolly-
  stand, or to the four legs of a kitchen-chair turned
  upside down, letting it sink in the middle so as
  to form a bag. Have ready two basins and some
  boiling water. Poiir the water through the
  cloth into one of the basins, so as to heat it
  thoroughly ; then put the dry basin underneath
  and pour away the water. Remove the lid from
  the pan, lift it carefully over without shaking it,
  and pour all the contents into the cloth. The
  jelly will not be clear the first time, as it is shaken
  up in pouring through, s^ change the basin, and
  pour what has run through back again into the
  cloth. Repeat this several times, until the jelly
  runs through perfectly clear. Cover the stand
  over with a piece of flannel or blanket, and let
  it remain until all the jelly has run through.
  
  Chicken a la Cardinal
  (Fr. Poulet a la Cardinal)
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  1 Chicken.
  
  Some White Stock.
  
  1 gill Button Mushrooms.
  
  
  J pint thick Tomato Sauce
  
  (p. 145).
  1 dozen Cherry Tomatoes.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Cut the cliicken into neat joints, and
  put it into a stewpan with sufficient white stock
  to cover it. Simmer gently from one to one and
  a half hom-s until the chicken is quite tender.
  Add the tomato sauce, which must bo very thick,
  and cook a few minutes longer. Then lift out
  the pieces of chicken, and arrange them neatly
  on a hot dish. Reduce the sauce, if necessary,
  until it is thick enough to coat the pieces of
  chicken, and then strain it over the joints.
  Garnish the dish with small cherry tomatoes
  which have been cooked in the oven but not
  broken, and button mushrooms saut6d in a
  little butter.
  
  
  Carried Fowl
  
  (Fr. Poulet en Cari)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 tender FowL | 1 pint Stock.
  
  IJ oz. Butter. 1 gill Cream.
  
  1 Onion. Juice of J Lemon
  
  1 tea-ap. Curry Powder Boiled Rice.
  A pinch of Salt
  
  Method. - Cut the fowl into neat joints, re-
  moving as much of the skin as possible. Melt
  the butter in an earthenwai'e stewpan, and
  colour in it the onion, sliced or chopped. Add
  the fowl, curry powder, and salt, and colour
  gently over a moderate fire, turning the pieces
  frequently. Then add the stock, and cook for
  one hour at least, until the fowl is tender and the
  liquid is reduced to one-third. Add the cream,
  simmer a few minutes longer, and add the lemon
  juice last. Serve en casserole and hand boiled
  rice separately.
  
  Boast Dock
  
  (Fr. Caneton R6ti)
  
  Fill the duck with apples peeled and cut in
  quarters and a few French plums which have
  been soaked and stoned. Roast in the same
  way as a fowl. It will take from three-quarters
  of an hour to one hour.
  
  Serve with brown gravy and salad.
  
  Note. - Sage and onion stuffing the same as
  for roast goose may be used instead of the above.
  
  Roast Goose
  
  {Fr. Oie R6tie)
  
  Roast in the same way as a fowl. The time
  required will be from two to two and a half hours.
  The following stuffing may be put inside : -
  
  
  Sage and Onion Stuffing
  
  i Spanish onions.
  8 or 10 Sage Leaves.
  lEgg.
  
  
  J lb. Bread-crumbs.
  Liver from the Goose.
  Seasoning.
  
  
  Parboil and chop the onions, add the bread-
  crumbs, sage leaves finely powdered, and Uver
  boiled and chopped. Mis all together, season
  well, and add the egg slightly beaten.
  
  Apple sauce and brown gravy should be
  served separately.
  
  Note. - The goose may be stuSed with apples
  instead of the above stuffing. (See Roast Duck.)
  Apple sauce would not then be required.
  
  Partridge Braised with Cabbage
  
  (Fr. Perdrix aux Choux)
  Ingredients-
  
  1 Partridge. 2 Small Cabbages.
  
  Slices of Fat Bacon. 1 Carrot.
  
  A bunch of Herbs. 1 Onion.
  
  Seasoning. Gravy of Stock.
  
  Method. - Wash and parboil the cabbages,
  
  M
  
  
  178
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  then drain them well and cut into quarters.
  Place some shces of bacon over the breast of
  the partridge and tie it up. Lay some more
  bacon at the foot of a stewpan, the carrot and
  onion cut in slices, and a bunch of herbs. Place
  the bird on the top of this, and put the pieces of
  cabbage round. Season well and add enough
  stock or gra\'y to half cover the contents. Put
  on the lid and stew slowly for at least one hour or
  imtil the partridge is tender. Then lift it out,
  cut it in quarters, and keep it warm. Strain the
  cabbage and place it in the centre of a hot dish.
  Arrange the joints of partridge on the top and
  garnish \rith the carrot and pieces of bacon.
  Remove the stock and pour it round the dish.
  
  Note. - Small sUces of cooked sausage are
  sometimes added to this dish.
  
  Broiled Partridge
  
  
  Butter.
  
  Browned Bread-crumbs.
  
  Potato Chips.
  
  Some good Gravy.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2ior more young Partridges.
  Chopped Parsley.
  Chopped Mushrooms.
  Chopped Shallot.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Pick and clean the partridges,
  cutting them in halves. Leave on the legs, but
  cut off the toes. Press the legs well back
  towards the wings, and inake the joint as much
  in the shape of a cutlet as possible. Mix to-
  gether some chopped parsley, mushrooms, and
  shallot with pepper and salt, and sprinkle the
  pieces of partridge with this mixture, and baste
  them with warm butter. Then sprinkle them
  with browned bread-crumbs, and broil over a
  clear fire for fifteen minutes. Baste again wdth
  warm butter, and serve very hot garnished with
  potato chips. Serve good gravy or some thin
  brown sauco separately.
  
  Roast Turkey
  {Fr. Dinde Rotie)
  
  This can be cooked in the same way as roast
  fowl. The time will depend upon the size of
  the bird ; a small turkey will require one and a
  half to two hours and a large- bird from two and
  a half to three hours. A turkey is unually
  stuffed before being roasted, and the following
  makes a nice force-meat : -
  
  Take one pound sausage meat (pork preferred)
  and add to it six ounces cooked and sieved chest-
  nuts and the liver of the tiu-kcy parboiled and
  chopped. Season rather highly, and put this
  into the crop of the turkey before trussing. The
  above is sufficient for a medium-sized bird.
  
  Brown gravy and bread sauce should bo
  served with the turkey.
  
  If the turkey is to be served cold, brush it
  over with liquid glaze after roasting. A little
  chopped aspic and some fresh salad may be used
  to decorate it.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  Remains of Game.
  I pint Gravy or Stock.
  
  1 glass Port Wine.
  
  2 or 3 Shallots.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  
  Salmi ol Game
  
  
  The Rind of 1 Orange.
  The juice of * Lemon.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  A sprig of Thyme.
  Croutons of Fried Bread.
  
  
  Method. - Cut the game into neat pieces, and
  put the bones and trimmings into a saucepan.
  Add the gravy or stock to the bones in the pan,
  also the shallots, orange rind peeled very thinly,
  and thyme. Simmer this for at least half-an-
  hour, and then strain. Melt the butter in a
  saucepan, and when it is slightly brown stir in
  the flour, add the strained stock, and stir again
  vmtil boiling. Add the wine, lemon juice, and
  seasoning to taste. Warm the pieces of game
  thoroughly in this, and skim wcU. Serve
  garnished with some pretty croutons of fried
  bread.
  
  Stewed Rabbit with Brown Sauce
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 Rabbit.
  
  2 oz. Ham.
  
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  
  2 Onions.
  
  1 pint Stock or Water.
  i table-spoonful Ketchup.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Clean and wash the rabbit well.
  Dry and cut it into neat joints. Melt the drip-
  ping or butter in a saucepan. Coat the pieces of
  rabbit with flom*, and brown them in the fat.
  Then add the ham cut in small pieces and the
  onioias in sUces, sprinkle with pepper and salt,
  pvit the lid on the pan, and cook slowly for ten
  minutes. Then add the stock and ketchup,
  mix well and cover again with the lid. Allow
  the stew to simmer slowly from ono and a half to
  two hours, or until the rabbit is quite tender.
  Remove any grease before serving, and dish
  very neatly on a hot dish.
  
  Stewed Rabbit with Onion Sauce
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 Rabbit. li oz. Butter,"
  3 Spanish Onions.
  
  2 oz. Ham.
  Seasoning.
  
  
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  A small bunch of Herbs.
  
  Croutons of Fried Bread.
  
  
  Method. - Prepare the rabbit as in last recipe
  and put it into a saucepan v^'ith cold water to
  cover it. Bring to the boil, pour the water away,
  and rinso both rabbit and saucepan. This is
  to whiten the rabbit. Cover again with warm
  water or white stock, add the seasoning, herbs,
  ham cut in small pieces, and onions scalded and
  cut in quarters. Put the lid on the pan and
  cook slowly for one and a half hours or longer
  if necessary. Strain and keep the gravy and
  ham. Place the pieces of rabbit on a dish and
  keep them warm. Make a sauce with the
  butter, flour, and gravy from rabbit. Add the
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  179
  
  
  onions finely chopped, season nicely, and pour
  this over the rabbit. Decorate with small
  croutons of fried bread.
  
  Jugged Hare
  
  (Fr. Civet de Lievre)
  Ingredients -
  1 Hare.
  Jib. fat Bacon.
  
  1 Onion stuck with 6 Cloves
  Bunch of Sweet Herbs.
  
  2 glasses of Port Wine.
  
  1 inch Stick Cinnamon.
  
  2 Bay Leaves.
  
  
  Juice of J Lemon.
  1 dessert-sp. Arrowroot.
  1 pint good Stock or Gravy.
  1 table-spoonful Red-Cur-
  rant Jelly.
  Pepper and Salt.
  Force-meat Balls.
  
  
  Method. - Cut the hare into neat pieces, not
  larger than the size of an egg, and wipe the
  pieces with a cloth. Cut the bacon into small
  pieces, and put it into a saucepan. Fry it for
  a few minutes, and then add the hare, onion,
  herbs, pepper, salt, cinnamon, and bay leaves.
  Put the lid on the saucepan, and cook slowly
  for twenty minutes, shaking the pan occasionally.
  Mix the arrowroot smoothly with the stock, and
  add to it the hare with the lemon juice and one
  glass of port wine. Stir over the fire imtil
  boiling, and then turn the contents of the sauce-
  pan into a strong jar. Cover the jar closely,
  and cook in a moderate oven from three to four
  hoiu-s. It is safer to place the jar in a shallow
  tin, and to keep a little boiling water round it.
  The time will depend very much upon the kind
  of hare used, but the cooking must be continued
  until the meat is quite tender. A few minutes
  before serving, add the other glass of port wine
  and the red-currant j^Uy. Dish the pieces of
  hare neatly, and strain the gravy over. Garnish
  with force-meat balls (see below).
  
  
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  2 oz. Butter or chopped
  
  Suet.
  1 whole Egg or 2 yolks.
  
  
  Force-meat Balls
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3 oz. Bread-crumbs.
  
  The grated rind of J Lemon.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  1 tea-sp. Thyme and Jlar-
  
  joram.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - If the Hver from the hare is good,
  it may be added to above ingredients. Cook
  it until it is firm, and then grate or chop it
  finely. Put it into a basin with all the dry in-
  gredients and season nicely. Rub in the butter,
  and then bind into a paste with the egg. Form
  this mixture into small balls and flour them well.
  Fry them in boiling fat until a nice brown colour.
  
  RECHAUFFES OP MEAT
  Cold Meat Shape
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. cooked Meat
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley
  
  1 hard-boiled Egg.
  
  
  ipint light Stock.
  } oz. sheet Gelatine.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Tlie meat used for this must be very
  tender, as it gets no further cooking. A mixture
  
  
  J oz. Butter.
  
  A little Stock.
  
  Seasoning.
  
  Browned Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  of meats such as veal and ham, mutton and
  tongue, &c., is best. Trim away all skin and
  gristle, and cut the meat in small neat pieces.
  Chop the parsley very finely, and cut the hard-
  boiled egg in slices. Then rinse out a mould
  with cold water, and decorate it at the foot with
  some of the egg and parsley. Place in very
  lightly a little of the meat with seasoning and
  more egg, then more meat, &c., and so on until
  all is in. Do not press it down. Dissolve the
  gelatine in the stock, and strain it over the meat.
  Set aside in a cool place until cold and firm.
  When wanted, turn out and garnish with parsley
  or salad.
  
  Darioles of Beef
  
  Ingredients -
  
  6 oz. cooked Beef.
  
  2 oz. cooked Potatoes.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  lEgg.
  
  J oz. Bread-crumbs.
  
  Method. - Grease half-a-dozen dariol moulds
  or small basins and coat the sides with fine
  browned bread-crumbs. Melt the half -ounce of
  butter in a small saucepan, add the meat finely
  chopped, the potato sieved, and enough stock
  to moisten. Mix well, season rather highly
  and according to taste, and the egg slightly
  beaten. Fill the prepared moulds with this
  mixture, sprinkle a few more browned crumbs
  on the top and bake in a moderate oven from
  fifteen to twenty minutes. Turn out the
  darioles on a hot dish and pom* some brown
  gravy or thin tomato sauce round.
  
  Note. - Any kind of meat may be used, and
  a little ham or tongue used along with the other
  meat is always an improvement.
  
  The mixture must not be made too wet or
  the darioles will not keep their shape.
  
  Glazed Beef Roll
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. cold Roast Beef.
  
  2 or 3 oz. cooked Ham or
  
  Tongue.
  1 dessert-spoonful Ketchup.
  A little Stock.
  lEgg.
  
  
  4 oz. Bread-crumbs.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  1 des.-sp. chopped Pickles.
  
  J tea-sp. Mixed Spice.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  Some Meat Glaze.
  
  
  Method. - INIince the beef and ham finely,
  being careful to remove all skin and gristle.
  Put them into a basin, and add the bread-
  crumbs, pickles, parsley, spice, pepper, and salt.
  Mix well, and bind with the egg well beaten,
  the ketchup, and, if necessary, a little stock or
  gravy.
  
  Form into a roll, and tie into a pudding cloth
  like a roly-poly. Boil this roU in the stock-pot
  for half-an-hour, then lift out and press between
  two dishes with a weight on the top until cold.
  Remove the cloth and brush over with a little
  melted glaze. Serve cold garnished with parsley
  or salad.
  
  
  180
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Note. - ^This roll may aJso be made \vith fresh
  uncooked meat. It will then require longer time
  for cooking, from one and a half to two hours.
  
  Meat Scallops
  
  (Fr. Coquilles do Viande au Gratin)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  \ lb. cooked Beef or ^■eal. i 2 table-spoonfuls browned
  1 gill Brown Sauce. Bread-ci-unibs.
  
  1 table-spooDful Sherrj'. I 1 table-sp. grated Cheese.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  Method. - Cut the remains of beef or veal into
  small squares, and heat them in the above
  proportion of good brown sauce. Season highly,
  and add the sherry. Grease six or seven china
  shells, and fill them with the mixture, piling it
  higher in the centre than at the sides. Sprinkle
  over them some browned bread-crumbs and
  grated cheese, and place a small piece of butter
  on the top. Place them in a hot oven about
  ten minutes. Garnish each with a sprig of
  parsley and a small shce of lemon.
  
  Potted Chicken or Game
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. cooked Chicken or I 2 oz. Butter.
  Game. | Pepper and Salt.
  
  2 OS. cooked Ham orTongue. I A pinch of Nutmeg.
  A little powdered Mace. I
  
  Method. - Take all the meat from the remains
  of cold fowl or game, remove all skin and gristle,
  and allow butter and ham or tongue in the above
  proportion.
  
  Put the meat twice through a mincing machine
  and then pound it in a mortar with most of the
  butter (previously melted) and season to taste.
  Rub the mixture through a fine wire sieve, pack
  into little pots, and ran the remainder of the
  butter over the top.
  
  Note. - Almost any meat can be potted in the
  same way. Two different meats used together
  are always tastier than one, and a little ham or
  other salted meat is alwaj's an improvement.
  If the ham is very fat, some of the butter may be
  omitted.
  
  The above seasonings are very simple, and
  different condiments may be added to suit
  individual taste.
  
  
  Chicken and Spaghetti
  Ingredients -
  
  0 oz. cooked Chicken.
  ) pint \V'hite Sauce.
  2 or 3 oz. cooked Ham.
  A little grated Lemon liind.
  
  1 o. ButUr.
  
  
  i lb. Spaghetti.
  
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  A few Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  Method. - Chop the chicken and ham finely,
  removing all skin and gristle. Cook the spa-
  ghetti in boiling water and salt for half-an-hour
  or until quito soft, then drain and cut in small
  pieces. Make a sauce with one ounce of flour,
  
  
  one ounce butter, and half a pint milk or chicken
  stock, and season with white pepper and salt.
  Mix the cliicken and ham in a basin with the
  sauce, adding the nutmeg, lemon, and parsley.
  Then grease a pie-dish, and put into it alternate
  layers of the chicken mixture and the spaghetti.
  Sprinkle the top with bread-crumbs, put the
  butter on in small pieces, and bake in a moderate
  oven from twenty to thirty minutes.
  
  
  Rissoles
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. cold cooked Meat
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  1 gill of Stock.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Onion.
  
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley,
  
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  A little Flour.
  
  Egg and Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  Method - ^Remove all skin and gristle from the
  meat, chop it very finely and then weigh it.
  Molt the butter in a small saucepan, add the
  onion, and cook for a few minutes over the fire.
  Then add the flour, and stir until slightly
  browned. Pour in the stock, and stir until the
  mixture begins to draw away from the sides of
  the saucepan. Add the meat and the seasonings
  and mix well together. Turn the mixture on to
  a plate, smooth it over with a knife, and set
  aside to cool. When cold, it will be firm and
  easUy shaped. Portion it out into about twelve
  equal-sized pieces. Take the pieces one at a
  time, and shape them on a board with the aid of
  a knife and a little flour. They may be made
  into any shape that is liked, such aa cutlet
  shapes, balls, small rolls, round cakes, or cone
  shapes. The dish will look neater if only ono
  or two shapes are used. Use as little flour as
  possible in the shaping, just sufficient to keep
  the mixture from sticking to the board. Then
  egg and bread-crumb them, and fry in boiling
  fat until they are a nice brown colour. Drain
  well, and serve hot with a dish-paper under them.
  Garnish with parsley.
  
  Note. - Any kind of meat may be used for
  making rissoles or a mixture of meats. A little
  ham or tongue used along with fresh meat is a
  great improvement.
  
  Scrambled Mutton and Tomatoes
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 tca-sp. chopped Parsley.
  1 or 2 slices of Toast
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  \ lb. cold Mutton.
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  1 cupful Tomato purie.
  
  1 oz. Butter or Dripping.
  
  Method. - Remove all skin and gristle from
  the mutton, then weigh it and mince it finely.
  Either fresh or tinned tomatoes may be used ;
  rub tliem through a hair or wire sieve in order
  to get a pur6e. Molt the butter or dripping
  in a saucepan, add the pur6e, meat, eggs well
  beaten, pepper and salt. Mix quickly over the
  fire until thoroughly hot and thick, and taste
  to see if sufficiently seewoned. Serve on neat
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  181
  
  
  pieces of toast or fried breswi, and sprinkle each
  with a little very finely chopped parsley. Send
  to table very hot.
  
  MEAT DISHES WITH PASTRY
  Beef Steak and Kidney Pie
  
  {Fr. Pat6 de Bifteck et Rognons)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  i table-sp. Stock or Water.
  J tea-sp. Jamaica Pepper.
  Flaky, Rough-Puff or Drip-
  ping Pastry.
  
  
  1 lb. Beef (cut thin).
  
  2 Sheep's Kidneys.
  1 hard-boiled Egg.
  1 tea-spoonful Ketchup.
  1 dessert-spoonful Flour.
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  Method. - Wipe the meat with a damp cloth
  and trim away all skin and any superfluous fat.
  Cut it into narrow strips suitable for rolling up.
  Split the kidneys, removing the skin and inside
  fat, and cut them into sm.all pieces. Mix the
  flour, salt and pepper together in a plate.
  (The usual proportions of seasoning to allow are
  one tea-spoonful of salt and half a tea-spoonful
  of pepper to each pound of meat, but this must
  vsu'y according to taste. The flour is used to
  thicken the gravy, and this should be omitted
  in a pie which is to be served cold.) Dip the
  pieces of meat and kidney into this mixture,
  coating them well. Roll up the strips of steak
  with some of the kidney and a small piece of
  fat inside each. Place these rolls loosely in a
  pie-dish, heaping them rather high in the middle
  of the dish to support the crust, and sprinkling
  them with the chopped parsley. Remove the
  shell from the hard-bo'led egg, and cut it into
  six or eight pieces. Arrange these pieces round
  the meat and poxir in the ketchup and half the
  stock.
  
  Notes. - The best steak should be used for
  pies, any other is likely to be tough. It is not a
  good plan to partly stew the meat beforehand,
  the pie will not have such a good flavour. The
  addition of a little potato and onion, partly
  cooked and thinly sUced, is considered by some
  people an improvement. The egg might then
  be omitted.
  
  To Cover the Pie. - For a plain pie, to be eaten
  hot, dripping crust (p. 164) does very well ; but
  for a superior pie, either rough-puff or flaky
  pastry is more suitable. The quantity made
  with half a pound of floui' will be about the
  requisite ajnount for the above proportion of
  meat.
  
  Roll out the pastry into an oblong shape and
  from one-quarter to three-eighthsof an inchthick.
  From tlais cut a strip about one and a half inches
  in width or rather wider than the rim of the
  pie-dish. Then wet the rim of the dish with
  cold water, and lay this"^ neatly on. Where a
  join is made wet one of the edges to make them
  stick. Do not overlap the pieces or one part of
  the edge will be thicker than the other. Wet
  this strip of pastry with cold water and lay on
  
  
  the larger piece of pastry to cover the top of the
  pie. Press this piece of pastry well on, easing
  it in shghtly and not dragging it over the dish.
  With a sharp knife cut off the larger pieces of
  pastry hanging round the dish, then hold the
  dish up in the left hand and with the right trim
  neatly round the edges. When trimming take
  short quick strokes, always cutting away from
  you, inclining the knife in such a way that the
  edges of the crust will have a considerable out-
  ward slope. Then flour the fii-st finger of the
  left hand and keep pressing the back of it down
  on the rim of the pastry, while with the back of
  a floured knife you tap the edges smartly all
  round, making them look Uke the leaves of a
  book. To scallop them, draw the back of the
  knife sharply across them at intervals of about
  half an inch, drawing the knife upwards and
  inwards, while with the thiunb of the left hand
  you keep pressing the pastry just in front of the
  knife downwards and outwards. Make a hole
  in the centre of the pie with a knife and briash
  over with beaten egg, omitting the edges. Roll
  out the trimmings of the pastry and cut out
  leaves for decorating. To do this in a simple
  way, cut the pastry into strips about one and a
  half inches wide. Then divide these obliquely
  into diamond-shaped pieces. Mark each with
  the back of a knife to imitate the veins of a
  leaf. From seven to nine of these leaves will
  be required for a centre ornament. Radiate
  the leaves from the hole in the centre of the
  pie, towards the edges of the dish, brush them
  over with beaten egg and the pie is ready to
  bake. Place it on a baking-tin and put it in a
  hot oven for the first half -hour or until the crust
  is risen and set and of a brown colour. Then
  move it to a cooler part, so that the meat may
  cook more slowly. As soon as the crust is dark
  enough, it should be kept covered with a double
  piece of paper until the pie is cooked. The time
  required will be from one to one and a half hoiu-s
  or longer if the meat seems tough or the pie is
  a large one. It may be tested by running in a
  skewer through the hole in the top. As soon
  as the pie is done remove it from the oven.
  Wipe the dish with a wet cloth and garnish with
  parsley before serving.
  
  Note. - A few chopped mvislirooms or an oyster
  may be rolled up inside the meat instead of the
  kidney. A little finely chopped shallot may bo
  added if desired.
  
  Beef Steak and Kidney Pudding
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Beef (cut thin).
  
  2 Sheep's Kidneys.
  1 dessert -spoonful Flour.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt
  
  3 table-sp. Stock or Water.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Ketchup.
  
  
  Method. - Prepare the meat according to
  directions given in previous recipe. Take a
  pint basin and line it with suet crust according
  to directions given on p. 164. Fill up with the
  
  
  182
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  prepared meat and poiir in the keteliup and
  stock. The contents should be rather heaped
  in the middle, as they slirink in cooking. Roll
  out the trimmings of pastry into a round shape
  to form a cover. Double down the edge of the
  pastry which lines the basin over the meat and
  wot it with cold water. Place the round piece
  on the top and press the edges well together.
  Cover with a scalded and floured pudding cloth.
  Plunge the pudding into a basin of f£ist-boiling
  water and boil quickly for at least two and a half
  hours or steam for tliree hours. When ready,
  lift out and let it stand for a minute or two.
  Tlien remove the cloth and turn the pudding
  carefully out on to a hot dish. Make a slit in
  the pastry at the side to let the gravy run over
  the dish.
  
  Note. - Larger puddings may be served in
  the bsisin in which they are made. Heat a table-
  napkin, fold it neatly and pin it round the basin.
  Chopped muslirooms or onions may be used for
  flavouring. The pudding may be baked instead
  of boiled.
  
  Chicken and Ham Pie (Cold)
  {Fr. Pate Froid de Volaille)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 tender Chicken.
  
  2 Hard-boiled Eggs.
  2 oz. Earn or Bacon.
  A pinch of gi-ound Mace.
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  
  A little grated Lemon Rind
  
  and Lemon Juice.
  Pepper and Salt.
  Some Jelly Stock.
  Rough- Puff or Flaky Pastry.
  
  
  Method. - Cut the chicken into neat pieces
  free from bone and with as little skin as possible.
  Season it with pepper, salt, and parsley, and add
  the ham cut in small pieces. Take a pie-dish
  just large enough to hold the meat, rinse it out
  with cold water and leave it wet. Then decorate
  the foot with sections of hard-boiled egg and
  chopped parsley. Fill up with the chicken and
  ham, &c., and press the meat well down, making
  it level with the top of the dish. Pour in half
  a gill of white stock, or just enough to moisten
  the meat. Cover the pie according to directions
  given on p. 181, but put on no decorations.
  Bake in the oven from one to one and a half
  hours, or until the chicken feels tender when it
  is tested with a skewer. When roa  the pie from the oven and pour in as much
  stock (that will jelly when cold) as the pie will
  hold. If the stock is not stiff enough a little
  gelatine must first be dissolved in it. Tlien set
  the pie away until it is quite cold. To serve -
  remove the pastry frf)m the top and place it
  upside down on a clean dish, and turn the moat
  par^ carefully out on the top of this. If it
  is inclined to stick, dip the dish into hot water
  for a moment, and then loosen round the edges.
  Garnish round the sides of the pie with some
  nice salad and servo cold.
  
  Note. - This makes a nice supper or luncheon
  dish.
  
  
  IngredicrUs-
  
  2 Pigeons.
  
  I lb. best Steak.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Ketchup.
  
  1 gill of Stock.
  
  1 hard-boiled Egg.
  
  
  Pigeon Pie
  
  (Fr. Pat6 de Pigeons)
  
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  1 oz. Butter.
  1 dessert-spoonful Flour.
  Pepper and Salt.
  Rout,h-Pufr or Flaky I'astry
  
  
  Method. - Draw and singe the pigeons, then
  cut them in quarters and wipe or wash the
  pieces. Reserve the feet for decorating the
  pie. Remove as much of the skin from the
  joints as possible, and trim away any parts
  which do not look eatable. Wipe the beef with
  a damp cloth, trim off the skin, and cut it into
  small neat pieces. Put the flour on a plate and
  clip the pieces of pigeon and beef into it, coating
  them well. Molt the butter or dripping in a
  frying-pan ; when sinoking hot put in the beef
  and pigeons and fry them until nicely browned.
  Lift out and arrange in a pie-dish, sprinkling
  with pepper, salt, and the chopped parsley.
  Pile the meat liigh in the centre and put the
  egg cut in small pieces round the sides. Pour
  in the ketchup and half the stock and cover the
  pie according to directions given for beef-steak
  and kidney pie (p. 181). Brush the pie over
  with beaten egg and place it on a baking-tin.
  Bake in a good oven for two hours or until the
  contents feel tender when tested with a skewer.
  When ready, lift from the oven and pour in the
  rest of the stock through the hole in the top by
  means of a filler. Wipe the dish with a damp
  cloth. Scald the pigeon feet in some boiling
  water and scrape off the outside skin. Stand
  these up in the hole at the top of the pie and
  garnish with some sprigs of parsley.
  
  A^ote. - Be particular to choose very tender
  pigeons for making pies. A little bacon is
  sometimes put in to give flavoiu". Partridge
  pie can be made in the same way.
  
  
  Roman Pio
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  6 oz. cooked Aleat.
  3 oz. cooked Macaroni.
  3 oz. grated Cheese.
  1 gill Stock or Cream.
  1 parboiled Onion.
  1 tea-sp. made Mustard.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  1 table-spoonful crushed
  
  Vermicelli.
  1 gill Brown or Tomato
  
  Sauce.
  Dripping Crust.
  
  
  Method. - White moat, such as rabbit, mutton,
  chicken, or veal is the best to use for this pie.
  Remove from it all sldn, bone, and gristle and
  chop it finely. Put it into a basin with the
  macaroni, cut in small pieces, and add the onion
  finely chopped and grated cheese. Season with
  pepper, salt, and mustard, pour in the cream or
  stock and mix well together.
  
  To Make the Pie. - Take a pint basin and grease
  it with butter or dripping. Put in the crushed
  vermicelli and coat the sides of the basin with
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  183
  
  
  this. Line the basin with some dripping crust
  rolled out thinly. Fill up with the meat mixture
  and put a cover of pastry on the top. Make a
  small hole in the top of the pie and place it on a
  baking-sheet. Bake in a good oven for one hour.
  When ready, remove from the oven and turn out
  on a hot dish. Heat some brown or tomato
  sauce and pour it round.
  
  Note. - Bread-crumbs may be used instead
  of vermicelli. The onion may be omitted.
  
  
  Sweetbread Patties
  
  (Ft, Petits Pites de Ris de Veau)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3 oz. cooked Sweetbread.
  1 oz. cooked Ham or Tongue.
  1 table-spoonful good White
  
  Sauce.
  A little grated Lemon Kind.
  
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  2 table-spoonfuls Cream.
  Pepper and Salt.
  Rough-Puff or Puff Pastry.
  
  
  Method. - To Make the Mixture. - Chop the
  sweetbi-ead and ham or tongue very finely. Put
  them into a small saucepan with the sauce and
  stir over the fire until well mixed. Season to
  taste with pepper, salt, grated lemon rind,
  lemon juice, and a pinch of nutmeg. Pour in
  the cream and make the mixture thoroughly hot
  before using.
  
  To Make the Patties. - Make the patty cases
  according to direction given on p. 165, first or
  second method, and when baked fill them with
  the mixture. Put on the lids of pastry, and
  garnish with sprigs of parsley. Serve on a hot
  dish with a d'oyley or dish -paper under them.
  
  Note. - Chicken and ham patties may be made
  in the same way, and tongue may be used
  instead of ham. The cream may be omitted
  and white stock added to make the mixtui'e
  sufficiently moist.
  
  
  Chicken and Ham Croquettes
  
  {Fr. Croquettes de Volaille)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3 oz. cooked Chicken.
  
  1 oz. cooked Ham.
  
  1 table-spoonful thick good
  
  White Sauce.
  Itea-spoonful finely chopped
  
  Parsley.
  Scraps of Pastry.
  
  
  A little grated Lemon Bind.
  
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  1 Truffle chopped.
  
  Pepper and Salt
  
  Egg and Bread-crumbs or
  
  Vermicelli.
  Frying Fat.
  
  
  Method. - First prepare the mixture to put
  inside the pastry. Remove all skin and gristle
  from the meat, and then weigh it. Chop it
  very finely with a knife or put it through a
  mincing machine. Then mix in a saucepan
  with the white sauce, wliich ought to be fairly
  thick, and add the seasoning. Turn the mixtiire
  on to a plate to cool.
  
  To Make the Croquettes. - ^Roll out some scraps
  of pastry very thinly. The thinness of the
  pastry is very important. If left too thick it
  will not be properly cooked, and will be most
  unwholesome and unpleasant. Stamp the pastry
  out into roimds with a plain or fluted cutter
  three to four inches in diameter, and with a
  small brush wet round the edges with a little
  water or beaten egg. Put a small portion of the
  mixture into the centre of each piece of pastry,
  and double over, pressing the edges well together.
  Any other suitable shape may be used instead of
  rounds if preferred. Next egg and bread-crmnb
  the croquettes, or, instead of bread-cnmibs,
  use crushed vermicelli. Fry them a nice brown
  colour, but not too quickly, in boihng fat, and
  drain well on kitchen-paper. Pile them on a
  hot dish with a d'oyley or dish-paper under
  them, and garnish with parsley.
  
  Note. - Cooked game, sweetbread or tender
  veal may be used instead of the chicken.
  
  These can be baked instead of fried.
  
  
  EGG AND CHEESE DISHES, SANDWICHES, ETC.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  
  Eggs in Bread Sauce
  
  
  i pint Bread Sauce.
  
  
  2 table-sp. grated Cheese.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Heat the bread sauce and povir it
  into a fii-e-proof dish. Slip into it the foiar eggs
  without breaking them, sprinkle the grated
  cheese over the top, and bake In the oven about
  ten minutes. Allow time to cook the eggs and
  to brown the cheese.
  
  Note. - The cheese may be omitted and
  browned bread-crumbs used in its place.
  
  
  Eggs a la Cliartres
  
  {Fr. CEufs a la Chartres)
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  5 Eggs.
  
  5 round cro  5 rounds of Tongue or Ham-
  White Pepper.
  
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  3 or 4 table-spoonfuls Stock.
  1 tea-spoonful Meat Glaze.
  Salt
  
  
  Method. - Cut the rounds of bread about three
  and a half inches in diameter, and the rounds
  of ham or tongue of the same size. Take an
  egg-poacher (this is necessary in order to keep
  the eggs a good shape), and first pour a little of
  
  
  184
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  the butter (melted) into the cups, then break
  the eggs carefully and drop them in ; the yolks
  must on no account be broken. Sprinkle lightly
  with white pepper and salt. Put the poacher
  in hot water, and cook the eggs for four minutes,
  or until set without being hard. Meanwliile fry
  the croutons a nice brown colour in the rest
  of the butter, and warm the slices of tongue
  or ham in the stock. Place the croutons on a
  hot dish, the shcos of tongue or ham on the
  top, and then the eggs. Melt the glaze in the
  stock and pour it round.
  
  
  Eggs en Cocottes
  (Fr. CEufs en Cocottes)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  Eggs.
  Butter.
  
  
  A little Cream.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Butter as many small fire-proof
  dishes as you wish. Break an egg into each,
  sprinkle with pepper and salt, and pour one
  tea-spoonful of cream over each egg. Stand the
  cases in a tin with enough hot water to come
  half-way up the sides, and cook in the oven
  about seven minutes, or until the eggs are set.
  
  Note. - ^This dish may be varied very much
  by putting one teaspoonful of chopped ham,
  tongue, mushroom, &c., at the foot of the Utile
  case, then the egg with the cream on the top.
  Or grated cheese may be sprinkled both above
  and below the egg, and this makes a nice dinner
  savoury.
  
  Eggs with Green Peas
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  4 Eggs.
  
  i pint cooked Oreen Peas.
  
  1 gill ligbt Sauce.
  
  2 table-sp. Milk or Cream.
  
  
  A pinch of Sugar.
  
  Sippets of Toast or Fried
  
  Bread.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Heat a little light-coloxired sauce
  and add the peas and seasoning. Cook for a
  few minutes, and add the milk or cream at the
  last. Turn the peas with their sauce on to a
  hot dish, and place on the surface four nicely
  poached eggs. Garnish with sippets of toast
  or fried bread.
  
  
  Eggs a la Maitre d' Hotel
  (Fr. CEufs h. la Maitre d'Hotel)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  0 Eggi.
  
  Maitre d'H6tel Butter.
  
  
  6 pieces
  Toast.
  
  
  of hot buttered
  
  
  Method. - Arrange the eggs, nicely poached,
  on the top of the pieces of toast. Put a pat of
  maitre d'hotel butter about the siz^ of a shilling
  on the top of each egg, and send them to table
  while the butter is just melting. (For Maitre
  d'Hfitel Butter, see p. 144.)
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  4 Eggs.
  
  4 rounds of hot buttered
  
  Toast
  J lb. cooked Chicken or
  Veal.
  
  
  Eggs a la Reine
  {Fr. CEufs a la Reine)
  
  
  A little chopped Parsley.
  2 oz. cooked Ham or Tongue.
  2 table-sp. light Sauce or
  
  Ora^-y.
  Seasoning.
  
  Method. - Mince the meat and ham or tongue
  very finely, and heat it in a small saucepan with
  the sauce to moisten it. Season to taste, and
  spread this neatly on the rounds of hot buttered
  toast. Place a poached egg on the top of each,
  and sprinkle with a little finely chopped parsley.
  Serve at once and very hot.
  
  Eggs with Shrimp Sauce
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 cupful White Sauce.
  
  
  6 rounds of hot buttered
  Toast.
  
  
  Fresh or potted Shrimps.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Heat the sauce in a small saucepan
  and add enough potted or shelled fresh shrimps
  to thicken the sauce well. Poach the eggs, and
  lay them on six rounds or squares of hot buttered
  toast. Season the sauce with pepper and salt,
  and pour it over the eggs. Serve very hot.
  
  
  Eggs sur le Plat
  (Fr. CEufs sur le Plat)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  3 Eggs.
  
  
  I 1 oz. Butter.
  Salt and Pepper.
  
  
  Method. - Lightly butter a flat fire-proof dish,
  and break the eggs into it without breaking
  the yolks. Season with pepper and salt, and
  put the rest of the butter in small pieces on the
  top. Set the dish in a moderate oven, and let
  it remain until the whites become set, but by
  no means hard. They will require about ten
  minutes. Serve hot.
  
  Note. - A httlo cream may be poured over the
  eggs before putting them in the oven.
  
  Eggs with Tomatoes
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  2 Tomatoes.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Onion.
  
  1 oz. Ham (chopped).
  
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  1 or 2 slices of Toast
  
  Parsley.
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Put the tomatoes into boiling
  water for a minute, lift them out, dry and peel
  them ; then cut them in small pieces. Melt the
  butter in a small saucepan, add the tomatoes,
  onion, and ham, cook for about ten minutes,
  and season to taste. Remove the pan from
  the fire, and add the eggs well beaten. Stir
  again over the fire until the mixture becomes
  thick, but on no account must it be haxd. Cut
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  185
  
  
  the toast into neat fingers or fancy -shaped pieces,
  put a Uttle of the mistxire on each, garnish with
  parsley, and serve very hot.
  
  Eggs Stuffed with Sardines
  
  Ingredients -
  
  6 hard-boiled Eggs.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  2 or 3 drops Vinegar.
  
  
  1 dessert-sp. Sardine Paste.
  
  Cayenne Pepper.
  
  Salad and Small Biscuits.
  
  
  Method. - Cut the eggs in halves across, re-
  move the yolks, and cut a small piece off the
  white so that the pieces stand Uke httle cups.
  Put the yolks into a mortar or strong basin
  with the butter, sardine paste, and seasoning,
  pound well and then rub through a sieve. Spread
  the biscuits with some of the mixture, and fill
  up the egg-cups with the remainder, piling it
  high in the centre. Serve very cold, garnish
  with cress or other small salad.
  
  Note. - This dish will look better if the mix-
  ture is put into a forcing bag and forced into
  the eggs ; a little being used to garnish round
  the sides of the biscviits.
  
  There are many varieties of this dish, as any
  savoury paste may be used instead of sardine
  flavouring. The decoration may also be varied -
  small pieces of pickle, ham, beetroot, or truffle
  cut in fancy shapes will help to give a Httle
  colour, while chopped aspic instead of the Uttle
  biscuits may serve as a bed upon which to dish
  the eggs.
  
  Poached Eggs with CSieese
  (Fr. CEufs poch^s au Fromage)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  4 or 5 Eggs.
  
  1 gill White Sauce.
  
  3 table-sp. grated Cheese.
  
  
  3 table-sp. Bread-crumbs.
  Pepper and Salt
  A little Butter.
  
  
  Method. - Butter a flat dish, and sprinkle it
  with half the bread-crumbs and cheese. Poach
  the eggs, and place them on the top. Then
  pour over the sauce, and put the rest of the
  cheese and bread-crumbs on the top. Lay on
  a few small pieces of butter, and place in a hot
  oven to melt the cheese and lightly brown
  the top.
  
  Savoury Egg Cutlets
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3 hard-boiled Eggs.
  
  \ oz. Butter.
  
  J oz. Flour.
  
  i gill MilK.
  
  2 table-sp. Bread-crumbs.
  
  
  i tea-sp. Anchovy or Shrimp
  
  Essence.
  6 or 8 Button Mushrooms.
  Egg and Bread-crumbs.
  A little Flour.
  
  
  Seasoning.
  
  Method. - Boil the eggs very hard ; let them
  lie in cold water for a few minutes, then remove
  the shells and chop them rather finely. Melt
  the butter in a small saucepan, add the flovu-,
  and mix until smooth. Tiien draw the saucepan
  
  
  to one side, add the milk, and cook again over
  the fire, stirring all the time until smooth and
  thick. Add now the chopped eggs, the mush-
  rooms finely chopped, the bread-crumbs, and
  seasoning. Mix well together, and spread the
  naixture on to a plate to cool. Finish in the
  same way as lobster cutlets (p. 137).
  
  Scrambled Eggs
  
  {Fr. (Eufs Brouill6s)
  
  
  IngredierUa-
  
  4 Eggs.
  
  1 table-sp. Milk or Cream.
  
  1 table-sp. Stock or Gravy.
  
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  Seasoning.
  
  1 slice hot buttered Toast.
  
  
  Method. - Melt the butter in an enamelled or
  earthenware saucepan - add the eggs sHghtly
  beaten and the milk and stock, and season to
  taste. Stir over a moderate fire until the eggs
  begin to set and the mixture is of a nice creamy
  consistency. It m\ist not be overcooked or the
  eggs will be tough. Place the toast on a hot
  dish, cut it in three or foiir pieces, and pour the
  scrambled eggs over. Garnish with small sprigs
  of parsley.
  
  Note. - This dish may be varied by adding
  different ingredients to the eggs, &c., thus : -
  
  With Ham. - Fry one or two ovmces of chopped
  lean ham in the butter before adding the other
  ingredients. Tongue can be used in the same
  way.
  
  With Peas or Asparagus Points. - Add two
  or three table -spoonfuls cooked gi'een peas or
  asparagus points to the eggs before they begin
  to thicken.
  
  With Anchovies. - Add one tea-spoonful an-
  chovy essence to the mixture, and serve gar-
  nished with fine strips of anchovy which have
  been warmed on a plate over hot water.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Plain Omelet
  
  (Fr. Omelette Naturel)
  
  I Flavouring
  I taste.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  according to
  
  
  Method. - An omelet is the most difficult to
  prepare of any egg-dish. It reqmres some prac-
  tice to give it the right shape, to have it soft
  inside and to give it a smooth slightly browned
  surface. The first essential is to have a perfectly
  clean and smooth pan - and one which is kept
  for this special purpose.
  
  Beat the eggs just enough to break them, and
  at the last moment, or they will become watery.
  The rule is twelve beats. Add pepper, salt,
  and minced onion, parsley, herbs, muslirooms,
  or whatever fancy may dictate. A dessert-
  spoonful of milk or cream may be used or not.
  Have the pan evenly heated, but not scorching.
  Put in the butter, and let it run evenly over the
  
  
  186
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  pan, but not brown, and then add the eggs, &c.
  With a fork break the cooked sm'faco in several
  places quickly, so that the egg from the top
  may run to the bottom and cook, or loosen
  the omelet from the sides of the pan, letting
  the uncooked ptirt run under. Tliis must be
  done in the beginning, so as not to make the
  surface uneven. Wlien the egg is cooked, but
  yet quite soft on the top, lift the pan on one
  side, slip a knife-blade under one half of the
  omelet, and carefully roll the egg to the centre.
  Let it cook a moment to set any egg that has run
  out. Place a hot dish over the pan and turn
  them together so that the omelet will fall in the
  right place. The outside of the omelet should
  be firm and lightly browned, the inside soft and
  creamy. Garnish with parsley, and serve at
  once. Have everything ready before beginning
  to cook an omelet, as it will not improve being
  kept while the dish is heated and the garnishing
  found.
  
  Note. - The size of the pan must always be
  considered. Unless it is proportioned to the
  number of eggs, it will be unmanageably thick
  or thin.
  
  More eggs may be used if a larger omelet is
  required, but never more than eight.
  
  
  Savoury Omelet
  
  {Fr. Omelette aux Fines Herbes)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 tea-ap. chopped Parsley.
  i tea-sp. mixed Herbs.
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  
  i tea-spoonful choppedOnioii
  
  or Shallot.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt
  
  Method. - Separate the yolks from the whites
  of the eggs. Put the yolks into a medium-sized
  basin and the whites on to a plate. Add to the
  yolks the parsley, onion, herbs, pepper, and salt,
  and work these well together with a wooden
  spoon until of a creamy consistency. Beat up
  the whites of the eggs with a broad-bladed knife
  until so stiff that you could turn the plate upside
  down without the whites falling off. Remove
  the wooden spoon from the basin, and ^^dth an
  iron one stir the whites lightly into the other
  mixture. Melt the butter in an omelet pan,
  and pour the mixture into it, scraping out the
  basin as quickly as possible. Stir the mixture
  round with an iron spoon until it begins to set,
  stirring mostly on the surface, and not scraping
  the foot of the pan. Then hold it a little longer
  over the fire until the omelet is nicely browned
  on th? under-side. Slip a knife under it, and
  double over first from one side and then from
  the other towards the centre. If it is not quite
  cooked on the top, hold it in front of the fire for
  a minute or two. Then turn it on to a hot dish,
  and serve as quickly as possible.
  
  
  {Fr.
  
  Ingredients -
  
  4 Eggs.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Cheese Omelet
  Omelette au Parmesan)
  
  
  3 table-sp. grated Cheese.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Make in the same way as Savoury
  Omelet, adding the grated cheese to the eggs.
  
  Ham Omelet
  
  {Fr. Omelette au Jambon)
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. cooked Ham. ■ 1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  2 Eggs. A little made Mustard.
  
  1 oz. Butter. I Pepper and Salt.
  
  Method. - Make in the same way as Savoiu-y
  Omelet, adding the ham (finely chopped) and
  mustard to the yolks of eggs.
  
  Mushroom Omelet
  
  {Fr. Omelette au Champignons)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  6 or 8 fresh Mushrooms.
  
  1 Shallot.
  
  1 tea-sp. chopped Parsley.
  
  
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  i oz. Butter.
  
  A Savoury or Plain Omelet.
  
  
  Method. - Remove the skins and stalks from
  the mushrooms, and let them lie in salt and
  water for five minutes. Then dry them
  thoroughly and cut them small. Melt the
  butter in a small saucepan, and put in the
  mushrooms, shallot finely chopped, parsley,
  pepper and salt. Cook these together for about
  ten minutes. Make a plain omelet, and before
  folding it over lay the cooked muslu-ooms on
  one half.
  
  Shrimp Omelet
  {Fr. Omelette aux Crevettes)
  Ingredients -
  
  3 Eggs.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  1 tea-sp. Anchovy Essence.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Mixture -
  
  1 cupful picked Shrimps. I Seasoning.
  1 gill White Sauce. I
  
  Method. - Put the shrimps into a small sauce-
  pan with the sauce, season to taste, and make
  thoroughly hot over the fire.
  
  Make a Plain Omelet, and before folding it over
  put the shrimp mixture in the centre.
  
  Cheese Custard
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 pint Milk.
  
  2 Eggs.
  } tea-spoonful Mustard.
  
  Method. - Beat up the eggs with the mustard,
  pepper and salt. Heat the milk and pour it on
  to them. Add the cheese and pour all into a
  
  
  3 oz. Cheddar or Oruy6re
  
  Cheese.
  Cayenne Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKEKY
  
  
  187
  
  
  1 gill of Milk.
  
  2 Eggs.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  
  greased pie-dish, sprinkle a little more cheese
  over the top and bake in a moderate oven for
  haK-an-hour. Serve hot with plain biscuits.
  
  Cheese Fondue
  
  {Fr. Fondue au Fromage)
  Ingredients -
  1 oz. Butter.
  3 oz. grated Parmesan
  
  Cheese.
  1| oz. Bread-crumbs.
  A little made Mustard.
  
  Method. - Put the bread-crumbs and butter
  into a basin, boil the milk, and pour it over them.
  Add the cheese (keeping back about one dessert-
  spoonful), yolks of eggs, and seasonings, and
  mix well. Beat up the wliites of eggs to a stiff
  froth, and mix them in Ughtly at the last. Poiu*
  the mixture into a greased pie-dish or fire-proof
  dish, sprinkle the remainder of the cheese over
  the top, and bake in a good oven about twenty
  minutes, or until nicely browned and well risen.
  
  Note. - Instead of baking tliis in one large
  dish, the mixture may be poured into small
  china dishes or paper cases, and baked from
  ten to fifteen minutes in a good oven. Those
  would be called Cheese Ramequins.
  
  Cheese Souffle
  
  {Fr. Souffle au Parmesan)
  
  
  2 yolks of Eggs.
  
  3 whites of Eggs.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  4 oz. Flour.
  
  IJ oz. Cheddar Cheese.
  
  IJ oz. Parmesan Cheese.
  
  1 gill of Milk.
  
  Method. - Melt the butter in a small stewpan,
  add the flour, and mix these two well together
  with a wooden spoon. Pour in the milk, and
  stir quickly over the fire until the mixture draws
  away from the sides of the saucepan. Then
  remove the pan from the fire, and add the
  grated cheese and the seasonings. Next add the
  yolks, one at a time, and beat well together.
  Have the whites beaten to a very stiS froth with
  a wire whisk, and stir them lightly in with an
  iron spoon. Pour the mixture into a greased
  fire-proof souffle dish, and do not fill it more than
  three-quarters full. Bake in a good oven from
  twenty to thirty minutes, or until the souffle is
  well risen, is nicely browned, and feels firm to
  the touch. Serve in the dish in which it is
  baked, and as quickly as possible.
  
  Note. - This may be baked in small china or
  paper souffle cases instead of in one large one.
  
  Parmesan Balls
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. grated Parmesan Salt.
  
  Cheese. Cayenne Pepper.
  
  2 whites of Eggs.
  
  Method. - Boat the whites of eggs to a perfectly
  
  
  stiff froth with a pinch of salt and a dust of
  cayenne. Then stir in quickly and Ughtly 2 oz.
  of freshly grated Parmesan cheese. Drop small
  tea-spoonfuls of the mixture into a saucepan
  of boihng fat, and cook them until a pretty
  brown colour (about five minutes). Drain well
  and serve on a d'oyley or dish-paper, sprinkled
  with Paprika popper and grated cheese.
  
  Potato and Cheese Mould
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. cooked Potatoes.
  2 oz. grated Cheese.
  2 table-sp. Milk or Cream.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  A few browned Bread-
  crumbs.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the potatoes, and add to them
  the butter melted, the yolks of eggs, cheese,
  seasoning, and the milk or cream. Mix well
  together. Whip the whites to a stiff froth, and
  stir them in lightly to the other mixture. Grease
  a plain mould or basin, and line it with browned
  bread-crumbs. Tliree parts fill it with the mix-
  ture, and bake in a moderate oven about thirty
  minutes. Turn out on a hot dish, and serve at
  once.
  
  
  Swiss Fondue
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  4 Eggs.
  
  2 oz. Gruy^re Cheese.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  A little made Mustard.
  Plain Biscuits or thin Toast.
  Pepper and Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Beat the eggs in a saucepan, add the
  cheese grated and the butter. Season highly,
  and stir over the fire until the mixture is soft
  and creamy. Serve very hot on toasted biscuits
  or fingers of thin toast.
  
  Note. - White wine should be served with this
  savoury.
  
  SANDWICHES
  
  This term has now a much wider meaning
  than formerly ; it includes not only the plain
  sandwich consisting of shoes of meat placed
  between two pieces of bread-and-butter, cut in
  varying degrees of thickness, but also many
  dainty trifles suitable for afternoon teas and
  other Ught refreshments.
  
  The variety of these little sandwiches is
  endless, and the following hints and recipes are
  merely suggestive. Clever fingers and a httle
  ingenuity will soon invent many others.
  
  Sandwiches may be made of white or brown
  bread, small rolls, various kinds of biscuits,
  toast, or pastry, fiUed with meat, salad, eggs,
  fish, flavom-ed butter, nuts, &c., and made up
  in a variety of ways.
  
  Wlien Bread is used it shoiild be a day old
  and fine in texture. New bread that is full of
  holes and crumbly will not cut well. A sandwich
  loaf is the best for white bread, and Hovis,
  Bermaline, or other fine makes for brown.
  
  
  188
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  If rolls aro preferred they must be quite fresh
  and small, and with a soft crust. The little
  finger-shaped ones are neatest and are very easy
  to arrange.
  
  There are many kinds of plain Biscuits wliich
  can be utilised for making sandwiches, and they
  make a nice change from the visual bread-and-
  butter species. The plain water, milk, wheaten,
  and parmesan are eill suitable ; in fact, any kind
  which is unsweetened and not too crumbly.
  
  Toast when it is served for this purpose mtist
  be thin, well made, and not too crisp.
  
  SUces of Pastry can also be employed, and
  are especially suitable for evening refreshments.
  Any good pastry may be cut in strips or rounds,
  baked in the oven, then allowed to cool and split
  open to receive the sandwich mixture.
  
  The Butter used for sandwiches must be very
  good and of a consistency that will spread easily
  on the bread without cnimbUng it to pieces.
  If hard it should be creamed first, or worked
  on a plate with a knife until it is soft enough
  to use. The knife may be dipped in boiling
  water occasionally so as to make the butter
  less hard.
  
  The Meat used must be free from all skin,
  gristle and a superabundance of fat. In most
  cases it is better to mince the meat and mix
  it with its special seasonings before placing it
  on the bread, unless a more substantial sandwich
  is wanted for travellers or sportsmen.
  
  Fish too is better either chopped or poimded
  to a peiste, and Salads should be cut in small
  pieces.
  
  As will be seen in the following recipes a little
  well-flavoured sauce or a little cream is some-
  times mixed with the meat or fish, especially
  when it is dry, in order to bind all together.
  
  The various kinds of potted meat now on the
  market are all most useful for sandwich-making,
  and these can either be combined with the butter
  or put on as a separate layer.
  
  Sandwiches may be cut in various shapes -
  square, triangular, oblong or diamond, while
  different fancy shapes may be stamped out with
  a cutter, although the latter method is apt to
  be wasteful unless the scraps can be otherwise
  used up.
  
  Very dainty little sandwiches can also be
  made by spreading a tasty mixture on thin
  bread and then rolling it up, instead of putting
  a second piece of bread on the top.
  
  The thickness and size of the sandwiches
  will depend upon the purpose for which they
  are to bo xised. For afternoon tea they must
  be cut very thin, and nothing of a substantial
  nature must bo offered, as it would take away
  the appetite for dinner which follows so shortly
  after. For evening refreshments they may be
  made more substantial, and still more so if they
  are to serve as a substitute for meat.
  
  Sandwiches should be served on a pretty
  serviette or lace-edgcd paper and may be
  
  
  decorated with a little peirsley, small cress,
  tomato, &c., according to their kind.
  
  Beef and Chutney Sandwiches
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3 oz. cold Boast Beef. I 1 dessert-spoonful Sauce.
  
  1 dessert-spoonful Chutney. White Bread and Butter.
  A little Mustard. | Seasoning.
  
  Method. - Mince the beef finely, add to it the
  chutney (cut very small) and seasoning, and
  moisten with a little well-flavoured sauce. Put
  a layer of this between slices of bread and
  butter, trim and cut into shapes.
  
  Note. - Different kinds of meat may be used
  in the same way, varying the flavouring according
  to the kind of meat used. Or, two different
  kinds of meat may be used together, such as
  ham and chicken, veal and tongue, &c., maj'on-
  naise, tomato, brown curry or any savoury
  sauce can be used to moisten the mixture.
  
  
  Egg and Shrimp Sandwiches
  
  
  Cayenne Pepper.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  Small Rolls.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 hard-boiled Eggs.
  
  A few picked Shrimps.
  
  1 oz. Butter, or
  
  1 table-spoonful Cream. |
  
  Method. - Chop the eggs and add the shrLmps
  cut in small pieces, season to taste, and add the
  butter melted or the cream. Mix well together.
  SpUt some finger-shaped rolls, put a good tea-
  spoonful of the mixture into each, and close
  them up.
  
  Note. - A httle mayonnaise sauce may be used
  instead of the cream or butter, and chopped
  salmon or sardines may take the place of the
  shrimps.
  
  Sardine and Cucumber Sandwiches
  
  Ingredients -
  
  Sardine Paste. I Cucumber.
  
  Butter. I Brown Bread.
  
  Seasoning.
  
  Method. - Mix equal quantities of butter and
  sardine paste together, adding seasoning if
  necessary. Spread this on thin slices of brown
  bread. Put some pieces of prepared cucumber
  on half the number of pieces, cover with the
  others, trim and cut in shape.
  
  To prepare the Cucumber. - Peel a small piece
  of cucumber and cut it in thin slices. Lay
  these on a plate, sprinkle with salt, and let them
  remain at least half-an-hour. Then pour off
  the water and season the cucumber with pepper,
  salt, and a few drops of oil and lemon juice.
  Turn over and over so as to mix thoroughly.
  
  Note. - Any other potted meat may be used
  instead of the sardine paste, and white bresMl
  instead of brown.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  189
  
  
  Tomato Sandwiches
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 or 2 ripe Tomatoes. | Seasoning.
  
  1 Gherkin. I Bread and Butter.
  
  Method. - To prepare the Tomatoes. - Allow
  them to soak in boiling water two or three
  minutes, then remove the skin and cut them in
  very thin sUces. Put the shoes on a plate and
  season with pepper, salt, cayenne, and a few
  drops of oil and lemon juice. Arrange the
  tomato on the top of some thin bread and
  butter, sprinkle a Uttle chopped gherkin or pickle
  over, and put another piece of bread and butter
  on the top. Trim and cut in shape.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  Cheese.
  
  Butter.
  
  
  Cheese Sandwiches
  
  
  Seasoning.
  Plain Biscuits.
  
  
  1st Method. - Season butter with cayenne
  pepper and mustard and spread it on some
  plain biscuits. Put a thin slice of Gruyere,
  Cheddar, or Dutch cheese on the top and cover
  with another biscuit.
  
  2nd Method. - Season the butter as above and
  mix into it an equal quantity of grated cheese
  and spread a layer of this between two biscuits.
  A Uttle thick cream may be added to the
  mixture.
  
  ^ote.- Almost any kind of cheese may be
  used for making sandwiches, and the various
  kinds of cream cheeses are also very suitable.
  It is a nice way of using up small remains. A
  little salad may be served with these sandwiches.
  
  
  Nut Sandwiches
  
  
  Ingredients -
  Shelled Nuts.
  Cream.
  
  
  I Slices of Pastry.
  
  I Seasoning.
  
  
  Method. - Any kind of shelled nuts can be used.
  Toast them for a few minutes in the oven or
  in front of the fire and then chop them rather
  small. Mix with clotted or whipped cream and
  season to taste. The mixture may be made
  
  
  either sweet or savoury. Put a thick layer of
  this inside a finger-shaped piece of pastry.
  
  Note. - Honey may be used instead of cream
  for sweet sandwiches. Gingerbread or any
  plain cake may be used instead of pastry.
  
  Chicken and Celery Sandwiches
  
  Ingredients -
  
  Cooked Chicken. [ Mayonnaise Sauce or Cream.
  
  Celery. I Bread and Butter.
  
  Method. - Take equal quantities of tender
  chicken and the heart of celery and chop them
  together. Moisten with a httle mayonnaiso
  sauce or thick cream and season to taste. Spread
  between bread and butter or small sandwich
  rolls.
  
  Rolled Sandwiches
  
  Ingredients -
  
  Potted Meat. i Butter
  
  Bread and Butter. 1
  
  Method. - Cream the butter on a plate with
  an equal quantity of some tasty potted meat.
  If a highly flavoiired paste is used, such as
  anchovy, a smaller proportion will be siifficient.
  The mixtTire must be delicate in flavour and of
  a nice smooth consistency. Spread this on thin
  slices of brown bread from which the crust heis
  been removed and then roll up the pieces.
  
  If white bread is preferred the roiuid sandwich
  loaf makes a very pretty shape.
  
  Spiced Beef Sandwiches
  
  Ingredients -
  
  Spiced Beef. , White Bread.
  
  Curry Powder. Seasoning.
  
  Butter. I
  
  Method. - Flavour the butter with curry powder
  and season with mustard and cayenne pepper,
  working all together on a plate. Spread shces
  of white bread with the mixture and put small
  thin slices of sUced beef between each two.
  Trim and cut in shape.
  
  
  HOT AND COLD SWEETS
  
  
  General Notes. - The number and variety of
  culinary preparations to which the term
  " pudding " may be applied is very varied,
  comprising milk puddings, suet and custard
  puddings, batter pudding mixtures, cake-hke
  mixtures, souffles, and pastry of different kinds.
  
  For a baked pudding, see that the oven is at
  the right degree of heat. Milk puddings require
  a moderate oven, whilst for pastry and any
  pudding of the nature of a souffle a hot oven is
  
  
  required. Custard puddings and all those con-
  taining custard must be cooked slowly. It is a
  good plan when cooking a custard pudding to
  stand the dish in a tin of water. Tliis will
  prevent the custard becoming watery.
  
  A pudding to be steamed must be put into
  a well-greased mould or basin and covered over
  with a piece of buttered paper. If a steamer
  is not available for the purpose, put the pudding
  into a stewpan with just suflScient water to come
  
  
  190
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  half-way up the mould, put tho lid on tho pan,
  and keep the water at simmering point until
  the pudding is cooked. Any pudding of the
  nature of a custard must be very carefully
  steamed, as extreme heat would curdle the eggs
  and make the pudding watery. More soUd
  puddings may bo steamed more quickly. The
  basin should not be more than three-quarters
  full.
  
  A pudding which is to be boiled must be tied
  over firmly with a cloth wliich has been \^Tung
  out of boiling water and sprinkled v,-ith flour.
  Have sufficient boiling water in the pan to cover
  the pudding, and keep it boiling steadily the
  whole tune tlie pudding is in it. A kettle of
  boiUng water should be kept at hand to fill up
  the saucepan when necessary. Fill the basin to
  the brim for a boiled pudding.
  
  Pudding cloths sliould be quickly washed after
  using and hung in the air to dry.
  
  ^V^l6n suet is losed in a pudding it should be
  hard and dry. Remove all skin and fibre from
  it and shred it as finely as possible. Dust it
  over generously with sieved flour, and then
  chop it finely with a long pointed knife. Hold
  down the point of the knife on the board with
  one hand, and with the other work handle
  end up and down. Any suet, if good, can be
  used, although beef suet is generally preferred.
  Mutton suet, however, makes the Ughtest
  puddings, while veal suet is the most dehcate.
  
  To prepare fruit (currants, peel, and sultanas),
  see p. 191.
  
  Use moist sugar for all general sweetening
  purposes, but castor sugar for all light puddings.
  
  To turn a pudding out of a mould or basin,
  lift it from the pan, and allow it to stand a
  minute or two. If too great haste is used, the
  first steam escaping from the pudding will crack
  it. Remove the cloth or paper from the top,
  then take hold of the basin with a cloth, and
  shake it gently to ascertain that it is coming
  away freely from the sides, then reverse it on
  a dish, and remove the mould carefully. When
  the pudding is in a cloth untie the strings, and
  draw the cloth a little from the sides of the
  pudding, then reverse it on a hot dish, and draw
  the cloth carefully away.
  
  HOT PUDDINGS
  Amber Pudding
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  6 o". Bread-crumbs.
  
  4 oz. minced Apple.
  
  2 oz. Sugar.
  
  2 oz. Flour.
  
  4 oz. chopped Suet.
  
  1 tea sp. Baking I'owder.
  
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Golden
  
  Syrup.
  2 Eggs.
  
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  A pinch of Salt.
  I A little grated Lemon Kind.
  
  
  Method. - Mix all the dry ingredients together
  in a basin, and make a well in the centre. Add
  the syrup slightly warmed and the two eggs
  well beaten, and mix together, adding a little
  
  
  milk if necessary. Pour the mixture into a
  well-gi'oased mould or basin, cover with a scalded
  and floured cloth, and boil quickly for two
  hours. Servo with lemon or orange sauce.
  
  Boiled Batter with Fruit
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  i lb. Flour.
  \ pint Milk.
  Fruit.
  
  
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve tho flour into a basin with the
  salt and the baking powder. Make a well in
  the centre, and add the two eggs without
  beating them. Jlix the flour gradually into
  these, and then add the milk by degrees. Beat
  the batter well, and then add as much fruit
  as it will hold. Apples, cherries, raspberries, or
  strawberries are about the best fruits to use.
  Apples would require to be peeled, cored, and
  shced, cherries stoned, and raispberries or straw-
  berries carefully picked. Pour the mixture into
  a weU-greased mould, and boil quickly for one
  hour. Serve with fruit syrup or any nice sweet
  sauce.
  
  Cabinet Pudding with Pineapple
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  1 table-spoonful Sugar.
  
  
  3 or 4 slices of Bread.
  \ lb. tinned Pineapple.
  
  4 pint Milk.
  
  Method. - Grease a plain round mould, and
  cut the bread in rounds to fit it. Drain the
  pineapple, and cut it into small pieces. Fill the
  mould with alternate layers of bread and pine-
  apple. Beat up the eggs with the sugar, and
  add the milk. Strain this custard into the
  mould, cover with greased paper, and allow tho
  pudding to stand for half-an-hour before cook-
  ing, so that the bread may become thoroughly
  soaked. Then place the mould in a tin with
  hot water to come half-way up tho sides, and
  cook in a slow oven from a half to three-quarters
  of an hour, or until the custard is set. Let it
  stand in the mould for a few minutes after it is
  cooked. When ready to serve, turn carefully
  out and serve with pineapple sauce.
  
  Note. - vSponge-cake cut in slices may be used
  in place of bread, and a httle Uqueur added for
  flavouring is an improvement.
  
  Chester Pudding
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 teacupful Ilour.
  
  1 teacupful Sugar.
  
  1 teacupful Bread-cnimbs.
  
  1 teacupful chopped Suet.
  
  1 teacupful Milk.
  
  
  1 teacupful Blackcurrant
  
  Jam.
  \ tea-spoonful Carbonate of
  
  Soda.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Chop the suet finely, and put it into
  a basin with the bread-crumbs, flour, sugar, and
  salt. Mix these dry ingredients together, make
  a well in the centre, and put in the jam. Heat
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  191
  
  
  the milk slightly in a small saucepan, add the
  soda free from lumps, and mix quickly. Pour
  this while still frothy on to the top of the jam,
  and mix all together. Put the mixture into a
  greased moiild or basin, cover with a scalded
  and floured cloth, and boil for three hours.
  Serve with jam sauce.
  
  Chocolate Pudding
  
  {Fr. Pouding au Chocolat)
  
  2 or 3 oz. Chocolate. 1 gill of Milk.
  6 oz. Bread-crumbs. 2 Eggs,
  
  3 oz. Butter.
  3 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  
  A few drops of Vanilla.
  A pinch of Cinnamon.
  
  
  Method. - Cut the chocolate into small pieces,
  and dissolve it slowly in the milk. Cream the
  butter and sugar together in a basin, add the
  yolks of eggs and a few of the bread-crumbs,
  and mix well ; then the dissolved chocolate,
  vanilla, and the rest of the crimibs, and mix
  again. Whip the whites of eggs to a stiff froth
  and mix them in lightly at the last. Pour the
  mixture into a well -greased mould, and steam
  slowly for one and a half hours, until the pudding
  is well risen, and feels firm to the touch. Serve
  with chocolate, custard, or wine sauce.
  
  Christmas Plum Pudding
  
  {Fr. Pouding de Noel)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 lbs. Valencia Raisins.
  2 Iba. Currants.
  
  
  2 lbs. Sultanas.
  
  2i lbs. Sugar.
  
  2 lbs. Suet.
  
  1 lb. Flour.
  
  J lb. Apples.
  
  IJ lbs. Bread-crumbs.
  
  i lb. mixed Peel.
  
  
  J lb. Sweet Almonds.
  
  2 Bitter Almonds.
  
  1 table-spoonful Mixed Spice-
  
  } tea-spoonful Salt.
  
  Rind and juice of 3 Lemons.
  
  1 glass of Brandy.
  
  1 glass of Kum.
  
  12 Eggs.
  
  Milk if necessary.
  
  
  Method. - First prepare the fruit. Stone the
  raisins and chop them sUghtly. Pick and clean
  the currants and sultanas. Shred the peel and
  blanch and chop the almonds. Peel and chop
  the apples, and grate the rind very thinly from
  the lemons. Put all the fruit into a large basin
  or crock, add the other dry ingredients and mix
  thoroughly. Then beat the eggs, and add them
  with the wine, lemon juice, and enough milk to
  bind all together. Mix again with a long spoon,
  cover the mixture, and let it stand for twenty-
  four hours before cooking. Then fill up greased
  moulds or basins with the mixture, tie over them
  a scalded and floured cloth, and boil from six to
  eight hours according to size. Keep the puddings
  in a cool place for several weeks before using
  them, and reboil for several hours as required.
  Before serving the pudding, povir a wine-glassful
  of brandy round the base, and set a light to it
  just before putting to on the table. The dish
  must be hot and perfectly dry, or the brandy
  will not bum well.
  
  
  Notes. - A httle grated orange rind and juice
  may be added to the above mixture.
  
  Remains of cold plum pudding are very good
  cut in slices and fried.
  
  Date Pudding
  (Fr. Pouding aux Dattes)
  Ingredients-
  i lb. Dates. i tea-spoonful mixediSpice.
  
  2 oz. Sugar. i tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  3 oz. Suet. A little Milk.
  
  2 oz. Bread-crumbs, A pinch of Salt.
  
  2 oz. Flour. 1 table-spoonful Treacle.
  
  1 Egg.
  
  Method. - Stone the dates and cut them in
  small pieces, and chop the suet, ilix all the
  dry ingredients together in a basin, and make a
  well in the centre. Add the eggs well beaten,
  the treacle sMghtly warmed, and enough milk to
  make all of a softish consistency. Pour the
  mixture into a well-greased mould, and steam
  steadily for at least two hours. Turn out on a
  hot dish, and serve with lemon or any other
  suitable sauce.
  
  Fig Pudding
  
  {Fr. Pouding aux Figues)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  } lb. Figs.
  
  6 oz. Suet.
  
  J lb. Bread-crumbs.
  
  J lb. Flour.
  
  i lb. Sugar.
  
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Mixed Spice.
  
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  J tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  J pint Milk.
  
  Method. - Soak the figs in boiling water for
  ten minutes, then dry them and cut them in
  small pieces, removing the stalks. Sieve the
  flour into a basin, add the suet finely chopped,
  the sugar, bread-crumbs, spices, baking powder,
  and salt, and mix all lightly together with the
  fingers. Then add the figs, mix again, and
  make a well in the centre. Beat the eggs in
  another basin, and pour them into the centre of
  the dry ingredients. Add also the milk, and
  stir well together. Povir the mixture into a
  greased mould or basin, and steam steadily for
  at least four hours. Serve with custard or wine
  sauce.
  
  Note. - This pudding may be made richer
  by adding two ounces of candied peel and two
  ounces of swcel almonds. A little wine may also
  be added and less milk.
  
  Little Russian Puddings
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 Eggs, their weight in
  Butter, Flour, and Castor
  Sjigar.
  
  J tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  2 or 3 drops of Vanilla.
  
  
  2 or 3 drops of Essence of
  Lemon.
  
  1 dessert-spoonful grated
  Chocolate.
  
  2 or 3 drops of Carmine.
  
  
  Method. - Cream the butter and sugeir and
  add the eggs and flour by degrees (see p. 212).
  
  
  192
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  When the mixture looks light and shows air-
  bubbles, add the baking powder, and then divide
  it into three equal portions. To one portion
  add the chocolate, to another a few drops of
  carmine to make it a pretty pink colour, and
  two or tliroe drops of essence of almonds to
  flavour, and leave the tliird portion its natural
  colour, flavouring with vanilla. Have about
  nine small moulds or dariols well greased, and
  put into them alternate spoonfuls of the different
  mixtviros. Fill them rather irregularly, and then
  shake the mixture down. Tliey should not be
  more than three-quarters full. Put them into
  a saucepan with a double fold of paper at the
  foot, poiu- in enough hot water to come half-way
  up the sides, and cover with greased paper-
  Put the Ud on the pan, and steam the puddings
  slowly for half-an-hour. Then turn them out
  and serve with custard sauce.
  
  
  {Fr.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  J lb. Bread-crumbs.
  2 or. Flour.
  
  2 01. Rice Flour.
  
  3 02. Castor Sugar.
  
  i tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  
  Orange Pudding
  Pouding k 1' Orange)
  
  
  The grated rind of 2 Oranges
  
  and the juice of 1.
  J lb. chopped Suet.
  A little Milk.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the oranges with a damp cloth,
  and grate the rind off them on to the top of the
  sugar. Work the sugar and orange rind together
  with a broad-bladed knife until they are
  thoroughly blended. Tlion chop the suet finely,
  using some of the flour to prevent it sticking to
  the board and knife. Mix all the dry ingredients
  together in a basin, and make a well in the
  centre. Add the orange juice strained, the eggs
  well beaten, and enough milk to make all of a
  softish consistency. Pour the mixture into a
  greased mould or basin, and steam or boil for
  at least two hours. Serve with orange sauce.
  
  Note. - Lemon Pudding may be made in the
  same way, substituting lemon for orange, and
  using rather a smaller quantity of rind.
  
  
  Pancakes
  
  
  A little Lard for frying.
  
  Castor Sugar.
  
  Lemon or Orange Juicu.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. Flour.
  
  1 pint .Milk.
  
  2 EggB.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  Method. - There are several kinds of batter
  for making pancakes. The above is one of the
  simplest.
  
  Sieve the flour and salt into a basin, and make
  a well in the centre. Drop in the two yolks of
  egg'., and with a wooden spoon mix a little of
  the flour gradually into them. Then add about
  half the milk verj' gradually, mixing in the flour
  by degrees from the sides of the basin. Keep
  the batter thick enough to allow of all lumps
  being rubbed smooth, then beat well until it is
  
  
  full of air-bubbles. Add the rest of the milk,
  and, if possible, allow the batter to stand for an
  hour at loa^t before using it. Just at the last
  stir in quickly and lightly the whites of the eggs
  beaten to a stiff froth.
  
  Melt some lard in a saucepan, and let it stand
  by the side of the firo to keep warm. Put a
  little into a small frying or omelet pan, and
  make it smoking hot. Then povu* quickly into
  the centre of the pan half a gill or so of batter.
  If the fat is hot enough, the batter will run all
  over the pan at once, whereas if it has not quite
  reached the required heat, the pan may have to
  be tilted a little to get the batter to cover it
  properly. Allow it to rest for a minute or two
  vmtil set or nicely browned on the under side,
  then slip a broad-bladed knife round the edges,
  and then either toss the pancake over or turn
  it with the knife. Brown on the other side,
  then slip the pancake on to sugared paper, strew
  sugar over it, sprinkle with lemon or orange
  juice, and roll up. Keep this pancake hot on
  a plate placed over hot water until the rest are
  cooked. Each pancake will require a little fresh
  fat added to the pan. Serve them very hot
  and as quickly as possible, and send cut lemon or
  orange to table with them.
  
  
  Preserved Ginger Pudding
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  3 02. Butter.
  3 oz. Castor Sugar.
  2 oz. Flour.
  2 oz. Rice Flour.
  
  
  I lb. preserved Ginger.
  1 table-sp. Ginger Syrup.
  J tea-ap. Baking Powder.
  J tea-sp. ground Ginger.
  
  
  Method. - Put the butter into a basin, and sieve
  the sugar on the top of it. Beat these two
  together with a wooden epoon until of a creamy
  consistency. Then add the eggs and the two
  flours by degrees. Beat well for a few minutes.
  Cut the ginger into small pieces, and mix it in
  lightly at the last with the baking powder,
  ginger syrup, and ground ginger. Pour the
  mixture into a well-greased mould, cover with
  greased paper, and steam slowly for one and a
  half hours. Turn out on a hot dish, and pour
  custaxd sauce round.
  
  Rice and Orange-Marmalade Pudding
  
  Ingredients -
  
  
  i lb. Rice.
  2 pint Water.
  1 quart Milk.
  4 oz. Sugar.
  
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  3 Eggs.
  
  2 table-sp. Marmalade.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the rice in several waters until
  quite clean, and then put it into a hned saucepan
  with half-pint fresh cold water. Bring to the
  boil, and pour the water off. Add the milk
  and butter, and simmer slowly until the rice is
  quite soft and thiclc. Stir well from time to
  time, or cook in a double saucepan. When
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  193
  
  
  ready add the yolks of eggs and half the sugar.
  Pour the mixture into a greased pie-dish, and
  bake about fifteen minutes in a moderate oven.
  Then spread the top of the pudding rather
  thickly with marmalade. Add a pinch of salt
  to the whites of eggs, and beat them up to a
  stiff froth. Sieve the remainder of the sugar
  over them, and pile this meringue over the
  marmalade. Return the pudding to a moderate
  oven until the meringue is nicely browned and
  set, and sprinkle with sugar before serving.
  
  Caramel Semolina Pudding
  
  {Fr. Caramel au Semoule)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  2 oz. Semolina.
  1 oz. Sugar.
  1 pint Milk.
  
  
  2 oz. Loaf Sugar.
  J gill Water.
  
  
  2 Eggs,
  flavouring.
  
  
  Caramel
  
  I A squeeze of Lemon Juice,
  
  
  Method. - ^Rinse out a small saucepan with
  cold water, and put into it the semolina and
  the milk. Stir these over the fire until boiling,
  then simmer from ten to fifteen minutes until
  the semolina is quite cooked and the mixture
  thick. Remove the pan from the fire, and add
  the sugar flavouring to t&ste, and the two eggs
  well beaten. Mix well. To make the caramel,
  put the sugar, water, and lemon juice into a
  small iron saucepan or sugar-boiler, and let them
  boil until they become a golden brown colour.
  Watch it carefully as it quickly browns. Then
  pour the caramel into r plain mould, one and a
  half pint size ; take hold of the mould with a
  cloth, as it will be very hot, and run the caramel
  over the bottom and sides, coating them well.
  Allow this to cool for a few minutes, then pour
  in the semolina mixture, and cover over with
  greased paper. Steam slowly for three-quarters
  of an hour, or bake in a moderate oven for
  half-an-hour. This may be served either hot
  or cold. Turn out carefully when wanted.
  
  Note. - Rice may be used instead of semolina.
  
  Yorkshire Pudding
  
  Make batter the same as for pancakes (p. 192),
  pour it into a baking-tin that has been well
  greased with dripping from roast-beef, and bake
  in a good oven for half-an-hour. Serve at once
  cut in small pieces.
  
  SOUFFLES AND FRITTERS
  
  Notes on Souffl6-maldng. - This is a class of
  puddings known only by its French name, which
  is so generally understood that it has become
  almost an anglicized word.
  
  A souffle is a pudding which is made verj' light
  by having stifl3y beaten whites of eggs added to
  
  
  it, or sometimes whipped cream, and of which
  the basis is a cooked batter, with raw yolks of
  eggs and some distinctive flavouring, or other
  ingredient which requires Uttle cooking, eidded
  to it.
  
  The preparation of a souffle is exceedingly
  simple if exact measures are taken, and if the
  directions given for making it are carefully
  followed. The only difiiculty is in serving it
  soon enough, as it falls so quickly when taken
  from the heat. Have everything ready before
  beginning to make the souffle. If it is a steamed
  one prepare the tin, and put on the saucepan
  with the water in which it is to be cooked. If,
  on the other hand, it is a baked souffle, see that
  the oven is at a right heat for cooking, and grease
  the tin or dish to be used.
  
  A souffle tin is a plain round one with high
  sides. (A fancy mould is not suitable.) First
  grease the mould very carefully
  and tliickly with clarified butter.
  If for a steamed souffle, cut a
  double band of paper] wide enough
  to stand three or fovir inches above
  the top of the tin and to reach
  down to the middle of it. Grease
  this band, and tie it round the
  outside of the tin, putting the
  single edges to the top and the double fold
  below. Also grease a round or square of
  paper to cover the top.
  
  The whites of eggs for all souffles must be
  beaten up very stiffly in a basin with a wire
  whisk, and folded rather than mixed in to the
  other ingredients, care being taken not to break
  them down by too much mixing.
  
  As the mixture rises considerably when cook-
  ing, the mould should not be more than half
  filled. In a steamed souffie the band of paper
  forms a protection to prevent the mixture
  falUng over the sides ; in a baked souffle this ia
  not so necessary, as the mixture hardens as it
  rises.
  
  When steaming a souffle, cook it very slowly
  and steadily ; the water must only reach half-
  way up the side of the mould, and merely simmer
  slowly all the time. If cooked too quickly, the
  souffl6 will rise rapidly without becoming firm,
  and will then sink in the middle when turned
  out, and look hke a crushed hat. A souffle is
  ready when it feels firm to the toiich.
  
  Steamed souffl6s are alwaj's turned out of
  the moulds in which they are cooked, and a
  stutable sauce poured round, never over them.
  
  A souffle that has to be baked should be scored
  across two or three times on the top to di\'ide
  the mixtin-e before putting it in the oven, other-
  wise the first stroke of the spoon when serving
  it would lift off all the surface skin. The oven
  for baking them should be moderate and steady.
  
  Baked souffles are sent to table in the tins in
  which they are baked, and these are either
  slipped inside a hot silver case, or a weurm
  
  N
  
  
  194
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  ser\-iette is folded round them. Cliina fireproof
  dishes may be used instead of the tins.
  
  Apricot SoufQ6
  
  {Fr. Souffle aux Abricots)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 oz. Flour.
  
  1 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  1 gill Apricot Puree.
  
  3 jolka of Eggs.
  
  
  2 or 3 drops of Cannine or
  
  Cocliineal.
  4 whites of Eggs.
  A pinch of Salt.
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Method. - First prepare the pur6e by rubbing
  Bome tinned apricots tlirough a hair sieve. Use
  some of the sjTup from the tin along with the
  apricots so as not to have the pur^o too thick.
  IVesh apricots may be used in place of the
  tinned, but these would reqviire to be stewed
  first with a little water and sugar.
  
  In making the sovtffl6, proceed exactly ac-
  cording to directions given for lemon souffle
  using the gill of apricot puree instead of the
  gill of milk. Before mixing in the wliites, add
  a squeeze of lemon juice, and just enough
  Cfunnine or cochineal to make the mixture of a
  peachy colour. Pour the mixture into a greased
  souffl6 tin and steam slowly and steadily from
  half to three-quarters of an hour, or until the
  souffle is well risen and feels firm to the touch.
  Turn out carefully, and serve at once with
  apricot, custeird, or wine sauce poured round it.
  
  Note. - Peach souffle may be made in the same
  way.
  
  Apple Souffle (Baked)
  
  {Fr. Souffle aux Pommes)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  J oz. Butter.
  
  Grated rind of } Lemon.
  
  
  3 large Apples.
  
  2EggB.
  
  2 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  Method. - Bake the apples in the oven until
  they are thoroughly cooked. Then scoop out
  all the soft inside and rub this pulp through
  a hair sieve. Put the sugar, lemon rind, and
  yolks of egga into a medium-sized basin, and
  beat them together with a wooden spoon until
  of a creamy consistency ; then add the apple
  pulp, and mix all together. Beat the whites of
  the eggs to a stiff froth, and stir them lightly in
  at the last. Pour the mixture into a groasod
  china souffle dish or pie-dish, and bake in a
  moderate oven for about twenty minutes, or
  until well risen and firm to the touch. WTien
  ready sprinkle with sugar and serve aa quickly
  as possible.
  
  Chocolate Souffl6
  
  (Fr. Souffl6 au Chocolat)
  In-^redients -
  
  2 or 3 oz. Chocolate. 3 yolks of Eggs.
  
  1 gill Milk. * whites of Eggs.
  
  i oz. Potato Flour. A few drops of Vanilla.
  
  1 table-spoonful Cream. 2 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  Method. - Break the chocolate into small pieces,
  
  
  and put it into an enamelled saucepan with half
  the milk and potato flour. Cook gently over tlio
  fire, stirring from time to time, until the chocolate
  is molted and quite free from lumps. Put the
  sugar, yolks of eggs, and vanilla into a basin, and
  work them together with a wooden spoon until
  they are of a creamy consistency. Add the rest
  of the milk to this, then the chocolate by degrees.
  Return all to the saucepan, and cook together
  over the fire until almost boiling. Then remove
  from the fire, add the cream, and stir occasionally
  for a few minutes. Beat up the whites of the
  eggs to a stiff froth, and mix them by degrees
  with the other mixture, stirring them in as lightly
  as possible. Pour into a greased souffl6 dish,
  and cook from fifteen to twenty minutes in a
  good oven. Should the souffle become too
  brown, put a piece of paper on the top, but do
  not open the oven door too often. Sprinkle
  with a little sugar just before serving, and send
  to table directly.
  
  Lemon SoufflS
  (Fr. Souffle au Citron)
  
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  3 yolks of Eggs.
  
  4 whites of Eggs.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  1 oz. Hour.
  
  1 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  Grated rind of 1 Lemon.
  
  1 gill of Itilk.
  
  Method. - Melt the butter in a small stewpan,
  add the flour, and mix well together with a
  wooden spoon. Pour in the milk, and stir
  quickly over the fire until the mixture boils and
  thickens. Wipe the lemon with a damp cloth,
  and grate off the rind very thinly on to the
  top of the sugar. Rub the sugar and lemon
  rind together with the tips of the fingers until
  the sugar looks qviite yellow. Remove the pan
  from the fire, and add this sugar and a squeeze
  of lomon juice, then the yolks one at a time,
  beating well between each. Add a pinch of
  salt to the whites, and whisk them to a very stiff
  froth, then with an iron spoon stir them lightly
  but thoroughly into the other mixtiu-e. Pour
  all into a prepared souffle tin and steam slowly
  from thirty to forty minutes, or until firm to the
  touch. Turn out carefully on to a hot dish,
  and serve with custard, lemon, or* wine sauce
  poured round it.
  
  Note. - Vanilla or orange souffle can be made
  in the same way, substituting vanilla or orange
  for the lemon.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  3 Eggs.
  
  IJ oz. Sugar.
  
  
  Omelet Souffl^
  
  (Fr. Omelette Souffl^)
  
  
  Grated rind of J Lemon.
  A little Jam.
  
  
  Method. - Put the yolks into a basin with the
  sugar and grated lemon rind or other flavouring,
  and mix well with a wooden spoon until of
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  195
  
  
  a pale creamy consistency. Whip the whites,
  with a pinch of salt added to them, to a very
  stiff froth, and fold them very lightly into the
  yolks. Do not stir more than is necessary.
  Pour the mixture into a well-greased omelet
  pan, and put in a brisk oven from seven to ten
  minutes until of a pale brown colour. When
  firm to the touch, turn the omelet out of the
  pan on to sugared paper, put a table-spoonful of
  warm jam in the centre, and fold over. Lift the
  omelet on to a hot dish with a dish-paper, and
  serve at once.
  
  Notes. - A little stewed fruit may be used in-
  stead of jam, or the omelet may be served plain.
  
  A plain iron or copper pan is the best. If
  there is any danger of the omelet sticking to the
  pan, the foot may be lined first with a round
  of greased paper.
  
  {Another Way)
  
  If preferred, turn part of the mixtiu-e on to
  a flat dish, and with a knife shape it into a round
  with a depression in the centre. Put the rest
  into a forcing-bag, and press it out through a
  large pipe into lines or dots over the mound.
  Sprinkle with sugar, and bake in a good oven
  from ten to twelve minutes. Serve at once on
  the dish on which it is baked.
  
  Note. - A little jam may be put in the centre
  before using the bag and pipe.
  
  Rum Omelet
  {Fr. Omelette au Rhum)
  
  Make a plain omelet according to directions
  given above. Wlien ready to place on the table
  pour over the omelet a few spoonfuls of rum and
  set fire to it.
  
  Semolina Souffle
  
  {Fr. Souffle de Semoule)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 oz. Semolina. 4 whites of Eggs.
  
  1 pint Milk. A pinch of Salt.
  
  2 oz. Castor Sugar. Flavouring.
  
  3 yolks of Eggs.
  
  Method. - Rinse out a small stewpan with
  cold water, and put the semoUna and milk into
  it. Stir over the fire with a wooden spoon until
  boiling, and then allow the semolina to simmer
  slowly for about ten minutes well between each.
  Put the whites into a large basin or beating-
  bowl, add a pinch of salt to them, and with a
  wire whisk beat them up to a very stiff froth.
  Remove the wooden spoon from the mixture,
  and with an iron one stir the beaten whites
  lightly but thoroughly in. Pour tins into a
  prepared souffle tin one and a half pint size,
  cover with greased paper, and steam slowly and
  steadily from half to three-quarters of an hour,
  or until the souffle is well risen and feels firm
  to the touch. Turn out carefully on to a hot
  dish, and serve at once with jam, custard, choco-
  late, or wine sauce poured round it.
  
  
  Note. - A ground-rice souffle may bo made in
  the same way, using ground rice in place of
  semolina. These souffles may be baked in a
  fireproof dish instead of being steamed.
  
  Batter for Fritters
  
  Ingredients -
  i lb. Flour.
  
  1 gill tepid Water.
  
  2 or 3 whites of Eggs.
  
  
  1 table-spoonful Salad Oil or
  
  melted Butter.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the flour and salt into a basin,
  and make a well in the centre. Add the water
  by degrees, and beat well with a wooden spoon
  to make a smooth paste free from lumps. Then
  add the oil or butter, and beat again for a few
  minutes. Whisk the whites of eggs to a stiff
  froth, and stir them in very lightly at the last.
  
  Notes. - This batter may be used for all kinds
  of fritters.
  
  Sugar should not be added, as it is apt to
  make it heavy.
  
  It is better if allowed to stand for some time
  before using, and before the whites of eggs are
  added.
  
  A little rum or liqueur may be added if desired.
  
  The batter should be very thick, and of the
  consistency to coat completely the article it is
  intended to cover.
  
  
  Apple Fritters
  
  {Fr. Beignets de Pommes)
  
  I Sugar.
  
  I Flavouring.
  
  
  Ingredienta-
  
  Frying Batter.
  Apples.
  
  Method. - Choose firm ripe apples ; rennets
  are best. Peel tliree or four, and cut them in
  slices an eighth of an inch in tliickness. Then
  with a small round cutter stamp out the cores.
  Put the apple rings on a plato, and sprinkle them
  with orange or lemon sugar (see under Lemon
  Souffle), and, if hked, a few drops of rum or
  brandy. Let them soak for a few minvites, then
  steep a round of apple in the batter. Coat it well,
  lift it out with a skewer, and drop it into a sauce-
  pan of boiling fat. Repeat this with the other
  rounds of apple, but do not put more than six or
  seven pieces into the fat at one time, as they swell
  considerably in the cooking. Tui-n them over
  wliile in the fat, and let thein fry a nice amber
  colour. Lift them out with a skimmer or per-
  forated spoon, and dry on sugared paper in a
  moderate oven until all are fried. Tlien servo
  them on a folded serviette or dish-paper, the
  slices over-lapping.
  
  Banana Fritters
  
  (Fr. Beignets de Bananes)
  Ingredients -
  3 or 4 Bananas.
  Castor Sugar.
  
  Method. - Peel the bananas, cut them in two
  lengthways and then once across, making four
  
  
  Frying Batter.
  
  Wine or Lemon Juice.
  
  
  196
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  pieces in all. Lay these pieces on a plate,
  sweeten and flavour, and let them lie for a few
  minutes. Finish off in the same way as Apple
  Fritters.
  
  Peach or Apricot Fritters
  {Fr. Beignets d'Abricots ou de Peches)
  Ingredients -
  
  Peaches or Apricots.
  Mkcaroon or Biscuit-crumbs,
  Castor Sugar.
  
  
  Maraachino or other flavour-
  ing.
  Tvymg Batter.
  
  
  Metliod. - Cut the fruit in halves or quarters,
  and remove the stones. Sprinkle the pieces with
  sugar and a few drops of maraschino, and roll
  them in macaroon or other biscuit-crumbs before
  dipping them in the batter. Finish in the same
  nuiiuier as Apple Fritters.
  
  Note. - Tinned fruit does very well for these
  if it is drained.
  
  
  Souffl6 Fritters
  
  (Fr. Beignets Souffles)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  5 oz. Flour.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  1 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  3 Eggs.
  
  
  i pint Water.
  Flavouring.
  A pinch of Salt
  
  
  Method. - Put the water, butter, sugar, and
  Bait into a stewpan, and bring them to the boil
  over the fire. Then draw the pan to the side
  of the fire, and add the flour which has been
  previously passed through a sieve. Mix all
  briskly with a spoon until it becomes a perfectly
  smooth paste. Stir this paste for a minute or
  two over a moderate fire, then remove the pan
  from the fire, and add the flavouring and one
  egg. Work the paste well until the egg is com-
  pletely mixed in, then add the other two eggs
  one at a time, beating well between each. Let
  it stand till cold. \Vhen ready to serve, drop a
  spoonfxil at a time into hot fat, and fry to an
  amber colour. Fry only a few at a time, as
  more cools the fat too much, and also they
  require room to swell. The paste will puff into
  hollow balls, and increase throe times in size.
  When ready, drain well on sugared papei, and
  arrange in a pyramid on a dish. Serve with
  lemon or orange sauce.
  
  PIES, TARTS, AND SWEETS WITH PASTRY
  
  Small Apple Dumplings
  
  Ingredients -
  
  Short Crust (p. 164).
  
  6 .Apples.
  
  IJ oz. Demerara Sugar.
  
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  Orated rind of J Lemon.
  
  
  Method. - Roll out some short crust rather
  thinly, and cut out six rounds about six inches
  
  
  in diameter with a cutter or saucepan lid. Wet
  round the edge of these rounds ^vith cold water,
  and place an apple peeled and cored whole in
  the centre of each. Put the butter, sugar, and
  grated lemon rind on to a plate, and mix them
  together with a knife. Fill up the holes in the
  apples with this mixture. Draw up the edges
  of the pastry so that they meet on the top of the
  apple, and roll the apple in the hands to make
  it a good shape. Place the apple balls as they
  are ready on a wetted baking-tin with the join
  downwards, brush them over with water or
  slightly beaten white of egg, and dredge with
  sugar. Bake in a moderate oven from twenty
  to thirty minutes. When ready, the apples
  should be soft, and the pastry nicely browned.
  Serve hot or cold on a dish with a dish-paper
  on it, and dredge again with sugar.
  
  Note. - Ground cloves, ginger, or cinnamon
  may be used for flavouring the butter and sugar
  instead of lemon rind.
  
  
  Apple Pudding
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  Suet Crust (p. 164).
  
  1 lb. Apples.
  
  2 table-sp. Cold Water.
  
  
  i lb. Sugar.
  
  A little grated Lemon Rind
  or 2 or 3 Cloves.
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the apples with a damp cloth
  and peel them thinly. Then cut them in
  quarters, remove the cores, and slice them
  thinly. Roll out the pastry to about quarter of
  an inch in thickness, grease a basin, and line it
  with it. Press the pastry well on to the sides
  of the basin, and try to keep it of a uniform
  thickness. Cut off the trimmings, and roll thona
  out in a round shape, large enough to cover the
  pudding. Fill up the basin with the apples,
  sugax, and flavouring, pressing them well down,
  as the fruit sinks considerably when cooking.
  Wet the edge of the pastry which Unos the basin,
  put on the cover, and press the two edges well
  together. Dip the centre of a pudding-uioth in
  boiling water, and dredge it with flour. Tie
  this over the top of the pudding, and plunge it
  into a saucepan of fast-boiling water. Boil
  quickly for two hours at least. More boiling
  water must be added as required. When ready,
  turn out on a hot dish, and serve at once.
  
  Notes. - (1) Any other fruit may be used
  instead of apples, and the amount of sugar will
  vary according to the acidity of the fruit. Goose-
  Ijerrios must be topped and tailed and washed
  in cold water ; plums washed in cold water, and,
  if time permits, stoned ; rhubarb wiped and cut
  in small pieces. All fruit must be carefully
  prepared before being put in.
  
  (2) The pudding may be baked instead of
  boiled ; a piece of greased paper should then be
  twisted over the top of the basin.
  
  (3) Short crust may bo used instead of suet
  crust if the pudding is baked.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  197
  
  
  Apple Tart with Meringue
  Short Crust
  
  
  Ingrediei}Js -
  
  lib. Butter.
  C oz. Flour.
  2 oz. Corn-flour.
  1 oz. Sugar.
  
  
  1 yolk of Egg.
  I tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  A squeeze of Lemon .Juice.
  Cold Water.
  
  
  Apple JIixture
  
  
  1 lb. Apples'tweighed after
  
  peeling).
  The Rind of J Lemon.
  
  
  J lb. Sugar.
  
  2 or 3 table-spoonfuls Water.
  
  2 yolks of Eggs.
  
  
  3 whites of Eggs.
  
  
  Meringue
  
  I 3 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  
  Method. - First make some short crust with
  the ingredients given above, and according to
  directions given on p. 164. Wet a dish with
  cold water, and cover it with the pastry rolled
  out rather thinly. Trim round the edges, and
  prick all over the foot with a fork. Then roll
  out the scraps of pastry and cut from it bands
  about two inches in width. Wet round the
  pastry covering the edge of the dish, and lay
  the band round. Wliere there is a join wet one
  edge with cold water, and fix the two pieces as
  neatly as possible. Then decorate round the
  edges according to taste, and bake the pastry
  in a moderate oven for about half-an-hour, until
  brown and crisp. Meanwhile prepare the apple
  mixture. Peel the apples, and then weigh them.
  Slice them thinly, and put them into a stewpan
  with the sugar, lemon rind, and a very little
  water. Allow them to stew slowly until quite
  soft and pulpy, and rub them tlirough a hair or
  wire sieve. Add to th<^m the two yolks of eggs,
  and put the mixture into the covered dish.
  Whip the wliites of eggs to a stiff froth, add the
  sugar sifted to them, and pile this roughly on
  the top of the apples. Dredge a little sugar over,
  and return the tart to a slow oven to dry and
  brown the meringue. About fifteen minutes will
  be required. This tart may be served hot or
  cold.
  
  Almond Cheese Cakes
  (Fr. Tartelettes aus Amandes)
  Ingredients -
  6 oz. Castor Sugar.
  3 oz. Sweet Almonds
  
  (ground).
  3 to 4 whites of Eggs.
  Short Crust or Puff Pastry.
  
  Method. - Sieve the sugar into a basin, and
  add the ground almonds to it, with a good squeeze
  of lemon or the orange-flower water. Then add
  three or four whites of eggs, according to size,
  and beat all with a wooden spoon or spatula.
  Tlie mixture must be of a creamy consistency.
  Line some patty tins with any good pastry,
  and put a little jam at the foot of each. Then
  fill them up with the almond mixture. Lay
  two tliin strips of pastry across the top, and
  
  
  A little Jam.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice
  
  or 1 tea-spoonful Orange-
  
  Uower Water.
  
  
  dredge the tartlets with sugar, which will
  give them a cracked appearance when baked.
  Bake in a rather slow oven about three-quarters
  of an hour. If baked too quickly, they will rise
  and then fall again. When ready, they should
  be nicely browned, and feel firm to the touch.
  Tliis amount of mixture should fill twelve cases.
  
  
  Chocolate Tartlets
  
  (Fr. Tartelettes au Chocolat)
  Ingredients -
  3 Macaroons.
  
  1 table-sp. grated Chocolate.
  J pint Milk.
  
  2 yolks of Eggs.
  
  
  Castor
  
  
  1 dessert-spoonful
  
  Sugar.
  A few drops of Vanilla.
  Short Crust or Puff Pastry
  
  
  Method. - Line some dozen small tartlet tins
  with any good pastry, but do not bake them.
  Put the chocolate into a saucepan with the
  milk, and let them simmer for about ten
  minutes over the fire, then add the macaroons
  crushed to a powder, and simn:ier a few minutes
  longer. Remove the pan from the fire, and add
  the sugar, flavouring, and yolks of eggs. Mix
  well, and fill the Hned tins with this mixture.
  Lay some narrow strips of pastry in a trellis-work
  pattern over the top, wetting one edge of pastry
  wherever a join is made. Bake in a good oven
  for about twenty minutes ; then brush the
  tartlets over with slightly beaten wliite of egg,
  and sprinkle them with sugar.
  
  Lemon Curd Cheese Cakes
  (Fr. Tartelettes au Citron)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. Castor Sugar. 3 yolks of Eggs.
  
  3 oz. Butter. 2 whites of Eggs.
  
  2 Lemons. Tartlet Cases (p. 199).
  
  2 Finger Biscuits.
  
  Method. - Sieve the sugar on to a plate, grate
  the lemon rind on the top of it, and work the
  two together with a knife until of a uniform
  yellow colour. Tlien put this sugar into a sauce-
  pan with the butter and eggs slightly beaten
  and the finger biscuits made into crumbs. Stir
  all gently over a slow fire until the mixture
  thickens and becomes Uke honey. Then pour
  into jars, and cover tightly with parchment
  paper. If stored in a cool place, tliis will keep
  for some time.
  
  When tartlets are wanted"fill pastry cases with
  the mixture, and warm in the oven, or they may
  be served cold.
  
  Or this lemon mixture may be used instead
  of jam for an open tart.
  
  Gooseberry Tart
  {Fr. Tourte aux Groseilles Vertes)
  Ingredients -
  
  Short Crust. I 2 table-spoonfuls Water.
  
  1 lb. Gooseberries. I J lb. Sugar.
  
  Method. - Top and tail the gooseberries and
  wash th'em in cold water. Put them into a
  
  
  198
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  pie-disli in alternate layers with the sugar,
  making the last layer gooseberries. Have tlio
  fruit piled liigh and well away from the sides of
  the dish. Make some sliort crust (p. 1C>4) and
  roll it out rather thinly. Wot round the edges
  of the pie-dish with cold water. Cut a strip an
  inch wide off the pastry, and lay it roimd the
  dish. Press it well on, and whore there is a
  join wet one of the edges with cold water and
  press the two together. Then wet roimd again
  with cold water, and lay on a piece of pastry
  large enough to cover the top. Ease this on
  slightly, and press the two edges well together.
  With a sharp knife cut off tlie larger pieces of
  pastry hanging round the dish, then hold up
  the dish in the right hand, and with the left trim
  neatly round the edges. Wlien cutting, take
  sharp quick strokes, cutting always from you,
  and slanting the knife outwards from the dish
  to avoid cutting the pastry too close. Then
  with the back of the knife mark round the edges
  of the pastry. jNIake the marks quite close
  together, and as neat as possible. Next flute
  round the edges by drawing the knife quickly
  upwards and towards you, and being careful to
  make the flutes an equal distance apart.
  
  Brush the pie over with beaten white of egg
  or a little cold water, and dredge well with sugar.
  This is to glaze it, and should be done just before
  the pie is put in the oven. Then with a skewer
  make four small holes at the sides of the pie, to
  £dlow the steam to escape while cooking. Bake
  in a moderate oven about one hour, or until the
  gooseberries are cooked and the pastry is nicely
  browned. When ready, lift out of the oven
  and wipe the dish well with a damp cloth.
  Sprinkle the tart with castor sugar, and serve
  either hot or cold.
  
  Note. - Any other fniit tart may be made in
  the same way. All fruit must be carefully
  prepared before being used, and sugar added
  according to the acidity of the fruit. A mixture
  of fruits may also be used.
  
  
  Marigold Tartlets
  
  
  Ingredients -
  Pufl or Flaky I'astry.
  Apricot Jam.
  
  
  Sweet Almonds.
  Angelica.
  
  
  Method. - Roll out some jjuff or flaky pa.stry
  rather thinly, and stamp it in rounds with a
  cutter about 2\ inches in diameter. Place those
  rounds on a baking-tin, prick them with a fork,
  and bake in a good oven from ten to fifteen
  minutes. When ready, lift them on to a sieve
  aid let them cool. To finish put a small
  tea-spoonful of apricot jam on the centre of each
  round of pastry. Stick thin shreds of blanched
  almonds round this to imitate the petals of a
  marigold, and then garnish with a few small
  leaves of angelica.
  
  
  Mincemeat
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. Suet.
  
  J lb. Valencia Raisins.
  
  \ lb. Sultana Raisins.
  
  i lb. CuiTants.
  
  } lb. Figs.
  
  J lb. Apples.
  
  1 lb. Sugar.
  
  2table-sp. ^larmalade.
  
  
  3 oz. Citron Peel.
  3 oz. Lemon Peel.
  3 oz. Orange Peel.
  6 oz. Sweet Almonds.
  
  1 dessert-sp. Mixed Spices.
  Rind and juice of 2 Lemons.
  
  2 glasses of Brandy.
  1 glass of Rum.
  
  
  Method. - First prepare the fruit, and as each
  article is ready put it into a large crock or basin.
  Pick and clean the cui-rants and sultanas. Stone
  the raisins, peel and core the apples, and chop
  these two together with a long sharp knife.
  Shred the peel finely, and blanch and chop the
  almonds. Remove the stalks from the figs,
  wash them in very hot water, and then dry and
  cut them in small pieces. Add the spiCQ to the
  fruit, also the suet finely chopped, and the lemon
  rind grated, and mix tlioroughly with the hands.
  Tlien add the marmalade, lemon juice, rum,
  and brandy, and mix again. Cover and stand
  in a cool place for twenty-four hours. Then
  mix once more, and pack into pots or jars.
  Tie a piece of parchment over the top of the
  pots to make them perfectly air-tight, and keep
  the mincemeat in a cool place. Do not use for
  several weeks.
  
  Note - Tins mincemeat will keep quite good
  for a year at least. If it should become rather
  dry, more wine or spirit may be added.
  
  Mince Pies
  
  Required -
  
  Puff Pastry. | Mincemeat.
  
  Method. - ^Roll out puff pastry to one-eighth
  of an inch in thickness, and stamp out rounds
  with a cutter three to four inches in diameter.
  Fold up the scraps of pastry and roll them out
  again, cutting out more rounds as before. (The
  first rounds that are cut out are always the best,
  so keep these more especially for the top of the
  pies.) Wet round the edge of half the number
  of rounds with a little cold water, and put a
  good tea-spoonful of mincemeat in the centre of
  each. Cover with the other rounds of pastry,
  and press the two edges well together. Make
  a small hole with a skewer on the top of each
  pie, brush them over with slightly beaten white
  of egg, and dredge them with sugar. Place the
  pies on a wetted baking-sheet, and bake in a
  good oven for twenty minutes until the pastry
  is well risen and nicely browned. When ready,
  sprinkle again with sugar and serve hot.
  
  Orange Pudding (Baked)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. Cake-crumbs. 1 gill Milk.
  
  2 oz. Castor Sugar. 2 Oranges.
  
  1 oz. Butter. A little Pastry.
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  Method. - Lino a mouium-sizod pie-dish with
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  199
  
  
  any good pastry, and then prepare the mixture.
  Wipe the oranges with a damp cloth, and
  grate off the rind on the top of the sugar.
  Work the rind into the sugar with a broad-
  bladed knife until they are of a uniform
  yellow colour. Then put this into a basin, and
  add the cake-crumbs sieved and the butter
  broken in pieces. Heat the milk in a small
  saucepan, and pour it over the crumbs, &c.
  Stir until the butter is melted, add the yolks of
  eggs, the strained juice of oranges, and lastly
  the wliites of eggs beaten to a stiff froth. Mix
  lightly, and pour all into the prepared dish.
  Bake in a moderate oven until set and of a Ught
  browTi colour. It will take about three-quarters
  of an hour. Sprinkle with sugar and serve hot.
  Note. - Lemon Pudding may be made in the
  same way, substituting one lemon instead of
  the two oranges.
  
  Tartlet Cases
  
  In famiUes where there are unexpected visitors,
  it is a good plan to keep some tartlet cases readj'
  at hand. With some fresh fruit or preserve
  they make a nice sweet for an emergency.
  Grease any small patty tins or quenelle-shaped
  moulds, and line them with rounds of short crust
  rolled out rather thinly. {The rounds of pastry
  should be cut rather larger than the diameter
  of the tins, to allow of some being taken up in
  the depth.) Press the pastry well into the
  moulds so that it may take the exact shape,
  and prick it all over the foot to prevent it bUster-
  ing while baking. Lay a small round of paper
  into each, and fill with rice or small beans.
  Bake in a moderate oven until the pastry is dry
  and nicely browned. Then remove the tartlets
  from the tins, empty them of the rice or beans,
  and store them in an air-tight tin until wanted.
  Tlie pastry for these should be rather stiff and
  not too rich.
  
  The cases may be filled with a little jam or
  fresh fruit (see below), and some whipped and
  sweetened cream may be piled on the top.
  
  Strawberry, Raspberry, or Red Currant
  
  Tartlets
  
  Required -
  
  
  i pint Fruit.
  
  A little Liqueur or any Fruit
  Syrup.
  
  
  J lb. Sugar.
  
  1 dozen Tartlet Cases.
  
  j gill of Watei.
  
  
  Method. - Choose nice ripe fruit, pick it, and
  put it into a basin. Put the sugar and water
  into a saucepan, and boil them to a syrup, but
  do not let thein colour. Add a little liqueur or
  some fruit sjTup or essence to flavour. Pour
  this sjTup over the fruit, and stand in a warm
  place for half-an-hour. Then lift out the fruit
  carefully, place it in the tartlet ceises, and pour
  one or two tea-spoonfuls of the syrup over.
  Serve oithar hot or cold.
  
  
  Note. - A little whipped cream sweetened and
  flavoured may be piled on the top.
  
  
  i tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  A little Flavouring.
  2 table-spoonfuls Jam.
  
  
  West Riding Pudding
  
  Ingredients -
  2 Eggs.
  
  The weight of the Eggs in
  Butter, Flour, and Sugar.
  Some scraps of Pastry.
  
  Method. - Roll out scraps of any suitable
  pastry into a strip four or five inches in width,
  and line the sides and edges of a wetted pie-dish
  with it. Join the ends neatly, and press the
  pastry well on to the rim of the dish and sUghtly
  over the outer edge ; then trim round with a
  knife. Wet the rim of pastry with a little cold
  water, and decorate all round the edge with small
  fancy -shaped pieces of pastry. Press these well
  on. Put the jam at the foot of the pie-dish, and
  then prepare the mixture. Sieve the sugar into
  a basin, add the butter, and beat these two
  together with a wooden spoon until they are of
  a, creamy consistency. Then add one egg and
  half the flour sieved, beat well, then the second
  egg and the rest of the flour, and beat again.
  Flavour to taste, and add the baking powder
  at the last. Half fill the pie-dish with this
  mixtiu-e, and bake in a good oven for one hour,
  or until the mixture is quite set and of a nice
  brown colour. Sprinkle with sugar before
  serving.
  
  COLD PUDDINGS
  Jellies
  
  Tlie Setting of Jellies. - The moulds in wliich
  jelHes are to be set should have been well washed
  with hot water to render them perfectly'' free
  from grease, and then soaked in hot water, or
  left filled with cold water up to the tinie of using.
  
  The best moulds for jellies are those which
  are made of copper and tinned inside.
  
  The temperatvire at which jelly is moulded
  ought to be such that, while still perfectly hquid,
  it is not sensibly warm. If poured into the
  mould hot it is apt to become cloudy, and there
  is Ukely to be difficulty in turning it out.
  
  Wlien putting the jelly aside to cool, see that
  the mould stands perfectly even, in order that
  the jelly may stand straight and firm when
  unmoulded.
  
  The great secret in making jelly that looks
  bright is to take pains with the clearing of it.
  Tlae right proportions must also be taken, so
  that the jelly may hold its shape without being
  firm and solid. It is much easier to turn a stiff
  jolly out of a mould than one that is just of
  sufficient consistency to stand, but a stiff jelly is
  never good.
  
  As a rule, a jelly is ornamental in itself,
  provided it is bright and is served in an equally
  bright crystal or silver dish ; but with different
  
  
  200
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  flavours, colours, and combinations, a great
  variety of more fanciful-looking sweets may
  be obt.iuned. Ornament-ation, howovor, requires
  care and taste ; unless the decoration is nicely
  done, the dish will have a slovenly appearance,
  corresponding very much to tawdry finery in
  dress.
  
  To Unmould a Jelly. - Take a basin of hot
  water, hotter than the hand can comfortably
  bear, and dip the mould quickly into it, letting
  the water cover it for a second (if a china mould
  is used a little longer immersion in the water will
  be necessary). Then wipe the moistxu-e off the
  mould with a cloth, and loosen the jelly away
  from the sidee with tlie tips of the fingers.
  Shake the jelly gently until it seems to be loose
  in the mould, place the dish on which it is to be
  served on the top, and reverse both together.
  Give another slight shake, and draw the mould
  slowly off.
  
  Jellies aro improved by having whipped cream,
  custard, or a pur6e of fruit served with them.
  This may either be put round the dish or served
  separately.
  
  Apple Jelly
  {Fr. Gelee de Pommes)
  Ingredients -
  1 lb. Apples (weighed after
  
  
  peeling).
  3 oz. Sugar.
  3 gills of Water.
  The rind of 1 Lemon.
  
  
  1 oz. Gelatine.
  
  A few drops of Carmine.
  
  J pint Double Cream.
  
  A little Sugar.
  
  A few Pistachio >"uts.
  
  
  Method. - Peel, core, and slice the apples, and
  then weigh them. Put them into a lined stew-
  pan with two gills of water, the thinly peeled rind
  of a lemon, and the sugar. Stew until reduced
  to a pulp, and then rub through a hair sieve.
  Melt the gelatine in the remainder of the water
  and strain it into the apple pulp. Colour part
  of this apple jelly pink with a few drops of car-
  mine, and fill a border mould wath alternate
  layers of yellow and pink, always allowing one
  layer to set before pouring in another. When
  quite f\ill, sot in a cool place until firm. Turn
  out when wanted, and fill the centre with the
  cream, whipped and sweetened.
  
  Decorate with a few chopped pistachio nuts
  or other suitable decoration.
  
  Bananas in Jelly
  
  (Fr. Gelee aux Bananes)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  Bananas. i Pistachio Nuts.
  
  Lemon or Wine Jelly. 1
  
  Metfiod. - Pour into a plain mould enough
  sweet jelly to cover it to the depth of quarter
  of an inch. Peel the bananas, and cut them in
  shces with a silver knifo. Place them on the
  jelly when it is firm, arranging them in a circle,
  one resting on the other. Make a small circle
  
  
  also in the middle of the mould if it is large
  enough. Pour a very little jelly over to keep
  tho fruit in position, and let it set. Then cover
  with more jelly, and when that is firm put in
  more banana, and proceed in this way until the
  mould is full. Some blanched and shredded
  pistacliio nuts may be used with the bananas,
  or the jelly may bo coloured slightly pink with
  a few drops of canhine.
  
  Note. - Other fruits such as grapes, straw-
  berries, raspberries, red or white currants,
  sections of orange, &c., may be set in jelly in
  the same way. A mixture of fniits (Alacedoine
  de Fruit) sdso looks pretty.
  
  Coffee Jelly
  
  {Fr. Gel6e au Caf6)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i pint strong Coffee.
  
  J oz. Gelatine.
  
  1 oz. Sugar.
  
  3 or 4 drops of Vanilla.
  
  
  For the Centre.
  
  1 gill double Cream.
  Sugar and Flavouring.
  A few pieces of preserved
  Cherry and Angelica.
  
  
  Method. - The coffee must be strong and clear.
  Put it into a lined saucepan with the sugar
  and gelatine, and dissolve slowly over the firo.
  Then strain into a basin, add the vanilla, and
  cool slightly. Rinse out a border mould with
  cold water, and fill it with the coffee jelly. Set
  aside until firm, and turn out when wanted.
  For the centre, whip the cream with a fork until
  thick, and sweeten and flavour to taste. Pile
  this in the centre of the coffee jelly, and decorate
  with a few pieces of preserved fruits.
  
  Lemon Jelly
  
  {Fr. Gel6e au Citron)
  
  
  4 Cloves.
  
  2 oz. Leaf Gelatine.
  
  The rind of 2 Lemons.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  I pint Lemon Juice.
  
  li pints Cold Water.
  
  6 oz. Loaf Sugar.
  
  1 inch of Cinnamon Stick. 2 whites and sheUs of Elggs,
  
  Method. - Take a clean fined saucepan, and
  put into it the water, gelatine, sugar, cinnamon
  stick, and cloves. Wipe the lemons with a
  damp cloth, and peel the rind very thinly off
  two of them. Do not peel off any of the white
  part, as this would give the jelly a bitter taste.
  Tlien roll the lemons on the table to soften
  them, cut them in halves, and squeeze out the
  juice until there is half a pint. Strain this into
  the saucepan, and add the lemon rind and the
  whites and shells of eggs. The latter should be
  washed and crushed. The pan should not be
  more than half full, as the jolly is verj' apt to
  boil over. Take a ware whisk, and wliisk the
  jolly over tho fire until a good froth rises on it and
  it is just bpginning to boil. Watch the jelly care-
  fully, and let it boil up as high as it will without
  boiling over. Then draw the pan gently to one
  side of the fire, where it will keep warm without
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  201
  
  
  simmering, and cover it over with a lid or plate.
  Let it stand for ten minutes, and then strain
  in the same way as Clear Soup (p. 120). Cover
  the stand over with a piece of flannel or blanket,
  and let it remain iintil all the jelly has run
  through.
  
  Pour the jelly into a mould that has been
  rinsed out with cold water, and put it in a cool
  place to set. Turn out on a glass or silver dish
  when wanted.
  
  The jelly should be strained in a warm place
  and out of a diaught. Should it stiffen in the
  cloth before all has run through, place a small
  basin or cup in the centre and fill it with boiling
  water.
  
  Orange Jelly
  
  {Fr. Gelee d'Orange)
  Ingredients -
  i pint Orange Juice (4 or 5
  
  Orangfis).
  The rind ot tTo Oranges.
  J lb. Loaf Sugar.
  
  
  1 oz. Sheet Gelatine.
  I pint Water.
  The rind and juice of
  Lemon.
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the oranges and lemon with a
  damp cloth, and then peel off very thinly as
  much rind as is required. Put the rinds into a
  small lined saucepan with the gelatine cut in
  small pieces, the loaf sugar, and water. Stir
  these over the fire until the gelatine is quite
  dissolved, and then simmer for ten minutes.
  Skim and strain into a basin. Roll the oranges
  and lemon on the table to soften them slightly,
  cut them in halves, and squeeze out the juice.
  Strain and measure this, and add it to the other
  ingredients in the basin. Stir occasionally, and
  do not mould imtil cool. Pour into a wetted
  mould or moulds, and set in a cool place until
  firm. Turn out when required, and serve with
  cream. Or the jelly may be set in a border
  mould, and when turned out the centre filled
  with whipped and sweetened cream. Decorate
  the cream with chopped pistachio nuts or small
  pieces of cherry.
  
  Note. - This jelly may be cleared with the
  white of an egg in the same way as Lemon Jelly
  (see above).
  
  Port Wine or Claret Jelly
  
  {Fr. Gelee au Vin Rouge)
  Jngredienta -
  i pint Port or Claret,
  i pint Water.
  The rind and juice of 1
  
  Lemon.
  } lb. Loaf Sugar.
  
  Method. - Put into a small lined stewpan the
  water, sugar, red currant jolly, cinnamon, and
  cloves. Cut the gelatine into small pieces, and
  add it with the lemon rind peeled off very thinly
  and the strained juice. Stir over the fire until
  the gelatine is quite dissolved. Simmer for a
  few minutes, and add the mne. Do not boil
  again. Strain tlu-ough a piece of muaUu, and if
  
  
  1 1 able-sp. Red Currant Jelly.
  1 inch Cinnamon Stick.
  3 Cloves.
  
  1 oz. Sheet Gelatine.
  
  2 or 3 drops of Carmine.
  
  
  necessary, add a few drops of cochineal or car-
  mine. When nearly cold, pour into one large
  or several small moulds that have been rinsed
  out with cold water. Set aside in a cool place
  until cold and firm. Turn out when required,
  and if wished, decorate with whipped and
  sweetened cream.
  
  Prune Jelly
  {Fr. Gelee aux Prunes)
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  1 lb. Prunes.
  
  2 oz. White Sugar.
  Rind of i Lemon.
  1 oz. Gelatine.
  
  1 inch Cinnamon Stick.
  
  
  J pint Water.
  
  1 oz. Sweet Almonds.
  
  1 glass Claret.
  
  1 gill whipped Cream.
  
  Sugar and Flavouring.
  
  
  Method. - Wash the prunes, and allow them
  to soak at least half-an-hour in the cold water.
  Then put both into a clean lined saucepan, and
  add the lemon rind thinly peeled, the cinnamon
  stick, and sugar. Stew until quite tender, then
  strain off the Uquid, and rub the prunes through
  a sieve. Crack the stones, blanch the kernels,
  and add them to the pulp. Put the Uquid
  from the prunes into a saucepan, add to it the
  claret and gelatine, and dissolve carefully over
  the fire. Strain this into the pulp, and stir
  occasionally until nearly cold. Rinse out a
  border mould with cold water, and decorate it
  with some sweet almonds, blanched and shred,
  fill up with the prune mixture, and set aside in a
  cool place until firm. Then turn out, and serve
  with wlupped and flavoured cream in the centre.
  Decorate with some chopped pistachio nuts
  or with a few glac6 cherries cut in small pieces.
  
  Wine Jelly
  
  {Fr. Gelee au Vin)
  
  
  2 Cloves.
  
  The rind of 2 Lemons.
  2 oz. Sheet Gelatine.
  2 whites and shells
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  i pint Sherry.
  
  1 gill Lemon Juice.
  
  5 gills Water.
  
  J lb. Loaf Sugar. 2 whites and shells of
  
  1 inch Cinnamon Stick.
  
  Method. - Prepare the ingredients and make
  the jelly according to directions given for lemon
  jelly (p. 200). Set in one large or several small
  moulds, and turn out when wanted.
  
  CREAMS
  Apricot Cream
  
  {Fr. Creme d'Abricots)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J pint Apricot Purt5e.
  i pint Double Cream.
  i oz. Sheet Gelatine.
  2 table-sp. Water or Syrup
  
  from the Apricots.
  2 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  
  Squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  A few drops of Carmine.
  
  Decorations.
  Sweet Jelly. Pieces of
  
  Apricot and Pistachio Nuta
  
  or Glace Cherries.
  
  
  Method. - Rinse out a mould with cold water
  and leave it wet. Then decorate the top of it
  
  
  202
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  with some lemon or wine jelly, and small pieces
  of apricot and chopped pistacluo nuts, or any
  other suitable decoration. Set this aside imtil
  the jelly stiffens. Make the piu-6e by rubbing
  tinned apricots tlirough a hair sieve. Use a
  little of the sjTup from the tin, so that the pur6e
  is not too thick, and weigh the half pint after
  sieving. Put the pur^ into a basin, and stand
  the basin over a saucepan of hot water until the
  contents are slightly warm. If quito cold, the
  gelatine would not mix well with it. Cut the
  gelatine into pieces with a pair of scissors, and
  put it into a small saucepan ^\-ith two tablo-
  spoonfuls of water or apricot syrup. Stir it
  over the fire until quite dissolved, strain it into
  the apricot purtkj, and mix well. Add the sugar
  and a squeeze of lemon juice. The quantity of
  sugar may be regulated according to taste.
  Whip the cream in a separate basin until quite
  thick, and then mix it lightly to the other in-
  gredients. Add enough carmine to make the
  cream of a peachy colour, not too pink, and stir
  occasionally until beginning to set. Tlien pour
  it into the prepared mould, and place in a cool
  place or on ice until set.
  
  When required, tiu-n out on a glass or silver
  dish, and put a border of chopped jelly round.
  
  Note. - If fresh apricots are used, they must
  be stewed first with a little water and sugar.
  
  A Peach Cream (Fr. Creme aux Peches) may
  be made in the same way.
  
  Coffee Cream
  {Fr. Creme au Caf6)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i pint Double Cream.
  i pint Coffee Custard.
  3 oz. Sheet Gelatine.
  2 table-spoonfuls Coffee.
  A few drops of Vanilla.
  
  
  1 gill strong Coffee.
  
  1 gill Milk.
  
  3 yolks of Eggs.
  
  1 white of Egg.
  
  2 oz. .Sugar.
  
  
  Decorations- ii-wtet Jelly and a few pieces of Preserved
  Fruits.
  
  Method. - Decorate the foot of a wetted mould
  with some sweet jelly and some pieces of pre-
  served fruit.
  
  Have ready some very strong and clear coffee,
  and put one gill of this and one gill of milk into
  a small saucepan to heat. Beat up the yolks
  and wliite of egg with the sugar in a basin, and
  pour the hot milk and coffee slowly on to them,
  stirring all the time with a wooden spoon. Re-
  turn this to the saucepan, and stir carefully
  over the fire until the custard thickens without
  allowing it to boil. Remove at once from the
  fire and strain into a ba.sin. Cut the gelatine in
  pif^ces, and dissolve it in a saucepan with two
  table-spoonfuls of coffee, and then strain it into
  the cvistard. Add two or three drops of vanilla
  and more sugar if wished. Whip the cream and
  add it to the custard mixture. Stir occasionally
  until the mixture shows signs of setting, and
  
  
  then pour it into the prepared mould. Set
  aside in a cool place until firm. When required,
  turn out on a pretty dish, and decorate with
  preserved fruits or chopped jelly.
  
  Note. - The decoration may be varied accord-
  ing to taste.
  
  
  Chestnuts in Cream
  
  {Fr. Nid de Marrons a la Creme)
  
  Ingrediejvts -
  
  1 lb. Chestnuts. | i lb. Castor Sugar.
  
  Milk. 1 pint Double Cream.
  
  A small piece of Vanilla. | Sugar and Flavouring.
  
  Decorations- Crystallised Violets.
  
  Method. - To peel the chestnuts, cut them
  round lightly with a knife ; put them into a
  stewpan just covered with cold water, and boil
  for five minutes over the fixe. Then strain and
  peel off both the shell and the inner skin. Put
  the chestnuts thus prepared into a saucepan,
  cover them with milk, and add a small piece of
  vanilla. Put the hd on the saucepan, and cook
  slowly until the chestnuts are quite tender and
  the milk reduced. Crush them in the stewpan
  with a wooden spoon, add the sugar, and pasa
  aU through a fine sieve. Put the pxiree into a
  basin, and stir it for a minute or two to render
  it smooth ; if it is too thick, add a little milk to
  it, but it is necessary for it to be of a good
  consistency.
  
  Form a border round a dish with this chestnut
  puree forced through a syringe made for the
  purpose, when it takes the form of vermicelli,
  or if there is no syringe at hand, simply place a
  fine sieve upon a round dish, and pass the chesl -
  nut puree through it, forming a border round
  the dish. Whip and flavour the cream and pile
  it in the centre. Decorate with a few crystal-
  lised violets and nuts.
  
  
  {Fr.
  Ingredients -
  
  1 pint Milk.
  3 Eggs.
  
  2 table -spoonfuls Sugar.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  Italian Cream
  
  Creme a I'ltalienne)
  
  
  J oz. Gelatine.
  
  2 table-spooufuls Water.
  
  Flavouring.
  
  
  Method. - Make a custard with the yolks of
  eggs, sugar, and milk. Pour it into a basin,
  and add the flavouring and salt. Dissolve the
  gelatine in a little water, and pour it into the
  custard. Mix well together, and strain all into
  another basin. When the custard begins to
  stiffen, stir in very lightly the whites of the eggs
  beaten to a stiff froth. Turn all into a wetted
  mould, and set aside until firm. When wanted,
  turn out on a glass or silver dish.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  203
  
  
  Meringues with Cream
  
  (Fr. Meringues a la Creme)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3 whites of Eggs. J pint Double Cream.
  
  A pinch of Salt. 1 table-spoonful Sugar.
  
  9 oz. Castor Sugar. A few drops of Vanilla.
  
  Method. - Put the whites into a large basin,
  add a pinch of salt, and with a wire whisk beat
  thera to a very stiff froth. Sieve the sugar, and
  mix it in gently and lightly with an iron or silver
  spoon. Place a sheet of white paper all over a
  Wooden board or baking-sheet of iron, and place
  the meringues on it.
  
  To Shape the Meringues. - You will require
  two dessert-spoons, a palette knife, and a jug
  or basin of cold water. Take up a spoonful of
  the meringue mixture in a wetted spoon, and
  with a palette knife also wet, smooth it qmckly
  over, piUng it high in the centre and pointed at
  the two ends. With the second spoon, scoop
  the meringue out, and place it on the prepared
  tin or board. Or the meringue mixture may be
  put into a forcing-bag, and the shapes forced
  out on the tin. Leave a space of half an inch
  between each meringue, and sprinkle them with
  fine sugar. Place them in a very gentle oven
  until they are crisp and deUcately tinted golden.
  Turn the paper on wliich the meringues have
  been baked upside down upon the table ;
  moisten the paper on the back with a brush
  dipped in cold water ; five minutes after the
  meringues will come off easily. Make each
  meringue hollow by pressing with the finger on
  the centre of it. place them back on the tin,
  and put them again in *he oven for a few minutes
  to dry.
  
  Wliip the cream until thick, sweeten and
  flavour it. Fill the meringues with tliis, putting
  two pieces together, and pile them on a glass or
  silver dish.
  
  Notes. - ^In making meringues the stiff beating
  of the wliites of eggs is essential, but it is equally
  essential that this beating should cease directly
  the right consistency is attained, or a broken
  curdled appearance will be the result, and the
  mixture will be close and heavy. As soon as
  the egg froth stands up in solid points on the
  withdrawal of the whisk, or wiU allow itself to
  be divided with a knife into two separate
  halves, stop beating.
  
  The oven will be suitable for cooking meringues
  when it has cooled down after other uses, or
  ■when the fire is allowed to get quite low. One
  of the main points in making meringues is their
  prolonged and thorough drying in a cool oven.
  
  Instead of baking them on paper, warm an
  ordinary baking-tin, rub the bottom of it all
  over with white wax, and cook the naeringues
  on that.
  
  Meringues may be stored in a tin and kept
  for use at any time.
  
  For the filling, any flavouring or liqueur may
  
  
  i pint Double Cream.
  2 or 3 oz. Sugar.
  
  
  be added to the cream, or smaU pieces of fresh
  fruit may be mixed in. The cream may also
  be coloured pink with a little carmine.
  
  Rice Cream
  (Fr. Riz a I'lmperatrice)
  Ingredients -
  
  li pint llilk. J oz. Gelatine.
  
  The rind of 1 Lemon. 2 table-spoonfuls Water.
  
  i lb. Carolina Rice.
  
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  Method. - Put the rice and milk into a sauce-
  pan with the thinly peeled rind of one lemon
  and a pinch of salt. Cook until the rice is per-
  fectly tender. (A double saucepan is best for
  this.) The milk should be nearly boiled away,
  leaving the rice very moist. Then add the
  gelatine dissolved in a Httle water, the sugar,
  and more flavom-ing if wished. A little liqueur
  or wine added is a great improvement. Mix
  well, and when begiruiing to set, stir in the cream
  whipped stiffly. Pour the mixture into a wetted
  mould, and allow it to set. Turn out when
  wanted on to a glass or silver dish.
  
  Notes. - This is a very white dish, and makes
  a dehcious dessert. It may be served alone or
  with a puree of apricots poured round it as a
  sauce. A compote of fruits may be served
  separately, or small pieces of ripe fruits pre-
  viously soaked in wine or Uqueirr may be mixed
  with the rice mixture before moulding, or, if
  liked, the mould used may be first decorated with
  some sweet jelly and pieces of fruit.
  
  Strawberry Cream
  
  {Fr. Creme aux Fraises)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 lb. Strawberries.
  h pint Double Cream.
  3 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  
  1 oz. pink Gelatine.
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Water.
  Squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Decorations- Some Sweet Jelly, Strawberries, and
  Pistachio Nuts.
  
  Method. - Rinse out a mould with cold water
  and leave it wet. Then decorate the top of it
  with some sweet jeUy (in a Hquid state), some
  nice pieces of strawberry, and a few chopped
  pistacluo nuts. Let this decoration set before
  poui'ing in the cream.
  
  Pick the strawberries, and rub sufficient of
  them through a fine hair or silk sieve to make
  half a pint of puree. Put this puree into a basin,
  and stand the basin over a saucepan of hot water
  until the contents are slightly warm. Unless
  tliis is done the gelatine will not mix properly
  with it. Cut the gelatine into pieces, and dis-
  solve it in a small saucepan with the water.
  Keep stirring it constantly with a wooden spoon
  to prevent it sticking to the foot of the pan,
  then strain it into the pur^e, being careful not
  to lose any. Mix well. If wliite gelatine is
  used, a few drops of carmine will reqtiire to be
  
  
  204
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  added. Put the cream into a large basin, and
  with a wire wliisk switch it until quito tliick.
  Mix tliis lightly but thoroughly beside the pxir^e,
  and add sugar and a squeeze of lemon juice.
  Stir this mixture occasionally until it is almost
  setting, and then pour it carefully into the pro-
  pared mould. Let it stand in a cool place or on
  ice luitil it is quite firm. \Vlien wanted, turn
  out the cream on to a silver or glass dish \rith
  a lace-edged paper on it, and decorate round
  with strawlxirry or fern leaves and a few fresh
  strawberries.
  
  Note. - Do not allow a strawberry cream to
  remain too long in the mould, as it ia apt to
  discolour.
  
  Several small moulds may be used instead
  of one large.
  
  Raspberry Cream {Fr. Creme aux Framboises)
  may be made in the same way, using raspberries
  instead of strawberries. A few red currants
  may also be added.
  
  Vanilla Cream
  (Fr. Creme a la Vanille)
  Ingredienis -
  
  i pint Double Creani. Custard.
  
  J pint Custard. 3 yolks of Eggs.
  
  Vanilla Flavouring. 1 white of Egg.
  
  } oz. Sheet Gelatine. i pint of Milk.
  
  2 table-spoonfuls "Water. 1 oz. of Sugai-.
  
  Decorationg-A little Lemon Jelly, a few Cherries, and
  I'istacluo Nuts.
  
  Method. - First rinse out a mould with cold
  water and leave it wet. Then decorate it at
  the foot with some liquid jelly, pieces of cherry
  and chopped pistachio nuts. (Any preserved
  fruit may bo used for decorating that will make
  a pretty contrast to the pale colour of the cream,
  or the jelly may bo coloured pink with a little
  carmine or cochineal.) Let the jelly at the foot
  of the mould set before pouring in the cream
  mixture.
  
  To Prepare the Cream. - Make the custard
  according to directions given on p. 146. Flavour
  the custard with vanilla essence, or it may be
  flavoured with vanilla pod by stewing the pod
  in the milk for a short time before making the
  custard.
  
  Cut the gelatine into pieces with a pair of
  scissors, put it into a small saucepan with the
  water, and stir over the fire, letting it dissolve
  slowly. Then strain into the custard, being
  careful not to lose any, and mix well.
  
  Put the cream into a separate basin, and
  switch it until thick. Add this to the ctistard
  mivture, and stir occasionally until the cream
  shi ws signs of setting. Then pour into the
  prepared mould, and set aside in a cool place or
  on ioe until cold and firm. When wanted, turn
  out on a gla'w or china disli, and decorate with
  preserved fruits or chopped jelly. A laco-edgod
  paper may, if liked, be put on the dish first.
  
  
  Custard.
  i pint Milk.
  3 yolks of Eggs.
  
  1 white of Egg.
  
  2 oz. Sugar.
  
  
  Walnut Cream
  {Fr. Creme aux Noix)
  Irujrcdicnts -
  
  i lb. shelled Walnuts.
  
  J pint Custard.
  
  i pint Double Cream.
  
  i oz. Sheet Gelatine.
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Water.
  
  Vanilla or other Flavouring.
  
  Decora  Kose Leaves crystallised.
  
  Method. - ^Rinse out a mould with cold water
  and leave it wet. Decorate the foot with a
  little sweet jelly, pistachio nuts, and crystallised
  violets or rose-leaves, and allow the jelly to set.
  
  Make the custard as dire^jted on p. 146.
  Melt the gelatine in a small saucepan with the
  water, and strain it into the custard, being
  careful to scrape it well out of the pan. Put
  the walnuts on a tin and roast them in the oven
  for a few minutes, so as to draw out the flavour.
  Then pound them in a mortar or crush them
  with a rolling-pin. Add them to the custard
  with a little flavouring. Wlaisk the cream until
  thick, and mix it lightly in beside the other
  ingredients. Stir the cream occasionally until
  it is almost setting, and then pour it into the
  prepared mould. Place the mould in a cool
  place or on ice until the creaiu is firm. Wlien
  required, tm-n out on to a glass or silver dish,
  and decorate round the edges with a little
  chopped jelly and a few crystallised violets.
  
  SIMPLE COLD PUDDINGS
  Caramel Custard
  {Fr. Creme Renvers6e a la Vanille)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  Caramel.
  3 oz. Loaf Sugar.
  J gUl Cold Water.
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Ctistard.
  2 yolks of Eggs and
  2 wliole Eggs.
  \ pint Milk.
  
  1 dessert-spooiiful Sugar.
  Vanilla Flavouring.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Make the caramel according to
  directions given on p. 193, and coat a plain
  souffl6 tin with it. Allow this to become cold
  whilst making the custard. Put the eggs into
  a basin with the sugar, flavouring, and a pinch
  of salt, and mix them to a cream with a wooden
  spoon. Heat the milk and pour it slowly on
  to the egg mixture, stirring all the time. Strain
  the custard into the prepared mould and cover
  with greased paper. Steam very slowly for
  one hour, or until the custard feels firm in the
  centre ; or bake in a moderate oven with some
  warm water round the mould. When the
  custard is cold, turn it out on a glass dish. It
  will have a glaze   some will run round the sides and serve as a
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  205
  
  
  l  with some coffee essence (Coffee Caramel
  Custard).
  
  Chocolate Custard
  {Fr. Creme Toumee au Chocolat)
  Ingredients -
  
  3 tablets of Chocolate or2 oz. I 5 yolks of Eggs.
  1 gill of Hot Water. i\ oz. fine Sugar.
  
  1 pint MUk. I i whites of Eggs.
  
  Method. - Dissolve the chocolate in a saucepan
  with the hot water, add the milk, and let it boil
  up. Put the yolks of eggs into a basin with the
  sugar, and cream them well together with a
  wooden spoon. Add the chocolate little by
  little to the eggs, then return all to the saucepan,
  and stir over the fire until it thickens. At this
  point remove the stewpan from the fire and add
  to the custard the whites of eggs beaten to a
  stiff froth. Stii' for a minute or two longer
  over the fire, but it must not boil. Serve in a
  glass dish or bowl.
  
  Chocolate Mould
  
  (Fr. Moule au Chocolat)
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. Chocolate.
  
  3 gills of ^rilk.
  2 yolks of Eggs.
  
  
  i oz. Gelatine.
  
  1 or 2 oz. Sugar.
  
  A few drops of Vanilla.
  
  
  Method. - Break the chocolate in small pieces
  and put it into a lined saucepan with one gill of
  milk. Dissolve slowly over the fire and cook
  until smooth. Then remove the saucepan
  from the fire and add the remainder of the milk,
  the gelatine, sugar, and yolks of eggs. Stir
  again over the fire until almost boiling and until
  the gelatine is dissolved. Strain into a basin,
  add a few drops of vanilla, and cool slightly.
  Then pour into a wetted mould and set aside
  until firm. Turn out when wanted, and serve
  plain or with whipped cream.
  
  Tliis pudding may be made less rich by
  omitting the yolks of eggs.
  
  *
  
  Coffee Blanc-Mange
  
  {Fr. Moule au Cafe)
  Ingredients -
  
  { pint Mlk. I J. oz. Sugar.
  
  \ pint strong clear Coffee. | A few drops of Vanilla.
  - oz. Corn-flour. 1 oz. Butter.
  
  Metlwd. - Put the coffee and half the milk into
  a saucepan to heat, ilix the corn-flour smoothly
  with the remainder of the milk and add it to the
  hot liquid in the saucepan. Stir over the fire
  until boiling, and boil slowly about ten minutes.
  Add the sugar, butter, and vanilla, and mix
  well. Pour all into a wetted mould, and set
  aside vmtil cold.
  
  A^ofe. - A little cream added to this is an
  
  
  improvement. The coffee used should be very
  strong and clear.
  
  Devonshire Junket
  Ingredients -
  
  1 pint new Milk. i 1 table-sp. Castor Sugar.
  
  1 tea-sp. Essence of Kennet. i tea-sp. ground Cinnamon,
  i glass of Brandy. 1 Clotted Cream.
  
  Method. - Mix together in a glass bowl or
  deep dish the brandy, cinnamon, and sugar.
  Pour on to these one pint of new milk, or fresh
  milk heated to the temperature of new milk,
  and add the rennet. Stir it well, and let it
  remain until it is set. Then spread some clotted
  cream over the top, and sprinkle with castor
  sugar.
  
  When well made, junket should cut into
  smooth shiny slices like jelly. Unlike jelly, it
  will set better and more quickly in a room of
  ordinary temperatm-e than in a cold larder.
  
  Gateau of Cherries with Cream
  {Fr. Gateau de Cerises a la Creme)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  1 lb. Cherries.
  3 gills of Water.
  I oz. Leaf Gelatine.
  The juice of i Lemon.
  
  
  J lb. Sugar.
  
  A few drops of Carmine.
  1 gill of Double Cream.
  Sugar and Flavouring.
  
  
  Method. - ^Wash and pick the cherries, then
  cut them in two and remove the stones. Put
  them into a lined saucepan with the sugar,
  lemon juice, and water, and stew them gently
  until quite tender. Then strain the juice from
  the cherries and measure it ; if not three gills,
  make up the quantity with water. Return this
  juice to the saucepan, and add to it the gelatine
  cut in small pieces, and a little carmine. Stir
  over the fire until the gelatine is quite dissolved.
  Put the cherries into a border mould that has
  been rinsed out with cold water, and strain the
  liquid over them. Set aside until firm, then
  turn out and pile whipped and flavoured cream
  in the centre.
  
  Note. - The stones of the cherries may be
  broken, and the kernels blanched and added
  to the mixture.
  
  The gateau may be further decorated by
  putting some fresh cherries and leaves of angehca
  round the cream.
  
  Cold Gooseberry Souffl6
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Gooseberries. I A little Carmine or Cochi-
  
  1 gill Custard. neal.
  
  6 oz. Sugar. I
  
  Method. - Top and tail the gooseberries and
  wash them well. Put them into a lined stew-
  pan with the sugar, and stew them until reduced
  to a pulp, then rub them through a coarse sieve.
  Put this fruit pur6e into a glass dish and pour
  the custard over. WTiip up the whites of the
  
  
  206
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  to a stiff froth, add sugar to taste, and
  colour one half pink with a few drops of csarmine
  or cochineal. Pile this on the top of the custard
  and sprinkle \^-ith a little chopped pistachio nut
  or pink sugar.
  
  Orange Custard
  
  (Fr. Creme Renversee a I'Orange)
  Ingredients -
  
  
  2 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  I oz. Gelatine.
  
  1 table-spoonful AVater.
  
  
  2 whites of Eggs.
  4 yolks of Eggs.
  i pint Milk.
  2 large Oranges.
  
  Method. - Sieve the sugar on to a plate, and
  grate the rind from the oranges on the top of it.
  Rub those two together with the fingers until
  thorouglily blended, and then put this orange
  sugar into a basin. Add to it the yolks and
  whites of eggs, and beat together for a few
  minutes. Heat the milk, and pour it gradually
  into the basin, stirring all the time. Then
  return all to the saucepan, and stir carefully
  over the fire until the custard tliickens, but do
  not let it boil. Remove quickly from the fire,
  and strain into a basin. Dissolve the gelatine
  in a very little water, and strain it into the
  custard, also the orange juice. Stir occasionally
  until lukewarm, then pour into a wetted mould,
  and set in a cool place imtil firm. TWn out on
  a glass or silver dish.
  
  Note. - The mould may, if liked, be decorated
  at the top with a little clear jelly set with a few
  small sections of orange.
  
  Raspberry Sponge
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  Rind and juice of 1 Lemon.
  
  1 oz. Sugar.
  
  2 whites of Eggs.
  1 gill of Water.
  
  
  i oz. Gelatine.
  
  4 or 6 table-spoonfuls Purde
  
  from fresh Raspberries.
  2 or 3 drops of Carmine.
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the lemon, and peel off the
  rind as thinly as possible. Put the rind into a
  saucepan with the gelatine, sugar, and water,
  and dissolve slowly over the fire. Then strain
  into a basin, and cool slightly. Add the whites
  of eggs, carmine, lemon juice, and raspberry
  syrup or puree, and whisk all together until
  thick and frothy. Pile up in a rocky manner on
  a glass dish, and sprinkle with a little grated
  oocoanut or chopped pistachio nuts.
  
  Note. - Strawberry sponge may be made in
  the same way, using strawberry instead of
  raspberry pur6e.
  
  
  Rhubarb Mould
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 bunch of Rhubarb.
  
  Gelatine.
  
  Sugar.
  
  
  Carmine or Cochineal.
  
  Water.
  
  1 gill Double Cream.
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the rhubarb, but do not peel
  it. Cut it into short lengths, and put into a
  
  
  lined saucepan with enough water to cover it,
  and sugar to taste. Stew slowly until the
  rhubarb is reduced to a pulp, then strain througli
  a fine strainer or hair sieve, pressing well with a
  wooden spoon in order to obtain all the juice.
  ^Measure this juice, and retmn it to the sauce-
  pan, adding French leaf gelatine in the pro-
  portion of 1 oz. to each pint of liquid. Stir
  carefully over the fire until the gelatine is dis-
  solved ; add a few drops of carmine or cochi-
  neal, and taste if sufficiently sweetened. When
  slightly cooled, pour into a wetted mould and
  set aside until firm. Then turn out and serve
  with whipped and sweetened cream.
  
  COMPOTES AND FRUIT SALADS
  Compote of Apples
  
  {Fr. Compote de Pommes)
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Apples.
  J lb. Loaf Sugar,
  i pint Water.
  
  
  The juice of J Lemon.
  A few drops of Carmine
  or Cochineal.
  
  
  Method. - Put the sugar, water, and lemon juice
  into a clean lined saucepan, and let them boil
  quickly for ten minutes. Meanwhile peel the
  apples, cut them in quarters, and remove the
  cores. Throw the pieces into the boihng syiup,
  and let them cook slowly until clear and tender,
  but not broken. Then remove the quarters of
  apple carefully, reduce the syrup a little, and
  colour it pink with a few drops of carmine or
  cochineal.
  
  Arrange the apples on a glass dish and pour
  the sjTup over.
  
  Notes. - If the apples are small, they may be
  cored and cooked whole.
  
  A httle wine may, if liked, be added to the
  syrup.
  
  A little cream or custard served with the com-
  pote is a great improvement.
  
  Compote of Cherries
  
  {Fr. Compote de Cerises)
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Cherries. i Juice of 1 Lemon.
  
  J lb. Sugar. I
  
  Method. - Wipe the cherries carefully, and
  separate them one from the other. Trim the
  stalks \vnth a pair of scissors, leaving only
  from an inch to an inch and a half on each.
  Put the cherries into a lined saucepan with the
  sugar, and strain in the lemon juice. Put the
  lid on the pan and stew gently for ten minutes,
  or until the cherries are cooked without being
  broken. Lift them carefully on to a glass dish,
  and pour back into the saucepan any juice which
  may be round them. Boil this juice a few
  minutes longer, and then pour it over the
  cherries.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  207
  
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Port Wine.
  J pint Cold Water.
  Juice of i Lemon.
  2 or 3 Cloves.
  
  
  Compote of Pears
  
  (IV. Compote dљ Poires)
  Ingredients -
  IJ lb. Pears.
  i lb. Loaf Sugar.
  A few drops of Carmine.
  1 inch Cinnamon Stick.
  
  Metliod. - Put into a lined saucepan the sugar,
  water, lemon juice, cloves, and cinnamon stick,
  and allow these to boil for ten minutes. Peel
  the pears, cut them in halves or quarters, ac-
  cording to size, remove the cores, and stew them
  slowly in the syrup until tender, from half to
  one and a half hoixrs. When nearly ready,
  add the wine and carmine.
  
  Serve the pears in a glass or silver dish, allow
  the syrup to cool slightly, and then strain it
  over.
  
  Compote of Strawberries
  
  Pick the strawberries and pile them on to a
  glass dish. ^lake a syrup. Put into a saucepan
  I lb. of loaf sugar and i pint cold water ; let
  this boil until reduced to half the quantity,
  flavour with lemon juice, brandy, or Hqueur,
  and colour pink with a few drops of carmine.
  Allow the sjTup to cool slightly, then poxir it
  over the strawberries. Keep the compote in a
  cold place or on ice for one hour before using it,
  and serve whipped cream separately.
  
  Fruit Salads
  {Fr. Salades de Fruits)
  
  Almost any fruit may be employed in the
  making of a salad, such as strawberries, rasp-
  berries, white, red, o.- black currants, grapes,
  oranges, bananas, pears, peaches, apricots, &c.
  The fruits must all be di-y and perfectly ripe.
  Hard or unripe morsels will spoil any salad.
  The salad may be composed of several kinds
  of fruit according to the season of the year,
  or merely of one or two fruits. Sometimes a
  small quantity of nuts, grated cocoanut, poiuided
  almonds, or pounded walnuts is mixed with the
  fruit.
  
  Oranges should be skinned, every particle of
  white pith removed from them, cut in slices, or
  divaded in sections, and the pips taken out.
  Plums peeled, cut in halves or quarters, and
  stoned. Grapes cut in two and the seeds re-
  moved. Bananas, apples, pears, peaches, &c.,
  peeled and cut in small pieces or dice. All the
  cutting of the fruit must be done with a silver
  knife. A crystal salad bowl, or, failing that, a
  deep compote dish is the best to use for the
  purpose.
  
  Pui-e white sugar and wine suited to the fruit
  form the dressing. For 1 lb. of fruit allow
  I lb. sugar and about \ pint wine. Tm-n the
  fruit over occasionally after the fruit has been
  added, that it may all be thoroughly satiu-ated.
  
  The kird of wine to use for the dressing is
  pretty much a matter of taste.
  
  
  For a salad composed principally of hght-
  coloured fruits, such as apricots, peaches, pine-
  apple, pears, &c., use a light sweet wine such £is
  Madeira or sherry.
  
  For strawberries and raspberries claret or
  port is preferable, while with oranges or bananas
  a white wine should be used. A table-spoonful
  of liqueur or brandy is an improvement to any
  salad.
  
  ICES
  
  Our American cousins have always been
  experts at the art of making ices of every kind
  and variety. It may be said, indeed, that ice
  in some form or other is never absent from the
  American dinner-table, if it is only represented
  by iced water, or some of those delicious iced
  drinks for the concoction of which the Americans
  are so famous.
  
  Of late years the cult of the " ice " has become
  somewhat pronounced in England also. No
  dinner-party with any pretence to that name is
  considered complete without an ice pudding or
  ice-creams to give the finishing touch to the
  menu, whilst yoimg people invited to join in
  even the smallest of " small and early " dances
  would feel distinctly aggrieved if the delectable
  " ice-cream " failed to be included in the refresh-
  ments provided.
  
  When ordered from the caterers, however,
  ices are apt to be somewhat expensive luxuries,
  and for that reason, however festive the occa-
  sion, they but seldom figure in the menu of
  families where ways and means form an im-
  portant consideration. There is no reason,
  however, why people of the most slender means
  shoiild have to restrict their menu in this
  direction, for ices can be easily made at home,
  and at a very small cost.
  
  There are many inexpensive machines now on
  the market, and quite a good practical one for
  family use (2 quarts) can be bought for 8s. or 10s.
  The working of the different machines varies
  somewhat; with some a freezing mixture is used,
  and with others a mixture of ice and coarse salt.
  Fxill directions for use are issued with each
  special make of freezer.
  
  The accompanying diagram shows one of the
  
  
  Freezing-Pail.
  
  simplest forms of freezing machines, and ia
  
  manufactured by Thomas Bradford & Co.,
  High Holborn, London.
  
  Before giving recipes for different kinds of
  
  
  208
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  ices it will be as well to give a few general
  directions for freezing.
  
  First of all be most particular to have every
  part of the freezer scrupulously clean, and then
  see that it is properly charged witli ice and salt.
  loe alone cannot produce a siifficient degree of
  cold, therefore salt is used in the proportion
  of one part salt to tliree parts ice. Tlie salt
  should be broken up into small pieces about the
  size of a marble. Tliis may be done by means of
  &n ioe-pricker or with a large hat-pin. Pack the
  
  
  Ice-Pricker.
  
  sides of the pail with three inches of ice and one
  inch of salt in alternate layers imtil within an
  inch from the top of the pot, and keep pressing
  the mixture down with an ico-spaddle or strong
  wooden spoon in order to make it close and
  compact. When ready, remove the hd from
  
  
  Ice-Spaddle.
  
  the pot, pour in the mixture to be frozen, and
  re-cover quickly. The pot should not be more
  than three parts full, and the greatest care must
  be taken in opening and shutting that no salt
  is allowed to enter, or the mixture would be
  entirely spoilt. Now turn the handle at the
  side of the machine with a slow and regular
  motion until the mixture is sufficiently frozen.
  Aa the freezing process proceeds the turning
  of the handle will become gradually harder.
  The dasher inside the pot is continually scraping
  the frozen mixture from the sides and mixing it
  thoroughly, so that there is no occasion to open
  the can until the freezing is sufficiently advanced.
  
  The time required for freezing will vary
  somewhat according to the make of the machine
  used and the kind of mixttire being frozen.
  It is always better if an ice can be made some
  time before it is required, as the flavour becomes
  blended with standing. The pail must be kept
  well packed and more ice and salt added as
  required. The water, too, should be run off
  from time to time by the hole to be found iu the
  side of the pail.
  
  Tf the iced mixture has to bo krpt some time
  remove the dash-wheel from the pot and plug
  up the hole in the lid with a cork. Pack up
  with plenty of ice and salt, and cover the pail
  with a piece of thick flannel or felt. The ice
  will then remain in a frozen condition for
  sceral hotirs, or even longer if more ice and
  salt is added when required.
  
  Water Ices
  
  Water ices may bo divided into several
  different classes according to whether they are
  
  
  made with fruit juice, fruit pur6e, or liqueur
  or perfume. The last-named are seldom used
  alone, but generally aa an aecompaniment or
  filUng to another ice. Tlie following recipes
  will serve as a guide from which many other
  varieties may be made.
  
  In the making of all water ices a syrup of
  sugar and water is required as below.
  
  Syrup for Water Ices
  
  
  Tlie juice of J a Lemon.
  
  
  Pro port loTUi -
  
  1 pint Water.
  
  J lb. Loaf Sugar. |
  
  Method. - Put the sugar and water into a
  hned saucepan, bring to the boil and boil for ten
  minutes, removing any scum that rises. Add
  the lemon juice and strain through fine muslin.
  
  Class I
  Make with fruit juice and syrup.
  
  Orange and Lemon Water Ice
  
  {Fr. Glac^ de Citron et d'Orange)
  Proportions -
  
  i pint Orange Juice. i 1 pint Synip as above.
  
  } pint Lemon Juice. I 2 whites of Eggs.
  
  Method. - Pour the syrup while still hot over
  the thinly peeled rind of two oranges and two
  lemons. When cold add the fruit juice and
  strain all through muslin. Put this mixture
  into the freezing-pot, and when half frozen mix
  in the whites of eggs beaten to a stiff froth.
  Continue the freezing process until the ice is
  svifficiently stiff for serving.
  
  Note. - Either orange or lemon juice may be
  used separately, but the above makes a nice
  combination.
  
  Red Currant Water Ice
  {Fr. Glace de Groseilles)
  Proportions -
  
  1 pint Red Currant Juice. i 2 Whites of Eggs.
  1 pint Syrup for Ices. I
  
  Method. - Extract the juice from the red
  currants in the same way as for red-currant jolly
  (p. 230), and then procood in the same way as
  for orange and lemon water ice.
  
  Note. - Black Currant Water ice can be made
  in the same way. A few drops of carmine
  should be added.
  
  Class II
  
  Made with fruit pur6e and syrup.
  
  Strawberry Water Ice
  
  (Fr. Glace de Fraises)
  Proportions -
  
  1 pint Strawberry Pure6. ■ l"he Juice of 1 Lemon.
  1 Pint Syrup for Ices. I A few drops of Carmine.
  
  Method. - Prepare the ptir6e by rubbing some
  fresh strawberries through a hair sieve (or
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKEKY
  
  
  209
  
  
  bottled strawberries may be used). Add the
  lemon juice, and deepen the colour if necessary
  by adding a few drops of liquid carmine. Freeze
  as directed on p. 208.
  
  Note. - The following ices can be made in the
  same way by using the different purees of fruit :
  apple, apricot, banana, pineapple, and raspberry.
  With the more acid fruits the lemon juice must
  be reduced in quantity or omitted altogether.
  The harder fruits will reqiiire to be stewed before
  the puree is made. A httle liqueur is sometimes
  added.
  
  Tutti-Frutti (Mixed Fruit Ice)
  
  (Fr. Tutti-Frutti Glaces)
  
  Proportions -
  
  1 pint Xemon or Orange 1 J lb. Mixed Fruits.
  Water Ice. ' 1 table-spoonful liqueur.
  
  Method. - Take any kind of fruit, fresh, tinned,
  or glace, and cut them up into dice. Sprinkle
  them with some liqueur and then stir into half-
  frozen water ice. Continue the freezing and
  serve in small cups.
  
  Class III
  
  Made with syrup and either perfume, such as
  orange flower water or rose water, or a liqueur
  of some kind such as maraschino or noyeau.
  
  Orange Flower Water Ice
  
  {Fr. Glace k la Flem- d'Orange)
  
  Proportions -
  
  1 gill Orange Flower Water. I 2 drops Essence of Almond.
  J pint Syrup for Ices. ,
  
  Method. - The very best French make of
  orange flower water must be used for this.
  Mix all the ingredients together and freeze.
  
  Cream Ices
  
  Cream ices may also be divided into the
  following different classes :^
  
  Class I
  
  Made with cream and custard with some
  special flavour.
  
  Vanilla Cream Ice
  
  {Fr. Glace a la Creme de Vanille)
  
  Proportions -
  
  1 pint Double Cream. | Vanilla Pod or Essence.
  
  1 pint Custard. j Sugar.
  
  Method. - Make the custard according to
  directions given on p. 146, flavour with vanilla
  and sweeten to taste. Allow this to cool and
  add the cream lightly whipped. Mix both to-
  gether and freeze until of a proper consistency.
  
  Note. - A cheaper ice may be made by using
  a simple corn-flour custard and aiding less cream.
  
  
  Chocolate Ice Cream
  {Fr. Glace au Chocolat)
  Proportions -
  
  1 pint Custard.
  
  1 pint Double Cream.
  
  2 or 3 oz. Chocolate.
  
  
  A little Water.
  Vanilla.
  
  
  Method. - Dissolve the chocolate in a little
  water and add it to the custard. Flavour with
  vanilla and then continue as in preceding
  recipe.
  
  Coffee or Tea Ice Cream
  
  {Fr. Creme au The ou Creme au Cafe Glace)
  Make in the same way eis vanilla ice cream,
  making the custard with equal quantities of
  strong tea or coffee and milk.
  
  Walnut Ice Cream
  
  Make in the same way as vanilla ice cream,
  adding 6 oz. roasted and ground walnuts to
  the custgird.
  
  Ginger Ice Cream
  
  {Fr. Glace a la Creme de Gingembre)
  Add 6 oz. preserved ginger cut in small
  pieces and a little of the syrup to the custard.
  
  Lemon Cream Ice (Cheap)
  {Fr. Glace a la Creme de Citron)
  Proportions -
  1 pint Custard. I 3 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  
  2 Lemons.
  
  
  A little yellow colouring.
  
  
  Method. - ^Grate the rind very lightly off the
  two lemons, rub it into the castor sugar, and
  use this for sweetening the custard. Add the
  strained juice of one lemon and a little yellow
  colouring. Mix well and freeze.
  
  Orange Cream Ice
  
  {Fr. Glace a la Creme d'Orange)
  Make in same way as above, using the juice
  of two oranges. Add one or two drops of car-
  mine as well as the yellow to produce an orange
  colouring.
  
  Class II
  
  Made with equal quantities of cream and pur^e
  of fruit.
  
  Apricot Ice Cream
  {Fr. Glace a la Creme d'Abricots)
  Proportions -
  
  i pint Apricot Pur6e. I A squeeze of Lemon Jutce.
  
  i pint Cream. 1 2 or 3 drops of Carmine.
  
  Method. - Use tinned apricwts and rub sufficient
  through a hair sieve to make \ pint. Some of
  the syrup must be used along with the fruit, as
  the ptu-^e should not be too thick. Mix the
  cream lightly whipped with the pur^ and add
  
  0
  
  
  210
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  the lemon juico and enough carmine to make
  an apricot colour. Add also a little sugar if
  necessary. Freeze as directed on p. 208.
  
  Kote. - Sometimes a little liqueur is added
  to this ice.
  
  Strawberry or Raspberry Cream Ice
  
  (Fr. Glace a la Cremc de Fraiscs ou de
  
  Framboises)
  
  Prepeu^ in the same way as above, adding
  
  sugar to taste and enough carmine to make the
  
  ice a pretty pink colour.
  
  The following ices can also be made in the
  
  same way : peach, pineapple, banana, pear, &c.
  
  Note. - The ices in this class may be made
  
  more cheaply by using partly custard and milk
  
  instead of so much cream.
  
  Cream Ices with Fruit Pur^e
  
  Very delicious ices can be made by com-
  bining an iced-cream mixture with some pviree
  of fresh fruit. For instance, put some lemon
  cream ice into some pretty glass cups, and
  then a spoonful of raspberry pur^e, which has
  been iced and flavoured with a little liqueur.
  Pile a little whipped and iced cream on the
  top and put the ices in an ice safe or on ice
  until required. Or, again, a raspberry ice cream
  may be used with a pur^e of raspberries or
  strawberries, or a Walnut or coffee cream with
  apricot or pineapple, and so on. These ices may
  be varied according to individual taste and
  the materials at hand.
  
  Iced Coffee (White)
  {Fr. Caf6 Frapp6)
  Proportions -
  
  1 pint strong Coffee. I i pint Cream.
  
  2 or 3 oz. Sugar. |
  
  Method. - The coffee used for this must be
  first-rate in quality, freshly roasted and freshly
  ground. It should be made rather stronger
  than for ordinary use, and must be perfectly
  clear. Mix the different ingredients together
  and stand until cold. Then freeze until it can
  be poured with difficulty. Keep on ice until
  wanted. Half milk and half cream may be
  used if the above proportions are too rich.
  
  Iced Coffee (Black)
  
  (Fr. Cafe Frappe)
  Proportions -
  
  1 pint strong clear Coffee. I 2 oz. Sugar.
  1 table-spoonful Brandy. I
  
  Method. - Mix the ingredients together in a
  jug and set deep in ice until wanted. Before
  serving add a lump of ice, and hand-whipped
  and iced cream separately.
  
  To Serve Ices
  
  The simplest way of serving ices is to put
  portions svifficient for one person in fancy paper
  
  
  cases, in pretty glass cups, or on ice plates.
  The top may be daintily decorated with a few
  crystallised flower petals, such as rose-leaves,
  violets, or orange blossom, or even a hght
  sprinkling of chopped pistachio nut, but the
  decoration must on no account be overdone.
  Wafer biscuits should always be served with
  ices.
  
  To Mould Ices
  
  If something more elaborate is wanted the
  ice may be moulded and turned out in a shape.
  The mixture in this case should not be frozen
  too hard, or it will not mould prettily. Take
  an ice pudding mould and let it be in cold
  water some little time before it is required.
  Then pack it tightly with the frozen mixture,
  cover with a piece of wet white paper and put
  on the lid. Seal round the join with a little
  lard, which, when hard, will make the mould
  perfectly water-tight. Imbed the mould in a
  mixture of ice and salt and allow it to remain
  from one to three hours.
  
  If an ice safe is used the lard will not be
  necessary ; in fact, the mixture might then be
  put into any fancy pudding mould, which are
  not so expensive as the proper ice moulds.
  A mould of some simple pattern is best.
  
  A little ice safe or refrigerator is not the
  expensive article it used to be when £3 had to
  be given for one of a very small sizo ; 32s. 6d.
  will now buy one that is quite sufficient for all
  ordinary purposes.
  
  When iced puddings or other moulded ices are
  frequently required an ice safe would be found
  a great boon, and would simplify their manu-
  facture to a great extent. Apart from ice-making,
  too, they are most useful in hot weather for
  keeping all viands cool and fresh.
  
  To Un mould an Ice
  
  If the mould has been buried in ice, scrape
  off the lard and wipe the outside carefullv
  Then remove the lid and dip the mould in
  cold or slightly tepid water. Wipe i* dry and
  invert it on a dish which has a pretty lace-
  edged paper on it and draw the mould .-ilowly off.
  If it does not come away at once, let it stand
  for a minute or two. This unmoulding must
  be done with care, and a little practice will
  be required to do it nicely. If the outside is
  allowed to become too soft some of the mixture
  will run down on the dish, and the appearance
  of the pudding will be altogether spoilt.
  
  Iced Puddings
  
  Almost any good ice mixture may be made
  into a pudding, or a mixture of two or three
  kinds may bo used together. A mixture of
  fruits cut in small pieces is often added, and
  liqueur of some kind is a favourite flavouring.
  
  Wlien two kinds of cream are to be used in
  the mould, set the mould on ice and line it
  about an inch thick with the heavier of the two
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  211
  
  
  mixtures, and then fill up the centre with another
  mixtui'e of a different flavour.
  
  If a cream ice and water ice are being used
  together, the cream mixture should be used to
  line the mould and the water ice for filling the
  centre. Then, again, if the mixtures are being
  set in layers, the lightest should be put in first
  and the most solid last, as there will then be a
  firm foundation for the pudding to rest on when
  it is tui'ned out.
  
  Very pretty combinations may be made by
  setting the iced mixture in a border mould and
  filling the centre with fruit or whipped cream
  when it is turned out. For instance, a pink
  ice-cream with white whipped cream in the
  centre and a few crystallised rose petals to
  decorate it, or a lemon-coloured ice-cream
  with small pieces of pineapple and whipped
  cream in the centre and a decoration of maiden-
  hair fern, or, again, a white cream with small
  strawberries or raspberries in the centre flavoiu-ed
  with a liqueur, and so on ; the variety is almost
  endless and leaves room for individual taste
  and ingenuity.
  
  Small ices set in separate moulds are often
  used as a decoration for larger puddings; they
  are often made in the form of fruit or flowers.
  A little colovxring is generally used to make
  the resemblance more natiu-al. These little
  moulds are, however, somewhat expensive,
  and as they are not particularly easy to use
  the amateur should scarcely attempt them,
  as so many pretty dishes can bo made with
  less trouble.
  
  Sorbets
  
  A sorbet is a half-frozen water ice, which is
  served directly before the roast at a dinner.
  It is also fashionable at present to serve a
  
  
  delicately flavoured sorbet at an afternoon tea
  or tennis party. Its preparation is quite simple
  and may easily be imdertaken by the unpro-
  fessed cook.
  
  The foimdation of a sorbet is always a water
  ice of some kind with the addition of one or
  more kinds of liqueur and generally some
  fruit. It should be served in pretty glass
  cups.
  
  Red Currant and Raspberry Sorbet
  
  (Fr. Sorbet aux Groseilles et Framboises)
  Proportions -
  
  1 pint Red Currant Water I 1 gill Curagoa.
  Ice. I A fevr ripe Raspberries.
  
  Method. - Freeze the ice tmtil smooth, but
  not too hard. Stir in the Curagoa and serve
  garnished with raspberries which have been
  sprinkled with sugar and placed on ice until
  cold.
  
  Lemon Sorbet
  
  (Fr. Sorbet au Citron)
  Proportions -
  
  
  1 pint Lemon Water.
  
  1 wine-glassful Maraschino.
  
  
  1 wine-glassful Rum.
  
  2 table-sp. Mixed Fruits.
  
  
  Method. - Cut the fruit in small pieces and
  marinade it in the liqueur and rum. Half
  freeze the lemon water ice and stir in the
  fruits, &c. ; freeze a little longer, but do not
  make the mixture hard.
  
  Note. - There are several other kinds of ices,
  such as souffles, parfaits, mousses, mosco-
  vites, &c., but as these are all more troublesome
  to make, we feel that it is beyond the scope of
  this book to enter into their manufacture.
  
  
  BREAD, SCONES AND CAKES
  
  
  PREPARATION OF MATERIALS
  
  Flour. - Ordinary household flour should be
  used in all the recipes except where otherwise
  stated, as in the case of somi- of the very light
  aakes, where Vienna or Hungarian flour is pre-
  ferable. It is very important to have the flour
  dry, as damp flour would render any cake
  heavy. If there is any doubt about the dryness
  it will bo safer to warm the floiu- in a cool oven
  or on the rack abovo the stovo before weighing
  and using it. Floiu- should be sieved for all
  cakes, as this not only renders it lighter, but
  keeps back any hard lumps it may contain.
  For sievmg, use either a very fine wu-e sieve,
  or a patent flour-sifter, which can be bought
  for about Is. 8d.
  
  
  Butter or Dripping.- Inferior or tainted butter
  should never be used for cakes ; if butter is
  used at all, it must be good. In cases where the
  butter is rubbed into the flour, the butter should
  be as cool and firm as possible ; where it is to
  be creamed with the sugar it may be rather
  softer, but not on any account oily. If the
  butter is very salt it will be better to wash it
  in cold water and dry it in a flom-ed cloth before
  using. If the butter contains a large propor-
  tion of water it should be dried and squeezed
  in a floured cloth before using. For many of
  tho plainer cakes good beef dripping may be
  used instead of butter. Tlie dripping should
  be clarified and free from any meat juice, and
  any brown sediment should bo scraped from
  the foot of it before using. For nursery cakes
  
  
  212
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  beef dripping is always to bo recommended in
  the place of butter.
  
  Sugar. - Take castor or sLftod sugar for "dl
  the recipes except where otherwise stated, and
  always sieve it before use.
  
  CMdled Peel. - Remove the hard sugar from
  the inside, and ^vith a sharp knife shred the peel
  very finely. The strip may be left any length
  desired, but as candied peel at the best is an
  indigestible article it should never be cut in
  thick chunks. If the peel is too hard to shred
  easily, it may be soaked for a few minutes
  in boiling water.
  
  Currants. - Rub these on the top of a sieve
  with a little dry flour to clean them and remove
  the stalks. Then drop them on a plate a few
  at a time to make sure there are no stones
  amongst them. If the currants are dii-ty they
  may be washed first in hot water, then dried
  in a cloth or a cool oven, and rolled in flovir.
  This should be done some little time before
  the cmrants are required, as they should be
  quite dry and cold before being added to the
  cake, otherwise they will spoil the mixture.
  
  Sultana Raisins. - Rub these on the top of a
  sieve with a little dry flour, and carefully remove
  all stalks.
  
  Valencia Raisins. - Remove the stalks, split
  them open with a small knife, and take out the
  stones, using a little warm water to prevent
  them sticking to the fingers. These raisins are
  usuallj' cut in small pieces or chopped roughly.
  
  Almonds. - Blanch these by putting them in a
  saucepan of cold water and bringing them to the
  boil ; then strain and run some cold water
  over them. Remove the brown skins and dry
  the almonds in a cloth. They are usually shred
  or chopped before being used, and it is better
  to prepare them some little time before they are
  required to ensure their being dry. For decora-
  tive purposes they are sometimes split in halves
  broadways.
  
  Glac6 Fruits, such as cherries, apricots, ginger,
  or pineapple, should have the hard sugar re-
  moved from them first by soaking them for a
  minute in hot water. Then dry the pieces
  lightly, cut them to the size required, and roll
  them in flour.
  
  Note. - All fruit should be mixed with a little
  dry flour (taken from the quantity given in the
  recipe) before being added to the cake mixture.
  
  EXPLANATION OF TERMS
  
  To Beat Eggs (yolk and white together). - If
  more than one egg is used, break them separately
  first into a small cup or basin to make sure that
  each one is fresh. Remove the tread, or the
  hard speck in the egg, and mix them all together.
  Then with a fork or egg whisk beat them lightly
  with an upward motion imtil they are light and
  frothy, and the whites and yolks thoroughly
  mixed together. Do not over-beat the eggs or
  
  
  they will not bo so light. Eggs used for cake-
  making must be fresh, although not necessarily
  now laid.
  
  To Whip the Whites of Eggs. - When only one
  or two are used put them on a flat dinner-plate,
  being careful that not a particle of yolk gets in.
  Add a pinch of salt, and ^^nth a broad-bladed
  knife or spatula whip them with an upward
  motion to a stif? dry froth, or until so firm that
  when the plate is reversed they will not fall off.
  ^Vhen more than two whites are used put them
  into a dry basin, add a pinch of salt, and beat
  them with a wire whisk until stiff enough to
  stand on the end of the wliisk without dropping.
  The whites of eggs ought to be beaten in a cool
  place, and if the eggs are fresh and cool, the
  beating will only take a few minutes.
  
  To Cream Yolks of Eggs and Sugar. - Sieve
  the sugar into a basin, drop the yolks of eggs
  on the top, and work the two together with a
  wooden spoon or wire whisk until they are of a
  pale lemon coloiu' and light and frothy-looking.
  
  To Cream Butter and Sugar. - Sieve the sugar
  into a basin, add the butter, and beat the two
  together until of a light creamy consistency.
  Either a large wooden spoon or the hand may
  be used for this. If over half a pound of butter
  is being used, it is quicker to take the hand.
  If the butter is very hard, the basin may be
  warmed slightly before commencing, but the
  butter must on no account be oiled, or it will
  make the cake heavy. Tliis process requires
  some time, and unless it is well carried out the
  cake will be hea\'y. The time will depend upon
  the quantity of butter and sugar that are used.
  
  To Clarify Butter. - Put the butter into a lined
  saucepan, and bring it slowly to the boil. Let it
  simmer for a few minutes, then draw the sauce-
  pan to the side of the fire, and let it stand until
  the butter has ceased to bubble. Tlien, with an
  iron spoon, remove all the froth from the top,
  and pour the clear oil into a dish ready for uso,
  leaving the sediment at the foot of the saucepan.
  
  To Rub Butter into Flour. - Sieve the flour into
  a dry basin. Place the butter on the top of the
  flour, cover it over, and break it in small pieces
  Tlien rub together lightly with the tips of the
  fingers and thumbs until as fine as breadcrumbs.
  While rubbing, keep lifting the flour well up
  in the basin, so that air may mix with it, and
  the butter is not niade too soft. Unless this
  operation is well carried out, the cake will look
  streaky.
  
  PREPARATION OF CAKE TINS
  
  This shoiild be seen to before the mixing of
  the cake is commenced, as some cakes will spoil
  if the mixture is allowed to stand and wait
  because the tins are not ready.
  
  To Line a Round Cake Tin with Paper. - Cut
  a double band of paper two or three inches deeper
  than the cake tin and rather longer than the
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  213
  
  
  circumference. Fold up an inch of this band on
  the double fold and make a mark. Open out
  and make cuts along the marked-off inch of
  the paper an inch or two apart. Ai'range this
  band inside the cake tin, making the notched
  part of the paper to Ue flat on the bottom of the
  tin. Then cut a double round of paper exactly
  the size to fit inside the tin, and lay it smoothly
  on the foot. The paper must Ue perfectly flat :
  there must be no wiinkles. If the tin used is
  very large, three or four folds of paper may be
  used. No grease is required ; it would only make
  the cake more Uable to burn.
  
  To Line a Flat Tin with Paper.- If the tin is
  very shallow the paper will not require to be
  shaped, but just pressed in smoothly and snipped
  at the corners if necessary.
  
  For Scones or Small Rock Cakes.- A flat baking-
  sheet should be greased and sprinkled with
  flour ; thpin knock the edges of the tin on the
  table so that the flour coats it all lightly, and
  then shake off any that is superfluous.
  
  For Sponge Cakes. - Tie a double band of paper
  round the outside of the tin and so as to project
  two or three inches over the edge at the top.
  Then coat the inside of the mould and the paper
  with melted clarified butter. This should be
  put on with a brush, and the butter should not
  be too liquid or the coating is apt to be too thin.
  Then pass tlxrough a sieve together one table-
  spoonful of flour and one tablespoonful of castor
  sugar, and dust over the inside of the mould and
  paper with this mixture. Tm-n the mould round
  and round until every part is coated, and then
  empty out what does not adhere. It is this
  preparation which gives the hght dry coating
  to a sponge cake.
  
  Small Cake Tins.- Prepare these in the same
  way as a tin for a sponge cake by greasing them
  with clarified butter and dusting them out with
  a mixture of flour or potato flour and sugar.
  
  If two ounces each of flour and sugar are
  sieved together, the mixture may be kept in a
  tin, and will always be in readiness for the
  preparation of cake tins.
  
  When tins are greased only clarified butter or
  fresh butter must be used." Any salt in the
  butter would be apt to make the cake stick to
  the tin and burn. For the plainer cakes good
  clarified dripping may be used,
  
  THE BAKING OF CAKES
  
  This is one of the most difficult parts of cake-
  making. No matter how carefully the mixture
  has been prepared, the success or failure of the
  cake will very much depend upon the proper
  regulation of the heat of the oven. This requires
  very close observance, and it is only by experience
  and careful watching that the capabilities and
  faults of individual ovens can be learned.
  
  There are one or two populai- tests which may
  be applied by novices, such as the following :-
  
  
  Sprinkle a httle dry flour on a tin and place it
  in the oven. If there is sufficient heat to bake
  a cake, this will be brown in about five minutes.
  Or, put a piece of white paper in the oven, and
  if at the end of five minutes it is a good yellow
  colom-, the heat is moderate and suitable for
  most cakes. Small thermometers can also be
  bought to tell the heat of the oven, but as these
  are somewhat fragile articles they are not always
  satisfactory. Still, if used with care, they act
  as a guide. The degrees of heat would be nearly
  the following : -
  
  
  From 350№-400' Fahr.
  800'Fahr. .
  250№-275' Fahr. .
  
  
  ~ a hot oven.
  
  a moderate oven,
  a slow oven.
  
  
  After a very little experience the heat of the
  oven can easily be discriminated by simply
  feehng it with the hand.
  
  It is very important that the fire should be
  made up some httle time before the cake is to
  be put in the oven, and in such a way that it
  will last, if possible, during the baking, or will
  not at least require fresh coal during the first
  hour of baking, when the cake is in process of
  rising, and when it is most essential for it to have
  steady heat. If a large cake requiring several
  hours' cooking is in the oven, the fire should
  never be allowed to get too low, except perhaps
  the last half -hour when the cake is just " soak-
  ing," but a httle coal should be added from
  time to time in order to keep up a uniform heat.
  
  The heat of the oven can generally be regu-
  lated by opening or shutting the damper. If
  shutting the damper is not sufficient to reduce
  the heat, the lid of the range over the oven may
  be opened a little way. If the oven does not
  get hot enough in spite of a good fire, the trouble
  probably is that it has not been properly cleaned
  of the cinders and soot wliich collect underneath
  and above the oven, and prevent the heat
  reaching these parts. This is a point which
  should be attended to before cake -making is
  thought of.
  
  For all cakes, except where otherwise stated,
  a moderate oven is best ; if anything, it should
  be rather hotter for small and light cakes than
  for the thicker fruit cakes.
  
  A cake to be baked to perfection should rise
  evenly and be smooth on the top, and by the
  time it has been in the oven half its time a hght
  brown crust should be formed. Owing to the
  variation in the heat of an ordinary oven, it is
  not always possible to arrive at this point of
  perfection ; still, by careful manipulation, it
  may be aimed at. \Vlien a cake rises in a cone
  in the centre, it shows that the oven has been
  too hot at the commencement, with the result
  that the sides of the cake became hardened with
  a crust before the mixture had had time to rise.
  If the cake seems inclined to rise at one side, it
  shows that the oven is hotter on one side than
  the other, and this fault may be obviated to a
  
  
  214
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  certain extent by turning the cake carefully
  diu-ing the baking. If tlie bottom of the oven
  is found to be the hottest part, it is a good plan
  to place an asbestos mat below the cake to
  prevent it burning at the foot, or stand the
  cake in another tin containing a bod of sand.
  
  Wlien a cake shows signs of becoming suffi-
  ciently brown before it is ready, it should be
  covered with a double fold of kitchen paper.
  
  The oven door should not be opened for at
  least five minutes after the cake has been put
  in, and then onlj' with the greatest care. If
  by slamming the oven door a draught of cold
  air is allowed to enter, it will be fatal to the
  successful rising of the cake. Any moving or
  turning of the cake must be done very cautiously ;
  it cannot have too careful handling. Moving or
  shaking the cake during the process of rising is
  almost sure to cause it to fall.
  
  Be sure the cake is sufficiently cooked before
  removing it from the oven. Small cakes £ire
  ready if they feel firm when gently touched with
  the finger. Larger cakes should be tested by
  running a bright and heated skewer into the
  csentre of them. If the skewer comes out sticky
  the cake is not cooked enough, but if it is dry
  and undimmed the baking is finished. A cold
  knife should never be run into a cake, as it would
  make it " sad." Cakes should be allowed to
  stand for a minute or two before removing them
  from the tin ; they will then come out more
  easily. (For baking in gas oven, see p. 96.)
  
  The time given for baking in the following
  recipes is only approximate ; it is impossible
  to lay down any hard-and-fast niles, as the time
  is bound to vary shghtly owing to various causes.
  
  Baking Powder
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3 oz. Cream of Tartar. • 3 oz. Ground Rice.
  
  3 oz. Carbonate of Soda. 1
  
  Method. - Pass all these ingredients twice
  through a fine wire sieve. Then put the mixture
  in a dry tin and store in a dry place.
  
  BREAD AND SCONES
  Household Bread
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3J lbs. Flour (a quarter
  
  Stone).
  1 oz. German Yeast.
  1 t"a-apoonful Sugar.
  
  
  2 tea-spoonfuls Salt.
  About 2 pints lukewarm
  Water.
  
  
  Method - Sieve the flour and salt into a large
  basin, and place it in a cool oven, or some other
  warm place, to get warmed tlirough, as tiiis will
  assist the rising of the broad. Put the yeast
  into a smaller basin with the sugar, and mix
  these two together until they become smooth
  and liquid. (This is called creaming the yeast,
  and may lie accomplished with either salt or
  sugar.) Add half the water to the creamed
  
  
  yeast, and mix well together. Make a well
  in the centre of the warm floui*, and strain in
  the milk and water. Stir in gi-adually from the
  sides enough flour to form a thick and smooth
  batter, still lea\'ing a wall of flour round the
  edges. Cover the basin with a cloth, and set
  it in a warm place until the sponge (mixture of
  flour, yeast, and water) is well risen. If the
  yeast is good, fifteen or twenty minutes will be
  sufficient ; the batter should then be covered
  with large bubbles. Mix in the rest of the flour
  by degrees, adding the rest of the lukewarm
  water, or enough to form rather a soft dough, as
  it will become firmer with kneading. Turn the
  dough on to a floured board, and knead well for
  fifteen minutes, or until it ceases to cling to the
  hands. Then flour the basin, and put the
  dough back into it, making a deep cross cut on
  the top from side to side %vith a sharp knife.
  Cover the basin, and let it stand in a warm place
  again for about one hour, or until the dough is
  well risen. It should be about twice its original
  size, and the cut on the top almost invisible.
  Turn out again on the board, re-knead hghtly,
  and make up into loaves the size and shape
  desired. For a cottage loaf make one large
  ball with a smaller one on the top. Press a
  floured finger tlirough the middle of both, and
  make four or five cuts at regular intervals round
  the sides. For a Cobiu-g loaf form the dough
  into an oval shape, and make several deep cuts
  across the top. If the loaves are to be baked
  in tins, grease the tins first, and do not moro
  than half fill them. After shaping the loaves,
  place them on a baking-sheet (greased and
  floui-ed for the loaves that are not in tins),
  and set them to prove for fifteen or twenty
  minutes. That is, place them again in a .varm
  place to rise - on the rack above the fire is a
  very good place. The bread should be covered
  with a cloth or piece of paper, to prevent any
  smuts from falling on it. To bake the bread,
  place it in a hot oven to begin with until the
  loaves are well risen and slightly browned, then
  in a moro moderate oven until they are cooked
  through to the middle. The time will depend
  upon the size of the loaf. When ready, the
  bread should give a hollow sound when tapped
  on the bottoin.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  1| lb. Brown .Meal.
  3 giUs Tepid Water.
  
  
  Brown Bread
  
  
  2 tea-spoonfuls Salt.
  I oz. Yeast.
  
  
  Method. - Either fine, coarse, or medium
  whole-meal may be used, or half quantity
  whole-meal and the other half household flour.
  Put this into a basin and make a well in the
  centre. Mix the yeast with the salt, add the
  tepid water and pour into the middle of the
  meal. Mix the meal in gradually, making a
  smooth but rather soft dough - more water must
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  215
  
  
  be added if required. Knead for a few minutes,
  and then put in greased and floured tins. Allow
  the dough to rise in a warm place for ono hour
  or longer, then bake in a moderate oven.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Vienna Flour.
  1 tea-spoonful Sugar.
  I oz. German Yeast.
  
  
  Vienna Bread
  
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  MUk.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the flom- and salt into a warm
  basin, rub in the butter until free from Itunps,
  and make a well in the centre. Cream the yeast
  in a smaller basin with the sugar, heat the milk
  to a lukewarm temperature, and pour it on to it.
  Strain this into the middle of the flour, and
  mix lightly. Beat all together for a few minutes,
  then cover the basin, and put the dough to rise
  for about two hours. When the dough is well
  risen, turn li out on a floured board, and make
  it up into small rolls or a variety of fancy shapes.
  One of the prettiest shapes is the horseshoe
  twist, which is made as follows : Roll out some
  of the dough to about a quarter of an inch in
  thickness, and cut it into triangular-shaped
  pieces. Then take the two corners at the base
  of the triangle, and roll up each piece so that
  the other point turns over on the outside.
  Another shape is to make small round rolls, and
  then to cut two slits across the top with a very
  sharp knife. Place the rolls on a greased and
  floured tin, and set them in a warm place to
  prove for about twelve minutes. Then bake
  in a rather quick oven from fifteen to twenty
  minutes, according to the size of the rolls.
  Just before removing the rolls from the oven,
  brush them over with milk, or egg and milk,
  to make them shiny.
  
  Note. - Sometimes an egg is added to the above
  dough.
  
  
  Ingredienta-
  
  i lb, Flour.
  
  lEgg.
  
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Cream Scones
  
  
  1 gill Sour Cream.
  
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the riovu-, salt, and baking
  powder into a basin, and rub in the butter with
  the tips of the fingers until free from lumps.
  Then make a well in the centre, and pour in
  the egg and cream beaten together. Mix from
  the centre outwards, gathering in the flour
  gradually until all is formed into one lump.
  Turn out the dough on a floured board, and
  knead lightly until free from cracks. Roll out
  to about half an inch in thickness, cut in rounds,
  and bake on a greased tin in the oven from ten
  to fifteen minutes, or on a greased girdle. If
  the latter, brown the scones, first on one side
  and then on the other, until they ai-e cooked
  through.
  
  
  Crumpets
  
  
  lEgg.
  Milk.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. Vienna Flour.
  j tea-spoonful Salt.
  I oz. Baking Powder.
  
  Method. - Sieve the flour, salt, and baking
  powder into a basin, and make a well in the
  centre. Add the butter melted and the egg well
  beaten, then gradually enough milk to make a
  thinnish batter. Grease some mxiffln rings, and
  lay them on a hot and greased girdle. Pour a
  little batter into each, and watch until air-
  bubbles begin to rise. Then remove the rings,
  ttirn the crumpets, and brown on the second sidw.
  Repeat this imtil all are finished. Toast the
  cnmipets lightly, spread them with butter, and
  pile them one on the top of the other. Cut
  in four, and serve hot.
  
  
  Dropped Scones
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 breakfastcupful Flour.
  1 table-sp. Castor Sugar.
  i tea-spoonful Cream of
  Tartar.
  
  
  i tea-spoonlul Carbonate of
  
  Soda.
  lEgg.
  J breakfastcupful Milk.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve all the dry ingredients into a
  basin, and make a well in the centre. Add the
  egg well beaten, and then the milk gradually,
  beating aU well together with the back of a
  wooden spoon. When the batter looks light
  and full of air-bubbles pour it into a jug. Heat
  a girdle and grease it well. Pour the batter
  on to it, about a table-spoonful at a time, being
  careful to keep the scones a nice shape and
  a little distance apart. When the top surface
  looks covered with bubbles, sUp a broad-bladed
  knife under the scones and turn them over.
  When both sides are nicely browned the scones
  are ready. They should be served quickly
  and hot buttered.
  
  
  Elcho Scones
  
  Ingredients -
  
  } lb. Flour. I Egg.
  
  2 oz. Butter. A pinch of Salt.
  
  J tea-sp. Cream of Tartar. Some Buttermilk or Sour
  
  J tea-sp. Carbonate of Soda. Milk.
  
  Method. - Sieve the flour, soda, cream of tartar,
  and salt into a clean, dry basin, and rub in the
  butter with the tips of the fingers until free
  from lumps. Tlien make a well in the centre,
  add the egg, well beaten, and enough biittermilk
  to form all into one Ivunp. The mixing should
  be done very quickly and lightly with the hand
  or with a broad-bladed knife. Turn the dough
  on to a slightly floured board, and knead lightly
  with the hands until free from cracks. Form
  into a round (do not roll) about one inch in
  thickness, and place the scone on a greased
  and floured baking-tin. Prick all over with a
  fork, and mark in four with the back of a knife.
  
  
  216
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Bake in a good oven about twenty minutes.
  Two or tlireo minutes before removing the scone
  from the oven break it in four, and brush it
  over with a little milk or egg and milk.
  
  Tea Cakes
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. Flour. 1 Ejrg.
  
  i oz. Oerman Yeast. } pint Milk.
  
  2 oz. Butter. A pinch of Salt
  1 tea-Bpoonful Su^rar.
  
  Method. - Sieve the flour and salt into a warm
  basin, and make a well in the centre. Put the
  yeast into a smaller basin with the sugar, and
  mix them together until smooth and creamy.
  I^Ielt the butter in a smaU saucepan, and add the
  milk. When lukewarm, pour on to the yeast
  and mix well. Strain this into the centre of the
  flour, and add the egg well beaten. Mix from
  the centre outwards, and then beat with the
  hands for a few minutes. Cover the basin with
  a cloth, and allow the dough to rise in a warm
  place from three-quarters to one hour. Turn
  out the dough on to a slightly floured board,
  and knead lightly with the hands until smooth
  and free from cracks. Form into two or three
  round cakes, and place them on a greased and
  floured tin. Set the cakes again to rise on the
  rack above the fire for ten or fifteen minutes,
  imtil they look light and puffy. Tlien bake
  them in a good oven from fifteen to twenty
  minutes. A few minutes before removing the
  cakes from the oven, brush them over with sugar
  and milk to give them a gloss. These cakes
  should be spht and buttered hot.
  
  A few currants or some very finely chopped
  candied peel may be added to the mixture if
  wished.
  
  Wheaten Meal Scones
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. NMieaten Meal.
  i lb. Flour.
  
  J tea-sp. Cream of Tartar.
  1 or 2 oz. Butter.
  
  
  f tea-sp. Carbonate of Soda.
  J tea-spoonful Salt.
  Some Buttermilk or Sour
  Milk.
  
  
  Method. - Make in the same way as Elcho
  Scones (p. 215).
  
  BUNS AND SMALL CAKES
  
  Almond Rock Cakes
  Ingredients -
  
  
  i lb. Flour.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  2 oz. Sugar.
  
  2 oz. Sweet Alraonda.
  
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  2 or 3 drops of Essence of
  
  Almonds.
  lEgg.
  
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  A little Milk.
  
  
  Method. - First blanch and chop the almonds
  finely, and put them to dry, but not brown, on
  a tin in the oven. Then sieve the flour, sugar,
  and baking powder into a basin, and rub in the
  butter until free from lumps. Add the prepared
  almonds, and make a well in the centre of the
  
  
  dry ingredients. Add the egg well beaten, the
  flavouring, and enough sweet milk to bind all
  together. The mixture must be kept stiff enough
  for the spoon to stand upriglit in it. Have ready
  a baking-tin, greased and sprinkled with flour,
  and arrange the mixture on it in small heaps
  (one tea-spoonful of the mixture in each) and at
  some little distance apart. Sprinkle the cakes
  with sugar or with ground almonds and sug£u:
  mixed, and bake in a quick oven from ten to
  fifteen minutes.
  
  Note. - Cocoanut or Currant Rock Cakes can be
  made in the same way, using 2 oz. desiccated
  cocoanut or 2 oz. cleaned currants instead of the
  almonds.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. Butter,
  i lb. Castor Sugar.
  } lb. Sweet Almonds.
  7 oz. Flour.
  
  
  Almond Slices
  
  
  i teasp. Baking Powder.
  3 Eggs.
  
  A few drops of Essence of
  Almouds.
  
  
  Method. - Cream the butter and sugar. Dry
  and sieve the flour, and add it by degrees with
  the eggs. Then boat for ten minutes until the
  mixture looks light and full of air-bubbles.
  Add most of the almonds, blanched and finely
  slired, the baking powder, and flavouring, and
  pom- out on a shallow tin that has been lined
  with paper. Sprinkle the remainder of the
  almonds on the top, and bake in a moderate oven
  for twenty minutes. Wlien the cake is nicely
  browned and feels firm to the touch, turn it
  out on a sheet of sugared paper, and, when cold,
  cut it in neat slices with a very sharp knife.
  
  
  Chocolate Cakes
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  4 oz. Cliocolate.
  
  3 oz. Butter.
  
  4 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  
  3 Egga.
  
  3 OZ. Flour.
  
  { tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  
  Method. - Grate the chocolate and place it in
  a jar in the oven or in a saucepan of hot water,
  allowing it to melt slowly. Cream the butter
  and sugar, then add the yolks of eggs and
  chocolate, and beat for a few rainutop. Whip
  the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth, and sieve
  the flour with the baking powder. Add a little
  flour and a little white of egg alternately to the
  other mixture until all is lightly blended together.
  Half fill small prepared tins (p. 213) with the
  mixture, and bake in a moderate oven about
  fifteen minutos.
  
  Coburg Cakes
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  i lb. Flour.
  
  i tea-sp. Carbonate of Soda.
  
  } lb. Sjrrup.
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  J lb. Sugar.
  
  
  1 tea-sp. Ground Ginger,
  
  J tea-sp. Ground Cinnamon.
  
  J tea-sp. Allspice.
  
  IJ oz. Butter.
  
  A few Sweet Almonds.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve all the dry ingredients except
  the almonds into a basin, and make a well in
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  217
  
  
  the centre. Melt the butter and syrup in a
  small saucepan, and pour them into the middle
  of the dry ingredients. Add the eggs well
  beaten, and mix all together. Have ready
  some small patty tins well greased, and with a
  half -blanched almond at the foot of each. Half
  fill the tins with the mixture, and bake them in
  a moderate oven tliree-quarters of an hour.
  
  
  3 Eggs.
  
  J tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  A few drops of Vanilla.
  
  
  Cocoanut Slices
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3 oz. Butter.
  
  3 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  3 oz. Desiccated Cocoanut.
  
  2 oz. Flour.
  
  Icing- i lb. Icing Sugar, the juice of half a Lemon, and a
  
  little Water.
  Decorations- 1 oz. Cocoanut and a few Pistachio Nuts.
  
  Method. - Cream the butter and sugar, then
  add the eggs and flour by degrees, beating well.
  When the mixture looks hght and full of air-
  bubbles, add the cocoanut, vanilla, and baking
  powder, and mix these in. Pour the mixture
  into a shallow tin that has been lined with paper,
  and bake in a moderate oven until hghtly
  browned and cooked through ; from fifteen to
  twenty minutes should be sufficient. When the
  cake is ready, turn it out on to a sheet of sugared
  paper and allow it to cool.
  
  Tlien prepare the icing. Sieve the sugar and
  put it into a small lined saucepan. Strain in
  the lemon juice and warm slightly over the fire,
  adding a Httle water if necessary. Care must be
  taken not to make the icing too liquid, but just
  sufficiently so to pour over the cake. Coat the
  cake nicely with the ^"ing by means of a spoon,
  and sprinkle with the one ounce of cocoanut and
  a few chopped pistacliio nuts. Cut in neat
  slices whilst the icing is still soft.
  
  
  Crullers
  
  
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  A pinch of Kutmeg.
  The grated rind of half
  Lemon.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. Flour.
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  1 oz. Sugar.
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  Method. - Sieve the dry ingredients into a
  basin, and rub in the butter. Add the grated
  lemon rind or any other flavouring preferred,
  and bind the mixture with two eggs well beaten.
  Turn the dough on to a floured board, and work
  with the hands until free from cracks. Roll out
  to about half an inch in thickness, and cut into
  fancy shapes, or make into twists. Have ready
  on the fire a saucepan of boiling fat, drop the
  erullors into this, a few at a time, and cook
  slowly from ten to twelve minutes until they
  are a nice brown colour, and have swelled to
  double their original size. When the crullers
  are ready, lift them out of the fat with a per-
  forated spoon, drain them on kitchen paper, and
  dredge w^U with sugar. These should be used
  while fresh.
  
  
  Dough Nuts
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. Flour. 1 Egg.
  
  2 oz. Butter. A little Milk.
  
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder. Some Jam.
  1 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  Method. - Prepare the mixture in the same
  way as for crullers recipe. Turn out on a
  floured board, and roll out to a quarter of an
  inch in thickness. Stamp out rounds with a
  cutter about three inches in diameter. Put a
  small tea-spoonful of red jam in the centre of
  haK of these, and brush over the others with
  beaten egg. Place two together, one with jam
  and the other without, and press the edges well
  where they join. Fry as in last recipe.
  
  Genoise Pastry
  
  Ingredients -
  
  6 oz. Flour (Vienna). I 7 Eggs.
  
  C oz. Butter. A few drops of Flavouring.
  
  8 oz. Castor Sugar. |
  
  Method. - First clarify the butter (see p. 212),
  and pour into a basin ready for use. Sieve the
  flour and put it into a warm place to get thoroughly
  dry. Break the eggs into a large basin and sieve
  the sugar over them. Stand this basin over a
  saucepan of hot water and beat well with a wire
  whisk from fifteen to twenty minutes, or until
  the mixture looks hght and frothy. The water
  in the saucepan underneath ought to be kept
  slowly simmering. When ready, remove the
  basin to the table and continue the beating a few
  minutes longer. Stir in the flour and butter
  very hghtly, a little at a time, and do not mix
  more than is necessary. Add a few drops of
  any flavouring that is liked. Pour the mixture
  out on a shallow tin fined with paper, but not
  greased. The shape of the tin must depend
  upon what the pastry is to be used for. Bake
  in a quick oven for about twenty minutes until
  lightly browned and firm to the touch. When
  ready, turn out on a sheet of sugared paper and
  place on a wire stand to cool.
  
  Brown Genoise Pastry. - Melt 2 oz. of un-
  sweetened chocolate in a table -spoonful of water
  and add it to the above mixtures before beating
  up the eggs.
  
  Pink Genoise Pastry. - Add a few drops of
  carmine to the above mixtures just before baking.
  
  Note. - Genoise pastry is used for various
  kinds of fancy cakes. (For Icing and Decoration,
  see p. 227.)
  
  Girdle Cakes
  
  Make some pastry (flaky or rough puff will
  do) and roll it out to a quai-ter of an inch in
  tliickness. Cut out into squares or oblong-
  shaped pieces, and place these on a hot girdle.
  Brown first on the one side and then on the
  other until the pastry is thoroughly cooked.
  Then spUt, butter, and serve hot.
  
  
  218
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Note. - A few currants may bo rolled into the
  pastrj' before cooking.
  
  Ginger Cakes (Small)
  
  
  A few drops of Ginger
  
  Essence.
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  1 oz. candied Lemon Peel.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  4 ot Flour.
  
  4 oz. Butter.
  
  4 oz. Sugar.
  
  i tea-sp. Ground Ginger.
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  Method. - Cream the butter and sugar together,
  and add to tlieiu the ground ginger, essence of
  ginger, amd the lemon peel chopped finely.
  Tlien add one egg and half the flour and beat
  well, then the other egg and the remainder of
  the flour and beat again. Wlien the mixture
  is liglit and frothy-looking mix in the baking
  powder, and lialf fill small tins that have been
  greased and dusted out with flour and sugar
  (see p. 213). Place the tins on a baking-sheet,
  and bake the cakes in a moderate oven from
  fifteen to twenty minutes, or until they feel
  firm to the touch.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Honey.
  J lb. Butter.
  1 lb. Flour.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  Honey Cakes
  
  
  J lb. Ground Almonds.
  A pinch of Ground Cloves.
  Grated Rind of half a Lemon.
  i oz. Carbonate of Soda.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the flour, salt, carbonate of
  soda, and ground cloves into a basin, add the
  almonds and grated lemon rind, and make a
  well in the centre. Melt the butter and honey
  in a lined saucepan, and pour them into the
  centre of the diry ingredients. Mix together
  until all is thoroughly blended, then cover the
  basin and allow the mixture to stand all night.
  Nex-t day sprinkle the paste with a little flour
  and turn it out on a baking-board. Flour a
  rolUng-pin and roll out the paste to half an inch
  in thickness. Cut in small square pieces or
  round cakes, and place them on a greased and
  floured tin. Brush over the top of the cake
  with slightly beaten white of egg, and sprinkle
  with some chopped almonds. Bake in a
  moderate oven about fifteen minutes, or until
  the cakes feel firm to the touch and are of a pale
  brown colour.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  4 oz. Flour.
  4 oz. Butter.
  4 oz. Sugar.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  Queen Cakes
  
  
  j tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  A little grated Lemon Rind.
  A few Currants.
  
  
  Method. - Grea.se nine or ton small tins, and
  dust them out with flour and sugar mixed {aae
  p. 2 1 3). Place a few cleaned currants at the foot
  of each, and then proceed to make the mixture.
  Cream the butter and sugar together in a ba.sia,
  and add the salt and grated lemon rind. Sieve
  
  
  the flour, and add half of it to the ci-eamed
  butter and sugar with one of the eggs. Mix
  slowly, and then boat well for a few minutes.
  Add the second egg and the remainder of the
  flour, and beat again. Sprinkle in the baking
  powder at the last, and half fiU the prepared
  tins with the mixture. Bake the cakes in a
  moderate oven from fifteen to twenty minutes,
  and, when ready, allow them to cool on a sieve
  or wire stand.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. Ground Rice.
  
  3 oz. Flour.
  3 oz. Sugar.
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Rice Buns
  
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  J tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  A little Flavouring.
  
  
  Method. - Make in the same way as Queen
  Cakes.
  
  Note. - This mixtxire may, if liked, be made in
  one large cake. It will take about one hour
  to bake.
  
  
  Walnut Buns
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. Flour.
  
  1 oz. Rice-flour.
  
  3 oz. Castor Sugar
  3 oz. Butter.
  
  3 oz. shelled Walnuts.
  
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  1 table-spoonful Cream.
  i tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  Some Red Currant Jelly.
  
  
  Method. - Cream the butter and sugar. Toast
  the walnuts for a few minutes in a moderate
  oven, then pound or chop them rather finely.
  Reserve one table -spoonful of these, and add
  the rest to the creamed butter and sugar with
  one egg and the rice-flour. ]\Iix well for a few
  minutes, then add the other egg, flour, cream,
  nutmeg, and baking powder. Beat well for a
  few minutes longer, and half fill small tins
  which have been greased and dusted out with
  equal parts of flour and castor sugar mixed.
  Bake in a good oven about fifteen minutes.
  Turn out and cool slightly. Then coat the
  top of the buns with red currant jelly and sp^mkle
  them with the remainder of the walnuts.
  
  
  PLAIN AND FANCY BISCUITS FOR
  DESSERT AND AFTERNOON TEA
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. Flour.
  
  I lb. Rice-flour.
  
  } lb. Butter.
  
  
  Ayrshire Shortbread
  
  
  4 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  1 Egg.
  
  1 or 2 table-spoonf ok Cream.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the two kinds of flour into a
  basin, and rub the butter into them. Sieve in
  the sugar, and add the flavouring. Beat up the
  egg in a small basin, and add a little cream to
  it ; pour this into the centre of the dry in-
  gredients, and mix all into a paste with the hand,
  using more cream if necessary. Turn out on a
  floured board, and knead lightly until free from
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKEKY
  
  
  219
  
  
  cracks. Flour a rolling-pin, and roll out the
  paste to about f inch in thickness. Stamp
  it out in small rounds with a cutter, and place
  the biscuits on a greased and floured tin. Roll
  the scraps again, and cut out more biscuits until
  all is used, then bake the biscuits in a moderate
  oven from ten to fifteen minutes. Sprinkle
  them well with sugar while they are still hot,
  and lift them on to a sieve or wire stand to cool.
  Note. - These biscuits will keep crisp if placed
  in a tin box with paper.
  
  Bachelors' Buttons
  
  Ingredients -
  
  5 oz. Flour. I 1 Egg.
  
  3 oz. Castor Sugar. A little Flavouring.
  
  2 oz. Butter. I
  
  Method. - Cream the butter and sugar together,
  and add a Mttle flavouring. Beat the egg, and
  add it gradually with the flour until a stiffish
  paste is formed. Do not add all the egg unless
  necessary. Take small portions of the mixture
  and roll them into balls the size of a hazel nut,
  using a little flour to prevent them sticking to
  the hands. Place them on a greased and floured
  tin, and when all are ready sprinkle them with
  sugar. Bake in a good oven about twelve
  minutes or until the biscuits are Mghtly browned,
  then hft them on to a sieve to cool.
  
  
  Cheese Straws
  
  
  Ingredients -
  3 oz. Flour.
  2 oz. Butter.
  2 oz. grated
  Cheese.
  
  
  Parmesan
  
  
  J yolk of Egg.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  A pinch of Salt.
  A little Water.
  
  
  Method. - Rub the butter lightly into the
  flour. Add the grated cheese and seasoning,
  and mix into a paste with half the yolk of an
  egg beaten with a Uttle water. Make the pastry
  rathor stiff, and work with the hands until free
  from cracks. Then roll it out on a floured board
  into a strip about four inches wide. Trim
  evenly at the edges, and cut most of the pastry
  into straws about quarter an inch wide. Place
  these on a greased tin, and out of the remainder
  of the pastry cut six or eight rings. Bake all
  together in a good oven for about ten minutes.
  Watch them most carefully, as they bvu-n very
  quicldy. Serve them with a bundle of straws
  placed in each ring.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  i lb. Flour.
  } lb. Castor Sugar.
  1 yolk of Egg.
  
  
  Cinnamon Biscuits
  
  
  1 tea-sp. Ground Ginger.
  Milk if necessary,
  i lb. Butter.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve all the di-y ingredients into
  a basin and rub in the butter with the tips of
  the fingers until free from lumps. Then bind
  together with the yolk of an egg, and a little
  milk if necessary. The dough must not be made
  
  
  too soft, but of the consistency of pastry.
  Knead with the hand until free from cracks, and
  turn out on a slightly floured board. Flour a
  rolling-pin and roll out the dough to one-eighth
  of an inch in thickness. Finish in the same way
  as Ayrshire Shortbread (p. 218).
  
  Cinnamon Macaroons
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. Ground Almonds. i * tea-spoonful Ground Cin-
  
  i lb. Icing Sugar. namon.
  
  1 oz. Flour. I Some White of Egg.
  
  Icing- 3 table-spoonfuls Icing Sugar, 1 tea-spoonful
  Flour, White of Egg.
  
  Method. - Sieve the flour, icing sugar, and
  cinnamon on to the baking-board, and mix with
  the ground almonds. Then add gradually
  enough wliite of egg to form a very stiff paste.
  Work with the hands until perfectly smooth and
  elastic, and form into a long roll quite free from
  cracks. Flour the rolling-pin and press out
  the roll into an even strip, keeping it perfectly
  straight at the edges so as to avoid any waste.
  Then prepare the icing. Mix the floiir and icing
  sugar together, and bind with a very little white
  of egg. Spread tliis smoothly over the almond
  paste with a wetted knife, and then cut in neat
  fingers. Place these on a greased and floured
  tin, and bake in a moderate oven until a light
  brown colour, and firm and crisp to the touch.
  
  Cocoanut Biscuits
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. Desiccated Cocoanut. i 1 white of Egg.
  2 oz. Castor Sugar. Wafer Taper.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Flour. I
  
  Method. - Chop the cocoanut a little more
  finely if necessary, and mix it in a basin with
  the other dry ingredients. Whip the white of
  egg to a stiff froth, and bind all together mth
  this. Put small squares of wafer paper on a dry
  baking-tin, arrange a tea-spoonful of the mixtiu-e
  on each, and bake in a slow oven for half-an-
  hour, or until the biscuits are firm and of a pale
  brown colour. Cool them on a sieve, breaking
  off the wafer paper which projects beyond the
  
  
  These biscuits should be kept in paper in an
  air-tight tin box.
  
  Ginger Biscuits
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. Flour. J lb. Butter.
  
  4 oz. Castor Sugar. 1 oz. Ground Ginger.
  
  A little Sherry.
  
  Method. - Sieve the flour, sugar, and ginger
  into a basin, and rub in the butter until free
  from lumps. Tlien form into a stiff paste with
  sherry, turn on to a floured board, and Icnead
  with the hands until free from ci'acks. Flour a
  rolling-pin, and roll the paste out very thinly.
  
  
  220
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Cut it into small round or fancy-shaped pieces
  with a cutter, lay them on a greased tin, and
  bake in a moderate oven from ten to fifteen
  minutes.
  
  
  Macaroons
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. Ground Almonds.
  i lb. C"8tor Sugar.
  3 or 4 ^^^ute8 of Eggs.
  
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  Wafer Paper.
  
  
  Method. - Put the almonds and sugar into a
  basin, and add tlie lemon juice and the white
  of eggs very gradually, beating well with a
  wooden spoon or spatula. Beat thoroughly and
  make the mixture just moist enough to drop
  from a spoon. Put it into a forcing-bag with a
  plain pipe at the end, and force out small por-
  tions on rounds or squares of wafer paper.
  This quantity should make twelve. Dust over
  with icing sugar, which will make the macaroons
  crack on the top, and place a half -blanched and
  split almond on the top of each. Bake in a
  very moderate oven until nicely browned, dry,
  and well risen. Lift on to a sieve to cool, and
  break off any scraps of wafer paper that extend
  beyond the edges.
  
  
  Milk Biscuits
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  } lb. Flour.
  
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  1 gill of MUk.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the flour, salt, and baking
  powder into a basin, and make a well in the
  centre. Melt the butter in a small saucepan,
  add the milk, and make it just lukewarm.
  Pour this into the centre of the flour and mix
  all together. Flour a baking-bo£ird, tiu-n the
  paste on to it, and knead with the hands until
  free from cracks. Then roll out as thin as
  possible, and prick all over vinth a fork or biscuit-
  pricker. Stamp out in rounds with a cutter
  about three inches in diameter, place the biscuits
  on a greased tin, and bake them in a moderate
  oven for about twenty minutes. The oven
  must not be too hot, but regular. When the
  biscuits are reawly, remove them from the tins
  and put them on a sieve or wire stand to cool.
  
  
  Norwegian Biscuits
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  4 oz. >lour.
  4 oz. KIce-flour.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  2 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  2 table-spoonfuls Cream.
  
  1 oz. Ground Almonds.
  
  
  Method. - Make in the same way as Ayrshire
  Shortbread (p. 218), sprinkling the ground
  almonds over the biscuits before bakine.
  
  
  Oatmeal Biscuits
  Ingredients -
  
  3 oz. Flour.
  
  3 oz. Oatmeal.
  
  1 oz. Sugar, or A tea-sp. Salt
  
  
  IJ oz. Butter.
  
  A pinch of Baking Powder.
  
  A little Water or Milk.
  
  
  Method. - Put all the dry ingredients into a
  basin, and rub in the butter with the tips of
  the fingers until free from lumps. Boat up the
  egg in a small basin, add half of it to the mixtiu-e,
  and then enough water or milk to form all into
  one lump. Ivnoad with the hands until fi-ee
  from cracks, and turn the dough on to a floured
  board. Finish in the same way as Ayrshire
  Shortbread (p. 218).
  
  Note. - Wheaten meal may be used instead of
  oatmeal.
  
  Raspberry Biscuits
  
  Take any sweet biscuits, such as Milan or
  AjTshire shortbread, and place two together with
  a little raspberry jam between. Coat them
  with raspberry glac6 icing (p. 226) and decorate
  them with a few chopped pistachio nuts or small
  pieces of preserved fruit.
  
  
  LARGE CAKES
  
  Angel Cake
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  2 oz. Vienna Flour.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Cream
  
  Tartar.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  1 tea-spoonful Orange Flower
  
  Water.
  C whites of Eggs.
  3 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  
  Method. - Dry and sieve the flour with the
  cream of tartar. Add a pinch of salt to the
  whites of eggs, and beat them to the stiffest
  possible froth. Well sieve the sugar, and mix
  it very Ughtly in. Then the flour and cream of
  tartar in the same way, and leistly the flavouring.
  Do not stop beating after tho mixing is begun,
  and keep the mixture as light as possible. Bake
  in a perfectly clean and ungreased tin, and from
  twenty to thirty minutes in a moderate oven.
  Test the cake with a fine skewer before removing
  it from the oven, and do not allow it to become
  too brown. When ready turn the cake upside
  down on a sheet of paper and leave it until the
  tin can be slipped off quite easily. The cake
  may be iced with fondant or glac6 icing if
  desired.
  
  Cherry Cake
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. Flour.
  
  3 Eggs.
  5 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  4 oz. Butter.
  
  Method. - Cream the butter and sugar. Sieve
  the flour, and add it to the butter and sugar by
  degrees with the eggs, boating well after the
  addition of each egg. Lift the mixture well up
  in the basin while mixing, and make it very
  
  
  i tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  2 or 3 oz. Glac6 Cherries.
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  221
  
  
  light. Add the cherries cut in small pieces,
  baking powder and nutmeg at the last, mix
  them gently in, but do not beat again. Pour the
  mixture into a small hned cake tin, and bake
  in a good oven about three-quarters of an hour.
  
  Chocolate Tea Cake
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i oz. Butter.
  
  3 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  3 oz. Grated Chocolate.
  1 oz. Ground Almonds.
  Grated Rind of half a Lemon.
  
  4 oz. Vienna Flour.
  
  
  1 dessert-spoonful Orange
  
  Flower Water.
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  A pinch of Ground
  
  Cinnamon.
  A pinch of Nutmeg
  
  
  3 small Eggs.
  
  Method. - Sieve the sugar, cinnamon, choco-
  late, and nutmeg into a basin. Add the butter
  and beat together with a wooden spoon until of
  a soft creamy consistency. Then add the eggs
  and flom- by degrees, beating and mixing well
  between the addition of each egg. Flavour to
  teiste, and add the baking powder at the last.
  Pour into a tin that has been greased and dusted
  out with flour and sugar mixed, and bake the
  cake in a moderate oven about one hour, until
  well risen and until it feels dry when tested
  with a skewer.
  
  Note. - When cold, this cake may be iced
  with chocolate glace icing (p. 225), and then
  decorated with crystalUsed violets and leaves
  cut out of angelica or any other suitable decora-
  tion that will form a nice contrast to the broAi^Ti
  icing.
  
  Christmas Cake
  
  
  1 tea-spoonful Ground
  Cinnamon.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Mixed Spice.
  12 Eggs.
  
  2 glasses Brandy.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Butter.
  
  1 lb. Castor Sugar.
  
  2 lbs. Flour.
  
  3 lbs. Currants.
  1 lb. Candied Peel.
  J lb. Sweet Almonds.
  
  Method. - Put the butter and sugar into a
  large warm basin, and beat them together to a
  cream. Add the yolks of eggs and spices, and
  beat for a few minutes. Have the whites of
  љggs beaten to a stiff froth, and add them next
  alternately with the flotir. Beat again for
  twenty minutes. Add the fruit, carefully pre-
  pared, and the brandy at the last. Poiu- the
  mixture into one or two well-lined cake tins, and
  bake in a moderate and steady ov"n from two
  to four hours according to size. This cake
  ought to be kept at least three months before
  it is cut. It should be wrapped in a clean cloth
  or paper, and stored in a tin box. It may be
  iced iu the same way as a wedding-cake (p. 226).
  
  Easter Cake
  
  Make in the same way as Simnel Cake (p. 224).
  Ai-range the almond paste on the top of the
  cake in the form of a bird's nest. Score roughly
  with a fork end bro^^Ti lightly in the oven or
  
  
  under the grill of the gas stove. Finish off by
  putting a few sweets to imitate birds' eggs in
  the hollow.
  
  German Pound Cake
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  C oz. Butter.
  C oz. Castor Sugar.
  10 oz. Flour.
  
  The grated rind of half a
  Lemon.
  
  
  i lb. Sultanas.
  
  i lb. Candied PeeL
  
  5 Eggs.
  
  I tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  
  Method. - First clean and pick the sultansis,
  and shred the candied peel very finely. Then
  put the butter and sugar into a basin, and beat
  them to a cream. Add the grated lemon rind,
  one egg, and a little of the flour sieved, and
  mix well for a few minutes. Add the second
  egg and a httle more flour, and so on, repeating
  this process until all the eggs and flour have
  been added. Beat all together for about ten
  minutes, lifting the mixture well up in the spoon
  so as to introduce some air. Mix in the fruit
  and baking powder at the last, but do not beat
  again, or the fruit will be incHned to fall in the
  baking. Pour the mixture into a lined cake
  tin, and bake in a moderate oven for two hours,
  or until thoroughly cooked and nicely browned.
  ^Vhen ready, remove the cake from the oven,
  allow it to stand a few minutes, then turn on to
  a wire stand to cool.
  
  
  Gingerbread
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Flour.
  } lb. Sugar.
  
  J lb. Butter, Lard, o
  
  Dripping.
  ј lb. Syrup or Treacle.
  
  2 oz. Sweet Almonds.
  
  1 gill Buttermilk or Water.
  
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  J lb. Candied PeeL
  
  1 dessert-spoonful Ground
  
  Ginger.
  1 tea-sp. Ground Cinnamon.
  1 tea-sp. Baking .Soda.
  A pinch of Cayenne.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the flour, spices, and soda
  into a large basin, and rub in the fat until free
  from lumps. Add the sugar, peel finely shred,
  and the almonds blanched and shred, and mix
  well. Make a well in the centre, pour in the
  treacle or syrup shghtly warmed, the eggs well
  beaten, and the biittermilk or water. Mix in
  the dry ingredients from the sides of the basin,
  and beat all well for a few minutes. Pour the
  mixture into a greased shallow tin, and bake in
  a moderate oven for at least one hour, or until
  firm to the touch.
  
  Note. - The fruit may be omitted from this
  recipe, or sultanas or currants added eis desired.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Flour.
  
  i lb. Butter.
  
  J lb. Currants.
  
  } lb. Mixed Peel.
  
  i lb. Sultanas.
  
  I lb. Demerara Sugar.
  
  
  Holiday Cake
  
  
  2 tea-spoonfuls Mixed Spice.
  
  i pint Stout
  
  Rind of 1 Lemon.
  
  1 tea-sp. Carbonate of Soda.
  
  4 Eggs.
  
  
  Method. - First prepare the fruit (see p. 212),
  
  
  222
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  and mix it with a littlo of the flour. Tlien put
  the rest of the flour into a large basin, and rub
  in the butter until free from lumps. Add the
  fruit and other dry ingredients except the soda,
  mix all together, and make a well in the centre.
  Heat the stout in a small saucepan and add
  the soda to it. Jlix quickly, and while still
  frothy pour it into the centre of the dry in-
  gredients. Add also the eggs well beaten, and
  beat all together for fifteen minutes. Pour the
  mixture into a lined cake tin, and bake in a slow
  oven for three hours.
  
  
  Invalid Cake
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  3 oz. Hoiir.
  
  2 Eggs.
  
  ■2 oz. C"stor Sugar.
  
  
  i tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  2 oz. Butter.
  
  Half Lemon Rind grated.
  
  
  Method. - Make in the same way as cherry
  cake (p. 220). Or the mixture may be baked in
  small patty pans that have been greased and
  dusted out with floiu* and sugar ; ten or fifteen
  minutes will be sufficient to cook them.
  
  Jam Sandwich
  Ingredients -
  
  3 Eggs, their weight in I A few drops of Vanilla or
  Bntter, Flour, and Sugar. | other flavouring.
  2 or 3 table-spoonfuls Jam.
  
  Method. - ^lake the cake mixture according
  to directions given for cherry cake (p. 220), beat
  it well. Pour the mixture into two sandwich
  cake tins that have been lined with paper, and
  bake in a good oven from fifteen to twenty
  minutes. When the cakes are nicely browned
  and cooked through, turn them out on a sheet
  of sugared paper, and, when cool, spread one
  with jam, and place the other on the top.
  
  
  Jabilee Cake
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  10 oz. Butter.
  
  10 oz. .Sugar.
  
  14 oz. Flour.
  
  J lb. Candied Peel.
  
  i lb. Glac^ Cherries.
  
  
  A few drops of Vanilla
  
  Essence.
  i lb. Sultanas.
  2 oz. Sweet Almonds.
  6 Eggs.
  
  
  Almond Paste- \ lb. Ground Almonds, J lb. Castor Sugar,
  I lb. Icing Sugar, 1 table-spcjonful Brandy, and 1 or 2
  whites of Egg.
  
  While GUue Icing- r&ge 22.5.
  
  Deeorations-2 oz. Shred and Browned Almonds, some Red
  Jam, and a few Pistachio Nuts.
  
  Method. - Make the cake in the same way as
  Cjrerman pound (p. 221) and bake in a moderate
  oven from two to three hours until well risen
  and firm to the touch. When ready, lift the
  cake on to a sieve, and let it cool. Prepare
  the almond paste as on p. 225, and put a nice
  smooth layer on the top of the cake, and set
  it aside for several hours to become quite
  dry. Then coat the top with a little white glac6
  icing. Coat the sides of the cake with some
  red jam, and then with a layer of shredded
  
  
  almonds and pistacliio nuts, or with browned
  cocoanut and some cocoanut coloured pink
  with cochineal. The top of the cake may be
  further decorated with some pieces of preserve
  fruits or with some of the icing put tlu-ough a
  forcing-bag, and little silver balls.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  } lb. Flour.
  J lb. Rice-flour.
  G oz. Castor Sugar.
  i lb. Butter.
  3 large Eggs.
  J lb. Currants.
  
  
  Luncheon Cake
  
  
  2 oz. Candied Peel.
  
  A pinch of Nutmeg.
  
  1 tea-sp. Carl)onate of Soda.
  
  The grated Rind of half a
  
  Lemon.
  1 gill of Milk.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the flour, rice-floiu-, and sugar
  into a basin, and rub in the butter untij free
  from lumps. Then add the nutmeg, lemon
  rind, sugar, and fruit, carefully prepared. Mix
  together, and make a well in the centre. Heat
  the milk in a small saucepan, add the soda to
  it, and, while still frothy, poiu- it into the midst
  of the dry ingredients. Add also the eggs, the
  yolks and whites beaten separately, and mix
  all together. Beat the mixture well for a few
  minutes, and then pour it into a cake tin that
  has been Uned with paper (see p. 212). Bake
  the cake in a moderate oven for about two hours.
  
  Madeira Cake
  
  
  Grated Rind of half a Lemon,
  or 3 or 4 drops of Vanilla
  Essence.
  
  1 or 2 Strips of Citron I'eel.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  6 oz. Butter.
  
  6 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  9 oz. Flour.
  
  i large Eggs.
  
  i tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  Method. - Cream the buttor and sugar. Beat
  the eggs in a separate basin until they are light
  and frothy, and add them to the creamed butter
  and sugar. Mix well for a few minutes. Sieve
  the flour and baking powder, and mix these
  hghtly but thoroughly into the other mixture.
  Have ready a cake tin lined with paper, pour
  in the mixture, not more than half fillinir it,
  and bake in a moderate oven from one and a
  half to two hours, or until the cake is well "isen
  and feels firm to the touch. \\Tien the cake
  has been in the oven about twenty minutes
  place the strips of citron peel on the top.
  
  Mocha Cake
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Castor Sugar.
  i lb. Vienna FTour.
  .\ few drops of Vanilla
  Essence.
  
  
  4 Eggs.
  
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  Mocha Icing.
  
  
  Method. - First jireparo a plain round cake
  tin in the same manner as for a sponge cake
  (p. 213), then proceed to make the cake.
  
  Separate the yolks from the whites of the
  eggs, putting each into a medium-t'zed basin.
  Sieve the flour with the baking powder, and
  put it in a warm pla<3e until required. Add
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  223
  
  
  the sugar and vanilla to the yolks of eggs, and
  cream these together with a \vii'e whisk from
  ten to fifteen minutes, or until they look very
  light in colour and consistency. Then whip
  the whites to a stiff froth and stir them very
  L'ghtly in, and alternately with a little flour,
  turning the mixttire over and over and as deli-
  cately as possible. When all is blended, pour
  the mixture into the prepared tin, place it on a
  bed of salt or sand on a baking-tin, and bake
  in a good oven for half-an-hoxir, or until well
  risen and firm to the touch. As soon as the top
  is brown, the cake ought to be covered with
  paper to prevent it taking too deep a colour.
  Allow the cake to stand for five minutes after
  removing it from the oven, then turn it out on
  a sieve and let it cool gradually. Then ice the
  cake as below : -
  
  To Ice the Cake. - Prepare some Mocha icing
  as on p. 227, and keep it on ice or in a very cool
  place until it is required. SpUt the cake once
  or twice according to height, spread each piece
  with a layer of the icing, and put the cake back
  into shape. Then with a spatula or broad-
  bladed knife spread the top, and, if wished, the
  sides of the cake with the icing. Put the re-
  mainder into a forcing-bag with a rather large
  fancy-shaped pipe at the end of it, and force
  out pretty patterns on the top of the cake. A
  few crystallised violets or pistachio nuts may
  be used as an ornamentation, or any sweet that
  will make a pretty contrast in colour to the
  brown icing. Allow the cake to stand in a cool
  place for an hour or two before cutting, so as to
  harden the icing.
  
  
  Orange Cake
  
  Ingredients -
  
  6 oz. Vieniia Flour.
  
  The grated Rind of 1 Orange,
  
  3 Eggs.
  
  
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  5 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the sugar into a basin, grate
  the orange rind on the top of it, and rub the
  two together with the tips of the fingers until
  they are thoroughly blended. Add the eggs to
  the orange sugar, and beat with a wire whisk
  about fifteen minutes until smooth and creamy.
  Then add the flour dried and sifted, and also
  the baking powder. Mix these in very lightly,
  and pour the mixture into a tin that has been
  greased and dusted out with a mixture of flour
  and sugar. Bake in a quick oven from twenty
  to thirty minutes, and, when ready, turn carefully
  on to a sieve to cool.
  
  Coat the cake with icing and decorate \dth
  chopped pistachio nuts, crystaUised violets, or
  small sections of crystallised orange.
  
  Note. - Instead of icing this cake, it may be
  spUt when cold, and spread with the following
  cream mixture : - Whip one gill of double cream
  until quite thick, sweeten to taste, and flavour
  with orango flavouring.
  
  
  Pitcaithly Bannock
  
  
  2 oz. Candied Orange PeeL
  J oz. Castor .Sugar.
  A little Flavouring.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. Butter.
  
  1 lb. Flour,
  i lb. Rice- flour.
  
  2 oz. Sweet Almonds.
  
  Method. - Warm the butter slightly and then
  beat it to a cream. Blanch and chop the
  almonds, and shred the peel very finely. Mix
  all the other ingredients with the creamed butter,
  and knead into one lump with the hands. This
  may take some Uttle time, but no Hquid must
  be used. Form into a round flat cake about
  one and a half inches thick, and prick all over
  with a fork. Place the cake on a baldng-tin
  and tie a band of double paper round it. Bake
  in a moderate oven from one to one and a half
  hours, or until the cake feels firm and is a nice
  brown colour. Allow it to cool on the tin before
  removing it, and take off the band of paper.
  
  Note. - This cake should be rolled in paper
  and kept in an air-tight tin box, and then broken
  in pieces when required.
  
  Scotch Seed Cake
  
  
  i lb. Sweet Almonds.
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  A little grated Lemon Rind.
  Some Sugar Carraways.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  i lb. Butter.
  
  i lb. Castor Sugar.
  
  14 oz. Flour.
  
  6 Eggs.
  
  J lb. Candied Peel.
  
  Method. - Shred the candied peel finely, and
  blanch and chop the almonds. Mx them with
  about one table-spoonful of the flour, or just
  sufficient to prevent them clotting together,
  and then make the cake mixture according to
  directions given for German pound cake (p. 221).
  Pour into a papered cake tin and put some
  sugar carraways on the top. Bake in a
  moderate oven from two to two and a half
  hours.
  
  
  Shortbread
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  4 oz. Flour.
  
  2 oz. Kice-flour.
  
  4 oz. Butter.
  
  
  2 oz. Castor Sugar.
  
  A few drops of Flavouring.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve all the dry ingredients into a
  basin, and rub in the butter. Add the flavouring
  and then knead all into one lump without using
  any hquid. Turn out on a board sprinkled
  with rice-flour, and form into a smooth round.
  If a shortbread mould is obtainable, shape the
  cake in that ; if not, pinch it round the edges
  with the fingers, or mark it with a knife. Then
  place the shortbread on a greased baking-tin,
  and prick it all over with a fork. A strip of
  candied peel may be put on the top if wished, or
  any other decoration that is desired. Bake in
  a moderate oven from twenty to thirty minutes
  or until the shortbread is of a uniform brown
  colour, and feels firm to the touch. Allow it
  to cool before removing it from the tin.
  
  
  224
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Note. - If the dough becomes rather soft in
  the making, it v\-ill be well to allow the short-
  bread to stand imtil quite cool before baking,
  otherwise it is apt to lose its fonn.
  
  Sinmel Cake
  
  
  J lb. Candied Peel.
  
  i lb. Valencia Raisins.
  
  } lb. Currants.
  
  J gill Brandy.
  
  J tea-sp. Ground Ginger.
  
  J tea-sp. Ground Cinnamon.
  
  J tea-sp. Grated Nutmeg.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Roar.
  
  \ lb. Butter.
  
  } lb. Castor Sugar.
  
  5 Eggs.
  
  The grated Rind of 1 Lemon.
  
  The grated Rind of 1 Orange.
  
  1 tea-sp. Baking Powder.
  
  \ lb. Sultanas.
  
  Almond Icing (see p. 225).
  
  Method. - First prepare the fruit (see p. 212),
  and mix it with one table -spoonful of the dry
  flour. Then take a strong cake tin and line it
  with at least two folds of thick white paper.
  When these are ready, proceed to make the cake.
  Cream the butter and sugar. Add the spices,
  gi-ated orange and lemon rinds, yolks of eggs,
  and brandy. Beat for a few minutes, and add
  the flour sieved and the whites of the eggs beaten
  to a stiff froth. ]Mix very lightly, and stir in
  the prepared fruit and baking powder last of all.
  Do not beat after the fruit is added. Pour the
  mixture into the prepared cake tin, smooth it
  over the top, and bkke in a steady oven from
  two to three hours.
  
  This cake improves with keeping, and should
  not be cut for three or four weeks after making.
  
  A Simnel Cake is usually coated with almond
  paste, and this should be put on two or tlu*ee
  days before the cake is to be used.
  
  To Coat with Almond Paste. - ^Take the
  quantity of almond paste, given on p. 225, and
  spread it smoothly on the cake. Then take a
  fork and score the pastљ across first one way
  and then the other, and coat Ughtly with beaten
  yolk of egg. Place the cake in a moderate oven,
  or place it beneath the grill light on a gas stove
  until the almond paste is nicely browned.
  
  Note. - Sometimes a layer of almond paste is
  put in the middle of this cake. When this is
  desired, half the above quantity of the paste
  should be made before the cake is baked, and
  this should be made in a round the size of tlio
  cake tin and laid in the middle of the mixture
  before baking.
  
  Sponge Cake
  Ingredients -
  5 oz. Loaf Sugar.
  1 wine-glassful Water.
  J lb. Flour (Vienna).
  
  Method. - Put the sugar and water into a
  small lined saucepan, bring them to the boil,
  and simmer slowly for five minutes. Beat the
  eggs slightly in a basin with a wire whisk, and
  pour the syrup of sugar and water on to them,
  stirring all the time. Then whisk steadily for
  half-an-hour, until the mixture looks light and
  
  
  2 whole Eggs and 1 Yolk.
  A little grated Lemon Rind.
  
  
  frothy and is well risen in the basin. Dry and
  sieve the flour, and mix it in hghtly at the
  last, with a little grated lemon rind or any other
  flavom'ing preferred. Pour the mixture into a
  cake tin prepared according to directions given
  on p. 213, and do not more than half fill the tin.
  Bake the cake in a very steady oven for about
  three-quarters of an hour, or until it is well risen
  and feels firm to the touch. If the heat from
  the oven is great, stand the cake on a bed of
  sand placed on a baking-tin, or put a tile or
  brick under the tin.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  11 lb. Fresh Butter.
  J lb. dark Treacle.
  IJ lb. raw Sugar.
  
  i pint warm Milk.
  
  J pint Brandy.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Salt.
  
  12 Eggs.
  
  
  Wedding Cake
  
  
  4 lbs. Currants,
  i lb. Sweet Almonds.
  2 or 3 Bitter Almonds.
  J lb. Citron Peel.
  
  1 lb. Orange and Lemon Peel.
  
  2 lbs. Flour.
  
  Almond and Royal Icing.
  
  
  Metliod. - Put the butter into a large and warm
  basin, and beat it to a cream with the hand or
  with a large wooden spoon. Add the sugar and
  treacle slightly warmed, and beat again for a
  few minutes. Then add the eggs two at a time,
  beating the mixtvu-e weU after each addition.
  (It will be safer to break the eggs into a small
  basin previous to adding them to the mixture,
  to ensure their being fresh.) Have the frioit
  carefully prepared (p. 212), and mixed with
  one or two table-spoonfuls of the flour, and add
  it next with the milk, brandy, and salt. Dry
  and sieve the flom*, and add it last of all. The
  mixture must not be beaten after the flour is
  added. When all is thoroughly blended pour
  the mixture into two lined cake tins, one of which
  is three or four sizes smaller than the other,
  and bake in a moderate and steady oven. Tlie
  larger cake will probably require from four to
  five hours to bake, and a smaller one less in
  proportion. Wlien the cakes begin to brown
  they should be co\'erod with a double fold of
  white paper to prevent them burning un the
  top. The succass of the cake will depend very
  much upon the long steady baking. Wlien the
  cakes are baked and cold, they should be wrapped
  in a thick sheet of white paper or a cloth, and
  kept in a tin box for two or three months before
  being iced or used.
  
  Note. - For icing and decoration of cakes,
  see pp. 225 and 226.
  
  ICING AND DECORATION OF CAKES
  
  The following are a few of the materials which
  may bo used for decorating purposes : -
  
  Coloured Sugars. - Put some coarse granu-
  lated sugar on to a stiff sheet of white paper,
  and pour a few drops of liquid colouring on the
  top. Work this in with the point of a knife
  until an even tint is obtained, and then leave
  the sugar to dry. Pink, green, yellow, &c..
  
  
  GUIDE TO OOOKEKY
  
  
  225
  
  
  sugsuf may bo made in this way, and these sugars
  will keep if put in corked bottles.
  
  Pistachio Kernels. - Put these into cold water,
  and bring them quickly to tlie boil. Then drain
  and pour plenty of cold water over them. Rub
  off the skins, and dry the pistachios in a cloth.
  Shred or chop before using.
  
  Browned or Coloured Almonds. - First blanch
  thealmonds (see p. 2 12), and dry them thoroughly.
  Shred them finely, or chop them rather roughly.
  To brown the almonds, put them on a tin in
  a veiy moderate oven, and keep tiirning
  them over and over until very evenly and
  lightly browned. To colour them, sprinkle a
  few drops of colouring on the top, and rub
  it into the almonds. Pistachio nuts (which
  are much more exiDensive than almonds) may
  be imitated by colouring the almonds pale
  green.
  
  Cocoanut. - This may also be browned or
  coloured iii the same way as almonds, and used
  for decorating purposes.
  
  Candied Cherries and other Fruits. - ^These are
  very pi-otty and useful for decorating cakes,
  and as they wiU keep almost indefinitely in an
  air-tight tin box, they are not expensive. They
  are generally cut in pieces unless they are very
  small.
  
  Angelica. - Tliis is also a very effective decora-
  tion. If it is hard and sugawy, soak it in warm
  water for a minute or two, then dry. Cut it
  first into tliin strips, then into diamond-shaped
  pieces to represent leaves, stars, rounds, &c.
  A combination of angelica and cherries is very
  pretty.
  
  Nuts, such as walnu+s, filberts, Barcelona
  nuts, &c., eitlier plain, or iced, or carameUsed,
  may also be used.
  
  Bonbons. - These may be had in many forms,
  and if tastefully used they make a very simple
  and easy decoration. Silver and gold dragees
  are among the most useful.
  
  Crystallised Flowers. - Tlaese can be bought
  ready, such as rose petals, violets, orange flowers,
  lilac ; and leaves to suit can be cutirom angeUca,
  or oven from citron peel.
  
  VARIOUS ICINGS
  
  Almond Paste or Icing
  Proportions -
  
  1 lb. Ground Almonds.
  J lb. Icing Sugar.
  J lb. Castor Sugar.
  
  
  Juice of half a Lemon.
  1 or 2 table-sp. Brandy.
  Yolks or Whites of Eggs.
  
  
  Method.- -Bq particular to choose good ground
  almonds; unless they are well preserved they
  are liable to have a bitter or mouldy taste, or
  perhaps no taste at all. Put the ground almonds
  mto a strong basin, and sieve the two sugars on
  the top of them. Add the flavouring, lemon
  juice, and brandy. The brandy may, of course,
  be onutted if it is objected to, but it renders the
  
  
  almond paste more wholesome, and it will keep
  better. Tlien add enough egg to bind all
  together. Knead well with the hand, adding
  the moisture very gradually. Eitiier yolks or
  wliites of eggs may be used ; the yolks will make
  the paste richer and yellower, the whites drier
  and of a paler coloiu*. Or both yolks and whites
  may be used if it is more convenient. The paste
  ought to be very smooth when finished, and just
  moist enough to be bound together.
  
  Sometimes, for fancy purposes, the almond
  paste is colom-ed pink, green, &c., and different
  flavourings used.
  
  To Use the Almond Paste. - This is generally
  used for coating rich fruit cakes, such as wedding,
  Christmas, or Simnol cakes. Cut the cake to
  be iced flat on the top, or coat the foot of it.
  Lay on a nice thick layer of the peiste and shape
  it first with the hands. Then take a wetted
  knife, and make the top and sides perfectly
  smooth and level, and a sharp straight ridge
  round the edges. If the cake is to be iced with
  a white icing as well, allow the almond paste to
  become quite dry and hard before putting on
  the second icing. Sometimes, as in the case of
  a Simnel or Easter cake, no wliite icing is put
  on the top. In this case the almond paste should
  be scored across with a fork, or marked in checks
  with a fluted roller, brushed over with yolk of
  egg, and browned under a gas grill or in a
  quick oven.
  
  GIac6 Icing
  
  Proportions -
  
  J lb. Icing Sugar.
  
  About 3 table-spoonfuls Water or other Liquid.
  
  Metlwd. - This is a simple soft icing, and one
  that is very quickly made. Sieve the sugar and
  put it into an enamelled saucepan or sugar -boiler.
  Add the hquid (see below) very gradually and
  stir over the fire until warm. The icing must not
  be made too hot or it will become lumpy and
  have a dull appearance. Whilst adding the
  Hquid it must be borne in mind that, as the sugar
  melts, the icing will become softer. Tlie icing
  must be just soft enough to pour over the cake
  and perfectly smooth. The following are a few
  of the colourings and flavourings in which tliis
  icing may be made : -
  
  Chocolate Glac6. - Dissolve U or 2 oz. un-
  sweetened chocolate in a very h'ttle water imtil
  it is perfectly smooth. Prepare the above icing
  with water and a few drops of vanilla, and
  add it to the chocolate. Jlix the two together
  and use.
  
  Coffee Glac6 Icing. - Use strong coffee or
  essence of coffee and a little water to moisten
  the icing. One or two drops of vanilla may be
  added if hked.
  
  Tea Glac^ Icing. - I\Iake in the same way, using
  tea instead of coffee.
  
  Lemon or Orange Glac6 Icing. - Use strained
  
  P
  
  
  226
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  orange or lemon juico to moisten the icing,
  adding water if necessary. A little yellow
  colouring may also bo added, the same as in
  fondant icing.
  
  Raspberry or Strawberry Glac6 Icing. - Use
  raspberry or strawberry sjTup to moiston the
  icing.
  
  If by any chsmoe this icing should become
  too soft in the making it may be stiffened by
  adding more sieved icing sugar, but it is always
  better if tliis has not to bo done.
  
  To Use the Icing. - Tliis icing may either be
  poured over the cakes, or the cakes may be
  •dipped into it. If a large cake is to be iced,
  put it on a wire stand placed on a sheet of white
  paper, and pour over enough icing to cover the
  top only, or the top and sides as desired. Any
  icing that runs over may be gathered up and
  used again. Small cakes may be iced in the
  same way, or they may be held on the point of
  a palette knife over the pan of icing, and the
  icing poured over them, or they may be dipped
  right into the icing.
  
  Royal Icing
  
  Proportions -
  
  J table-sp. Lemon Juice, or 6 or 7 AMiites of Eggs
  
  6 drops of Acetic Acid. 2 lbs. Icing Sugar.
  
  A little Blue Colouring.
  
  Metlwd. - This is a hard white icing used
  principally for the icing of wedding, birthday,
  or Christmas cakes. Sieve the sugar, and put
  most of it into a basin, reserving a small pro-
  portion in case the icing should be made too
  moist, when this may be used. Add a very
  little blue colouring, either a drop of liquid blue
  or a tiny dust of stone washing blue, and just
  enough to take off the yellow shade from the
  sugar, and to make the icing a finer white.
  Then put in some acid, lemon juice, or acetic
  acid, as without this the icing would not harden
  on the cake. Now add the whites of eggs by
  degrees, mixing the icing with a wooden spoon
  or spatula. It is very important that both
  basin and spoon should be dry and free from
  gretise before commencing, or otherwise the
  icing might be spoiled. Beat the icing as
  quickly as possible until it is perfectly smooth
  and of the right consistency ; from five to ten
  minutes may be sufficient, but it requires some
  hard beating to make it workable. To be of
  the right consistency, the wooden spoon should
  be able to stand vertically in it without falling.
  The icing is now ready for use, but in order
  to prevent a skin forming on the top it must
  be kept covered with a damp cloth. Place a
  piece of stick or wire across the basin to pre-
  vent the cloth falling down on the icing.
  This icing will keep for several days if it is
  attended to, but the cloth on the top must be
  kept dampi and the icing itself beaten up occa-
  sionally. If once a skin is allowed to form on
  
  
  the top tlirough exposure to the air, the icing
  will bo spoilt for all fine purposes, and especially
  for piping, aa the Uttle hard particles would
  choke up the tube. Keep the icing in a cool
  place.
  
  To Ic" a Cake. - It is a comparatively easy
  matter to put a plain coating of icing on a cake ;
  it is when sometliing more elaborate - designs
  and ornaments - are required that much patience
  and practice are necessary. To begin with,
  the cake must be perfectly flat ; if there is not
  a coating of ahnond paste to make it so, it will
  be better to trim the cake so as to make it stand
  evenly, and then to turn it upside down and
  ice the bottom. If cake icing is frequently
  done in a house, a rotation -stand or cake -drum
  should be bought, as this will simplify the pro-
  cess very considerably. Fix the cake on to
  the stand by means of a little icing, and then
  have it raised to a convenient height for the
  hand. Failing a proper cake-stand, fix the cake
  on to the bottom of a cake tin turned upside
  down, always choosing the tin a size smaller
  than the cake itself, in order that the knife
  may pass freely round it whilst icing. Then
  pile on the top of the cake sufficient icing to
  cover it and spread it over, quite roughly at
  first, with a good -sized table-knife. Now place
  the point of the knife to the centre of the cake,
  holding it horizontally and steadily with the
  right hand and with the left ; move the rotation -
  stand round until a complete circle has been
  made, when the knife may be slipped off. It
  will require some practice to leave the surface
  smooth after one turn of the stand, a little
  touching up may be necessary, but skill will be
  acquired by degrees. If the cake is being iced
  without a rotation-stand, the knife must .]ust
  be brought smoothly across it in one direc-
  tion. If the top only of the cake is to be iced,
  allow it to dry, then decorate to taste and
  cover the sides with a silver or gilt paper band
  or with a coloured paper frill, and perhaps a.
  band of ribbon.
  
  To Ice the Sides of a Cake. - Place some more
  icing on the bare parts and spread it roughly
  round with a knife. Then hold the knife
  vertically and in a slanting position against the
  cake, seeing that it touches the complete width,
  and turn the stand round with the left hand.
  Any superfluous icing should be carried off with
  a swoop of the knife when the circle is finished.
  If not smooth after the first attempt, repeat the
  process. Touch up the edges ^vith the point of
  the knife and allow the cake to dry. For a
  wedding cake, two or even three coats of this
  icing Bie generally put on, but one coat must
  always be dry before another is added ; in fact,
  if more convenient, the cake may rest for several
  days between the coatings.
  
  The next step is to decorate the cake. The
  simplest method of decorating a Qiristmas or
  birthday cake is to use bon-bons or preserved
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  227
  
  
  fruits, and these can easily be fixed in place with
  a little icing. The other style of decoration,
  known as " piping," is more elaborate and
  requires a corisiderable amount of practice.
  A few lessons from an experienced teacher
  would be an immense help to a beginner. For
  piping purposes bags and fancy forcing-pipes are
  necessary. The pipes or tubes are made with
  various-shaped openings to give different forms
  to the icing pressed through them. Put some
  icing into this bag and fold down the top to keep
  it in. Now force out this icing as fancy dic-
  tates, experimenting first on the back of a plate
  or even a piece of paper until you get a definite
  and regular pattern. Dots, stars, or rosettes
  are easier than a long flowing pattern, and they
  can be arranged very effectively. Points may
  be pricked at regular intervals on the cake to
  act as a guide in forming any pattern. Then
  press the icing slowly through the tube, following
  any device you may have in view. Of course,
  this piping is an art which cannot be learned in
  a day, but if it is commenced at the simple stages
  and gradually worked up to something more
  difficult it will be found a most fascinating em-
  ployment. A little colouring may also be added
  to the icing when desired.
  
  When a cake is to be in two or three tiers, as
  in the case of a wedding cake, the cakes must be
  in graduated sizes, the plain coatings of icing
  put on separately, and then the cakes stuck
  together by means of a little icing before the
  decorating or piping is commenced.
  
  Vienna or Butter Icing
  
  Ingredients -
  
  6 oz. Fresh Butter. | J lb. Icing Sugar.
  
  Method. - If salt butter must be used, wash
  and work it in several cold waters, and finally
  press out the water in a cloth before tising it.
  Put the butter into a basin and sieve the sugar
  on the top of it. Cream these two together
  with a wooden spoon in the same way as for a
  cake. Then add the desired flavouring and
  colouring as below.
  
  1. Coffee or Mocha Icing. - Add two table-
  spoonfuls of strong coffee to the above, mixing
  it in a little at a time.
  
  2. Cliocolate Icing. - Add two or three ounces
  of unsweetened chocolate dissolved in one table-
  apoonful of water to the above mixture.
  
  3. Strawberry or Raspberry Icing. - Add a
  few drops of essence of strawberry or raspberry
  to flavour, and colour pink with carmine.
  
  4. Orange or Lemon Icing. - Grate the rind
  off an orange or a lemon, and rub it into two
  ounces of the sugar to be used for the icing.
  Proceed to make the icing as above, and colour
  with a little yellow colouring.
  
  The colouring and flavouring of this icing may
  be varied according to taste. Spirit or liqueur
  
  
  is frequently added, such as rum, maraschino,
  Curagoa, &c.
  
  Any of the above icings may be made in half
  or quarter quantities, or if a ntunber of httle
  fancy cakes are to be iced, the plain butter and
  sugar may be worked together first, and then
  the quantity divided and different flavourings
  and colours added.
  
  To use the Icing. - The icing must be allowed
  to become quite cold and hard before using. In
  hot weather the basin containing the icing
  should be placed on ice or put in a very cold
  place. If a large plain cake is to be iced, it is
  usual to split it once or twice, and put a layer
  of the icing between. Sometimes for this purpose
  a little thick cream is worked into the icing just
  before using. Spread a thin coating of the icing
  on the top and sides of the cake, and put more
  of the icing in a forcing-bag, with rather a large
  pipe on the end of it. Force out the icing on
  the cake in stars or scrolls, and do it as quickly
  as possible, before the heat of the hand has
  time to soften the icing. If hked, two different
  colours of icing may be used, such as yellow
  and pink, yellow and brown, pink and wMte,
  &c. Do not put too much of this icing on any
  cake, as it is decidedly rich. Some other Ught
  and suitable decoration may be used as well,
  such as a little finely chopped pistachio nut,
  a few rose-leaves or violets, small pieces of
  angelica, &c.
  
  GENERAL HINTS ON DECORATING
  
  Cakes, as well as other eatables, should be
  made to look pretty as well as to taste good.
  Of course, many cakes are better left in their
  simple state without any decoration at all, and
  when this is the case ptirticular care should be
  taken with the baking to avoid overcooking
  or burning, and consequently an tinsightly ap-
  pearance.
  
  Under no circumstances should a cake be
  over-decorated, and there are many simple
  and harmless forms of decoration which may be
  employed.
  
  One of the simplest forms of decoration is a
  sprinkling of sugar, or the cake may be brushed
  over with white of egg and sprinkled with sugar
  in two colours, or even chopped nuts.
  
  Another simple decoration is to spread a tliin
  coating of jam or jelly over the cake, and then
  to sprinkle with browned or coloured almonds,
  cocoanut, pistachio nuts, &c., or a mixture of
  these. This is very suitable for the sides of
  cakes where the top only is iced.
  
  When a more elaborate decoration is wanted,
  one of the various icings may be used. With a
  large cake it is very usual to ice the top only and
  then to decorate with preserved fruits, bon-bons,
  or icing in two colours put through a forcing-bag.
  Any decoration may be fixed in place with a
  little soft icing.
  
  
  228
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Pleasing efloots in colour must always be
  studied. Light and delicate colours ai-e prefer-
  able to the darker shades, wliich are apt to
  suggest " somotliing painted."
  
  In the decorating of little fancy cakes there
  is a wide range for individual taste and arrange-
  ment. With the help of the icings and decora-
  tions above described, or even odds and ends
  of icings, the variety of pretty cakes wliich can
  be made is endless, and it is just these pretty
  little cakes which cost so much to buy, and
  which add so immensely to the attractiveness
  of an afternoon tea-table.
  
  The making and decorating of these cakes
  require the same amount of taste and ingenuity
  as any other fancy or artistic work, but it is
  wonderful how many new kinds of cakes in
  novel designs can be made with a little ctireful
  handhng and some good-wiU.
  
  ilost of the small fancy cakes are made up
  from Genoese pastry, sponge cake, Madeira cake,
  chocolate cake, orange cake, or any other plain
  cake mixture. These are sliced and cut in small
  fingers, diamonds, rounds, heart-shapes, &c.,
  and iced or made into sandwiches. Two different
  cake mixtures may be put togotRer, such as
  pink and white, chocolate and wliite, chocolate
  and pink, orange and pink, and so on ; and for
  spreading purposes jam, marmalade, soft almond
  peiste, thick flavoured custard, clotted or whipped
  cream mixed with chopped nuts, sieved jam or
  pieces of fruit, Vienna icing, fondant icing, and
  
  
  Bo on may be used. Then a coating of icing or a
  little piping in icing put on the top with some
  other form of decoration. The following axe a
  few examples of what may be done : -
  
  1. Genoese pastry made into a sandwich with
  raspberry jam and cut into fancy shapes.
  Coated with chocolate or wliite icing, and
  decorated with loav'es of angoUca and crystallised
  violets.
  
  2. Sandwich of orange cake spread with
  marmal de, iced with yellow glac6, and deco-
  rated with crystalUsed sections of orange, and a
  Uttle chocolate icing to mark the seeds.
  
  3. Sandwiches of chocolate cake spread with
  pink Vienna icing, a piping of Vienna icing on
  the top, and a few silver dragoes.
  
  4. Sandwiches of Madeira cake spread with
  soft almond paste. Spread th6 top with almond
  paste, brush over with white of egg, and deco-
  rate with chopped pistachio nuts or browned
  almonds.
  
  5. Sandwiches of Genoese pastry spread with
  clotted cream. Coat with pale yellow fondant'
  or glac6, and decorate with leaves of angelica
  and red berries (bon-bons).
  
  These hints may be varied indefinitely, and
  according to what there is at hand to make the
  cakes of, but they will perhaps serve as a guide
  to the beginner, who, after a little practice, will
  soon launch out on her own account, and be
  able to make dainty morsels without any trouble
  or difficulty.
  
  
  THE PRESERVING AND BOTTLING OF FRUIT
  
  
  JAMS AND JELLIES
  
  HINTS ON JAM-MAKING
  
  TjNiiESS we have a garden of our own which
  supplies us with fruit, home-made jam is almost
  of necessity more expensive than that wliich is
  bought, although, when well made, it is beyond
  doubt superior in quality.
  
  Fruit for preserving should be uniformly
  ripe, sound, and fresh, and it should bo picked,
  if possible, on a dry, sunny morning, and not
  with the dew upon it. If the fruit bo damp, or
  even if the weather be foggy when it is gathered,
  there is nothing more likely than this to prevent
  the jam from keeping.
  
  The fruit should be made into jam as soon
  as possible after picking, and this is one point
  whore housewives have the advantage over
  manufacturers.
  
  We must first see that the fruit is free from
  dust and dirt, after which it must be picked and
  all stalks removed. The harder fruits, such as
  apples, plums, and gooseberries, may bo washed
  before being preserved.
  
  
  There are many different methods of making
  jam, and opinions vary as to which is the best.
  One method is to boil the sugar and water first,
  and thus make a syrup to which the fruit io
  added ; another is to boil the fruit by itself and
  then to add the sugar in a crushed or half -melted
  condition ; and a third way is to boil both sugar
  and fruit together.
  
  The sugar used for preserving should always
  be of the finest - ^puro cane sugar - and crushed
  or crystallised, not powdered. Inferior sugar is
  expensive in the end, as it causes so much waste
  by tho extra amount of scum it produces ; and
  if beetroot sugar is used the jam will neither have
  such a good colour nor will it keep so long. The
  quantity of sugar required will vary slightly
  according to the nature of the fruit used, the
  usual proportion being from three-quarters to
  one pound sugar to one pound of fruit. If too
  little sugar is used the jam will not keep, if too
  much it will candy and the flavour will not be so
  good.
  
  It is possible, but not easy, to make jam with-
  out a proper preserving -pan ; an iron one would
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  229
  
  
  discolour the fruit, wliile a tin one is so thin
  that the jam would be liable to burn. Copper,
  brass, and aluminium pans are the best for the
  purpose. Enamelled iron ones are also sold
  and are less expensive, but jam made in them
  is much more likely to burn unless it has very
  careful attention. If much preserving is to be
  done it will be found a wise investment to
  buy a thoroughly good preserving -pan, a brass
  one for preference. The greatest care must be
  taken to keep the pan in good condition, and
  it must always be scrupulously clean and dry
  before the fruit is put in.
  
  An iron spoon must never be used, but stir
  always with a wooden or silver one. The
  skimming should not be commenced too early
  in the process. It is only a froth which rises
  at first ; the scum itseK is very thick.
  
  During the time the frmt and sugar are being
  boiled together they must be stirred carefully
  and almost constantly. Be careful, too, that
  the pan is raised a little from the fire and not
  directly over it, or it will be liable to burn ; on
  the hot-plate of a close range is really the best
  place for cooking it. It is the amount of sugar
  employed in the maldng of jam which makes it
  so liable to catch.
  
  The time for cooking will depend very much
  upon the method employed, the kind of fruit
  used, and also upon the rate of boiling. It does
  not do to let the fruit boil too slowly. As a
  matter of fact, it is impossible to lay down any
  hard-and-fast rule as regards time ; experience
  is the best guide, as not only will the time vary
  according as to whether the fruit is quickly or
  slowly boiled, but the same kinds of fruits will
  be found to differ, some being more watery than
  others, and the more watery the fruit the longer
  boiling will it require. If boiled too short a time
  the jam will neither sot firmly nor keep well,
  while, on the other hand, if it is boiled too long
  the flavour will be spoilt and the jam become
  sticky. Wlion a little of the jam, poured upon a
  cold plate, sets in a few minutes, it is ready and
  should be put at once into pots. It ought to be
  ladled out of the pan with a silver soup -ladle or
  with a cup or small jug.
  
  The pots must be thoroughly dried beforehand,
  and then filled to within quarter of an inch from
  the top. If any drops are spilt on the sides of
  the pots they should be immediately wiped off
  with a cloth wrung out of hot water.
  
  To cover the jam, cut rounds of thin white
  paper the proper size of the pots, dip these in
  brandy, whisky, or vinegar, and lay them on the
  surface, then tie over each pot a piece of wetted
  vegetable parchment or a gummed paper cover
  sold for the purpose. Label the pots on the
  sides with a written or printed label, stating tlio
  name of the jam and the date when made.
  (For Storing, see p. 104.)
  
  It is impossible to give a large number of
  recipes for jam and jelly -makiag in a book of
  
  
  this kind, but it is hoped that the following will
  give a good idea of the ordinary methods.
  
  
  Apple Ginger
  
  Proportions -
  
  3 lbs. Apples.
  
  3 lbs. Preserving Sugar.
  
  
  6 oz. Whole Ginger.
  Water.
  
  
  Method. - Put the ginger into a jug or lined
  saucepan with boiling water and let it infuse
  by the side of the fire for several hours, keeping
  it well covered. Peel the apples, cut them into
  neat pieces, removing the core, and throw them
  into cold water to preserve the colour. Drain
  the water from the ginger and make up the
  quantity to one and a half pints. Put tliis into
  a preserving -pan with the sugar, bring to the boil
  and boil from eight to ten minutes. Drain the
  pieces of apple, throw them gently into this
  sjnrup, and let them boil until transparent but
  not broken. Then lift them out carefviUy, put
  them into jars, and potu: the sjTup over.
  
  Apple Jelly
  
  Proportions. - To each pint of apple juice
  allow one pound of preserving sugar and the
  rind and juice of one lemon.
  
  MetJiod. - Wash the apples and cut them in
  four or six pieces, according to si2;e, without
  removing the peel and cores. Put these into a
  preserving-pan with just siifficient cold water to
  cover them. Bring to the boil and boil gently
  for one hour or longer, stirring occasionally with
  a wooden spoon. ^Vlien reduced to a pulp pour
  all into a jelly -bag or cloth (see below) and allow
  the j\iice to drip all night. The juice ought to
  be of a tliickish consistency when cold ; if very
  watery either too much water has been added or
  the pulp has not been sufficiently cooked.
  
  Next day measure the juice carefully and put
  it into a preserv-ing-pan with the lemon rind
  peeled off thinly and tied in musUn and the lemon
  juice, if Uked. Bring to the boil and add the
  proper proportion of sugar. Stir carefully until
  the sugar is melted, and then boil quickly fi-om
  twenty to thirty minutes or until the jelly will set
  when tested on a plate. The time depends very
  much upon the kind of fruit used. Remove
  any scum from the top before potting.
  
  Note. - Tlais jelly may be flavoured with
  whole ginger instead of lemons, or orange juice
  and rind may be used instead of lemon juice and
  rind.
  
  The apple pulp may be sieved, mixed with
  sugar and boiled carefully for half-an-hour, and
  can be used for making puffs or an open tai't.
  It will not keep long.
  
  The Jelly-Bag or Cloth
  
  The best strainer for jelly is a piece of hucka-
  back or strong cheese-cloth. This is more easily
  
  
  230
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  kept in order than the old-fashionod flannel
  bag, and serves the purpose equally well. The
  material may bo cither in the form of a towel tied
  on the four legs of a chair (see p. 1-0), or a conical-
  shapod bag may bo made with loops through
  which a stick may bo put in order to suspend it
  between two chairs with a basin underneath.
  The jelly -bag should be well scalded with boiling
  water before it is used. After the fruit has been
  emptied into it no pressure must be used or the
  juice will not bo clear. Tlie straining must be
  done in a warm place and out of a draught, and
  sufficient time must be allowed to let every
  possible drop of juice run through. The best
  plan is to let it drain over-night. Some people
  use a hair sieve instead of a cloth, but this is not
  so roomy and not such a convenient plan on the
  whole.
  
  Apricot Jam
  
  Proportions. - To each pound of apricots
  weighed after stoning allow three-quarters of a
  pound preserving sugar.
  
  Method. - Wipe the apricots, and, if time per-
  mits, remove the skins. Cut them in halves with
  a silver knife and take out the stones. Spread
  out the apricots on large dishes and strew over
  them their proper proportion of sugar. Let
  them stand thus for at least twelve hours.
  Meanwhile break the stones, or at least some
  of them, blanch the kernels, and add them to
  the apricots. Next day turn all into a preserv-
  ing-pan and simmer very gently until the apricots
  are clear and the jam will set. It must be stirred
  very carefully, and the time required will be from
  three-quarters to one hour.
  
  Note. - Greengage Jam may be made in the
  same way.
  
  Blackberry and Apple Marmalade
  
  Proportions. - Equal quantities of apples and
  blackberries and one pound of sugar to one
  pound pulp.
  
  Method. - Wash the apples and cut them in
  slices without removing skins and cores. Pick
  the blackberries carefully, discarding any that
  are unsound. Put both kinds of fruit into a pro-
  serving-pan with just enough water to keep them
  from burning. Cook until reduced to a pulp,
  stirring frequently. Then rub through a hair
  sieve, leaving only the skins and seeds. Return
  the sieved pulp to a clean preserving-pan with
  sugar in the above proportion, and stir almost
  constantly for twenty minutes or until it is firm.
  If this is put in small pots it can bo turned out
  in shape when wanted, and is very good served
  with blancmange or with cream.
  
  Black Currant Jam
  
  Proportions. - To throe pounds black currants
  allow one pint rhubarb juice and four pounds
  preserving sugar.
  
  Method. - ^The black currants should be as ripe
  
  
  as possible. Strip them from the stalks and
  wash thom if they are very smoked and dirty.
  Put them into a preserving-pan with the proper
  portion of rhubarb juice (see p. 231), bring to
  the boil, and allow the berries to simmer slowly
  for fifteen minutes. Warm the sugar without
  allowing it to brown and add it next. Boil with
  the sugar from twenty to thirty minutes, or
  until the jam will set. It must be stirred almost
  constantly.
  
  Note. - ^Raspberry or red currant juice may be
  used instead of rhubarb, but either of these will
  give a distinct flavour.
  
  Black Currant Jelly
  
  Proportions. - To one pint of black currant
  juice allow one pound of sugar.
  
  Method. - Pick the currants from the stalks
  and wash them if necessary. Put them into a
  double saucepan or into a jar placed in a sauce-
  pan of boiling water with one gill of water or
  rhubarb juice (see p. 231) to each pound of fruit,
  and cook for two hours at least, or until all the
  juice is drawn out. Then strain them through
  a jolly-cloth or large sieve, allowing them to
  drip all night. Next day measure the juice and
  put it into a preserving-pan with the above
  proportion of sugar. Stir carefully until the
  sugar is dissolved, and then boil for half-an-hour,
  or until the jelly will set.
  
  Note. - A few red currants may be mixed
  with the black.
  
  Red currant or Cranberry jelly can be made in
  the same way.
  
  Damson and Apple Jam
  
  Proportions -
  
  8 lbs. Damsons. i 10 lbs. Sugar.
  
  2 pints Apple .Tuice. I
  
  Method. - Pick the fruit carofullj', rejecting
  any that is not sound. Then wash if necessary
  or rub it between the folds of a coarse towel.
  Prepare the apple juice in the same way as for
  apple jolly (see p. 229). Put the damsons into
  the preserving-pan with their proper proportions
  of sugar and apple juice and stir carefully until
  they come to the boil. Take out as many stones
  as possible and boil the jam for twenty minutes,
  or until it will stiffen.
  
  Note. - This jam will bo nicer if the stones can
  bo removed from tho damsons before they are
  used. A few of thom can then be cracked and
  the kernels blanched and used for flavouring.
  They should bo tied in muslin and removed
  before the jam is potted, as they are too bitter
  to eat.
  
  Gooseberry and Red Currant Jam
  
  Proportions. - To three pounds gooseberries
  allow one gill red currant juico and three and a
  half pounds sugar.
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  231
  
  
  Method. - Top and tail the gooseberries and
  remove any that are unsound. Wash them
  thoroughly and dry in a coarse cloth. Put
  them into a preserving-pan with red currant
  juice (see below) in the above proportion. Heat
  the contents slowly over the fire and then boil
  foF fifteen minutes. Add the sugar gradually,
  and boil again until the jam will set. Skim when
  necessary.
  
  Orange Jelly
  
  Proportions -
  
  4 lbs. Marmalade Oranges. I 4 pints Water.
  
  2 Lemons. ) Preserving Sugar.
  
  Method. - Wipe the oranges and lemons with
  a damp cloth, and grate off the yellow rind only.
  Then remove all the white skin, which is not
  used in the making of the jelly. Cut the inner
  part of the oranges and lemons into small pieces,
  and put it into a preserving-pan with the water.
  Boil for half-an-hour, stirring frequently, then
  strain through a hair sieve or jelly-bag, and
  allow the juice to drop without pressure.
  
  Measure this liquid and put it into a clean
  preserving-pan, with the grated rinds and one
  pound preserving sugar to each pint of juice.
  Bring to the boil, and boil from ten to fifteen
  minutes, or until it wiU jelly. Skim well, pour
  into jars, and cover while hot.
  
  Orange Marmalade
  Proportions -
  
  3i lbs. Marmalade Oranges. I \ pint boiling Water.
  
  3 Lemons. Sugar (see below).
  13i pints cold Water. ;
  
  Method. - Wipe the oranges and lemons with
  a damp cloth, and cut them in halves. Squeeze
  out the juice on a lemon -squeesser, and strain it
  into a basin. Put the pips into a smaller basin
  with the boiling water, and let them stand to
  extract the flavour. Cut the skins of both
  oranges and lemons into very thin strips, put
  them into a large basin or crock with the cold
  water, and let them soak twenty-four hours.
  Then pour into a preserving-pan, and boil until
  the pieces of peel are quite tender. Put the
  seeds with their water into a smaller saucepan,
  and boil for fifteen minutes ; then strain the
  water from them into the preserving-pan beside
  the rest. Pour again into the basin or crock,
  add the orange and lemon juice, and stand for at
  least twelve hours longer. Next day measure
  and allow one pound of preserving sugar to each
  pint of liquid. Boil together in the preserving-
  pan about twenty minutes, or until the mar-
  malade will jelly. Then pour into pots, and
  cover while hot.
  
  Quince Jelly
  
  Proporti(ms. - One povmd sugar to one pint
  quince juice.
  
  
  Method. - Peel, quarter and core the quinces.
  Then weigh the pieces and put them into a
  preserving-pan with two teacupfuls of water to
  each pound of fruit. Simmer slowly until tho
  fruit is quite soft, but not too pulpy or the jelly
  will not be clear. Strain though a hair sieve
  or jelly-cloth without pressing the pulp. Measure
  the juice and put it into a preserving -pan with
  the above proportion of sugar. Bring to the
  boil and boil qmckly from fifteen to twenty
  minutes.
  
  Note. - ^To use the pulp that is left see under
  Apple Jelly (p. 229).
  
  Raspberry and Red Currant Jam
  
  Proportions. - To every pound of raspberries
  allow one gill of red currant juice and one and a
  quarter pounds of sugar.
  
  Method. - Stalk the currants and put them
  into a double saucepan, or into a jar placed in a
  saucepan of boiling water, and let them cook
  until all the jmce is drawn out ; then strain
  either through a flannel jelly-bag or though a
  cloth, allowing the juice to drip all night.
  
  Pick the raspberries, removing the stalks,
  then weigh them, and put them into a preserv-
  ing-pan with the proportion of red currant juice.
  Bring to the boil and boil for ten minutes, then
  add the sugar by degrees, and boil until the jam
  will set, stirring almost constantly, and skimming
  when necessary.
  
  Rhubarb Jam
  
  Proportions -
  
  6 lbs. Rhubarb. I 3 Lemons.
  
  6 lbs. Preserving Sugar. |
  
  Method. - Choose some nice red-stalked
  rhubarb. Wipe it and, unless young and tender,
  take off the peel. Cut it into small pieces and
  then weigh it. Put it into a large crock or basin
  in layers with the sugar, sprinkling over with the
  grated rind of the lemons. Strain the lemon
  juice over, cover the basin, and stand for twenty-
  four hours.
  
  Next day povir off the liqmd and as much of
  the melted sugar as possible into a preser\'ing-
  pan and boil for ten minutes. Put in the
  rhubarb and boil all together from half to tliree-
  quarters.of an horn" or until the jam will set.
  It must be stirred very frequently and skimmed
  when necessary.
  
  Note. - This jam may be flavoiu-ed with ginger
  if preferred, or oranges may be used instead of
  lemons. A few blanched and shredded almonds
  may be added.
  
  Rhubarb Juice
  
  Rhubarb juice may be used instead of water in
  the maldng of many jams, especially in the
  preserving of the less juicy fruits. Its flavour is
  so delicate that it does not overpower the special
  
  
  232
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  fruit with wliich it is used. Wash tho rhubarb,
  but do not ixvl it unless tho skin is very coarse,
  as this helps to give a pink colour. Cut it up in
  small pieces and put it into a largo jar with just
  onougli water to moisten the base. Cover the
  Jar and steam in a saucepan of water, or cook in
  the oven until the juico is drawn out of the
  rhubarb. Tlien strain through a jelly -cloth or
  clean hair sieve.
  
  Rowan Jelly
  
  Proportions. - To each pint of rowan juice
  allow one pound sugar.
  
  Method. - Pick and wash the rowans and put
  them into a preserving -pan with just enough
  water to prevent them burning. Cook slowly
  until the berries are reduced to a pulp ; then
  strain in order to get the clear liqmd. Measure
  this and return it to a clean pan. Bring to the
  boil and add the proper proportion of sugar.
  Then boil quickly for twenty minutes or until
  tho jelly will set, skimming when necessary.
  
  Strawberry Jam
  
  Proportions. - Allow throo-queirtors of a pound
  preser\'ing sugar to each pound of strawberries.
  
  Method. - Choose small or medium-sized red
  strawberries, and remove the husks and any
  decayed ones before weighing. Put tliem into a
  preser\ang-pan and boil them for haK-an-hour,
  stirring almost constantly. During this time
  allow the proper proportion of sugar to warm in
  the oven without taking coloiir. Add it to tho
  strawberries and boil the two together, stirring
  all the time for another half-hour or until the
  jam will set.
  
  Note. - Tlie addition of one gill of red currant
  juice to each pound of strawberries will much
  improve the flavour of this jam. It should be
  added with the sugar.
  
  
  Proportions -
  
  4 lbs. Tomatoes.
  4 lbs. Sugar.
  
  
  Tomato Jam
  
  
  1 pint Water.
  
  
  Method. - Tho red home-grown tomatoes are
  the best. Wipe them and put into a basin with
  boiling water to cover them. Allow them to
  remain for a few minutos, then lift them out and
  peel them. Next cut them into quarters and
  remove the hard pieces from tho end and some
  of tho seeds. Put tho seeds, skins, and one pint
  of the water in which the tomatoes were soaked
  into a saucepan, boil for half-an-hour and strain.
  Th. n put tho sugar and this strained liquid into
  a preserving-pan and bring them to the boil.
  Add the tomatoes and boil until the jam will set,
  stirring almost constantly.
  
  Note. - A little lemon juice or ^nger may be
  added if liked.
  
  
  Vegetable Marrow Jam
  
  Proportions. - To each pound of prepared
  m£irrow allow one pound sugar, half a lemon, and
  half ounce whole ginger, water.
  
  Meilwd. - The vegetable marrows should bo
  medium-sized and fresh. Wash, dry, and peel
  them. Then cut in slices an inch thick. Stamp
  out the seeds with a round cutter and cut the
  rings in blocks an inch in width. Weigh the
  marrow and put it into a largo basin with tho
  proper proportion of sugar, tlie grated rind and
  juice of lemon and the ginger broken in small
  pieces. Put the skins and seeds into a saucepan
  with water to cover them and boil haK-an-hour.
  Then strain, and allow one gill of this liquid to
  each pound of marrow. Pour this into tho basin,
  cover, and stand for twenty-four hours.
  
  Next day boil all together, stirring almost
  constantly until the pieces of marrow look
  transparent, and the liquid will jelly when tested
  on a plate. From three-quarters to one hour
  will be required.
  
  THE ART OF BOTTLING FRUIT
  
  The valuable notes following have been quoted
  by kind permission from " The Book of Fruit-
  Bottling" by Edith Bradley avd May Crooke,
  published by John Lane.
  
  Until the last few years, when there has been
  a decided renewal in the industry, fruit-bottling
  had become almost a lost art. Perhaps it ro-
  qxiires more of that leisure and composure which
  we of to-day so sorely lack. And yet fruit-
  bottling is essentially a work for ladies, whether
  it be for the replenishment of their own store-
  rooms or as a pleasant and convenient means oi.'
  adding a trifle to a straitened income.
  
  It is by no means laborious, but interesting,
  pleasant and healthy, though at the same time
  it demands tho utmost nicety, cleanliness, and
  attention to details ; and it is just in this
  minute attention to detail that an uneducated
  cook so often fails. All fruits may be - nay,
  should be - bottled. The method is admirably
  suited to those pai'ticular fruits which are least
  in flavour when fresh gathered, as black currants
  and damsons. These, when bottled and kept
  six or eighteen months (or even longer), are veistly
  improved. They lose that element of roughness,
  almost acridity, which in tlio fresh fruit some-
  times runs round the mouth and makes one
  shudder.
  
  First of all the fruit must be sterilised, and for
  this a special steriliser must be used.
  
  The follo%ving simple directions for using tho
  Mercia Steriliser (and in general terms the same
  will hold good for other kinds) may be of use to
  those who are tempted to take up this fascinating
  occupation.
  
  It will bo easier, however, to describe the
  steriliser after explaining tho process of stcrilisa-
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  233
  
  
  tion. Sterilisation is briefly this - to make
  sterile or deprive of vitality the bacteriological
  germs which cause decay and putrefaction in
  fruit and vegetables, as well as in other forms of
  food. If these germs axe destroyed and kept
  from approaching the sterilised object again,
  it will keep perfectly sound and good for a con-
  siderable time, possibly an vmhmited time.
  This result is brought about by the following
  process. The article (fruit or vegetable) to be
  sterilised is packed into a glass jar or bottle,
  which is then filled with cold water and closed
  either by a metal or glass cap fastened by a cUp
  or a screw ; the bottles are placed in a vessel
  containing cold water ; heat is applied in one form
  or another, and the temperature of the water
  bath is slowly raised lontil it is svtfficiently high
  inside the glass jars to kill the bacteriological
  germs. The exact degree of heat required to
  destroy the germs varies considerably according
  to the object wliich is being sterilised ; in fact,
  some fruits and some vegetables require three
  or four successive sterilisations (by which first
  one bacteriological family and then another are
  destroyed) to bring about the required con-
  ditions.
  
  The hot air and steam by which the bottles in
  the steriUser or other vessel are now siurounded
  causes the water or juice inside the bottles to
  get hot and expand until it reaches the air-tight
  capsule or cover. The requisite temperature is
  sustained for some time at an equal height until
  the process is complete (this can be determined
  to a nicety by the fixed thermometer), and the
  bottles are either lifted out and put into a cool
  place, or else cold wacer Ls tin-ned into the
  machine whilst the bottles are in it (the hot water
  having been previously drawn off). With the
  decreasing temperature the vacuum is created,
  and unless the caps or tops are imperfect or
  imperfectly adjusted, and so admit the air, the
  contents of the jar, as before stated, will keep
  for any length of time, because germs do not
  incubate in a vacuum. This, then, is the
  theory carried out by the process of sterilisation.
  If sufficiently complete, and, as before stated,
  the requisite temperatm-es for the different
  fruits and vegetables have been proved, and
  these temperatures have been registered by a
  thermometer, the vacuum is attained and the
  germs made sterile. It may chance, however,
  that the rubber bands or the caps are not placed
  on the bottles quite evenly, or, if the cap is
  screwed, that the screw ring is not quite perfect ;
  then if from one cause or another air is admitted,
  as a ceriaia consequence the vacuum is destroyed,
  the germs come into life, and immediately begin
  to cause decay and decomposition or fermenta-
  tion. If this is not at once noted, and the batch
  of bottled fnut re-sterilised and re-capped, it
  will all go bad.
  
  In the Mr rcia Patent Steriliser every attempt
  has been made tc put upon tlu market a steri-
  
  
  liser which is the outcome of practical experience,
  presented in a portable, tangible, practical, and
  workmanUke form, and at a price which brings
  it within the reach of all who £ire taking the
  bottling of fruit year by year seriously.
  
  It is made in three si^es of the best steeled tin.
  The leirgest. A, takes twenty-five bottles, holding
  
  
  Mercla Steriliser.
  
  two poiinds each, i.e. fifty pound of fruit -
  price £4. The second siz;e, B, takes twelve
  bottles, containing two pound each - price £3, 3s.
  The third size, C, which is for household use,
  holds six bottles, containing two pounds each,
  or nine smaller ones - price 1 8s.
  
  Upon the copper bottom of the vessel stands
  a low tin shelf pierced with holes. The bottles,
  when filled, stand on this sheH, and it prevents
  them from cracldng, as they are liable to do,
  by coming into too close contact with the heating
  vmderneath. In the Ud is an aperture in wliich
  is inserted a socket ; into tins socket is screwed
  (when it is required) a specially constriicted
  thermometer, consisting of a long tube, the bulb
  of which reaches about midway down the
  bottles which contain the fruit for sterilising
  (see illustration). As will be readily understood,
  when the water in which the bottles is immersed
  is heated and turned into steam, the temperature
  at which the process is actually going on is
  registered on the porcelain scale above the hd,
  and it is thus possible to adjust the temperature
  to a degree. Tlie necessary heat for the Mercia
  steriliser can be supplied either by using a small
  oil stove or gas-burner and raising the steriliser
  on a strong stand above it, or Jhe ordinary
  kitchen range upon wliich the sterihser may
  stand.
  
  Special bottles must be used with lip and clip
  or screw-top lid, and the cost of these generally
  amounts to 3d. or -Id. each. The bottles will do
  again year after year, only the caps and rings
  will require renewal each season. They are to
  be obtained by the dogen from the Mercia
  Agricultural Store, Bredon's Norton, near
  Tewkesbury.
  
  Tlie best fruits for bottling are gooseberries,
  cherries, raspberries, apricots, plums, damsons,
  
  
  234
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  blackberries, tomatoes, apples, and pears.
  Strawberries can also bo successfully bottled,
  but they require more caro and trouble than
  other fruits, because they are so much softer.
  
  Gooseberries. - Gooseberries are the easiest of
  all fruits to bottle, and as a rule give the most
  satisfactory results. The following directions
  should be carefully followed. Have the bottles
  reawly, making sure tliat tliey are perfectly clean
  and quite dry. The gooseberries should be
  picked when green and hard, and before they get
  too large. For bottling they ought always to
  be picked in the same condition as that in which
  they are tised for green gooseberry tart. Before
  putting the fruit into the bottles it should be
  topped and tailed, and to ensure a good appear-
  ance when finished it is always best to grade the
  fruit and only put berries in which are the same
  si?e, rejecting any that are too large and not
  sound, or are disfigured in any way. These can
  always be used up in the preservnng-pan. Pack
  the fruit closely into the jaxs without bruising
  to within an inch of the top, and fill up with cold
  water or sjTup to the very top of the bottle.
  Do not put on the cap at once, as the water often
  sinks when it has worked its way down among
  the fruit. If this happens the bottles should
  be filled up again, as the fruit ought always to be
  well covered.
  
  Capping the Bottles. - The bottles are now
  ready for capping, and much of the success
  depends upon the care taken in capping. The
  india-rubber rings are next put on. Have ready
  a basin of hot water, and before laying the ring
  on the mouth of the bottle dip it into hot water
  for a second or two. This makes the rubber
  more flexible and more likely to lie flat, which
  is an important point. When the ring is in its
  place put on the metal cap. Care must be taken
  to place it on the bottle perfectly straight. The
  spring clip is then put on, and the bottle is ready
  to go into the steriliser. Imperfect capping is
  often due to the ring or the cap ^ being care-
  lessly put on. This allows the air to get in,
  and prevents the bottle becoming hermetically
  sealed, as it should be.
  
  Sterilising the Fruit. - The bottles are now
  placed in the steriliser. They should stand
  just clear of each other. A sufficient quantity
  of cold water is put in to cover the bottle three
  parts of the, way up. The lid is then put on
  and the thermometer screwed into its socket.
  The temperature generally registered at this
  stage is about 60№. It is very gradually allowed
  to rise until it reaches 155№. An increase of two
  degrees a minute is enough. If the temperature
  is allowed to go up with a rush the skin of the
  fruit in the bottles will be cracked. It nearly
  always takes an hour, if not more, before the
  required temperature is reached. The bottles
  should be kept at 155№ for forty-five minutes.
  If gas or oil is used for the heating this is easily
  done by regulating the flame. At the end of
  
  
  forty-five minutes the bottles are taken out and
  put to cool. If a screw-topped bottle is used
  the loose rim is now tightly screwed down.
  \Vhere the spring clip is used it is loft on till
  the bottles are quite cold. \Vlaen tliis stage has
  been reached (probably the next day) each
  bottle should be examined to see if the cap is
  perfectly tight ; if so it has become hermetically
  sealed, and will only move by presstu-e from
  without, such as the insertion of a knife between,
  cap and rubber ring to raise it. This will be
  a proof of the fruit keeping. If any are found
  imperfectly capped they should be re-sterilised ;
  but a careful examination should be made of the
  cap to see if it fits properly or not, as a cer-
  tain percentage of those sent out are sure to
  be faulty.
  
  Cherries. - The Kentish cherry is excellent for
  preserving in this way. Pick the cherries off
  their stalks and pack in the bottles. The fruit
  should be firm but nearly ripe. \Vlien packing
  shake the bottle gently up and down so that
  the fruit may fit in closely. If the fruit is
  pricked at one end with a needle it prevents
  bursting. Fill up the bottles with syrup or
  water. Proceed as indicated in the foregoing
  recipe and sterilise at 150№. Another method
  is to split the cherries in half with a sharp knife,
  take out the stones, crack sonr.e, and return
  the kernels to the bottles wheji packing. This
  latter method keeps the fruit a beautiful colour,
  but it would be well to use syrup instead of
  water, because, preserved in this way, they are
  richer in flavour and appearance.
  
  Raspberries and Red Currants. - ^Raspberries
  and currants together make one of the very
  best fruits for winter use. They are always
  liked, and as they keep their coloiu- well when
  bottled they look appetising. Discrimination
  should be used in the weather for bottling, and
  a specially dry day should be chosen for doing
  soft fruits, for if saturated with rain they lose
  their flavour, and do not keep as well as when
  picked on a warm dry day. The oiirrants
  should be carefully picked off their stalks and
  also the raspberries. Place a layer of raopberries
  about one inch thick first in the bottle, and
  shake gently down ; then place a layer of red
  currants. Proceed in this manner till the
  bottles are filled to within an inch of the top.
  Fill up and proceed as in the foregoing recipes.
  Sterilise at 155№.
  
  Syrup for Bottled Fruits. - Sometimes it is
  desirable to bottle the fruit in syrup instead of
  water only. The following is a good recipe :
  To every quart of water allow half a pound of
  the best cane sugar. Bring to the boil and con-
  tinue to boil at 212№ for half-an-hour, taking caro
  to skim when necessary. Pour the syrup into
  a vessel and keep till quite cold before pouring
  over the fruits.
  
  The foregoing directions can be applied,
  broadly speaking, to all soft fruits enumerated
  
  
  GUIDE TO COOKERY
  
  
  235
  
  
  at the commencement of the chapter. The tem-
  perature must also depend upon the quality of
  the fruit. K young and tender 155№-160№ is a
  usual standard. The time occupied in sterilis-
  ing varies with the fruit ; larger frmt, such as
  plums, require twenty-five minutes, pears one
  hour, apricots forty-five minutes, poaches forty-
  five minutes, tomatoes thirty minutes, rhubarb
  twenty minutes.
  
  Plums. - Plums should be quite freshly gathered
  for bottling, and only those of a fairly good
  size should be used. The smaller plums can
  always be turned into jam. The fruit should be
  quite firm and not quite ripe. For all the stone
  fruits it is better to use the larger bottles, as
  with the smaller bottles the mouths are not
  large enough to allow tlie insertion of any very
  fine fruit. The packing of plums in the bottles
  is an important item, because if the fruit is not
  proper 1}- packed the bottles present a very ugly
  appearance when finished. To pack properly
  the fruit must be graded, and plums chosen as
  near of a size as possible. It is always best to
  make a good beginning by getting three even
  fruits if possible into the bottom of a bottle.
  When the lowest round is started properly the
  rest of the packing is fairly simple. The bottles
  should be gentlj' shaken from side to side, and a
  round piece of wood with a blunt end should be
  used to help to slide the fruit gently into place.
  Great care must be taken not on any account to
  break the skin. Some people prick their fruit
  with a steel knitting-needle at the stalk end to
  prevent the skin breaking, but we have serious
  doubts whether anything is gained by so doing.
  The bottles, after packing, are filled up with
  syrup or water. When very large plums are
  used, they may be cut in half with a dessert-
  knife, and the stones extracted and cracked.
  Tlie kernels may then be distributed among the
  fruit in the bottles.
  
  Sterilising Plums.- When placed in the
  steriliser the temperature should be brought
  up very gradually till it reaches 160№. If the
  plums are in good condition the temperature
  should rise to this point without the skin crack-
  ing, but if the fruit is at all soft 155№ will be
  sufficient. Victorieis, Czars, and Monachs are
  the best varieties for preserving. The well-
  known Pershore plum must not bo forgotten, as
  it bottles admirably. Damsons can be bottled
  in the same way.
  
  Apricots,Peaches,and Nectarines. - These fruits,
  
  
  unless quite small, should be cut in halves,
  always remembering to use a dessert -knife, as a
  steel knife will not only make the fniit taste
  but mark it and turn it brown or black. The
  stones should be cracked and some of the
  kernels placed amongst the fruit when packing.
  The packing of the fruit is a slightlj' difficult
  operation. The halves should overlap each
  other evenly up the sides of the bottle, no space
  being left. Before trying packing of this sort
  it would be well to purchase a properly packed
  bottle and use it as a modeL Care must be taken
  that all the juice which the fruit loses when it is
  being cut is saved and put into the bottles with
  the kernels. This can be done by halving the
  fruit on a plate. As these are choice fruits,
  syrup may be used in the bottling instead of
  water. When used the fruit must not be ripe,
  but quite firm. Care must be taken not to
  bruise it when placing in the bottles. Bring
  them gradually up to a temperature of 155№,
  following in all cases the general directions for
  bottling.
  
  Apples and Pears must be carefully and evenly
  peeled before bottling. They should be cut
  down the middle as already ad\ased for peaches,
  &c., removing the cores. Have ready a basin
  of water into which some lemon juice has been
  8quee:?ed ; drop the fruit into this, and then
  fiU the bottles with the fruit so prepared, and at
  once add the water or syrup. If there is any
  delay the fi-uit will turn brown, and it is to
  prevent this happening that it is dropped into the
  basin of water, the lemon juice keeping it white.
  
  Tomatoes may be taken either as fruit or
  vegetable. Generally they come under the head
  of the latter, but as either they are most excellent
  bottled. They require a little more trouble
  than most other fruits to bottle successfully.
  They should be used small, and just coloured,
  as they have to be done at a high temperatxire,
  in order to ensure complete sterilisation. In
  places where tomatoes are grown in quantities
  the small ones are often reserved for bottUng.
  Pack in bottles as directed for plums, and cover
  with water. Bring the temperature up to 170№.
  Take out of the steriliser after an hour at this
  temperature, and leave for twenty -foxir hours ;
  then repeat sterilisation at 170№. Again leave
  for two or three days, and again sterilise at the
  same temperature. By doing them thus three
  times they will remain like fresh fruit, and can
  be kept for any length of time.
  
  
  THE TABLE '
  
  
  \ GOOD housewife will not rest content with the fact that the meals in her house are well cooked.
  She will also see to it that they are well served, knowing that dainty table equipment and skilful
  8er\'ice does much to enliance the enjoyment of the fare provided.
  
  This article deals with all the many important subjects bearing upon table service, including
  the fittings and arrangement of the pantry and its contents ; the choice of silver, china, cutlery, and
  class : the arrangement of a menu, with order of coxirses ; valuable hints are also given in regard to
  the choice of wines, and the rules which govern waiting at table in every refined and well-ordered
  house.
  
  
  THE PANTRY
  
  Where more than one servant is kept a small
  pantry is a very necessary apartment in a house,
  as it enables the maid who has charge of the
  table arrangements to do all her washing up
  without interfering with the work of the cook
  or getting in her way.
  
  In large establishments the pantry would be
  the special sanctum of the butler. In it he
  would keep all the silver, glass, and china that
  came under his care, as well as the supply of
  wine that was required for immediate use.
  There would also be a small table or desk at
  wluch he could write his orders and make up
  his books.
  
  In smaller houses the pantry need not be a
  spacious apartment, but even a small place
  conveniently fitted up will be found a great
  convenience, not only to the table-maid but
  also to the ladies of the house, as it is a
  place where they can do any washing of tea
  dishes or fine china, preparing of dessert, cutting
  bread and butter for afternoon tea, and the
  arranging of flowers, &c., without having to
  enter the cook's domain.
  
  A pantry should be fitted with a small sink
  with hot and cold water - supply. At the
  side of the sink there should bo a good -sized
  draining-board on which wet dishes can bo
  placed, above the sink a plate-rack in which
  to drain plates, wlulo a small cupboard fitted
  underneath would be a useful receptacle for
  plate powder, silver brushes, furniture polish,
  ammonia, soap powder, and other indispensable
  articles for cleaning purposes. Another neces-
  sary fitting is a dresser. It should be provided
  wiih two or throo drawers in which glass cloths,
  dusters, leathers, and furniture sheets could bo
  kept, one drawer being reserved for the maid's
  private use. The lower part of the dresser should
  be fitted with cupboards di\'ided off into separate
  portions. One part might bo reserved for clean-
  
  
  ing utensils, another for larger dishes, and a third
  as a small store for sugar, jam, butter, &c. Then
  above the dresser there should be a nice high
  narrow cupboard, with sliding glass doors if
  possible, for holding china, glass, cruets, sugar
  basins, jam dishes, &c. If this is large enough
  one portion of it might hold a reserve supply
  of china and glass and be kept locked.
  
  Other useful fittings would be a small pulley
  or rail for drying towels and a rack for holding
  two or three brushes.
  
  If room permits there might be a good solid
  table in the pantry and also a chair on which
  the maid could sit down while doing her silver
  cleaning and other work of the kind.
  
  The floor should be covered with cork carpet
  or Unoleum and the walls papered v.'iih a good
  washing paper or coated with a light-colovired
  ripolin or distemper, which could easily be re-
  newed when dirty.
  
  The pantry should contain all that the table-
  maid requires for cleaning purposes, and the
  sink must be supplied \\ath one or two tubs
  and other necessary appliances for washing up.
  It is a good plan also to hang up somowliore in
  the pantry a list of all glass, cliina, &c. ; this list
  shoiiid be checked periodically by the mistress
  and servant together.
  
  Cleanliness and order in the pantry are very
  important. Each time the sink is used it should
  be scrubbed out with hot water and then thor-
  oughly rinsed with cold. Tho dresser and table
  should be scrubbed onoe a week and tho floor
  washed when necessary. No dirty towels or
  dish cloths should be seen lying about, and a
  pride should be taken in the neat arrangement
  of the cupboards. (For " Washing Up," see p. 76.)
  
  SILVER AND CUTLERY
  
  Choice of Silver. - ^There are few families,
  except perhaps the very wealthy, who care to
  use solid table silver every day, for even if they
  
  
  THE TABLE
  
  
  237
  
  
  are fortunate enough to possess a set it is care-
  fvilly guarded under lock and key and only
  brought out on special occasions, and with the
  exception perhaps of a few small articles, such as
  salt and mustard spoons, pepperettes, butter-
  knives, sugar-tongs, electro-plate is rnade to do
  duty for ordinary use.
  
  Although silver costs about three times as
  much as electro -plate, it must be remembered
  that it will last for years without requii-ing any
  repair, and can even be handed down from
  generation to generation.
  
  Solid silver is sold by weight and fluctuates
  a little in price, but the current price for table
  silver is about the following : - table-spoons and
  forks from £i, 12s. per dozen, dessert-spoons
  and forks from £2, 15s. per dozen, and tea-spoons
  from 30s. per doz;en.
  
  SoUd silver is one of the things which can
  often be bought very well second-hand, and in
  most large towns reliable shops are to be found
  where it can be obtained at fairly moderate
  prices.
  
  Electro-Plate. - A good quality should always
  be bought, as the plating soon wears off the
  cheaper makes. Good electro-plate ought to
  last from twenty to thirty years without re-
  quiring any renewing. For those who have only
  a small amount to spend on silver and who are
  not fortunate enough to have it given to them
  as a present when they start housekeeping, it is
  better to purchase a little of a good quaUty
  rather than full sets of an inferior kind. There
  are several regulation patterns such as Old
  English, King's, Bead or Thread, and Rat Tail,
  so that additions can al'^ays be made by degrees,
  as the best plated goods are sold by tlae single
  article when required. The above patterns are
  all simple and will easily be kept in order ; in
  fact, heavily ornamented patterns are rarely
  seen nowadays.
  
  The price of electro-plate varies, but, roughly
  speaking, good electro-plate of a quality that
  will last for j'ears can be had at the following
  prices : - table-spoons and forks from 25s. per
  dozen, dessert-spoons and forks from 19s. 6d.
  per dozen, and tea-spoons from 9s. per dozen.
  
  When electro-plate begins to look shabby it
  can be replated for about the followingcharges: -
  table-spoons and forks from 17s. 6d. per dozen ;
  dessert-spoons and forks from 13s. per dozen,
  and tea-spoons from 7a. per dozen. (For the
  Cleaning of Silver, see p. 74.)
  
  Choice ol Cutlery. - As in the case of electro-
  plate, so with cutlery, a low-priced article is the
  
  
  c
  
  
  3
  
  
  Knife with Throagh-Tang Rivet.
  
  reverse of economical ; not only will the handles
  of cheap knives be badly fixed, but the blades will
  be made of a soft steel which never takes a
  proper edge. It is a wise policy, therefore, to
  
  
  buy knives the blades of which are made of tho
  best Sheffield steel, and to see that they are fixed
  to the handles with what is called the through-
  tang rivet, which never comes undone.
  
  There is a choice of materials for the handles,
  the cheapest of which are bone and horn ; then
  comes ivorine and ivoride, which is the nearest
  appoach to real ivory that can possibly be made ;
  and, lastly, fine African ivory and sterhng silver-
  plated handles.
  
  Real ivory and sterling silver are rather
  expensive articles, and most people have to
  content themselves with one of the cheaper
  materials. The following will be a fair price to
  pay for really good articles : -
  
  Best white Bone Handles with Through-Tang : -
  Table-knives from 133. 6d. per dozen, dessert-
  knives from I2s. per dozen, joint or game
  carvers from 5s. per pair, steel Is. 9d.
  
  Imitation Ivory Handles : - Table-knives from
  17s. 6d. per dozien, dessert-knives from 14s. per
  dozen, joint or game carvers from 6s. per pair,
  steel 2s. 4d.
  
  African Ivory Handles : - Table-knives from
  38s. per dozen, dessert-knives from 30s. per
  dozen, joint or game carvers from 12s. 6d. per
  pair, steel 4s. 3d.
  
  Knives will cost about 2s. 6d. per dozien less
  without the tang fastening. New blades can
  always be fitted to good ivory handles at a
  reasonable charge. (For the Care and Cleaning
  of Knives, see p. 76.)
  
  CHINA AND GLASS
  
  Choice of China. - Now that both china and
  glass can be bought at such moderate prices and
  in such artistic shapes and pretty colours, there
  is no excuse for any one to have what is chipped
  and ugly on theu- tables. Although some of
  the china dealers of to-day make specialities
  of tea and dinner services of the most gaudy
  colouring and in the most impossible patterns,
  and ornament them with a liberal supply of
  gilt, there are other manufacturers who reproduce
  the most tasteful designs of Wedgwood, Spode,
  and the famous old Crown Derby Wares.
  
  The choice of china is very much a matter
  of taste and circumstances, and space will not
  permit of giving many details regarding designs
  and price, as these are so niamerous and varied.
  Before selecting it is advisable to send for the
  catalogues of some of the largest firms and to
  visit their show-rooms. Slany valuable ideas
  may be gleaned in this way.
  
  The frugal housewife whoso means are limited
  and who will in all probability have to leave
  her china in the hands of inexperienced servants,
  will do well to buy the strong make of stone-
  ware or semi-porcelain for every-day use and
  to choose a style which can be renewed when
  pieces are broken.
  
  Such patterns as the willow, delf, rose-bud.
  
  
  238
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  -white fluted, and wliite with a gilt or coloured
  band are always stocked. Strong colouring
  should always be avoided whether for tea,
  breakfast, or dinner services, and it must be re-
  membered that the price will bo influenced very
  much by the amount of good gilt and also
  ■upon the novelty of the design and shape.
  
  A Dinner Service. - W\\en choosing a dinner
  service it is better to select one in which the
  centre of the dishes and plates is white, as
  food always looks more appetising when served
  on a light surface. Choose also a porcelain
  that will wear well and that will not chip and
  crack with the heat. China can either be bought
  in largo or small sets for six or twelve persons,
  or single pieces can be bought in quite a number
  of different patterns by paying at a little higher
  rate. A nice set of what is called the " cottage "
  size can be bought from a guinea upwards con-
  sisting of the following pieces, while a medivun
  set will cost from about £1, l-4s. 6d. upwards -
  
  Cottage Set (52 pieces) : - Twelve meat plates,
  twelve pudding or pie plates, twelve cheese
  plates, two covered dishes, six meat dishes, two
  sauce tureens.
  
  Medium Set (81 pieces) : - ^Twenty-four meat
  plates, twenty -four pie plates, twelve soup
  plates, seven dishes, two covered dishes, two
  sauce tureens, one soup tureen, one fish drainer.
  
  It must be remembered that in houses where
  there are a number of people or where small
  dinner-parties are given, the number of plates
  must not be too limited.
  
  Tea and Breakfast Sets. - A small tea and
  breakfast service in plain ware can be bought for
  6s. or 7s. and upwards, and in china from 16s. to
  17s. and upwards. They would consist of the
  following pieces : -
  
  Tea Set (40 pieces) : - ^Twelve tea-cups and
  saucers, twelve tea plates, two cake plates, one
  slop basin, one cream jug.
  
  Breakfcutt Set for Six (29 pieces) : - Six cups and
  saucers, six plates, two cake plates, one slop
  basin, one eugar basin, one milk jug, six egg cups.
  
  Choice of Glass. - Not a little of the handsome
  appearance of a well-set dinner -table may be
  ascribed to its array of shining well-kept and
  well-polished glass. The table glass should
  always be of as good a quality as possible, and
  the design should bo characterised by its rffinod
  simplicity. Too much design and ornamentation
  is a mistake, as it tends to rob the glass of that
  bright transparency which forms the great charm
  of its appearance. But here, again, unless the
  glass is always under the care of a reliable ser-
  vant, it is best to buy it of not too fine a quality
  and of a design that can be easily replaced. Very
  th'n glass is no doubt appreciated by those who
  like dainty articles, but it requires the utmost
  care in the washing and drying. When cut glass
  cannot bo afforded, plain thinnish glass or plain
  glass with a little engraving looks the best.
  Very good plain tumblers can be had from 4d.
  
  
  each or with a little engraving from 6s. 6d. per
  dozen, while a cut glaiss tumbler will cost from
  about Is. upwards.
  
  Wine-glasses are made in various sizes to suit
  the different wines for which they are used ;
  the form changes with fashion, but they should
  always match the tumblers in quality and design.
  
  Coloured wine-glasses were at one time much
  in vogue, but people of taste now appreciate
  the fact that the wliite wine -glasses of tasteful
  design are infinitely preferable.
  
  Decanters also should be carefully chosen
  with due regard to their design. More orna-
  mentation in the way of cutting or engraNang is
  allowable in the case of all kinds of decanters.
  
  HOME DINNERS
  
  No matter how simplo a meal may bo, it
  should be put neatly upon the table and made
  attractive to the eye. There are certain table
  refinements wliich are within the reach of the
  very humblest ; they may not be essentials, but
  they are beyond doubt among the ameliorating
  influences of life which help to cultivate the
  mind and improve the manners. The every-day
  dinner should be as carefully prepared as the
  more formal meal when visitors are expected.
  The decoration of the table may be simpler, the
  number of courses fewer, and the dishes less
  expensive, but so far as the appointments are
  concerned they should receive the same attention.
  
  Under these conditions if paterfamilias should
  take it into his head to bring in a friend to dinner
  without any previous notification of his intention
  of so doing, no disturbance will be caused by the
  arrival of the unexpected guest - rather \vill he
  be looked upon as a welcome addition to the
  family party.
  
  The dinner -hour mvist be chosen with due
  regard to the needs and employments of the
  various members of the household, and, if
  possible, let it be at an hour when it does not
  require to be hurried over. It should bo made
  a time of relaxation, when there can be pleasant
  and cheerful conversation, and worries and care
  are, for tho moment at least, laid aside. It is
  a well-known fact that a cheerful frame of
  mind is a valuable aid to digestion.
  
  Having fixed upon an hour see that the meal
  is punctually attended and punctually served.
  The very best cooking will be spoiled if the
  dinner has to bo kept back owing to the un-
  punctuality of some member of the family,
  while, on the other hand, tho cook who cannot
  send up a dinner to time should remember that
  a meal that has to be waited for often fails to
  be appreciated. Regularity is also good from
  a health point of view, and for those who are
  delicate it is all the more important.
  
  The dishes given may be as simple and in-
  expensive as possible, but let them bo well
  cooked and nicely served.
  
  
  THE TABLE
  
  
  239
  
  
  Then the arrangement is an important con-
  sideration- we do not all possess beautiful china
  and glass, and the choicest silver and damask,
  but it is possible to have even the simplest things
  spotlessly clean and bright and to have them
  arranged with order and taste.
  
  And, again, no table should be considered
  properly laid unless decorated with some flowers
  or ferns. Some people may consider this an
  extravagance, but a small quantity is all that
  is required, and if flowers are scarce or too
  expensive, any plant which looks fresh and
  healthy or even some pretty foliage can take
  their place.
  
  The dining-room itself ought to be in order
  and free from dust, and there should be a tidy
  fireplace and a bright fire burning in the grate
  if the weather is cold. Also pay attention to
  the ventilation of the room, as a stuffy atmos-
  phere tends to spoil the appetite ; so if the room
  has been occupied beforehand, let the windows
  be thrown open for a few minutes at least before
  the meal is served.
  
  The clean cloth, the bright silver and glass,
  the tidy and pleasant room with the tasteful floral
  decoration will all add to the enjoyment of the
  meal. It may not be every one who bestows
  direct attention upon these details, but they
  affect the naind none the less. There is some-
  thing elevating in beauty and order, whereas
  an untidy table is just as degrading as a slovenly
  dress. Let us make the home dinner as attrac-
  tive as possible, and the simplest meal will then
  give satisfaction.
  
  SETTING -^HE TABLE
  
  The Informal Dinner. - Before the actual laying
  of the cloth there are certain preliminaries in the
  pantry, or in the kitchen if there is no pantry,
  which should be attended to. The cruets, for
  instance, will require attention. The salt-
  cellars should be filled with fine salt free from
  lumps, the surface made perfectly smooth, and
  a clean bright spoon laid across the top. The
  mustard-pots should be filled with well-made
  mustard. ^Vhen fresh mustard is required,
  mix it first in a small cup and never in the pot
  itself. It must be mixed with a little water
  and beaten until perfectly smooth, and be of a
  consistency that will not run off the side of the
  plate. A pinch of salt should always be added.
  If French mustard is preferred, mix the dry
  mustard with vinegar instead of water, or half
  vinegar and half water. Tarragon vinegar is
  best. Tl)e pepperettes should also be well
  filled with wliite pepper, black being unsuitable
  for table use. Large cruets are not used now
  as a rule, but if bottles of any kind are put on
  the table, they should be clean and bright and
  the stands themselves kept in good order.
  
  Next consider the number of people to be
  laid for, and count out the glasses reqviired and
  
  
  rub them up, and fill the water-bottles with
  fresh water. Collect the necessary knives and
  examine the steel parts to see that they are free
  from tarnish. The bread too that is required
  should be put on the platter or small pieces put
  in a bread-basket. All these articles should be
  put on a tray and carried to the dining-room
  as soon as the table-cloth and sideboard-cloth
  have been laid.
  
  Then in the dining-room itseK see that the
  room is in order and well ventilated and the
  fireplace tidy before beginning to lay the cloth.
  
  A dining-room table is usually made with
  leaves which can be taken out and put in as
  required according to the number of persons to
  be seated. An oval or round table is considered
  more sociable than a square or oblong one and
  will accommodate more people, but the shape
  is of little importance as long as the table is of a
  suitable height and size for individual needs.
  
  An under-covering or " silence cloth " should
  first be laid on the table to prevent hot dishes
  spoiling the polish of the wood, to give the table-
  cloth a smoother and better appearance, and
  also to deaden the sound when silver, dishes, &c.,
  are laid down. This can either be an old
  woollen table-cloth of some light colovir, a piece
  of blanket or serge, or a piece of cotton felt-
  ing or interlining sold for the purpose. This
  silence cloth should be about six inches larger
  than the table all round, and to keep it in position
  it may either be tied to the four legs by means
  of tapes, or hemmed and drawn up beneath the
  edges with a running string.
  
  The table-cloth itself must be laid on per-
  fectly even and as smoothly as possible, the
  centre of the cloth in the centre of the table, and
  the sides hanging gracefully with the creases in
  a straight line. As the appearance of the table
  will depend very much on the kind of table-
  cloth used, an effort should be made to have this
  as clean and vmruffled as possible.
  
  Next lay a carving-cloth at one or both ends of
  the table or wherever there is carving or serving
  to be done. This cloth may either be sqxiare or
  oblong - ^very pretty cloths with hem-stitched
  or fringed edges are sold for the pm-pose, but,
  failing these, an ordinary serviette of a large
  size will do very well.
  
  Spread the sideboard also with a cloth and the
  dinner-waggon or butler's tray if required. In
  small houses and flats it is sometimes more con-
  venient to have the latter placed just outside
  the dining-room door.
  
  Now put the flowers or any other decoration
  on the table (see p. 253), as this is more easily
  arranged before the glasses, &c., are placed on
  the table.
  
  In the allowance of space a good rule to go
  by is to allow twenty inches at least for each
  person's accommodation, but if the table is
  large a little more room does not matter. It is
  a good plan to place round the serviettes before
  
  
  240
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  laj'ing the rest of the cover, as this vnll give
  an idea of the amount of space available. Tho
  fancy and artistic folding of sorvdottes is quite
  out of fasliion for tho moment and is only to be
  Been in hotels and restaurants. When clean
  they should be simply folded, and after they have
  been used put into rings.
  
  The silver required must next bo taken from
  the sideboard and everj-thing must bo carried
  to the table on a tray and not in the hands.
  Put a table-knife at tho right-hand side and a
  fork at the left for each person, leaving room for
  a plate to be placed between, and place a small
  dessert-spoon and fork horiz;ontally across tho
  top, the handle of tho spoon to tho right-hand
  side and that of tho fork to the left. If fish is
  to be served, place a fish-knife and fork outside
  the other knife and fork, as they will bo required
  first ; if soup, a table-spoon on the right-hand
  side, and if cheese, a small knife at the right-
  hand side next the plate. Everytliing must be
  placed evenly and about an inch up from the
  edge of the table.
  
  Next put down the spoons and carving-knives
  and forks that are required for serving the
  different dishes, and small cruets and water-
  bottles at a convenient distance down the table.
  It is no longer tho custom to put dinner-mats on
  the table, but those made of asbestos may bo
  placed under tho cloth when there is danger of
  very hot dishes spoiling the table.
  
  The glasses and bottles of water should be
  placed on the table almost last - a tumbler at
  tho right-hand side of each person and a wine-
  glass for each kind of wine that is to be served.
  The bread may either bo put round, a piece to
  each person, or left in the bread-basket to bo
  handed.
  
  The sideboard should be arranged as carefully
  as the table, and everything that is required for
  after use placed upon it, such as a few extra
  knives, forks, and spoons, extra bread, a basket
  for receiving dirty knives and silver, and a
  crumb brush and tray. See also that the chairs
  arc put in their places before bringing in tho first
  couree and announcing that the meal is ready.
  
  A DInner-Party. - Sermce A la Russe. - Adinner-
  pjurty ranks highest among entertainments, and
  time and thought aro required if it is to bo mado
  a succeas. There are prescribed rules for tho
  sending out of tho invitation-s, the arranging
  of the guests, and the manner of serving tho
  dinner (see Etiquette). The most popular way
  of serving a dinner at present is d ^ Russe.
  By this mode all tho carving and serving is done
  from the sido-tablo and none of the dishes are
  placed on tho dining-table itself. It is certainly
  a much more luxurious and pleasant method
  than the old-fashioned stylo of having all tho
  helping done by tho host and hostess, who by
  this means are loft froo to attend to their guests
  and enter more fully into tho conversation. It
  means, however, a more elaborate service a" far
  
  
  as waiting is concerned and one wliich cannot be
  carried out whore there is only one table-maid.
  On the other hand, a dinner of tliis kind is more
  economical as regards food. \Vhon served from
  tho side the quantity can bo more exactly
  calculated and smaller joints can bo supplied,
  whereas if tho dishes aro put on tho tablo they
  must be handsome ones and there must be more
  than sufficient to go round. \Vlien dinner tl la
  Russe is found too troublescime, a compromise
  between the two styles is very often adopted,
  some of tho dishes, such as soup and joints, being
  served from the tablo and entremets handed
  round in the samo manner as the entrees.
  
  A dirmer-party is looked upon by many
  people as a very difficult form of entertainment,
  and they will hesitate to give one for fear of its
  nob being a success.
  
  Certainly when one possesses a handsome
  dinner service, good silver and glass and well-
  trained servants it is a comparatively easy matter,
  but these are conditions which cannot always
  be fulfilled. But still this should not debar
  the housewife of more modest means from the
  pleasure of giving a little dinner-party to her
  friends, as a simple dinner well planned is very
  often more enjoyable than a very formal affair.
  There is no occasion to have things elaborate
  and costly, and if wo as a nation were a little
  loss pretentious in our tastes, pleasant social
  intercourse would be less rare. An invitation
  to a dirmer is always considered a greater com-
  pliment than one to an " At Homo." It is
  an indication of a wish for greater intimacy,
  for dinner-parties serve to place us in closer
  touch with our friends than is the case with
  almost any other social gathering.
  
  If dinner a la Russe is decided on preparations
  should be commenced in good time so that there
  need be no cause for a hurry and bustle at the
  last minute. If special dishes, glass and silver
  are to be ussd for tho occasion tliey should be
  looked out early in tho day and made clean and
  ready for tho table.
  
  Tho setting of tho table is very much tho same
  as for tho more simple meal, only no carving-
  cloths will bo required and no spoons and forks
  for serving tho different dishes.
  
  Some possessors of polished oak and mahogany
  tables have adopted tho fashion of replacing the
  large table-cloth with small mats of fine damask
  and rich lace laid before each guest and below
  the various dishes, but this is by no means a
  prevailing fashion. Another custom is to have
  small tables at which four or six persons can be
  seated instead of one largo tablo, as this is con-
  sidered a little more sociable and conducive of
  conversation.
  
  As regards decoration tho tendency is to have
  it as light as possible, but to have tho damask
  of tho whitest and finest that can be afforded.
  (For Table Decoration, seo p. 253.)
  
  Tho covers mtist not consist of too many
  
  
  THE TABLE
  
  
  241
  
  
  knives and forks - ^it is always better to put
  down others as the meal proceeds than to crowd
  the table in any way - but they must always be
  arranged so that the diner commences with
  those on the outside. The necessary glasses
  must be put at the right-hand side, with the
  highest one placed farthest away to avoid its
  being knocked over. Tlie number of glasses
  vnll depend upon the wines to be served - three
  (sherry, claret, and champagne) is a very usual
  number, and small tumblers should be provided
  for non-wine-drinkers. The serviettes should be
  simply doubled and a small roll or some bread
  sticks laid to each guest. When name cards are
  used they must be clearly written and placed
  beside each cover in such a way as to avoid all
  confusion later. A menu card should be allowed
  for each two or three people. The fruit may or
  may not be placed on the table from the begin-
  ning ; this is entirely a matter of taste, but small
  bon-bon dishes containing salted almonds or
  sweets are generally placed at intervals down
  the table or arranged amongst the decorations.
  
  A good deal will depend on the Ughting of the
  room, and as the table will be the chief attraction
  for the time being, the Ught ought to be centred
  on that while the rest of the room may be in
  shadow. If there is a large centre-light it
  should have a shade corresponding in colour to
  the flowers used or else forming a pleasing con-
  trast. The ploasantest light is perhaps from
  shaded candles or small electric lights placed at
  intervals down the table. If candles are used
  they should be lighted at least fifteen minutes
  before dinner commences in order to ensure
  steady burning.
  
  The sideboard will also require careful pre-
  paration. All wine decanters and extra glasses
  should be placed well to the back, and the dessert
  plates, finger bowls and doyleys, extra knives
  and forks and the like laid neatly in the front.
  When the fruit is not placed on the table that
  also must find a place on the sideboard until
  required. Champagne, hook, and other wines
  that are not decanted should be placed under-
  neath on the floor.
  
  The carving -table is another important item
  in the diner A la Russe. It must be furnished
  with a good light, and everything in the way
  of knives, forks, and spoons must be placed in
  readiness for the carver dixring the different
  courses of the dinner.
  
  The temporatiire of the room must also be
  thought of ; it must be well aired and still
  warm and comfortable. It must be remem-
  bered that the ladies will bo in light attire and
  the room must not strike cliilly. Many a good
  dinner has been spoilt by inattention to this
  point. If windows have to be opened a little
  way it is generally possible by a careful adjust-
  ment of screens to prevent the draught from
  beating down upon the persons seated.
  
  Chairs must be put in position, and the first
  
  
  course, hors d'oeuvres or soup, brought to the
  room before the meal is announced.
  
  A word might be said here about the drawing-
  room fire ; it ought to be one of the maid's duties
  to attend to this and to see that it is not allowed
  to bum too low. A bright fire ought to await
  the guests when they return from dinner.
  
  WAITING AT TABLE
  
  General Directions for Waiting at Dinner. -If a
  
  dinner is to be a success the waiting must be above
  reproach. Perhaps nothing tends so much to spoil
  the good effect of a meal as inferior service ; then,
  no matter how excellent the cooking, nor how
  pretty and dainty the table, the result will not
  be satisfactory. If there are long pauses between
  the courses, if the waitress is clumsy and noisy in
  her movements and inattentive to the needs of
  the company, the finest dinner will be marred.
  
  Even if the meal be but a simple homely one
  with one maid in attendance a mistress should
  make a point of having the service as perfect as
  it is possible, as intelligent and proficient waiting
  at once stamps the orderly and well-regulated
  household.
  
  The maid who waits at table should be neatly
  dressed in a well-brushed black frock and spot-
  less apron, collar and cuffs, and neat cap ; or a
  clean and tidy print gown may take the place
  of the stuff dress at an early dinner or luncheon
  in small households when the maid has house-
  work to do after the meal is served. Her hair
  must be neatly done without any untidy ends
  flying about, and she ought to pay particular
  attention to her hands and nails to keep them
  clean and in good order. If the lighting of fires
  and cleaning of stoves is part of her work she
  ought to be careful to wear gloves for the piorpose,
  as it is almost impossible to remove black-lead
  from the hands when once it has sunk into the
  skin. She ought also to keep the skins of lemons
  to rub on her hands, as this helps to remove any
  stains.
  
  A good waitress must be quick and light in her
  movements and at the same time quiet and gentle.
  Although it is of paramount importance to have
  the courses served quickly one after the other
  there must bo no appearance of hm-ry ; there
  is a happy medium between long waits and rush-
  ing people through, scarcely lea\'ing them time
  to finish what is on their plates. The service
  should be carried on as noiselessly as possible ;
  there mu.st be no clatter of dishes nor rattling of
  knives and forks. The ^waitress must have all
  her wits about her and be ever on the alert to
  see what is wanted, and ready to give her whole
  attention to the work in hand. Forethought is
  another very necessary quality - she ought to
  consider beforehand what will be required for
  the meal so that there need be no unnecessary
  moving about or leaving the room when onoe
  the meal is served.
  
  Q
  
  
  242
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  She must try to cultivate a pleasant and
  gracious manner, being thoughtful for the com-
  fort of those she is serving and ready to fore-
  stall their weuits. She must not take notice
  of any conversation that is going on, nor lot
  a joke or funny story distract her thoughts.
  Should any of tho company happen to bo a
  little peculiar in manner and perhaps depart
  from the orderly rules of beha\'iour, the waitress
  must not appear to observe it, and if at any time
  an accident should occur, such as the spilling of
  a glass of wine or water, she must be ready to put
  the matter right without showing any signs of
  annoyance.
  
  When the meal is ready, the cheurs in their
  places and everytliing in order, the maid ought to
  see that doors leading into all kitchen and back
  premises are shut ; then when the first course
  is placed upon the table the dinner may be
  announced. Tliis may be done either by sound-
  ing a gong, ringing a bell, or by going to the
  drawing-room and saying in a clear voice,
  " Dinner is served " or " Dinner is on the table.
  Madam." The drawing-room door should then
  be left open, and the maid, returning to the
  dining-room, should take up her position there.
  
  When the courses are served from the table,
  as is frequently the case at the ordinary family
  dinner, the waitress should stand on the left-
  liand side of the one who serves and commence
  by removing the cover if one is in use. At
  present tho tendency is to abolish dish covers,
  although in many houses, especially where old-
  fashioned customs prevail, they are still to be
  seen. A cover must be taken oS and tvirned
  Tip quickly to prevent any drops of steam from
  falling on the table-cloth.
  
  A waitress should accustom herself to carry
  two things at a time, one in each hand, as for
  instance a platљ of soup in one hand and a plate
  of crofltons in the other, a plate of tneat in the
  right hand and a vegetable or sauco in the left,
  or a plate of meat in each hand. Vegetable and
  sauces are not placed upon the table when a maid
  is in constant attendance ; they are kept on the
  sideboard and handed - an attentive servant
  will see at once when they are required. If the
  maid leaves the room, she usually puts them
  down on the table after she has passed them
  round.
  
  When a dish is handed round it must be
  held steadily and firmly on a finger napkin and
  at a convenient height, so that the person seated
  may find no difficulty in helping himself. A
  table-spoon or fork and spoon, according to what
  is required, must bo placed in the dish in readiness.
  
  Except at the formal dinner it is customary
  also to ask if a little more meat or pudding, &c.,
  is desired before the plate is removed.
  
  Do not remove a soup tureen nor any dish
  being served until every one at the table has
  finished that particular course.
  
  Soiled plates must be removed at once when
  
  
  finished with ; they should never be allowed to
  remain in front of the person who has used them.
  They must be removed quietly, and care must
  bo taken not to drop the knife or silver. A plate
  may be taken in each hand and they should be
  carried at once to the sideboard, the knives and
  silver placed in the box or basket placed there
  for the purpose, and the plates piled without
  noise one on the top of the other or put into a
  plate-carrier. A tray or basket must never be
  carried roimd the table to receive the knives and
  silver from the plates, although the reverse is
  the case with the dishes from which moat, &c.,
  has been served. A carving-knife and fork
  should never be removed on the dish, as being
  large and heavy they would be very liable to
  fall, but a small tray for the purpose should be
  brought to the table to receive them. The dishes
  themselves must be removed carefully in order
  that no grease or gravy be spilt.
  
  Before sweets and dessert, remove on a small
  tray all cruets and salt-cellars and any knives,
  forks, spoons, and glasses that will not be re-
  quired. Also take away the carving cloth if one
  has been \ised. All crumbs should then be very
  carefully removed from the left-hand side of
  each person seated with a brush or crumb scoop
  on to a small tray or silver waiter.
  
  A waitress must never reach across a person
  seated to put down or remove anything from the
  table, but should walk quietly to the right or
  left-hand side as required.
  
  If any extra knives or silver are required they
  should be put down on the table in thoir proper
  place with the empty plate before the serving of
  a course - they must never be offered on a tray.
  
  If more bread is asked for small pieces should
  be handed in a bread-basket or on a plate. If
  any small condiment is wanted it should be
  handed on a small tray or silver salver.
  
  \Vhen dinner is served in the old-fashioned
  way it is quite possible for one maid who is
  quick and clever to wait upon six or even eighl
  people, although of course the service can be
  better performed when there are two in attend-
  ance, or if some assistance can be given bj'
  dishes being brought from the kitchen to tho
  dining-room door and soiled plates carried away.
  
  If two maids are in attendance, the head
  servant passes round the fish and the second
  follows with tho sauco and other accompani-
  ments ; tho head passes the meat and the second
  the vegetables, and so on. The principal servant
  should never leave the room ; the younger maid
  should inform the cook as soon as a course has
  been served and prepare her to send up the next
  at once. The younger maid should also do tho
  carrying of the dishes to and from the room.
  WTien a maid is single-handed and is obliged
  to bo absent for a short time a member of the
  family usually rings the bell at the end of each
  course.
  
  NoNnces in the art of waiting have sometimes
  
  
  THE TABLE
  
  
  243
  
  
  a little difficulty in knowing at what side a dish
  or plate, &c., should be handed or removed. To
  these the following hints may be iiseful : -
  
  (1) When there is no choice to be made, the
  plate with its contents should be put down at
  the right-hand side of the person seated.
  
  (2) When there is a choice, as for instance
  two different sweets or two different kinds of
  fish, hand these at the left-hand side.
  
  (3) When a dish has to be offered, as in the case
  of a side dish or vegetable, carry it to the left-
  hand side. It is a good rule to remember that
  everything that is offered (except wine) must be
  carried to the left-hand side.
  
  (4) Soiled plates should be removed from the
  right-hand side.
  
  (5) Clean and empty plates are put down at
  the right-hand side.
  
  (6) Wine is offered from the right-hand side
  as the glasses are naturally standing in that
  position.
  
  Precedence In Serving. - At a family dinner the
  lady of the house should be served first unless
  she is carving, then the daughters of the house
  according to age, and the governess, if there is
  one present, and lastly the master of the house
  and the sons according to age.
  
  If only one or two guests are present serve
  them first, commencing with the ladies and the
  principal guest. At a formal dinner-party,
  where there are a number of guests, commence
  with the lady on the right-hand side of the
  host (the principal guest) and continue straight
  round the table irrespective of sex. It is not
  then the custom to serve the ladies before the
  gentlemen. If there ire several maids in
  attendance the two sides of the table may be
  served simultaneously, commencing with the
  lady seated next the host on each side. In the
  case of small tables, the one where the principal
  guests are seated should be served first.
  
  Hired Coolis and Waitresses. - When the staff
  of servants is not sufficiently experienced and a
  large and important party is to be given it is
  sometimes necessary to hire outside assistance.
  Both cooks and waitresses can be hired at the
  principal catering establishments ; or very often
  they can be heard of through private recom-
  mendation, wliich is even better. The usual
  fee for such assistance is from 5s. an evening
  for a waitress, and from 10s. 6d. a dinner for a
  cook.
  
  DRAWING UP A MENU
  
  It requives some skill and experience to make
  a good bill of fare ; any miscellaneous collection
  of good dishes does not necessarily produce a
  first-class menu.
  
  There are several points to bear in mind when
  arranging the dishes for a dinner : -
  
  (1) Dishes thai are in season should be chosen.
  Although many articles, such as vegetables.
  
  
  fruit, and fish, can be had out of their proper
  season, it must be remembered that an ex-
  orbitant price will Kkely be asked for them, and
  even at that they will in all probabiUty be
  wanting in flavour.
  
  (2) There must be variety in flavour, and the
  dishes must follow each other in such a way as
  will please the palate. An insipid dish must
  not directly follow one that is very tasty, and
  if two or three different entrees are served the
  most savoxiry one should come last. Tlie same
  flavouring must not be repeated in two conse-
  cutive dishes.
  
  (3) There must be variety in the method of
  cooking and in the character of the different
  dishes. It would not do for fried cutlets to
  follow fried fish, nor for two braised dishes or
  two grills to come together, and so on. A simple
  dish should be followed by one a little more
  elaborate or vice versd.
  
  (4) There must be variety in colour and
  decoration. The dishes must be pleasing to the
  eye as well as to the palate, there should be no
  sameness, and an element of refinement rather
  than ostentation.
  
  (5) The names of the dishes should be written
  on the menu cards either in French or in EngUsh,
  French is perhaps the more fashionable, but
  this is entirely a question of choice. The names
  of standard dishes should never be altered,
  although more liberty may be taken with the
  names of mede-up dishes.
  
  (6) And, lastly, the powers of the cook and
  the capabilities of the kitchen-range must be
  borne in mind. If the cook is single-handed do
  not attempt too much and do not give her a
  number of dishes that cannot be finished off
  until the last minute. Of course it will always
  be possible to have a certain number of dishes
  sent in from a caterer, but tliis will add con-
  siderably to the expense, and in the end there is
  notliing better than good cooking well done at
  home. An important point is to give the cook
  plenty of notice and explicit directions as to
  what will be required.
  
  The different courses of a complete menu will
  comprise the following : - ^hors d'ceu\Tes, potage,
  poisson, entries, relev6, sorbet, roti, entremets,
  dessert, oaf6.
  
  Hors d'(Euvres. - These consist of small
  appetising morsels usually served cold, such
  as oysters, oUves, anchovies, ca\nare, smoked
  salmon, small salads, thin slices of sausage, &c.
  They may either be served plain or made up in
  some more elaborate style. Small plain biscuits
  or thin brown bread and butter may accompany
  the plain hors d'oeuvTcs.
  
  Potage (Soup). - Either one or two soups may
  be served. If only one it is preferable to have
  it clear or of a very light character, especially
  if there are a number of courses to follow. If
  there are two soups one may bo thick and the
  other clear.
  
  
  2U
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Poisson (Fish). - This may either be plainly
  boiled with a sauco or dressed in a more elaborate
  fashion, or there may be one dish of each.
  
  Entries. - These may come either before or
  aft^T the rclev6 ; in fact, they can bo served
  between any of the courses or omitted alto-
  gether. They consist of various kinds of made
  dishes and ought to be served very daintily. If
  more than one is served one might be brown
  and the other white, or one might be hot and the
  other cold.
  
  Relev6 (or Remove). - ^This consists of a solid
  joint cither roasted, boiled, or braised, and a
  garnish generally gives the characteristic name.
  One vegetable besides potatoes is usually served
  with the remove.
  
  Sorbet. - A half - frozen water ice which is
  served in cups immediately after the roast.
  
  Roti. - Roast game or poultry visually served
  with salad and chip potatoes.
  
  Entremets. - Tliese may be divided into three
  classes - ( 1 ) dressed vegetables (legumes) ; (2) sweet
  entremets, both hot and cold ; (3) savouries,
  which precede the dessert and are usually hot.
  
  Dessert. - Fruits of variovis kinds and pctits
  fours or other fancy biscuits.
  
  Coffee. - This must be black - cream being
  sers'ed separately.
  
  In a small dinner some of these courses would
  be omitted. The number of dishes depends
  entirely upon the style of the dinner ; it may
  consist of three or four or of eleven or twelve.
  For instance, the hors d'oeu\Te3 and sorbet are
  seldom given at a small dinner, and either the
  relev6 or the rOti would be omitted. One
  sweet might follow the last meat course to be
  followed by a cheese dish or other savoury.
  Ices may either be served in place of a cold
  sweet, or they may form a separate course after
  the savoury.
  
  HINTS ON SERVING THE DIFFERENT
  COURSES
  
  Hors d'CEuvres. - These are frequently placed
  on tho plato before dinner is announced -
  especially in the case of oysters - or a choice of
  several kinds is offered on a small tray.
  
  Soup. - If the soup is served from the side and
  tho dinner consists of numerous coiu^es, three-
  quarters of a ladleful will bo sufficient to give
  as a helping. If there are two different soups,
  the waitress should take a plate of each and
  offer a choice ; if only one she should take a
  plate of soup in one hand and a plate of croutons
  or pulled bread in tho other. Parmesan cheese
  may also bo served with clear soup.
  
  Fish. - The waitress should take a portion of
  fish in the right hand and the sauce or other
  accompanimei.t in the left. If there is a choice
  she should take a portion of each kind and tho
  accompaniments would be offered by a second
  waitress.
  
  
  Entries. - A hot or cold plate as required must
  first bo put down to each person, and it must be
  seen that they have the necessary knives and
  forks. The entree must then be handed with a
  spoon and fork in readiness in the dish. Entrees
  are alwaj's handed, no matter how simple the
  dinner.
  
  Joints and Game. - Unless these have been
  carved beforehand, the head waitress must bo
  able to help them neatly from tho side and serve
  them out in small portions, wliich must bo
  handed round followed by their various accom-
  paniments.
  
  Salad. - A small salad plate should bo put to
  the left of each guest before the salad is carried
  round. The salad itself should be mixed at the
  side or in the kitchen and handed in the bowl
  with the salad spoon and fork in readiness. If
  not partaken of the special plate should be
  removed.
  
  Sweets and other Entremets aro usually
  handed in the same way as entries, a hot or
  cold plate with necessary fork or spoon and fork
  being put before each guest previously. In the
  case of any sweet requiring cutting, such as
  tart, tliis would be served out in portions from
  the side.
  
  Cheese. - It is not customary to serve plain
  cheese at a formal dinner, but when it is wished
  it is usually handed in a dish with different
  divisions containing cheese in small pieces,
  butter, and one or two different kinds of biscmts.
  A small plate and knife would be put down to
  each guest before the dish is handed.
  
  Dessert. - The table should be cleared of
  crumbs and all unnecessary glasses, &c., before
  dessert is served. Unless the fx-uit has not been
  on the table during the dinner it should now
  be put down, and a dessert plate with a doyley
  and finger bowl, along with a fruit knife and
  fork, should be placed before each guest. If ices
  are served in tliis course thoy should be served
  first and the ice plates removed before tho fruit
  is handed. Each kind of fruit must \y offered
  in turn and then replaced on tho table.
  
  It is not usual to offer a second helping of any
  of the courses at a formal dinner. (For the
  Ser^-ing of Wine, see p. 248.)
  
  CARVING AND SERVING
  
  Although at tho present time the formal
  dinner is always served A la Russe, when all
  carving and serving is done at tho side-table or
  in tho kitchen, tho art of carving is still required
  at family repasts.
  
  Every lady ought to know how to carve ; in
  fact, it would bo a good thing if even the young
  people in the house took turns in perfornxing
  this duty ; they would not then feel at a loss
  when they came to have homes of their own or
  when called upon to talce tho place of their
  parents.
  
  
  THE TABLE
  
  
  245
  
  
  The art of carving can only be learnt by
  practice ; some instruction may no doubt be
  given in a book, and a beginner may also learn
  from watching an expert carver, but proficiency
  can only come by actually doing the work
  oneself.
  
  To begin with there must be some knowledge
  of the anatomy of the various joints, of the
  relative position of bones, joints, muscles, and
  fat, and also which are the choicest portions.
  The most satisfactory way of learning this is
  to take the chance when opportunity occurs of
  studying the various pieces of meat off the
  table. In the case of game or poultry, for
  instance, the bird might be cut up in its raw
  state for a fricassee or stew and a point made
  of examining the different joints.
  
  Carving does not require much physical
  strength ; in fact, any undue effort or exhibition
  of exertion only shows want of skill or bad
  implements : the really clever carver is able to
  cut up the most difficult joints with perfect ease.
  
  One must first of all learn to carve neatly
  without splasliing the gravy over the cloth or
  pieces of meat beyond the dish, and then to cut
  straight and uniform sUces so that the joint may
  not be made to look untidy and jagged, but
  inviting enough to tempt one to desire another
  helping, or, if large enough to appear at another
  moal, it may do so wearing a presentable appear-
  ance. A number of cut surfaces only allow the
  escape of juice and tend to make the joint
  flavourless. Bad carving is always wasteful,
  but the good carver will cut in such a way as to
  make every portion inviting and full of flavoiir.
  
  Both the butcher anl the cook can do much
  to facilitate the work of the carver - in the case
  of a loin of mutton or veal, for instance, neat
  car\dng would be impossible unless the butcher
  had performed his part of well jointing between
  the ribs. The cook, too, should see that all
  skewers, pieces of string, &c., are removed. The
  size of the dish on which the joint is served is
  also important. It must be large enough not
  only to hold the joint when whole, but also to
  allow room for several cut portions when they
  are detached. Some people prefer to have a
  separate dish for the cut portions, and these
  can, if liked, be handed round. It is a mistake
  to put a garnish on any meat which requires
  carving at table, and the less gravy there is the
  easier it will be for the one who is serving. An
  extra supply can always be served separately
  in a sauce-boat. The dish must always be
  placed near enough the carver to allow of her
  reaching it without any difficulty, and the
  chair on which she is seated ought to be high
  enough to allow her to have perfect control
  over her work without the necessity of standing.
  Some will find it easier to be raised on a firm
  cusliion.
  
  The sharpness of the knife is another very
  important matter. It must always be sharpened
  
  
  before dinner and never at the table, where the
  performance is most trying to people's nerves.
  It should have a handle that can be grasped
  easily and a long thin blade of a size adapted to
  the article to be served. A carving-knife should
  never be used for anything but its one legitimate
  purpose. There are different kinds of knives
  sold for the purpose, as, for instance, a meat
  carver, a slicer, a breakfast carver, a game knife,
  and game scissors ; but if means are limited and
  only one general carver can be afforded, choose
  one made of the best steel one and a half inches
  wide at its broadest part and from eight to ten
  inches long.
  
  The carving fork should have two long prongs
  and a good guard to protect the fingers. The
  hand should be hold over the handle of the fork
  with the palm downwards and the first finger
  extended. Insert the fork deep enough into the
  meat to enable you to hold it firmly in position.
  The knife also should generally be held firmly
  and then applied lightly. There will be less
  gravy squeezsed out if the pressure on the meat
  is not too heavy. Both knife and fork must be
  held in a natural manner and not grasped as if
  they were weapons ; the cutting must be sharp
  and clean, never jagged Uke a saw. All meat
  should be cut across the grain with the exception
  of saddle of mutton.
  
  The carver mvist try to make a fair distribution
  of the different cuts and bear in mind individual
  likes and disHkes. As a rule, one small slice
  is sufficient to serve to a lady and two small or
  one large to a gentleman, but the quantity must
  be regulated somewhat by the number of courses
  in the dinner. If there is onlj' one joint on the
  table and there are ladies and gentlemen present,
  she should try to regulate the helpings so that
  a smaller portion is served to the ladies. If
  there is more than one dish to choose from
  the portions should be made equal and rather
  small in size.
  
  Never ask a guest before begiiuiing to carve
  to make a choice between two different dishes,
  but help the dishes first and then make the
  inqmry, otherwise they might feel that it was
  being cut into solely for them.
  
  The following notes on the carving of some of
  the principal joints indicate the general method
  adopted, but these rules need not be hard and
  fast, and clever carvers very soon acquire their
  own style.
  
  BEEF
  
  Sirloin of Beef. - ^This joint should be placed
  with the back bono or tliickest end at the left-
  hand side of the dish. Although it is \isual to
  carve the undercut first, as tlais is one of the
  primest cuts when hot, the joint is served with
  this piece underneath and the carver raises it
  and turns it over. The undercut should be cut
  across in fairly thick slices C to D and a small
  
  
  246
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  portion of fat served with each. The upper part
  should be cut in long slices parallel with the ribs
  A to B. The slices should be as thin as possible
  
  
  Sirloin of Beef.
  
  without being ragged, and the point of the knife
  sliould be inserted to loosen the slices from the
  bone.
  
  Ribs of Beet. - This joint should be carved in
  the same way as the upper part of the sirloin.
  There is no undercut.
  
  Round of Beef or Rolled Ribs. - A thin-bladed
  and very sharp knife is required for tliis. First
  cut rather a tliick slice ofi the ovitside to make
  the top surface even and then continue cutting
  thin slices right across the joint.
  
  Ox Tongue. - As the centre is the choicest
  portion, the tongue should be cut through tliree
  or four inches from the top and thin slices cut
  from both ends. A small piece of the fat which
  lies near the root might be served with each
  portion.
  
  MUTTON AND LAMB
  
  Leg of Mutton. - Place this joint on the dish
  with the thickest part lying towards the outside
  of the dish and the small end to the left. The
  carving is not difficult and it is always done in
  the same way. Insert the fork in the thickest
  part and raise the joint slightly towards you.
  Then cut several slices of medium thickness
  through the thickest part and right down to the
  bone B to A. Next slip the knife along underneath
  
  
  Leg of MnttoD.
  
  the slices and detach them from the rest. Some
  prefer a piece from the upper end and others
  one nearer the knuckle, as the moat is usually
  better done towards the thin end, and one of the
  tswtiest morsels lies quite close to the knuckle
  or lower joint. A small piece of fat which lies
  underneath the thick end should be served with
  ea"h portion. When the thick side of the meat
  is finished, slices should bo cut from the other
  Bide in the same v/ay.
  
  
  Loin of Mutton and Lamb. - This cut must be
  thoroughly well jointed by the butcher or it
  will be found most difficult to carve. It will
  be well also to examine it before cooking, and,
  if necessary, joint any part that has been
  forgotten. Place the joint on the dish with
  the thick part towards tho outside. Insert the
  
  
  Forequarter of Lamb.
  
  knife between the bones and cut right tlirough,
  sepsirating all the cutlets in the same manner.
  If there is a kidney a piece of it should be
  served with each portion.
  
  Saddle of Mutton should be placed on the
  dish with the tail end to the left. Insert tho
  fork firmly in tho middle and carve across the
  ribs in long slices running parallel with the
  backbone. Then slip the knife under and de-
  tach the slices from the ribs. If too long they
  may be cut across in two or three pieces. A
  small piece of crisp fat from the lower part of
  the ribs may be served with each portion.
  
  Shoulder of Mutton. - This is one of the most
  difficult joints to carve. Serve with the skin
  side uppermost on the dish. Insert the fork in
  the fleshy part and raise the joint slightly from
  the dish. Take as many slices as possible from
  
  
  Slioulder of Mutton,
  
  the side A and B to C, cutting in each case right
  through to the bono. The meat lying on each
  side of the blado-bono on tho upper side of the
  joint should next be cut, carv-ing the whole
  length of tho meat from tho knuckle end.
  
  Then turn tho joint and take slices off the
  under-side. The under-part is the Juiciest and
  most delicate part, and is frequently cut before
  the upper portion.
  
  Forequarter of Lamb. - ^This is another some-
  what troublesome joint to carve. The first
  point to attend to is to raise the shoulder from
  the ribs and breast. Insert the fork in the
  most fleshy part of the shoulder and with the
  knife cut round as 8ho\Tn by dotted Une C.
  Raise up the shoulder on the fork and cut it
  
  
  THE TABLE
  
  
  247
  
  
  away without removing too much of the meat
  from underneath. The shoulder portion should
  be carved in the same manner as a shoulder of
  mutton, but unless the whole joint is required
  for one meal it is usual to have tlus put aside on
  
  
  Loin of Pork.
  
  a separate dish and served cold. Cut the under
  portion across, separating the ribs from the
  breast. Divide the ribs one from the other, A to
  B, and cut the breast in slices. A smaJl portion
  of each may be served to each person.
  
  VEAL
  
  Fillet of Veal. - This should be carved in thin
  even sUces in the same way as a round of beef.
  If there is stuffing a small quantity should be
  served with each portion.
  
  Loin of Veal. - Carve in the same way as loin
  of mutton unless the cutlets are very large, when
  they may be cut in slices like ribs of beef.
  
  Knuckle of Veal. - Carve in the same way as
  a leg of mutton.
  
  PORK
  
  Leg of Pork. - Carve in the same way as a
  leg of mutton, serving a piece of the crisp fat
  and a small quantity of stuffing, if there is any,
  to each person.
  
  Loin of Pork. - Carve in slices from A to B,
  separating the cutlets between the bones in the
  same way as the loin of mutton.
  
  Sucking Pig. - This is generally sent to table
  cut in half down the centre and with the head
  cut off with one piece laid at each side. First
  cut off the four legs from the carcase and then
  separate the ribs into small cutlets. It is all
  good, and it is just a matter of choice which part
  is served.
  
  Ham. - If the ham is sent to table whole, the
  thickest part should be placed towards the outer
  side of the dish. Take a very sharp knife and
  make an incision through the thickest part and
  right down to the bone. Continue cutting in
  very tliin slices towards both ends of the ham
  and serve a fair amount of fat with each portion.
  
  A more economical way of carving a ham is
  to comtiience at the knuckle end and cut off
  thin shces working towards the thicker part.
  \Vhen the bone begins to look unsightly it can
  be sawn off.
  
  GAME AND POULTRY
  
  Fowl (Roast or Boiled). - The fowl should be
  placed on the dish with the logs to the loft-hand
  
  
  side. Insert the fork deeply across the breast-
  bone so that it takes a firm hold. First remove
  the wing on the side nearest you by cutting
  through the skin and shaving o2 a thin slice of
  the breast towards the wing joint. Then with
  the point of the knife sever the joint from the
  carcase. Next remove the leg on the same side
  by making a downward cut between the thigh
  and the body. Bend the leg over and sever
  the joint with the point of the knife. Now cut
  the meat from the breast in thin slices and the
  whole length of the bird B to A. The fork shoxild
  never be moved from its original position, and
  the necessary carving should be finished before
  beginning to serve.
  
  If the family is small and the whole fowl is
  not required the second side may be left, and if
  the bare piece of carcase is cut away and the
  half fowl served bone downwards on a dish with
  a nice garnish of parsley or salad, it will make
  quite a nice-looking dish. If, however, the
  whole fowl is reqviired, remove the wish-bone
  from the nock in front of the breast-bone by
  inserting the point of the knife at the end.
  Then turn the bird round and carve the second
  side in exactly the same way as the first, and
  
  
  Boast FowL
  
  finally turn the carcase over and remove the
  oyster, a small dark portion which lies near the
  centre of the side bones. The wing and the
  breast are considered the finest parts.
  
  Turkey. - This is carved in very much the
  same way as a fowl, only if it is large and the
  whole is not required it is usual to commence
  with the breast and to cut slices from that
  before remo^dng the legs and wings. \\Tien the
  legs are cut off they should be di\'ided in two at
  the joint and then out in slices, as they make
  too large portions by themselves. If the bird
  is stuffed a small quantity of the force-meat
  should be served with each portion.
  
  Goose. - Serve the bird with the neck at the
  left-hand side of the dish. As the breast is the
  best part it is xisual to carve this first and not
  to use the legs and wings the first day unless
  they are required. Insert the fork in the centre
  over the ridge of the breast -bono and out the
  breast in thin parallel slices, commencing at the
  
  
  248
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  wing and continuing until the breast-bone is
  reached. Tlien slip the knife under and detach
  them from the bono. Remove the legs and
  wings in the same waj' as from a fowl. If thero
  is sago and onion farce inquire of each one if
  a small helping is agreeable, or hand it round
  separately.
  
  Roast Duck. - Car\-e in the same way as
  roast goose.
  
  Pigeon. - The usual plan to adopt is to cut
  the bird right tlirough the middle into two equal
  parts. If these are too large they may be cut
  through again into quarters.
  
  Partridge and Grouse should be carved in the
  same way as pigeon, a piece of toast being
  served with each portion.
  
  Small birds, such as snipe, landrail, ortolan,
  are usually served whole or may be cut in two
  for ladies.
  
  FISH
  
  A silver or plated fish knife and fork or fish
  carvers ought to be used for serving fish. A steel
  knife should never be used or the flavour of the
  fish \viU bo spoiled. Care should be taken not
  to break the flakes more than is necessary and
  to serve as little bone as possible.
  
  Cod or Salmon. - The fish should be placed on
  the dish with the tluck part of the back towards
  the further side. Carve in fairly thick slices
  right through to the centre bone, then slip the
  knife underneath and detach them. ^Vhen the
  top part is finished remove the bone and cut
  through tho lower portion in the same manner.
  
  Turbot and Brill are both served in the same
  way. First cut through the thickest part of the
  fish right doNvn to the back bone. Commence
  at the head end and continue to the tail. Then
  cut slices across from the centre towards the
  sides of the fish and detach them from the bone.
  Part of the fins and a Uttle of the gelatinous skin
  should be served with each portion.
  
  Sole. - Cut through the whole length of the
  thick part and then raise the fillet from each
  side. Then remove the bono and separate tho
  other side into two fillets.
  
  Plaice. - If largo carve in the same way as a
  turbot ; if small according to directions given
  for sole.
  
  Small fish aro either served whole or cut in
  two pieces.
  
  SERVING OF WINES
  
  In former times it was considered tho correct
  thing to serve a different kind of wine with each
  course, and the choice was very complicated,
  but nowadays the number has been much re-
  duced, and it is quite usual to servo only one
  or two kinds throughout the whole meal.
  
  When wine is offered it must be good of its
  kind; poor cooking is bad enough, but cheap
  
  
  wine is even worse, being at times almost poison-
  ous. People with limited means should not give
  champagne or sparkling hock, which in a cheap
  form are very deleterious, but let them rather
  be content in offering some other wine less ex-
  pensive and yet good of its kind, such as clarst,
  sherry, or some light wliite wine.
  
  When one is in doubt as to what wine to buy
  or what brand to get, the best plan is to consult
  a reliable wine-dealer, as it is impossible for an
  amateur to know all the different brands and
  their distinctive qualities.
  
  For a simple informal dinner it is very custo-
  mary to give a good claret or burgundy and
  a good sherry or some Ught white wine. For
  a formal dinner champagne or hock is usually
  given either alone or with other wines.
  
  If a variety of wines is given the following is
  the usual order in which they are served : -
  
  Sherry with soup, champagne with the first
  entr6e and throughout the meal ; sherry and
  claret at dessert, and liqueurs with the ices and
  after coffee. Sometimes a wlute RMne wine,
  chablis, or sauterne is offered with fish or with
  oysters when they commence the meal.
  
  At luncheon one wine is usually sufficient,
  such as claret, burgundy, or hock. Cliampagne
  is rarely given. Wliisky and soda may be offered
  if gentlemen are present.
  
  At supper sherry, claret and hock, or cham-
  pagne may be offered, or one wine only.
  
  Claret should always be decanted when vised
  for dessert - at other times it is a question of
  taste. Both claret and burgundy should be
  warmed to the temperature of the room. The
  best way to do tliis is to allow them to stand in
  a warm dining-room some houi's before they are
  required ; or if wanted in a hurry to stand the
  bottle in a pail of warm water for a short time.
  These wines will not keep long after the bottle
  has boon opened.
  
  Sherry and port should always be decanted,
  and this should be done carefully and some time
  before the wine is required, so as to allow any
  sediment to sink to the foot of the decanter.
  
  Port and Madeira are little used, espccir.Uy at
  large dinners, although they may be served
  with dessert or with a cheese course at the end
  of a dinner. A fine Madeira sometimes takes
  the place of sherry at the soup course.
  
  Champagne is generally served from the
  bottle. A serviette should be wxapped round
  the bottle, or held beneath the neck after tho
  wine has boon poured out to prevent the drops
  falling on the cloth. It ought to be very cold,
  and in hot weather it is customary to stand the
  bottles in ice for two hours before using. Metal
  pails are sold for tho purpose, and these are filled
  with a mixture of broken ice and salt. A dry
  cliampagne is the favourite, the sweet brands
  being little used, except sometimes for ladies.
  Hock and Moselle are not decanted ; they should
  bo drunk at a temperature of about 40№ Fahr.
  
  
  THE TABLE
  
  
  249
  
  
  Decanters of wine are nob put on the table at
  a formal dinner until dessert is served, when
  claret and sherry can be placed in front of the
  host.
  
  To open champagne or other sparkling wines,
  first cut the wire with a pair of chamipagne
  nippers and then cut the strings. Hold the
  bottle in a slanting position and remove the cork
  slowly and carefully. The bottle must be held
  on the slant until the wine has been poured
  out. Wlien drawing ordinary bottles care must
  be taken not to break the cork ; the corkscrew
  should be screwed into the middle of the cork
  as straight as possible. A lever corkscrew is
  best.
  
  Wine should always be poured out at the
  right-hand side of the person seated, and poured
  out very carefully. When handing champagne
  at a dinner it is usual to ask in the first instance
  if it is desired, but when handing it later the
  glass should be refilled without any comment.
  
  Liqueurs are always served in small Uqueur
  glasses on a silver tray or liqueur stand and
  handed at the left-hand side.
  
  jMineral waters and lemonade should be at
  hand at all meals, as so many do not take ■wine.
  Barley water too is a favourite and fasluonable
  drink, especially among ladies, and is often
  served at luncheon.
  
  Brandy or wliisky and soda may be in readi-
  ness at informal meals where men are present.
  These spirits should always be decanted.
  
  When stout or ale is taken the bottle should
  be opened at the sideboard and then poured out
  carefully and slowly, holding the bottle at an
  angle so that the glass may be filled with ale and
  not froth. It should then be handed on a silver
  waiter. If it is draught ale it should be poured
  out briskly and then slowly from a jug in order
  to give it a head.
  
  BREAKFAST
  
  The service of the breakfast-table does not
  alter much, and whether the meal be simple or
  elaborate the mode of lajang the table remains
  very much the same. Although there are no
  hard-and-fast rules as in the case of the formal
  dinner, as much daintiness should be observed
  in the setting of the breakfast-table.
  
  In large houses this meal is usually set in the
  morning-room and not in the dining-room and
  at an hour to suit the habits of the household.
  In all cases it must be served early enough to
  permit of those who have special work to perform
  to take their meal quietly and without hurry.
  This is especially necessary in the case of cliil-
  dren having to go off to school. The seeds of
  indigestion have often been sewn even in cliild-
  hood by having to swallow this meal in a hurry.
  
  Both table and sideboard must be covered with
  a cloth, sometimes a plainer one than that used
  for dinner ; any decoration most be of the very
  
  
  simplest - a pretty plant or fern, or a few flowers
  in vases will be all that are required.
  
  The usual plan is to place the tea or coffee
  or both at one end of the table in front of the
  hostess along with the necessary accompaniments
  of sugar and milk, the required number of cups
  and saucers and a jug or kettle of hot water.
  Everything must be within easy reach for serv-
  ing, and hot articles should be placed on silver
  or china stands.
  
  At the other end would be placed any dishes
  that were being served and the necessary plates.
  If there is a choice of dishes cold dishes such
  as ham, tongue, or cold pie are usually placed
  on the sideboard and served from there. WTien
  boiled eggs are served they are put on an egg-
  stand or in a folded ser\-iette or lined basket to
  keep them warm. Butter and jam or marmalade
  should also find a place on the breakfast-table,
  the former neatly rolled or made up in pats
  in the butter dishes, and the latter tidily served
  in jam dishes or fancy pots.
  
  Different kinds of bread woiild also be served
  according to taste, such as rolls and scones
  (white or brown), toast, oatcakes, cut white and
  brown bread, &c. Tliese must be served on
  bread plates with doyleys vmderneath. If a
  loaf of bread is reqiiired as well it is usually
  placed on the bread platter on the sideboard
  and cut as required.
  
  Fruit either stewed or raw is also becoming a
  recognised addition to the breakfast-table, the
  kind varying according to the season of the year.
  
  Wlien cereal foods, such as porridge, grape-
  nuts, quaker oats, bread and milk, &c., are
  wanted, they must be daintily served - some of
  the pretty bowls or fire-proof dishes now sold
  are very suitable for the purpose.
  
  Tlie other appointments of the table will
  depend on the number of persons and the special
  dishes being served. A small plate and knife
  and serviette must be put to each place and
  the necessary knives, forks, and spoons for the
  different dishes. Pro^^ision must also be made for
  any dish that is to be served, not forgetting such
  things as cruets, butter knives, jam spoons, &c.
  
  A table-heater is a most useful article to have
  for the breakfast - table, especially in houses
  
  
  The "Heatorboil
  
  
  where the meal is a prolonged one. By this
  means dishes can be kept weirm, and if the
  heater has a sliding top, as in the " Heatorboil,"
  as shown in illustration, it can be utilised for
  boiling eggs or a Uttle water as well.
  
  
  250
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  As a rule, there is no waiting done at break-
  fast, so that it is all the more important that
  the table be set carefully and that nothing is
  forgotten.
  
  Variety of Food. - Perhaps there is no meal
  at which variety is more necessary than at
  breakfast, but m many middle-class houses it
  is made a most monotonous and uninteresting
  repast. Tlus may be due partly to the early
  hour at wliich the meal is served, but it is also
  the result of want of thought or resourcefulness
  on the part of the cook or housewife. Elaborate
  dishes are not required ; in fact, they would be
  out of place ; what is wanted is simple tasty
  dishes nicely served - always remembering that
  what pleases the eye helps also to please the
  palate. It is well as far as possible to choose
  for breakfast such dishes as can either be pre-
  pared the night before or will take little time to
  get ready in the morning.
  
  Besides such well-known favourites as ham,
  eggs, bacon, fried fish, fried sausages, &c., the
  dishes deteuled below, recipes for which will be
  found in the Guide to Cookery (pp. 116 to 235),
  might be quoted : -
  
  Cod's roe, fish cakes, fish curry, fish cutlets,
  steamed fish pudding, scalloped fish, smoked
  haddock balls, herring au gratin, pickled herring,
  fish pies (various), tripe with tomatoes, grilled
  kidneys, sheep's tongues, brawn, jellied veal,
  calf's liver, calves' brains, calves' feet, galantine
  of veal, cold meat shape, meat scallops, glared
  beef roll, chicken and spaghetti, potted fish and
  meat, rissoles and croquettes, cold pie, various
  eg-g flishes and omelets, stewed mushrooms, nut
  rissoles.
  
  If more suggestions as to what to give are
  required, the housewife would do well to supply
  herself with the little volume entitled " Break-
  fast Dishes," published by T. C. and E. C. Jack.
  
  Tea and Coffee. - It is very important that the
  tea and coffee for breakfast should be well made
  and served very hot, and the few hints given
  below for the use of the novice in the art of tea
  and coffee-making may not be out of place.
  
  Tea. - Half fill the teapot with boiling water,
  let it stand a minute or two until thoroughly
  hot, then empty it. Put in the requisite quantity
  of tea (the old rule of a level teaspoon for each
  person and one over is a good one, but for a
  number a smaller proportion may be allowed),
  and pour on, gently enough, boiling water to half
  fill the teapot. Take the teapot to the kettle,
  and never the kettle to the teapot. Cover with
  a cosy or let it stand in a warm place to infuse
  for three minutes, then fill up the teapot and
  pour out the tea. Tea is never good if allowed
  to stand too long, and the use of a tea-cosy is
  to bo deprecated if it is employed to keep tea
  hot for a long time until it becomes black and
  bitter. If the tea has to be kept hot for any
  length of time, it should be poured off the leaves
  into another teapot, or some teapots are fitted
  
  
  with an inner case which contains the leaves,
  and which can be removed when the tea has
  infused sufficiently.
  
  When sugar and milk or cream are used, they
  should be put into the teacup before the toa.
  The addition of milk makes the tea more whole-
  some, that of sugar less so.
  
  Coffee. - ^To get good coffee is often one of the
  difficulties of the housekeeper, and yet it need
  not be so. The making of it is very simple. It
  just requires some nicety and care.
  
  Coffee to be good should be freshly roasted
  and freshly ground. When tliis cannot be done
  at home, it should be bought in very small
  quantities and kept in a tin box with a tight-
  fitting lid.
  
  If pure coffee is wanted chicory must not bo
  used. Chicory imparts a slight bitterness to the
  coffee and darkens the colour, and some people
  prefer coffee with it. The usual proportions are
  two ounces chicory to one pound coffee. The
  water, as for tea, must be freshly boiled. It is
  also important to have the coffee-pot very clean.
  
  Tliere are many different kinds of cafetiores,
  and some of them are more compUcated than
  others, but for ordinary purposes the simple
  tin or china cafetiere with percolator answers
  very well and requires no spirit-lamp.
  
  First fill the cafetiere with boiling water, let
  it stand until thoroughly heated, and pour the
  water away. Then put in the reqviired amount
  of coffee - the quantity will vary according to
  the taste of the consumer ; but a very good
  proportion is one table-spoonf\il coffee to each
  half-pint of boiling water. Pour the boiling
  water gently and gradually over the coffee, and
  let it filter slowly through. Keep the pot stand-
  ing in a warm place, and serve as hot as possible.
  Coffee to be good must be hot. If there is no
  percolator attached to the coffee-pot, it is a good
  plan to have an iron ring made to fit the top of
  the coffee-pot inside. To this ring sew a muslin
  bag, and fit the bag into the pot. Pour some
  boiling water through it, and when it is well
  warmed pour the water away. Put the coffee
  into the bag and proceed as before.
  
  Coffee can also be made in a jug. Heat the
  jug thoroughly with boiling water and pour the
  water away. Put the coffee into the jug, and
  stand it on the top of the stove for a few minutes
  until the coffee is hot. Then pour the proper
  quantity of boiling water over it and stir with
  a spoon. Cover the jug with a lid or thickly
  folded cloth, and let it stand by the side of the
  stove for fifteen minutes. Have the jug or pot
  in which the coffee has to be served made very
  hot. Stretch a piece of muslin over it and
  strain the coffee through.
  
  When milk is served with coffee it should be
  scalded but not quite boiled. The proportions
  are equal quantities of strong coffee and milk,
  or two-thirds milk to one-third of coffee. A
  little cream may be added.
  
  
  THE TABLE
  
  
  251
  
  
  LUNCHEONS
  
  There are several different kinds of luncheons,
  and the manner of serving them is more varied
  and less formal than that of the late dinner.
  
  First there is the simple meal of two or three
  courses, which serves as the dinner of the chil-
  dren of the family and also that of the servants.
  
  Then there is the still simpler meal partaken
  of by those who look forward to a more sub-
  stantial meal in the evening and consisting of
  some egg or vegetable dish, or perhaps some
  made-up meat dish, cold meat, or the remains
  of dinner of the night before, along with a little
  fruit, cheese, and perhaps a cup of coffee.
  
  And, lastly, there is the rather more formal
  luncheon, very similar to the late dinner, but
  with fewer courses and simpler ceremony.
  
  The mid-day dinner has already been described
  under " Home Dinners," and requires no further
  comment.
  
  The luncheon proper is a more or less informal
  meal according to the style of the house and
  customs of the family. As a rule all the dishes
  are served from the table, the waitress only
  passing the plates and handing any vegetable.
  The plates would also be changed by the maid
  in attendance, but any other service is generally
  performed by members of the family themselves,
  unless there is a good staff of servants.
  
  A more formal luncheon would be served
  d la Russe, but this is only suited to large
  establishments, as one or two maids would
  require to be in constant attendance. The
  decorations should be very simple and menu
  and name cards aro not necessary. Long
  luncheons consisting of many courses are not
  liked, and the dishes should be lighter than for
  a dinner.
  
  When soup is on the menu it is frequently
  served in cups instead of soup plates, and small
  racks of toast should be suppUed as well as
  bread.
  
  Entrees of different kinds frequently take the
  place of more substantial joints which require
  carving, and the sweets should be simple in
  character, or some novelty in the way of pastry
  or French gdteaux might be offered. Dessert
  may be omitted if it makes the service too long,
  but a few little dishes of bon-bons or salted
  almonds may be placed on the table as at dinner.
  
  The table is not cleared at dessert, and fruit
  plates are used without finger glasses. Black
  coffee is usually handed at the table after the
  last course has been served.
  
  AFTERNOON TEA
  
  Tills can scarcely be called a meal, but rather
  a light refreshment taken in the afternoon to
  break the fast between luncheon and late
  dinner. It is usuallj' served in the drawing-
  room between four and five o'clock, and although
  
  
  unceremoniotis in character, it is one of the most
  social and popular events of the day, and the
  taste and refinement of the hostess are readily
  recognised in the manner in which it is served.
  Everything should be as dainty and attractive
  as possible.
  
  The tea itself should be of the best that can
  be afforded and must be well made (see p. 250).
  The question as to what special tea to use is
  entirely a matter of taste - China tea is much
  appreciated by many people, and it is light and
  refreshing, but it is an acquired taste and not
  liked by every one, so that when tea is to be
  offered to a mixed company whose individual
  tastes are not known, it is safer to use a good
  blended tea wdth no pronounced flavour.
  
  The beauty and deUcacy of the china is also
  important, and it is usual to have small thin
  cups and saucers of some dainty design with
  teaspoons of a suitable size. All the silver must
  be very bright. Plates are not as a rule required,
  unless cream cakes or other similar dainties are
  being offered - when used they m\ist be qviite
  small in size.
  
  The hostess should try to study novelty and
  variety in the cakes or bread offered, and nothing
  of a large or clumsy nature must be seen.
  Plain bread, either brown or white, should be
  buttered and sliced very thinly and cut in any
  shape desired, or, for a change, it may be made
  up in little rolls. Scones and tea-cakes are best
  hot butter jd and served in a muffin dish or in a
  folded doyley. Different kinds of small sand-
  wiches might also be served (see p. 187), and
  there must always be a nice choice of cakes.
  Petits-fours and other fancy biscuits of various
  sorts are also favourites, as they are dry and not
  hkely to soil the gloves.
  
  All the bread plates should be covered with
  pretty doyleys or lace-edged papers ; the latter
  is better for placing under any cake that has
  to be cut. The tea should be prepared in the
  pantry or kitchen. If the tray is not of silver
  cover it with a dainty white tray-cloth, then
  arrange the cups and saucers, sugar basin, slopr
  basin and cream jug on it, and have the plates
  of bread and butter and cake in readiness. \Vhen
  all is ready and a good kettle of water boiling,
  prepare the table in the drawing-room - tliis
  may or may not be covered with a cloth accord-
  ing to its kind, but if one is used it must be as
  dainty as possible - there is nothing prettier
  than the all-white cloth, embroidered or trimmed
  with lace, but if colour is introduced it must tone
  with the colour of the teacups. Small serviettes
  to match are sometimes used, but this is not a
  universal custom.
  
  The table is generally low and should be
  placed beside the hostess. Tlie plates of cake
  may be placed on a cake-stand or on another
  small table close at hand. Infuse the tea and
  fill up the hot-water jug or kettle last of all
  and carry all to the drawing-room at the hour
  
  
  252
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  appointed. Tea-cosies are no longer £asliionable,
  although many people still prefer to use them.
  
  AVhcn guests are expected the table is some-
  times prepared beforeliand, leaving only the tea
  and water to be carried in when it
  is required. If more visitors should
  arrive after the tea has been served,
  the waitress must see that there is a
  sufiBcient number of cups and bring
  more if necessary without requiring
  to be told. Fresh tea should also
  be made and more bread cut if
  needed.
  
  Tea is usually poured out by the
  
  hostess or by a grown-up daughter,
  
  and the cups are passed by any
  
  Cake-Stand. g6'it^"'™en visitors or by the young
  
  people of the house. Servants do
  
  not as a rule remain in the room, but are only
  
  ning for when anything extra is required.
  
  AFTERNOON "AT HOMES"
  
  When a number of guests are expected the
  tea itself is sometimes served in a back drawing-
  room. A good-sized table spread with a pretty
  cloth should be placed in one corner, and upon
  it should be arranged the tea things with plates
  of bread and butter cakes and other dainties.
  The tea in this case should be poured out by
  one of the daughters of the house or by a lady
  friend, leaving the hostess free to receive and
  entertEiin her guests in the drawing-room
  proper.
  
  At very large " At Homes " tea is frequently
  served in the dining-room, but this is a more
  formal affair. Visitors are shown into the
  room on arrival and waited on by servants
  before they enter the drawing-room. Gentle-
  men visitors often assist in handing round the
  refreshments. The table should bo made into a
  sort of buffet, and, if space is limited, it should
  be moved to one end of the room. It must
  be covered with a fine damask cloth and the
  serving should be done from the back. Both
  tea and coffee are frequently served on these
  occasions and rows of cups and saucers should be
  in readiness. The jugs of cream and milk and
  bowls of sugar might be placed on the side of
  the table next the guests, allowing them to help
  themselves. There should be an abundant
  supply of all kinds of dainties, and one or two
  largo cakes on high stands would help to give
  an ornamental appearance. The table n^ust be
  prettily decorated with a few flowers or plants
  and everything made as attractive as possible.
  
  In summer it is very u'fual to offer fruit,
  strawberries especially, and these are best served
  in small quantities on little plates. Ices too
  are sometimes served.
  
  If there is sufficient space in the dining-room
  there might be two or three little tables and some
  chairs dotted about the room for the convenience
  
  
  of those who do not care to take their refresh-
  ment standing.
  
  SUPPER
  
  The Family Supper. - In houses where early
  dinner is the rule, supper of a more or less
  substantial kind is the concluding meal of the
  day. Tliis is generally quite an informal meal,
  and the arrangement of it depends entirely upon
  individual requirements. As a rule, all the
  dishes are placed on the table and there is little
  or no waiting. The table is laid in very much
  the same way as for luncheon, and as the articles
  required depend entirely upon the kind of food
  provided, it is impossible to give any definite
  rules. If coffee is served, it is either placed at
  one end of the table and served by the hostess
  as at breakfast, or it is served by one of tho
  daughters of the house.
  
  The Formal Supper. - This may be served in
  several ways, and the arrangement chosen
  depends very much upon the wishes of the hos-
  tess. Many people consider it inhospitable not
  to provide a substantial meal to which their
  guests can sit down and be waited on by the
  servants of the house. In tliis case one large
  or several small tables are laid and the service
  is very much the same as for Diner it la
  Russe.
  
  As a rule the dishes are cold, although hot
  soup and perhaps one hot entree are frequently
  served. Such dishes as the following would all
  be suitable for the bill of fare : -
  
  Cold meats of different kinds, such as game,
  poultry, ham, tongue, galantine and meat pies,
  dishes vrith aspic and mayonnaise, and various
  salads - jellies, creams, and all kinds of fancy
  sweets and plenty of fruit in season.
  
  Buflet Supper. - When there are a number of
  guests and space is limited, a *' stand up " supper
  is very often given. Tho different dishes are
  placed on the table, the ladies sit round the
  room, and the gentlemen wait on them and help
  themselves. Waitresses may also be in attend-
  ance. Only such dishes as can be easily eaten
  must be served, such as sandwiches, patties,
  aspic and mayonnaise dishes, and perhaps cold
  meats neatly sliced, followed by jelhes, creams,
  various other sweets, and perhaps ices. Cooling
  drinks and light wines should also be offered.
  
  This is a less expensive mode of serving the
  meal and one most frequently adopted by the
  housevWfe of moderate means.
  
  Another way is to arrange a sort of buffet and
  to serve refreshments at any time throughout
  the evening without having a fixed hour for the
  meal. It will be the duty of the host and
  hostess to let tliis be understood by their guests
  and to see that every one is taken into supper
  in tho course of the evening.
  
  When only cold and light refreshments are
  given at an evening party it is very usual to offer
  
  
  THE TABLE
  
  
  253
  
  
  a cup of hot soup or coSee to tho guests just
  before they leave.
  
  TABLE DECORATIONS
  
  The floral decoration of the table is now a
  universal custom. Large sums of money are
  often spent upon the flowers and vases for a
  smart dinner-party, and hostesses will vie with
  each other as to whose table will present the
  most novel and effective appearance. But
  unless means are unlimited it is impossible to
  follow every passing fashion, and it is a good
  thing for most of us that floral decoration does
  not depend upon costly vases and expensive
  flowers ; in fact, in most cases the simpler the
  arrangement the more charming the result.
  
  Even although we are not all the happy
  possessors of a garden, flowers are brought into
  our towns in such lavish quantities nowadays,
  not to speak of those from our own market-
  gardens, that they have been brought within
  the means of the poorest. It is seldom one
  cannot get a bunch of some sort of bloom for
  a few coppers or even the modest penny, and
  when we consider the joy and comfort they
  bring we are amply compensated for the outlay.
  The delight a few flowers can give is unlimited.
  
  \^1iat a difference between a table that is
  tastefully decorated with a few flowers and one
  on which a huge cniet-stand takes the central
  position. A table without a plant or flower is a
  desolate affair. There is no occasion to have a
  great display; more taste can often be shown
  in the arrangement of a few blooms than in
  an exuberant show. Flowers should not be
  crowded ; they should have room to stand out
  individually. The Japanese, who are so artistic,
  consider one choice bloom quite sufficient to put
  in a vase. The main thing is to make the table
  pretty and attractive, and at the same time to
  think of something novel.
  
  The foliage sprays shoidd be inserted first,
  and the flowers then placed in carefully, so
  as to face whatever direction is required. If
  some flowers have a tendency to twist about,
  this can be remedied by pushing a piece of thin
  wire up the inside of the stem and allowing it
  to project half an inch. This projection can
  usually bo inserted into a piece of foliage or stem,
  and the flower thiis retained in the desired
  position.
  
  Needless to say, the flowers must be fresh and
  the water shoiild be changed every day.
  
  Tlie arrangement of flowers is very much a
  matter of skill and taste and the following
  paragraphs are only suggestive. The tendency
  at present is to keep the floral decoration low,
  tall-growing flowers, when they are used, being
  put in slender glasses or arranged in such a
  way that they do not obstruct the \aew. From
  the conversational point of view this is a great
  advantage, as it is never pleasant to be forced to
  
  
  look around ornaments in order to talk to some
  one on the opposite side of the table. Harmony
  of colour with the surroundings and a sense of
  proportion as to height, siz;e, and shape of vases
  - a lightness of touch in the grouping together,
  with a quick eye for possibilities in the blending
  of shades, are all necessary to ensure success.
  
  The quantity must depend upon the size of
  the table ; a large table will stand some display
  of abundance, but now that small tables are
  fashionable, even for private houses, a very light
  form of decoration is all that is necessary.
  
  Choice and Colour of the Flowers. - Flowers
  are now to be had in such variety and at every
  season of the year that their choice is very
  much a matter of individual taste, limited only
  by the resources at one's command. Flowers
  typical of the season are as a rule more pleasing
  than exotics and forced productiorxS. Those
  with a strong scent should be avoided, especially
  if they are to be used in large quantities and in
  a heated room. When selecting a little thought
  must be given to the general tone of decoration.
  The colour of the room must be taken into con-
  sideration, unless the walls are cream or of some
  pale shade which will not clash with any of the
  brighter colours. Pleasing effects of colour are
  the first consideration. A mixture of colours
  rarely looks well ; one or at most two colours
  with green is quite sufficient, although there
  may of course be graduations in shade of the
  prevailing colour.
  
  Colour schemes are now the fashion, the
  flowers, candle shades, dinner ware, bon-bons,
  &c., being of corresponding hues. Some
  hostesses even aim at ha\'ing the flowers, &c.,
  to match the gown they are going to wear.
  
  Foliage and Plants. - Plenty of foliage should
  be used, that of the flower itself wherever
  possible, and the teaching of nature followed if
  perfection is to be attedned. The leaves them-
  selves should not lie in the water, but should be
  stripped off the stalk, as they only crowd the vase
  and prevent the flowers getting sufficient water.
  
  Asparagvis, springeri, maidenhair, and smilax
  are among the choicest and best -known foliage
  plants, but there are many people, especially in
  the country, who may find these too costly for
  ordinary use or difficult to prociu-o ; to those
  it may be suggested that there are many traiUng
  plants to be had for little or nothing, which could
  be employed in a similar way, such as the small-
  leaved gold or silver iv-y, creeping jenny, canary
  creeper, periwinkle, and traveller's joy. To keep
  them from drooping the ends can be inserted in
  button -holders filled with wet sand and liidden
  among the leaves. Trailing plants can have
  silver wire inserted among the stems if it is
  wished to keep them in a special position. The
  tops of asparagus can often take the place of the
  more expensive fern ; wliile more use might be
  made of carrot -leaves and those of the wild
  geranium, the latter sometimes being found in
  
  
  254
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  delightful shades of a red-brown colour. Con-
  vohnilus trails, with tliick clusters of scarlet
  berries lastmg for montlis after the leaves have
  withered, are a splendid addition to our winter
  decorations.
  
  Vases. - Almost any kind of vase can be \isod
  as long as it suits the style of flower and docs
  not clash in colour. As a rule, wliito and green
  crj'stal ones are the most adaptable. Tall-
  stalked flowers, such as clirysanthomums, lilies,
  lilac, daffodils, &c., look best in liigh glass,
  whilst short -stemmed flowers, such as violets,
  primroses, snowdrops, forget-me-nots, &c., should
  be arranged in low vases. Roses look especially
  well grouped in a bowl or single blooms set in
  slender glasses. Most people pick up quaint
  vases at different times, especially on a holiday,
  when they can often be found both pretty and
  cheap. It is astonishing, too, what can be done
  in case of necessity ; an old meat or fruit tin
  packed with wet silver sand and hidden by
  moss can be made to do duty inside a basket
  quite as effectively £is a proper zinc Uning, while
  small baskets with the Uttle china or glass
  drinking vessels used for birds or even a penny
  m\istard tin are equally useful ; similarly, all
  sorts of glass jars for potted pastes come in
  handy, so do cups without handles, especially
  the Japanese blue ones, also small china ash
  trays and saucers ; indeed, cny one at all resovirco-
  ful need never be at a loss. If high glasses are
  used they should be slender and so arranged
  that they leave the line of vision clear. For
  comers all kinds of specimen glasses, upright or
  globular, cups, saucers, or pots filled with ferns,
  miniature trees or shrubs may be employed ;
  a variation of the latter can be obtained by
  planting in tiny tubs (doll's washing-tubs painted
  dark brown servo the purpose), pips of oranges,
  lemons, grape fruit, apples, &c., which make
  excellent little trees ; while rambles in woods
  and lanes will reward a search by giving us tiny
  oak, holly, and other trees to adorn our tables :
  these are especially desirable now that Japanese
  dwarf trees are the fashion.
  
  Wild Flowers. - Those who live in the country
  often overlook or despise the decorative possi-
  bilities of the flowers around them ; yet what
  can be more lovely than a large vase of golden
  buttercups loosely arranged. It is true the
  petals soon drop, but then how easy to renew
  them. Then, again, what a delightful effect is
  produced by a bowl filled with half-open buds
  of the deep pink wild-rose with pieces of sweet-
  briar among it. We do not half appreciate the
  artistic possibilities of the wild anemone with its
  delicate green leaf, or of the snowdrop, crab-
  applo blossom, wild hyacinth, the meadow
  crane's-bill with its charming lavender shade,
  meadow-sweet, poppies, corn-flower, and a host of
  others too numerous to mention, along with
  grasses and leaves of all kinds.
  
  Table Decorations in Spring. - For spring there
  
  
  is nothing more easy to grow than bulbs of all
  kinds ; they can be grown in bowls of cocoa-
  nut fibre in sitting-rooms ; the lovely blooms
  are in this way always available for decoration
  and they last long. Daffodils, pheasant's eye,
  narcissus, tulips, and hyacinths of all colours
  following one another give a glorious variety with
  the added interest of being grown by oneself.
  A pretty picture is made of a low dark -green
  bowl filled %vith crocuses ranging from white
  through the shades of mauve to dark purple, or
  massed with the golden kind the bowl is parti-
  cularly striking. Lily of the valley can also bo
  grown in the same manner ; but in growing
  bulbs it should always be borne in mind that
  a hot room is fatal for good results. As the
  season advances we get a bewildering choice of
  flowers, among which violets take a first place
  for their sweetness ; a favourite combination is
  that of dark violets ^^-ith the lavender-coloured
  parma-violets. Pansies and violas associate
  well with almost any light green foliage, but
  nothing is so suitable as their own foliage when
  that can be procured bright and fresh and of
  good colour. Violets, however, do not make
  a good show at night. A well-grown bowl of
  lily of the valley with smaller ones of violets
  looks charming. Violets can also be used with
  the lavender shades of iris. Another sweet
  spring decoration is that of lilac in blending
  shades, but the stalks of this flower and other
  woody kinds must be split up to allow them to
  get plenty of water, otherwise they soon droop.
  A large bowl of crimson peonies makes a very
  handsome centre-piece, and, being so showy, does
  not require more than ferns round it.
  
  What an important niche is filled in our
  decorations by the little salmon pink anemone
  which appears in the late spring. Sold in small
  bundles of unopened flowers, it looks insignifi-
  cant to those who do not know its value, but if
  kept for a few days a lovely show is made by
  the gradual unfolding of the buds to their full
  size, its colour alone making it valuable, eoming
  as it does at a time when most of our flowers are
  white or yellow ; as the blooms last well, its
  purchase is always a safe investment. The
  larger kind, though more showy, do not blend so
  well with other colours.
  
  Table Decorations in Summer. - Summer
  brings us the rose, tlie queen of flowers, in all its
  many forms and shades, but as a queen it must
  reign alone, no other flower being permissible
  near it. You may havo all one colour, or various
  shades as from pink to crimson, but do not
  mix all colours together ; it is a fatal mistake.
  What is more perfect than an old silver or china
  bowl filled with rich crimson roses ; or a few
  long-stalked pink ones in branched glass or other
  vases, small corner bowls holding each a rose
  with perfect foliage, the stems kept in place
  by leaden clips covered -with moss ? Rambler
  roses are more difficult to deal with, but if the
  
  
  THE TABLE
  
  
  255
  
  
  dusters of bloom are not too heavy, and you get
  the right kind of vase to suit them, they make
  a perfect picture. All the larger liUes make a
  splendid show in tall vases, but many people find
  the scent too powerful in a room. Carnations
  rank next the rose, combining as they do both
  beauty of colotir and fragrance. A simple but
  effective decoration can be made by arranging
  short trails of the dwarf nasturtium in a slender
  but broad -rimmed vase and allowing the ends to
  fall over, a few leaves and half-opening flowers
  being arranged in small bowls or saucers.
  
  Sweet peas are both beautiful and plenti-
  ful ; also particularly useful in schemes of
  colour with their many shades of pink and
  mauve, but theirs is a fragile loveUness, for
  should the weather be hot they droop almost
  as soon as picked ; they look best in slender
  vases loosely arranged. The dainty colourings
  of gladioli are very charming, though the form is
  somewhat stiff ; the defect can in this and many
  other cases be lightened by sprays of gypsophila.
  Pink or mauve ivy geraniums go well with some
  shades of gladioli as a combination. A delight-
  ful table decoration for a hot day is formed
  by large marguerites, blue Canterbury bells, and
  wild oats ; the sense of coolness imparted by
  those in a white-papered room mxist be felt to
  be understood Harebells and dog daisies give
  the same effect.
  
  The soft yet brilliant shades of the Shirley
  poppies make another welcome addition to our
  list of summer favourites ; arranged in a tall
  tapering glass with sprays of the feathery wliite
  statice or gypsophila they look charmingly grace-
  ful, the various shad 3 of white, yellow and
  orange or reds and pinks, blending beautifully
  together. Many people think they drop quickly,
  but they should be chosen as much in bud as
  possible, as every bud opens and then they will
  be found to last nearly a week.
  
  Charming combinations can be worked in
  cream and lavender, in white and dark violet,
  in yellow and cream, and in mauve and white.
  Large fine blooms of fancy pansies are always
  admired on a table, and when well arranged
  no combination can be more attractive.
  
  Table Decorations in Autumn and Winter. - As
  the autumn comes along we get the asters and
  dahlias in all their varied colourings ; the single
  dahlias are the best for table ornamentation,
  though a bowl of the crimson or yellow double
  ones makes a rich feast of colour. The loose
  petalled asters are the most effective, and pink
  and white or mauve and white combine well
  together. The Michaelmas daisies have been
  much improved of recent years, and many
  varieties can now be obtained. There are two
  kinds of white Michaelmas daisies which are
  invaluable for putting among flowers ; the
  blooms are very small and feathery. Now we
  get the lovely tones of the xnrginian creeper,
  &o charming for adorning our tables, but it is
  
  
  necessary to wire it, as the leaves so soon drop
  off ; a few trails should hang from vases as well
  as be used in draping.
  
  In the country many richly -shaded leaves o£
  all sorts, also berries, can now be gathered, the
  leaves pressed and put aside for winter use.
  Hips and haws are well known, as are also the
  rowan berries. Trails of virginian creeper, a
  vase of bronze, yellow chrysanthemums, and
  smaller vases (of copper, if possible) filled with
  yellow marguerites make a charming pictiire,
  especially if the svirroundings are of a browTi
  tone.
  
  For those who live in the country there is the
  possibility of making use of the rich hues of the
  crab-apple. A few discreetly selected small
  branches well laden with fruit, the stems clipped
  together with the soft leaden supports so cheap
  to buy, placed in a large green pot as if growing,
  the pot being half filled with moss, would make
  a novel decoration, while tiny specimen baskets,
  each containing one or two of the brilhantly
  coloured Quarantine apples, and the basket
  handles tied with a bow of green ribbon, might
  be placed round. This decoration would be
  suitable for a harvest home.
  
  Winter gives us the ever -popular chrysan-
  themum, now grown in such quantities that it
  is brought within the reach of the most modest
  purse. Chrysanthemiims always look best in
  tail jars or vases and require plenty of water ;
  in fact, th6y should be left in a pail of water up
  to their heads every night. These flowers bring
  us to Christmas when holly reigns supreme,
  helped out by Christmas roses and forced
  scarlet tulips, the fragile-looking white of the
  Christmas roses making a delicate contrast to
  the prickly and brilliant holly.
  
  Decorations for Special Occasions. - A few
  suggestions may be given for special occa-
  sions.
  
  For Christmas the centre vase might be filled
  with large white or yellow chrysanthemums ;
  round the base should be placed the small-
  leaved golden variegated holly, a well-berried
  piece of daxk holly put at intervals ; at the four
  corners horseshoes made of the leaves of the
  variegated sort, " A Merry Xmas," or similar
  motto formed of the berries running round or
  across as preferred, one corner of the horseshoe
  being tied with a bow of crimson ribbon. Fancy
  pots or baskets filled with ferns and scarlet
  tulips and tied with green ribbon could be used,
  or bowls of Clu-istmas roses could take their
  place. The menu cards might have a robin or
  other seasonable de\dce painted on them.
  
  For Primrose Day. - ^Fill tliree round or long
  vessels viith wet silver sand, put in the flowers
  one by one, separate the vessels with pots of
  hght maidenhair, put the whole on a tin or zinc
  tray and bank up with moss. Smilas should be
  arranged round and draped along the sides,
  with small pots of maidenhair at the corners
  
  
  256
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  tied with bows of red ribbon, and a primrose
  button-hole put to each gtiest.
  
  For a Wedding. - The place of honour being
  occupied by the wedding cake, pink and white
  roses, carnations, sweet peas, lily of the valley,
  and white heather are the most usual decorations.
  A pretty touch can bo given by having tiny
  horseshoes for each guest ; these can be made of
  lily of the valley or forgot-me-nots, with a small
  bunch of white heather at the side tied with pink
  or wliito ribbon.
  
  SERVING OF FRUIT
  
  Fresh fruit should find a place on every
  table ; it is always wholesome and beautiful,
  and much taste can be shown in the manner
  in which it is arranged. \Vlien fruit is served
  at a dinner-party it may either be placed on
  the table at the beginning and remain through-
  out the meal, or it may be put down when
  the guests are ready to partake of it. The
  first method is to be recommended as feir as
  the decorative appearance of the table is con-
  cerned, although the fruit itself suffers from
  being exposed to the heat of the room for so
  long. The softer fonts especially stiffer from
  the hot atmosphere and the odours of savoury
  dishes. Perhaps the best plan to adopt is to
  put down the harder and drier fruits, such as
  nuts, oranges, and apples, and to reserve the
  daintier and finer ones to be brought in fresh
  and cool when they are required, either in their
  natural state or en salade.
  
  
  ^^^aen arranging fruit it must bo carefully
  looked over and any that is blemished put aside.
  Oranges and apples, pears and other fruit of the
  kind should be wiped with a damp cloth and
  poUshed. Grapes should be lightly brushed
  with a soft brush, peaches and plums very
  Ughtly rubbed, and all berries carefully picked
  and washed if necessary.
  
  Fruit may bo arranged in a variety of ways.
  Each dish may contain either a different kind of
  fruit, or else a miscellaneous assortment artisti-
  cally grouped. If the table is large, a handsome
  centre-piece of mixed fruits sometimes looks
  well. Many pretty designs for fruit dishes are
  now sold, and these may either match the fruit
  plates or form a pleasing contrast. Rustic baskets
  of different shapes can also be made to look very
  pretty and artistic. Green leaves should always
  cover the dishes on which the fruit is served. For
  the larger fruits vine-leaves are the most suitable,
  while currant -leaves can be used for the smaller
  kinds. In winter when fresh leaves are scarce
  gold and silver paper leaves can often be em-
  ployed with good effect, especially for dried
  fruits, dates, figs, Carlsbad pltrnis, crystallised
  fruits, and such -like.
  
  One important point to remember is that
  when arranging a dish of mixed fruits the
  lighter kinds must alwaj^s be put on the top.
  Apart from this, there are no fixed rules for the
  arrangement of fruit, but an eye for colour and
  artistic taste are as necessary hero as in floral
  decorations.
  
  
  The following is a specimen of a Dirmer Menu, written in both French and English : -
  
  
  MENU
  
  Melon Glac6
  
  Consomme aux Quenelles
  
  Turlx)t. Sauce aux Crevettes
  
  Cremes de Boeul aux Champignons
  
  Oigot d'Agneau- Sauce Menthe
  
  Sorbet au Rhum
  
  Faisans IWtis. Salade d'Orange
  
  Nid de ifarrons h. la Crfeme
  
  Gel6e au Vln Rouge
  
  Pallleg au Parmesan
  
  Glacis anx Fraises
  
  Dessert
  
  
  MENU
  
  Iced Melon
  
  Clear Soup with Quenelles
  
  Turbot with Shrimp Sauce
  
  Beef Creams with Mushrooms
  
  Lamb with Mint Sauce
  
  Rum Sorbet
  
  Boast Pheasants with Orange Salad
  
  Nest of Chestnuts with Cream
  
  Port Wine Jelly
  
  Cheese Straws
  
  Strawberry Ices
  
  Dessert.
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD LINEN
  
  A GOOD housewife will tako great care of her household linen, and it will be her pleasure to see
  that it is kept in beautiful order.
  
  In beginning housekeeping the quantity and quality of the linen that is bought must depend
  upon individual taste and means, the size of the household to be provided for, and the room there
  is for keeping it.
  
  As a rule, it is a wise plan to buy just what is necessary to start with and to add to the stock
  as time goes on and the necessity for more arises. The space in modern houses is often somewhat
  limited, and if surplus linen has to be stored away in boxes in a cellar, it will probably be attacked
  by mildew and become unfit for use. Whatever is bought should be good of its kind, not necessarily
  of the finest quality, as this would be unsuitable in many cases, and the price paid will naturally
  depend upon the means at disposal ; but an inferior quality should never be bought. Even a little
  extra outlay at the beginning in order to obtain first-rate material will be amply repaid in the
  ultimate satisfaction afforded. Cheap linen may look very well when new, when it has dressing in
  it and a certain amount of gloss, but after the first washing it wiU be found limp and thin and
  without any body.
  
  The material for household linen can always be bought by the yard and made up at home,
  but now that good ready-made articles can be had at such moderate prices, there is really
  nothing to be gained by taking this extra trouble. If hand work is stiU preferred to machine
  work, it can always be ordered or asked for specially. Of course, it is important to go to a first-
  class shop where the goods can be trusted. In this chapter useful information is given in regard to
  standard qualities and prices.
  
  
  BED LINEN
  
  Sheets. - Material. - Until within recent years
  linen was always considered the correct material
  for sheeting, and it would have been thought
  a breach of etiquette to provide a guest with
  anytliing but the finest and whitest of hnen
  sheets. But now, owing to the many improve-
  ments made in its manufacture, cotton has to
  a large extent taken the place of linen. Linen
  is, however, still preferred by many people ;
  it is so fine and smooth to the touch, and
  delightfully cool in summer. One must of
  course be prepared to pay a good price for
  linen ; but it will be found very durable, and
  it keeps its colovu? bettor than cotton. Good
  linen is fine and even in vexture. It should
  be bought fairly heavy, otherwise it will curl up
  and soon look shabby and crushed.
  
  It is not wise to let deUcate and rheumatic
  people sleep in linen sheets, as linen carries off
  the heat of the body and is very apt to give cold.
  
  Cotton, on the other hand, is much warmer than
  linen, and for this reason it is often hked better.
  Besides, it is possible now to buy it of such fine
  quality and with such a nice soft finish, that
  even the most fastidious can scarcely object to
  it. The difference in price, too, is a consideration
  with people of moderate meanb.
  
  
  Cotton sheets can be had in two kinds, twilled
  and plain. At the present time the plain calico
  seems to be the favourite and the kind most
  generally asked for, but this of course is a
  matter of taste, and the price of both is very
  much the same.
  
  Both Unen and cotton sheets can be had with
  either plain or hem-stitched hems at the ends ;
  the latter add very little, if anything, to the
  price, and they certainly add to the dainty
  appearance of the bed.
  
  It is always well to have the top hem a little
  wider than the one at the bottom, or to have
  some other distinction, in order to prevent the
  foot of the sheet being placed near the face.
  
  For servants' use a well-woven twilled calico
  is best. The unbleached material used to bo
  bought for the pm-pose, but it is now seldom
  asked for, and the wliito certainly looks nicer.
  
  A very usual plan when providing sheets for
  a household is to buy linen for the best beds,
  fine cotton for ordinary use, and a hea^^er twill
  for the servants. As some people object to
  linen sheets, it is well to keep one or two pairs of
  fine cotton in reserve for the use of guests.
  
  Size and Price. - Sheets must always be
  bought of a right size for the bed for which they
  are intended. They must be long enough and
  wide enough to permit of their being tucked in
  257 E
  
  
  258
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  all round the mattress. An extra length, about
  three-quarters of a yard, must bo allowed if the
  under-sheet has to cover the bolster as well. In
  breadth a sheet should at least bo 72 inches wide
  for a single bed, and 90 inches for a double
  bed, and from 2 to 3i yards long.
  
  As regards quality taste varies so much that
  indi\idual preference and the means at command
  can alone decide the choice. The following
  prices may, however, be a guide to those who
  have little knowledge of what ought to be paid.
  Only thoroughly recommended prices are quoted.
  
  Cotton Hem-stitched Sheets.
  
  Single-bed size - 8s. 6d. to 15s 6d. per pair.
  
  Double-bed size - 12s. to 23s. 6d. per pair.
  
  The difference in price depends upon the
  fineness of the material, and also upon the
  length.
  
  Hem-stitched Linen Sheets (Irish).
  
  Single-bed sheets- 18s. 9d., 23s. 6d. to £3, 3s.
  per pair.
  
  Double-bed sheets- 253. 9d., 30s. to £4, 4s.
  per pair.
  
  For servants' use a very good twilled calico
  sheet with plain hem can be bought at 6s. 6d. per
  pair, and a rather better quality at 8s. per pair.
  
  The more expensive sheets have very often a
  pretty embroidered piece for turning over at
  the top.
  
  The Jaeger or Sanitary Sheet. - This is a special
  kind of sheet made of pure wool, and of a thin
  texture that can easily be washed. The Jaeger
  sheets are used principally for children and
  deUcate people, and especially for those troubled
  with rheumatism. The price varies from 193. 6d.
  to 30s. for a single-bed sheet, and from 33s. 6d.
  to 60s. for a double-bed sheet. They can be
  liad either of a fine white cashmere or in the
  natural wool or camel-hair shade. Pillow-cases
  can also bo obtained in the same material.
  
  Sheet-Shams. - These are fancy articles, and
  not by any means a necessity for any one start-
  ing housekeeping. They are strips of linen
  hem-stitched, and generally very prettily em-
  broidered, which are slipped in under the bed-
  clothes and turned back over the cover to
  resemble a sheet, and they give to a bed a
  dainty appearance during the day.
  
  Mattress Covers. - Every mattress should be
  covered with a cotton slip to keep it clean, and
  this need only be removed once or twice a year
  to be washed. Unbleached calico or thin holland
  is usually sold for the purpose.
  
  Pillow and Bolster-Slips. - Material. - These
  can bo either of cotton or of linen, to match
  the sheets with which they are used, although
  linen pillow-slips are very often used with cotton
  sheets. Lovers of ease always prefer linen
  pillow-slips to cotton ones, as they are cooler
  for the head and smoother and softer to lie on.
  
  
  Any one troubled with headaches or sleepless-
  ness should always use tliem, as they check the
  flow of blood to the head, and almost act as a
  cold-water bandage.
  
  Pillow-slips can bo bought ready made in
  different sizes. They look very pretty hem-
  stitched, and they can also be had with dainty
  frills ; but it must be borne in mind that these
  latter are not so durable, and that the washing of
  them will cost more than that of the plainer kinds.
  They can be had either fitted with tapes or with
  buttons and button-holes. Upon the whole,
  the latter method of fastening is to be preferred,
  as it is more conducive to neatness.
  
  The newest method of fastening is with a
  double set of button-holes and small bone studs,
  which can easily be slipped out when the pillow-
  sUps are sent to the washing. It is a good plan
  to sew these studs on to a length of tape - ^the
  proper distance apart - and this will prevent
  them from getting lost.
  
  Bolster-slips are not always used, the under-
  sheet being rolled round the bolster and mad"
  to act as a cover. However, some people
  prefer the separate cover, and it is certainly the
  more comfortable arrangement, especially for
  indifferent sleepers, as the cushions can be
  moved about at will and arranged to suit one's
  special comfort.
  
  Bolster-slips can also be bought ready made,
  but it is almost better to have them prepared to
  order, and to suit the special shape of bolster.
  They look better when they are drawn in at the
  ends and not button-holed, or sometimes they
  are made with a shaped piece at each end, which
  gives the bolster a more handsome appearance.
  
  The newest shape of bolster-slip is made
  about half a yard longer than the bolster on
  each side. The ends, which are left open, are
  cither hem-stitched or embroidered, and the
  extra length is allowed to hang over the sides
  of the bed.
  
  Both bolsters and pillows should also have an
  under-cover of calico to preserve the tick, and
  also to prevent the stripes of the latter showing
  tlorough the outer case. An old pillow-slip or
  bolster-slip will answer the purpose very well,
  and they should be removed once or twice a
  year to be washed. These inner slips are usually
  sown on, but if fastened with tapes or buttons, the
  open end should be put into the outer case first,
  to prevent both fastenings coming together.
  
  Size and Price. - Pillow-sHps must be bought
  to fit the pillows for which they are intended,
  and as these vary somewhat in size, it is im-
  portant to take careful measurements. If too
  tight the softness of the pillow is destroyed,
  and on the other hand if they are too large they
  look clumsy.
  
  Very good hem-stitched pillow-cases can be
  bought for 28. 6d. - fastened neatly at the ends
  with hand-made button-holes and well finished -
  and upwards to 83. each, and even more. With
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD LINEN
  
  
  259
  
  
  frills they will cost from 3s. 6d. upwards. Plain
  white calico slips can be had from 8d. to 2s. each,
  and with frills from 2s. 6d. upwards.
  
  PlUow-Shams. - These axe dainty ornamental
  covers, which are laid over the pillows dui'ing
  the day and removed at night. They are
  generally made of fine Unen or muslin, em-
  broidered prettily with initials and some other
  design, and finished round the edges with lace
  or cambric frills. Sometimes a large bow of
  ribbon will ornament the centre. They help
  to make a bed look pretty, and when carefully
  folded at night they will keep clean for quite a
  long time.
  
  Quantity Required. - Allowances. - The careful
  housewife should see that the hnen cupboard is
  always kept well stocked with sufficient linen to
  meet all emergencies. If each bed has its own
  special linen, then three pairs of sheets, six pillow-
  slips, and two or three bolster-slips will be a
  very moderate supply for each, in order that the
  linen cupboard may never be left without a
  pair of sheets to fall back upon. If, however,
  the hnen is used generally, and the cost of
  washing has to be considered, six pairs of sheets,
  twelve pillow-cases, and half-a-dozen bolster-
  slips might do service for three beds. This,
  however, is a minimum supply, and if frequent
  change is indulged in, double the number would
  not be too many.
  
  Ideas vary much as to how often bed-linen
  ought to be changed, and to have a liberal
  allowance is certainly a luxury. When the
  expense and trouble of washing has not to be
  thought of, sheets may be changed as often as
  three times a week, and pillow-sUps every day ;
  but this amount is beyond the means of the
  ordinary household, both as regards the supply
  of linen required and the somewhat heavy wash-
  ing bill entailed. Once a week is considered a
  very good allowance, while once a fortnight
  should be the minimum of change. To keep
  sheets in use longer than this is not healthy.
  Some people prefer to change one sheet each
  week, always putting the top sheet down, while
  others prefer to have all clean at once. One
  pillow-slip a week at least should be allowed for
  each person, and a bolster -slip if used should be
  changed once a fortnight.
  
  If the supply of bed-linen is limited, house-
  keepers should arrange that all the bedt; are not
  changed the same week, but in rotation. If
  there is a number of beds, it will be as weU to
  make a note in a small book of the dates when
  each have been changed.
  
  Servants too should be allowed one clean
  sheet a week, or a pair a fortnight, and one clean
  pillow-slip each week.
  
  BED-COVERS OR COUNTERPANES
  
  Dainty bed-covers add not a little to the
  attractive appearance of a. bedroom, and they
  
  
  should always be kept as fresh and clean as
  possible. A httle care expended in selecting
  new bed-covers will be amply rewarded in the
  additional wear to be had out of a well-selected
  article, which as a rule will combine the
  quaUties of both decorativeness and durability.
  
  Bed-covers are to be had in various styles, but
  the all-white coverlet is always agood investment,
  as it washes easily and looks well on any bed.
  
  The tendency now is to have them of a very
  light make, and some of the newest styles are in
  white cotton or hnen embroidered and hem-
  stitched, or a pretty white embroidered muslin.
  The finer and open-work ones are usually
  mounted on a sateen slip of a colour to match
  the bedroom, and these shps are fastened to the
  cover by means of small buttons and button-holes,
  which are easily undone when the upper part
  requires washing.
  
  A very pretty embroidered cotton quilt can
  be bought for 12s. 6d. for a small bed, and 18s 6d.
  for a double-bed size and upwards. An em-
  broidered and hem-stitched hnen cover will cost
  from 23s. 6d. for a small, and 31s. 6d. for a
  double-bed size, while several pounds may be
  paid for one with a very elaborate design of
  drawn- thread work and lace.
  
  A white embroidered mushn cover, which
  is very dainty and particularly suitable for
  summer use, can be obtained for 16s. 6d. small
  size, and 18s. 9d. large size, and upwards. An
  under-sMp of sateen for these covers costs 10s. 6d.
  or 12s. 6d., according to size, and any colour can
  be chosen.
  
  Coloured bed-spreads are also greatly used,
  made of printed cotton or taffeta. To obtain
  one of a good quality, it will be necessary to
  pay from 12s. 9d. upwards. They shoiild be
  chosen to suit the curtains, or the prevaihng
  colour in the room for wliich they are intended.
  For winter use, and especially if fires are burned
  in the bedroom, these coloured qviilts are per-
  haps more practical than the all wliite, and
  especially where washing is a consideration.
  
  Stronger counterpanes in colour suitable for
  servants' use are sold for 4s. or 5s., and it is
  quite possible too to get these with a nice
  design and of a pretty shade. There is no
  occasion to have something ugly because it is
  cheaper than the finer quahties, and a maid is
  more likely to take a pride in keeping her room
  in order if some encouragement is given to her
  to make it pretty.
  
  Although somewhat out of date, the thick
  whitљ Marcella and honej'comb quilts will always
  be useful for hard wear, as they stand frequent
  washing without any harm, and with care will
  last for years.
  
  The bed-spread or cover miist be large enough
  to cover the bed. and hang well over the sides.
  If no valance is used, a little extra width will
  be reqmred.
  
  One bed-cover at lesist will be required for
  
  
  260
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  each bed, and two or three extra ones to allow
  for washing. It is a good plan to have a change
  of quilts in summer and winter.
  
  TOILET COVERS AND DUCHESSE SETS
  
  No toilet table is complete without its toilet
  cover and doyleys, and the bedroom would
  indeed have a neglected appearance where their
  use was dispensed with. A daintily dressed toilet-
  table adds materially to the cleanly and cheerful
  aspect of a room, and besides nothing is more
  calculated to show off a good piece of furniture
  than this time-honoured essential to the toilet-
  table equipment, wliilst on the other hand the
  appearance of shabby fiu-niture can be con-
  siderably improved upon by the use of clean
  and dainty toilet sets. The variety in these is
  almost endless, and choice must depend upon
  individual taste.
  
  The all-wliite covers, such as the Marcella and
  Honeycomb, can be bought ready made in
  various sizes frOm Is. and Is. 9d. each, and
  upwards. They will stand any amount of hard
  wear and frequent wasliing ; in fact, the material
  will scarcely wear out. ^Vhen the fringes be-
  come shabby, they should be cut off, and the
  ends of the cover hemmed and trimmed with a
  little edging if desired. The same material is
  also to be had by the yard, known as " Toileting."
  The required length can then be bought, neatly
  hemmed at the ends and trimmed with crochet
  edging or other suitable embroidery.
  
  Of course, from an artistic point of view, the
  above covers are not pretty ; they are strong
  and clean -looking, but there is nothing dis-
  tinctive about them. The daintiest covers are
  those made to suit the room. A pretty cretonne
  edged with lace and insertion, or a dainty
  muslin with a frill of the same material, and
  coloured sateen underneath, or again, a nicely
  embroidered linen or some fancy material
  worked in colours, can all be made to look very
  nice and give a homelike appearance to the
  room.
  
  Instead of the all-over toilet cover, a Duchesse
  set of matfl is frequently used, and this permits
  of some of the wood of the toilet-table being
  seen. Needless to say, these should only be
  used where the table or chest has a good surface.
  If the wood is shabby, it is much better to have
  it entirely covered.
  
  Duchesse sots can also bo had in strong white
  Marcella material, and will cost from Is. per set
  and upwards. The prettiest ones, however, are
  in fine linen or damask and lace, or drawn-thread
  V ork. The price of these will vary according to
  the amount of work in them and the quality of
  the lace. A simple hem-stitched set can be
  procured for Is. 6d., while linen and lace will cost
  from 2s. 6d. and upwards to almost any price.
  But these are things which are frequently made
  at home, as small odds and ends of linen, muslin.
  
  
  lace, &c., can be so easily utilised for the pur-
  pose.
  
  For the changing of toilet covers no regular
  rule can be laid down ; if the table is standing
  near the open window and in a dusty situation,
  the cover may look dirty at the end of a week,
  whereas in a clean place it may retain its fresh
  appearance for a month and even longer - there-
  fore the only rule to go by is to change when
  necessary.
  
  Two toilet covers or sets will be required for
  each room, unless they are used generally for
  the different bedrooms, when one each and two
  or throe over to allow for washing will be
  sufficient.
  
  TOWELS
  
  Bedroom Towels. - General Remarks and
  Material. - For ordinary use the linen huckaback
  are the most suitable, while Hnen, damask or
  diaper will serve the purpose when a fine towel
  is required. The latter make very nice face
  towels, as they are so fine and soft. Towels can
  be bought ready made, either hemmetl, hem-
  stitched, or vAth. fringes. Those with fringes are
  scarcely to be recommended, as they so soon
  become shabby and untidy -looking. If they are
  chosen, it is wise to overcast the ends before
  putting the towels in use, as this will prevent any
  fraying out, unless this has already been done,
  which is sometimes the case with the more
  expensive towels. When the fringes become
  shabby they should be cut off, and the ends of the
  towels neatly hemmed.
  
  Towelling can also be bought by the yard,
  fifteen yaxds being of fair allowance for twelve
  towels. But there is really Uttle to be gained
  by doing this, as the ready-made towels have
  generally some kind of border, and the others
  would not have the same finished appearance.
  
  The ends of towels are sometimes made orna-
  mental by having a border worked across them,
  very often in Russian cross-stitch, in blue and
  white, red and white, or simply all wiiito ; or
  a monogram or initials may be worked in one
  corner, or any other effective design. Iho ends,
  too, are sometimes trimmed with hand-made
  lace - that of a strong make, such as a crochet
  or knitted edging, being the most appropriate.
  These little additions are considered by some
  people to greatly improve the appearance of a
  towel, and to make a pretty finish for those
  destined for the guest-room ; but for practical
  purposes the perfectly plain towel is to be
  preferred.
  
  Turkish towels are generally used for the bath.
  They are made of cotton, with a raised fluffy sur-
  face, and are very soft in texture. They can be
  had either all white or a mixture of red and
  white. Those of a large size are called bath
  sheets. When a very rough towel is wanted
  to produce friction after a bath, the brown linen
  towelling should be asked for.
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD LINEN
  
  
  261
  
  
  Unbleached huckaback towels of a stouter
  make should be bought for servants' use, and
  these can generally be had with a coloured border,
  , which would serve as a distinguishing mark where
  there are several maids. If something cheaper
  is desired, then the cotton honeycomb towels
  should be bought, and these too are made with
  some colour introduced.
  
  Size and Price. - Very good pure linen hucka-
  back towels, grass bleached and of a soft finish,
  can be bought for 14s. per dozen, and with a
  damask border in a heavier make for 21s. per
  dozen.
  
  Damask and diaper towels will cost from 15s.
  to 35s. per dozen.
  
  Turkish bath towels (Christie's) are also sold
  at from 15s. to 35s. per dozen, according to size
  and quality, wMle a bath sheet can be obtained
  for 3s. 9d., 5s., 6s. 6d. or 8s. 6d.
  
  The rough crown Unen towels are 2s. each and
  upwards.
  
  The unbleached huckaback for servants' use
  will be about 8s. 6d. or 12s. per dozen, while the
  white honeycomb are only 6d. each and upwards.
  A very suitable bath towel is also to be had for
  lOd. or Is.
  
  When buying towels it is well to compare the
  sizes, as often by paying a shilling or two more
  per dozen a few extra inches in length can be
  obtained, and as the larger towel will not cost
  more in the washing, this is a point worth
  considering.
  
  An ordinary towel should be at least 40 inches
  long and 24 inches wide ; anything less than this
  is very inadequate for the purpose, while an
  inch or two larger would be a distinct advantage.
  Bath towels especially are better if of a larger
  size, while for a bath sheet double the above
  proportions would not be too much.
  
  Quantity Required - Allowances. - At least half-
  a-dozen bedroom towels and three bath towels
  should be allowed for each person. This will
  allow of two face towels and one bath towel being
  given out each week, the same number would
  be at the washing, and the other three woiild
  be in reserve. This is of course a very limited
  supply ; as many people like to have their towels
  changed more than once a week, the supply
  would then have to be increased accordingly.
  
  Bath sheets may be had in addition to the
  above ; these need not be changed so frequently
  as the bath towels.
  
  The usual allowance for servants is one face
  towel a week and a bath towel once a fortnight.
  Three face towels and two bath towels would be
  enough to allow for each maid.
  
  BLANKETS
  
  Choice. - In choosing blankets for the house-
  hold it is advisable to select those of a first-rate
  and reliable quality. Good blankets will not
  only last longer than inlerior ones, but they
  
  
  are warmer and lighter in make. Touch is the
  best gtiide to choice ; they should have a soft and
  silky feeUng, with a nice woolly surface.
  
  In England the Witney blankets have the
  finest finish, but the Yorkshire and Welsh are
  very good for hard wear.
  
  The Scotch blankets are also famous, and one
  special feature of their manufactiire is that they
  are generally all wool. They have a raised surface,
  although not so much so as a Witney blanket.
  
  A blanket should be large enough to tuck in
  at both sides and at the bottom of the bed, but
  must not be so wide that it touches the floor.
  Where economy has to be considered, one pair
  might be chosen smaller, if the upper one is large
  enough to tuck in and keep all in position.
  
  Before buying blankets it is very important
  to know the exact size of the beds for which they
  are required.
  
  Quantity Required and Price. - Two pairs of
  upper blankets and one under-blanket is a very
  fair allowance for each bed. When an eider-
  down qmlt is used one upper blanket may be
  sufficient, but this is very much a question of
  individual needs, and it is always well to have
  one or two pairs of blankets in reserve.
  
  A pair of very good single-bed blankets,
  guaranteed all pvu-e wool, can be bought for 16s.
  per pair, while as much as 45s. can be paid for
  the same size in the finest and softest wool, with
  a pretty silk binding in sky-blue, rose-pink, or
  cream. For a double-bed blanket the price
  will range from 21s. to 75s. per pair. They can
  be suppUed either all white or with blue or red
  lines, button-holed in the same colour.
  
  For servants' use union blankets are generally
  bought. These are rather harder to the touch,
  as they are not all wool, but are woven with
  a certain amount of cotton. They are not so
  light in weight as an all-wool blanket, but are
  very suitable for hard wear. The price of these
  blankets will range from 8s. to 12s. 6d. per pair.
  
  The under-blanket is generally a single blanket
  which can be bought new for 4s. and upwards,
  but except in the case of a new manage, a worn
  or thin upper blanket can generally be used for
  the purpose.
  
  Scarlet blankets when they are preferred can
  be bought for the same price as the white. Grey
  blankets are now little used, except those of a
  very hard make, which are sold for charity
  purposes.
  
  The Scotch blankets are generally sold by
  weight. For instance, the well-known make
  called " Scotch Teviot " are made in weights
  from 5 lbs. to 10 lbs. 6 lbs. is a good single-bed
  size, and measures about 68 by 76 inches. 9 lbs.
  is a good double-bed size, and measures about
  78 by 90 inches. An extra large size weiglis 10
  lbs., and measures 80 by 94 inches.
  
  This range is sold according to quality - 6 lbs.
  weight from 17s. 9d. to 25s. retail ; 9 lbs. weight
  from 21s. 9d. to 42s. retail.
  
  
  262
  
  
  THE 'WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Tho twilled blanket is also much used as
  binders or uftder-blankets. Thoy roscmblo very
  much a serge materi{il, but are very warm and
  durable. Tho prices are from 10s. to 18s, a
  pair (retail).
  
  Note. - Tho above particulars and prices re-
  garding Scotch blankets have been kindly sup-
  plied by Jlessrs. Charles Jennor & Co., Princes
  Street, Edinburgh.
  
  Of course, it will be quite possible to buy
  blankets at a much lower price than the above,
  but nothing cheaper can bo really recommended
  for comfort and good wear, unless it may be
  a lot slightly soiled which can sometimes be
  picked up at a sale.
  
  Marking Blankets. - Blankets should always be
  C£irefully marked. This is best done in wool,
  worked in cross-stitch from a sample (see p. 406).
  Tlie lettering should match in colour the
  button-holing on the blanket or any colour
  introduced in the weaving. If the blanket is all
  white, then the sewing might be done in some
  pretty contrasting colour. Cash's woven letter-
  ing can also be used for the purpose, or the name
  be written in ink on a piece of tape and sewn on
  to the blanket, but the first method looks best.
  
  Care and Cleaning of Blankets. - Blankets that
  are not in use should be stored away in a blanket
  chest or on the shelves of the linen cupboard.
  If they are to be left for some time, precautions
  must be taken to prevent their being attacked
  by moths. Put camphor, naphtha balls, or
  Russia leather parings between the folds, and
  then sew the blankets into a piece of old sheeting
  or other cotton material, taking care that no
  holes are left where the moths could enter.
  
  The washing or cleaning of blankets is another
  very important point. Some people consider
  that if they are cleaned once a year, generally
  at the annual spring cleaning, this should be
  sufficient ; but one must be guided somewhat
  by circumstances. If the blankets are used in
  a room where a fire is frequently hghted, or in
  a smoky and foggy neighbourhood, twice a year
  will not bo too often to have them attended to.
  Then again after a case of illness the blankets
  used on the Ijod should always be cleaned, and, if
  necessary, disinfected as well. Of course, un-
  necessary weishing must be avoided, as it im-
  poverishes the material, and there is always tho
  danger of a certain amount of shrinking.
  
  If washing is the modo of cleaning to be
  adopted, then great care must be taken in the
  choice of the laundry to which they are sent.
  Preference should be given to one where they are
  dried in the open air. If there is the slightest
  doubt aa to their being well done at a laundry,
  then it is a much wiser plan to send blankets
  to a professional cleaner. The price for cleaning
  will vary from Is. to 28. per pair, according to
  size, which may mean a little extra expanse as
  compared with washing, but it is cheap when
  one considers that the so-called weishing often
  
  
  spells " ruin " to a beautiful blanket. In the
  case of new blankets, it is always better to have
  them cleaned instead of washed, as the first
  time of washing is always more difficult. It
  must be remembered, too, that once a blanket
  becomes clotted and non-porous through bad
  washing, it ceases to be so healthy.
  
  The length of time blankets keep clean depends
  upon the care that is taken of them. They
  should be protected by night as well as by day
  with a cover of some sort. So if the bed-cover
  is removed at night, whicli is the correct thing
  to do, there should be a thin cover underneath or
  an ordinary sheet to cover the blankets. Then
  again, when a bed is being turned down or made,
  the blankets must not be allowed to sweep the
  floor, but be laid over the backs of two chairs,
  and then handled carefully. It is a good plan
  to have the blankets well brushed from time to
  time, and hung in the open air for a few hours.
  
  Upper blankets are always sold in pairs, but
  some people prefer to have them neatly cut in
  two, and the raw edges button-holed in wool to
  match the other end of the blanket.
  
  Mending of Blankets. - When blankets begin to
  show signs of wear, they should be carefully
  darned with wool of the same colour, and when
  a hole appears it should be neatly patched with
  a piece of blanketing of a suitable texture.
  (For details, see under Needlework, p. 415.)
  
  What to do with Old Blankets. - Old blankets
  can be utilised in many different ways. Large
  blankets can be cut down to make blankets for
  beds of a smaller size, or if not sufficiently good
  for the purpose they may be used as under-
  blankets. If very thin, the material might be
  doubled and button-holed together at the edges,
  and this would make a capital under-blanket.
  Then in houses where there are children small
  pieces of blankets will be found invaluable, either
  to cover them when they are asleep or for them
  to sit on. In cases of sickness, too, scraps of
  blanket are frequently required for fomentations
  and other purposes. Small pieces will also be
  required for patching other blankets ; and very
  old pieces will always be found useful as floor-
  cloths or for cleaning purposes, such as the
  waishing of paint, &c.
  
  TABLE LINEN
  
  It has often been said that the refinement of
  a household may bo judged to some extent by
  its table appointments, and more particularly
  by the dainty freshness of the table napery.
  The soiled and crumpled table-cloth replete
  with holes is characteristic of the third-rato
  lodging-house and not of the well-ordered
  household.
  
  If when buying table-cloths a littlo care is
  expended upon their selection, to keep them
  in good condition should bo a comparatively
  simple matter ; always providing, of course.
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD LINEN
  
  
  263
  
  
  that they are entrusted when soiled to a fairly
  capable laundress, and that the proverb " A
  stitch in time saves nine " is borne well in
  mind.
  
  Double damask, bleached or unbleached, is
  the best material to buy. It wears well, and
  keeps its appearance to the end. There is
  nothing to be gained by buying inferior table
  linen ; it may have a very fine glossy surface
  when new, but the first washing removes all
  this dressing and leaves only a poor limp material
  which wrinkles up and soils very readily.
  
  The design to be chosen is entirely a matter of
  taste, and each season shows something new.
  It must be borne in mind, however, that the
  newest designs generally cost a little more money,
  so, where economy has to be considered, it is
  as well to ask for something of an earlier date,
  which may at the same time be just as pretty
  and eflEective. As a rule, a table-cloth with a
  small all-over pattern, such as spots, stars,
  diamonds or small sprigs, is cheaper than one
  with a large central design and border.
  
  Table-cloths with some colour introduced,
  generally red or blue, are used by some people
  as luncheon or breakfast cloths, but the fasliion
  is more German than English, and at present
  is not much in favour.
  
  Then there is a fashion at present for using
  dinner sets - a centre and mats in place of a
  cloth ; but tills can only be adopted by those
  who have a very finely poUshed table or a
  beautiful oak surface to show, and is not likely
  to become general.
  
  For kitchen use the unbleached dameisk cloths
  answer the purpose ver\ well, as they will not soil
  so quickly as the pure white cloths. They
  ought to be bought strong and good, although
  the quality need not be so fine as the other
  household cloths.
  
  Table napkins, or serviettes, to be correct,
  should match the table-cloth with which they
  are to be used in quality and design. Tliis,
  however, entails additional expenditure, as
  a much larger number will be required than
  when they are used generally with any cloth.
  For this reason it is a good plan to buy two
  table-cloths of one pattern, as it wiU then be
  found easier to regulate the supply of serviettes.
  In fact, in small households of moderate means
  it is just as well for everyday use to buy all the
  serviettes alike, and to choose a small un-
  obtrusive pattern that can be used with any
  cloth. Then for special occasions there can
  bo a set kept in reserve which matches the
  best tablo-cloth in pattern and quality.
  
  Size and Price. - The size of the table-cloth is
  very important, as it will not look well unless it
  hangs at least half a yard over each end of
  the table and twelve inches at the sides. Care-
  ful measvu-ements should therefore be taken of
  the tables for which the cloths are required
  before buying is thought of.
  
  
  A very good double damask table-cloth in a
  small spot design can be bought at the follow-
  ing prices : - 2 by 2 yards, 10s. ; 2 by 2^ ygu-ds,
  12s. ; and 2 by 3 yards, 14s. ; and these are par-
  ticularly suitable for breakfast or luncheon cloths.
  Those of a more elaborate design will cost from
  14s. 6d. to 27s, 6d., 18s. to 35s. 6d., and 21s. 6d.
  to 42s. and upwards for the same sizes re-
  spectively, while larger sizes wiU cost still more
  in proportion. A large cloth of very fine quality
  cannot be bought under £4 or £5.
  
  Other designs in fine quality damask, with
  hand-made lace insertion and hem-stitched
  borders, will cost from 60s. to £18 and upwards,
  according to size and the quaUty of the work.
  
  Serviettes are made in different sizes - i.e.
  22, 27, and 31 inches squaxe ; the medium size
  is the most usual, although the smallest ones
  are frequently used for breakfast. Very good
  serviettes can be bought for 16s. 6d. per dozen
  for the medium size and 12s. 9d. for the smaU
  size, while as much as 45s. and 68s. can be given
  for the same size in an extra fine quality.
  
  There are a number of small articles in the way
  of table Unen, such as tray-cloths, afternoon
  tea-cloths, doyleys, carving-cloths, sideboard-
  cloths, table-cloths, &c., which will also be
  required in a household, but a list of these is
  scarcely necessary, as they must be bought to
  supply indi\adual needs. These are the little
  things which are frequently given as presents
  to those starting house for the first time, while
  in an old-established menage scraps of damask,
  linen, &c=, can often be utilised for the purpose.
  In any case, they should never be bought in
  large quantities, as they can so often be picked
  up at a very moderate rate and at odd times as
  the use for them arises. Fashions too change so
  quickly, that it is better to have a small stock
  and renew it when necessary.
  
  Quantity required. - Allau-ances. - Tliis, again,
  depends very much upon the means of the
  household, and must be regulated according to
  indixidual circumstances and the special arrange-
  ment of meals. In houses where a large amount
  of entertaining is done the quantity will neces-
  sarily be increased.
  
  A very moderate supply would be four table-
  cloths of average size for each meal, and three
  dozen serviettes, two cloths of extra quality and
  extra size, if necessary, for each meed, and two
  dozen ser\aettes to match.
  
  It is always better to keep a cloth specially
  for dinner, and a different one for breakfast and
  luncheon or supper. In this case perhaps it
  will be sufficient to give out one of each kind
  in a week, although in many houses the dinner
  cloth will be changed as often as tliree times
  a week.
  
  Serviettes should be changed at least twice a
  week, or fresh ones for dinner every day where
  it can be afforded. One table-cloth a week is
  the usual allowance for servants' use.
  
  
  264
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  The table linen has so much to do with the
  
  success of a meal that it should never bo
  
  allowed to become too dirty or crushed. If a
  
  table-cloth heis to do duty for several days and
  
  look well all the time, great care must bo taken of
  
  it. It should bo folded carefully and always
  
  in the original creases, and each fold should
  
  bo smoothed out with the hands. If it is kept
  
  in a drawer, it must be laid perfectly flat, but
  
  what is better still is to put it
  
  into a hnen press, as shown in the
  
  accompanying diagram. When
  
  the cloth has been laid in between
  
  the boards, tho tension should be
  
  screwed down as tightly as it
  
  will go without destroying the
  
  material, and if the table-cloth is
  
  I ■ I H allowed to remain several hours,
  
  I '"^ I ■•^ it will come out looking as if it
  
  l1"- X--' had been newly " done up." Tho
  
  screw of the press should bo
  
  loosened when not in use. Failing
  
  a press, the cloth may be slowly mangled if it has
  
  become very much crushed.
  
  Another point about table-cloths is that they
  should never be put directly on tho bare table.
  An old table-cloth or piece of felt should always
  be laid under it. This not only acts as a silence
  cloth, but it enables one to lay tho cloth more
  smoothly. If a piece of felt has to be bought
  for the purpose, then wliite should be chosen,
  as then there will be no fear of staining should
  water or any other Uquid be spilt.
  
  Kitchen and Household Towels. - Besides the
  towels required for bedroom use, there is also
  a stock indispensable to kitchen and household
  purposes, such as : -
  Roller Towels.
  
  
  Linen Press.
  
  
  Glass Towels.
  Tea Cloths.
  Kitchen Towels.
  Slop Cloths.
  
  
  Lavatory Towels.
  Pudding Cloths.
  Hearth Qoths.
  Dusters.
  Oven Cloths.
  
  
  &c.
  
  
  All household cloths should be hemmed and
  marked with the name and purpose for which
  they are intended. If there are several servants
  in a house, it is a good plan to let each one have
  her own special set for wliich she is held respon-
  sible, and they ouglit to be instructed as to the
  legitimate use of cacli kind. In somo household
  towels the name of its kind is wovcninto each one,
  such as "Glass Towel," " Tea Cloth," " Kitchen,"
  &c., then to distinguish one maid's towels from
  another's they can be bought in various styles
  and colours, with a blue and white or red and
  white check, a blue or rod border, or all white,
  and so on. If just a little difference is made,
  coruusion will bo avoided, and tlio blame of lost
  towels will not be likely to fall upon tho WTong
  person.
  
  Towels and dusters should bo given out
  regularly once a week, and tho last week's lot
  should always bo accounted for. Tlio number
  
  
  required depends entirely upon the amount of
  work to bo done. It is a mistake to be niggardly
  in giNnng out supplies - ^it should be remembered
  that people have different ways of working, and
  as a rule it is not wise to limit a good worker,
  but to give what is asked for witWn reason.
  
  The only point that must bo insisted upon is
  that the towels and dusters are kept clean, taken
  care of, and never bundled away damp in dark
  corners.
  
  Except in the case of a young manage, it should
  not be necessary to buy all these towels new.
  The duster supply especially can generally bo
  provided for by using up pieces of old soft
  material ; thin bedroom towels can be cut
  down to make lavatory towels or basin cloths,
  and old bath towels for drying floors and so on.
  (See also " What to do with Old Linen," p. 267.)
  
  If now dusters must be bought, they can bo
  procured ready made from 3d. each, or if the
  material alone is bought, there is notliing better
  than a cheap sateen. This can be cut up in
  convenient pieces, and a hem laid and machined
  round in a very short time. These will be found
  excellent for furniture, and they become softer
  each time they are washed.
  
  Dish cloths again can be made of any old soft
  material, such as remnants of Turkish or other
  old towelhng. It is a mistake to have them
  very close in texture, or they \\nll too readily
  absorb grease. There is really nothing better
  than the knitted kind, made of strong unbleached
  knitting cotton worked with rather coarse
  needles. These wear well and can be washed
  and boiled over and over again.
  
  Cloths known as " swabs " are very useful for
  house cleaning. They are made of a coarso
  open material, and are better and stronger than
  flannel for washing floors, tiles, and doorsteps,
  and they have the fiu-ther advantage of leaving
  no fluff behind. Tlie price is about 2d. each.
  
  Dust Sheets. - Old sheets or bed-covers can
  generally bo used, but where these are not
  available, thin unbleached calico or holland
  should be bought and sown up into suitable
  sizes. It will cost from 4Jd. to 6d. per yard.
  The number of dust-sheets required will depend
  entirely upon tho amount of furniture to be
  covered.
  
  House Flannel. - A linen cupboard should al-
  ways contain a supply of this, but it must be
  given out with care. The remains of old blankets
  can often be utilised.
  
  THE LINEN CUPBOARD
  
  The durability of linen depends very much
  upon its being well kept. If it is treated with
  care, it will not only look better, but it will last
  longer. To keep it nicely, a linen cupboard or
  its equivalent is a necessity. In houses with
  good cupboard accommodation, and especially in
  the old-fasliioned ones, a place specially fitted
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD LINEN
  
  
  265
  
  
  up for linen is generally provided. Sometimes
  even a small room can be reserved for the
  purpose, where, in addition to the linen proper,
  spare blankets, curtains, and other upholstery
  which is not in use can be comfortably stored
  away. The linen cupboard should be in a
  
  
  Linen Cupboard.
  
  dry and airy situation, and not against an
  outside wall, which is not always free from
  nnoistixre. If linen is allowed to become damp
  it mildews and rots very quickly. It can
  frequently be arranged that the hot-water
  pipes going to the bath-room pass through the
  linen cupboard, and the inner wall is warmed by
  a kitchen flue, or that the shelving is fitted in
  close proximity to a hot-water tank. In this
  way the linen is kept well aired.
  
  If no special cupboard is provided, and in
  modern houses, and especially in flats, this is
  frequently the case, tnen perhaps an ordinary
  cupboard can bo utihsed, or an old-fashioned
  wardrobe with shelves and drawers underneath.
  Failing this, it is sometimes possible to have
  shelving fitted up in some recess, and then a
  light wooden door made to keep it free from
  dust ; or merely a door frame, the panels being
  filled in with some pretty cretonne or tapestry.
  
  A linen cupboard should be well provided
  with shelves, and these should be wide enough
  to hold folded bed and table linen comfortably,
  with a little room to spare. The shelves are
  frequently made of simple spars of wood with
  spaces between, and this plan allows the air to
  circulate round the linen better than it would
  in the case of solid wood.
  
  Arrangement. - The shelves of the linen cup-
  board should be covered with thin calico or with
  strong white paper, which can be renewed from
  time to time. Each kind of linen should have
  a shelf or a portion of a shelf devoted to itself ;
  ihna bed linen should be arranged in one place,
  table linen in another, towels in another, and so
  on. Linen sheets should be kept separate from
  cotton sheets, large sheets from small sheets,
  different sets of table-linen by themselves, each
  class of towel by itself, &c., and all of one kind
  together. AiTauge the linen methodically in
  
  
  neat piles, and in an order most convenient to
  yourself. Finer and better tilings which are
  not in common use should be wrapped up in
  muslin or pieces of old sheeting and labelled ;
  otherwise they are Uable to be pulled out by
  mistake and used in a hurry. The shelves of
  the linen cupboard must be kept carefully
  covered to prevent the dust falling on the hnen.
  Some people have small rods fixed to the
  edges of the shelves, by which covers can be
  attached by means of rings or a casing, and
  these can then be folded back over the linen,
  or loose covers of thin hoUand fastened to the
  edges of the shelves with large drawing-pins
  will answer the purpose very well. The covers
  must be large enough to cover the linen well
  and to tuck in all round. Needless to say, they
  must be kept very clean and washed at regular
  intervals. The door of the linen cupboard
  must always be kept locked, or at least tightly
  closed.
  
  Scenting the Linen. - The old-fashioned plan
  of putting lavender among the bed Unen is
  a very dainty one. The dried lavender can
  either be bound up in bundles, or the flowers
  put into a muslin or thin silk bag, and laid
  between the folds of the sheets and pillow-cases.
  Instead of lavender, dried rose-leaves, helio-
  trope, verbena, or powdered oris-root can all be
  used. Any of these will give a dehcate scent
  to the bed-linen.
  
  Marking. - It is very important to have every
  article in the linen cupboard carefully and
  distinctly marked. Shopkeepers who supply
  the linen are generally very willing to do this
  in ink, free of charge. There are different
  methods of marking, and, of course, the most
  artistic is to have the name or monogram of
  the owner embroidered on the material.
  Linen drapers will generally undertake to do
  this on payment of the required fee - the
  simple initials will only cost a few pence, wliile
  more elaborate designs will, of course, be more
  costly. A pretty monogram may cost as
  much as 5s. or 7s. Those who have time and
  clever fingers will like to do it at home, and the
  process is not a difficult one.
  
  Cash's lettering is another way of marking.
  A combination of any two letter combinations
  can be bought ready for lOd. per box of one
  gross, or any length name made to order in ten
  days, in Script, Old English, or Block style type,
  for 4s. 6d. per gross, 2s. 9d. per half gross.
  These can be embroidered in red, navy, black,
  blue, yellow, green or white, on fine tape, and
  are easily sewn on to the linen. They do very
  well, for such things as sheets, blankets and
  towels, but would not look well on table linen.
  There is always the danger, too, of their being
  picked off if the linen passes through the hands
  of dishonest people. If the washing of the
  linen is to be done in a public laundry, the
  simple ink marking is as good as any. The
  
  
  266
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  mark should be put in the top left-hand corner,
  as it is most convenient for folding. In addi-
  tion to the name, it is a good plan when
  marking to put the number of articles in each
  set, and the date of purcliaso as well, thus -
  supposing the name to be Grant, and the
  number of articles six, one would put
  6- Grant, 1910.
  
  In the case of bed-linen some people put
  a mark to show for wliich room it is intended
  as well, and with table-hnen when separate
  table-cloths are vised, for luncheon and dinner,
  the word luncheon or dinner could bo marked
  in accordingl}'. If the marking is to be done
  in ink at homo, be ceireful to choose one of
  a reliable quality, as inferior kinds turn a
  bad colour, and sometimes biu-n a hole in the
  fabric. If there is any uncertainty as to the
  ink being satisfactory, it will be wise to test it
  first on a piece of rag ; then submit the rag
  to all the processes of washing, boiling, and
  ironing, and see how the ink stands the treat-
  ment. If good, it should come out clear and
  black. A metal pen should never be used for
  marking, as the steel of the pen combined with
  the ink often forms an acid, which spoils the
  linen. A ' proper quill pen for the purpose is
  usually sold with each bottle of ink.
  
  Small india-rubber 'Stamps can be bought for
  marking linen, but the resvdt is not elegant.
  These are more smtable for large institutions
  than for home use.
  
  Kitchen towels and dusters mvist bo marked
  as methodically as bed linen.
  
  Inventory. - It is very important, too, that a
  list bo made of every article the hnen cupboard
  contains. This should bo entered in a small
  book kept for the purpose, and space should be
  left for any notes or alterations. It is a good
  plan to put a note of the price and the date of
  purchase against each article, as tliis is useful
  for future reference. When new hnen is bought,
  it must at once be added to the hst, and any
  that is discarded should be struck off. The list
  •will require revision from time to time, and the
  Btock should bo counted carefully and compared
  with the numbers in the book. If the Unen is
  in charge of one of the maids of the household,
  the mistress should go over the list with her
  and check every item. A simple copy of the
  list, without any notes and comments, might
  also be fastened to the door of the linen cup-
  board by means of drawing-pins, as this can be
  easily referred to at a glance. Of course, some
  of these details may be simplified in very small
  houses, although at all times it is wiser to
  have housekeeping done in a methodical and
  business-like manner, and it really saves time and
  expense in the end.
  
  Care of Soiled Linen. - To allow soiled linen to
  accumulate is a habit to be condemned. Both
  personal and bed linen is liable to have an un-
  pleasant odour, and the sooner it can be washed
  
  
  the more sanitary and hygienic it will be for
  every one concerned. A weekly washing is
  strongly to be recommended, and under no
  circumstances should soiled linen remain un-
  washed longer than a fortnight. Meanwhile,
  it must be kept in a ventilated receptacle. A
  light basket is the usual thing, and nothing
  could bo better. If possible, the soiled linen
  should be kept in a small room or closet that is
  not used for sleeping purposes - it is not a
  healthy custom to store it in a bedroom, but
  where this is unavoidable, there is all the more
  necessity to have it turned out and washed as
  soon as possible.
  
  Sending out the Washing. - Before sending out
  a waslnng, great care must bo taken to make an
  accurate Ust of all the articles. The list should
  be written in a book, and not on slips of paper,
  which are readily lost. In large households it
  is a good plan to make the list in duplicate,
  sending one copy to the laundry and reserving
  the other for reference on return of the wasliing.
  Some laundries supply their own books with a
  printed hst of the different items, and all that
  is necessary is to date it and fill in the number
  of the different articles. Or special laundiy
  books, such as Lett's, can be bought for a few
  pence. Everything that requires washing
  should first be collected together in a given place,
  and if there are different maids in the house
  each one should be responsible for the collecting
  of her own towels, &c. Then have the things
  divided into lots, according to their kind, and
  carefully counted. If the washing is a large one,
  it will be much easier if two can be engaged at
  the work ; then one can do the counting, while
  the other enters the numbers in the book. It
  is always safer to count everything tvvice in case
  of any mistakes. It is always well too, in making
  the Ust, to put some notification of the kind of
  article sent - such as Zinen • sheets, cotton sheets,
  large table-cloths, kitchen table-cloths, and not
  merely to classify them under the heading of
  sheets or table-cloths respectively.
  
  The soiled linen must then be put into bags or
  packed in a basket ready to be sent away, and
  the written list must in all cases accompany it.
  
  For directions for home washing, see
  " Guide to Laundry Work," p. 271.
  
  Return of the Washing. - When the Unen is re-
  turned from the washing, it must bo most care-
  fully checked, first as regards numbers, and then
  as regards the kind of washing it has received,
  and the mending that may be required. If
  there is any article missing, it should have a
  mark put against it in the book, and inquiry
  must at once be made about it, and when re-
  ceived a note must be made of the fact in the
  book. It is also important when checking to
  examine the linen to see that all has been well
  washed, and if there is anything faulty, it should
  be returned to the laundry with a note asking
  that it should be redone and returned in better
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD LINEN
  
  
  267
  
  
  condition. It is a good plan to keep a list of the
  laundry prices at hand, so as to compare them
  with those marked in the book. Anything re-
  quiring mending miist be put aside until it can
  have attention, and the remainder aired if
  necessary, and then put away in its proper place
  on the shelves. The freshly washed articles
  should always be put at the foot of the pile
  already there, as this will ensure equal wear,
  everything being used in rotation. Regular use
  is also a protection from mildew.
  
  Airing of Linen. - It is most important that
  all Unen should be thoroughly dry before it is
  laid away. In many cases it is not necessary to
  air it when it comes from the laundry, as it
  arrives almost warm from the hot air closets,
  but where the least dampness is suspected it
  should have attention, or it will be liable to
  gather mildew. And then again, just before
  bed lineu is used, it shotild be well aired, unless
  the linen cupboard happens to be a heated one.
  The sheets should be hung in front of a good
  hot fire, and turned and re-turned until they
  are warmed through and through. If linen
  is stored in a cold cupboard, it readily absorbs
  moisture, whilst a spell of wet weather, especially
  after frost, will render it quite damp, and when
  we consider what serious results may follow the
  sleeping in damp sheets, the slight extra trouble
  of airing the linen will not be objected to.
  
  Mending of House Linen. - After the first few
  weeks of wear hnen will require examination for
  repairs. Buttons and tapes soon begin to dis-
  appear, the ends of hems and seams come un-
  done, and other stiti hes here and there will be
  required. Then later on more serious mending
  will be necessary - patching, darning, and adapt-
  ing. The housewife need never be ashamed
  of linen that is well mended ; on the contrary
  she should be proud of it, fop it will serve to give
  eloquent testimony of her patience and thrift.
  
  The proper time for patching and darning
  house linen is before sending it to the washing,
  and slight rents must have instant attention.
  If it is not convenient to mend bed linen and
  towels before washing, any holes or tears must at
  least be drawn together or roughly mended with
  a needle and cotton, or the hard treatment to
  which they will probably be subjected in the
  laundry will only tend to increase them tenfold.
  Table linen, however, must always be mended
  before it is done up, as it would be impossible to
  do it when starched and ironed without crushing
  it considerably. If a large patch or darn is
  required, it is even better to have the damask
  washed and rough dried in order to remove all
  the dressing before attempting the mending.
  
  Wlien sheets show signs of wear in the middle,
  it is a good plan to cut them in two lengthways,
  and to join the two outer edges together. The
  cut edges will then reqviire to be hemmed. Or
  if a large sheet begins to wear in other paxts, per-
  haps the best pieces can be taken to make a sheet
  
  
  for a smaller bed or cot. Always try to get as
  much as you can out of a sheet before putting it
  aside as old linen.
  
  Note. - For directions for mending, see
  Needlework Section, p. 411.
  
  What to do with old Linen. - No matter how
  much care is taken of house Unen it will even-
  tually wear out.
  
  Old cotton sheets can always be used as dust-
  sheets, or if these are not required, the best
  pieces can be cut out and made into cloths for
  various household purposes, covers for the hnen
  cupboard, covers for drawers, or for wrapping
  up fine Unen or blankets, &c.
  
  An old Unen sheet is more valuable, and the
  remains should be put to some better use. The
  top and bottom which has not had very hard
  wear will Ukely be in good condition, and a strip
  can no doubt be cut off wliich, with a little hem-
  stitching and embroidery, will make quite dainty
  sheet-shams. Or smaU good portions might be
  made into pillow-shams, and smaUer pieces still
  could be cut up into centres for doyleys and tray
  cloths, or the cover for a cosy, or perhaps even
  a complete toilet set for a bedroom. Any one
  with clever fingers and a Uttle ingenuity can,
  with some embroidery and the addition of
  pretty lace and insertion, make many a dainty
  article out of smaU pieces of Unen. Pieces of
  Unen which are too worn to be worth any sewing
  should be carefully rolled up and laid aside, as
  they wiU no doubt be found invaluable in the
  case of sickness.
  
  Old table-cloths, when they can no longer be
  darned or patched, can be cut down into tray
  cloths, sideboard cloths, ceu-xang cloths, &c.,
  and also it is always weU to keep a few old pieces
  of damask at hand for patching and mending.
  
  Old towels can always be used up as household
  cloths ; in fact, the more thin and worn they are
  the more useful and valuable they wiU be for
  some purposes. A collection should always be
  made in view of any spring or special cleaning ;
  they wiU come in very handy for the drying of
  paint and woodwork, &c., and a plentiful supply
  wiU be a great boom.
  
  Old pillow-cases make useful bags for keeping
  various patching materials, &c.
  
  Old Blankets. (See p. 262.)
  
  Replenishing the Linen Cupboard. - It is not
  wise to allow the linen supply to fall too low, ets
  this will mean pajang out a big sum sooner or
  later to bring it back to its normal condition.
  It is much better, when it can be managed, to add
  something new every year, even although it may
  only be a pair of good sheets, half-a-dozen towels,
  a fine table-cloth, or a few serviettes. In this
  way the supply is kept up at very Uttle expense.
  It might just be mentioned here that household
  Unen is one of the things that can often be very
  profitably bought at a sale. The large linen
  warehouses sell off their old stock, either because
  the patterns are not of the latest or because the
  
  
  268
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  materials are shop soiled, and as this in nowise
  detracts from the value of the article a great
  saving can be realised by buying what is neces-
  sary at these times.
  
  The following lists with estimates have been
  compiled from information kindly supphed by
  Messrs. Waring & Gillow, Oxford Street, London,
  and wiU perhaps bo a guide to those who have to
  stock their linen cupboard for the first time.
  
  Tlie quantities can, of course, be increased or
  decreased according to special requirements.
  
  Eatimate No. 1- £17 18s. 5d.
  
  
  Description.
  
  Price.
  
  Amount.
  
  s.
  
  d.
  
  £ s.
  
  d.
  
  3 double damask cloths, 2
  
  by 2i yards . . .
  
  10
  
  6
  
  1 11
  
  G
  
  2 double damask cloths, 2
  
  by 3 yards ....
  
  12
  
  9
  
  1 5
  
  G
  
  I dozen double damask
  
  dinner napkins
  
  15
  
  0
  
  15
  
  0
  
  3 damask tray cloths . .
  
  2
  
  0
  
  G
  
  0
  
  2 damask sideboard cloths
  
  2
  
  9
  
  5
  
  G
  
  2 kitchen table cloths
  
  3
  
  G
  
  7
  
  0
  
  3 pair cotton sheets, 2| by
  
  3J yards ....
  
  12
  
  6
  
  1 17
  
  G
  
  2 pair cotton sheets, 2 by
  
  3J yards ....
  
  8
  
  6
  
  17
  
  0
  
  12 cotton pillow-cases
  
  10^
  
  10
  
  G
  
  4 pair servants' cotton
  
  sheets, 2 by 3 yards
  
  G
  
  0
  
  1 4
  
  0
  
  4 servants' pillow-cases .
  
  8i
  
  2
  
  10
  
  1 dozen linen bedroom
  
  towels
  
  11
  
  9
  
  U
  
  9
  
  G servants' towels . . .
  
  81
  
  4
  
  3
  
  6 white Turkish bath
  
  towels
  
  1
  
  4 J
  
  8
  
  3
  
  ^ dozen glass cloths
  
  5
  
  0
  
  2
  
  6
  
  J dozen tea and china
  
  cloths
  
  5
  
  0
  
  2
  
  6
  
  J dozen strong kitchen
  
  rubbers
  
  6
  
  6
  
  3
  
  3
  
  J dozen housemaids' cloths
  
  6
  
  6
  
  3
  
  3
  
  1 dozen check dusters .
  
  4
  
  6
  
  4
  
  6
  
  4 linen roller towels . .
  
  1
  
  4
  
  5
  
  4
  
  2 pudding cloths . . .
  
  4i
  
  9
  
  4 knife cloths ....
  
  H
  
  1
  
  G
  
  2 pair double -bed blankets
  
  18
  
  6
  
  1 17
  
  0
  
  2 under blankets . . .
  
  3
  
  9
  
  7
  
  G
  
  1 pair single-bod blankets
  
  12
  
  0
  
  1 under blanket
  
  2
  
  9
  
  2 large white toilet quilts
  
  10
  
  0
  
  1 0
  
  0
  
  1 single-bed white toilet
  
  quilt
  
  7
  
  6
  
  7
  
  G
  
  2 pair servants' blankets .
  
  10
  
  0
  
  1 0
  
  0
  
  2 under blankets . . .
  
  2
  
  9
  
  5
  
  G
  
  2 servants' coloured qtiilts
  
  4
  
  0
  
  9
  
  0
  
  4 white toilet covers . .
  
  1
  
  3
  
  5
  
  0
  
  2 servants' toilet covers .
  
  1
  
  0
  
  2
  
  0
  
  £17 18
  
  5
  
  Eatimate No. 2- £31 IGs. 2d.
  
  
  Description.
  
  
  4 superior double damask
  cloths, 2 by 2^ yards
  (hand woven) . . .
  
  2 superior double damask
  clotlis, 2 1 by 3 yards
  (hand woven)
  
  IJ dozen superior double
  damask napldns, 27
  inches square (hand
  woven)
  
  J dozen damaskfish napkins
  
  4 damask carving napkins
  or tray cloths . . .
  
  2 damask (or hem-stitched
  linen) sideboard cloths
  
  2 kitchen table cloths, 2 by
  
  2 yards
  
  3 pair double -bed Unen
  
  sheets, 2f by 3J yards
  
  3 pair single - bed linen
  
  sheets, 2 by 3^ yards
  12 Unen pillow-cases (hem
  stitched) ....
  
  4 pair servants' cotton
  
  sheets, 2 by 3 yards
  4 servants' cotton pillow
  
  cases
  
  1 dozen linen huckaback
  
  bedroom towels
  1 dozen linen diaper bed
  
  room towels (hem
  
  stitched) ....
  J dozen servants' linen
  
  bedroom towels
  G large white Turkish bath
  
  towels ....
  1 dozen glass cloths
  1 dozen tea cloths . .
  1 dozen strong kitchen
  
  rubbers ....
  I dozen housemaids' cloths
  1 dozen check dusters .
  1 dozen soft polishing
  
  dusters ....
  6 linen roller towels . .
  3 pudding cloths .
  J dozen knife cloths
  1 hearth-rug cover .
  
  1 dozen sponge cloths, for
  
  lamps, &c. . . .
  
  2 pair double-bed fine wool
  
  blankets
  2 under blankets . . .
  1 pair single-bed fine wf
  
  blankets
  
  1 under blanket .
  
  2 pair servants' blankets
  2 under blankets . . .
  
  
  Price.
  
  Amount.
  
  8.
  
  d.
  
  £ 8.
  
  d.
  
  15
  
  0
  
  3 0
  
  0
  
  23
  
  0
  
  2 G
  
  0
  
  24
  G
  
  0
  0
  
  1 IG
  3
  
  0
  0
  
  2
  
  0
  
  8
  
  0
  
  3
  
  G
  
  7
  
  0
  
  4
  
  G
  
  9
  
  0
  
  27
  
  G
  
  4 2
  
  6
  
  21
  
  0
  
  3 3
  
  0
  
  2
  
  0
  
  1 4
  
  0
  
  7
  
  0
  
  1 8
  
  0
  
  1
  
  0
  
  4
  
  0
  
  14
  
  0
  
  14
  
  0
  
  15
  
  0
  
  15
  
  0
  
  10
  
  0
  
  5
  
  0
  
  2
  6
  G
  
  0
  G
  G
  
  12
  G
  6
  
  0
  6
  6
  
  8
  G
  4
  
  0
  G
  6
  
  8
  3
  4
  
  0
  3
  6
  
  3
  1
  
  4
  
  2
  
  6
  G
  6
  6
  11
  
  3
  9
  1
  2
  2
  
  G
  0
  6
  3
  11
  
  2
  
  0
  
  2
  
  0
  
  25
  
  5
  
  0
  0
  
  2 10
  10
  
  0
  0
  
  IG
  
  12
  
  2
  
  G
  
  0
  9
  
  IG
  
  3
  
  1 4
  
  5
  
  6
  3
  0
  6
  
  HOUSEHOLD LINEN
  
  
  269
  
  
  Estimate No. 2 - continued.
  
  
  2 fine white toilet quilts,
  for double beds
  
  1 fine white toilet quilt,
  
  for single beds . .
  
  2 servants' coloured quilts .
  4 white toUet covers . .
  2 servants' toilet covers
  
  
  8. d.
  15 0
  
  
  10
  5
  1
  1
  
  
  £ s.
  
  d.
  
  1 10
  
  0
  
  10
  
  6
  
  11
  
  0
  
  7
  
  0
  
  2
  
  0
  
  £31 16
  
  2
  
  Estimate No. 3- £67 5s. lOd.
  
  
  Description.
  
  
  4 fine double damask table
  cloths, 2 J by 2 J yards
  
  3 fine double damask table-
  
  cloths, 2i by 3 yards .
  
  1 fine double damask table
  
  cloth, 2J by 4 yards .
  
  4 dozen fine double damask
  
  napkins, 27 by 27 ins.
  1 dozen damask fish nap-
  kins
  
  1 dozen damask pastry
  
  napkins
  
  6 damask tray or carving
  napkins, 31 by 36 ins.
  
  2 damask (or hem-stitched
  
  linen) sideboard cloths
  
  3 kitchen table cloths, 2 by
  
  2J yards
  
  2 dishing-up cloths, IJ by
  Ij yards
  
  4 pair fine Unen sheets for
  
  double beds, 3 by 3^
  yards (hem-stitched) .
  
  4 pair fine hnen sheets for
  single beds, 2 by 3 J
  yards (hem-stitched) .
  
  18 fine linen hem-stitched
  pillow-covers (square
  or oblong) ....
  
  6 pair servants' superior
  cotton sheets, 2 by 3
  yards
  
  6 servants' superior cotton
  pillow-covers
  
  1 dozen strong linen hucka-
  back towels .
  
  1 dozen fine linen hucka-
  back towels (hem-
  stitched)
  
  1 dozen fine soft Unen diaper
  towels (hem-stitched)
  
  1 dozen servants' strong
  linen huckaback tow els
  
  
  Price.
  
  Amount
  
  s.
  
  d.
  
  £ s.
  
  d.
  
  25
  
  0
  
  5 0
  
  0
  
  30
  
  0
  
  4 10
  
  0
  
  42
  
  0
  
  2 2
  
  0
  
  30
  
  0
  
  6 0
  
  0
  
  7
  
  6
  
  7
  
  6
  
  7
  
  6
  
  7
  
  6
  
  3
  
  6
  
  1 1
  
  0
  
  7
  
  6
  
  15
  
  0
  
  5
  
  6
  
  16
  
  6
  
  2
  
  6
  
  5
  
  0
  
  42
  
  0
  
  8 8
  
  0
  
  30
  
  0
  
  6 0
  
  0
  
  3
  
  6
  
  3 3
  
  0
  
  8
  
  6
  
  2 11
  
  0
  
  1
  
  0
  
  6
  
  0
  
  15
  
  9
  
  15
  
  9
  
  19
  
  6
  
  19
  
  6
  
  21
  
  0
  
  1 1
  
  0
  
  12
  
  6
  
  12
  
  6
  
  Estimate No. 3 - continued.
  
  
  6 large whitљ Turkish bath
  
  towels
  
  6 extra large Turkish bath
  
  towels
  
  2 white Turkish bath sheets
  1 dozen glass cloths, fine
  
  quality
  
  1 dozen tea or china cloths,
  
  fine quality ....
  1 dozen linen dusters
  1 dozen soft poUshing cloths
  
  or dusters ....
  1 dozen housemaids' cloths
  
  (basin)
  
  1 dozen strong large kitchen
  
  rubbers
  
  1 dozen soft large kitchen
  
  rubbers
  
  8 Hnen roller towels .
  J dozen pudding cloths .
  
  1 dozen knife cloths
  
  2 hearth-rug covers .
  
  1 dozen sponge cloths, for
  
  lamps, &c
  
  2 pair large double - bed
  
  blankets
  
  2 under blankets ....
  2 pair single-bed blankets .
  
  2 under blankets . . .
  
  3 pair Liervants' strong
  
  heavy blankets . . .
  3 under blankets ....
  3 fine white toilet quilts for
  
  double beds ....
  
  3 fine white toilet quilts for
  
  single beds ....
  
  4 servants' coloured quilts
  6 fine white toilet covers .
  4 servants' toilet covers
  
  
  8.
  
  d.
  
  £
  
  8.
  
  d.
  
  3
  
  0
  
  18
  
  0
  
  3
  
  6
  
  1
  
  1
  
  0
  
  5
  
  0
  
  10
  
  0
  
  7
  
  6
  
  7
  
  6
  
  7
  
  6
  
  7
  
  6
  
  5
  
  6
  
  5
  
  6
  
  4
  
  6
  
  4
  
  6
  
  6
  
  6
  
  6
  
  6
  
  8
  
  6
  
  8
  
  6
  
  8
  
  6
  
  8
  
  6
  
  2
  
  0
  
  16
  
  0
  
  6
  
  0
  
  3
  
  0
  
  4
  
  6
  
  4
  
  6
  
  2
  
  11
  
  5
  
  10
  
  2
  
  0
  
  2
  
  0
  
  30
  
  0
  
  0
  
  0
  
  6
  
  0
  
  12
  
  0
  
  18
  
  6
  
  17
  
  0
  
  4
  
  3
  
  8
  
  6
  
  12
  
  6
  
  1
  
  17
  
  6
  
  3
  
  3
  
  9
  
  9
  
  21
  
  0
  
  3
  
  3
  
  0
  
  15
  
  0
  
  2
  
  5
  
  0
  
  5
  
  6
  
  1
  
  2
  
  0
  
  2
  
  6
  
  15
  
  0
  
  1
  
  6
  
  6
  
  0
  
  £67
  
  5
  
  10
  
  Eatimxite No. 4- £177 3s. Id.
  
  
  Description.
  
  
  6 extra fine double damask
  table cloths, 2J by 2i
  yards
  
  4 extra fine double damask
  table cloths, 2i by 3
  yards
  
  4 extra fine double damask
  table cloths, 2 J by 4
  yards
  
  2 extra fine double damask
  table cloths, 2\ by 5
  yards
  
  
  Price.
  
  
  8. d.
  
  37 6
  
  45 0
  
  63 0
  
  84 0
  
  
  Amount.
  
  
  £ 5. d.
  
  11 5 0
  
  9 0 0
  
  12 12 0
  8 8 0
  
  
  270
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Estimate No. 4 - continued.
  
  
  1 extra fiiio double damask
  
  table cloth, 2J by 6
  
  yjU-ds
  
  6 dozen extra fine double
  damask napkins, 27 by
  27 inches
  
  2 dozen extra fine double
  
  damask breakfast nap-
  kins, 22 by 22 inches .
  dozen extra fine double
  damask tray or carv-
  ing napkins. 31 by 36
  
  ins
  
  2 dozen damask fish napkins
  (large and small) . .
  
  2 dozen bread and pastry
  
  napkins
  
  4 damask (or hem-stitched
  linen) sideboard cloths
  
  3 afternoon tea cloths .
  
  4 strong damask cloths, for
  
  upper servants, 2 by 2
  yards
  
  4 kitchen table cloths, 2 by
  2 J yards
  
  4 extra strong disliing-up
  cloths, 1 J by 2 yards .
  
  6 pair fine linen hem-
  stitched sheets, for
  double beds, 3 by 3|
  yards
  
  8 pair fine linen hem-
  stitched sheets, for
  single bods, 2 by 3|
  yards
  
  30 fine linen hem-stitched
  pillow-covers (square
  or oblong) ....
  
  6duchesse toilet covers
  
  8 pair strong cotton sheets,
  for servants, 2 by 31
  yards
  
  12 strong linen pillow-
  covers, for servants .
  
  2 dozen extra strong hem-
  stitched huckaback
  towels
  
  2 dozen fine hem-stitched
  huckaback towels .
  
  2 dozen fine soft diaper
  bedroom towels, for
  ladies' use ....
  
  
  8.
  
  d.
  
  105
  
  0
  
  45
  
  0
  
  30
  
  0
  
  63
  
  0
  
  7
  
  6
  
  5
  
  0
  
  10
  
  6
  
  15
  
  0
  
  6
  
  6
  
  7
  
  6
  
  4
  
  0
  
  57
  
  6
  
  42
  
  0
  
  5
  
  6
  
  5
  
  0
  
  10
  
  6
  
  2
  
  0
  
  21
  
  0
  
  25
  
  0
  
  25
  
  0 1
  
  £ 8.
  
  d.
  
  5 5
  
  0
  
  13 10
  
  0
  
  3 0
  
  0
  
  3 3
  
  0
  
  15
  
  0
  
  10
  
  0
  
  2 2
  
  0
  
  2 5
  
  0
  
  1 6
  
  0
  
  1 10
  
  0
  
  16
  
  0
  
  17 5
  
  0
  
  16 16
  
  0
  
  8 5
  
  0
  
  1 10
  
  0
  
  4 4
  
  0
  
  1 4
  
  0
  
  2 2
  
  0
  
  2 10
  
  0
  
  2 10
  
  0
  
  Eatimate No. 4 - continued.
  
  
  2 dozen linen huckaback
  towels, for servants
  
  1 dozen medium -size white
  Turkish bath towels .
  
  i dozen large -size wliite
  Tvirkish bath towels .
  
  0 brown Turkish bath
  
  towels
  
  6 large white Turkish bath
  sheets
  
  1 dozen Turkish towels, for
  
  servants
  
  2 dozen glass cloths . . .
  2 dozen tea or china cloths
  
  (pantry)
  
  1 dozen linen dusters
  
  (strong and fine)
  1 dozen linen dusters
  
  (strong and fine), . .
  1 dozen soft polishing cloths
  
  or dusters ....
  
  1 dozen housemaids' clotlis
  
  (basin)
  
  2 dozen kitchen and scullery
  
  cloths, 1 yard square .
  1 dozenkitchencliinacloths,
  
  1 yard square . . .
  1 dozen linen roller towels .
  I dozen pudding cloths
  
  1 dozen knife cloths .
  
  2 hearth-rug covers . . .
  4 butlers' aprons ....
  
  3 pair large double -
  bed superior Witney
  blankets
  
  3 under blankets ....
  
  4 pair single-bed superior
  
  Witney blankets . .
  4 under blankets . . .
  4 pair strong blankets, for
  
  servants
  
  4 under blankets ....
  
  4 fine white toilet quilts, for
  
  double beds . . . .,
  
  6 fine wliito toilet quilts, for
  
  single beds ....
  
  5 coloured or white quilts,
  
  for servants ....
  
  6 toilet covers, for servants
  
  
  a. d.
  
  14 0
  
  30 0
  
  42 0
  
  2 6
  
  7 6
  
  12 6
  
  8 6
  
  10 0
  
  5 6
  8 0
  4 6
  8 6
  
  10 6
  
  10 0
  
  30 0
  
  6 6
  
  
  £
  
  1
  
  8.
  
  8
  
  d.
  0
  
  1
  
  10
  
  0
  
  1
  
  1
  
  0
  
  15
  
  0
  
  2
  
  5
  
  0
  
  10 0
  1 10 0
  3 3
  
  
  4
  
  6
  
  4
  
  G
  
  2
  
  11
  
  6
  
  10
  
  2
  
  0
  
  8
  
  0
  
  42
  
  0
  
  6
  
  6
  
  0
  
  6
  
  6
  
  19
  
  0
  
  30
  
  0
  
  6
  
  0
  
  0
  
  5
  
  3
  
  1
  
  1
  
  0
  
  15
  
  0
  
  3
  
  0
  
  0
  
  2
  
  9
  
  11
  
  0
  
  27
  
  6
  
  p
  
  10
  
  0
  
  21
  
  0
  
  5
  
  5
  
  0
  
  6
  
  6
  
  1
  
  12
  
  6
  
  1
  
  3
  
  7
  
  6
  
  £177
  
  3
  
  1
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  The proper wasliing and " getting up " of linen is an art which remains practically unsolved by
  the average housewife, who, when she is obHged to do even the simplest laundry work at home, is
  content to get through her task in a most rough-and-ready fashion.
  
  " What is worth doing at all is worth doing well " is a maxim which might be followed with ad-
  vantage by the home laundress, who should make a point of acquiring a real practical knowledge
  of her work. The information contamed in this chapter has been compiled as a result of many years'
  practical experience of laundry work in all its branches, and the amateur laundress should derive
  much help from a careful study of these pages.
  
  
  Home- Washing. - Whether the washing should
  be done at home or not is a question which every
  housekeeper must decide for herself. There is
  a great diversity of opinion on the subject, and
  much to be said on both sides.
  
  Given the necessary accommodation, a wash-
  house fitted with tubs, a plentiful supply of hot
  water, a good drying -green and convenient room
  for ironing, there is no doubt that home washing
  is more satisfactory and more economical than
  having the work sent out. It is more economical,
  not only from the money point of view, but in
  the wear and tear of the clothes the saving is
  unquestionable. Besides, there is the pleasure of
  wearing and using lineu which we know has been
  washed and rinsed in clean water, and that has
  not come in contact with all and sundry garments.
  There is also the feehng that one can be a little
  more lavish with the supply when it is not neces-
  sary to reckon up the cost for the washing of
  each separate article. This is a very important
  point, when we consider that cleanliness in our
  garments and surroundings is one of the first
  laws of health, and a law which it would bo
  false economy to break.
  
  On the other hand, a housekeeper must con-
  sider whether there is the adequate convenience
  for doing such a large piece of work as the family
  wasliing, and also if there is sufficient help
  available for the labour to be undertaken satis-
  factorily.
  
  In many houses, especially town houses, where
  space is valuable it would be impossible to carry *
  out the work successfully, and certainly not
  without a great deal of discomfort. There are
  other economies to consider besides the saving
  of money ; there is the economy of time, the
  economy of labour, and the economy of patience
  and temper as well.
  
  The probable discomfort of a washing day
  deters many people from entertaining the idea
  of doing their washing a*- home, and it certainly
  
  271
  
  
  requires some planning and knowledge of the
  necessary details to have the extra work going
  on, and to keep the wheels of the house running
  smoothly at the same time. If, however, the
  work is to be done at the expense of every one's
  comfort, then by all means leave it alone ; any
  advantages to be gained would be dearly bought
  at such a price.
  
  Now that public laundries are springing up
  all around us, and their methods for treating
  the clothes are improving year by year, there
  is no longer the absolute necessity for home
  washing.
  
  Sometimes, although it is found impossible to
  do the whole washing at home, a part can be
  done quite easily, the heavier and more compli-
  cated articles being sent out. There is always
  more difficulty in undertaking the dressing of
  starched hnen, especially such things as gentle-
  men's shirts, collars and cuffs, white petticoats,
  dresses, &c., and heavy articles Uke sheets and
  table-cloths. If these are sent away to be done,
  perhaps the rest will cause no difficulty.
  
  If the decision is in favour of home washing,
  then it is very important that the process be
  planned with care, and then carried out methodi-
  cally.
  
  A REGULAR TIME FOR WASHING
  
  In arranging your washing-day, of course take
  into consideration the circtmistances of the
  household, but have it as early in the week as
  possible, and at a fixed hour. As a general rule
  Tuesday is the most suitable day, as tlvis lets you
  have all necessary preparations made on Jlonday.
  Never let soiled clothes remain unwashed longer
  than a fortnight, and you must judge from the
  amount of work to be done if a weekly weishing
  is advisable. Begin operations early in the
  day, as clothes dried in the morning air are
  always whitest and freshest.
  
  
  272
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  LAUNDRY UTENSILS, THEIR CHOICE
  AND CARE
  
  As all the uton&ils used in laundry work are
  subjected to a considerable amount of weeir and
  tear, it ia of the utmost importance to have them
  good and durable. A little additional outlay at
  the commencement in order to obtain first-class
  articles will be money well spent, the replacing of
  faulty goods will not be necessary, and much
  needless worry will bo saved.
  
  At its best laundry work is a somewhat arduous
  occupation, and although it is possible to pro-
  duce excellent results with the most primitive
  implements, this requires the skilled worker.
  Under ordinary circumstances, in order to have
  the work well done and time and labour econo-
  mised, the necessary implements must be
  provided.
  
  The number of utensils required will depend
  very much upon individual circumstances.
  A large household with good laundry accommo-
  dation, and all the washing done at home, will
  naturally require more than a small household
  where the work has to be done in a kitchen and
  scullery, and perhaps only part of the washing
  undertaken. In the latter case the number of
  utensils should be reduced to a minimum through
  lack of space to accommodate them. Where-
  ever possible, laundry utensils should be kept
  apeirt from those used for cooking purposes.
  In aU cases it is better to buy just what is
  absolutely necessary to begin with, and to add
  as the need arises.
  
  The follo\ving utensils will be required to do a
  complete wgishing conveniently : -
  
  Tubs. - ^Two or three fitted tubs with hot and
  cold water, and one or two smaller movable tubs
  or rinc baths for small articles, are the most con-
  venient for washing purposes. If fitted tubs are
  not provided, then leu-ger zinc or wooden tubs
  ■wi\l be necessary, and a stand or bench to place
  them on. It is very impor-
  tant to have the tub placed
  at the right height for the
  worker. All tubs must bo
  kept very clean, and dirty
  soapy water must on no
  account be allowed to re-
  main in them. They must
  bo well scrubbed out after
  use to remove any dirty
  scum that may have col-
  lected on the sides. Then
  zinc or porcelain ones may
  be dried, but wooden ones
  should have a little cold
  water left in them to pre-
  vent them shrinking.
  Washing-Board and Brush.
  
  
  Nl
  
  
  "vJJ
  
  
  Washing-Board.
  - Both these will be found of great assistance.
  The board is useful in the washing of heavy
  articlee,such as sheets, table-cloths, counterpanes.
  
  
  &c., and anything strong and dirty that will stand
  a fair amount of rubbing. A wooden board is pre-
  ferable to one made of zinc. It should be well
  washed on both sides after use, and set up on end
  to dry. A brush with good bristles and not too
  hard is also useful in the washing of collars,
  cufJs, bands, or any very soiled parts which
  require extra attention. The brush should be
  well rinsed and set up to drj' after use, and never
  ■used for any other purpose.
  
  A Boiler. - Tliis is generally a fitted arrange-
  ment with a small fireplace underneath. It
  must be kept very clean, and well washed and
  dried after use. If a greasy scum collects on the
  sides, a mixture of soft soap and sliredded
  Brooke's soap should be applied with a wet
  flannel, or a Uttle paraffin may be added to this
  mixtiu-e if something stronger is required.
  Clean cold water must always be put into the
  boiler before the fire is hghted, and the fire
  should be out before the boiler is emptied.
  Cinders from other fires do very weU for burning
  in a boiler fire, or coke is very often substituted
  for coal. If no fitted boiler is provided, a large
  saucepan can be used and boiled on an ordinary
  fire or gas stove. A tin or enamelled one is best,
  and, if possible, it should be kept for laundry
  purposes only.
  
  Mangle and Wringer. - ^A mangle is a large
  machine, with heavy wooden rollers used for
  smoothing hovisehold linen and the hea\'ier
  articles of clothing. When in use the tension
  must be tight enough to press the clothes
  sufficiently, and loosened again when finished
  with. The rollers must be kept very clean and
  free from dust, and the working parts should
  be oiled occasionally. A wringer is a most use-
  ful machine and almost indispensable if any
  heavy washing is to be done. It is generally
  attached to a washing-tub, and the clothes are
  put through it while wet. The roUers are of
  india-rubber, and should be kept clean with
  soap and water, or if stained with any dyed
  material a Uttle turpentine should be anphed
  with a soft rag. As vnih. the mangle, the tension
  must be tightened when in use and afterwards
  loosened. Nothing that is boiUng hot should
  be passed through the wringer or the surface of
  the india-rubber will become roughened. With
  care the india-rubber ought to last a long time,
  and when it does wear out, the coating can be
  replaced and the wringer made as good as new.
  For small washings the wringer can almost take
  the place of the heavier and larger mangle.
  
  Washing Machines. - Various machines are
  now made for home washing, and where there is
  a large number of things to be done they are
  certainly a great aid. A good machine carefully
  used will really wear the clothes less than the
  ordinary washing and rubbing in a tub. One /
  
  of simple construction should be chosen, and the I
  directions, which vary slightly with the different j
  machines, will be given with each. Very often i
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  273
  
  
  a wringer or small mangle is attached to the
  machine, and in this case the extra machinery
  would be unnecessary.
  
  The " Sunrise " Patent Washing Machine can
  be thoroughly recommended. It is very simple
  
  
  •' Sunrise " Washing Machine.
  
  in construction, absolutely efficient, and occupies
  very little space. The price too is only 35s., or
  with a rubber roller attached, 25s. extra.
  
  Clothes-Ropes, Pins and Poles. - These are used
  when drying is done out of doors, and it is most
  important that they should be kept perfectly
  clean. Clothes are frequently seen with the
  mark of a dirty pin or rope upon them, and this
  happens through carelessness. The clothes-
  ropes should never be left outside when not in
  use. They not only get dirty, but will rot if
  exposed to the atmosphere. They should be
  rubbed over with a cloth, rolled up and put into
  a bag or basket where tnoy will be under cover.
  The same care must be taken with the pins
  which fasten the clothes to the line. Do not
  let them lie on the ground, but see that they are
  quite clean, and put them away with the ropes.
  New clothes -ropes and pins should be soaked
  first in hot and then in cold water before use, as
  they are liable to mark the clothes. Clothes-
  poles, which are used for propping up the ropes,
  must be brought indoors when not in use, and
  kept in a clean place.
  
  Clothes-Horse and Pulley. - These are necessary
  for drying and airing indoors. The horse, which
  is like a screen with bars, is placed round or near
  a fire, and the pulley is generally fixed to the roof
  of the kitchen or laundry, and can be pulled up
  and down as required.
  
  The Ironing Table. - This must be of a good
  size, strong, and steady, and of a convenient
  height for working at. It should be covered
  first with felt or a double fold of thick blanket.
  The kind known as " charity " blankets, of a
  grey colour and rather a hard make, are very
  suitable for the purpose. The blanket should
  be l^arge enough to come at least a few inches
  ove^ the table all round. A clean sheet will
  thori be reqviired to place on the top of this,
  which should either be pinned at the four corners
  
  
  or fastened to the table legs by means of tapes.
  Patches and seams should be avoided as far as
  possible, or put where they will not come in the
  way of the ironing. The heat of the iron must
  never be tested on the ironing sheet, as if once
  scorched it is almost sure to wear into holes
  when washed.
  
  Never lay ironing blankets and sheets away
  damp, or they will probably mildew ; and never
  let them remain on the table longer than is
  necessary, as they get dusty. Shake them well,
  and fold evenly before laying away.
  
  In addition to the ironing table, a smaller one
  for placing the work on will be found a great
  convenience if space permits.
  
  Irons. - Those most generally used are called
  flat irons, and for all ordinary purposes they
  produce as good work as any other. They
  should be of different sizes and have comfortable
  handles. Numbers 3, 6, and 7 are useful sizes,
  and two, or better three, will be required for each
  worker. If any fine intricate work is to be done,
  one or two very small irons will be necessary.
  Flat irons are best heated on an ironing stove
  or on the top of a close range.
  Ironing stoves can be had in
  different sizes, they take up
  very little room, and where
  there is a large amount of work
  to be done, and consequently
  many irons to be heated, a
  proper stove will be found more
  economical than keeping up a large kitchen fire
  for the sole purpose of heating irons. If a
  cooking stove is used for heating, the fire must
  be well made up, the hearth swept, and the top
  of the range wiped free from grease before the
  irons are put down. It is not such a good plan
  to heat irons in front of an open fire, as their
  surfaces are liable to get roughened and smoky.
  If it must be done, have the fire bright and free
  from smoke before placing the irons, and when
  fresh coal has to be added let it be put at the
  back of the fire, drawing forward the red cinders.
  A smoked iron is fatal to good ironing. Never
  put irons into a fire to heat or the surface will be
  roughened and the iron rmned for any fine work.
  Gas stoves are very convenient for heating one
  or two irons, but where a number are required it
  will be found an expensive method.
  
  An iron must be well cleaned each time before
  using. Have a wooden box, and put at the foot
  of it some sand-paper, or ordinary thick brown
  paper with fine sand or bath-brick dust sprinkled
  on it. Rub the iron well on this first, and the
  slight roughness of the sand, &c., will clean it.
  Then have a piece of coarse cloth or sacking
  with a little grease on it. A piece of bees" -wax
  or candle-end slired down and put between the
  folds of the cloth will do. Rvib the iron next
  on this to make it run smoothly, then finish off
  by dusting it with a duster to make it quite free
  from sand or brick-dust. Occasionally it is well
  
  
  Flat Iron.
  
  
  274
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  to wash the irons thorouglily with hot water,
  soda, soap, and a brusli, and then thoroughly
  dry. On no account must irons be black-leaded.
  Never allow them to cool flat on a stove when the
  fire is going out, as damp collects and rusts them,
  but either stand them up on end at the side of
  the stove or on the hearth-stone. Irons must
  bs kept in a perfectly dry place. If you once
  allow them to get rusty, the rust eats into them,
  and their surface is never so smooth again. If
  they are to be laid away for some time, see that
  they are thoroughly dry, then grease them well,
  and wrap them in brown paper.
  
  It is almost impossible to iron with perfectly
  new irons ; they must bo seasoned first. To do
  tliis heat them on a stove for several hours, then
  clean in the ordinary way, and let them cool.
  Repeat this process for several days, and the
  irons will be ready for use.
  
  A very good invention is the new patent
  " Slip-On " Ironing Shield, wliich can be put
  on to any flat iron. No.
  4 to 7, after it has
  been well heated. This
  saves the trouble of so
  much cleaning, and the
  nickel-plated surface of
  the shield will iron the
  clothes without a mark,
  and produce a high
  gloss on the linen. The price is Is.
  
  Various special irons can now bo had to replace
  the flat iron, such as box irons. These, as
  their name implies, are like a 1 ox, and are heated
  by means of a hot bolt placed inside. Charcoal or
  Dalli irons, which are heated with hot charcoal
  inside the iron. Gas irons, heated with gas, by
  means of an india-rubber tube attached to a gas
  jet. Asbestos irons, electric irons - heated by
  electricity, and also the spirit iron, which is
  heated with methylated spirits, and is most
  useful where no fire is obtainable, or for a lady's
  private use, and for travelling.
  
  Polishing and Goffering Irons. - The polishing
  iron is like an ordinary iron with an oval surface
  of polished steel. It is used for polishing cuffs
  and collars or anything that requires a high
  gloss. Goffering irons are used for goffering
  
  
  Iron Shield.
  
  
  Polishing Iron.
  
  
  Goffering Iron.
  
  
  fnlls, and it is well to have them in different
  sizes if both wide and narrow frills are to bo
  done. They should be heated in a gas jot, with
  methylated spirits, or be placed under a flat
  iron on an ordinary stove. They must never be
  put into a firo.
  Jron-Stand and Holder. - Each ironer must be
  
  
  provided with an iron-stand, on wliich to rest the
  iron, and an iron-holder. Iron-stands are of
  different kinds, the simplest being a plain ring of
  iron, and others are of more elaborate design ;
  but in any case they should stand liigh enough
  above the table to prevent the heat of the iron
  from scorching the ironing-sheet.
  
  
  Sleeve Board.
  
  Iron-holders should be made hke kettle-
  holders, only more substantial. They should
  have several thick folds of flannel or two of felt
  inside, sewn together, and covered over with a
  clean cotton cover. A piece of kid put between
  the folds will help to keep the heat from the
  hands. The top cover must be strong. A piece
  of strong linen or ticking is suitable, but it must
  not be anything from which a dye will come off.
  For collars, cuffs, and shirts it is better to have
  the holder covered with white cotton. The
  holders must be made long enough to cover the
  length of the handle, and broad enough to come
  well round. When resting the iron, always
  take the holder off it. This not only keeps it
  cooler for the hand, but very often prevents it
  getting burnt when the iron is too hot to use.
  Iron-holders should be kept in a box or drawer
  where they will not get dusty.
  
  Special irons which are provided with wooden
  handles will not require a holder.
  
  
  .Skirt Board.
  
  Shirt, Skirt, and Sleeve Boards. - These are all
  required in fitting out a laundry. The skirl
  board is used when ironing the fronts of shirts.
  One side at least must bo covered with a double
  fold of white flannel, blanket, or felt stretched
  tightly over it, and either sewn or tacked ou.
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  275
  
  
  Above this place a cotton or linen cover, which
  can be made like a slip, to be easily removed
  when dirty and replaced by a clean one.
  
  Sleeve boards, used when ironing the sleeves
  of dresses, &c., must be covered in the same way.
  Keep both shirt and sleeve boards covered up
  when not in use, to prevent their becoming
  soiled.
  
  Skirt boards are used when ironing petticoats,
  di'ess sldrts, childi-en's frocks, &c. These being
  larger will do quite well if covered with grey
  blanket Uke the tables, only it should be tacked
  on, and then covered with a small sheet pinned
  firmly underneath. It is better to have a sheet
  that can be taken off after use, as it will keep
  cleaner.
  
  Polishing Boards are Uke skirt boards, only
  they are left uncovered. They are used for
  polishing collars and cuffs.
  
  Basins. - Tin enamelled basins are the most
  satisfactory for laundiy purposes, and it will be
  found useful to have several and of different
  sizes. These serve for the making of starch,
  for holding water when sprinkling the clothes,
  and for the soaking and even wasliing of small
  articles, such as lace, handkerchiefs, &c.
  
  Bags. - One or two bags for boiling clothes
  in ^vill be found useful. They can be made of
  strong net or of cotton with a sht in the side
  to allow the water to enter, otherwise they will
  blow up like a balloon and float on the surface
  of the water.
  
  Sundries. - A soap dish, a small enamelled
  saucepan and knife for making soap jeUy, a
  wooden fork or stick for lifting clothes from the
  boiler, a clothes-baskt u, a can for water, a
  steel comb and small brush for fringes, one or
  two tea-spoons, one wooden spoon, one gill
  measure, tliree or four towels, and some soft rag
  for rubbers, one or two pieces of white felt for
  the ii-oning of lace and embroidery, and three
  or four jars for keeping stores will complete the
  oufit of a laundry, and the following will give an
  idea of the approximate cost.
  
  PRICE LIST OF LAUNDRY UTENSILS
  
  Flat irons, from 8d. to 2s. according to side.
  Box iron with pair of heaters, 23. to 3s. each,
  Dalli iron (charcoal), 6s. each.
  Spirit-heated ladies' iron, 6s. or 7s. each.
  Gas iron, 3s. 9d. to 6s. each.
  Polishing iron. Is. 6d. to 2s. each.
  Electric iron, from 17s.
  Tubs - wooden with galvanised hoops, 2s. to
  
  6s. according to size.
  Tubs - galvanised zinc. Is. 6d to 3s according
  
  to size.
  Shirt board, 3s. to 5s.
  Skirt board, 4s. 6d. to 6s.
  Sleeve board, Is. 6d. to 4s.
  Washing board. Is. 3d.
  Large tin boil-.''', 3s. 6d.
  
  
  Tin enamelled basins. Is. 2d. to 2s.
  
  Mangle, from £2.
  
  Wringer, from 18s.
  
  Washing machine, various prices according to
  
  make.
  Clothes -ropes, 16 yards for Is.
  Clothes-poles or props, 8d. to Is.
  Clothes-horse, 3s. 6d. to 6s.
  Goffering irons, 8d. to lid. per pair.
  Iron-stand, 4d. to 6d.
  Soap-dish, 4d. to 8d.
  Clothes-basket, Is. 6d. to 3s.
  Can for water, 2s. 6d. to 3s.
  Steel comb, 4d.
  White felt, about Is. 2d. per yard, double
  
  width.
  Laundry blankets (grey charity), 4s. or 5s.
  Laimdry sheeting, about Is. 3d. per yard.
  
  MATERIALS REQUIRED AND THEIR USE
  
  Water. - For washing pm-poses it is necessary
  to have an abundant supply of pure and soft
  water. Cleaning is almost an impossibiUty when
  the water is of an earthy colour, and contains
  a quantity of mineral matter. Rain water, when
  it can be obtained free from impurities, is pre-
  ferable to river or spring water, which is gene-
  rally hardened by a certain amount of lime
  acquired in running through the ground. There
  are many chemical tests by wliich one can teU
  soft water from hard water, but for laundry
  purposes it is sufficient to know that the harder
  the water the greater is the quantity of soap
  needed to produce a lather. When hard water
  must unavoidably be used for washing, some
  softening substance, such as soda or borax, must
  be added.
  
  Soap. - Good yellow soap is best. Cheap soaps
  are no economy, as they contain a large per-
  centage of water and waste quickly. Many of
  them also contain soda to an extent hurtful to
  the clothes. Soap must never be allowed to he
  in the water, and all ends, wliich are too small
  for washing with, should be saved to make soap
  jelly, or else shred down and put into the boiler
  when boiling the clothes.
  
  Soda. - This has a softening effect upon water,
  and absorbs and removes grease, but if used
  in too large quantities it will be found destruc-
  tive to clothes, and will give them a grey
  appearance. It will also make the hands rough
  and sore. Before soda is used it must be
  completely dissolved in boiling or very hot
  water, for were it to touch the hnen undissolved,
  yellow marks would be left, in reality burns,
  and these would eventually wear into holes.
  Soda must not be used for coloured clothes nor
  for flannels, and for fine articles borax will be
  found safer as a water-softener. Wlien wasliing
  and boiling the coarser clothes, one ounce of
  soda wall be sufficient to soften one gallon of
  water.
  
  
  276
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Borax. - This also softens water, but not so
  powerfully as soda, and as it is perfectly harmless
  it may be used even for wooUen and dyed articles.
  Boron, a substance found in borax, acts as a
  disinfectant. Allow one table -spoonful of pre-
  pared borax to one gallon of water. Borax is
  also used for stiffening and glossing linen, such
  as coUars and cuffs. It may bo bought either
  as a powder or in lump form ; the former is the
  more convenient of the two.
  
  Blue. - Tliis is added to the water in which
  white clothes are rinsed to give them a good
  colour. Tliere are a nvunber of different blues
  both in soUd and Uquid form- indigo, ultra-
  marine, Prussian, and anihne ; but the soUd
  blues will, as a rule, be found handier, and the
  required quantity will be more easily judged.
  Having chosen the brand, keep to it, and then the
  question of quantity will be no difficulty. Blue
  which dissolves most readily and leaves least
  sediment after the water has stood some time
  is the best. Stone or soUd blues should be
  firm and not gritty, and they ought to be kept
  in a dry place, as they readily absorb moisture.
  \Vhen a cake is required it should have the
  paper removed and be tied in a small bag or piece
  of flannel, when it will be ready to squeeze into
  the water. (See p. 278.)
  
  Starch. - ^The stiffening and other qualities of
  starch vary according to the substance from
  which it is derived, so that it is a matter of great
  importance to choose a good kind.
  
  Wheat and rice starches are those most
  commonly vised. Rice starch is used as a
  substitute for wheat starch for all finer pur-
  poses.
  
  Ammonia. - This is also used for the softening
  of water and will be found invaluable in the
  washing of flannel and knitted articles. It dis-
  solves the grease and dirt in a wonderful way, and
  thus saves unnecessary rubbing. It must not,
  however, be used too freely, or it will impoverish
  the woolly fibre. Ammonia should be kept in a
  tightly corked bottle, as it is very volatile.
  
  Turpentine. - Used in the making of cold-
  water starch, and also for the removal of certain
  stains. It should be kept in a tightly corked
  bottle.
  
  Bees' -wax and White Wax. - The former is use-
  ful for the greasing of irons when candle-ends
  are not available, and the latter is sometimes
  put into hot-water starch.
  
  Salts of Lemon- Salts of Sorrel.- These are
  useful for the removal of cortain stains. As
  they are poisonous substances they ought to be
  labelled so, and kept in a safe place.
  
  Chloride of Lime. - This is used for bleaching
  pvirposes, and also for the removal of very
  obstinate stains. It must be specially pre-
  pared. (See p. 277.)
  
  Gum-Arabic. - This will take the place of
  starch in the stiffening of laco and silk.
  
  Common Salt and Vinegar.- These are some-
  
  
  times required for the rinsing of coloured
  articles.
  
  Methylated Spirits. - Tliis is used in small
  quantities in the washing of silks.
  
  PREPARATION FOR A WASHING
  
  Sorting. - Without order and method much
  time will be wasted. After having collected all
  the clothes to be washed, arrange them in
  different lota according to the kind of article and
  the tubs available for steeping.
  
  1. Table linen.
  
  2. Bed and other household linen.
  
  3. Body linen.
  
  4. Laces, muslins, and finer articles.
  
  5. Flannels and other woollen or knitted goods.
  
  6. Pocket-handkerchiefs.
  
  7. Coloured prints, muslins, and sateens.
  
  8. Kitchen towels and very dirty articles.
  When there is a scarcity of tubs one may be
  
  used for bed and body linen.
  
  Pocket-handkerchiefs should always be kept
  apart from other articles until after the first
  washing.
  
  As table linen might be discoloured by contact
  with greasy clothes, keep it also separate until
  after washing.
  
  Mending. - Before washing, all holes or tears
  must at least be drawn together if not actually
  mended, as the friction of washing would tend
  to enlarge them.
  
  All strings should be untied and undrawn, and
  any buttons unfastened.
  
  Removal of Stains.- This is generally looked
  upon as very troublesome, but it will be found
  that the results fully repay the time and labour
  involved, indeed, it is absolutely necessary for
  the production of good work. The sooner
  stains are removed the better. Most stains can
  be easily eradicated when fresh, while they
  harden if allowed to remain. As soap com-
  bined with hot water makes most stains per-
  manent, the removing process must take place
  before the actual washing begins. Different
  chemicals are employed for this, all more or less
  injurious to the fabric, so that after the appli-
  cation of any of them, the article must be
  immediately rinsed in clean warm water.
  
  Rust or Iron-Mould. - Take a small basin of
  boiling water, dip the stained part into it, and
  then stretch tightly over the basin. Sprinkle
  with salts of sorrel, and rub it well into the
  stain ; use a piece of rag or smooth stick to do
  this, as salts of sorrel is most poisonous and
  might bo injurious to the fingers. Allow it to
  steam for a short time with the salts on it, when
  the stain should entirely disappear.
  
  A solution of oxalic acid may be used in the
  same way. Rinse at once.
  
  Ink. - When ink stains are fresh they may be
  removed by dipping the stained part in hot
  milk and letting them soak for some time, then
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  277
  
  
  wash out thoroughly. If the stain has been
  in for some time it will be more persistent, and
  the same method as for rust stains shoxild be
  adopted. A black ink stain can also be removed
  by pouring some red ink over it, allowing it to dry,
  and then washing it out.
  
  Wine and Fruit. - Spread the stained part over
  a basin, rub well with common salt, and pour
  boiling water through to avoid spreading the
  mark. If the stain is still persistent, try salts
  of sorrel.
  
  If a fruit stain is left in for any length of time,
  it is most difficult to remove. It is sometimes
  better to let it wear out gradually ; but if it
  must be removed, use oxahc acid weU rubbed
  into the part or chloride of lime.
  
  Tea and Coffee. - Spread the stained part over
  a basin, rub well with powdered borax, and
  pour boiling water through. If still persistent,
  use a weat solution of chloride of Ume.
  
  Paint.- - When fresh, remove with tiu-pentine
  well rubbed in. If it has become dry, mix a little
  ammonia with the turpentine. When the stain
  is on a fabric of wliich the coloixr is apt to be
  destroyed, moisten first with a little oil, and
  then remove w^th tvirpentine or ether.
  
  Mildew. - This is a species of fungus of which
  there are several varieties. It often attacks and
  stains Unen or cotton, and is caused by the
  material being laid away damp. It is one of the
  most obstinate stains to remove, and often im-
  possible without injury to the fabric. Stretch
  the stained part over a hard firm surface, and
  rub off as much as will come with a piece of soft
  dry rag. Rub in a Utt)*^ salt, and try if the juice
  of a lemon will take it out. Failing this, make a
  paste of French chalk and water, spread it on the
  stained part, and let it dry slowly, if possible in
  the sun. Repeat the process if necessary, and
  then rinse well.
  
  Use of Chloride of Lime and Sanitas. - Put J lb.
  chloride of lime into a basin, and break it to a
  smooth paste with a Uttle cold water, then add as
  much cold water as will fill a quart bottle, about
  1| pints ; stir the lime well up, and let it stand
  covered over for a day or two, stirring it occasion-
  ally. Tlien lot it settle ; skim it well, and pour
  the clear liquid off the top. Strain this into a
  quart bottle, and keep it tightly corked.
  
  To remove stains wet a rag with this solution
  and apply it to the part. V/hen anything is very
  much stained all over, it is best to soak it in cold
  water with some of this preparation of chloride of
  lime added to it. Make the water smell just
  slightly with the lime. This will also serve for
  bleaching things when they have become a
  bad coloux.
  
  Sanitas is now frequently used for removing
  ink, fruit, and wine stains on white cotton goods.
  
  When removing stains the simplest method
  should always be tried first before any of the
  stronger chemicals are resorted to.
  
  Care of the Chemicals. - Most of the chemicals
  
  
  used for removing stains are poisonous, therefore
  they ought to be labelled as such and kept in a
  safe place.
  
  Soaking. - Soak everything except flannels,
  wooUen goods, and most coloiu-ed articles. Place
  each assortment in a tub, using large basins if
  more convenient for the smaller things, and
  cover all with cold or tepid water. Never use
  hot water for soaking purposes, as it tends to
  make dirt adhere to Unen, whilst cold or tepid
  water loosens it, and so simpUfies the process
  of washing. If the water is hard, either borax
  or soda may be added before the clothes are
  put in. For the coarser and dirtier things use
  soda in the proportion of one ounce of soda to
  a gallon of water. This must be previously
  dissolved in a little boiling water. (See p. 275.)
  For the finer articles use borax instead of soda
  in the proportion of one table-spoonful to one
  gallon of water. It is perfectly harmless, even
  colours not being affected by its use, but it heis
  a marvellous power of softening water and of
  drawing out dirt. A little soap may be rubbed
  on the more soiled part of the clothes, or some
  melted soap added to the water.
  
  Very dusty articles, such as window-bhnds
  and curtains, should be soaked in plain cold
  water until some of the dust is got rid of, and
  the water should be changed several times.
  
  Pocket-handkerchiefs should have a handfxil
  of salt added to the water in which they soak ; it
  wiU make the washing of them easier.
  
  Let the clothes soak for one night at least.
  If Monday is yoiu- wasliing day, they may be
  soaked from Saturday without harm.
  
  Disinfecting. - This is not always necessarj',
  but where there has been infectious illness, or
  even bad colds, it will be wise to put the infected
  clothing through some process which will destroy
  the disease germs. There are various methods
  of disinfecting, such as the use of soaking fluids,
  exposure to hot air,exposm'e to steam, and others,
  but for home purposes there is nothing safer
  nor more effective than Izol. It is non-
  poisonous, and is undoubtedly very powerful
  as a germ destroyer. Use it in the proportion
  of 2 ounces of Izol to 1 gallon of water. In tliis
  solution the clothes should be allowed to soak
  for at least twelve hours. After this the clothes
  may be treated in the ordinary way.
  
  Sundry Preliminaries. - The boiler fire should
  be laid the night before the washing day, and tlio
  boiler itself dusted out and filled with clean cold
  water. It will then be ready for hghting tho
  first thing in the morning. Cold-water starch,
  as it requires soaking, and soap jelly should also
  be prepared beforehand. (See pp. 281 and 287.)
  It should also be seen that all utensils are clean
  and ready for use the following day, and that
  all necessary materials are at hand. Eeirly in
  the morning the fire should be hghted, and as
  soon as there is hot water the washing com-
  menced.
  
  
  278
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  THE WASHING OF LINEN AND
  WHITE CLOTHES
  
  
  The linen liaving boon soaked and all stains
  removed as far as possible, it is now ready for
  washing. The object in washing is to got rid
  of the dirt with as little wear and tear to the
  clothes as possible, and to keep them a good
  colour. This may be done either by hand or by
  machine, but whichever method is adopted the
  principles are the same, and it is as well to know
  liow to wash by hand. Cominence with the
  finest and cleanest articles, generally table linen,
  then proceed to the bed and body linen.
  Fine towels and sheets must be washed before
  the ordinary household linen, and all coarse and
  kitchen articles left to the last. First rub the
  clothes and wring them out of the steeping
  water. Rinse out the tub and half fill it with
  water as hot as the hand can bear, adding, if
  necessary, a little borax or ammonia to soften it,
  or soda when it is to be used for the coarser
  clothes. Do not put too many articles into the
  tub at one time, and press them well down under
  the water. Then soap as much of the article as
  can conveniently be rubbed, and wash one part of
  the material against the other, and not against
  the w-rist or hand. The pressure of rubbing
  should come on the lower and fleshy part of the
  thumb. Work methodically over every part,
  pajdng particular attention to those that are
  most soiled, and dip the article from time to
  time into the water so as to get rid of the soap
  and the dirt. A washing-board, preferably a
  wooden one, will be found of great assistance in
  the washing of the heavier and coarser things,
  and such articles as collars and cuffs will be
  cleaned most easily by being brushed on the
  washing -board with a softish brush. The brush
  is also valuable for the washing of very soiled
  articles, such as kitchen towels and aprons.
  Large articles, such as sheets and table-cloths,
  should be folded for washing and then rubbed
  by the selvedge from end to end until the middle
  is reached, when it will be advisable to turn and
  begin at the other end. If the clothes are not
  clean after the first washing, take fresh hot
  water and repeat the process. Soap and rub
  in the same way in the second water a.s in the
  first, turning any article that is tiu-nablo on to
  the wrong side.
  
  If the washing is to bo done by a machine, it
  will be bettor to follow the directions given
  with each special make, as they vary somewhat
  in structure. Most of them are simple enough,
  and will be found invaluable in houses where a
  large washing has to be undertaken.
  
  The above directions only apply to the
  washing of ordinary white clothes ; special
  articles, such as muslins, lace, coloured articles,
  &c., will be treated under special headings.
  
  Boiling. - The clothes should he well wrung out
  of the water in which they have been washed
  
  
  and left twisted, aa this will prevent their floating
  in the boiler. Soap should then be rubbed on
  them, or added to the water in the boiler in the
  proportion of one pound of soap to four gallons
  of water. A little soda, borax, or ammonia
  may also he added if the water is hard and
  the clothes a bad colour. Tie together or put
  into bags all small articles, such as cuffs, collare
  and pocket-handkerchiefs ; in fact, a carefiil
  laundress will put everything into bags ; this
  prevents any soapy scum from settling on t)ie
  clothes, and avoids the necessity of lifting each
  article separately from the boiler.
  
  As the clothes must have sufficient room to
  toss about, do not put too many things into the
  boiler at one time. Bring the water slowly to
  the boil, and boil from fifteen to twenty minutes,
  pressing the tilings down occasionally with a
  stick to keep them under water. Do not allow
  the clothes to boil too long, or they will becoine
  a yellow colour, and they must on no account
  bo boiled before washing. Wlien the clothes
  have boiled sufficiently, hft them out into a tub,
  and, if time permits, cover them with the water
  in which they have been boiled, letting them
  cool in it. This whitens the clothes, and is
  almost as good as bleaching, but it cannot of
  course be done where washing and drying have
  to be accomplished in one day.
  
  The water in the copper must never be
  allowed to become dirty, and more water and
  more soap must be added for each lot of clothes.
  
  Bleaching. - When the clothes become a very
  bad colour, bleacMng will very much improve
  them. Take the clothes from the boiler, let
  them cool slightly, and, with the soap still in them,
  spread them on a green for some hours, sprinkling
  them with water from a watering-can if they
  become dry. If the clothes are spread out
  boiling hot, they will scorch and discolour the
  grass.
  
  Rinsing. - This is one of the most importar.L
  operations in laundry w^ork. The reason of
  clothes having a streaked appearance and bad
  colour is very often that the soap has not been
  rinsed out of them. Ironing reveals the faulty
  work, making unrinsed clothes look absolutely
  dirty and giving them an unpleasant smell. Use
  plenty of water for rinsing - first tepid, then cold.
  To use cold water to begin with would be to
  harden the soap into the tissues of the material,
  so that to remove it would be almost impossible.
  First remove the soap with tepid water, and then
  use a plentiful supply of cold until every trace
  of it is removed. Too much stress cannot be
  laid upon this point.
  
  Blueing. - This improves the appearance of
  the clothes by bringing back some of the clear
  colour which they lose through wear and age,
  and counteracting the slightlj' yellow tinge they
  acquire in boiling. In preparing blue water see
  that the tub in which the water is placed is
  perfectly clean and free from dust and soap suds.
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  279
  
  
  and add sufficient bluo to make it a sky-blue tint.
  It is impossible to lay down absolute rules as to
  quantity, as it depends both upon the kind of
  blue used and the textiu-e of the articles under-
  going operation. As a rule, body linen requires
  more blue than other articles, and table Unen
  less. If there is any uncertainty as to the
  right shade, the water should be tested first on
  some small article or piece of rag. The aim must
  be to get the clothes of a clear uniform tint
  and not too blue. Do not prepare the blue
  water long before it is wanted, as a sediment
  will fall, and stir it well before immersing the
  clothes.
  
  Wring the clothes out of the last rinsing water,
  open them out, and put a few at a time into the
  blue water, those requiring most blue first.
  Work them so as to let the water well tlirough,
  then wring out as dry as possible. The solution
  will got weaker as it is used, so that more blue
  must be added when required, and tliis always
  when there are no clothes in the water.
  
  Wringing. - Wringing is getting rid of the
  superfluous water in the clothes. This you may
  do either by hand or maclaine, but certain pre-
  cautions are necessary, or the process will be
  destructive. In wringing by hand, twist the
  articles selvedge-wise, and be careful not to
  wrench them unduly, but to wring with a
  sustained pressure. The use of a macliine
  causes less wear and tear and also saves time.
  Shake out the clothes and fold them evenly
  before putting them through the wringer, then
  work the machine slowly and carefully. If
  worked hurriedly the moisture will not be
  properly extracted. I'ass the clothes tlirough
  the machine once or t^;^-ice that they may be
  wrung as dry as possible. Do not screw the
  wringer too tight ; it both spoils the macliine
  and is too great a strain on the linen. Hide
  away buttons in the folds of the fabric in order
  to protect them as well as the rollers ; tapes
  should also be concealed, to prevent their being
  wrenched off.
  
  After wringing, the clothes must be sorted,
  those requiring starching put to one side, and
  the others hung up to dry.
  
  Drying. - Clothes are always fresher and
  whiter if they can be dried in the open air,
  morning air being best of all. But in towns
  this is not always possible, owing to the presence
  of smoke and other obstacles, and the absence of
  space. Still a fine bright day with a little wind
  blowing, a good green, and clean lines and pegs
  are luxuries for any laundress who has the
  success of her work at heart. Tlie clothes-line
  must first be rubbed over with a clean duster,
  and the clothes pinned or pegged on to it with
  the wrong side out, if tliei'e is one. The direction
  of the wind should be considered, and the clothes
  hung so as to catch the breeze. Hang the
  articles well over the line to prevent straining,
  and so that they may rot slip off and get soiled
  
  
  on the ground. Do not hang sheets and table-
  cloths by the corners, or they will be apt to
  tear. Neither should they be hung next the
  post nor near a wall or tree ; a towel or something
  small can be put in these spaces. Nightdresses,
  sliirts, and the Uke should be hung up by the
  bottom or by the shoulders. If by the former,
  only one side should be fastened to the line,
  and the other side left open to face the wind,
  which will blow tlirough and freshen every part.
  Small articles, such as collars and cuffs, may
  be strung together on a piece of tape, and
  if there is any chance of smuts faUing, it is a
  good plan to cover them with a piece of muslin
  or cambric. On no account must anything be
  fastened up by the tapes, as this is most Uable
  to strain and injure the garment. Raise the
  rope well above the ground by means of a prop
  or pole, and allow the clothes to remain until
  sufficiently dry. When clothes are dried indoors
  they must either be hung on a clothes-horse
  near a fire, on pvdleys swung to the ceiMng in a
  heated atmosphere, or in steam closets fitted up
  for the purpose. If the drying is done before a
  fire, the clothes will require turning or moving
  from time to time, as the heat is not regular.
  Care must be taken not to place them too near
  the fire, as the Hnen will not only become dis-
  coloured by too close contact with the heat,
  but become so dry as to burst into a flame.
  
  Damping and Folding. - Anything that has to
  be manglod or ironed must be damped and
  folded evenly first. It is a sa\dng of time and
  trouble if these things can be taken down from
  drying while still slightly wet, for if allowed to
  become quite dry they must be sprinkled with
  water either by hand or with a small watering-
  can. Every part of the article must be evenly
  sprinkled, and at the same time not made too
  wet. When sprinkling by hand, hold the basin
  of water in the left hand, take up as much in the
  right as it will hold, and sprinkle it Ughtly over
  the material, letting the drops be as small as
  possible, and going over every part. Smooth out
  the tilings well, fold evenly, seeing that the
  selvedges in such things as towels, counterpanes,
  sheets, &c., meet exactly.
  
  Avoid all unnecessary creases, but fold the
  clothes to a convenient size for passing tlirough
  the mangle, and of an equal thickness, so that
  the pressure of the mangle may come on every
  part. Pack the clothes into a basket, placing
  all of one kind together ; those requiring ironing
  underneath, and those requiring mangling only
  on the top. Cover them over, and lot them lie
  for some time, over-night if possible, before
  ironing or mangling them.
  
  Mangling. - Mangling is a process of smoothing
  clothes by passing them between hea\y rollers,
  which are sometimes heated. All household linen,
  such as towels, sheets, pillow-cases, table-cloths,
  table-napkins, &c., and most body linen may
  bo mangled. Mangling requires great care and
  
  
  280
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  attention in order not to stretch the articles nor
  strcun them unduly. Take the damp and folded
  things and place them in the mangle perfectly
  straight. Do not put too many things in at one
  time, and keep smoothing them out as they are
  put in to prevent pleats and creases. Work the
  mangle steadily, not too quickly, and not by
  fits and starts.
  
  It is better if two people can work together ;
  then one can smooth and hold the linen as it
  passes tlirough, and the other can turn the
  handle. Pass the Unen tlirough once or twice,
  and keep the tension tight enough to press the
  material sufficiently without straining the
  mangle unduly. Then fold up and lay to one
  side such articles as require ironing, and hang
  up to air those that are finished, such as sheets
  and some towels.
  
  Airing. - Everything must be thoroughly aired
  either after ironing or mangling, and before it is
  laid away. The greatest care must be taken
  that no dampness is left in them before they are
  folded and laid away. Carelessness in this
  respect may lead to very grave results.
  
  GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR IRONING
  
  There is no process in laundry work which
  requires greater or neater handUng than that
  of ironing, and the proverb, " Practice makes
  Perfect," can perhaps be better apphed to tliis
  than to any other branch of household work.
  Until it can be done with speed it cannot be done
  well. An iron cools so quickly that, unless it
  can be expeditiously handled, very Uttle can be
  done with one, and constant changing not only
  makes it a very tiring process, but the clothes
  become so dry before they are finished that they
  never look well. A novice at the work is almost
  sure to meet with disappointment until a certain
  amount of experience has been gained.
  
  The ironing table must be placed in a good
  light. Daylight is best, and the worker should
  stand in such a position that the light will strike
  upon the work. Cover the table according to
  directions given on p. 273, and have everything
  at hand that will be required before commencing
  to iron. Have on the table a basin of clean cold
  water, set on a plate to prevent its upsetting,
  and one or two pieces of clean rag or old handker-
  chief to use for rubbing or damping down the
  clothes. Place the iron-stand and holder at
  the right-hand side and the articles to be ironed
  at the left.
  
  The clothes to be ironed must be slightly
  damp, but not too wet. Knowledge of the
  correct heat of an iron can only be learnt with
  practice, no written rules can be of much assist-
  ance. If too hot, it will fcorch, and if not hot
  enough it will fail to give the necessary gloss,
  and may even soil the work. A learner should
  test the heat of an iron on a piece of rag kept
  on the table for the purpose. The heat of the
  
  
  iron will bo regulated by the kind of material to
  be ironed, and also by the speed of the worker.
  
  Where there is a large plain surface to be ironed,
  as in table Unen, a hot and heavy iron can be
  used, but when it is something more intricate
  and the work cannot be done so quickly, a cooler
  iron must be taken. When ironing, lift the iron
  as little as possible, and do not thump it down.
  Ironing should not be a noisy proceeding.
  Iron quickly and at the same time press well.
  Prepare and smooth out the work with the left
  hand whilst ironing with the right. When any
  wrinkle is made in ironing, damp it over with a
  wet rag and iron again. Handle the things so
  as not to crush the parts already ironed. There
  is quite an art in the way the clothes are lifted
  and moved about. Iron until the material is
  quite dry, and air everything before it is laid
  away.
  
  THE MAKING OF STARCH AND GENERAL
  DIRECTIONS FOR ITS USE
  
  Clear or Hot-Water Starch. - It is somewhat
  difficult to give exact proportions for the making
  of this starch, so much depends upon the number
  of articles to be starched and the stiffness
  required. Individual taste must also be taken
  into consideration, some preferring the articles
  very stiff, and others the merest suspicion of
  starch.
  
  For a moderate quantity, take say two table-
  spoonfuls of dry starch, put it into a clean basin,
  and add to it enough cold water to make a thick
  paste. Work this with the back of a wooden
  spoon until quite smooth and free from lumps.
  Have a kettle of fast-boiling water on the fire,
  take the basin of starch to it, and let a second
  person pour the boiling water slowly in. Keep
  stirring all the time until the starch turns clear
  and transparent, when it is said to be made. The
  kettle should not be taken from the fire, but kept
  fast boiling all the time. The water used ought
  to bo soft and colourless. Should the ■starch
  not become clear, it will show that either the
  water in the kettle has not been boiling, or too
  much cold water has been used in the first mixing.
  The mistake can, however, be remedied by turn-
  ing the starch into a clean lined saucepan, and
  stirring it over the fire until it boils and turns
  clear. In fact, some people prefer always to boil
  the starch, and say that it brings out its stiffening
  qualities to the best advantage.
  
  If the starch is of a yellow hue, a Uttle blue
  may bo added to it. A little wax is frequently
  added to hot starch to make the articles starched
  iron more smoothly, but if the iron itself is
  waxed as before described (see p. 273) this is not
  necessary.
  
  The starch should bo stirred for a short time
  after mixing to prevent a skin forming on the
  top of it, and should be kept covered when not
  in use.
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  281
  
  
  It may be used in its present condition for
  making articles very stiff, or can be diluted to
  suit laces and muslins. For diluting purposes
  the water need not necessarily be boiling. It is
  sometimes more convenient to use it cold, as it
  makes the starch of a more comfortable heat to
  use. Do not make more of this starch than will
  be required at one time. It will keep for a day
  or two, but is better when used fresh.
  
  This starch is used for the stiffening of table
  linen, prints, musUns, embroidery, petticoats,
  dresses, &c.
  
  Coloured starches are made in the same way
  as the above. As a rule they require mixing
  with some white starch. Used alone, the
  colour is too deep for ordinary purposes. For
  instance, for a pale yellow colour, mix in the
  proportion of J of cream starch to -J of white,
  or for a deeper tint use half of each. The quan-
  tity must be regulated according to the shade
  required. Special care must be taken when
  breaking these coloured starches with cold
  water, as if any lumps are left before the boiling
  water is poured on they will show up afterwards
  as dark coloured spots.
  
  If there is any fear of the starch not being
  perfectly smooth, it is safer to strain it.
  
  There are other ingredients which may be
  used for tinting starch, as for example : -
  
  For an ecru shade, colour the starch with
  coffee. Have some very strong clear coffee, and
  use tills for mixing the starch with instead of
  water, then pour on boiling water until it turns
  clear.
  
  A duller shade, such 13 is seen in old laces, can
  be produced by using tea instead of coffee. If a
  delicate pink hue is wished, use a decoction of
  logwood.
  
  Cold-Water Starch. - The usual proportions
  axe : -
  
  2 oz. cold-water starch (rice starch preferred).
  
  3 gills of cold water.
  
  1 tea-spoonful turpentine.
  
  I tea-spoonful powdered borax, or a piece the
  size of a small nut of rock borax.
  
  These proportions may vary sUghtly according
  to the starch used.
  
  Mix the starch with the cold water, using the
  fingers to work out the lumps. Cover the
  basin over, and let the starch soak over-night at
  least. It is much better if io can soak for several
  days ; even although it may turn sUghtly sour,
  it will be none the worse, in fact, almost better.
  The longer it can soak, the less apt it is to cake
  on to the linen.
  
  Care must be taken to keep it very clean and
  free from dust.
  
  When about to use it, mix it up again, add the
  turpentine, dissolve the borax in a little boiling
  water ; if it is rock borax, dissolve it in a sauce-
  pan over the fire and add it. If the borax is
  left undissolved, it will appear afterwards in
  shiny patches on the linen. Use the best quality
  
  
  of turpentine, or it wiU smell strongly. The
  turpentine and borax are added to give a gloss
  and to make the iron run more smoothly.
  
  The starch is then ready for use, but must be
  well mixed up from the foot of the basin. There
  is no harm in making more of this starch than is
  reqiiired, as it wiU keep from one week to another.
  It must be covered over, and when about to use it
  again, if the water on the top looks dirty, pour it
  off. The starch itself, which will have sunk to the
  foot of the basin, wipe free from dust, and add the
  same amount of clean water as before. Add also
  a httle more borax and turpentine, about half as
  much as before.
  
  This starch is used principally for the stiffen-
  ing of collars, cuffs, shirts, and anything that is
  required particularly stiff.
  
  BED, TABLE AND OTHER HOUSEHOLD
  LINEN
  
  All bed and table linen should be washed
  according to general directions already given on
  pp. 278-80.
  
  Bed Linen. - Sheets should be stretched well by
  two people while damp, folded very evenly in
  four, and then mangled. It is not necessary to
  iron them, but be particular to air them
  thoroughly, turning them occasionally so that
  they get dried right through. If there is any
  embroidery on the sheets, that must be ironed,
  pressing it out well on the wrong side ; or, if they
  are hem-stitched, iron the hems to give them a
  finished appearance.
  
  Pillow and Bolster-cases may either be mangled
  and the tapes only ironed, or they may be ironed
  aU over as well as being mangled. The latter
  method will of course make them smoother, and
  it really reqxiires very httle time to run over
  them quickly on both sides with a hot iron. This
  is specially necessary for fine Unen pillow-cases.
  
  Ernhroidered Pillow-cases or pillow-shams will
  look better if they are put through some very thin
  hot-water starch, put several times tlirough the
  wringer, and then rolled up for some time in a
  towel before ironing. If there are frills, these
  should be ironed first, ironing them on the right
  side so as to give them a gloss, and go well
  into the gathers without making any wrinkles.
  Next iron the centre on the right side. If there
  is embroidery, keep off it as much as possible,
  just ir ning well round it - ironing it on the
  right side would press it down. If a pillow-case,
  put your hand inside and separate the two sides,
  as the starch always makes them stick a little,
  then turn over and iron the second side. Iron
  both sides free from wrinkles, and trj' to get a good
  gloss on the linen. Press out the embroidery well
  on the wrong side, and lastly crimp or goffer
  the frills (see pp. 284^85.) Air well, and it is
  finished.
  
  Bed-Covers. - Thick heavy bed-covers only
  require to be stretched and folded evenly while
  
  
  282
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  damp, well mangled, and then thorouglily aired.
  Those of a lighter make are better to be put
  through some tliin starch, or some ready-made
  starch may be added to the water in wliicli
  they are rinsed. Tliis will give them a slight
  stiffness, wliich vdll make them look better and
  keep their clean appearance longer. If a polish
  is wanted, they must bo ironed as well as
  mangled. Any lace or embroiderj^ must always
  be ironed, and fringes combed and brushed out.
  
  Table Linen, Starching of. - Table linen will
  look better and keep its clean appearance longer
  if slightly starched. The amount of starch used
  depends upon individual taste and the quahty of
  the damask. Many people object to the use of
  starch entirely on the ground that it rots the
  linen. If one had always the very best double
  damask to deal with the extra stiffening might
  certainly be dispensed with, as the material has
  sufficient body in itself to keep its appearance ;
  but when the ordinary tliin damask is under
  treatment a Uttle starch does no harm, in fact,
  it saves in the end, as a table-cloth that is made
  slightly stiff will keep clean double the time a per-
  fectly limp one would do. Starch also preserves
  from stains, and it is only when it is made too
  thick, rendering the articles so stiff as to make
  them not only lose all their natural beauty, but
  also disagreeable to use, that it can be said to be
  hurtful.
  
  Table linen should be starched while wet ; it
  would be too stiff if starched dry, and the starch
  would not penetrate tlirough it so evenly. If
  there is a large quantity to starch, it will save
  time and much wringing if some very thick
  hot-water starch is made (p. 280) and added to the
  blue rinsing water ; or if there are only a few
  things, after wringing them, put them through
  some thin hot-water starch. Wring well after
  starching, putting the things through the
  wringer as smoothly as possible ; if wrung
  twisted they will have a streaky appearance
  when ironed. Table napkins and doyleys
  should be put through the starch before table-
  cloths, as they are required slightly stiffer.
  
  Table-cloths. - After starching dry slightly, and
  then each one must be stretched by two
  p)eople. Stretch it first one way and then the
  other, and shake it out well to get it a good shape
  and even at the sides. Fold it by doubling it,
  selvedge to selvedge, with the right side out.
  Let the single sides drop, and then pick them up,
  one on each side, to the double fold. The table-
  cloth will then bo folded in four, and the right
  side will bo inside. Spread the table-cloth out
  on a table and arrange it quite smoothly, making
  the folds and the hems at the ends quito even.
  Double it and mangle. Lot it lie for some time
  rolled up in a cloth before ironing, or if there
  is difficulty in getting very hot irons, it will be
  as well to let it dry a little first, but be careful it
  does not get too dry, or it will not look well.
  
  To iron a table-cloth spread it out smooLhly on
  
  
  a table in the folds and with the two selvedges
  nearest the edge of the table, keep it in the
  folds as much as possible. Iron first the upper
  part, turn that back, iron the next two parts,
  turn back again and iron the next two, and so
  on until the whole of the table-cloth has been
  ironed on both sides, then double the table-cloth
  and mark the fold down with the iron. Air well,
  and then either roll or fold. To get a good gloss
  on table Unon, the hotter and heavier the irons
  are the bettor. Keep them well greased, and
  press heavily, ironing until almost dry. If the
  table-cloth is very large, it is better if two people
  can iron it at one time, otherwise it would get
  dry before it was all finished.
  
  Table-Napkins. - Fold them double, selvedge
  to selvedge, perfectly evenly, and mangle
  several at one time, then let them lie rolled up
  in a towel for some time before ironing.
  
  To iron them, take one at a time, shake out
  and stretch evenly, lay out very smoothly on the
  table with the right side uppermost and as square
  as possible. Iron the right side first, then the
  wrong, and back again on the right. Be careful
  not to stretch the edges out of shape, and iron
  until quite dry. They are ironed on both sides
  to avoid having one side rough and the other
  smooth, as sometimes happens. Give the hems
  an extra iron to dry them well.
  
  Table-napkins can be folded either in three or
  in four, according to taste. To fold in four,
  fold in the same way as a table-cloth, only on the
  opposite side, bringing the right side outside
  instead of the wrong. Get the ends very even,
  press the folds well with an iron, and fold in
  four across, making a square again. Air well
  before laying them away. To fold in three,
  measure the sides (hems) first, and get them
  dixnded into three equal parts, press them down
  with an iron to keep them in place, then make
  the folds right across and iron them down, fold
  in three across to make a square again, and press
  with the iron once more. If there is a name, it
  must be on the outside when the table-napkin is
  folded ; if a monogram or raised initials, iron
  well on the wrong side to make the embroidery
  stand out.
  
  Doyleys. - Starch in the same way as table-
  napkins, and let them lie rolled up for some time.
  If they have fringes, shake them well out against
  the edge of the table before beginning to iron.
  This opens out the fringes. To iron, spread out
  on the table, and brush out the fringe all round
  with a small brush, and comb it -with a fine
  comb until it lies quite straigkt, then iron the
  centre of the doyley and the fringes on both
  sides, and brush and comb the fringe again until
  it is quite soft and free. The brushing and
  combing must be done carefully, so as not to
  draw out the threads, and always before the
  fringe is dried with the iron. Finish by trimming
  off any untidy ends with a pair of scissors. If
  liked, the fringes may bo curled, using a blunt
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  283
  
  
  knife or a paper-knife, and curling them in the
  same way as an ostrich feather.
  
  Doyleys with netted or tatted edges should be
  pinned out on a covered board or table, stretch-
  ing each point well and putting in pins where
  required. Then iron the centres only (ironing
  would spoil the edges), and leave them pinned
  out until dry. After unpinning them, if the
  edges feel rather stiff and hard, pull them out
  with the fingers.
  
  Doyleys with a full lace edge should have the
  lace ironed first, then the centre, and, lastly, the
  lace goffered round very evenly. (See p. 284.)
  
  Tray Cloths and Sideboard Cloths. - These
  should be treated in the same way as other
  table linen. If they have fringes these should be
  brushed and combed out before they become dry.
  If they can be ironed on both sides, then do so ;
  but if they have a distinct right side, iron on the
  right side only, just pressing out any embroidery
  on the wrong side, and iron round the hems. If
  there is lace round the edges, iron it first before
  the centre, and do any goffering that is required
  last of all. There is no particular way of folding
  tray cloths and sideboard cloths ; just fold them
  to the size which is most suitable for laying
  away. Long sideboard cloths are better rolled
  than folded.
  
  Other Household Linen
  
  Bedroom Towels. - These should be folded
  evenly while damp and well mangled. Then run
  over them quickly with a hot iron on both sides,
  fold them in foixr lengthways, and air well. If
  there are fringes, the :e should be brushed and
  combed out before ironing ; and after ironing,
  combed out again to make them free and soft.
  If there are embroidered initials or monograms
  on the towels, press them out well on the wrong
  side.
  
  Coarse Bath Towels and Turkish Towels. - These
  should neither be mangled nor ironed ; the
  rougher thej' are the better. Stretch them well,
  iron the plain piece at the ends, comb the fringes,
  and fold them evenly. Air them well.
  
  Toilet Covers. - These should be put through
  thin starch when wet, wrung out, and hung up
  to dry slightly. Then fold them very evenly,
  double, and mangle well. Next iron on the right
  side to get a good gloss, and brush out any
  fringes. To fold them, double lengthways and
  press the fold down, and then either roll up or
  fold once or twice across. Do not make too many
  folds in a toilet cover, or it will not lie well.
  
  Kitchen Towels, Dusters, &c. - These sliould
  just bo folded evenly wliile damp, and then
  mangled. It is quite unnecessary to iron them,
  but air them well before laying away.
  
  BODY LINEN
  
  General Directions for the Doing Up of Body
  Linen. - All underclotliiiig must be damp for
  
  
  ironing. Very thin cambric articles will be
  improved by being slightly starched, otherwise
  they will have a Ump undressed appearance.
  If a httle hot-water starch is put into the water
  in which they are blued it will be sufficient.
  All that is wanted is to give the cambric the
  slight stiffness of new material, and not enough
  to make it unpleasant to wear. Ordinary
  cotton will not require any starch ; it will be
  sufficiently crisp if ironed with a hot iron and
  sUghtly damp. All frills and embroidery are
  improved by being dipped in very thin hot-
  water starch, even although the whole garment
  is not being done. This should be done when
  the clothes are being damped and rolled up.
  Gather up the frill in the hand, dip it into
  some very thin starch, and then wring out
  in the hands or between the folds of a towel.
  The slight stiffness this will give will prevent
  the frilling curhng up and otherwise looking
  limp.
  
  First iron all embroidery or frills. Embroidery
  must be ironed on the wrong side over a piece of
  felt or double flannel, in addition to the ironing
  blanket, well pressed so as to raise the pattern,
  and the points pulled out and ironed until quite
  dry. Plain frills or frills with just a narrow lace
  edging must be ironed on the right side so as to
  give them a gloss ; care must be taken to iron
  well up into the gathers and without making
  wrinkles. All bands, hems, and double parts
  should bo ironed on both sides to give them
  a more finished appearance. Always keep the
  neck or the top of the garment at your left-hand
  side, so that the iron may be more easily run
  well up into the gathers. If the cotton should
  get dry before it is all ironed, damp it down
  with a wet rubber. It will never look glossy
  if ironed too dry, but will have a rough appear-
  ance. Iron out all tapes. Never leave them
  twisted and curled up. Iron round buttons,
  not over them, or it will be apt to mark them.
  Sometimes seams and tucks are inchned to drag
  the articles and cause creases, especially when
  the clothes are new. They should then be well
  stretched out before applying the iron. New
  cotton is always more difficult to iron and make
  glossy than that which has been washed several
  times.
  
  Crimping. - As a rule tliis is done on plain frills,
  or on plain frills with a narrow lace edging ; but
  embroidery can also be crimped, especially when
  it is put on only slightly full and not starched,
  in which case it would be unsuitable for goffering.
  Crimping can be done with an ordinary iron,
  using the back, side, or point according to the
  width of the frill. For a very narrow frill use
  the point ; for a wider one the back or side, as
  is found easiest. When the frill is very wide,
  it is sometimes easier to crimp half of it at one
  time, crimping first down near the drawings with
  the side of the iron, keeping the point close to
  the gathers, and then the upper part with the
  
  
  284
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  back of the iron. Tlio iron must be cool enough
  for you to hold the fingers on it.
  
  To crimp, keep the gatliering of the frill at
  yoiu- left-hand side, and the frill itself lying
  straight across the table. Commence with the
  
  
  Crimping.
  
  peu-t nearest the edge of the table, drawing the
  frill towards you as it is crimped. Hold the iron
  with the right hand, run up part of the frill witli
  the part of the iron with which you are going to
  crimp, put two or tliree fingers of the left hand
  under tlie frill and close to the iron, draw the
  iron quickly back, following with the fingers of
  the left hand, and crimping the frill underneath
  it. Only a small piece, an inch or an inch and
  a half, can be crimped at one time.
  
  It requires a good deal of practice to do crimp-
  ing quickly, and at the same time finely and
  evenly. The thicker the material, the firmer
  pull back must be given to the iron.
  
  Special machines can now be had for crimping.
  
  
  Goffering.
  
  Goffering. - This is done with heated goffering
  tongs. A frill rec^uires to be pretty full, and to
  be starched, in order to goffer well. For wide
  and full frills, use the large size of tongs ; and
  for narrow ones, the smaller pair. Have two
  pairs of tongs of exactly the same size in use at
  one time, so that one pair can be heating whilst
  
  
  you are using the other. Always test them on
  a piece of rag or paper first, and see that they
  are thorouglily clean and not too hot before
  you apply them to the frill.
  
  Place the frill to be goffered lengthways on
  the table, with the drawings from you. Pin out
  straight as much of the frill as possible at one
  time, to keep it steady. Commence at the right-
  hand end of the frill and work towards the left.
  Hold the tongs in the right hand, putting the
  thumb in the lower hole, and the second or
  third finger in the upper ; put the tongs right
  up to the drawings of the frill, and then turn thorn
  half round, so that the hole with the thumb in it
  comes uppermost ; keep two or tliree fingers of
  the left hand close to the tongs to keep the
  goffering in position, and let them remain there
  until the tongs are loosened sUghtly and drawn
  gently out. Then go a Uttle distance further
  back and do the same again, working from right
  to left, and being careful not to pull out what
  has been already done. In drawing out the tongs
  be careful to keep them as flat to the table as
  possible, and do not give them an upward jerk.
  The distance the goffers are apart depends
  on the fulness of the frill. The fuller the frill
  the closer the goffers can be. Sometimes when
  a frill is only sUghtly drawn merely the mark of
  the tongs can be shown.
  
  Always keep the goffering tongs on the straight
  of the frill, or with the thread of the material.
  Goffering should be regular, and an equal distance
  apart. This is sometimes rather difficult if the
  frill is not drawn evenly. If there are two frills
  to be goffered, do the upper first, then the under.
  With practice, goffering can be done quite
  quickly. The more quickly it is done, the hotter
  the tongs can be used.
  
  Folding and Airing. - Folding depends very
  much upon individual taste, and upon the shape
  of the garment to be folded. Shapes vary so
  much that it is difficult to lay down any hard-and-
  fast rules, only it is as well to have some general
  rules for guidance.
  
  Always fold so as to crush the garment as
  little as possible, laying in pleats caiefuUy
  where required. Iron down each fold or pleat
  as you make it to keep it in position. Fold
  garments so as to show as much of the embroidery
  as possible, always having the inside as tidy and
  smooth as the outside, I'nd making each a con-
  venient size. Keep all tapes to the inside.
  
  All underclothing must bo thoroughly aired
  before it is laid away. Although the things seem
  dry after ironing, there is always a certain amount
  of moisture which clings to them from the iron.
  The greatest care and attention should be paid
  to this, as want of thought may lead to the
  gravest results.
  
  How to Iron and Fold a Chemise. - Have the
  chemise on the right side to begin with. First
  iron any trimming, frills, or embroidery, and
  also bands on both sides. Next fold the chemise
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  285
  
  
  down the centre of the back, keeping the neck
  at your left-hand side. Iron the back, first on
  
  
  one side, and then tarn over and iron on the
  other ; iron the hem at the foot on the wrong
  side, and when ironing up near the gathers at
  the neck, hft up slightly, so that the iron may
  run well up into the gathers, being careful not
  to crease the under side. Then open the
  chemise out and lay it on the table, so that the
  whole of the back is uppermost ; iron the front
  hem on the wrong side, and round the arm-holes
  and sleeves on the back. The back is then
  nmshed. Turn the chemise over and iron the
  front- first the bottom part straight across
  and the rest of it lengthways ; iron well up into
  the gathers and round the arm-holes and sleeves,
  and the chemise is finished. Any goffering or
  crimping must be done before folding, layincr
  It out on the table, or double it so as not to
  crush. If there is only a little fulness at the
  corners of the embroidery, this can be goffered
  after folding.
  
  A chemise may be folded in two different ways
  -the side fold or the front fold. For a plain
  chemise the side fold is best ; and for a more
  elaborately trimmed one the front fold. For
  the side fold, double the chemise, bringing the
  two side-seams and two shoulders together,
  with the back inside and the front out ; lay it
  on the table wivh the n- ck at the left-hand side
  
  
  and the band down the opening of the front
  turned uppermost (Fig. 1). Take hold of the
  neck and the bottom of the chemise, and stretch
  it so that it falls in pleats. Arrange these pleats
  evenly, two or three according to the fulness at
  the band, and iron them well down (Fig. 2).
  Turn the chemise over, see that the pleats are
  even on the other side, fold the chemise again
  lengthways, making it the same width all the
  way down, and turning in an extra piece at the
  foot if it is too wide there ; pleat the sleeves back
  a httle so that the embroidery only shows over
  the sides (Fig. 3), and then fold from the bottom
  upwards in tliree or four, according to the size
  you wish it to be when finished (Fig. 4). Air
  well before laying it away.
  
  For the front fold, first fold the chemise double
  so as to find the centre of the back, make a mark
  with the iron and open out again. Keep the
  back of the chemise uppermost on the table, and
  the neck at the left-hand side. Fold in two or
  three pleats from the side in towards the centre
  of the back and press them weU down (Fig. 1).
  Then pleat the other side in towards the centre
  of the back in exactly the same way, making the
  chemise an equal width all the way down, and
  not too broad. Fold the sleeves so that the
  embroidery only shows over the sides (Fig. 2),
  and fold the chemise into three or four from the
  bottom upwards, press well, turn over and see
  that the front looks quite straight ; air well, and
  it is finished (Fig. 3).
  
  
  How to Iron and Fold a Pair of Drawers.- Iron
  
  any embroidery or trimming first, and the bands
  on both sides. When ironing the waistband,
  keep the band next you, and lying lengthways
  on the table, and iron the strings if there are any.
  Place the pair of drawers on the table front
  uppermost, with the waistband at the left-hand
  side. Commence with the leg nearest the edge
  of the table, smooth it out and iron straight
  
  
  286
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  across as far up and down as possible until the
  drawings interfere, then iron up into the draw-
  
  
  ings at the top, and if knickerbockers, iron
  down into the drawings at the foot, holding the
  iron with the left hand. Then iron the hem on
  the under part of the leg on the wrong side, and
  draw that leg over the table out of the way
  whilst the other leg is being ironed. Iron the
  second leg on the same side and in the same way.
  Next turn the pair of drawers over, still keeping
  the band at the left-hand side, and iron the
  other side of the legs in the same manner as the
  first, not forgetting to iron the hems of the
  front part on the wTong side. Goffer or crimp
  the frills if necessary, and the drawers are
  ready for folding.
  
  To fold a pair of drawers, place the two legs
  evenly one on the top of the other, fold in the
  shaped piece so as to make them the same width
  all the way down, turn any strings insido to
  prevent their being pulled off, and fold the
  drawers from the top downwards in three or
  four. If there is any embroidery at the foot,
  separate the two pieces, doubling one leg back
  BO far so as to show both pieces of embroidery.
  Crimp or goffer the trimming if necessary.
  
  Knickerbockers require to be pleated to make
  them lie smoothly. Pleat one leg down, putting
  in two or three pleats according to the fulness
  between the bands, and not pleating the bands
  themselves, then iron the pleats well down.
  Place the other leg on the top of that one, and
  pleat it in the same way, keeping it exactly
  the same width, and having the same number of
  
  
  pleats (Fig. a). Finish ofi the same as a pair of
  drawers (Figs, b, c).
  How to Iron and Fold a Pair of Combinations. -
  
  Iron all embroidery and bands first, then place
  the combinations on the table with the neck at the
  left-hand side, and iron the upper part down as
  far as the waist, smootliing out each piece. Then
  fold the legs evenly by the side -seams, and iron
  them in the same way as a pair of drawers, first
  on one side, and then on the other, and the
  sleeves on both sides. Iron the front hems on
  the wrong side, do any goffering or crimping
  that is required, and tlioy are ready for folding.
  Combinations require very careful handling, one
  part is so liable to be crushed while another is
  being ironed.
  
  To fold a pair of combinations, fold them
  double first, bringing the sides of the bodice,
  the sides of the legs, and the two shoulders
  together. As the back is usually longer than
  the front, see that it lies smoothly underneath.
  It generally requires a pleat put in it just at the
  waist. If the combinations are very wide and
  Uke knickerbockers, put pleats in them, two or
  three according to the fulness, and continue one
  or two of them up the front of the bodice (Fig. 1).
  Then place the combinations on the table with
  the button-hole side uppermost, double over the
  shaped part of the leg by dotted line (Fig. 1), so
  as to make them the same width aU the way up,
  then double them from the bottom upwards, so
  as to make the trimming at the foot come just
  
  
  below the trimming at the neck (Fig. 2), turn
  over and double them again. Lastly, turn back
  and see that they look nicely arranged, doubling
  back the sleeves if necessary, and separating
  the legs so as to show both pieces of embroidery
  (Fig. 3).
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  287
  
  
  How to Iron and Fold a Night-Dress. - A night-
  dress is ironed in very much the same way as a
  chemise. If there is a yoke, iron it after the
  embroidery and bands. Iron the skirt of the
  night-dress in the same way as a chemise, leaving
  the sleeves to the last. To iron the sleeves fold
  the night-dress double lengthways, keep the neck
  at the left-hand side and the sleeves towards the
  edge of the table, throw back the upper sleeve,
  and iron the under one on the top side ; then fold
  it back underneath, draw the other one forward,
  and iron it on the same side. Next turn the night-
  dress so that the neck is at the right-hand side,
  and iron the other two sides of the sleeves in
  the same way. This way of ironing the sleeves
  prevents a^ny crusliing of the night-dress. Crimp
  or goffer any frills that reqiiire it, and the night-
  dress is ready for folding.
  
  A night-dress raay be folded in two ways, like a
  chemise, by the side fold or the front fold, and
  the two blf^eves must be made to lie nicely over
  the front.
  
  FLANNELS AND WOOLLEN ARTICLES
  
  The term flannels, when used in the following
  paragraphs, appUes to woollqn goods of all kinds,
  whether knitted, crocheted, woven, or flannel
  proper.
  
  The washing of flannels is one of the simplest
  branches of laundry work. The rules are few
  and easy, but none the less important. Given
  the necessary reqiiisites, a tub of hot water,
  some liquid soap, a Mttle ammonia and a
  wringer, there is no excuse for the flannels not
  being soft and elastic ifter washing, but if the
  rules are disregarded, the result will in all
  probability be hard shrunken garments re-
  sembling cheap tweed.
  
  Soap Jelly. - As this is used instead of a piece
  of soap, it ought to be prepared first of all.
  
  Take as much soap as will be required, and
  cut it down in slireds with a knife. Put it into
  a saucepan, and just cover it with cold or hot
  water. Allow the soap to melt slowly over the
  fire until it is quite clear and without lumps.
  Let it melt slowly, as boiling wastes it. Do not
  fill the saucepan too full, as soap is very liable
  to boil over. The soap may be put into a jar
  instead of a saucepan, and melted in the oven.
  
  Any ends of soap raay be used up in this way.
  It is better to make soap jeily freshly each week,
  as it loses its strength if kept many days.
  
  Remember that soap will taste very strongly
  anything with which it comes in contact, so that
  the knife and board on which it is cut, also the
  saucepan in which it is melted, ought to be kept
  for that purpose only.
  
  Any good soap will do ; olive oil is excellent if
  it can be obtained, but, failing that, good yellow
  soap will serve the piu-pose.
  
  Instead of soap jelly, Lux, or any other form of
  shredded soap, can be used, but care should be
  
  
  taken that it does not contain a quantity of
  soda.
  
  General Directions. - The best plan is to wash
  flannels either before or after all the other clothes.
  The former is better if they can be dried outside,
  as they wiU then have the benefit of the morning
  air and sun. First shake the flannels, in order to
  get rid of any loose dust, and divide them into
  lots according to colo\ir and kind - white articles
  and those that are least soiled by themselves,
  then other hght-coloured articles, such as grey
  and drab. Stockings and socks should always
  form a lot by themselves, and also dark -coloured
  things, or those in which the colour is likely to
  run, as reds and crimsons. To wash the flannels
  prepare a tub half full of warm water, not too
  hot, but just comfortable for the hand to rest in.
  To be exact the temperature should be from 35№
  to 45№ Centigrade. Then add enough ammonia
  to make the water smell slightly. The quantity
  will depend somewhat upon the strength of the
  ammonia ; from one to two table -spoonfuls in a
  tub of water will generally be found ample. This
  will soften the water, dissolve the grease in the
  flannels, and thus save some of the friction of
  washing. Commence with the wliitest and
  cleanest articles, leaving the most soiled and
  those in wliich the colour is Ukely to run until
  the last.
  
  Avoid rubbing flannels except any particularly
  soiled parts, or those of a coarse make, as rubbing
  inchnes to shrink them ; but squeeze well and
  work up and down in the water, drawing them
  through the hands.
  
  A httle soap may be rubbed on any cotton
  bands. Wlien the first garment is finished,
  squeeze it out in the hands, or, better still, put
  it tlirough the wringer and proceed with the other
  articles in the same way. If not clean after the
  first washing, repeat the process, using less soap
  and ammonia in the second water. Garments
  that are tm-nable, as night-dresses, combinations,
  &c., should be washed on the right side in the
  first water and on the uTong side in the second,
  and then left on the wrong side until dry.
  
  After the light-colomred flannels are done,
  the same lather may do for the darker ones ; only,
  if the water is dirty or if the lather has dis-
  appeared, take entirely fresh water, and use the
  second lather of the Ught tilings as the first of
  the darker. Never wash in dirty water, and
  never rub soap on to flannels. Do not com-
  mence too many flannels at one time, as the
  sooner they are finished and hung up to dry the
  better. It is specially necessary to hiu-ry through
  the process in washing coloured flannels.
  
  Rinsing. - \Vlien the flannels are quite clean,
  rinse them in plenty of warm water, two or three
  times if necessary, until they feel soft to the
  touch. Should any soap be left in them, they
  will not only be hard and sticky, but have an
  unpleasant smell when dried. Never rinse in
  too hot or cold water, as either of these would
  
  
  288
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  cause them to shrink suddenly, and feel hard
  like pasteboard. A little blue may be added to
  the Itist water in wliich white flannels are rinsed.
  When thoroughly rinsed, wring the flannels as
  dry as possible. This is best done through the
  machine, as it does not twist them. Any rough
  twisting would break the fibres of the wool.
  Shake them well to raise the " nap " or soft
  woolly substance on the surface of the material,
  pull into a good shape, and they are ready for
  drying.
  
  Drying. - ^Flannels must on no account be
  allowed to he about wet. This shrinks them
  more than anything. Whenever it is possible,
  they should be dried in the open air in a good
  wind and not too bright a sun. Faihng this,
  dry them in a warm atmosphere, where they will
  dry quickly ; but at the same time they must
  not be put so close to an open fire or in such a hot
  place that they steam. This would be as bad
  as putting them into boiUng water. Shake the
  flannels, and tvirn them once or twice wliile dry-
  ing, pulUng them into a good shape.
  
  Mangling or Ironing. - For the coarser and
  thicker flannels it will be sufficient if they are
  mangled when nearly dry. Any bands or tapes
  must be ironed, and then the articles hung up
  again to finish drying. The finer kinds should be
  ironed when nearly dry with a rather cool iron.
  If they have become quite dry it will be necessary
  to spread a slightly damp cloth over them and
  iron over that, pressing heavily. Never iron
  flannels very wet or the hot iron will shrink them
  up, and on no account must the iron be too hot,
  especially in ironing coloured flannels. Should
  any scorching occur, dip the piece in warm water,
  squeeze it well, and rub gently, then wring out
  and re-dry, or rub with a silver coin and the
  scorch will disappear.
  
  Reasons for Flannels Shrinking. -
  
  1. Soap has been rubbed on them instead of
  soap jelly being used.
  
  2. They have either been washed or rinsed in
  too hot OF cold water.
  
  3. They have been allowed to lie about wet,
  instead of being hung up to dry immediately.
  
  4. They have been dried too slowly.
  
  5. They have been dried so close to an open
  fire that they steamed.
  
  6. They have been ironed while wet with a very
  hot iron.
  
  Spkcial Articles
  
  New Flannels and Sanitary Underclothing. - These
  are better to bo soaked for about half-an-hour
  b. fore washing in warm water with ammonia in
  it, one table -spoonful to two gallons of water.
  Cover the tub over to prevent the heat escaping,
  and squeeze and wring them out of this before
  the water has time to get cold. This process
  draws out some of the sulphur which new flannels
  contain, and which would prevent the soap
  
  
  making a lather, and it also helps to remove
  the greeise. Then wash in the same way as
  flannels.
  
  Stockings and Socks. - The comfort of stockings
  and socks, as well as their durabihty, depends
  very much upon their being well washed. The
  soles, heels, and toes require special attention.
  These should always be rubbed, using the wash-
  ing-board and a little soap if necessary. Wash
  them first on the right side, then turn and wash
  on the wrong, giving them two waters. Fold
  them evenly by the seam at the back of the leg
  before wringing and drying. When nearly dry
  either mangle them or iron them on the WTong
  side, and leave them wrong side out ready
  for mending.
  
  Red or Crimson Flannel. - ^This is rather
  troublesome to wash, and however careful one
  may be it is almost impossible to prevent the
  colour running. Ammonia should be omitted
  from the water in wliich it is washed, and vinegar
  should be added to the rinsing water in the
  proportion of foui' table -spoonfuls to one gallon
  of water. This helps to brighten the colour.
  
  Blankets. - Always choose a fine day for
  washing blankets, as it is a mistake to dry them
  indoors. First shake them well, and then pre-
  pare water with soap jelly, the same as for
  flannels, and in the largest tub you have. Put
  the blankets in, one or two at a time, move
  them up and down in this, squeezing and press-
  ing them against the sides ; then put them in
  a second tub of the same kind of water to
  repeat the process. In Scotland, instead of
  being washed with the hands, they are tramped
  with the bare feet. They may also be pounded
  with a dolly. Rinse well until free from soap,
  and then wring. If the wringer is used, let
  the rollers be as loose as possible. The colour
  of the blankets depends very much upon the
  cleanliness of the water they are washed in, so
  be particular to change it whenever necessary.
  
  Shake the blankets well before hanging up to
  dry, and hang them quite straight and singly on
  the clothes -rope in a gentle wind. See that they
  are securely fastened and well raised above tho
  ground. When dry, take them down, stretch
  them well, and rub all over with a piece of clean
  rough flannel so as to raise the pile, and then
  hang them near a fire for some time, as it is
  most important to have them thoroughly
  dry.
  
  Shetland and other Shawls. - Wash in the same
  way as flannels, but handle more gently,
  especially tho finer ones, squeezing them well,
  and being careful not to break the threads of
  wool. Rinse them in warm water, putting a
  little blue into the last rinsing water for white
  shawls, and for fine Shetland shawls a little hot-
  water starch, about one breakfast-cupful thick
  starch to half a gallon of water. Squeeze the
  water well out of the shawls, or put them through
  a wringer. Avoid twisting them in any way.
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  289
  
  
  If there is no wringer, after squeezing out as
  much of the water as possible with the hands,
  beat well between the folds of a towel.
  
  To dry a shawl, spread a sheet on the floor and
  pin it tightly at the corners ; pin out the shawl
  on this, stretching it well but not over much,
  pin out each point, and be careful to keep the
  shawl a good shape. Leave it till quite dry, then
  unpin carefully, shake it out, and air if necessary.
  
  The Sulphur Bath. - White shawls and flannels
  which have become yellow may be wloitened by
  putting them in a sulphur bath. Take a deep
  barrel, break up about one oz. of rock sulphur,
  and put it on an old plate or tin dish at the foot
  of it ; sprinkle over the sulphtu* a few drops
  of methylated spirits, and then set fire to it.
  When the methylated spirits has burnt out and
  the sulphur itself is burning, suspend the flannels
  or shawls across the fumes. Tliis must be done
  just before they are dried. Twist them loosely
  round sticks, pinning them here and there to
  prevent their slipping down and catching fire,
  and place the sticks across the barrel ; or a
  wire cage may be used, suspended on the top
  of the barrel. Cover over with a blanket or
  something thick enough to keep in the fumes,
  and let them remain about twenty minutes.
  Turn the things once during the time, so that
  every part of them gets whitened. Great care
  must be taken to have the things raised suffi-
  ciently high above the sulphur to avoid all
  danger of their catching fire.
  
  A Chamois Leather. - This may be washed
  and made to look equal to new if the following
  directions are carried out. Prepare a lather with
  water and soap, the san.3 as for flannels, put the
  leather into this, and squeeze it gently between
  the hands. Repeat the process if not clean after
  the first water, and until the last soapy water
  looks quite clean. Do not rinse, but wring
  straight out of the soapy water. Hang up to
  dry, rubbing and pulUng it out occasionally
  with the hands in order to keep it soft. It may
  be smoothed out last of all with a cool iron.
  
  Eiderdown Quilts. - To wash a large eiderdown
  quilt is rather hard work, and unless a good
  wringer is available and ample drying accom-
  modation, it should scarcely be attempted.
  But with these conveniences an eiderdown
  of moderate dimensions can be very easily
  tackled, and the results will be most satisfactory
  if the few needful rules are attended to. Before
  starting the actual washing shake the quilt, '
  to free it from all loose dust, and if there are
  any holes, either mend them or draw them
  together with a needle and cotton. Then
  wash according to directions given for flannel
  washing, or when large treat as blankets. If
  the coloiu" runs, use the water jiist tepid.
  Rinse in an abundant supply of warm water,
  adding a little salt or ammonia to the last to
  brighten the colour. There must on no account
  be any soap left in the quilt. Wring it carefully
  
  
  through the machine, loosening the tension to
  the fullest extent if necessary. The drying
  requires special attention. Shake out the
  eiderdown ; it is better if two people can do this
  - and hang it up, out of doors if possible, in
  a good wind and not too much sun, or, fail-
  ing that, in a warm atmosphere in the house.
  Whilst drying the quilt must be taken down
  from time to time and rubbed and shaken, to
  loosen the down and prevent it forming into
  clots. When dry, it shoiild be quite as soft as
  when new.
  
  Swansdown. - Wash gently in warm water,
  making a lather with soap jelly, and rinse in
  tepid water. Then hold it a little distance from
  the fire and shake till quite dry and fluffy.
  
  Flannelette. - Wash in the same way as
  flannel, only it will take no harm if rinsed in
  cold water. White flannelette may even be
  boiled along with cotton articles. Dry and
  finish off Hke flannels.
  
  Delaine. - When carefully washed, delaine
  should look equal to new. Wash it in exactly the
  same way as flannels, and be careful with the
  rinsing. Add ammonia in the proportion of
  one table -spoonful to one gallon of water to the
  last warm water. This will help to brighten the
  coloiu". Iron wliile slightly damp, and not so dry
  as for flannel. K it is Uned, iron the Hning first.
  
  Velveteen. - Cotton velvets, especially the
  light-coloured ones, can be waslaed and be made
  to look quite well. Wash in the same way as
  flannel with a lather of soap and warm water,
  and rinse first in warm and then in cold water.
  When nearly dry iron on the wrong side with a
  moderately hot iron.
  
  White Coque Feather Boas. - (See p. 318.)
  
  MUSLINS, LACE, CURTAINS, AND NET
  
  The Washing of Muslin. - Muslin requires very
  careful treatment, and especially coloured musUn
  if it is being washed for the first time. It must
  be treated more carefully than ordinary cotton,
  and not be pulled out of shape nor stretched, or
  it will have a drawn appearance. Being thin
  and open in textiu-e it is easy to wash without
  any rough treatment. First soak the mushn in
  cold or tepid water to take out the dressing or
  stiffening ; then wring or squeeze out gently.
  Prepare a small tub or basin of warm water,
  and make a lather with melted soap in the same
  way as for flannels. Squeeze the muslin well
  in this, and work it up and do^vn in the water.
  In the case of very soiled articles a httle borax
  or ammonia may be added to soften the water
  and draw out tho dirt. If not clean after the
  first washing, repeat the process in fresh soapy
  water, using rather less soap the second time.
  If washing, is not sufficient to make the muslin
  a good colour, it should be boiled (see p. 278).
  Then rinse first in tepid and then in cold
  wat-er, until every trace of soap has been rљ-
  
  T
  
  
  290
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  moved. Pure white muslin may have a little
  blue added to the last rinsing water. If the
  muslin is coloured, and the colours are likely to
  run, soak it first in salt and water, allowing a
  handful of salt to a gallon of water. Let the water
  for the fii-st washing bo just tepid, and proceed as
  quickly as possible, putting salt again or a little
  ammonia in the final rinsing water. Coloxu-ed
  muslin must on no account be boiled.
  
  Clear Starching and Ironing. - All muslin should
  be starched wet. If put into the starch dry, it
  never looks so clear. Prepare some clear starch
  (see p. 2S0), and tliin it to the consistency re-
  quired. This depends upon what the muslin is
  wanted for, and accorchng to the degree of
  stiffness desired. It is imiDossible to give the
  exact quantities of starch necessary for clear
  starch, as different qualities and makes of starch
  require more water than others, but experience
  will soon teach this, and at first it will be just
  as well to test the stiffness of the starch on a
  small piece of mushn. Be sure to have the
  starch clear, put the musUns into it, putting in
  first those white articles wliich are wished stiffest.
  Let the starch soak well through, then wring
  well, putting them twice at least through the
  wringing machine. In starching coloured
  muslins do not let the starch be too hot, or it
  will destroy the colours ; and never put things
  through the wringer straight out of boiling hot
  starch as it ruins the india-rubber rollers. In
  thinning the starch, after it has been made clear
  with boihng water, cold water may be used, and
  that will make the starch a more comfortable
  heat to use.
  
  After wringing the musUns shake them well,
  smooth out, and let them lie for some time
  rolled up in a towel before ironing. Muslin must
  be ironed wet. If allowed to get dry, it will have
  a rough appearance when ironed. Iron on the
  right side to give it a gloss, and the way of the
  thread as much as possible. When ironing a
  large piece of musUn, keep as much of it covered
  over at one time as you conveniently can, to
  prevent it becoming dry. Should the muslin
  dry before it is ironed, damp it down very evenly
  with a wet rubber or towel, not missing a piece,
  or it will not look smooth. Embroidered muslin
  should bo ironed on the wrong side, to raise
  the pattern. Spotted muslin should also be
  ironed on the wrong side, unless the spots are
  pretty far apart, when it may look better ironed
  first on the right side to give the muslin a gloss,
  and afterwards ironed over on the wrong to press
  out the spots. In ironing coloured musUns do
  not use the iron too hot, as it is apt to destroy
  the colours.
  
  Muslin trimmed with lace should have the
  lace ironed first and then the muslin itself. If
  the muslin feels too stiff after ironing, the fault
  can be remedied by putting it through water and
  then ironing again. Air muslin well after
  ironing or it will become limp.
  
  
  Washing of Lace. - To "do up " lace nicely is
  by no means difficult, in fact, it is one of the
  most interesting and least fatiguing branches
  of laundry work and amply repays the trouble
  expended upon it. Care and attention to de-
  tails is all that is required. The lace should
  first be carefully mended if necessary, and any
  tacking or di-awing threads removed.
  
  If very much soiled, soak it for several hours
  in a lather of warm water and soap, and allow
  one tea -spoonful of powdered borax to one quart
  of water. Then squeeze it out of the soaking
  water, and wash it in two or three warm lathers
  of soap and water. Do not rub it, but squeeze
  between the hands and press it well. Any
  rubbing or tv\ isting would break the tliroads of the
  lace, especially if it were of a fine make. When
  clean, rinse well in tepid water and then in cold,
  and if time permits allow it to lie for some time
  in the cold water to clear it. Pure white lace
  may have the last rinsing water shghtly tinged
  with blue.
  
  If after repeated washings the lace still has a
  soiled look, it may either be bleached in the sun
  or boiled. To boil lace put it into a jar or jam
  pot, wi'th cold water to cover it, and a little soap
  jelly ; stand the jar in a saucepan with boiling
  water to reach fully half-way up the jar, put the
  lid on the pan and boil for two or tlu-ee hoiu-s.
  Care must be taken that the water in the pan
  does not boil away.
  
  Stiffening of Lace. - ^There is great difference of
  opinion about the stiffening of lace, and many
  object to the use of starch on the ground that
  it makes the lace too stiff and tends to destroy
  it. As a rule, however, a httle starch or other
  stiffening is an improvement to most laces, but
  the aim must be to get the lace of the same
  stiffness as when new and no stiffer. For the
  thicker and commoner laces use hot-water
  starch. (See p. 280.)
  
  Take some clear starch and thin it down until
  it feels like slightly thickened water, or for
  heavy laces it may be a Mttle thicker. Allow
  the lace to soak in this for some little time, and
  then squeeze out gently with the hands. Spread
  it out between the folds of a fine towel or old
  handkerchief, and eitlier beat it between the
  hands to remove some of the starch or pass it
  carefully through the wringing machine. Avoid
  twisting the lace in any way.
  
  Cream lace may bo put through cream starch
  or through starch coloured with tea or coffee
  (see Coloured Starches, p. 281), instead of white
  starch.
  
  In the case of very fine lace use gum water
  instead of starch. This can be used without
  any danger of its rotting the fabiic, and the
  following are the directions for making it : -
  
  Gum Water. - Take one ounce of gum-arabic
  and put it into a saucepan with one pint of
  boiling water. Dissolve slowly over the fire,
  stirring occasionally, then strain through musUn,
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  291
  
  
  and bottle ready for use. Allow one table-
  spoonful of this melted gum to half a pint of cold
  water. Soak the lace in it for half-an-hour, and
  proceed in the same way as with starched lace.
  To tint the lace use strained tea or coffee with
  the gum water instead of plain water.
  
  After wringing p\ill the lace out gently with
  the fingers and roll it up with the wrong side
  inside. Wrap it in a towel and let it lie for an
  hour at least before ironing.
  
  Ironing of Lace. - Take a piece of clean wliite
  felt or flannel of tliree or foiu" thicknesses, and
  iron the lace over this on the wrong side and
  with a moderately hot iron. The points of the
  lace must be placed furthest from the edge of
  the table, and must be well ironed out. Do not
  unroll too much of the lace at one time, and iron
  until quite dry. If too stiff rub gently between
  the fingers to take out some of the starch, and
  iron again. Press weU with the iron, and at the
  same time not too roughly, and use the point of
  the iron to raise the pattern of the lace. Keep
  the lace the same width all the way along, and air
  it well before lasdng it away. Very fine lace
  should be ironed with a piece of mushn over it,
  and never touched with the bare iron. Ironing
  too with regard to lace is frequently objected to,
  but if carefully done no trace of the iron should
  be seen, and the resvilt should be most satis-
  factory.
  
  White Silk Lace. - This may be washed in the
  same way as any other lace, but should never be
  boiled. After rinsing, steep for half-an-hour in
  half a pint of hot milk, to which one dessert-
  spoonful of gum water has been added. This
  will restore the colour. Then proceed as for
  other lace.
  
  How to Iron a Muslin and Lace Handkerchief. -
  This must be put through the very thinnest
  starch or gum water, and wrung in the same
  careful way as lace.
  
  Iron the lace first, pulling it out after ironing
  to keep it soft, and then iron it over again. Iron
  the centre part next. Turn over to the right
  side, and wet the muslin part over with a damp
  rubber (it is sure to have become dry while the
  lace was being ironed). Iron it with a rather
  cool iron until smooth and glossy. If necessary,
  press out the lace round the edges last of all,
  and the handkerchief is finished.
  
  Black Lace. - First brush it well with a soft
  brush to get rid of as much dust as possible. If
  it is spotted or stained, wash it in tea with a very
  little soap jelly added, then rinse it in more tea,
  and finally let it soak for about half-an-hour in
  prepared tea. Add prepared gum (see p. 290)
  in the proportion of one table-spoonful to one
  pint of tea. If the lace is quite clean, and you
  merely wish to stiffen and renew its appearance,
  you may dispense with the wasliing, and simply
  soak it in the prepared tea. The gum-arabic
  in the ten gives the lace a slight stiffness.
  When doing up silk lace, ndd two tea-spoonfuls of
  
  
  methylated spirits to a half -pint of prepared tea
  to give a gloss to the silk in the lace.
  
  After soaking, squeeze the lace out of the tea.
  Shake it well, and spread it out between the
  folds of a towel or cloth, and either beat it with
  the hands or pass it once or twice through the
  wringer, then pull it out with the fingers, and
  roll up in the same way as white lace.
  
  To iron black lace take a sheet of kitchen
  paper, spread the lace out on the smoothest side
  of it with the points away from the edge of the
  table, cover over with more paper, and iron over
  that. Lift the upper pieces of paper occasionally
  to see that the lace lies smoothly underneath.
  Iron until quite dry, and hang up to air. Black
  lace must never be touched with the bare iron ;
  there must always be something over it to pre-
  vent it getting glazed. Paper not only prevents
  the lace staining the ironing sheet, but it also
  imparts a sUght stiffness to it.
  
  Curtains. - First shake the curtains well, or
  hang them up and brush them down with a soft
  brush to get rid of the superfluous dust, then
  soak in warm water and borax - one table-spoon-
  ful to two gallons of water - for an hour or two.
  Squeeze them well in this, and then pass through
  the wringing machine.
  
  Wash in warm water, making a lather with
  boiled soap. Work them up and down in this,
  squeezing and pulUng them through the hands.
  If not clean after the first washing, repeat the
  process.
  
  Rubbing of all kinds must be avoided, and
  it is always dangerous to wash ctu-tains by
  machinery. Rinse them first in warm water,
  then in plenty of cold. Wring well and starch
  them. Pure white curtains may have a Uttle
  blue either added to the rinsing water or
  mixed in with the starch. If two ounce of
  alum dissolved in one gallon of water be used for
  rinsing, it will prevent the ciu-tains catching fire
  at any time. Starch curtains wet, and have the
  starch just a moderate degree of stiffness. For
  white ciu-tains, use the ordinary white hot-water
  starch ; for cream or ^cru, use starch coloured
  with tea or coffee, or cream starch. (See
  Coloured Starches, p. 281.)
  
  Curtains ought to be dried quickly ; they are
  always better to be stretched and pinned out on
  frames for the purpose, or on slieets spread on the
  floor. Allow them to remain until almost di-y,
  take up and iron round the edges, pressing out
  all the points well, then hang up to air. If
  there is no convenience for having the ciu-tains
  pinned out, partly dry them by hanging them at
  a safe distance from the fire, or in a warm room ;
  then spread them out on a table, and iron all
  over. If curtains are hned, iron the linings first
  before stretching and pinning out to dry ; and
  when ironing, iron from the middle towards the
  sides, so that if there is any fulness it may come
  to the edge where it will show least.
  
  Plato and Spotted Net. - Wash in the same way
  
  
  292
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  as lace, and put through thin hot-water starch.
  Iron plain net on the wrong side ; stretch and
  pull it out, and then iron again. It must not bo
  too stiff, and should look clear. When held up
  to the light, the httle holes in tlie net should not
  be filled with starch. Iron spotted net in the
  same way, only a piece of flannel may be put
  under it to make the spots stand out better.
  
  A GeDtleman's Evening Tie. - Care must be
  taken in wasliing these to keep them a good
  colour. They may bo washed along with laces
  or fine muslins, but must not come in contact
  with anything dirty. After blueing, and while
  still wet, put tliem through clear starch of a
  moderate thickness, rather thicker than for
  ordinary muslins ; let the starch soak well
  through them, and then squeeze out with the
  hands. Shake them out well, put them between
  the folds of a towel, and pass them through the
  wringing machine. To prepare them for ironing
  pull them out well, and roll up from left to
  right, keeping the muslin the same width all the
  way along. If there are hems at the ends of the
  ties, notice which is the right side, and keep the
  right side inside when roUing. Cover each tie
  up as it is prepared, to prevent it becoming dry.
  
  
  :3>
  
  
  until all are finished, and it is time to iron them.
  To iron one of these ties, take a moderately hot
  iron, commence at the loose end of the roll, and
  iron carefully along from one end to the other,
  unrolUng as required. Iron along several times
  until smooth and glossy, ironing on one side only.
  Turn over, and it is ready for folding. First turn
  down a small piece at the top of the tie, just
  sufficient to take in the rough edge of the material,
  and press it down with the iron. Next turn up a
  piece at the foot of the tie, rather larger than that
  at the top, and according to the width the points
  are to be (Fig. 1). Be careful to have both ends
  alike, and press down with the iron again. Fold
  down the top piece again, making the tie the
  same width all the way along. Measure the
  two points, and if tho^ are exactly alike, iron
  along once more (Fig. 2). Fold loosely in four,
  and tie a thread round the centre to prevent it
  sUpping (Fig. 3).
  
  Chiffon. - Chiffon is washed in the same way as
  muslin, and after rinsing, put through very thin
  cle xr starch. Bo careful not to twist it in any
  way, but enclose it in the folds of a towel, and
  either beat it between the hands imtil dry or
  put it through the wTinging machine. Do not
  let chiffon lie too long before ironing, it dries so
  very quickly ; stretch it out to its proper shape,
  and iron it on the right side with a moderately
  
  
  hot iron. If it is a lajge piece, do not expose
  too much of it to the air at one time, but keep
  the part you are not ironing covered over to
  prevent it becoming dry. Pull out occasionally
  wliilst ironing to keep it soft, and iron over again.
  It must on no account be made stiff, but ought
  to fall softly, and just have sufficient stiffness to
  prevent it looking limp.
  
  SILKS, PRINTS, AND FANCY ARTICLES
  
  Washing of Silk. - There are many silks wliich
  can be washed quite easily and made to look
  equal to new, more especially the soft silks, such
  as Japanese, Tussore, Foulard, &c., but corded
  and glace silks will not be successful, and it is
  wiser to have these dry-cleaned.
  
  If a number of different silks have to undergo
  treatment, commence by dividing them into lots
  - white silks by themselves, light -coloured ones
  in another heap, and the darker and brighter-
  coloured ones in a third lot apart.
  
  To wash white silk prepare a lather of tepid
  water and soap jelly. Squeeze the silk well in this,
  and work it up and do^vn in the water. Tako
  two or three different soapy waters if necessary
  until the silk is quite clean. Never use the
  water too hot, as it would make the silk yellow,
  and never rub soap on white silk for the same
  reason. If the pieces of silk are small, or if they
  are silk handkerchiefs, a basin will be quite large
  enough for washing in, and then less soap will be
  required. At the same time the basin must be
  large enough to enable one to work comfortably.
  
  After washing, rinse the silk thoroughly, first
  in tepid, and then in plenty of cold water, letting
  the water from the tap rush on the silk, or letting
  it lie in clear cold water for a short time. It is
  most important to get the soap well out of the
  silk, or it will look thick and feel hard when
  ironed. Pure white silk should have a little
  blue added to the last rinsing water, to bring
  back its clear bluish colour.
  
  Coloured Silks should be soaked for p short
  time before being washed in cold water with a
  httle salt in it.
  
  If the colour is inclined to run, this will prevent
  it doing so to a certain extent. Silks of different
  colours should be soaked separately. Wash the
  silks in the same way as white silks, still using the
  water tepid, as hot would be more apt to"draw
  out the coloiu-s. If the colour comes out very
  much, hurry through the process as much as
  possible, and do not let the silk lie about between
  the different waters, especially where there is a
  mixture of colours in the silk, as one colour would
  run into the other. It is better to put the
  articles as quickly as possible from one water to
  the other.
  
  A little salt should be added to the last
  rinsing water to help to fix the colour, or with
  blues, greens, pinks, and reds a little vinegsu:
  sometimes restores and brightens the colour.
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  293
  
  
  To Put a Gloss on Silk. - After rinsing put the
  silk through cold water with methylated spirits
  in it, allowang one dessert -spoonful of the spirit
  to half -pint of cold water. There is no occasion
  to prepare a large quantity of this, but there
  must be sufficient to soak the silk thoroughly.
  Then squeeze well out.
  
  Wringing and Ironing. - In wringing silk be
  most careful not to twist it in any way, as it will
  then have a drawn look and a washed appearance
  when finished. Squeeze the silk between the
  hands, then shake it out, fold it evenly, and
  place it between the folds of a towel or piece of
  musHn, and afterwards either beat it between
  the hands or pass it once or twice through the
  WTinging machine. Be careful that there is no
  Starch on the rollers when putting it tlirough the
  wringer. The silk may he for some time rolled
  up in a towel, but must not be allowed to get too
  dry before ironing, as to sprinkle it with water
  afterwards would give it a spotted appearance.
  If it should happen to get dry, it will have to be
  put into water again, or damped all over with a
  wet rubber. Before ironing, smooth the silk
  out well on the table, lay over it a piece of
  muslin or old handkerchief, and iron over with a
  moderately hot iron. When slightly dry, remove
  the covering, and iron with the bare iron, first
  on one side and then on the other, to give the
  silk e gloss, if the silk feels in the least hard
  after ironing, shake it and rub it between the
  hands, and then iron again. The silk when
  finished shoiold be as smooth and soft £is when
  new. Some silks look better without being
  glazed. These should never be touched with
  the iron, but have something between them and
  it. If a very hot iron is put on wet silk, it will
  stick to it and crinkle it up. That is the reason
  why the silk should be covered when the ironing
  is commenced.
  
  In ironing coloured silks do not use the iron
  too hot or it will destroy the colours ; and if the
  colour is coming out to any extent, spread a
  piece of clean cloth over the ironing sheet to
  prevent the silk staining it.
  
  A Silk Slip. - Wash according to directions
  already given, and after rinsing put it through
  gum water in the proportion of two table-
  Bpoonfuls of the melted gum (see p. 290) to one
  quart of water. Add also a httle methylated
  spirits to gum water, and let the silk soak in
  this for half-an-hour. This will give a gloss to
  the silk and also impart the slight stiffness which
  is found in new silk. Squeeze out with the
  hands, 'ay smoothly between the folds of a
  towel, and pass it tlirough the wringing machine.
  Shake out and wrap again in a dry towel, and
  allow it to remain a few hours, if possible, before
  ironing. To iron the slip commence with the
  sleeves, ironing these on a sleeve-board if possible,
  but if this is not available iron first the upper
  and then the under half of the sleeve, then well
  up into the drawings at the top and at the wrist
  
  
  if tjiere are any. If the sleeve is gathered or
  pleated, a Uttle management with the point of
  the iron will be required to prevent its being
  creased. It is somewhat difficult to give definite
  instructions, as shapes and styles vary so much.
  The easiest way must always be taken, and that
  which crushes the material least.
  
  Next iron the bodice part. Place the neck
  at the left-hand side and commence with the
  piece lying nearest the edge of the table, and
  work gradually along until the other side is
  reached. Iron up into any gathers with the
  point of the iron, and smooth well round the
  armhole. If the silk becomes dry damp it over
  with a wet rubber, but do not sprinkle it. When
  the silk part is finished, press out any lace or
  embroidery on the wrong side and iron any
  tapes. If there are any lace frills these may be
  goffered (see p. 284). Then dry the silk sUp
  thoroughly before laying it away.
  
  Washing of Prints. - When prints are being
  washed for the first time, and there is danger of
  the coloiu" running, it is well to soak them in
  cold water with salt in it beforehand. Allow a
  handful of salt to one gallon of water. Wash them
  in tepid water, making a lather with boiled soap
  the same as for flannels. In fact, the water in
  which flannels have been washed, if it continues
  clean enough, will be suitable for the washing of
  prints and coloured things. Give them at least
  two soapy waters, squeezing and rubbing them
  gently with the hands until they are quite clean.
  Pay particular attention to the most soiled parts.
  If there is the least fear of the colour running,
  do not rub soap on them. After they have been
  washed several times, and when the colour is
  ascertained to be fast, the prints may be washed
  by the ordinary method for white cotton
  articles. Some prints ■"'ill even stand boihng,
  but do not attempt this unless it is quite certain
  there is no danger of their colour being destroj'ed.
  When clean, rinse the prints, first in tepid water
  and then in plenty of clear cold water. Add salt
  or ammonia, one table -spoonful to a gallon, to the
  last rinsing water when the colours are not fast.
  Vinegar is good for restoring blues, and ox -gall
  for dark colours. The strength of the colour
  depends very much upon the quahty of the
  material. If the coloiu-s have been properly
  mixed before being used for printing, they will
  stand soap and water perfectly ; if not, careful
  washing will not prevent theni fading. When
  water becomes tinged with the colour of the
  material that has been weished in it, it must be
  poured away at once and not used for anything
  else. Goods of different colours wluch are not
  fast must be washed separately. After rinsing,
  wring them out, fold evenly, and pass them once
  or twice through the wringing machine. In all
  cases, when washing coloured articles, avoid the
  use of soda and washing powders.
  
  Starcliing and Ironing. - ^^^^en coloured things
  are only \vished sUghtly stiff, they should be
  
  
  294
  
  
  THE WOIVIAN'S BOOK
  
  
  put through thin clear starch while they are
  still wet. Wring them again after starching,
  and then either roll up in a towel and let them
  he some time before ironing, or hang them up to
  dry shghtly. If wished very stiff, let them dry
  first, and then starch. Do not use the starch
  too hot or it will destroy the colours, and when
  ironing them do not use the iron too hot for the
  same reason.
  
  Iron on the right side, except in cases where the
  pattern is raised or dull and a gloss would be
  imsuitable. ^^^aen ironing any fancy article
  with sewed work, press out the sewed part on
  the wrong side over flannel.
  
  How to Starch and Iron a Cotton Petticoat. - It
  is not necessary to starch the whole of the
  garment. It will generally be found sufficient
  if it is just starched about a quarter of a yard up
  from the foot, or to the top of any tucks or
  embroidery. The starclung may be done before
  the petticoat is hung up to dry. Have a basin
  of clear starch, not very tliick ; dip the foot of
  the petticoat into tliis, squeeze the starch well
  through it, and then pass it once or twice tlirough
  the wringing macliine. In wringing put the
  band end through first.
  
  Or the petticoat may be starched dry. Sprinkle
  it well with water down as far as the tucks or frills,
  and then dip the foot part into the stau-ch in the
  same way as before. The petticoat being dry,
  the starch will not require to be q\iite so stiff.
  After starching and wringing, roll the petticoat
  up tightly with the starched part inside, and let
  it lie rolled up in a towel for some time before
  ironing. If the petticoat is made of rather
  thick material, it will be as well to hang it up
  to dry slightly before commencing to iron it.
  
  To iron a petticoat or skirt of any kind well
  it is necessary to have a skirt-board. It will not
  only be better, but much more quickly done.
  Have the narrow end of the skirt-board at your
  left-hand side, and place it in a good hght.
  Cover it with a small sheet kept for the purpose,
  and pin the sheet tightly underneath, so that
  there is no fear of it wrinkhng up. If there is
  embroidery on the petticoat, put it on the board
  with the wrong side out to begin with, and the
  band of the petticoat towards the narrow end of
  the board. Iron the embroidery first, pressing
  it well out so as to raise the pattern. If there
  are two or more embroidered frills, commence
  with the lowest one ; iron it first, then turn it
  back, and iron the second one, and so on.
  When the embroidery is finished, turn the petti-
  coat on the right side. If there are frills on it,
  iron the plain piece under the frills first, then the
  frills themselves, except when they are made of
  embroidery, when they already have been ironed.
  Iron the plain top part of the petticoat last ;
  let it be pretty damp, and iron it firmly, so as
  to get it smooth and glossy. If it has become in
  the least dry, damp it down with a wet rubber,
  or it will have a rough appearance when finished.
  
  
  If there are full frills, goffer them before taking
  the petticoat off the board. If there is more
  than one, goffer the top one first, and then the
  lower. When finished, remove the petticoat
  from the board, iron the waist -band on both
  sides and the strings, fold the petticoat neatly
  and hang it up to air.
  
  A Princess Petticoat. - Iron the bodice part of
  the petticoat as a slip-bodice before putting it
  on the board ; then proceed as above.
  
  A Dress Bodice. - This should not be starched
  too stiffly or it will be uncomfortable to wear.
  It is therefore better to starch it when wet, and
  then wring it well. If very tliick, hang it up to
  dry shghtly before ironing. If it is made of
  tliin material, merely roll it up in a towel, and
  let it he for a short tune.
  
  To iron, commence with the Unings - first the
  neckband, then the sleeves, and lastlj^ the bodice.
  \Vlien ironing the hning of the bodice keep
  the neck at the left-hand side ; commence
  with the part nearest the edge of the table.
  When that is ironed, go on to the next piece,
  and so on until the other side is reached. Do
  not iron the Unings too dry or it will be difficult
  to get the right side smooth afterwards. Iron
  all seams out flat. Do the right side of the
  bodice in the same order, trying to make each
  piece perfectly smooth. A sleeve-board may
  be found useful when ironing the sleeves. If
  there is any lace, iron it before beginning the
  right side of the bodice. Leave any goffering
  that is required till the end. Iron round the
  seam at the armhole to make it soft and com-
  fortable for the arm. Air well, and fold as little
  as possible.
  
  Holland. - Wash in the same way as white
  cotton articles. A httle tea may be added to
  the last rinsing water to preserve the colour.
  Or rinse in water in wliich a little hay has been
  boiled. After wringing finish off in the same
  way as prints.
  
  Chintz. - First shake the cliintzes, or brush
  thein with a soft brush, to remove all surface dust.
  Then soak them in a plentiful supply of cold water
  overnight. If they are very dusty it is a good
  plan to change the water once or twice during
  tliis time. Then wring out and proceed with
  the washing. Although the colours in chintzes,
  and especially the better ones, are almost invari-
  ably fast, it is wise to take every precaution
  against their running the first time they are
  washed. Wash chintzes in the same way as
  prints, punching and pounding them well in the
  soapy water. A little liquid ammonia may be
  added to the water if it requires softening. A
  second soapy water will generally be found
  necessary, and the process of squeezing and
  pounding should be repeated. When the
  cliintzes appear to be quite clean, rinse them well
  in plenty of warm water, and then in cold water
  until it is free from soap. Then wring tightly,
  and next put them through rather thick starch.
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  295
  
  
  and hang outside to dry. When quite dry,
  starch a second time in hot-water starch, pound-
  ing and squeezing the starch well into the
  material. Pass tlirough the wringer once or
  twice, then shake out and hang up indoors until
  dry enough for ironing. Take them down, and
  roll up in a cloth until they can be ironed. Or if
  there are straight pieces of material, these may
  be mangled first. Iron with hot and heavy irons,
  finishing off with the polishing iron. Each iron
  should be well rubbed on a little bees' -wax before
  it is used, as this will make it iron smoothly and
  help to give a gloss to the chintz. Finish off
  with the polishing iron (see p. 300) if a very high
  gloss is desired.
  
  Note. - Instead of starch, size is sometimes
  used for the stiffening of chintz. Take a penny
  packet of size and dissolve it in half a gallon of
  boiling water. When lukewaqn put in the chintz
  and let it soak one hour. Then wring out and
  hang up until sufficiently dry to iron.
  
  TO WASH GLOVES
  
  Cotton Gloves. - If very much soiled rub them
  with soap and let them soak in tepid water for
  several hours. Paraffin soap is good, especially
  if the gloves are soiled. Then rub well and
  squeeze out the dirty water. Wash again with
  hot water and soap until perfectly clean. Pay
  particular attention to the most soiled parts.
  It is sometimes a good plan to put them on the
  hands and brush them \vith a nail brush. Rinse
  in tepid water and then in cold, adding a httle
  blue to the cold water for white gloves. Wring
  out and hang up to diy. They may be pressed
  with a moderately hot iron when nearly dry.
  
  Silk Gloves. - Wash these in the sanae way as
  other silk articles - ^rinse and hang up to dry.
  When nearly drj' press with an iron.
  
  Chamois Leather and Doe-skin Gloves. - Wash
  and dry according to directions given for chamois
  leather (p. 289). Rub occasionally whilst dry-
  ing and pull them into shape. The best way
  to dry them is to put them on wooden hands
  sold for the purpose.
  
  Woollen Gloves. - Wash and dry in the same
  way as other woollen articles. Pull them out
  well whilst drying or put them on wooden hands.
  
  COLLARS, CUFFS, AND SHIRTS
  
  Importance of having them well Washed. - The
  
  above should be washed according to general
  direotioi^s already given (p. 278), and dried
  thorougiily. It cannot be too strongly im-
  pressed that unless the process of wasliing is well
  carried out, no amount of care in the starching
  and ironing will make the articles look well. It
  is a good plan when washing to give the articles
  a good brushing on the washing-board. Collars
  especially are so liable to be stained with the
  heat of the neck that, u:iles3 they are thoroughly
  
  
  washed and rinsed, when they reach the stage
  of being ironed the iron will only show up the
  faulty work. A httle extra trouble taken in
  the washing wiU save much future disappoint-
  ment. Then again care must be taken in the
  drying. Dry in a clean place and dry thoroughly,
  or they will not take in the starch properly, and
  will be limp when finished.
  
  All articles which are wanted very stiff should
  be starched in cold-water starch.
  
  How to Starch Collars and Cuffs. - Before
  commencing the process have everytliing at
  hand that is likely to be required - a basin of
  cold water, a basin of cold-water starch (see p.
  281), a plate, one or two clean towels, and a
  piece of clean soft rag to use as a rubber.
  
  Mix the starch well up from the foot of the
  basin ; put into it several of the collars and cuffs,
  or as many as the starch will cover easily at one
  time, and let the starch soak well through them.
  Squeeze them with the hands in the starch, and
  then wring as dry as possible and lay them on
  the plate, and do the others in the same way.
  Tliey must not be put through the wringing
  macliine, or too much of the starch would be
  taken out.
  
  Take a collar or cuff at a time ; rub it between
  the hands to get the starch well through the
  different folds of hnen, draw out straight, and
  lay smoothly on the towel. Commence a few
  inches from the top of the towel, so that there
  is a dry piece to double over. Then proceed
  with the others in the same way ; lay them
  close together on the towel, but do not put one
  on the top of the other.
  
  Do not use the starch when it gets very
  low in the basin, but always have a plenti-
  ful supply to work with, so that it may not
  cake on the articles. When all ai'e starched,
  put the basins of starch and water out of your
  way, and spread out the towel on the table to be
  ready for the collars and cuffs.
  
  Roll up tightly and beat the bundle between
  the hands so as to bring the different folds of
  material together, and lay aside for an laour at
  least before ironing.
  
  Method of Ironing Cufls. - To carry out tliis
  process successfully it is absolutelj^ necessary to
  have first a really hot iron and one which has
  been well dusted, the sides and top as well as the
  bottom, and then rubbed on a httle bees' -wax
  or candle-end to make it run smoothly ; and,
  secondly, a smoothly covered ironing table or
  ironing board without any objectionable \\Tinkles.
  
  Do not take out more than one cuff" or collar
  from the towel at one time, and keep the others
  well covered. If they get dry, they will not iron
  properly, and it is impossible to damp them
  over, as it would take out too much of the starch.
  Spread the cuff out on the table with the wrong
  side uppermost, and smooth away all wrinkles
  with a paper-knife. If there is any extra fulness
  on the wrong side, push it over to tlio edges.
  
  
  296
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  where it will not be seen. Iron once or twice
  across on the wrong side until slightly dry,
  then turn to the right. See thet it is quite
  smooth before putting the iron down on it ; iron
  it well, and then go back again to the wrong side.
  Iron slowly at first, until the cuff gets pretty
  dry and smooth ; then iron more and more
  quickly backwards and forwards, until the cuff
  is quite dry and the surface glossy. Iron prin-
  cipally on the right side, as it is there that the
  most gloss is wished, but iron the wrong side
  smooth enough to prevent it feeling rough to
  the skin. Lift the cuff occasionally when iron-
  ing to let the steam escape, and dry the sheet
  underneath it with the iron before laying it
  down again.
  
  When several cuffs have thus been ironed,
  they may be poUshed with the poUshing iron
  (see p. 292), or if not, rounded into shape ^v-ith
  the iron and placed negu" the fire to become
  thoroughly crisp and dry.
  
  Collars. - These are ironed in very much the
  same way as cuffs, first on the wrong and then
  on the right side. When there are points to be
  turned down, be careful to iron them most on the
  WTong side of the collar, as that will be the side
  which will show most. When tvirning them
  down, make a mark first vnth the side of the
  iron, on the right side of the collar, then press
  down with the fingers. Do not iron down with
  the iron, as it is apt to cut the linen. Then turn
  the collar. When the whole collar is turned
  over, be careful to notice which is the right side
  before beginning to iron. Lift up any tabs there
  may be on the collars ; dry luiderneath them
  with the iron, and then iron down again.
  
  Eton Collars. - Iron the band first, stretch it
  well, and iron on both sides until dry, being
  careful not to iron the collar itself so eis to dry it.
  Then stand the band up, and make the collar lie
  flat on the table. Iron round it slowly - first on
  the wrong side, keeping the band well stretched
  to prevent any creases where they are joined.
  Do not iron too long on the wrong side, or the
  right wiU become so dry that it will bo impossible
  to iron it smoothly. Turn and iron the right
  side until dry ; smooth and then turn with the
  fingers.
  
  A Front. - Iron the neckband first on both sides
  until dry, or if there is a collar attached, finish
  it off before commencing the front. Iron the
  front on the right side only, and it is not necessary
  to iron the wrong ; and if there is any fulness,
  smooth it away towards the sides before com-
  mencing to iron. Stretch the neckband well
  when ironing towards the neck to prevent
  ertases. Then work the iron quickly up and
  down the front to get a good gloss. (For
  Polishing of Collars, &c., see p. 292.)
  
  A Gentleman's White Shirt. - Have the shirt
  perfectly dry, and keep it on the wrong side until
  it is about to be ironed. Commence with the
  cuffs ; place them evenly together, and gather
  
  
  them up in the left hand. With the right hand
  wet the cotton part just above the cuffs with
  cold water, as this will prevent the starch from
  spreading up the sleeve where it is not required.
  Then dip the cuffs into the starch, and squeeze
  the starch well through them. Starch right up
  to the top of the cuffs, but do not let the starch
  go any further. Wring out tightly, and rub
  with the hands in the same -n ay as other cuffs.
  
  Next starch the front. Place the two halves of
  it evenly together, and gather them up in the
  hands, commencing at the back of the neckband,
  and gathering down to the foot of the front.
  Wet carefully down the side of the front to
  prevent the starch spreading on to the body of
  the shirt, at the same time being careful that
  no drops of water fall on tlie front itself, which
  might cause blisters when ironing. Tlien dip
  the fronts and neckband into the starch and
  squeeze the starch well into them. A mere
  dip in and out again is not sufficient ; the starch
  must be forced tlirough the different layers of
  Unen. Wring out and rub between the hands.
  After starching spread the sliirt on the table with
  the front uppermost and the neck nearest the
  edge of the table. Smooth out the front and
  give it a light rub over with a clean dry cloth or
  rubber. Fold it double, the neck towards thn
  bottom of the sliirt. Place the sleeves across
  the back, Bmoothing out the cuffs, and double the
  shirt again so that the sleeves are inside. As it
  is now folded, sprinkle it well with water on both
  sides, roll tightly up from one end to the other,
  and keep covered over until it has to be ironed.
  A shirt should lie for an hour at least before
  being ironed, but must not be allowed to become
  too dry.
  
  To Iron a Shirt. - First turn the shirt on to the
  right side, and place it on the table with the
  front uppermost and the neck towards the edge
  of the table. Turn the yoke forwards, so that it
  lies flat on the top of the back of the shirt, and
  iron the yoke first on the right side, then turn
  it back, slip the iron inside, and iron it on the
  wrong. Next iron the neckband, first on the
  wrong and then on the right, ironing it until
  quite dry. Finish it off well, particularly at the
  button-holes, and be careful not to iron down
  on to the front of the shirt. When these are
  done, fold the shirt down the centre of the
  back, keeping the front apart from it. Iron the
  back on both sides, always keeping the neck at
  the left-hand side. Open out, so that the whole
  of the back lies uppermost on the table, and
  iron round the back of the armholes, and this
  finishes the back.
  
  Next fold the shirt double lengthways with the
  front inside to prevent its becoming dry, and place
  it on the table with the sleeves lying out to right.
  Throw back the upper sleeve, and commence
  with the under one. Iron the cuff first on the
  wrong and then on the right, in the same way
  as other cuffs, then run the iron up inside the
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  297
  
  
  cuff and iron the thick part over the drawings.
  Iron also the ■svrong side of the hems at the
  opening of the sleeve, and turn the cuffs into
  shape. Smooth out the sleeve, and iron first
  on one side, ironing well into pleats or gathers
  at the top and bottom, and put a pleat into the
  sleeve itself if necessary. Tiarn down the shirt
  at the neck so that the other side of the sleeve
  can be ironed, but do not change the position of
  the shirt itself.
  
  Then iron the second sleeve in exactly the
  sanme manner, the ironed sleeve being turned
  back and underneath the shirt out of the way.
  When both are finished, place the shirt on the
  table with the front uppermost and the neck at
  yoiir left-hand side. Arrange the back in pleats,
  and press them down with the iron. Then iron
  the breast of the shirt ; slip a shirt-board up in
  between the back and the front, without dis-
  
  
  arranging the pleats down the back. Stretch
  the upper half of the breast on to the board first,
  drawing the other half as much out ot the way
  as possible. Tuck the cotton part of the front
  underneath the board, so as to keep the breast
  firm. Smooth away all wrinkles on the breast
  with a paper-knife, pusliing any fulness over
  towards the sides. Hold the neck firmly with
  the left hand iron slowly up the centre, then
  gradually towards the sides. As it becomes
  smooth, iron up and down more quickly, lifting
  the breast occasionally to let the steam escape.
  Keep stretching it well with the left hand to
  prevent any wrinkles forming round the collar.
  Do the other side in the same way, and then hold
  both firmly together, and iron quickl;^ and fiunly
  up and down the breast to get a good gloss.
  
  When the breast is finished, slip out the
  shirt-board and arrange the cotton part of the
  front smoothly on the top of the back, putting
  a pleat down the centre where required. Damp
  it over if it has become dry, and then iron it
  smoothly. If the shirt has to be polished with
  the polishing iron, do so now ; but if not, fold it.
  
  
  To Fold a Shirt. - First put a pin in the neck
  to keep the two sides together, then tvirn it over
  so that the back is uppermost and the neck at
  the left-hand side. Turn the sleeves down the
  sides of the back (Fig. a), noticing that both are
  turned in from exactly the same place on both
  sides. Turn over them a small piece from the
  sides by dotted hne 1 (Fig. o) ; then turn over
  again from dotted line 2 (Fig. a), so that both
  sides meet down the centre of the back. Stretch
  them rather tightly, so that the front will have
  a curved look, and pin them firmly together
  (Fig. b). Hang up to air, and then fold so that
  the front only shows (Fig. c).
  
  A Lady's Shirt. - After it is rinsed put it
  through rather thin clear starch and hang it
  up to dry. This gives a slight stiffness to the
  body part of the sMrt. When quite dry starch
  the cuffs and collar in cold-water starch, being
  careful to wet previously just above the
  cuffs and below the collar with cold water
  to prevent these parts becoming stiff with
  the starch. If there is a plain band down
  the front, and this is Hked stiff, dip it also
  in the cold-water starch. Rub the starch
  well in and then smooth the parts over
  with a clean rubber. Sprinkle the dry
  parts of the shirt with cold water and roll
  up tightly. Let it lie for an hour or two
  at least before ironing.
  
  To iron the sliirt, open it out and turn
  it on the right side. Commence with the
  collar, stretch it out, and iron first on the
  wrong and then on the right side. Next
  iron the yoke on both sides and then
  proceed to the sleeves. Iron these in the
  same way as the sleeves of a gentleman's
  shirt, or slip them on to a sleeve-board.
  Use a small iron for running up into the
  gathers at the top, and try to avoid creases. To
  iron the bodice place the shirt on the table with
  the neck at the left-hand side. Commence with
  the front lying nearest the edge of the table,
  smooth it out and iron it well. Next iron the
  back and then the other front. Finish off by
  ironing the parts round the armholes, also the
  hems on the wrong sides and any strings. The
  cuffs may now be polished if wished, then turn
  them into shape and hang the shirt up to air.
  To Fold the Shirt. - First pin the two sides
  together at the neck, and pleat the front if
  desired. Then lay the sleeves down the sides
  of the back the same as in a gentleman's sliirt
  (Fig. a) ; fold them upwards again so that the
  cuffs show above the neck, and pin them into
  position. Fold over the sides so that they meet
  down the centre, and pin them together. Fold
  quite loosely ; any pressing would crush the
  sleeves.
  
  INFANTS' AND CHILDREN'S CLOTHING
  
  Preliminary. - In washing infants' clothing it is
  always better to keep the articles separate, and
  
  
  298
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  not to mix them with other clothes. Special
  attenyon must be given to them, and in dressing
  they require very dainty handhng.
  
  The water used in washing must be changed
  as soon as it becomes in the least degree dirty.
  
  Neither soda nor wasliing powders must on any
  account be used, as they are irritating to the
  skin.
  
  Baby's Robes and Robe Skirts. - If time permits,
  allow these to soak for an liour or two in tepid
  water before washing. When about to wash,
  wring them out of tlie soaking water, and wash
  in water as hot as the hand can bear. It is best
  to wash these carefully with the hands. Being
  fine, they will not bear being rubbed on a board
  or with a brush. Rub soap on them, and pay
  particular attention to the most soiled parts.
  If the material is fine, use melted soap (see p.
  287). Go methodically over every part ; wash
  first on one side and then on the other, and give
  them a second soapy water if they are not clean
  after the first. Then boil if necessary, and
  afterwards rinse, blue, and wring (see p. 278).
  Give them throughout very careful treatment,
  as the least unnecessary strain is apt to tear
  them or cause holes.
  
  After wTinging, put through the thinnest pos-
  sible starch and wring again. Tlien dry partially,
  roll up in a towel, and let them he a short time
  before ironing, but not long enough to become
  dry.
  
  To iron a robe skirt cover a skirt-board with
  a fine sheet, and put the skirt on it with the
  wrong side out. Iron any lace round the foot
  and embroidery on this side, pressing it well with
  the iron to make the pattern stand out. Then
  turn, and iron the rest of it on the right side. If
  any of the muslin part has been dried with the
  ironing on the wrong side, damp it down before
  ironing it on the right. If there are any tucks,
  iron them first, stretching them out well before
  ironing, and getting them quite free from creases.
  Iron the plain part of the skirt from the bottom
  upwards, and keep drawing it towards you as you
  go along. Do not let it stick to the ironing-
  sheet, but keep lifting it up from time to time.
  Should it get dry before the ironing is finished,
  wet the end of a towel and damp the muslin over
  lightly with it. The muslin must on no acf;ount
  be ironed dry, or it will have a rough appearance,
  instead of looking smooth and glossy.
  
  The skirt of a robe is ironed in the same way.
  Iron the embroidery on the front of the bodice
  before turning the robe on to the right side.
  After turning, finish the skirt of the robe before
  doing the bodice. If the bodice has become dry,
  damp it down before ironing. Iron as much
  of it as possible on the board, using a small iron
  so £is to get into the corners well. Any frills
  that cannot be done on the board may be left
  until the robe is taken off. The embroidered
  flaps or side-pieces on the front of some robes are
  better left until the end and ironed off the
  
  
  board, the mushn part of them on the right
  side, and the embroidery on the wrong. Do
  the sleeves whichever way is found easiest.
  Sometimes they are wide enough to allow of the
  iron being slipped inside them, or they may be
  managed more easily by putting a roll of flannel
  inside and ironing over that. Goffer or crimp
  any frills that require it ; iron out any strings,
  and then air well.
  
  A Piquee Pelisse. - Wash according to general
  directions (see p. 278), and starch while wet in
  tliin hot-water starch. Allow it to dry sUghtly
  before ironing.
  
  Iron all embroidery first on the wrong side,
  over flannel, until it is qviite dry. The piquee
  itself must be ironed on the right side to give it
  a gloss. Commence with the cape, iron it from
  one end to the other, and have the coat part of
  the pelisse turned back from under it so that
  the cape itself Ues single on the table. Then
  iron the sleeves - ^lay out one at a time smoothly
  on the table, and iron first the upper and then
  the under part. Then lay the pelisse on the
  table with the neck at your left-hand side, tiu"n
  the cape back, and iron the coat itself. Iron
  the piece nearest to you first, smooth out each
  piece as you go along, always keeping it lying
  the one way, and draw the coat towards you as
  you get it ironed. Press well with the iron to
  get a gloss. Double by the shoulders and sides,
  and finish off round the armholes ; also iron the
  hems on the wrong side. Then finish by goffer-
  ing any trimming that requires it ; air well, and
  fold loosely.
  
  Stays. - When washing these, place them on
  the washing -board and use a brush to brush
  them with. Being made of firm material, they
  will bear a good rubbing. Boil them if necessary,
  and after rinsing put them tlii'ough thin hot-
  water starch. On no account make them stiff.
  Allow them to dry slightly, and iron first on
  one side and then on the other until quite dry.
  Stretch well while ironing, as the quilting is
  inclined to pucker. Hang up in a warm place
  to air before laying away.
  
  Pinafores. - Those should always be slightly
  starched ; if left quite limp they will not keep
  their appearance any time, and will very soon
  soil. Muslin pinafores should be put through
  stiffor starch than those made of diaper and
  other fancy white material, and must always bo
  starched wet. Diaper and other kinds of pina-
  fores may be starched either wet or dry, and
  the starch should be quite thin. Pinafores
  made of muslin and other thin material should
  be wrung well and rolled in a towel for some
  time before ironing. Those made of tliicker
  material may be slightly dried and then rolled
  up.
  
  When ironing pinafores always commence
  with the embroidery, pulling it out well and
  ironing very carefully. The rest of the pinafore
  is as a rule very simple to iron. Always keep
  
  
  GUIDE TO LAUNDRY WORK
  
  
  299
  
  
  the top of the pinafore at the left-hand side, and
  iron the material single when possible. If the
  pinafore is joined up the back, iron it double -
  first the front and then the back, or iron it on a
  skirt-board. If there are tucks along the foot
  of the pinafore, stretch them out well when
  ironing to prevent them dragging. Iron as
  much as possible with the thread of the material.
  A small iron must be used for getting into all
  gathers. Always finish off well round arm-
  holes and iron out all strings, and run round
  hems on the wrong side. If there is a full drawn
  front on the pinafore it sometimes looks well
  crimped. Goffer or crimp all frills that require
  it, and fold neatly.
  
  Knickerbockers. - After washing these, wring
  and let them dry slightly before ironing. On
  no account must the frills be starched, as the
  stiffness would irritate the tender skin of young
  childi'en. Iron the frills first, then the waist-
  band on boih sides. Keep the waist at the left-
  hand side when ironing the legs, and iron first
  the front and then the back of them. Iron
  whichever way crushes them least. There is
  such a variety of shapes that it is difficult to
  give definite rules. Iron well into gathers, and
  hems on the wrong side. Crimp the frills, and
  then fold neatly.
  
  Flannel Binders, Pilches, and Barracoats. - Wash
  and dry these according to general directions
  given for washing and drying flannels (p. 287).
  They should, when possible, be dried in the
  open air ; it gives them a sweeter and fresher
  smell. When nearly dry, iron them all over
  with a cool iron to make them smooth and
  soft. Iron all strings and bindings, and be
  most particular to air well.
  
  Knitted Socks and Bootees. - Wash these care-
  fully in a lather of warm water and boiled soap,
  and rinse in warm water (see p. 287). If wliite,
  a little blue should be added to the last rinsing
  water. Pay great attention to the drying of
  these, as they are Uable to shrink. Wooden
  blocks of different sizes are to be had for stretch-
  ing them ; they are put on to these while still
  wet, and allowed to remain until dry. A
  simpler block may be cut out of a piece of card-
  board the exact size and shape reqviired, and
  in some ways this is even better than wood, as
  in this case pins can be put through the cardboard
  and the sock stretched in length as well as
  breadth. Failing to get either of these, pin
  the socks out to their proper shape on a
  covered table or board.
  
  Knitted Jackets and Drawers. - For the washing
  of these, see p. 287. When drying them, see
  that they are pulled out to a proper shape before
  hanging up. If they are not very thick, it is
  almost better to pin them out on a covered table
  or floor, and allow them to remain there until dry.
  
  Wincey and Serge Dresses. - These are both
  washed in the same way. Shake well before
  washing to free tliem from all superfluous dust.
  
  
  Soak them in warm water with a Uttle ammonia,
  and let them remkin from twenty to thirty
  minutes. This softens them and makes them
  easier to wash. Wring them out and wash in
  the same way as flannels (see p. 287). Pay
  particular attention to the most soiled parts.
  Rinse thoroughly, adding a httle blue to the
  last rinsing water for white or blue serge. Hang
  up to dry with the wrong side out, and if drying
  indoors turn and shake occasionally during the
  process. When nearly dry, iron with a cool
  iron. Wincey especially requires a good deal
  of pressure bestowed on it. Navy blue serge
  should be ironed on the \\Tong side only ; it
  would not look well to glaze it.
  
  Smocks. - Smocking must never be pressed
  with the iron, but only steamed. Iron the rest
  of the garment first, leaving the smocking to do
  last. It takes two people to steam it. Let a
  moderately hot iron be held with the bottom
  upwards by one, while a second holds the smock-
  ing firmly on the top of it, and dj-aws it slowly
  over the surface of the iron until it becomes
  quite dry. The heading round the top of the
  smocking should be ironed with a small iron,
  and if it is a starched material, afterwards
  goffered.
  
  Boys' Sailor Suits. - These require very careful
  washing. They are as a rule made of drill or
  jean, materials which are both very hard to wash.
  Being of a fu-m texture, they will stand a good
  deal of rubbing and a brush on the wasliing-
  board. They may be boiled after wasliing if
  there is no fear of any colour in them running.
  After rinsing, starch wliile still wet. The starch
  must not be stiff, as the material itself is of
  a stiff nature. Wring well, and dry sUghtly
  before ironing. Be careful to choose a very
  clean place for drying, and dry with the wrong
  side out.
  
  To iron the trousers turn them on the right
  side, smooth them out on the table, with the
  waist at your left-hand side and the fi'ont upper-
  most. Iron the fronts of the two legs first, but
  not too di'y ; turn over and iron the back, then
  iron over the fronts again. Iron bands and
  hems on the wrong side, and press hard with the
  iron to get a good gloss.
  
  In ironing the jacket, commence with the
  collar, and if this is of navy blue or scarlet, iron
  it on the wrong side only, or on the right w4th
  sometliing laid over it ; it should not be glossed.
  Next iron the sleeves on the right side, first the
  upper and then the under half. In doing the
  jacket itself, keep the neck at the left-hand side,
  commence with the piece nearest to j'ou, and
  iron from one end to the other, smoothing out
  each piece as it is reached. Then finish off at
  the shoulders, round armholes, and the inside
  of the jacket. Blue hnen suits must not be
  polished with the iron, but either ironed entirely
  on the wrong side or ironed with sometliing over
  the material.
  
  
  300
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  SUk Dresses, Pinafores, and Veils. - For the
  
  washing of these, see p. 292. After a silk dress
  is wrung, starch any lace there may be on it in
  very thin starch, and hang it up to dry for a
  short time. Iron the lace first on the wrong
  side, then any linings or double parts on the
  wrong side. Next iron the sleeves with a small
  iron, first the upper and then the under part,
  ironing well into the gathers. If the dress is
  smocked, leave tlio smocking to the last (see p.
  299). If there is a bodice, iron it before doing the
  skirt. Do the skirt either on the sldrt-board or
  by lajnng it double on the table, and ironing first
  the front and then the back. If the silk is \ery
  wet in parts, iron with something over it to begin
  with, to prevent the iron sticking to and scorch-
  ing it. When the silk is embroidered, press out
  the embroidery on the wrong side after the silk
  is ironed. It is not necessary to gofTer the lace
  on a silk dress, as it looks better falling softly.
  Goffering would be out of place unless merely
  for a narrow frilling on the neck.
  
  Silk Pinafores are ironed in the same way as
  others (see p. 298). The lace on them may be
  slightly starched, but do not goffer it.
  
  Silk Veils should be pinned out on a covered
  table or board wliile still wet, and allowed to
  remain until dry. If they feel in the least
  degree stifl after they are removed, rub gently
  with the fingers to soften the silk again.
  
  Blankets. - These being small may be washed
  in the same way as white flannels (see p. 287).
  Dry in the open air if possible, and then air before
  the fire.
  
  POLISHING
  
  When about to polish, have ready at hand a
  polishing board, a basin of cold water, a piece of
  soft rag, and a well-heated polishing iron. Let
  everything be particularly clean and free from
  dust.
  
  To polish cuffs, take one at a time ; place it
  flat on the polishing board, dip the clean rag into
  the cold water, and then lightly wet the sui-face
  
  
  of the cuff. On no account must it be made too
  wet, or it will be apt to blister ; and bo careful
  that no drops of water fall on it. Hold the cuff
  in position with the left hand, and run the
  poUshing iron up and down it with the right.
  
  There are different kinds of polisliing irons ;
  the one like diagram on p. 274 is to be recom-
  mended. It is of a good weight, and has a
  rounded surface at the one end only. The
  opposite end is held up while in use, and the iron
  is swung backwards and forwards from the WTist,
  the rounded sm-face doing the pohshing. Other
  kinds are to be had which are held flat while in
  use, and are worked quickly backwards and
  forwards on the surface to be polished.
  
  Polishing at first gives the linen a streaky
  appearance, but it must be continued until the
  surface is evenly glossed all over. The iron must
  be changed when it cools. When all the cuffs
  are polished, turn them into shape. Pohsh
  collars in the same way, only be particular that
  you polish the proper side of those that are
  turned down, or have turned-down points. In
  polisliing a shirt, slip up the polishing board
  without crushing either the front or the back.
  Polish the breast first, working the iron up and
  down the length of it, and not across. In all
  cases remember to wet the surface slightly
  before polishing. When the breast is finished,
  draw the board gently out, lay it across the shirt,
  place the cuffs on it, and polish them. Turn the
  cuffs into shape, and fold the shirt (see p. 297).
  
  Different kinds of glazes are to be had for
  polishing linen, which are \ised instead of the
  polishing iron. They do not of course give such
  a high gloss, but by many people are preferred.
  
  Directions for using them are generally given
  with the different kinds. Some are added to the
  starch, while others are in a liquid form and are
  rubbed on the surface of the linen when ironing.
  
  Polishing irons should be treated with great
  care. Their surface is made of polished steel,
  and if it once gets roughened it will not dn such
  good work.
  
  
  DRESS- ITS CHOICE AND CARE
  
  Without indulging in an inordinate passion for dress, which is hkely to result in unjustifiable ex-
  travagance beyond her means, it is the duty of every woman to dress suitably and well, according to
  her position in Ufe. Appearances count for a great deal in all phases of society, and in the matter
  of dress, as much as in anything else, appearances must be studied. The question of lack of means
  is often put forward as an excuse for general untidiness, dowdiness, and want of taste, but no woman,
  however limited her pm'se, need degenerate into what is contemptuously termed a " dowd." True,
  it is necessary to " cut one's coat according to one's cloth," and it needs not a httle pinching and
  contriving in some cases to be able to do this successfully, but the result will always be found to be
  well worth the trouble taken in achieving it. In addition to the first and all-important question of
  good taste, such tilings as durability, general utility, and style have to be considered, and last but
  not least, the best way to take care of clothes in order to preserve as long as possible their pristine
  freshness. All these important phases of the dress question are fully dealt with in this chapter in a
  manner wliich it is hoped will be especially useful to those women for whom ways and means are all-
  important considerations.
  
  
  The Art of Dressing Well. - Dress is an invalu-
  able aid to good looks, yet, strange as it may
  seem, comparatively few women have acquired
  the art of dressing well. The reason for this
  is not hard to seek. If fashion sets the seal of
  her approval upon some particular style, every
  woman rushes bUndly in its wake. No matter if
  the stylo be one that is only suitable for the tall
  and the slender, it is ei .braced indiscriminately
  by the short and the stout, whilst, with a hopeless
  lack of the sense of what is fitting, the portly
  dowager of fifty wiU be seen to deck herself in a
  mode only becoming to a young girl of eighteen.
  
  There are some women who dress well in-
  stinctively. These realise that careful dressing
  can do a great deal towards enhancing their
  good points ; wliilst bad dressing can materially
  nullify any pretence to good looks they may
  possess. To dress well is to dress becomingh'
  and suitably. For instance, however pretty a
  smart light silk gown may bo, it would look \m-
  suitable in the street on a wet and muddy day.
  However trim and well fitting a na\'y bhie tailor-
  made suit, it would look woefully out of place
  at a smart garden party. Elaborate silks and
  laces are not the wear for the seaside be it said ;
  whilst the rough-knitted jersey and very short-
  pleated skirt and high boots of the Scotch
  Highlands would present a most incongruous
  appearance if worn out of doors in town. A
  woman will exclaim, " \Vhat bad taste," if she
  sees a man wearing brown calf boots with a tall
  hat and frock suit, j-et the same woman may
  think nothing of wearing a light flower-betrimmed
  hat of the picture variety with a tweed coat
  and skirt.
  
  
  The Well-dressed Woman. - Suitability and
  good taste should be the aim of all those who
  ■wish to acquire the art of dressing well. The
  woman who dresses well plans her dress from the
  point of view of her own indiv-iduahty. She no
  more thinks of sla\Tishly following the dictates of
  fashion than she thinks of absolutely ignoring
  them. But she wisely adapts the fashion to
  suit herself, and does not try to adapt herself
  to suit the fashions. There is rarely a style
  but can be adapted in some way or other to
  suit individual needs. It is in rushing to the
  extremes of fashion that the woman of the
  present day more particularly errs.
  
  How to avoid Dowdiness. - On the other hand,
  the well-dressed woman does not allow her
  appearance to become dowdy. If her purse is
  Umited, she will adopt that style of dress that
  does not date quickly in preference to the most
  marked styles of the current season.
  
  Simplicity should be the cliief characteristic
  of the toilette of the woman of small means.
  Chiffons, laces, and other such ephemeral fabrics
  should be discarded for the more useful tailor
  suit for everyday wear. She should always be
  careful to avoid choosing very bright colours,
  no matter how well they suit her. ^\^lcro a
  woman who can only afford one now goN\Ti, for
  instance, chooses a strawberry-coloured cloth -
  it will look very well when it is new ; but her
  friends in time will tire of seeing her in it. Con-
  stant wear will emphasise the fact that she only
  has one dress, and when this has to do duty, say,
  for two or tlu-ee seasons, she runs the danger of
  becoming known as " the woman in the straw-
  berry-coloured dress." On the other hand.
  
  
  301
  
  
  302
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  navy blue, black and other dark materials, seldom
  " date " a dress to the same extent as the
  brighter colours. Black perhaps is par ex-
  cellence the most economical w^ar. The black
  costume may be varied with drossy blouses for
  dressy occasions, simpler blouses for every-
  day wear, whilst varying little touches in the
  way of new ornamental buttons and different
  trimmings do wonders towards renovating a
  black indoor dress which has seen better days.
  For evening wear black or white are the most
  sensible colours for the woman who has but
  one evening gown in her wardrobe. Such
  colours as pink or blue are very pretty when
  new, but constant wear of a coloured evening
  dress serv-es decidedly to emphasise the limita-
  tions of the wardrobe of its wearer.
  
  Style and Colour. - Just as there are some
  women who dress well by instinct, there are
  others who seem to possess an instinct for
  dressing badly. Tall thin women will appear
  in gowns cUnging so tightly to their forms as
  to accentuate their tliinness. In addition, the
  ultra-tall woman will as often as not dress her
  liair very high on the top of her head, and
  weax hats remeirkable for the abnormal height
  of their crowns. To make matters worse, the
  trimming on her gown will run in straight lines
  from almost the neck to the feet, and very
  often also one or more of her tailor-made dresses
  will be built of striped materials which will
  serve to emphasise both her undue thinness and
  her extreme height.
  
  Short stout people, on the other hand, will
  garb themselves in the brightest of colours. Their
  gowns will as often as not be heavily trimmed,
  the trimmings running horizontally across the
  dress, ser\nng effectively to " cut the height "
  of the wearer. Very often large patterned
  materials and huge checks are worn, whilst
  tailor-mades are liberally adorned with buttons
  the size of half-crown pieces. It should be
  remembered that all striped materials and the
  trimmings laid lengthways on a dress add to
  the height. They should therefore be avoided
  by the ultra-tall women. On the other hand,
  narrow stripes are becoming to the stout woman,
  whilst checks and large -patterned materials add
  to the breadth of her figure, and should there-
  fore be avoided. A stout woman should never
  wear white or other light colours ; these only
  serve to accentuate her stoutness, whilst dark
  materials tend to give her a much slimmer ap-
  pearance. A style of dress at present in vogue
  with a front panel running from neck to hem is
  becoming to most stout figures, but the panel
  roi,uires careful cutting. It should not be too
  broad, and should be made to taper as narrowly
  as possible at the waist-line. All unnecessary
  fulness in the way of pleats at the hips should
  be avoided ; at the same time the dress should
  not be made to fit too closely to the figure. The
  skirt should stand out well at the hem, the ful-
  
  
  ness at the foot serving to make less prominent
  the width of the hips.
  
  A stout woman should never wear a very
  short skirt. Hor walking-skirts should only just
  clear the ground - if she attempts the very short
  " trotteur " skirt, which is becoming to the
  graceful figure and neat ankles of the young girl,
  she will make herself appear even stouter than
  she is. The skirt of the moment which clings
  tightly round the feet at the hem is particularly
  unbecoming to the stout woman. Her dress
  should be plain and well cut. Gathers and
  elaborate pleating should be avoided. On the
  other hand, the extra fulness afforded by pleats
  and gathers should always be made use of
  wherever possible by the thin woman in the
  plarming of her gowns. She should avoid all
  severe harsh lines in dress, as these would only
  serve to emphasise the angularity of her figure.
  It may be said with truth that the very severe
  tight-fitting gown should only be adopted by
  women of perfect proportions.
  
  Fashions within the last year seem to have
  been designed only to suit the very slim ; the
  fashionable figiu-e, in fact, at the time of writing
  is slender, and many have been the devices
  resorted to by possessors of plump figures to
  acquire the fashionable contour. All sorts of new
  corsets have been designed \¥ith the object of
  aiding the fair wearers in this direction. Some
  of these models have, in fact, been carried to
  almost ridiculous extremes. In length they
  reach almost to the knees, and one cannot help
  wondering how the wearer can bend or even sit
  down when encased in these latest outcomes of
  fashion's vagaries.
  
  The wise woman who is endowed with un-
  fashionable plumpness does not seek to reduce it
  in this manner. She chooses her corsets, indeed,
  with the view of improving her figm-e, knowing
  that there are many good makes of corset which
  will achieve this result without imposing upon
  her the penalty of general discomfort entailed by
  the species above-mentioned, but she docs not
  strive to appear in gowns which in design and
  construction are only suitable for the schoolgirl.
  She knows that gowns of the " Pensionnaire "
  type are not for her, and adopts a style of dress
  more suited to her figure in accordance with
  the principles already laid down for her ob-
  servance. La Mode of late seems to have
  devoted herself entirely to the needs of the
  jcune fille. A vogue for simplicity has come
  upon us ; gowns are not only simple in design
  and construction, but they are characterised by
  that degree of extreme simplicity which, though
  most becoming to sweet seventeen, is trying,
  to say the least of it, to more mature forty.
  The woman who has attained the latter age
  must therefore refrain from adopting the exag-
  geratedly 8irr>plo styles. Her dress may be
  simple without being childishly so, and it is in
  this respect that the greatest discrimination
  
  
  DKESS- ITS CHOICE AND CARE
  
  
  303
  
  
  must be exercised. In all periods of history the
  best-dressed women have been those who made
  fashion walk hand in hand with common sense,
  and to no period does this apply with greater
  truth than to the present day.
  
  Choice of Colour. - Many women are apt to
  nullify the effect of a really smart dress by
  selecting a colour which does not suit them.
  A few general hints in regard to colour may
  here be given. It may be taken as a general
  rule that where the tints of the hair and
  eyes are repeated in the costume, the effect
  is on the whole successful. Thus blue-eyed
  people rarely look so well as in the different
  shades of blue, more especially the shade
  that matches their eyes. A fair girl with a
  delicate pink and wliite complexion looks well
  in the various soft subd\ied tones of pink. The
  choice of colours for the girl whose hair is of
  the colom- of ripe corn, and whose complexion
  is of a pink and white prettiness, is very varied ;
  white, pale blue, pale pink, black, dark greens,
  red, dark brown (where she has brown eyes), all
  suit her well. The red or aubiu-n -haired woman
  must be particularly careful in her choice of
  colour, and her dress should not be so much
  regulated by the colours themselves as by the
  varying shades of the different coloiu"s. Green,
  for instance, is considered an ideal colour for the
  red-haired woman, but it must be either a very
  dark green or a very faint delicate shade
  bordering on the tint known as eau de nil.
  Bright greens are altogether unsmtable. Brown
  may be worn by the red-haired woman, more
  especially if she has brown eyes. In other cases
  it is not so successful, i.lthough it always serves
  to bring out the pretty shades in her hair. The
  fact remains, however, that a red-haired woman
  to look her best in brown should have brown
  eyes. Black velvet is pretty generally becoming
  to the red and the auburn-haired, but the
  ordinary dull black cloths prove trying, and
  should be relieved by touches of white where
  possible. A red-haired woman always looks
  well, however, in a low - cut black evening
  gown, the black serving to accentuate the wliite-
  ness of her skin. Dark-haired women with
  creamy or sallow complexions look their best in
  bright colours such as bright reds, yellows for
  evening, &c. When they wear dark dresses,
  these should always be relieved by touches of
  bright colour. Cream suits this style of com-
  plexion better than white. Dark-haired women
  with delicate fair sldns and pink and white com-
  plexions, however, require softer and less decided
  shades ; white, dove greys, delicate pinks,
  heliotrope are eminently suited to tliis stj^le,
  and if the eyes are violet, the shades of violet
  and mauve are particularly becoming. Grey is
  a colour wliich should be chosen with great dis-
  crimination. It has a very hardening effect upon
  the faces of people with very pallid complexions.
  As a rule, light greys should bo relieved with
  
  
  black or white. Certain soft shades of grey are
  particularly becoming to elderly people. Youth
  and age, it should be remembered, are not the
  least important factors in deciding the colour
  of a dress, and the sensible woman who is ad-
  vancing towards middle age will not err in
  affecting the style and colours which became her
  in her youth.
  
  Very often a colour which proves unsuitable if
  worn as a whole dress will be perfectly becoming
  if a touch of it only appears upon the dress.
  For instance, though a girl with red hair should
  not wear a whole pale blue dress, a tie, a waist-
  belt, or a sash of pale blue upon a white dress
  would suit her quite well. White frilling or lace
  on the collar and cuffs of a dress is becoming to
  almost every woman, though many could not
  wear a whole white dress. On the other hand,
  touches of bright colovu* on a dead white dress
  serve to make it fitting wear for a sallow dark-
  haired person who would look simply ghastly in
  unrelieved white. It is in the satisfactory
  blending of coloiirs, on the whole, that success
  in dress may be achieved. The very texture
  of the material itself should be studied. For
  instance, for evening wear red-haired and pale
  fair-haired women should wear the soft dull
  materials such as cliiffons, ninons, net, soft silks,
  voiles, &c., in preference to satin, which is too
  hard for this type of prettiness, although it is
  most becoming to youthful -looking fair girls
  with very pink and white complexions and to
  the dark-haired types. Wliere the complexion
  is washed out, anaemic, or pallid, white satin
  especially should be avoided.
  
  OUT-DOOR COSTUMES
  
  One thing to keep in mind in regard to tho
  selection of an out-door costume is this : -
  If the costume has to do duty for an extended
  period, by all means let it be good in quahty.
  It is better to pay a fair price for a " tailor-made "
  at the start than to have a dress " run up " any-
  how by some indifferent dressmaker on the
  strictly economical plan. Tliis procedure nearly
  always turns out false economy in the long-run -
  what with the outlay upon maldng, material,
  lining and extras, the cost of the di-ess amounts
  to nearly the same as that of a tailor-made.
  The cut is more often than not indifferent,
  the fit unsatisfactory ; and, last but not least,
  the costume in nine cases out of ten \\ill often
  be altogether lacking in style. In many in-
  stances the dress will prove such a faihu-e that
  the unfortunate wearer in sheer desperation
  will lay it aside, and, notwithstanding the fact
  that she can ill afford it, will be induced to buy
  a new gown by effecting some economy in
  another direction. It is false economy, therefore,
  to buy indifferent clothes at the outset. A
  woman should always have one good costimie to
  fall back upon. It is not alwaj-s necessary that
  
  
  304
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  this should be made to measure. The cult of
  the ready-made tailor gown has to-day reached
  the level of a fine art. For the trifling sums
  of from 5s. to 10s. 6d. these gowns are altered
  by expert fitters to suit indi\'idual figiu-es. Of
  course those with what is known as " stock
  figures " will get the most satisfactory results,
  as very often a ready-made gown will fit them
  exactly without the sUghtest need for alteration.
  These fortimute people have the best facilities
  for practising economy in dress in that parti-
  cular way. It is always ad\'isable to go to a
  good class firm for costvmies of the kind. The
  very cheap " ready mades " are bad investments.
  Very good " tailor mades " may now be had for
  three and a half to four guineas, but if tlie
  costume is bought at sale time it may often be
  had for much less.
  
  SUMMER DRESSES AND THE HOME
  DRESSMAKER
  
  A woman who is an adept with her needle will
  be able to eke out her dress allowance in a much
  more satisfactory manner than her sister who is
  less gifted in this way. Such a woman on a
  dress allowance of £12 a year will be able to
  dress much better than a woman whoso allowance
  runs to more than double that amount. The
  summer season in particular is a time of triumph
  for the home dressmaker. Nothing can look
  more suitable in the hot weather than dainty
  linen, cotton, and muslin frocks. \Vlien it is
  remembered that Unens and cottons may be had
  for an outlay of a few pence a yard, it will be
  seen that the cost of a gown made of these
  materials will be very small. A dainty cotton
  frock can be made for as small an outlay as 5s.
  upon the material.
  
  One material which has been much in vogue
  of late years is particularly economical for
  summer wear. It is known as " mercerised
  lawn," and has the appearance of fine Indian
  muslin, only with a softer and more cUnging
  effect, and is to bo had in white and all the most
  delicate shades. To crown its other advantages
  it is of double width, and may be purchased for
  from 6d. to Is. per yard. The material has the
  additional advantage of washing particularly
  well, having no tendency whatever to shrmk
  in the wash. With the aid of a good paper
  pattern, a very pretty dross, good enough for
  any drossy occasion, can be fashioned out of
  this material by the clever homo dressmaker at
  a cost of from between six or seven shillings,
  including trimmings, buttons, and other accos-
  Borieq. If the home dressmaker, in addition to
  being able to make herself dainty frocks of the
  kind, is able to save washing bills by laundering
  them herself at home, then she is fortunate
  indeed, and she will always be able to hold her
  own in the smartest company as a woman who
  dresses prettily and well.
  
  
  (For the making of dresses from paper pat-
  terns, see Homo Dressmaking.)
  
  (For washing cotton dresses at home, see
  p. 293.)
  
  EVENING DRESS
  
  In selecting an evening dress due regard
  must be paid to the occasion for which it is
  required. A ball dress, for instance, would be
  quite out of place if worn at a dinner-party or
  at the theatre, whilst a dinner dress would
  hardly be suitable at a ball. Yet many women
  show a remarkable lack of teiste and discrimi-
  nation in this direction. Dresses worn at big
  balls and dances and receptions must neces-
  sarily be more elaborate than those worn at
  dinner-parties or at the theatre, excepting of
  course where the dinner-party precedes some
  large ball or some important reception.
  
  Ball Gowns should always be of light and
  deUcate colours, the soft, flimsy materiaLs such
  as chiffon, ninon, and not being the prettiest
  and the most graceful for those occasions. The
  lighter and more ethereal -looking the fabric the
  more successful will a ball dress be. The corsage
  of a ball gown is of course cut low at the neck,
  and the sleeves are usually quite short, some-
  times mere straps or bands of the material or
  its trimmings doing duty as such. The gloves
  worn with these gowns are extremely long,
  covering the whole of the arm ; and shoes and
  stockings are worn to match. White is the
  ideal colour for the ball dress of a young girl,
  more especially where she is a debutante.
  DeUcate shades of pink, pale blue, primrose,
  eau de nil, pale green, are also effective. Orna-
  ments of some kind are usually worn in the
  hair. Dainty wreaths of flowers, choux or bands
  of ribbon, in accordance with the fasliion of
  the moment, being particularly suitable for the
  wear of young women and girls ; jewelled combs,
  sequin ornaments and jewellery being worn by
  the elder women.
  
  Sensible people have realised that long
  trailing dresses are not conducive to the enjoy-
  ment of dancing, hence for the moment fashion
  has decreed that dance dresses should be
  short and without trains.
  
  Dinner and Theatre Dresses. - Dinner dresses
  are not so elaborate as dance frocks. Sleeves
  are worn to the elbow as a rule, and the corsago
  is not so d6collet6. In some cases demi-toilette,
  consisting of a gown with transparent yoko
  and sleeves, may be worn. This style is particu-
  larly suitable for theatre wear, more especially
  for elderly people. As a rule, ladies occupying
  the stalls, boxes, or dress circle of a fewhionablo
  West End theatre in London, and our other
  large towns, wear low-necked dresses ; theso
  are not, however, of the nature of ball dresses,
  and " demi-toilette " is every bit as appropriate.
  At the opera full evening dress is de rigueur,
  and the display made by tho handsome gowns
  
  
  DRESS- ITS CHOICE AND CARE
  
  
  305
  
  
  and costly jewellery worn by the lady members
  of the audience at the opera during the season
  is of itself a sight well worth going to see.
  
  The General Utility Evening Gown. - An even-
  ing gown for a woman of small means has to be
  a more or less adaptable garment which can be
  made to do duty upon widely different occasions.
  A gown of this kind should never be pronounced
  in style or in colour. The material should be
  of some endurance. The various satin -faced
  materials, such as " satin charmeuse," which
  have been so much in vogue of late, are ideal
  fabrics for a general utUity gown of the kind
  described, as they wear exceedingly well. The
  dress should be smartly cut and finished. A
  little extra expenditure on the initial outlay
  will be well worth while. The neck should of
  course be cut low, and the sleeves short for
  wear on very dressy occasions ; but the gown
  should be furnished with two separate detach-
  able sets of lace or net guimpes and sleeves.
  One lace guimpe could be cut low in the neck,
  only not so decollete as the gown itself, to
  form a little lace chemisette coming above the
  d6colletage ; the sleeves of this guimpe should
  be of elbow -length. The second guimpe shovdd
  be cut high in the neck, the sleeves being either
  to the wrist or to the elbow. A woman will
  thus be provided with a good evening dress
  which can be adapted for very dressy, moder-
  ately dressy, or demi-toilette occasions ; and
  upon each and all of these occasions she will
  have the satisfaction of knowing that she is
  well and suitably dressed.
  
  Evening Wraps. - Evening cloaks, coats, or
  wraps are necessai-ily indispensable adjuncts
  to evening dresses, but they must of course
  be chosen with due regard to the circumstances
  of the wearer.
  
  A woman who lives in the suburbs, for
  instance, and cannot afford the outlay on a
  hired carriage, taxicab, or cab to take her to
  the theatre or to a dance in town, must neces-
  sarily go there by train or bus. In these cir-
  cumstances a white or other Ught-coloured
  cloak would be useless. It would very soon get
  dirty, and as light coloiirs show up the dirt very
  quickly, it would probably have to be cleaned
  after having been worn only two or three times.
  For the woman so situated a coat of some
  darker colour should be chosen. It need not
  necessarily be too dark. There are several
  shades of art blue and art green, for instance,
  which are most becoming as well as most useful.
  The cloak should be lined with white or sonie
  other light colour for the protection of the light
  gown underneath.
  
  How to keep Gloves Clean when Going Out. -
  Light evening gloves are also apt to become
  verj' quickly soiled when travelling by train or
  omnibus. The wise woman will provide herself
  with a pair of cotton or woollen gloves (according
  to the season), of a size larger than those she
  
  
  usually wears and slip them over her other
  gloves whilst in the train. She will, of course,
  take them off when she reaches her destination,
  and the gloves underneath will be found to be
  quite clean and fresh, whereas if she had not
  taken this precaution, they wotild have un-
  avoidably become soiled.
  
  Hats are seldom worn with evening dress, but
  when a woman has to either walk or go by
  train or tram to the theatre, it is advisable that
  she should have some Mght head -covering,
  not only to ob\date the risk of catching
  cold, but also to keep her hair tidy. A light
  crocheted woollen " fascinator," which is the
  name given to a kind of hood especially designed
  for evening wear, is admirably suited for the
  purpose, and may be purchased for two or
  three shilhngs. Silk, chiffon, and lace fascinators
  are more expensive, some of these dainty trifles
  being extremely elaborate and ornamental in
  design. A pretty lace scarf, or a white crepe
  de chine motor scarf, would also be iiseful, only
  the scarves must be fresh -looking and clean,
  as many women spoU the effect of extremely
  dainty toilettes by wearing either a soiled scarf
  or a very bedraggled piece of chiffon over the
  hair. Fascinators are dress accessories well
  within the scope and skill of the home worker,
  and many a dainty little head-covering may
  be fashioned at home from one or two lengths
  of lace, chiffon, or silk with very little trouble.
  
  DRESS FOR THE WOMAN WORKER
  
  The women workers in our leirge cities are
  apt to err most lamentably in regard to their
  dress in office hours. Girl typists will be seen
  dressed in light flviffy dresses with short sleeves
  and no collars, their dress Uberally adorned with
  imitation jewellery, to say nothing of the
  ubiquitous row of pearls worn round the neck.
  Such a dress is thoroughly out of place in a
  business office, and the girl who adopts it will
  handicap herself a great deal when it comes to
  the question of seeking for a new post.
  
  Appearances go for a great deal in business,
  as much in fact as under any other conditions
  of life. An employer -will as often as not put
  down the girl who is tawdry in her appearance
  as apt to be tawdry in her work, and the post
  \vill therefore go to a girl who, though perhaps
  she may be less efficient as a worker, will create
  a more favourable impression by being suitably
  dressed. A neat coat and skirt costume is
  the ideal dress for the city worker, with an
  alternative in the serviceable costume recently
  suggested by the manager of one of London's
  largest drapery establishments as the most
  suitable wear for the woman in business. This
  consists of a neat Norfolk costume, made of
  good face cloth or serge for winter wear, and of
  butcher-blue linen or other similar material for
  summer wear, worn with a neat turn-down
  
  
  306
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  linen collar. Tlie costume is a particularly
  dainty and effective one. In addition it looks
  trim and thoroughly in keeping with business or
  office surroundings.
  
  COATS AND WBAPS
  
  Tlie rain coat is rapidly taking the place of
  the ubiquitous mackintosh for wear in wet
  weather. It lias this advantage, it can take
  the place of an ordinary coat to perfection, and
  for this reason it is especially useful on showery
  days. Mackintoshes do not look well except
  when worn diu-ing an actual downpour ; a
  brilliant burst of sunshine will make them look
  woefully out of keeping. Very often the
  wearer will not wish to discard her coat when
  the weather clears up, as she will most probably
  have donned her oldest garments in preparation
  for a very wet day. It is in these circumstances,
  then, that a rain coat is especially useful. Very
  good rain coats may be had in serviceable
  tweeds, covert coating and other materials,
  also in the material known as " Cravenette."
  
  Motoring Coats. - It is useless to make an
  ordinary coat and skirt costume do duty for a
  long motor drive, such as from London to
  Brighton, for instance. A special motor coat is
  absolutely necessary. Very useful tweed and
  cloth motoring coats may be had at moderate
  prices. The coats are usually semi-fitting, and
  rainproof in most instances.
  
  UNDERCLOTHING
  
  Women are at length beginning to under-
  stand that good well-cut underclotliing is
  essential to the neat fit of a dress, and in this
  respect what may be termed a regular revolu-
  tion in regard to underwear has set in. One
  ofter hears elderly people sighing for the good
  old days when clothing was regulated aa much
  by common sense aa by the style of the moment.
  We doubt if such days ever existed - they cer-
  tainly did not in regard to underclothing. It
  is interestiiig to read the remarks of fashion
  writers in nooks dealing with subjects of dress
  published about twenty years ago. One writer
  loudly decries the underwear of the time from
  the point of v'iew of health. She points out
  that clothing to be hygienic must bo light, and
  speaks in no measured terms of disapproval of
  the practice of cumbering the body with heavy
  garments a.s a protection against cold. She
  also deals with the increased bulkiness of the
  figure caused by the fastenings of those under-
  garments which were worn drawn into a very
  substantial fulness by means of tapes round the
  waist. " The weight of the garments should not
  fall from the waist," she complained ; " all
  hygienic garments should be designed so that
  the weight falls from the shoulders." This
  writer proved a veritable prophet in her genera-
  
  
  tion, for all sensible women nowadays plan
  out their underwear with due regard to the
  principles she advocated. We doubt if the
  change is due to the improved present-day
  knowledge of the principles of hygiene, rather
  may we ascribe it to the vagaries of " Dame
  Fasliion," who at present decrees that the
  fasliionable figure must be slim. Bulkiness of
  underwear is naturally incompatible with slim-
  ness of contour, and hence for the nonce feishion
  and hygiene are walking hand in hand.
  
  Sensible people no longer cumber their bodies
  with heavy underwear ; light woollen com-
  binations and a warm flannel petticoat are all
  the extra clothing they adopt in very cold
  weather. Sometimes they discard the petti-
  coat altogether, and wear neatly cut and warmly
  lined serge or satin knickers under their walking
  costumes. Corsets are also now built on
  hygienic lines ; the wasp waist is happily a-
  thing of the past, and we hope that it will remain
  buried in obli\don.
  
  There are several makers of woollen under-
  wear who vie with each other in the lightness
  of texture combined with the maxinaim of
  warmth to be found in the material of which
  their goods are manufactured. Silk, and mix-
  tures of cotton and silk and wool and cotton, for
  winter underwear are also to be had in several
  makes, and make satisfactory winter wear for
  those who cannot stand the all-woollen garments
  next their skin. Ready-made imder -garments
  may be had in almost every size. All the
  leading firms are making a special feature of
  " out sizes," by wlrich is meant sizes to fit
  women with ultra-stout figures. The good
  needlewoman can now fashion her own under-
  clothing with a great measure of success.
  Patterns of all styles and sizes of underwear may
  be had from almost all the ladies' fashion papers
  in liberal profusion ; the veriest amateur can
  cut well-fitting garments from them, as they are
  extremely simple in design as a rule, and can
  easily be adapted to suit individual require-
  ments.
  
  Lingerie. - Fastidiousness in regard to " lin-
  gerie " is characteristic of the present day, and
  every woman is anxious that her underwear
  should bo as neat and as dainty as possible.
  Formerly longcloth and calico were considered
  the materials " par excellence " for " lingerie "
  under -garments, and strength of make was held
  to be of much more importance than good cut
  and daintiness of design. Nowadays, the ten-
  dency of the modern woman is to go to ex-
  tremes of luxuriousness in the fineness and
  daintiness of her underwear, and to ignore as
  far as possible the question of serviceability.
  
  This is as much a mistake as to make dura-
  bility an apology for lack of daintiness, more
  especially whore both good qualities can be
  so admirably combined. It is advisable to
  avoid all cheap makes of underwear character-
  
  
  DRESS- ITS CHOICE AND CARE
  
  
  307
  
  
  ised by the elaboration of their trimmings.
  It stands to reason that the material of these
  must be of the very cheapest to allow of such
  elaborate ornamentation, and in most cases the
  garments will not survive a few visits to the
  laundry. When you have only a very little
  money to spend in tliis direction, the plainer the
  article the better and the more serviceable will
  it turn out to be. Fine longcloth, batiste, lawn,
  nainsook are the favourite materials for under-
  wear. Perhaps a good nainsook is the most
  satisfactory in regard to the combined qualities
  of daintiness and good wear. Dainty laces are
  used as trimmings on all the finer garments,
  which are also embellished by means of fine
  hand-embroidery and the finest needlework.
  Fabtdous are the sums of money spent in this
  direction. Some very pretty and at the same
  time inexpensive iinderlinen may be had in
  the plain hand-embroidered work of the Irish
  and French peasants ; night-dresses, chemises,
  drawers, combinations worked in this manner
  are sold at very moderate prices. Ribbons are
  now largely worn with under -garments. They
  usually are slotted tlirough rows of embroidery
  or lace beading. Although ribbons may be
  purchased very cheaply nowadays, the fashion
  tends to be a somewhat extravagant one, as they
  seldom wash satisfactorily. Messrs. Cash of
  Coventry, however, have supphed a need in
  this direction by their washable ribbons for
  underwear which come out Uke new from the
  hands of the laundress. These ribbons can bo
  obtained from any drapers at prices varying
  from Is. Id. to 33. pe'' dozen yards, according
  to width. The colours are warranted to be
  perfectly fast. For trimming home-made
  under -garments, the plain hem-stitched and lace
  frillings sold by this firm are also remarkable
  for their good quality and durabihty ; beading,
  open-work insertions, and edgings of all kind
  particularlj' suitable for trimming dainty lingerie
  may be had at the most moderate prices. All
  Cash's trimmings are sold in twelve-yard lengths
  at prices varying from Is. the piece and upwards.
  
  Underskirts and Petticoats. - At one time a silk
  petticoat was deemed a luxury only within the
  reach of the most affluent. Nowadays weU-cut
  silk underskirts for wear with dressy toilettes
  may be had at prices well within the reach of
  the average woman's purse. In this connection
  fashion is apt to change to a certain extent.
  Sometimes rustUng silk underskirts are worn ; at
  other times, as at the present moment, under-
  skirts of .-joft silk or satin are more fashionable.
  White lace-trimmed and embroidered petticoats
  are the correct wear with summer muslins and
  hnen dresses. These may be had cut in the
  princess style at very moderate prices.
  
  The Princess Petticoat. - One of the most note-
  worthy outcomes of the change of fashion in
  regard to underwear is the " princess " petticoat.
  This garment., which consists of a camisole and
  
  
  underskirt in one, has come to stay, for it is so
  comfortable that few once having worn it will
  discard it.
  
  It is made to fit closely to the figure, and all
  unnecessary fulness is done away with.
  
  In regard to hngerie petticoats of this kind
  they are very \iseful for wear with inusUn and
  other summer dresses, forming a complete under-
  dress of themselves, and thiis doing away alto-
  gether with the necessity for any kind of dress
  lining.
  
  Another style of petticoat which has per-
  fection of fit as its leading characteristic is
  that known as the " Leewig " petticoat. These
  petticoats consist of close-fitting cotton, stock-
  ingette or spun -silk tops with detachable
  flounces. The flounces fasten easily to the
  petticoat by means of patent fastening devices,
  and the effect on the whole is neat in the extreme.
  Flounces of every description may be had to
  go with these petticoats, ranging in price from
  2s. lid. to £5, 5s. The petticoat tops have the
  additional advantage of wasliing perfectly, and
  thus from the point of view of hygiene, as well as
  from the point of view of economy, a petticoat
  of the kind is a good investment. The Leewig
  petticoats are the patent of ^lessrs. Cliarles Lee
  and Co., Wigmore Street, London, and are
  made to measure free of any extra charge.
  
  FURS
  
  Tlie wear of furs has become so ubiquitous
  that there is scarcely a woman nowadays who
  does not possess some piece of genuine peltry,
  however small, cherishing it as one of her most
  valuable possessions.
  
  In choosing fvu-s the woman of limited means
  will reqiiire to exercise no little care and dis-
  crimination ; skins which will not last more
  than a season will be of no use to her, however
  inexpensive they may be. Her object should
  be to obtain inexpensive yet good furs with
  good wearing properties.
  
  Bearskin is a fiu- which should at once find
  favour with the woman who has to practise
  economy in regard to her purchase. It is not
  only one of the least expensive of furs, but it
  is also one of the most dtu-able, and, as far eis
  the dark bearskin is concerned, one of the most
  universally becoming. The hght bearskins are
  not much worn, for the reason that on account of
  their shade they do not suit many people.
  
  Marmot runs bearskin very close in regard to
  both wear and economy in the original outlay.
  Squirrel is also an economical fiu-, its soft grey
  tints being especially becoming to dark-haired
  women, and fair women with very bright and
  clear complexions. This season, however, there
  is every indication of a rise in price of squirrel,
  owing to the vogue for grey furs which was one
  of the features of the ^-inter season of 1910.
  Opossum is a good diirable and very inexpensive
  
  
  308
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  fur, chiefly used for trimming coats, sdt hough it
  was also a great deal worn last season in the
  form of ties and muffs. Beaver is a useful fur
  which shows signs of coming into fasliion again,
  although it has not been much worn during the
  last few seasons. Moleskin is an inexpensive
  and becoming fur, but it has the disadvantage
  of wearing badly. This is also the case with one
  of our most beautiful and at the same time one
  of our most fashionable furs - Fox. Black Fox,
  which is the most generally becoming of the
  fox varieties, being perhaps the worst in this
  respect ; the smoked fox wearing better than
  either the black, silvered, or the white. The
  vogue for silver fox was specially marked last
  season. Skunk is a beautiful soft fur, somewhat
  after the appearance of dark bearskin, but much
  more expensive.
  
  The black woolly furs Astrachan and Persian
  Lamb are very durable. Neat little ties and
  muffs of astrachan are quite moderate in price,
  but as the fashion at present inclines to very
  large stoles and enormous pillow muffs, a set of
  the kind in either of these fiu-s would be fairly
  expensive.
  
  Sable is one of the most expensive of furs,
  but at the same time it is one of the most durable ;
  a good sable tie will last for years. The Russian
  sable is the best and the most costly. Next
  comes the Canadian sable, and last the Kolinsky,
  which is much cheaper than either the Russian
  or the Canadian varieties.
  
  A new fur called Fisher was introduced last
  season. This is very Uke sable in appearance,
  with the exception that the skin contains a few
  white hairs. It may be purchased for the
  same price as Canadian sable. Mink is a good
  wearing fur, somewhat darker than sable.
  Stone Marten also wears well. Chinchilla is a
  soft deUcate fur of a pretty grey shade. Ermine,
  the Royal fur, is one of the most beautiful and
  becoming of furs, though delicate and costly.
  Sealskin is a fur which will always be fashionable
  for those who can afford it. Undoubtedly the
  most beautiful of furs, its soft sheeny appearance
  is unrivalled, and there are few whom it does
  not suit. Its price is, however, prohibitive to
  many - a good long sealskin coat being rarely
  obtainable for less than £100. There has Ijeen
  a great vogue during the last season, however,
  for sea) musqueush and seal coney, both of
  which, more especially the seal musquash,
  resemble the real seal in appearance. Seal
  coney is the loss expensive of the two, and has
  been largely worn both in the form of coats
  and stole and muff sets.
  
  Ihe woman with little money to spend on
  furs cannot do better than purchtise a good bear-
  skin, marmot, or squirrel set. A fairly good dark
  fox stole and muff may be had for £7, Vs., but
  the bad wearing properties of the fox are usually
  against it. It is better to purchase all furs
  from a good furrier, as necessarily the q'lality
  
  
  of the skins will depend to a great extent upon
  the establishment at wliich they eire bought. It
  is impossible to give anj' exact figures as to the
  prices of furs, as these are continually fluctuating.
  In reg8u:d to imitation furs, wliito foxahne or
  imitation fox sets may be purchased for a sum
  of about £2, 2s. Their appearance is very good
  indeed, the white foxaline resembling the real
  fur very closely, and in this respect it is superior
  to most other imitation furs.
  
  It is always better to send good furs to a
  furrier to be cleaned in preference to sending
  them to an ordinary cleaner. Furriers remodel,
  reline, and renovate furs at very moderate prices,
  and often store them for the winter free of charge,
  if they are entrusted with work of the kind.
  (For Care of Furs, see p. 315.)
  
  HATS, BONNETS AND VEILS
  
  In her headgear, even more perhaps than in
  her dress, is a woman inclined to go astray
  when slavislily following the dictates of fashion.
  Thus the grotesque spectacle presented by a
  diminutive specimen of womanhood wearing a
  hat of immense proportions, the brim being
  so large as to completely hide her neck at the
  back, is only too common at the present day.
  Cartooniats may hold her up to ridicule, humor-
  ists may launch their wit at her expense - but all
  without avail. Her hat is of the latest fashion,
  so she feels quite happy, and goes her own sweet
  way.
  
  A woman of taste shuns all extreme styles in
  millinery as in dress. Whatever the fashion of
  the moment, it is always open to modification,
  and headgear of at least a moderate style is
  always to be had. A woman has no excuse
  therefore for making herself grotesque.
  
  One important thing to be remepibered is
  that headgear should always be as light as
  possible. Heavy, stiff, ill-ventilated millinery
  is most injurious to the health of the hair.
  Although on the cold snowy days of winter
  there is nothing more becoming than the
  toque of fur, fur as a head -covering is not
  hygienic, more especially as fur toques are apt
  to fit very closely to the head. Young men
  become prematurely bald because their head-
  gear is stiff and unhygienic, and unfortunately
  for thorn the styles of their hats vary but little
  in their essential points. There is such an
  abundance of choice in a woman's millinery
  that she need never choo.se a hat which by
  reason of its heaviness and its very close fit is
  unhygienic. A woman's millinery should there-
  fore always be chosen with due regard to the
  all -essential quality of lightness. Heavy head-
  gear if persistently worn will in time caiise
  injury to the best head of hair.
  
  A woman's hat should always be in keeping
  with her dress. Thus a neat toque or turban
  or a medium -sized hat plainly trimmed is thg
  
  
  DRESS- ITS CHOICE AND CARE
  
  
  309
  
  
  ideal hat to wear with a " tailor-made." Simple
  picture hats are siiited to light cotton and
  muslin dresses, whilst more elaborate hats of
  all shapes are worn with smart afternoon
  toilettes, and all very dressy gowns for dressy
  occasions. A picture hat would be quite out
  of place on a motor drive or on a steamboat,
  be it said. For motoring distinctive motoring
  millinery should always be worn. Motor hats
  and bonnets are not now the hideous things
  they were when motoring first came into fashion.
  Indeed, a pretty face seldom looks prettier than
  when seen under a becoming motor hat (or
  bonnet) and veil. For wet weather special
  waterproof silk hoods are made to cover the hat
  or bonnet. These may be had at a price of from
  10s. 6d. and upwards. Motor veils are also largely
  worn round the headgear on board ship and on
  stormy days at the seaside ; indeed, there is no
  fashion introduced within recent years that has
  proved more useful than the motor veil. Both
  when motoring and on board ship, or on gusty
  days at the seaside, it serves the double purpose
  of keeping the hat on and keeping the hair tidy.
  With a motor veil well tied round one's hat, a
  gusty day is robbed of most of its discomfort to
  the feminine sex in the way of hat-pins falling
  out, hats blowing off, and tresses becoming
  loosened and falling about one's face in not
  always " picturesque " disorder. (For Home
  Millinery, see p. 432.)
  
  Bonnets. - The bonnet, in the true sense of the
  word, has had its day. Formerly it was prac-
  tically de rigueur for a woman as soon as she
  married to discard the youthful -looking hat for
  the more sober -looking bonnet, as a sign that she
  had attained the dignity of matronhood. Nowa-
  days the old-time bonnet is only worn by elderly
  people, with the addition perhaps of the more
  old-fashioned matrons who still adhere to the
  traditions of their youth. Now and again there
  come signs of the reappearance of the bonnet
  in the millinery world, but these only herald
  the tentative advent of some picturesque styles
  taken from similarly picturesque periods, styles
  as a rule only becoming to very young faces,
  and for this reason usually short-lived.
  
  For elderly people the present-day styles in
  bonnet wear are a great improvement upon
  those formerly in vogue. Dainty silk and lace
  creations are to be had trimmed with jet,
  ribbon, ostrich tips and other appropriate trim-
  mings. The art of millinery is employed to-
  wards making them as youthful -looking as is
  compatible with the age of their wearers.
  
  Veils. - Veils are not now the all -important
  adjunct of dress they were in former years. At
  the present day their wear is practically optional,
  limited to those whom they suit. The style
  of wearing veils is materially altered. A few
  years ago they were worn quite closely round the
  face, whilst now they are allowed to fall loosely
  from the hat, and when worn with large picture
  
  
  hats are becoming to most faces. The style is
  a great improvement from the point of view of
  the eyesight ; the tightly skinned veil was most
  trying to the eyes, and even now large patterns
  and spots should be avoided. Dainty veilings
  may be had in many makes, the plainer the
  pattern and the finer the net the better for the
  eyesight. Large patterns on a veil are always
  injurious. When taken off, a veil should be
  pxilled out smoothly, and wound round a piece
  of cardboard before being put away, or else
  rolled up carefully, the ends being kept even.
  When veils are to be worn with very large hats,
  their adjustment is much simplified by making
  a narrow hem at the top, and running very
  narrow ribbon through this. In this way the
  veil can be made to gather upon the ribbon,
  which is drawn tightly over the brim of the hat
  and tied at the back. Veils may now be worn
  to fall loosely over the chin, a fashion which much
  simpUfies their arrangement.
  
  GLOVES, BOOTS, AND SHOES
  
  " One can always tell a lady by her gloves and
  by her shoes " is a familiar saying, and, like
  most familiar sayings, it has a very substantial
  amount of truth. To be " down at heel " is
  perhaps the worst form of shabbiness, and the
  woman who goes about with holes in her gloves
  advertises the fact that she is lacking in that
  refinement and neatness of dress by which a
  gentlewoman is always characterised. There
  are many false economies habitually practised
  by various households ; but of all false econo-
  mies, economy in footwear is apt to become the
  dearest in the long-rtm. Cheap boots are
  usually made of hard unyielding material ;
  they are not only answerable for corns, bunions,
  blisters, and other similar ills, but their soles
  are little more effective than brown paper in
  resisting damp and wet - consequently many a
  severe chill and illness can be traced to their
  wear. In addition they lose their shape very
  quickly and require to be soon renewed. It is
  better to pay a good price for all boots and
  shoes, and the result will be much more satis-
  factory in the long-run. There should not be
  much difficulty in getting ready-made boots to
  fit nowadays, when half and even quarter sizes
  are to be had. The Americans have been
  largely responsible for this welcome innovation
  in regard to size, and American boots and shoes
  are, as a rule, neat and well fitting. One particu-
  larly good American make of boot, known under
  the trademark of the " Sorosis," has become
  very popular. The Sorosis boots and shoes are
  well cut and keep their shape very well. They
  may be had for the modest price of 16s. 6d., and
  are good for any amount of hard wear. Several
  good makes of walking shoes can be had for
  from 10s. 6d. and upwards. Tlie cult of the
  " small " foot is not as universal as it was a few
  
  
  310
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  years ago. The greater participation by women
  in outdoor exercise, games and atliletics is in
  a large way responsible for tliis, and women
  seldom nowadays are seen to attempt to squeeze
  their feet into shoes one or two sizes too small for
  them. A woman with a naturally large foot
  would, however, do well to always wear her
  boots with toe-caps, as these diminish the
  apparent size of the foot ; she should never
  wear brown and other hght-coloured boots or
  shoes, as they have exactly the opposite effect.
  Boots with very high heels and pointed toes
  sliould be avdided.
  
  Evening Shoes are worn to match the dress.
  They are usually of leather, suede or satin.
  Satin shoes are the most fasliionable at the
  present moment. Gold and Silver leather
  evening shoes are also very smart, and can be
  worn with almost any ev'ening gown. (For
  painting white shoes gold or silver, see p. 318.)
  
  Goloshes. - Rubber goloshes are very useful to
  slip over the boots and shoes in wet weather, in
  order to keep the feet perfectly dry. They may
  bo had as complete overshoes or half goloshes ;
  the latter cover the sole and toe-cap of the boot,
  only fitting over the heel by means of a piece
  of broad elastic.
  
  The prices of goloshes vary slightly with the
  price of rubber ; usually 2s. lid. will buy a pair
  of goloshes, whilst half goloshes may be had for
  even less.
  
  Snowboots. - Snowboots are not much worn in
  England ; they should, however, form part of
  the equipment of every woman who conteinplates
  going to Canada or other colonies where the
  snowfall is great. For wintering in Switzerland
  and other similar places their wear is also
  essential. They are made of cloth, usually
  trimmed with fur, and have india-rubber soles.
  They are slipped over the boot in sno^vy weather.
  They are not costly, and it is always useful to
  have a pair by for winter in case of an un-
  usually hf!avy snowfall.
  
  Creaking Boots. - Well-made boots rarely
  creak ; the creaking boot or shoe is usually one
  of an inferior quaUty. Standing the boots over-
  night in salt and water, using just sufficient cold
  water to cover the soles after rubbing a little oil
  well into the leather, has often remedied this
  annoying defect. If this treatment does not
  do good at first, repeat for two or throe nights.
  
  Gloves. - Kid and suede gloves are those used
  for smart wear. In the summer silk and cotton
  ones may bo worn with light dresses. The
  fashion in gloves varies to a large extent.
  Som<^times very long elbow-length gloves are
  won. in the daytime. At other times they are
  only worn to cover the hands and wrists. Their
  length of course depends altogether on the
  length of sleeves to gowns which is the fashion
  of the moment. The feushion of short sleeves
  to gowns is always liable to recur at regular
  intervals, more especially for the summer sepson.
  
  
  and glove -makers have therefore to carefvilly
  watch the trend of fashion befoi-e planning
  their stock. For evening wear, long gloves are
  nearly always in fashion - the long white suede
  and kid gloves being always appropriate wear for
  hght toilettes and black gloves for black toilettes,
  although evening gloves are always worn as far
  as possible to match the gown, and may be had
  in most of the dehcate evening shades.
  
  In regard to the coloui- of gloves for outdoor
  wear, fasliions are also constantly changing. At
  one time the various shades of tan were con-
  sidered appropriate wear for all occasions in the
  daytime. Subsequentlj^ white kid gloves were
  de rigueur for afternoon and dressy toilettes. At
  the present time the tendency is as far as possible
  for the gloves to match the gown, and gloves are
  now manufactured in almost every conceivable
  shade. This is a fashion which may be carried
  to extremes of luxury beyond the reach of the
  modest purse, and for this reason it is not likely
  to become general. Light -coloured gloves, how-
  ever, such as light beaver, biscuit colour, white,
  should be worn on dressy occasions.
  
  From the point of view of economy, kid gloves
  are more useful than suede - the latter are apt
  to wear into holes more quickly, and do not look
  so fresh as kid gloves once they have been
  in the hands of the cleaners. Gloves should
  always be well fitting, and care should be taken
  to select those of the right size. Tight gloves
  are responsible for red hands and arms, whilst
  gloves which are too large give an air of un-
  tidiness to their wearer. Great care must be
  taken in putting on gloves for the first time, for
  on this will to a large extent depend their appear-
  ance on subsequent occasions. Never put on
  a new pair of gloves hurriedly - work all the
  fingers into the glove fingers before putting in
  the thumb, and above all see that the seams are
  not twisted, but that they are all in place. It is
  as well to rest the elbow on the table while
  gently putting on the glove. A little powder
  dusted into the fingers of the gloves before
  putting them on will often make them f^o on
  more easily. The buttons of new gloves should
  always bo firmly stitched on before they are
  worn. One or two buttons will usually be
  found to be loose, and this is a very necessary
  precaution if neatness is desired. A very small
  piece of cotton wool placed inside the finger-
  tips of silk gloves will often prevent holes from
  coming as quickly as they are wont to do with
  gloves of this kind. All kid and suede gloves
  should bo sent to the cleaners when dirty,
  home cleaning of gloves is unsatisfactory as a
  rule, and as gloves are cleaned for the small sum
  of 2d. a pair nowadays, the bother of cleaning
  them at home is hardly worth while. (For
  washing silk and cotton gloves, see p. 295.)
  
  If after taking off delicate kid gloves they
  are stretched out straight and put away flat
  between sheets of tissue or other clean paper.
  
  
  DRESS- ITS CHOICE AND CARB
  
  
  311
  
  
  they will keep their shape much better, and
  their wear will be materially prolonged.
  
  
  STOCKINGS
  
  Cashmere stockings make the most satis-
  factory all -the -year -round wear ; warm, closely
  woven cashmere stockings for the winter, and a
  much lighter texture for the summer. Large
  worked silk patterns on stockings are no longer
  fashionable. The finer the texture of the
  stockings the smarter are they supposed to be
  for present-day wear. Very finely woven Msle
  thread hose are much in fashion at the moment.
  These are quite plain without any pattern, ex-
  cepting perhaps a small black silk clock which
  runs up the side of the leg. The effect is that of
  fine silk, and as hsle thread is much cheaper
  than the former material, it has to a great
  extent superseded it for dressy wear amongst
  people of moderate means, though silk hosiery
  undoubtedly is the acme of " dressiness " for
  very smart occasions.
  
  Those who wear hsle thread hose would
  always do well to see that the soles and heels
  are of cashmere. Stockings of this description
  can be had in a great many makes, and
  from the point of view of both wear and com-
  fort are far superior to those which are of hsle
  thread throughout.
  
  Open-work Hsle thread stockings are no
  longer so fashionable as they were. Although
  they are still largely worn, plain hsle thread
  stockings are considered smarter in every way.
  Those who suffer from tender feet, corns, &c.,
  should never wear any other than cashmere or
  hght woollen stockings.
  
  Suspenders. - As a means of keeping up the
  stockings, suspenders are much more satisfactory
  than garters. They are more hygienic, inasmuch
  as they do not tend to restrict the circulation as
  in the case of a band of elastic drawn tightly
  round the leg. Suspenders now form an integral
  part of nearly all the new makes of corsets, and
  besides keeping up the hose, serye in a certain
  measui-e to keep the corset in place and so help
  to support the fig\ire.
  
  It is always well to ensure that the studs of
  the suspenders are surrounded by some soft
  silk or kid covering, otherwise they are apt
  to tear the stockings, forming what is known
  as a " ladder." Some stockings are manu-
  factui'ed with a small portion of the upper part
  of the leg of different and stronger material
  from the rest of the stocking. Stockings built
  in this way effectively resist the strain of the
  heaviest suspenders. Failing this, it is a good
  plan, if the stockings are fairly long in the legs, to
  double them over slightly at the top before fixing
  the suspenders. When thus doubled over they
  resist the strain of the suspenders much better
  than when they are put on in the ordinary way.
  
  
  THE ACCESSORIES OF DRESS
  
  
  It is in the accessories of her dress as much as
  in any other detail that the weU-dressed woman
  justifies her reputation as such. With her, pins
  are not made to do duty for hooks and 6yes,
  and there is never that ugly gap between waist-
  band and skirt which is so often characteristic
  of the blouse and skirt toilette of the untidy
  woman. She is well up to date in such trifles
  as waistbands and dainty neck -wear, realising
  that even a gown which has seen better days
  may be effectively sinartened by the freshness
  of such Mttle details as lace jabots, pretty ties,
  or any other similar dainty trifles which may be
  the fashion of the moment. In one important
  detail the well-dressed woman holds her own.
  The fit of the collar of her gown is always above
  reproach. There is nothing that tends to
  impart an air of untidiness in dress more than
  an ill-fitting collar. The collars of ready-made
  blouses, for instance, run in certain sizes, and
  are apt to be too large on some women. Yet
  these women will seldom think of altering the
  collar before wearing the blouse, and the result
  is that they never achieve the eSect of looking
  really smart. The fit and cut of the coUar of a
  gown is not the least important adjunct to its
  style, and the well-dressed woman realises tliis.
  In the matter of collars, fashion is apt to show
  strange vagaries. One season they will be
  worn high, almost to the ears - at another gowns
  will be innocent of even the pretence of a
  collar band. One word of warning to the
  middle-aged woman in this direction. Very
  stiff and tight-fitting collars are injvu-ious to
  the neck, causing it to become hned, and often
  making the skin of an unbecoming yeUow
  colour ; these, hke all other extremes of fashion,
  should be avoided. On the other hand, a woman
  who is getting on in years should always have
  a collar of some kind to her go\vns. Tliis need
  not be too high, but it should always be of
  medium height - the lower her collar the more
  it will detract from her appearance. Collar less
  bodices in the daytime are only becoming to the
  very young. This is a rule to be observed
  whatever the tendency of fasliion. At the time
  of writing, what are known as the " Peter Pan "
  and " Claudine " collars are much in vogue. Tlie
  Peter Pan is a plain ttu-n-down coUar of em-
  broidery, net or lace ; the Claudine collar is a
  pleated collar of the same shape and materials.
  Both are worn with blouses which are innocent
  of neckbands. This style of collar is very
  becoming to young girls of the " pension-
  naire " style with round faces and full throats,
  but when adopted by the dowager of fifty it
  only succeeds in making her look absurd.
  Elderly women should avail themselves of the
  fashion for dainty not and chiffon frilling, which
  sewn on to the collar has a most softening effect
  upon even the most faded and wxinkled faces.
  
  
  312
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  There has been indeed during the whole of
  the year 1910 such a variety of becoming neck-
  wear to choose from, that the elderly woman
  has really had no excuse for succumbing to the
  vogue for the Peter Pan.
  
  Dainty lace, net and muslin jabota have been
  introduced in endless variety, their coming into
  fashion being due to a large extent to the very
  deep and low openings with which the fronts
  of tailor-made coats were cut. The lace jabot
  has proved such a dainty dress accessory that
  the opinion may be hazarded that it will still hold
  its own, at any rate for wear with indoor toilettes.
  These jabots are simple of design and etisy of
  construction, and the clever home worker may
  easily fashion them from any odd bit of lace,
  muslin, or net which she may discover in her
  odds -and -ends bag. Many women still keep to
  the neat linen collars and cufis for wear with
  morning sliirt blouses. It must be remembered,
  however, that these are only suitable for morning
  indoor and outdoor wear. For the afternoon
  something more dressy is required. Linen
  collars should fit £is loosely as is compatible with
  neatness, and they should never be worn too
  high. The constant wearing of stiffly starched
  high collars is very bad for the neck, causing
  lines and discoloration of the skin.
  
  JEWELLERY
  
  Love of jewellery is innate with almost all
  womankind. Perhaps it is inherited from that
  passion for all kinds of ornaments displayed
  by our more remote and barbaric ancestors. It
  is certainly typical of the savage of to-day as
  shown in his love of gaudy bead ornaments and
  everything bright and glittering. The love of
  jewellery, therefore, is most certainly a barbaric
  instinct, but none the less it is an instinct which
  we most of us possess.
  
  Her passion for jewellery will often make a
  woman err seriously in regard to good taste. In
  no respect can vulgarity or ostentation be more
  glaringly shown than in regard to an inordinate
  display of brooches, rings, bangles and other orna-
  ments of the kind. Often at f"ishionable restau-
  rants a woman will be seen with diamond rings
  half covering every finger of both hands, some-
  times not even excluding the thumbs. Such a
  display may certainly be indicative of her wealth,
  but it serves even more to emphasise her lack
  of refinement and good breeding. Very little
  jewellery should be worn in the morning.
  Diamonds are totally out of place with a morning
  gown ; with the exception of her engagement
  ring, which a woman never discards, she should
  keep diamond ornaments for afternoon and
  evening wear. A great display of jewellery
  in the daytime is never in good taste. For
  evening wear, however, one's taste for jewellery
  may be indulged, only excess of ornamentation
  should be avoided.
  
  
  Brooches, pendants and bangles should be ia
  keeping as far as possible. For instance, one
  should avoid wearing a turquoise necklet at
  the same time as an amethyst brooch and a
  ruby bangle. Pearls and turquoises go very well
  together, as do diamonds and opals - diamonds,
  in fact, go well with most stones. They are
  most becoming as a rule to brunettes and
  dark-haired women generally, wliilst pearls are
  the ideal stone for fair women, and more especi-
  ally for young girls. Jet jewellery is worn with
  very deep mourning.
  
  There seems to be an inclination nowadays for
  women who cannot afford good jewellery to go
  in to a great extent for various imitations and
  shams. This is a very great mistake. Sham
  jewellery is yet another unfailing sign of wil-
  garity. If a woman cannot afford diamonds
  and precious stones she should be content with
  plain gold. It is better to possess a very Uttle
  good jewellery than an abundance of paste and
  other imitation ornaments.
  
  Care of Jewellery. - All plain gold bangles,
  bracelets, brooches and other articles of jewellery
  may be cleaned by W8ishing in a lather of soap ,.^_
  and water. They should be well dried with a jfl
  towel, and gentle rubbing with chamois leather
  will serve to give an additional polish. Diamonds
  may be cleaned by rubbing with eau-de-Cologne.
  If very dirty, they may first be brushed gently
  with warm water and a httle soap. The pre-
  paration known as " jewellers' rouge," to be
  obtained from the jewellers, is very good for
  polishing gold and diamond ornaments. Pearls
  and turquoises should never be allowed to go
  into water ; turquoises in particular are liable
  to lose their colour if exposed to the wet. These
  stones can be cleaned with methylated spirits.
  Opals are stones which require particular care ;
  they should never be exposed to too much heat,
  as this often makes them crack. They should
  be cleaned with powder, to be obtained from the
  jewellers for the purpose.
  
  For cleaning jewellery set with small pearls,
  rub well with a chamois leather, and if very
  dirty, apply a little whiting with a small brush.
  Little boxes containing chamois leather and
  cleaning material for jewellery can be bought at
  any of the large stores. Jet may be cleaned by
  rubbing with olive oil and polishing with a
  chamois leather.
  
  If before putting on any article of jewellery,
  the wearer would take the trouble to polish it
  gently with a clean chamois leather, she would
  find that it would keep clean for a much longer
  period.
  
  SYMBOLISM OF STONES
  
  The Diamond signifies light, innocence, life
  and joy.
  
  The Rtiby - divine power and love, dignity
  and royalty.
  
  
  DRESS- ITS CHOICE AND CARE
  
  
  313
  
  
  The Carbuncle - blood and suffering.
  
  The Sardius - martyrdom.
  
  The Sapphire - all heavenly virtues.
  
  The Topaz - divine goodness and human
  faithfulness.
  
  The Emerald - hopes of immortality.
  
  The Amethyst - earthly sufferings and truth
  unto death.
  
  The Pearl - purity, innocence and humility.
  
  CARE OF CLOTHES
  
  Care of Outdoor Clothes. - A woman who
  takes care of her clothes always manages to
  look tidy and neat, whatever the limitations of
  her purse, and she can eke out her dress allow-
  ance much more successfully than her careless
  sister who, either through ignorance or natural
  untidiness, fails to get the proper amount of
  wear out of her garments, which very soon lose
  their pristine freshness.
  
  In respect to outdoor costumes, one sensible
  rule should invariably be observed. Never
  wear an outdoor skirt in the house if you wish
  it to keep in proper shape. Make a rule of
  changing it as soon as you come in from a walk ;
  there is nothing more calculated to make a
  tailor-made skirt lose its shape and become
  shabby than constantly sitting about in it and
  wearing it indoors.
  
  All cloth and serge dresses should be brushed
  directly they are taken off. The garment should
  first be brushed with a good whisk brush to get
  the dust off, then it should be laid on a table and
  brushed with a moderately hard clothes-brush,
  a hard brush being used to remove any mud from
  round the hem, and a soft brush to remove the
  dust from silk or velvet trimmings. Soft
  brushes should always be used for very fine
  cloth and velvet. Combined soft and hard
  clothes-brushes may be had, the bristles being
  hard on one side of the brush and soft on the
  other.
  
  On a wet day particular care should be taken
  to change the outdoor dress. Letting alone all
  questions of catching cold through keeping on
  damp clothing, a skirt will become hopelessly
  creased -looking if worn when it is wet. It
  should be taken off at once, and hung up to dry
  in a warm atmosphere. If very much creased,
  however, it will require ironing with a moderately
  warm iron on the wrong side of the material to
  take the creases out. Dry skirts which are
  slightly creased should be hung out in the open
  air, or near - but not too near - the fire. The
  wear of tailor-made garments will be materially
  prolonged if they are sent occasionally to the
  taOor's to be pressed. A tailor's charges for
  pressing are not heavy, and more especially in
  the case of a pleated skirt which has become
  very damp and creased, a visit to the tailor will
  give it a new lease of life. There are many
  working tailors in a small way of trade who
  
  
  charge very little for pressing and renovating
  garments from time to time, repairing buttons
  and attending to other httle details which
  require attention to keep the garment trim and
  neat. A tailor will also have aU the necessary
  pressing apphances, and the result will be more
  satisfactory in every way than if the dress were
  ironed at home.
  
  Care of Indoor Dresses. - Indoor dresses also
  require their share of attention. The busy
  woman need not wear an untidy or slovenly
  appearance in the house because she has domestic
  duties to attend to. She should keep a special
  workaday gown, it is true, but this should
  always be trim and neat. A plain butcher-
  blue Unen with turn-down collar and tie makes
  an admirable house di'ess for morning wear in the
  summer ; a neat plainly cut blouse and skirt
  serves an equal purpose in the winter. The
  linen dress could be one of these plain -cut
  princess gowns known as " tub frocks," which
  are Ukely to remain long with us on account of
  their extreme usefulness.
  
  Overalls and Aprons. - The housewife should
  take the additional precaution of wearing an
  overall which will completely cover her gown
  whilst engaged in any housework. An overall
  is especially handy also to sUp over an afternoon
  gown in the event of any light household task
  cropping up in the afternoon, and also in the
  event of cooking or superintending the cooking
  in the evening. It is better to have long sleeves
  to the overall if possible, though many women
  prefer overalls and aprons of the daintier sleeve-
  less types. For light work one of these latter
  is quite sufficient. They may be bought in
  several styles from 2s. lid. upwards, or can be
  easily made at home by even the amateur
  needlewoman.
  
  Putting Clothes Away. - Dresses and skirts
  which when taken off are tlii'own carelessly over
  the backs of chairs, or are hung
  up one on top of another behind
  doors, very soon become soiled
  and shabby -looking. Cloth and
  serge dresses should be well
  shaken and brushed when taken
  off in the manner already de-
  scribed, and then hung up in a
  cupboard or wardrobe, the coats
  suspended on coat-hangers, and
  the skirts hung up by their loops.
  There sho\ild alwaj's be two loops
  for hanging sewn inside the waist-
  band of the skirt. This helps a
  great deal to preserve the " hang "
  of the garment - one loop is not
  sufficient for the purpose. Some
  very simple combined coat and
  skirt hangers may now be had
  from the most of the leading drapers for the
  trifling cost of a few pence, and it is as well to use
  these where possible.
  
  
  Skirt-Bag and
  Hanger.
  
  
  314
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Light-coloured skirts and all best skirts should
  be hung up in thin musUn or cotton bags made
  to open down the front. Several drapery firms
  sell combined hangers and skirt -bags at moderate
  prices. An old wliito petticoat can bo admirably
  made to answer the purpose of a skirt -bag by
  drawing it in at the top.
  
  Impromptu Cupboards. - In some small houses
  and flats where every inch of space is valuable,
  there is httlo room for heavy furniture such as
  W£irdrobes, and very often there are no cupboards
  pro\ided, so that the putting away of clothes
  becomes a real problem, which is not always
  readily solved.
  
  The clever woman is seldom at a loss, however,
  even in this emergency. Where there is an
  alcove or recess in the w-all, for instance, she
  can, with the aid of two boards of wood for
  shelves, some dress -hooks and a few yards
  of chintz, make an excellent little impromptu
  cupboard. One shelf is placed at the requisite
  height from the floor, say six or seven feet, to
  form the top of the cupboard ; the other shelf
  is placed a few inches from the floor. The
  chintz curtain is hung from the top of the cup-
  board to the floor, and is made to draw back-
  wards and forwards. The dress-hooks are fitted
  to the top shelf, whilst boots and shoes and hat
  boxes may be put on the lower shelf, the cupboard
  being sufficiently high for the purpose. Odd
  corners in the room can also be utihsed for
  hanging dresses by nailing a board with some
  dress-hooks across and covering the corner with
  a curtain. This method is not, however, so
  satisfactory as the alcove cupboard, and clothes
  should only be placed there temporarily to get
  them out of the way.
  
  Curtains of impromptu cupboards of the kind
  should be thoroughly well dusted every day.
  Ottomans are also very handy articles to have
  in flats, and any small carpenter will put one
  together for a trifling sum. Covered with
  pretty hght -coloured chintzes, they make very
  dainty -looking additions to the furniture of the
  room, and their usefulness in regard to the
  putting away of linen, clothes or hats is un-
  doubted.
  
  Silk Dresses and Underskirts. - Silk drF>sses
  should be carefully wiped over with a clean cloth
  before being put away. Stiff silk underskirts
  should never be folded away in a drawer, as the
  silk is liable to spUt at the folds. Tliey should
  always bo hung up. Starched cotton and
  mushn dresses should be folded away neatly and
  put in drawers. If hung up they will soon
  become limp and lose their freshness.
  
  Hats should be brushed with a soft hat brush
  every time they are taken ofT, and put away on
  hat shelves in the cupboard or wardrobe, or
  else in a hat box, and well covered over with
  tissue paper. For travelling, special leather
  hat boxes fitted with cushions for a number of
  hats should bo used. These can be had for
  
  
  from 12s. 6d. and upwards. If the hats have
  to be placed on the top tray of an ordinary trunk,
  it is a good plan to pin them to the canvas of the
  tray by means of hat-pins ; tliis will prevent
  them from getting knocked about and tumbled.
  
  Umbrellas should never be opened out to dry
  when wet. They should be turned upside down,
  resting on the handle. They should not be
  left tightly rolled up when not in use, or the
  covering will wear into holes at the folds. It is
  never a good plan to leave an umbrella in tlie
  hall stand. Very often another umbrella will
  be pushed tlirough it by mistake, especially if
  the stand is overcrowded. A good way of
  keeping vmibrellas is to make a case of hoUand
  or canvas to hold the number required, and
  hang it up inside the door of a cupboard or
  wardrobe where it will take up Uttle or no room,
  placing the umbrellas inside.
  
  For travelling, special umbrella -cases of leather
  or waterproof canvas should be used, if there are
  a number of umbrellas to be taken. These cases
  may be had at prices varying from 3s. 4d. and
  upwards.
  
  Boots and Shoes should always be kept on
  trees when not in use, and they will retain their
  shape much longer. Wet boots should not be
  placed too near the fire to dry, or the leather
  will crack. Place them at once on trees and
  stand them in a warm dry place. Where there
  are no boot -trees available, it is a good plan
  to stuff the boots with pieces of old newspaper.
  It is always better to have two or three pairs
  of boots in constant wear, and not to keep on
  wearing one pair day after day until they
  become worn out.
  
  Never allow boots or shoes to become *' down
  at heel." Send them to be repaired as soon as
  the heels show signs of wear. Boots and shoes
  should not be left lying about under the bed or
  upon the bedroom floor. If there is not a
  place for them at the bottom of the dress cup-
  board, a Uttle boot cupboard may easily be
  fashioned out of an old wine-case or orange-box.
  This should be varnished or enamelled, stood
  on its side against the wall, and a piece ot chintz
  made to draw across it to form a miniature
  curtain cupboard. There will be room for a
  plank of wood to be fixed in the centre of the
  box, and the boots can be placed on the shelf
  thus formed, and at the bottom of the box.
  Boots which have to be stored for any length of
  time should he well vaselined before they aro
  put away.
  
  STORING WINTER AND SUMMER
  CLOTHES
  
  Before putting away winter or summer clothes
  at the end of the season they should be well
  sorted out, and any garments that will not
  again be required should be given away or
  otherwise disposed of. It is an unwise policy to
  
  
  DRESS- ITS CHOICE AND CARE
  
  
  315
  
  
  hoard up old soiled and disused garments which
  can never be worn again, more especially to
  keep them with other good garments. To do
  this in the case of cloth or woollen clothing
  is practically to invite the depredations of the
  moth. All serge, cloth, tweed and woollen
  dresses should be well beaten and thoroughly
  brushed with a good clothes-brush and then
  himg out in the open air for a few hours before
  being packed away. Nothing should ever be
  put awaj' dirty, and care should be taken that
  all the garments are thoroughly dry, as mildew
  is apt to form upon clothes which are put away
  damp for any extended period. All the necessary
  cleaning and repairing should be done before
  laying clothing aside for the season.
  
  Plenty of tissue paper should be placed
  between the folds of Ught silk and satin dresses,
  and stuSed into the sleeves to make them keep
  their shape. All cotton and musHn dresses
  should be washed and rough dried before being
  put away. WTiite cotton and muslin dresses
  should be rinsed in blue water to keep them a
  good colour. No starch should be allowed to
  remain in any cotton dress that is put aside for
  the winter, ^^^ben qmte dry, fold the garments
  away carefullj'. If wliite garments are folded
  between sheets of blue tissue paper tliis will help
  to preserve their coloiu*.
  
  Furs. - Before putting furs away they should
  be well beaten with a very Ught cane or riding-
  whip to free them from dust ; then they should
  be hung out in the open air for several hours.
  
  Tliey should not be put away damp, as damp,
  like dust, renders them Uable to the attacks of
  the moth. They should be well powdered with
  cayenne pepper and then placed in tliick brown
  hoUand bags, which, in their turn, should be sewn
  up in brown paper. Camphor or naphthaline
  sewn up in tiny muslin sachets and placed inside
  the hoUand bag with the furs may be used instead
  of the cayenne pepper. Camphor is very popular
  as a moth preventive, but naphthaline is much
  more effective, only its clinging odour is some-
  what against it for this purpose. Some strips
  of Russian leather placed in the bag with the
  furs will also be found useful in resisting the
  inroads of the moth. It is an advantage if the
  furs can occasionally be taken out of their
  coverings in the summer and hung out in the
  sunshine. In fact, where there is sufficient
  wardrobe and cupboard accommodation to allow
  of their being hung up with plenty of space,
  and \v-here the cupboard is warm and diy and
  free from damp, it will be quite sufficient to put
  them away in the cupboard without packing
  them, taking them out and shaking them as
  often as possible. A few balls of naphthahne
  might be placed upon the cupboard sheh-ec.
  
  Fur -lined coats and cloaks should be well
  sprinkled with cayenne pepper and stored in
  special boxes lined with tar paper. Chinchilla
  is too deHcate a fur to bo either beaten or shaken.
  
  
  In the case of really valuable furs, it is much
  better to send them away to a furrier to be
  cleaned and stored for the ■winter. The charges
  for fur warehousing are moderate, and the
  freedom from anxiety afforded by the knowledge
  that they are in expert care is well worth the
  small outlay entailed.
  
  CARE OF MEN'S CLOTHES
  
  Men's garments soon become shabby -looking
  if they are not properly cared for. Coats,
  waistcoats and trousers should be well brushed
  when taken off, and then carefully folded or hung
  in a wardrobe. Trousers should be placed in
  trouser -presses, or if these are not available they
  should be pulled out lengthwise, folded down the
  front of the leg and folded over before being put
  
  
  Trouser-Press.
  
  away. A very good plan is to place the trousers
  so folded under the mattress of a bed, as the
  pressui'e "i/hus afforded answers the same pur-
  pose as that of trouser-stretchers, and helps
  to prevent them from becoming baggj' at the
  knees. Lajnng a damp cloth over the trousers
  after they have been folded down the front of
  the leg, and then carefully pressing them ^ith a
  moderately warm iron is also effective. They
  should only be folded down the front before being
  ironed, and not folded over until afterwards.
  Coats and overcoats should be hung on hangers.
  Small single hangers can be had from any
  draper for from 2d. upwards.
  
  Mending. - All men's garments should be kept
  in thorough repair ; that is to say, all the small
  mending, such as sewing on buttons, repairing
  button-holes, darning underUnen and socks,
  should be regularly attended to. As men's socks
  are sold in so many different colours nowadays,
  it is always a good plan when buying new
  socks to buy at the same time wool to match
  them. It is a wise plan to stretch the heels and
  toes of socks and lightly darn them before
  use ; they will be found to wear much longer
  in this way. (For general hints on Mending,
  see p. 407.)
  
  All flannel and linen under -garments should be
  carefully gone over when they retm-n from the
  laundry, and buttons sewn on and any other
  necessary small repairs executed before they
  are put awajs as nothing is more annoj-ing to a
  man when taking clean clothes from liis chest of
  drawers to find that there are buttons laclcing
  
  
  316
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  or holes undamed. Frayed collars and cuffs
  of sMrta should be neatly clipped with a sharp
  pair of scissors. If the linen fronts and collars
  and cuffs of sliirts have become very shabby
  and worn, they can be sent to have new fronts
  made. Most laundresses will undertake this re-
  novating work for quite moderate charges.
  If, however, the shirts should be of the cheapest
  kinds sold, it might pay better to buy new
  ones. Cheap underwear is even a greater
  mistake ^vith men than with women. Shirts
  in particular require so much treatment in the
  way of dressing and glazing at the hands of the
  laundress, that the very cheap kinds never wear
  satisfactorily, neither do they ever look as
  well when laundered as the better garments.
  (For Washing Shirts, see p. 295.)
  
  Renovating Shabby Coats, Waistcoats, and
  Trousers. - There is nothing Uke rock ammonia
  dissolved in warm water for cleaning and re-
  novating men's garments which have become
  shabby -looking and shiny. Use a good-sized
  lump of ammonia to about a pint of water, and
  when it has dissolved dip a clean whisk brush,
  or a clothes-brush with firm bristles, into the
  solution and thoroughly brush the garment ;
  then hang in the open air to dry. If pressing
  is required, do tliis with a moderately warm iron,
  ironing the garments under clean brown paper.
  Velvet coat collars can also be cleaned by care-
  fully sponging with ammonia solution.
  
  Rente and tears in men's coats, overcoats,
  waistcoats or trousers cannot be satisfactorily
  darned at home. The garments should be sent
  to a etoppeur who is able to match the thread
  of the tweed or cloth, and repair the garment in
  such a manner that the darn is imperceptible.
  
  Hats should be carefully brushed every day
  with a soft hat-brush. After being out in the
  rain the surface of a silk hat will often become
  rough and untidy-looking. To remedy this,
  pass a hat -brush which has been damped with
  cold water gently round the hat in the direction
  of the nap. This will distribute the moisture
  evenly. When the whole hat is thoroughly
  damped, brush evenly round with a hard brush.
  Leave the hat for a few hours, and when it is
  thoroughly dry, brush with the soft hat-brush
  as usual.
  
  Wlien a silk hat has become dull -looking
  through constant wear, it should be sent to the
  hatter's to be ironed. This is usually done for
  a very moderate charge, and is more satisfactory
  than ironing at home. Sometimes, however,
  brushing with a hot brush will have the required
  effect. Silk hats which have become soiled and
  greasy can be cleaned with a piece of clean
  flannel dipjied in a solution of ammonia and
  water ; gently wipe this round the hat in the
  direction of the nap. The whole cleaning and
  ironing process will be undertaken by a hatter
  for a trifling consideration. They also do the
  work very promptly, usually getting the hat
  
  
  ready wliile the customer waits. On the whole,
  a great deal of trouble is saved in this way.
  Felt hats are also cleaned with ammonia.
  
  Boots and Shoes should not be allowed to
  Utter a man's dressing-room. A small trunk or
  suit-case stand usually forms part of every
  dressing-room equipment. The suit-case is
  
  
  Suit-Case Stand.
  
  placed on the top of this, and the boots neatly
  ranged on the shelf underneath. Faihng this,
  they should be put away in a cupboard or on
  shelves made for the purpose. All the boots
  should be placed on trees when not in wear, and
  if put away for any length of time, they should
  be well vasehned to prevent the leather from
  cracking.
  
  Ties and Collars. - Collars should be kept in
  special round collar-boxes ; ties should be folded
  neatly when taken off, and put away in a tie-
  case.
  
  CLEANING AND DYEING
  
  Cleaning and dyeing play an important part
  in the renovation of clothes, and old garments
  should not be thoughtlessly cast aside before
  the possibiUties in this direction have been well
  weighed and considered. A dyed dress may
  be renovated and altered in more ways than one,
  so much so as to present the appearance of a
  totally new garment. Where a woman is an
  adapt at fasliioning her own gowns, she will be
  able to effect much saving in this way. If,
  however, she has to have all her dressmaking
  done for her, then before planning extensive
  renovations of the kind, she would do well to
  take pencil and paper and calculate exactly
  what it will cost her. In addition to the dyer's
  account, dressmakers' charges will be found to
  considerably swell the sum total, which would
  in these circumstances sometimes amount to
  almost the cost of a now garment. For this
  reason a woman should either carry out the
  renovating of dyed garments herself, or if she
  is unable to do this, she should engage a good
  visiting dressmaker and needlewoman by the
  day and help her with it. It does not always
  pay to send out renovations unless the dress
  was originally a very expensive one. Dress-
  makers as a rule have not much liking for this
  work, they prefer new and more straightforv/ard
  
  
  DRESS- ITS CHOICE AND CARE
  
  
  317
  
  
  dressmaking ; and for this reason, apart from
  the question of expense, their work in this
  direction is seldom satisfactory. There are ex-
  ceptions to this rule, of course, but one is more
  liable to come across the rule than the exceptions.
  
  Formerly to send clothes to the dyers or
  cleaners was somewhat of an undertaking, as
  each garment had to be religiously unpicked
  and taken to pieces, and when it came back
  from the cleaners, there was all the work and
  worry of putting it together again. Nowadays
  cleaners undertake to clean garments of the
  most elaborate character without so much as
  impicking a stitch of tliem. Cleaning has, in
  fact, been raised to almost the level of a fine
  art ; what is known as the " dry cleaning " pro-
  cess has been almost universally adopted, and
  all danger of the shrinking of cloth and woollen
  garments has been practically obviated. The
  most delicate fabrics pass successfully through
  the expert cleaner's hands.
  
  In dyeing, however, the possibiUty of slight
  shrinking must always be reckoned with, and a
  woman should make allowances for this when
  planning out the renovation of a garment in this
  way. The time taken by professional cleaners
  to clean garments usually amounts to from
  eight to ten days, whilst for dyeing a fortnight
  is usually required. The latter rule does not
  apply, however, to garments which are being
  dyed black for ptu-poses of moxirning. All dyers
  give special concessions in regard to exceptional
  circumstances of the kind, and most of them
  can undertake to get the garments ready
  within two or tliree dnys.
  
  Hints for Home Cleaning. - A great deal in
  regard to cleaning may be successfully under-
  taken at home. For this purpose there should
  always be a good amount of Fuller's earth,
  ammonia and benzine in the store cupboard.
  Special care must, however, be taken in regard
  to the storing of the two latter articles, as
  ammonia in its pure state is explosive when
  too much shaken, and benzine is inflammable.
  Petrol is also exceedingly useful for the home
  cleaner, but on account of its dangerous proper-
  ties it should only be procured in small quantities
  as required ; and it should never on any account
  be stored at home.
  
  Cleaning Lace and Silk Yokes, Vests, Trim-
  mings, &c. - It often happens that a cloth dress
  will have a white lace or net yoke, or vest, or
  other similar trimming which would naturally
  become dirty long before the dress is soiled.
  One dof^s not care to send a whole dress to the
  cleaners for the sake of the trimming, more
  especially as the latter may be cleaned at home
  as follows ; -
  
  Lay the dress on a table over which a clean
  cloth has been spread ; cover all the dress over
  with a cloth excepting the portion which is to be
  cleaned, then with a piece of flannel soaked in
  petrol rub all over the soiled part. Go over
  
  
  it again with a piece of clean flannel dipped in
  petrol, and leave in the open air to dry. Petrol,
  it must be remembered, is extremely dangerous
  in careless hands, as it is most inflammable ; for
  this reason the cleaning should only be under-
  taken in the daytime, and in a room where there
  is no fire.
  
  White Non- Washing Silks may be cleaned by
  rubbing with stale bread-crumbs mixed with a
  Uttle powdered blue. White silk and other light
  dresses which have only been slightly soiled can
  be made quite fresh again by rubbing with stale
  bread-crumbs. Silk, serge, and cashmere dresses
  may be freshened by rubbing with a solution
  of fig leaves, made by boiUng a handful of fig
  leaves in about a quart of water, and straining
  off when cool.
  
  Taking Stains from Garments. - One* general
  rule to be observed in taking stains from
  garments is this : - When rubbing with the
  cleansing preparation rub always in a circular
  direction, beginning in a circle just outside the
  stain round the outer part, gradually working in
  towards the centre. This prevents the stain
  from spreading any further.
  
  Most stains, such as grease stains, fruit stains,
  and wine stains, may be removed from very fine
  garments by rubbing with a flannel dipped in
  ether. This may be obtained m small quantities
  from most chemists at prices varjang from six-
  pence and upwards.
  
  To Remove Paint Stains. - Rub when fresh
  with turpentine apphed on a piece of flannel.
  If the stain is an old one, mix ammonia with the
  tiirpentine. Paint spots on velvet or velveteen
  can usually be removed with paraffin or pure
  alcohol.
  
  To Remove Grease or Wax Stains. - Lay the
  garment out on a table over a clean ironing-
  sheet, place a piece of blotting-paper both over
  the stain and underneath it. Iron with a
  moderately hot iron. The blotting-paper will
  be found to absorb the grease and the stain
  will disappear. Good brown paper may be used
  instead of the blotting-paper with successful
  results.
  
  Cleaning Light Blouses. - A simple and easy
  method of cleaning hght blouses at home which
  has been proved successful is as follows : -
  
  Take an ordinary hat box and Une it %rith
  clean white paper, cover the bottom of the box
  with a layer of Fuller's earth. Place the blouse
  in this, covering it with another layer of Fuller's
  earth. Cover this with a sheet of white paper ;
  close the box, rendering it as air-tight as possible,
  and put it aside for foiu* or five days. When
  taken out of the box and shaken, the blouse
  will be found to be perfectly clean.
  
  Renovating Shabby Garments. - Faded and
  shabbj' -looking stuff garments may be much
  improved by careful sponging with hquid
  ammonia. For all black fabrics ammonia is
  the best cleanser.
  
  
  318
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Cleaning Light Cloth Garments. - For cliiklren's
  light cloth coats, &c., a little fig dust well rubbed
  into the niat<^rial, and allowed to remain on for a
  few hoiu" before being brushed off, is an effective
  cleanser. For hght cloth trimmings, cloth ball
  is also very useful. This may bo obtained from
  any drapers for an outlay of from lOid.
  
  ink Spots on Cloth. - ^\Vhen a cloth or stuff
  dress becomes stained with ink, the stain should
  never be allowed to dry into the material.
  Pressing blotting-paper on the wot stain will
  often be sufficient to absorb it. This, however,
  must be done at once if it is to be efficacious.
  Another way of removing ink stains from cloth
  is to sponge at once with milk, then with warm
  water ; dry with a soft cloth, and iron on the
  wTong side of the material. (For taking out
  ink spots on cotton or hnen, see p. 279.)
  
  To Raise the Pile of Velvet.- WTien velvet has
  become shabby it may be renovated by holding
  the wrong side of the velvet over a jug of boiling
  water ; tliis will cause the pile to rise. Another
  and perhaps a more effective method is as
  follows : -
  
  Cover the flat part of a very warm iron with
  a damp cloth. Get some one to hold the iron
  for you, and then grasping the velvet firmly at
  
  
  each end p"i8S it backwards and forwards on the
  wrong side across the cloth. The steam from
  the cloth will cause the ^5ile to rise, and the
  velvet will become almost like new. (For
  Washing Vrlveteen, son p. 289.)
  
  To Wash White Coque Feather Boas. - Dis-
  solve some Lux into a basinful of warm
  water, stir it into a lather, and place the boa
  in tl is, gently pressing tho feathers between the
  fingers ; rinse in clean water, shake well, and hang
  in the open air to dry in the simshine. The
  feathers will have a straight appearance when
  wet, but will resume their fluffy appearance as
  soon as dry. They should be well shaken before
  hanging them up. In winter they should be
  shaken before a fire and then hung near it ;
  
  
  only not too close, as they are liable to get
  scorched.
  
  To Clean Ostrich Feathers. - Shake them well
  in a lather of Lux and water, or soap and
  
  
  water. Dry slowly before the fire, and curl
  the feathers with a blunt penknife.
  
  To Clean White and Light Felt Hats. - Rub the
  hat all over with calcined magnesia applied with
  a small soft brush ; put the hat aside for a day or
  a night, then shake the powder off. If the hat
  is found not to be perfectly clean after the first
  appUcation, repeat the treatment. For white
  felt hats, bran moistened with petrol and rubbed
  all over the hat makes a particularly effective
  cleanser.
  
  Renewing Black Chip Hats. - After removing
  all dust from the hat with a soft brush or a
  piece of velvet (a velvet cushion such as is used
  for polishing patent and glac(?i shoos would do),
  rub in a little olive oil with another piece of old
  velvet.
  
  Straw Hats. - Wlute straw hats may be cleaned
  by rubbing with cut lemon, and afterwards
  rinsing in cold water. The straw should then
  be stiffened by brushing with a brush dipped
  in a solution of gum and water. To whiten
  wliite straw hats which have become scorched
  by the sun, dissolve a tea-spoonful of oxalic acid
  in half a pint of warm water and brush evenly
  round the hat, rinse and put in the open air to
  dry.
  
  Black straw hats, after being thoroughly
  brushed to take the dust off, may be cleaned by
  applying black ink and liquid gum mixed in
  equal proportions with a small brush.
  
  To Dye Straw Hats which have become irre-
  trievably scorched by the sun or discoloured,
  brush all dust off with a good stiff brush, and
  paint the hat all over with hat dye or Aspinal's
  enamel of tho shade required, using a colour
  brush for the purpose.
  
  To Paint White Shoes Gold or Silver.- White
  kid and leather shoes which have become very
  soiled may be dyed gold or silver. To do this,
  purchase sixpenny-worth of gold or silver paint,
  and paint evenly all over the shoes with a paint
  brush. Leave them in the air to dry.
  
  Tarnished Gold Braid may be freshened by
  rubbing with a little Fuller's earth.
  
  
  DRESS- ITS CHOICE AND CARE
  
  
  319
  
  
  To Clean Furs. - Furs may be cleaned by
  rubbing with warm bran. The bran should be
  placed on a piece of white paper in the oven to
  dry. It should not be overheated, or the furs
  will be spoiled. The white paper wiU form an
  excellent guide in this direction, for if it becomes
  the least bit brown it will be a sign that the
  bran has become too much heated. It should
  be well rubbed in and then shaken or brushed
  out. Fig dust may be used in the same
  way.
  
  Cleaning White Furs. - Powdered magnesia
  warmed in the oven is a good cleanser for white
  and light furs. It shotild be weU rubbed into
  the fur and then shaken out. After the first
  shaking it wiU be found advantageous to leave
  the furs in a box for a day or two, and then
  thoroughly shake out once more. For the
  coarser white furs ordinary flour warmed in the
  oven makes a very good cleanser. Spread some
  clean paper on the table, place the fur to be
  cleaned upon it, and well rub in the warm flour
  into the hairs. When the fur appears to be
  clean, shake well and lay aside in a box for
  twenty-four hoiu-s, when most of the surplus
  flovir will be found deposited in the bottom of
  the box. Shake again thoroughly, and the fur
  will be ready for wear.
  
  DRESS ALLOWANCES
  
  It is wise of parents to give their daughters a
  dress allowance as soon as they attain a certain
  age, making them responsible for the pvirchase
  and upkeep of their wardrobe. Tliis plan tends
  to give young people a practical insight into the
  value of money wliich will stand them in good
  stead when they in turn have to take the cares
  of a home upon their shoulders. Every woman
  should allot a certain sum of money each year
  for expenditure upon dress, and be careful that
  this sum is not exceeded. System in this as
  well as other questions of apportionment of
  income is essential where economy has to be
  practised. " I cannot say what I spend upon
  dress," a woman will often be heard to remark.
  " I buy new clothes when I need them, but my
  wants do not amount to much, and my ex-
  penditure must be very small." If this woman
  would make up her mind to note down carefully,
  say for a period of threo months, her dress
  expenditiure she would be astounded at the
  substantial total to which small sums expended
  here and there upon what seemed at the time
  to be mere trifles have amounted, and she will
  then begin to reaUse the necessity of the fixed
  dress allowance as a factor in restraining all
  unnecessary expenditiu'e.
  
  Tlie cost of a woman's wardrobe will depend
  
  upon the social circle in which she moves, and
  
  / the appearance which she has to keep up ; also
  
  ' upon the extent of her aptitude with her needle,
  
  her ability to cut out, fashion, and renovate
  
  
  garments for herself, and the care she takes of
  her clothes. Much saving may also be effected
  by the woman who knows how to spend her
  money judiciously.
  
  Buying at Sales. - The woman who has only a
  small dress allowance often makes the mistake
  of expending it upon cheap articles which may
  be good for show at first, but wliich are certainly
  bad for wear, and in her hankering after cheap
  finery she neglects essentials, with the resrilt
  that she is never weU dressed. " Little and
  good " should be the motto for the woman
  to whom sliillings and pence are a matter of
  moment. She should know what to buy, and
  when and where to buy to the most advantage.
  The clever woman makes a point of buying the
  more expensive items of her wardrobe at the
  sales of the large drapery establishments. In
  the case of firms of high standing and repute,
  these sales are always genuine, and some really
  amazing bargains may be had during sale time.
  The large winter sales occur in January or
  February, and the summer sales at the end
  of July and in August. At the winter sales
  especially some wonderful bargains in coat and
  skirt costumes may sometimes be found. Very
  often a costume which was originally priced
  at seven or eight guineas will be marked down
  to as low a figiu-e as £3, 3s. It will, in several
  cases, be of the latest style and cut, and one
  is sometimes puzzled as to the reason for the
  reduction. This may be due to the fact that
  the dress is of a coloiir only becoming to tho
  few. Well, if it is secirred by one of the
  few, that one will have every reason to be
  satisfied with her purchase. Care, of course,
  must be taken to choose a costume which will
  not " date " too quickly. Summer dress
  materials may also be purchased to wonderful
  advantage at sale times. The bargain -hunter
  at the sales must show method in her shopping
  if she wishes to make it a success. She should
  know what she wants to buy, and make up her
  mind to buy it, and not be led into spending
  her money upon those innumerable Httle un-
  necessary trifles which appeal to her natvu-ai
  feminine love of finery, and so prove such
  formidable weapons in the armovu-y of the
  expert salesmen at this season. After the sales
  are over, many a woman finds herself the
  possessor of a number of useless little odds and
  ends she does not want, but which she felt she
  must buy " because they were so very cheap."
  
  Sales are the rocks upon wliich many good
  resolutions for economy are wrecked ; on the
  other hand, they are inexpressible boons to the
  sensible woman shopper who knows how to
  shop upon a scientific basis. She has two tilings
  always before her - her requirements, and the
  limitations of her purse. This being so, she is
  careful to purchase onlj- what she really needs,
  and thus she is able to eke out her allowance by
  careful and judicious buying at tliis period. If
  
  
  320
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  all women kept these two essentials well in mind
  at sale time, they would find that they could
  expend their money to great advantage.
  
  The inability to " cut her coat according to
  her cloth " is the reason why a woman so often
  finds herself unable to make both ends meet on
  a small dress allowance. She is ever striving to
  \'ie in her dress with other women who enjoy
  double her income, and her efforts are doomed
  to failure at the outset. It is not much use, for
  instance, to spend all one's allowance on an
  expensive gown, only to have it ruined by
  wearing it in wet weather through not having
  sufiicient money to provide either a good coat
  to cover it, or a tailor-made for ordinary occa-
  sions, and the appearance of the smartest gown
  is spoiled by shabby shoes or inferior gloves.
  A woman with little money to spend on dress
  must set a standard for herself, and not be led
  into trjang to follow the standard of others, for
  this invariably leads to disappointment. It is
  8\u"prising on how little money a woman can
  dress well if neatness and serviceabiUty are the
  two objects she keeps in view, leaving the taste
  for indulging in the extremes of fashion to the
  woman who can afford to indulge herself in this
  direction.
  
  But whatever her income, a woman with the
  exercise of a Uttle forethought can avoid being
  old-fashioned and out of date in her dress.
  Even if she can only afford one new costume
  every two years, she can at least take care that
  what she buys is not only in fashion at the
  moment, but that it is not of a fashion so striking
  that it is doomed to be short-lived. Ordinary
  styles last generally well into two seasons. The
  first season they are adopted by a few - the
  second season they become general. It is an
  unwise plan to only adopt a style after it has
  become general, for this is a sure indication that
  it will die out very soon, and for a woman whose
  dress has to leist her for two years, this is not a
  promising outlook. A woman therefore should
  strive to show some originality and some de-
  cisiveness in her choice of dress, and not be
  content to follow bUndly where others lead.
  She must not disregard fashion altogether be it
  Sfidd ; to do so would be to make oneself con-
  spicuous, and the well-dressed woman is never
  conspicuous ; but she should shun all styles
  which do not suit her, avoid all dress unsviitable
  for the position in life which she occupies, re-
  membering that to be suitably dressed is to
  have solved the art of dreasing well.
  
  How to make her dress allowance suffice for her
  requirements is therefore a problem with which
  many a woman is confront^^d. A good manager,
  however, will by dint of careful contriving suc-
  cessfully cope with all her difficulties, very often
  making £15 a year go as far as £30 would go in
  less experienced hands.
  
  The successful management of a dress allow-
  ance will depend to a great extent upon how far
  
  
  a woman can dovetail her requirements, making
  the purchases of one year fit in with those of the
  next. For instance, where she is only able to
  buy one new dress in a year, one year she will
  buy a good outdoor costume - the next year she
  will expend the money on an afternoon dress,
  each doing duty therefore for two seasons.
  
  In this way she will be able to balance each
  year's expenses to a nicety, instead of spending
  only half her allowance one year and three times
  the amount of it the next.
  
  It is difficult to set down hard-and-fast rules
  for expenditure upon dress in the year ; as has
  been said before, the successful expenditure of a
  dress allowance resolves itself into a question of
  good management. As a guide, however, for
  those to whom the advice may be useful, we
  append some specimen lists of expenditure
  covering annual sums of £15, £25 and £40 a year.
  These amounts may be taken to be fairly repre-
  sentative, and the Usts will give at least some
  general idea of judicious apportionment of the
  money spent upon the various articles detailed.
  
  SOME SPECIMEN DRESS ALLOWANCES
  
  £15 A Year
  
  £ a. d.
  
  Costume 300
  
  Dress 200
  
  Coat or cloak 110
  
  Boots and shoes 2 0 0
  
  Underclothing 3 0 0
  
  Hats 10 0
  
  Blouses 1 10 0
  
  Gloves, veils, &c 10 0
  
  Boot-mending, cleaning, &c 9 0
  
  £15 0 ~0
  
  In regard to the item £3 for a costume, this can
  be spent on a winter costume one year and the
  next year a best summer dress, costing £2, and
  two cotton dresses or Unen skirts at 10s. each
  can be purchased. In regard to the £2 allotted
  for a dress, tliis can be expended upon an
  afternoon toilette one year, and on an evening
  toilette the next. It is always necessary to
  allow a good sum for boots and shoes, therefore
  £2 will not be a bit too much to put by for these,
  and the expenditure upon them will be pretty
  nearly the same each year. The amount spent
  upon underlinen will of course be varied accord-
  ing to the amount of wear to be had out of the
  articles purchased, and where a woman is able to
  make part of her lingerie herself, the expenditure
  will of course be decreased, for home-made under-
  linen not only costs less, but wears much better
  than that which is bought ready made. Any
  surplus from the £3, therefore, in any particular
  year, can be allowed for an umbrella or a sun-
  shade, as the C£ise may be. Nine shillings is not
  a very large amount to cover repairing and
  
  
  DRESS- ITS CHOIOE AND CARE
  
  
  321
  
  
  cleaning, but it can be augmented occasionally
  from any small sum that may bo left over from
  other items. In regaxd to the £1, Is. allowed
  for coat, this can be expended upon a good warm
  serge coat, which would also do duty as a rain
  coat one year, and the next year it might pur-
  chase a plain simple little light cloak or coat
  which would do duty for both day and evening
  weax, only the purchase would have to be made
  at sale time for anything Uke a presentable
  garment at the price to be had.
  
  Many other Mttle contrivances too numerous to
  mention can be resorted to in order to eke out
  a dress allowance of the amount named, but
  ideas in regard to these will come of themselves
  to the woman who takes the trouble to plan her
  expenditure in a sensible manner.
  
  With the above few notes as a guide, the
  reader will be able to adapt the two following
  specimen lists for dress allowances of £25 and
  £40 a year respectively to suit herself.
  
  £25 A Year
  
  £ 8. d.
  
  One good costume 4 0 0
  
  Summer dress 2 0 0
  
  One afternoon dress 2 10 0
  
  One evening dress 2 10 0
  
  One wrap or coat 1 10 0
  
  Boots and shoes 2 5 0
  
  Hats 200
  
  Blouses 200
  
  Underclothing 3 10 0
  
  Gloves, veils, neckwear 1 10 0
  
  Umbrella or sunshado 0 10 0
  
  Cleaning, boot-mending, &c. . . . 0 15 0
  
  £25 0 0
  
  £40 A Yeak
  
  £ 8. d.
  
  One good costume 5 6 0
  
  One best summer dress 3 0 0
  
  Two lingerie dresses at £1 each ... 2 0 0
  
  Afternoon dress 3 0 0
  
  Evening dress 4 0 0
  
  Wrap 2 10 0
  
  Blouses 300
  
  Underclothing (including dressing-
  gown) 500
  
  Boots and shoes 3 0 0
  
  Hats 300
  
  Gloves, veils, and neckwear .... 2 10 0
  
  Umbrella or sunshade 0 15 0
  
  Repairiugi cleaning, &c 10 0
  
  £38 0 0
  
  This leaves a balance of £2, which should be
  set aside to be added towards the same balance
  on the following year, and the two together with
  any surplus from the lingerie or other items will
  serve to purchase a useful so' of furs.
  
  The above list allows for new winter costumes
  
  
  and new summer dresses every year ; but of
  course the winter costume of the preceding yetir
  always comes in for morning outdoor wear, the
  new toilette being kept for visiting and more
  dressy occasions. The same may be said in
  regard to the summer dresses. Where a woman
  engages in motoring to a certain extent, she will
  of course require a good motoring coat, bonnet,
  and veil. By spending a little less on her
  winter and summer dresses one year she will
  be able to supply this, or else she might forego
  the new wrap one year, and employ it on a
  motoring outfit instead. This will last her a
  good time, and will not reqiiire to be often re-
  newed. A stylish evening or day wrap may often
  be purchased for the small sum of £1, 15s. In this
  case the surplus from the £2, 10s. allowed will
  go towards the purchase of a rain or dust cloak.
  Where a woman can make her own blouses
  and summer and indoor dresses, her allowance,
  of course, can be made to go twice as far again.
  She should always be well in advance with her
  new things at the very beginning of each season,
  as in this Ues the secret of being up-to-date aa
  far as dress is concerned.
  
  THE BRIDAL TROUSSEAU
  
  Upon no occasion perhaps does the question of
  dress assume such importance to the girl and
  women members of a family as when one of
  their number is engaged in the preparation of
  her trousseau. However poor and humble the
  circumstances of the parents of the bride, they
  will strain every effort, depriving themselves
  even of necessaries if needs be, in order to see
  that their daughter goes to her husband well
  equipped in every way.
  
  We have said good-bye to the days when every
  girl, as soon as she reached the matvire age of
  fifteen or thereabouts, would pass most of her
  time laboriously putting the finest of stitches
  into the finest of garments to be set aside in the
  " bottom drawer " with sprigs of lavender
  placed between their dainty folds, pending the
  appearance of " Jlr. Right " upon the scene to
  put the momentous question. How many a
  trousseau prepared in this manner has been fated
  to remain for ever undisturbed in the place into
  which it was laid with so mvich care and tender-
  ness and so many happy thoughts of that bright
  future which looms golden in the mind of nearly
  every girl. Marriage is not to-day the sole
  idea of the young girl's hfe as it was in those days,
  and in any case, however anxious a girl may bo
  to get married and settle down in a home of
  her own, she would never anticipate events by
  preparing a trousseau before any man had asked
  her to be his bride. Such an act indeed the
  modern girl would look upon with superstition
  as being unlucky - yet, when the momentous
  question has been asked, and once she is engaged,
  her thoughts are naturally full of the prepEurations
  
  
  322
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  she must make in this direction. Her girl
  friends will flock round her and beg to see the
  pretty things that she has prepared. Small
  wonder then that the engaged girl is anxious
  that everything she has will be the daintiest and
  the best procurable for the money her parents
  can afford.
  
  People are not making the mistake nowadays
  of including a largo number of dresses of every
  kind and variety in the trousseau. In most
  cases half of those dresses would be quite out of
  date before their owner had any opportunity of
  wearing them, and she would be doomed there-
  fore, if not very well off, to spend the first
  few years of her marriage wearing demode
  gowns.
  
  A sensible idea adopted by many parents is
  that of including several dress lengths in the
  trousseau. These can be made up as required,
  and v\-ill be found not the lesist useful part of
  the trousseau. The number of dresses that will
  be absolutely necessary depend upon the social
  position the bride will be called upon to fill. For
  the ordinary middle-clsiss girl of average means,
  in addition to her wedding dress and going-
  away dress, the following will usually be found
  sufficient : -
  
  One good outdoor costume.
  
  One good coat and skirt for morning wear.
  
  Two afternoon dresses.
  
  One light evening dress.
  
  One dark evening dress.
  
  One fur coat, or dressy coat or wrap.
  
  One evening cloak.
  
  One morning dress or skirt to wear with
  blouses.
  
  Two or three light muslin and lingerie dresses,
  bloxoses, &c.
  
  With several dress lengths added, this list of
  dresses should bo suflScient for all ordinary
  requirements.
  
  Where the wedding dress is afterwards used as
  an evening dress, the light evening dress may be
  dispensed with.
  
  The specimen lists given below for trousseaux
  which may bo purchased for an outlay of £65 and
  £130 respectively are capable of much variation.
  They are intended mainly as a guide to parents
  with marriageable daughters as to what form
  their expenditure should take. Tlie £65 trous-
  seau includes only the essentials of a wedding
  outfit, the various items mentioned being of
  simple and plain yet at the same time of fairly
  good quality. In the £130 outfit a little more
  scope for finery is allowed. A substantial pro-
  per* ion of the respective sums of money is allowed
  for underlinen, as lingerie of the very cheap
  variety is excluded from both lists.
  
  Trousseau for £65
  
  
  Wedding dress (to be used afterwards
  as best evening dress) and veil .
  
  
  8 8 0
  
  
  £ 8. d.
  Going - away dress (afterwards best
  
  visiting costume) 5 5 0
  
  Wrap suitable for both afternoon and
  
  evening wear 2 10 0
  
  Outdoor costume 4 4 0
  
  1 dark evening dress 4 4 0
  
  Good afternoon dress 3 3 0
  
  Skirt for wear with blouses .... 1 1 0
  
  Rain coat 110
  
  Going-away hat 1 10 0
  
  2 Hats at 12s. 9d 15 6
  
  Blouses 200
  
  6 pairs short gloves at 3s. 3d. ... 19 6
  
  2 pairs long gloves at 5s. 6d. ... 110
  
  1 pair very long gloves at 7s. lid. . 7 11
  
  1 pair boots 16 0
  
  2 pairs walking shoes at 10s. 6d. ..110
  
  1 pair white evening shoes (for wear
  
  with wedding dress) 10 6
  
  2 pairs indoor shoes at 5s. 6d. ... 110
  
  Umbrella 15 0
  
  Sunshade 10 6
  
  Lingerie
  
  3 Night-dresses, longcloth and em-
  
  broidery at 7s. lid 1 3 9
  
  2 Night-dresses, fine nainsook and lace
  
  at 12s. 9d 15 6
  
  1 Night-dress, cambric and lace . . 15 9
  6 longcloth chemises trimmed with
  
  embroidery at 3s. lid 1 3 6
  
  4 French hand-made chemises with
  
  Valenciennes lace at 5s. lid. . . 1 3 8
  
  2 fine cambric chemises with lace at
  
  10s. 9d 116
  
  6 Longcloth knickers at 3s. lljd. . . 1 3 9
  4 French hand - made knickers at
  
  5s. lid 138
  
  2 Cambric and lace knickers at 8s. lid. 17 10
  
  2 pairs corsets at 12s. 9d 16 6
  
  3 Camisoles at 3s. 3d 9 9
  
  2 Camisoles at 5s. 6d 110
  
  1 Camisole at 7s. lid 7 11
  
  4 Flannel or nun's-veiling petticoats
  
  at 58. 6d 12 0
  
  1 dozen pair stockings at 23. (six
  
  cashmere, six fine lisle thread) .14 0
  
  2 pairs spun-silk stockings at 3s. 6d. . 7 0
  4 Wliite petticoats at 7s. 6d. ... 1 10 0
  1 Lace or silk petticoat for wear with
  
  bridal dress 110
  
  1 Dark petticoat 7 6
  
  6 Merino, woollen, or silk-spun com-
  binations at 63. 6d. 1 19 0
  
  1 Winter dressing-gown 10 0
  
  1 Summer dressing-gown IS 0
  
  2 dozen handkerchiefs at 10s. 6d. ..110
  
  £63 13 6
  
  This leaves a balance of £1, 6s. 6d., which may
  be expended upon veils and neckwear. In
  
  
  DRESS- ITS CHOICE AND CARE
  
  
  323
  
  
  regard to the lingerie, if combinations are pre-
  ferred to the chemises and drawers, the combined
  garments will of course be cheaper than the
  separate items. The above Ust represents all
  articles actually bought in their complete state.
  A substantial saving would be effected if the
  bride, aided by the women members of her
  family, could make some of the Ungerie and
  simpler gowns herself. Many people cannot afford
  even £65 for a trousseau for their daughters.
  In these circumstances the help of the home
  needlewoman is a necessity ; the wedding frock
  should be of the very simplest, and the frocks
  not home-made would have to be the plainest of
  their kind. With the sum of £65 to expend,
  however, with the addition of the help of really
  clever home-workers and plenty of time in which
  to prepare their work, a very good trousseau
  indeed may be had. For a comparatively small
  outlay upon materials, dainty Ught muslin
  frocks, an extra afternoon frock, and even a
  pretty tea-gown may be made without added
  extra outlay. It is always advisable to have
  the going-away dress and the outdoor costume,
  made at a good shop. In regard to both
  these a good tailor's cut is eminently desirable.
  With the money saved on garments made at
  home even a little extra expenditure may be
  made in this direction.
  
  There are, of course, many articles nowadays
  of the ready-made species which can be had for
  ridiculously low sums, and might perhaps cost
  no more than those of home manufacture. In
  regard to a bride's trousseau, however, every-
  thing in it should bo good. For this reason
  it is better to avoid purchases of the cheap
  " ready-made " variety if making one or two
  things at home wiU allow for an extra outlay
  upon the garments which have to be bought.
  
  £8, 8s. is not a very large sum to allot for the
  wedding dress and veil, if the dress is to be made
  at a good costumier's. If, on the other hand,
  a known and tried dressmaker who makes
  up ladies' own materials is entrusted with the
  work, it can be made for even less, and the
  surplus would go towards some other purchase.
  If the wedding is to be a quiet one, the bride
  being married in her travelling dress, £4, 4s. of
  the sum allowed for the wedding dress might
  be expended upon a good white evening dress,
  the remainder being expended upon two pretty
  muslin dresses or else two useful dress lengths.
  
  As a rule, the bridal dress is worn as a best
  evening gown afterwards, so the evening gown
  allowed on the list should be a black one if
  possible, as it is destined to play the part of a
  serviceable dress.
  
  Many bargains, and good ones, may sometimes
  be had at sales both in regard to lingerie and to
  dresses ; the discriminating shopper will be wise
  to make judicious use of her opportunities in
  this direction, and she will perhaps secure several
  of the items at a good deal less than the figures
  
  
  at which they are marked upon the following
  lists.
  
  Trousseau for £130
  
  £ 8. d.
  Wedding dress (to be used afterwards
  
  as best evening dress) and veil . 10 10 0
  Going-away dress (afterwards best
  
  visiting costume) 7 7 0
  
  Good fur-lined coat or fur stole and
  
  muff '..770
  
  1 Cloth outdoor costume 5 5 0
  
  1 Serge or tweed costume .... 3 3 0
  1 Long coat suitable for motoring or
  
  rain coat 2 10 0
  
  Demi -toilette dress 3 3 0
  
  Evening dress 5 5 0
  
  1 Afternoon dress 4 4 0
  
  1 Evening wrap 3 0 0
  
  1 Dress length, 6 yards cloth at 4s.
  
  per yard 14 0
  
  1 Dress length, 12 yards silk or satin
  
  at 5s. per yard 3 0 0
  
  1 Tea gown 300
  
  Light muslin or voile summer dress .300
  
  2 Linen costumes or cotton dresses at
  
  £1, 10s. each 3 0 0
  
  1 House dress 2 2 0
  
  Going-away hat 2 2 0
  
  Motoring and travelling hat and veil . 1 10 0
  
  2 Hats at 12s. 9d 15 6
  
  Blouses 400
  
  1 pair boots 110
  
  1 pair walking shoes 110
  
  2 pairs walking shoes at 12s. 6d. ..150
  2 pairs evening shoes at 10s. 6d. ..110
  2 pairs house shoes at 7s. 6d. ... 15 0
  
  Umbrella 110
  
  Sunshade 15 0
  
  6 pairs short kid and suede gloves at
  
  3s. 3d 19 6
  
  2 pairs short kid and suede gloves at
  
  5s. 6d 11 0
  
  4 pairs long kid and suede gloves at
  
  6s. lid 17 8
  
  Lingerie
  
  6 Night-dresses at 7s. 1 Id 2 7 6
  
  4 Night-dresses at 12s. 6d 2 10 0
  
  2 Night-dresses at £1, Is 2 2 0
  
  6 Chemises at 5s. 6d 1 13 0
  
  3 Chemises at 7s. 6d 12 6
  
  3 Chemises at 10s. 6d 1116
  
  6 Drawers at 5s. 6d 1 13 0
  
  3 Drawers at 7s. 6d 12 6
  
  3 Drawers at 10s. 6d 1116
  
  6 Spun silk, merino, or woollen com-
  binations at 6s. 6d 1 19 0
  
  6 Camisoles at 4s 14 0
  
  5 Camisoles at 6s. 6d 1 12 6
  
  1 Camisole at 10s. 6d 10 6
  
  1 pair corsets 110
  
  
  324
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  £ a. d.
  
  2 pairs corsets at 128. 9d 15 6
  
  1 Silk, satin or \axx> petticoat for wear
  
  with wedding dress 2 2 0
  
  1 Silk petticoat 110
  
  1 iloirette petticoat 10 6
  
  6 White petticoats at 7s. 6d. ... 2 6 0
  6 Nun's-veiling or flannel petticoats
  
  at 6s. 6d. 1 19 0
  
  6 pairs cashmere stockings at 2s. 6d. . 15 0
  
  6 pairs fine lislo thread at Ss. 3d. . . 19 6
  
  3 pairs silk stockings at 10s. 6d. . . Ill 6
  
  2 dozen handkercliiefs at 15s. 6d. per
  
  dozen 1110
  
  4 lace handkerchiefs at lOs. 6d. each .220
  Good dressing-gown 2 0 0
  
  
  £ 8. d.
  
  Summer dressing-gown 110
  
  2 Dressing jackets at 12s. 6d. each .15 0
  1 pair quilted satin bedroom sUppers 3 6
  
  Veils, neckwear, scarves, &c. . . 1 10 0
  
  £129 6 8
  
  
  The balance of 13s. 4d. may be expended upon
  a pretty night-dress case, and a brush-and-corab
  bag.
  
  The trousseaux lists given comprise only the
  clothing. Travelling bags, trunk and dress
  baskets will of course make extra items in
  each case. All luggage should be as neat as
  possible.
  
  
  SCHOOL OUTFITS
  
  
  For a Girl
  
  
  4 Night-dresses.
  
  1 Dressing-gown.
  
  1 pair bedroom slippers.
  
  1 Night-dress bag and 1 brush-and-comb bag.
  
  3 pairs woollen combinations.
  
  4 pairs cotton combinations or 4 chemises and
  
  4 pairs of drawers.
  
  2 pairs knickers with 2 linings.
  
  2 peiirs stays with suspenders.
  
  3 Princess petticoats.
  6 pairs stockings.
  
  \\ dozen handkerchiefs.
  3 Bath towels.
  3 Face towels.
  
  Toilet requisites.
  1 Writing-case with paper, &o.
  1 Cewh-box with lock and key.
  
  1 pair school slippers, 1 pedr for better we"ur.
  
  2 pairs walking shoes, 1 pair boots.
  1 pair gymnastic or tennis shoes.
  
  1 pair goloshes or overshoes.
  
  2 Linen bags.
  
  2 School dresses or 2 skirts with blouses.
  
  1 Sunday dress.
  
  2 Evening dresses.
  
  1 Gymnastic costume.
  
  1 Coat for everyday wear.
  
  1 Coat for Sundays.
  
  1 Waterproof.
  
  1 School hat, 1 Sunday hat.
  
  1 Evening cloak.
  
  1 Umbrella.
  
  2 pairs woollen or ootten gloves.
  
  1 pair kid gloves, 1 pair evening gloves.
  Ties according to regulation.
  
  1 Rug.
  
  1 Music case (flat).
  
  The above list represents ordinary require-
  ments ; special garments may bo necessary ac-
  cording to the sports and games played at the
  school. At fashionable schools a larger outfit
  will bo necessary.
  
  
  For a Boy
  
  
  1 Sunday dress suit.
  
  2 Tweed suits (longs or knickers according to
  
  school regulations).
  1 Overcoat. 1 Dressing-gown.
  
  1 pair bedroom sUppers.
  
  Toilet requisites, brush, comb, &c.
  
  3 Wliite dress shirts, 4 flannel shirts.
  
  8 Linen or flannel collars (according to school
  regulations).
  
  3 Sunday collars (according to school regula-
  tions).
  
  3 pairs underclothing (vests and drawers).
  
  2 pairs boots, 2 pairs shoes, 1 pair slippers.
  1 pair gymnastic shoes.
  
  1 Rug. 3 Pyjama suits.
  
  6 pairs socks or stockings (according to kind
  
  of suit worn).
  1^ dozen handkerchiefs.
  1 Black necktie, 2 school neckties.
  1 Tall hat and hat-box for Sundays.
  1 Umbrella. 1 pair garters.
  1 pair kid gloves, 1 pair woollen gloves.
  1 School cap. 1 pair cuff links.
  Cash- box and writing-case.
  
  1 School muffler.
  
  3 Bath towels, 3 face towels.
  
  Extras for Winter Term
  
  2 pairs football shorts (blue).
  2 pairs football shorts (white).
  2 Football jerseys.
  
  1 Football blazer and belt.
  
  2 pairs football stockings. 1 Sweater.
  
  1 pair football boots.
  
  Extras for Summer Term
  
  4 pairs white shorts or longs (according to
  
  school regulations).
  
  2 pairs blue shorts.
  4 Cricket shirts.
  
  1 Blazer and belt.
  
  2 pairs cricket shoes.
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  The word " etiquette " simply means " ticket," and is the " label " attached by an unwritten
  convention to the best observances in the social life of well-bred people. In tliis chapter the fvmda-
  mental principles of etiquette are described, and the chief rules which govern its observance are
  enumerated in a manner which it is hoped will be useful to many a woman who is in doubt how to
  act upon various social occasions.
  
  
  Tact. - It has been said that the essence of
  all good breeding is tact. A tactful woman is
  essentially a woman who knows how to adapt
  herself to varying circumstances, who has that
  keen perception which enables her to see and do
  what is best upon occasions when discrimination
  between the ^iVTong and the right methods of
  action is necessary. A tactful woman is one
  who will never hurt another's feehngs. She will
  always respect the Uttle foibles of her friends
  and refrain from holding them up to ridicule.
  Wlien she entertains, she is past master in the
  art of asking the right people to meet each other
  and of making them all feel at their ease in her
  society.
  
  " I Hke going to Sirs. Brown's ; she does know
  how to make you feel at home," is a phrase often
  heard in speaking of a tactful hostess. On the
  other hand, " You will not enjoy yourself at
  Mrs. Jones'. There is always an atmosphere of
  stiffness in her house. You never feel at home
  there somehow," is a warning often given when
  reference is made to a hostess whose disregard
  for the comfort of her guests and want of tact
  generally is proverbial upon these occasions.
  
  There are some people who have a genius for
  " rubbing their friends up the wrong way." The
  society of these women as a rule is shunned.
  Others are well known for their agreeable and
  charming manners. These women become
  popular with every one, no matter how plain and
  homely their appearance may be. Comment is
  often made upon the fact that plain girls as a
  rule get married sooner than their fairer sisters.
  The reason is not hard to seek. The latter have
  grown into the habit of looking upon homage
  and adulation as their right. " Self " is the
  keynote of interest in their lives, and in the
  worship of self they neglect to cultivate that
  all-potent charm of manner founded upon true
  innate unselfishness and tact, in which their
  plainer sist^ers as a rule excel. When beauty
  and tact are allied in on^ person, then her charm
  
  
  825
  
  
  is indeed irresistible, while sad indeed is the
  case of the woman who possesses neither the one
  nor the other.
  
  Manners. - In the cultivation of tact, good
  manners are essential. " Manners makj-th Man "
  and woman too, for if good manners are so
  essential to man, are they not then indispensable
  to woman, whose great object in life is to please ?
  
  A lady's manners should be perfect upon
  all occasions. Manners cannot be donned
  and discarded at will. To be ill-mannered and
  churhsh in the home circle and keep one's best
  manners, hke a visiting toilette, to be donned for
  the benefit of strangers, is as iU-ad\'i3ed as it is
  inefficacious. Politeness assumed in tliis way
  inv£iriably comes with an effort, and is only too
  often apt to degenerate into mere affectation.
  
  Practise good manners with your own people
  if you wish to shine before strangers. The
  manners of a gentlewoman are always character-
  ised by their perfect ease and naturalness, and
  how can this ease be possibly acquired if poUte-
  ness is only assumed for special occasions ?
  Much of that stiff, artificial demeanour displayed
  by so many of our young people is due to the
  fact that, instead of being taught good manners
  in their childhood, they are expected to assimilate
  the whole of the rules of etiquette, poUteness
  and good breeding in the few months which
  immediately precede their coming out.
  
  The effect of this mistaken training is lament-
  able in most circumstances, for the polish ac-
  quired in this way at the last moment is of so
  thin a veneer that it very often only serves to
  accentuate that native gaucherie which it wm
  intended to conceal.
  
  We all pay a silent tribute to the mother who
  initiates her httle three -year-old toddler into
  the mysteries of how and when to raise his
  diminutive cap as soon as he is promoted to
  knickerbockers. All mothers should pay particu-
  lar attention to the manners of their children.
  " As the twig is bent so will it grow," and by
  
  
  326
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  dint of careful traiiung politeness becomes
  innate with the little ones, so that when they
  grow up their claim to the title of " gentleman "
  or " gentlewoman " will be recognised by all
  with whom they come into contact.
  
  Etiquette. - Every gentlewoman should be thor-
  oughly acquainted with that code of manners
  which falls under the general designation of the
  word " etiquette." To many people the word
  etiquette conveys the meaning of mere empty
  forms and ceremonies which can be honoured
  just as well in the breach as in the observance.
  This is a mistake. We have defined tact as a
  keen perception for seeing and doing what is
  best in varying circumstances. Etiquette tells
  us what to do to keep within the rules of polite-
  ness and good breeding. It is obvious, therefore,
  that in the practice of tact a knowledge of
  etiquette is all -important. jMany an otherwise
  tactful woman has given offence by her ignorance
  of social rules, more especially in regard to the
  rule of precedence. A knowledge of etiquette
  in these circumstances would have saved her from
  making a mistake of a kind so often bitterly re-
  sented by the person at whose expense it is
  made.
  
  Etiquette in Olden Times. - Every period of
  liistory has had its recognised code of manners,
  and though the etiquette of our forefathers
  differed considerably from our own social rules,
  yet the governing principles of true poUteness
  have always had their foundation upon the
  pr£ictice of true kindliness, courtesy and con-
  sideration for others ; for " Manners are not
  idle, but the fruit of loyal nature and of noble
  mind."
  
  It must bo said, however, that the ideas held
  by our forefathers upon the outward observances
  of refinement and culture as decreed by their
  laws of etiquette, differed very considerably
  from the standard of manners at the present day.
  Customs invariably change, and with the change
  of custom our ideas also undergo a considerable
  metamorphosis, so that what was allowable in
  former times would in many cases be looked
  upon with horror at the present day. In the
  same way our descendants will probably look
  back upon the twentieth century as a period
  of positive uncouthness as compared with the
  standard of incre£ised cultiu-e they will have
  attained.
  
  In a little book, intended sw a guide to gentle-
  women as to their behaviour and deportment
  upon all occa-sions, which was published in 1086,
  some interesting rules are laid down as to the
  etiquette and suitable behaviour of the lady of
  the 1 eriod. This ingenious little volume, which
  bears the somewhat quaint title, " The Accom-
  plished Ladies' Rich Closet of Rarities, or The
  Ingenious Gentlewoman and Servant Maids'
  Delightful Companion," casts a most interesting
  sidelight upon the manners prevailing in England
  Just after the reign of the *' Merrie Monarch."
  
  
  Indeed, it may be taken for granted that they
  were also de rigueur during that same interesting
  period which has generally been looked upon
  as ono of the most pictiu-esque epoclis of our
  history, when courtUness and gallantry were
  raised to the level of a fine art. Yet from the
  manners of the times, as detailed in this book,
  it will be seen that much was permissible in the
  code of etiquette which prevailed in the seven-
  teenth century which would be looked upon
  nowadays with amazement and disgust.
  
  For instance, the following precept laid down
  for the observance of the lady in society, " If
  you are abroad at dinner lot not your hand be
  first in any dish," is decidedly reminiscent of a
  time when knives and forks were not regarded
  as indispensable to the dinner-table equipment.
  And again, " Whenever you carve, keep your
  fingers from your mouth ; throw not anything
  over your shoulder," would suggest that it was
  quite usual for a fair carver in the days of the
  Stuarts to convey surreptitiously the dainty
  morsels to her mouth through the medium of
  her fingers, instead of placing them upon the
  plates of her guests, and to summarily dispose
  of any excess of fat and skin upon a joint by
  promptly throwing it over her shoulder !
  
  It requires an effort of the imagination to think
  of the stately dames of the period behaving in
  this fashion, and if such were the manners of the
  gentler sex, what must have been the poUte
  behaviour of those cavaUers of the long perfumed
  ringlets and picturesque dress which outrivalled
  in its richness and elegance the attire of their
  ladies. Picture those effeminate white hands,
  adorned at the wrist with dainty lace ruffles,
  dipping for some coveted tit-bit in the gravy !
  
  Evidently curiosity has always been the
  besetting failure of the fair sex ; yet nowadays
  no lady would require the following caution :
  " Be not inquisitive (for that is uncomely) to
  know what such a Fowl or such a Joynt cost,
  nordiscourseof Bills of Fare "; - and even though
  inordinate love of the good things of this viorld
  might be her besetting sin, she would not require
  to be told, " Take not in your wine or other
  liquor too greedily, nor drink until you are out
  of breath. Eat not your spoon meat so hot that
  it makes your eyes water, nor bo seen to blow it."
  
  Some rules laid down for the deportment of a
  gentlewoman when out walking are worthy of
  comment : -
  
  " Observe that you walk not carelessly or
  lightly, shouldering as it were your companions,
  nor strutting or Jutting in a proud manner.
  Keep your head steady, your countenance not
  too much elevated nor too mucli dejected ; keep
  your arms likewise steady, and throw them not
  about a.s if you were flying. Let your feet
  rather incline a little more inward than outward,
  lest you be censured splay-footed. . . . Do not
  run or go extreme fast in places of concourse,
  unless great occasion require it, for in such
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  327
  
  
  violent motions it is not always in your power
  to keep your body steady ; nay, by too much
  haste you may chance to fall ! " The following
  caution, " Wink not too often, nor cast your eyes
  ascance as if you squinted, neither keep them too
  reserved, nor scornfully turn them away when
  any object oSers," would seem to indicate that in
  her beha\'iour out of doors the young maiden of
  the period was often apt to go to somewhat
  divergent extremes !
  
  It is when we come upon a book of this kind,
  handed down through so many years, that we
  begin to realise the manners and habits of a by-
  gone age. It indicates to us that then, as now,
  a code of etiquette was absolutely essential to
  the smooth working of society. The principles
  of etiquette will always remain the same, but its
  rules must needs vary with the passing of time
  and fashion. Autres temps, autres moeurs - "and
  other manners too " ; but the personal qualities
  which make the effective foundation of all good
  manners are necessary if the " polish " imparted
  by etiquette is not to be only a superficial one.
  
  Etiquette of To-day. - Though we do not now
  need to have such quaintly elementarj'^ rules of
  etiquette drawn up for o\ir observance, yet the
  fact remains that it is against the simple rules
  of good breeding that the woman of to-day is
  too often apt to transgress. It is in little things
  more than anj^hing else that good breeding tells,
  and the gentlewoman who wishes to justify her
  claim to that title should aim at making her
  manners upon all occasions, whether in the
  family circle or at social gatherings, in the
  drawing-room, at the dinner-table, out of doors,
  in private as in public, beyond reproach.
  
  How a Lady should Behave out of doors. - In
  her behaviour out of doors the gentlewoman is
  quiet and unassuming. She shuns any exag-
  geration of dress and fashion which would make
  her conspicuous ; it is not her aim to attract the
  eye of the crowd, but to escape its notice. She
  does not sweep the pavement %vith trailing skirts
  or address her friends in loud tones. Neither
  does she attract attention by her boisterous
  laughter. The aim of the gentlewoman is to
  escape notice out of doors ; that of the ill-bred
  woman to attract it. Therein lies the difference.
  
  It is the lady's privilege to bow first, if she
  should meet a gentleman of her acquaintance.
  
  The bow should be a gentle inclination of the
  head, not a jerky nod, nor a movement so slight
  as to be almost imperceptible.
  
  A lady should also be the first to offer to shake
  hands. It is no longer fashionable to raise the
  arm in an exaggerated manner when shaking
  hands.
  
  It is not necessary to make introductions
  between friends out of doors, excepting in the
  case of a lady being out with another lady with
  whom she is staying on a visit. In this case
  she would introduce any friends she might
  meet to her hustess.
  
  
  Driving. - A lady should always enter a carriage
  before a gentleman. If two ladies are driving
  together, the lady of highest rank should enter
  it fiirst, unless she particularly expresses a wish
  that her companion should do so.
  
  A visitor should enter the motor car or carriage
  before her hostess.
  
  When two ladies and a gentleman are driving
  together, the ladies should take the front seat,
  the gentleman sitting with his back to the
  horses. In a motor car the ladies should also
  occupy the front seat.
  
  A gentleman should be always the first to get
  out of a motor car or carriage, in order to assist
  the ladies to ahght.
  
  Young ladies shotdd always leave the place
  of honour in carriage or motor to the elder
  ladies.
  
  Etiquette of the Table. - In no circumstances
  are bad manners more noticeable than when
  displayed at the table, whilst, on the other hand,
  it is at the table more than anywhere else that
  good breeding tells. To eat badly is to commit
  one of the greatest offences against the laws of
  poHteness, and of all vulgarities \T.ilgarity at
  table is without exception the very worst. A
  woman's innate refinement will often protect
  her in tliis direction, and she is as a rule less apt
  to err against the rules of table etiquette than
  a man.
  
  Apart from the elementary rules of table
  politeness, however, there are certain laws of
  etiquette governing the manner of eating
  articles of food which, though found as a matter
  of coxirse on the dinner-tables of the rich, are
  usually absent from the tables of those only
  moderately blessed with this world's goods,
  for the simple reason that they are luxvu-ies that
  cannot be afforded in the poorer household.
  
  It is in these circumstances that a woman
  endowed with good breeding but little means
  finds herself at a loss at times when asked to
  join the dinner-table of her wealthier sister. A
  woman of refinement will generally piill through
  the ordeal without committing any very glaring
  faux pas - for if any uncommon dish (to her)
  is put upon the table, she will wait and watch
  how the others eat it. But the very fact of having
  to do this involves a certain awkwardness of
  demeanour caused by over-anxiety to do the
  right thing and to avoid a mistake.
  
  A woman should not be placed in tliis equi-
  vocal position, however perfect her imitative
  powers may be. She should always know what
  to eat and how to eat it. With the elementary
  rules of table etiquette everj'^ gentlewoman is
  acquainted, but for the benefit of those who are
  not quite au fait we give here the principal rules,
  elementary and otherwise, governing the impor-
  tant question of manners at the table.
  
  How to Eat. - WTien you have taken your seat
  at the table, remove j-our gloves, unfold your
  serviette, taking from it the piece of bread or
  
  
  328
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  roll, wliich you place at your left-hand side, then
  spread the ser\-iette over your lap.
  
  As soon as you are served at table, begin to
  eat ; to wait for others is now considered ill-
  bred-
  Soup aliould be eaten with a table-spoon, and
  taken from the side of the spoon. When the
  quantity of soup on the plate is so small that it
  cannot bo easily taken up by the spoon with
  the plate in its normal position, gently tilt the
  plate - not toweirds you, but away from you - so
  that it can be taken up more easily.
  
  Rissoles, mince, and other similar-made dishes
  should be eaton with a fork only.
  
  All sweets, where possible, should be eaten with
  a fork alone.
  
  A spoon and fork may be used for frmt tarts.
  Either the spoon or the fork should be raised
  to the mouth for the purpose of receiving the
  fruit stones. In the case of plums and other
  large stone fruit, it is better to separate the stone
  from the fruit with the spoon and fork before
  putting the fruit into the mouth.
  
  In eating asparagus, where no small asparagus
  tongs are pro\nLded, a knife and fork should be
  used, and the points should be cut off and eaten
  with a fork.
  
  Salad is always served on salad plates. It
  should be eaten with a knife and fork.
  
  It is, of course, needless to emphasise that
  the bones of game or poiiltry should not be
  taken up with the fingers.
  
  The knife should not under any circumstances
  be raised to the mouth. When eating cheese,
  small pieces of cheese are placed upon small
  pieces of bread and so conveyed to the mouth
  with the fingers.
  
  In eating artichokes the outer leaves are re-
  moved with a knife and fork ; the inner leaves
  can then be taken up to the mouth with the
  fingers.
  
  Savouries, when possible, should be eaten with
  a fork.
  
  Oysters should be eaten with a dinner-fork.
  Hold the oyster shell on the plate with the left
  hand, remove the entire oyster with the fork,
  which is held in the right hand, and convey it to
  the mouth.
  
  Fish is always eaten with a fish knife and fork.
  FaiUng these, it may be eat"n with a fork and a
  crust of bread.
  
  The skin and stones of grapes and cherries
  should not be ejected direct from the mouth to
  the plate. The hand should be raised to the
  mouth to recei%'e them.
  
  Strawberries when served without cream can
  be takon up by the stalks in the fingers. When
  served with cream, the stalks should be separated
  from the fruit with a spoon. Strawberries and
  cream are eaten with a spoon and fork.
  
  Pears, apples, peaches and nectarines are eaten
  with a fruit knife and fork. The fruit is held on
  the fork with the left hand and peeled with the
  
  
  knife, wliich is held in the right hand ; it is then
  divided into halves and quarters.
  
  Oranges are divided into halves and quarters,
  and each quarter is peeled separately as required.
  
  Pineapple is eaten \\ath a dessert knife and
  fork, and melon with a spoon and fork.
  
  Finger glasses containing water are placed on
  doyleys on the dessert plates. Both finger glass
  and doyley should bo removed at the beginning
  of dessert, and placed at the side of the dessert
  plate. Wlien dessert is over, the fingers may be
  dipped into the finger glass and wiped with the
  serviette.
  
  General Hints. - ^Never crumble your bread or
  fidget with the table service ; to do so indicates
  that you are unaccustomed to good society.
  When not eating, keep your hands away from the
  table.
  
  Do not fold your serviette after dinner at a
  friend's house ; leave it on the table before you.
  When staying on a visit, however, a serviette
  ring will be allotted to you for ordinary occasions ;
  then the serviette would be folded and placed
  in the ring.
  
  Never take a second helping of soup or fish.
  
  A hostess should never unduly press a guest
  to partake of a certain dish, however hospitable
  her motive may be.
  
  INTRODUCTIONS
  
  A knowledge of the rules of etiquette govern-
  ing introductions between friends is of the
  utmost importance for every woman, no matter
  what her social position may be. The chief
  things to be remembered in regard to making
  introductions are : -
  
  1. Introductions should not be made indis-
  criminately without regard for the wishes of the
  persons who are introduced to each other. An
  introduction which is unwelcome to either one
  or the other of the parties should be avoided at
  all costs, as the person who does not desire the
  acquaintance may in some cases feel compelled to
  show by her manner what her feelings are upon
  the subject.
  
  Before introducing one person to another,
  therefore, always find out if the introduction
  will be acceptable to both parties. If the per-
  sons are of different rank, it will be sufficient to
  consult the person of higher rank before making
  the introduction.
  
  2. Always introduce a gentleman to a lady
  irrespective of any question of rank. Precedence
  in this manner is one of the privileges of the sex.
  Always mention the name of the person you are
  introducing first, thus : " Mr. X - Miss Z," would
  be the correct formula, Mr. X being introduced
  to Miss Z. This mere mentioning of the names
  of the party is sufficient, but when it is wished
  to adopt a Icps formal mothod the person making
  the introduction might say, "May I introduce
  Mr. X to you. Miss Z ? "
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  329
  
  
  3. If seated, a lady need not rise when a gentle-
  man is introduced to her, unless that gentleman
  is her host, or else some clerical dignitary to
  whom she should show respect by reason of his
  office.
  
  4. Upon being introduced both bow but do
  not shake hands. If a lady offers her hand to a
  gentleman, it is an act of grace on her part.
  When introductions are made between ladies, the
  lady of lower rank should be introduced to the
  lady of higher rank. An unmarried lady should
  be introduced to a married lady, unless the
  unmarried lady is of a higher rank than the
  married lady. Ladies only bow to one another
  as a rule upon being introduced, but should the
  lady of higher rank offer her hand, it may be
  taken as a mark of favour on her part. When
  ladies are of equal rank, the younger lady should
  be introduced to the elder one.
  
  6. A hostess should shake hands with every
  one introduced to her in her own house. When
  a person introduces two of her very great friends
  to each other it would be qiiite correct for them
  to shake hands. In the same way when a
  young girl is introduced to an elderly lady, the
  latter usually shakes hands as a mark of
  kindness.
  
  6. At a dinner-party it is customary for the
  hostess to present the gentleman to the lady
  whom he is to take in to dinner. It is not neces-
  sary for her to ask the lady's permission before
  doing so.
  
  7. After dinner the hostess uses her own dis-
  cretion as to what ladies she will introduce to
  each other in the drawing-room.
  
  8. Gentlemen continuing at the table over the
  " walnuts and wine " talk with each other with-
  out introduction.
  
  9. At afternoon At Homes, garden parties, and
  similar functions the hostess should use her own
  judgment as to what introductions should be
  made. She should introduce gentlemen to the
  ladies in order that the former may look after
  the needs of the latter in the way of taking them
  to the tea-room. Gentlemen should always
  realise what is expected of them on these occa-
  sions and act accordingly. Acquaintances made
  in this manner do not involve more than a bowing
  acquaintance afterwards.
  
  10. The lady should always be the first to bow
  to a gentleman upon meeting him on subsequent
  occasions.
  
  11. Ladies do not rise from their seats upon
  being introduced to each other on ordinary
  occasions, or At Homes, or in the drawing-room
  after dinner.
  
  12. In ball-rooms the real responsibility for
  introductions rests much more with chaperons
  than with stewards. The latter can only
  interpret according to their judgment the
  advisability of introductions. If an introduction
  is sought by a gentleman he is bound either to
  dance, or at all events to jhow the usual civilities
  
  
  of the supper -room, to the lady to whom he
  sought to be introduced.
  
  13. When two or three ladies call on the same
  afternoon at the same house, the hostess gener-
  ally feels it necessary to introduce them to each
  other. Introductions so made will warrant a
  bowing acquaintance.
  
  Letters of Introduction. - It is not wise to be too
  ready to give letters of introduction. Friends
  feel bound to show special com-tesies and hospi-
  tality to a person introduced to them in this
  manner, however they may feel disposed towards
  her.
  
  Upon hearing that an acquaintance has the
  intention of visiting some particular town, a
  good-natured woman will often be heard to
  exclaim, " Oh, I must give you an introduction
  to Mrs. X. She is sure to give you a good time."
  without pausing to think what IVIrs. X would
  think of her suggestion. By giving introduc-
  tions in this way, a woman must remember that
  ' she taxes both the coiirtesy and hospitality of
  the friend to whom the introduction is addressed.
  If her friend is in a superior rank of life, it is only
  right to ask her permission before sending the
  letter.
  
  The letter of introduction should never be
  closed, and the bearer should leave it with her
  card without asking to see the hostess.
  
  If the latter is well disposed, she should as soon
  as possible send an invitation to dinner or aa
  At Home, or any similar function.
  
  THE ETIQUETTE OF VISITING CARDS
  
  There is much in the etiquette of card-leaving
  that is misunderstood, and many gaucheri&s are
  habitually committed, through ignorance, in
  contravention of the recognised rules governing
  this important social custom. The leaving of
  cards may be said to be the most efficient method
  of regulating a lady's visiting list, forming an
  unfaihng index to her choice of acquaintance.
  It is also the means decreed by society for the
  exchange of the various civiUties around which
  the social wheel revolves.
  
  The principal rules governing the etiquette of
  cards are as follows : -
  
  Style and Size of Lady's Card. - A lady's card
  should always be plain in tj'pe, unglazed, and
  free from any kind of ornamentation. In size
  it should be from 3i to 3f inches wide and 2^
  inches in depth. The name of the lady should
  be printed in the centre of the card, and her
  address in the lower left-hand corner. If she
  has a country as well as a town address, the
  second address may be printed in the opposite
  corner. If she has an At Home day, tliis should
  be printed or written across the top left-hand
  corner.
  
  A married woman should never have her
  Christian name printed on her cards. If her
  husband is the senior member of his fsmiily.
  
  
  330
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  hor name would bo printed simply - " Mrs.
  Brown." If he has a father or an elder brother,
  then her husband's Christian name should be
  used before the surname - " Mrs. James Brown."
  
  How to leave Cards when making Calls. -
  Ladies leave their visiting cards personally
  when walking, not by servants or through the
  post office.
  
  When the Lady called upon is not at Home. -
  When a married lady calls upon another married
  lady and finds the latter " not at home," she
  should leave her own card for the mistress of the
  house, and two of hor husband's cards, one for
  the master of the house and one for the mistress.
  
  Excepting in the case of a first call, however,
  a lady very often nowadays leaves only one of
  her husband's cards in addition to her own, if
  he is very well acquainted with her friend's
  husband and they are constantly meeting.
  
  When the lady called upon has a grown-up
  daughter or daughters, the lady leaving cards
  should turn down the right-hand corner of her
  card to indicate that she wishes to include the
  daughter (or daughters) in her call.
  
  If the lady called upon is a widow, only one of
  the caller's husband's cards should be left.
  
  If the lady who is making the call is driving,
  she should send her footman to inquire if the
  lady called upon is at home. If he is told that
  she is not at home, his mistress should hand liim
  the cards to be left on her behalf.
  
  When the Lady called upon is at Home. - When
  the mistress of the house is at home, the lady
  making the call should leave two of her hus-
  band's cards on the hall table upon leaving. She
  must not in this case leave her own card. If
  her husband is very intimate with her friend's
  husband and it is not a first call, it will only be
  necessary to leave one of her husband's cards.
  
  Cards are never sent up with the servant
  when calling unless the call is of a strictly bzisiness
  nature.
  
  Leaving Cards upon Newcomers. - When new
  people settle in a county district, the residents
  should bo the first to either call or leave
  cards upon them. This they can do without
  having any previous acquaintance with the new
  people. The latter should never, even if they
  be of higher rank, call upon the residents first.
  They should return call for call and card for
  card, but if they do not wish to continue the
  acquaintance, they can intimate this desire by
  merely leaving cards in return for the call.
  The custom of calling upon new people is
  characteristic of county and country society,
  but does not prevail in London and other large
  citiett.
  
  In leaving cards upon a friend who is the
  guest of a person with whom the caller is im-
  acqualnted, there is no need to leave a card upon
  the hostess.
  
  Except where the persons called upon are
  living in hotels, it is " bad form " for visitors to
  
  
  write upon the cards left the names of the persons
  for whom they are intended.
  
  Card Etiquette for Brides. - A bride should not
  send out cards to hor friends or give an At
  Home after the honeymoon is over. She must
  wait for them to call upon her. A newly
  married bride generally makes a point of being
  at home in the afternoons during the first
  fortnight after her return home in order to
  receive the calls of her friends.
  
  Difference between making Calls and leaving
  Cards. - All the rules given above concern the
  etiquette of cards in " making calls." But
  there are instances in which cards are left apart
  from the ordinary social function of paying
  visits. In this case they are left as a mark
  of civility or acknowledgment of civility or
  hospitality received. When a card is simply
  left it is not necessary to ask if the lady is at
  home.
  
  Calls should always be returned by calls and
  cards by cards within a week or ten days at
  latest, and care must be taken that a call is not
  returned by a " card " only, or a " card " by
  a " call." If a superior in rank should waive
  ceremony and return a call for a card, this mark
  of extra civility may be taken as a compliment
  by the recipient. If, however, she only repays
  a call with a card, it is obvious that she does not
  wish to improve the acquaintance.
  
  Great punctiliousness should be observed in
  regard to the returning " call for call " and
  " card for card " etiquette, otherwise, apart from
  the gaucherie involved by ignorance of these
  social rules, a slight may be conveyed where
  there is no intention of showing one, and positive
  offence given to the person slighted in this
  manner.
  
  Leaving Cards after Entertainments. - After the
  following entertainments cards should be left by
  all invited (whether present or not) witliin a
  week of the entertainment : balls, weddings,
  receptions, private theatricals, amateur concerts,
  dinners.
  
  Dinner Calls. - Only after dinner-parties need
  you ask if the hostess is at home. In this case,
  what is called a " dinner call " is made. In the
  other cases card-leaving is sufficient. It is not
  necessary to leave cards after a luncheon party
  or an ordinary At Home.
  
  Cards " To Inquire." - Cards to inquire after
  friends who are ill are left in person, and must
  bear simply the words written above the printed
  
  name - " To inquire after Mrs. ." In the stage
  
  of convalescence there comes in return through
  the post an ordinary visiting card with the words
  written above the name, " With thanks for kind
  inquiries." In the case of an accouchement " to
  inquire " cards are either left personally or by
  servants.
  
  P.P.C. Cards. - P.P.C. or Pour Prendre Conge
  - " to take leave " - cards are usually loft upon
  their friends by people who are going away
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  331
  
  
  for a period of from three to six months, or who
  are leaving a neighbourhood for good. These
  cards should be left within a week or ten days
  of departure, oither in person or by servants.
  
  In large cities arrivers intimate their arrival by
  leaving cards upon friends who otherwise might
  not know of it. Ladies having a large circle of
  acquaintances very often in these circumstances
  send their cards to their acquaintances by a
  man-servant, or in some cases give a list of
  addresses to their stationers who undertake to
  send the cards out.
  
  Wedding and memorial cards are now out of
  fashion.
  
  Card Etiquette for Young Girls. - A young un-
  married girl does not have cards of her own, but
  has her name printed underneath her mother's
  name on her mother's cards. This is also the
  case where there are several young daughters
  who are " out." It is always better form to
  have each name printed separately under the
  mother's name, though if there were foiu" or five
  grown-up daughters the term " The Misses "
  would be permissible.
  
  When young girls are chaperoned in society
  by friends, their names should be written in
  pencil under the names of the ladies chaperoning
  them on the visiting cards of the chaperons.
  
  When a girl is on a visit without lier parents,
  and wishes to call upon a friend, she should use a
  card on which her name and that of her mother's
  is printed, crossing out the mother's name in
  pencil. Unmarried ladies past their first youth
  should have their own visiting cards.
  
  The Motherless Girl. - Very often through the
  death of her mother a young girl suddenly finds
  herself head of her father's house, and responsible
  for all its social observances. Though used to the
  routine of calls and card-leaving as discharged by
  her mother, she will find that in her case circum-
  stances are slightly different. There are rules
  of etiquette governing a young girl's social
  observances when left in this position, and she
  should make herself au fait with these before
  embarking upon the additional social duties
  enforced upon her in these sad circumstances.
  
  When a girl has no mother, her name is usually
  printed under her father's name upon his card,
  which in this case are of the style and size of a
  lady's card.
  
  When returning a call upon a married lady who
  is not at home, one of these cards (with the name
  of father and daughter) should be loft. If her
  father is well acquainted with the husband of the
  lady callod upon, there is no need to leave one of
  his personal cards as well ; but if, on the other
  hand, the two men are only slightly acquainted
  with each other, it will be necessary to do so.
  
  If the lady called upon is at home, only one of
  the father's personal cards should be left.
  
  In calling upon a widow, one of the cards with
  the father's and daughter's names should be
  left. If the widow hao a daughter, a comer
  
  
  of the card should be turned down to include her
  in the call. If the daughter is middle-aged, a
  separate joint card of father and daughter should
  be left for her.
  
  Leaving Cards after Entertainments. - After
  being invited to a ball, reception, or other similar
  function given by married people, a joint card
  of the father and daughter should be left within
  a week of the function ; and as this comes under
  the category of card -leaving as acknowledgment
  of civiUty and hospitality, there is no need to ask
  if the mistress of the house is at home.
  
  After a dinner, however, a call should be
  made, the father accompanying his daughter if
  possible. If he does not do so she should leave
  two of his personal cards on departure.
  
  If an aunt or other relative of the motherless
  girl should come to Hve with her, the social duties
  would of comrse fall upon her as chaperon. In
  this case the girl's name would be printed on
  her chaperon's cards, and the etiquette observed
  would be the same as during her mother's life,
  until the chaperonage is dispensed with.
  
  Gentlemen's Cards. - In size a gentleman's card
  is usually 3 inches wide and 1^ inches deep. His
  name should be printed in the centre of the card
  and always with the prefix " Mr." (if he has
  no higher title). Printing the Christian and
  sin-name without any prefix, as in " James
  Brown," is not considered good form. An
  officer in the Navy adds R.N. or R.I.M. (Royal
  Indian Marine) after his name, but no King's
  Counsel, Member of Parliament or Doctor of
  whatever faculty adds K.C., M.P., LL.D., D.D.,
  to their card names. Baronets and Knights,
  until recently, were simply " Sir James Brown,"
  without Bart, or Kt., but since the Lord
  Chamberlain's instructions that baronets attend-
  ing Courts shoiild have their rank of baronet on
  their cards, it is usual for them to indicate their
  rank on their printed visiting cards. Officers
  in the Army have the name of their club down
  in the left-hand corner, and the name of their
  regiment down in the right-hand corner.
  
  In calling upon married people, a gentleman
  leaves two cards - one for the mistress and the
  other for the master.
  
  A gentleman should not turn down the corner
  of his card ; liis call is upon the host and
  hostess, and not upon the young ladies of the
  house.
  
  Calls are not made nor cards left by a gentle-
  man upon new acquaintances, however pleasant
  they may have been to him at a dinner or ball
  in another person's house, without a clear
  intimation from the lady that a call at her
  house would be agreeable to her.
  
  The same rules apply to gentlemen as to
  ladies with regard to leaving cards after enter-
  tainments.
  
  Bachelors call upon bachelors after receiving
  hospitality, unless they are upon such intimate
  footing as to dispense with ceremony.
  
  
  382
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  INVITATIONS
  
  There are certain pointa of etiquette to
  be observed in regard to sending invitations.
  In\'itation3, it must be remembered, are of
  two kinds, formal and informal. Ail formal
  in\'itations are printed on special cards and
  worded in the third person - wliilst for in-
  formal occasions, such as a luncheon party, or
  a small tea party, the invitation usually takes
  the form of a short note, or else it may be
  written on a %4siting card. A hostess should
  guard herself from falhng into the error of
  issuing an informal invitation for a formal
  occasion, or a formal invitation for an informal
  function - for to do either would indicate that
  she had a lack of that savoir faire which sets
  a hall mark upon social entertaining.
  
  Dinner Invitations.- Dinner invitations are
  issued in the name of both the host and hostess.
  If the host is a widower with a young daughter,
  the invitations are issued in the name of both
  himself and his daughter. In the case of a
  brother and sister who hve together the invita-
  tions would be issued in the name of both
  brother and sister. The following is the usual
  form for printed dinner invitations : -
  
  "Mr. and Mrs. Black request the
  pleasure of Mr. and Mrs. Brown's
  company at dinner, on Tuesday, the
  ith of January, at 8 o'clock."
  
  The reply, if acceptance, should take the
  following form : -
  
  " Mr. and Mrs. Brown accept xoith
  pleasure Mr. and Mrs. Black's kind
  invitation to dinner on the Qth of
  January."
  
  Invitations to At Homes. - An invitation to
  an At Home should be sent in the name of
  the hostess only. At Home invitations are
  printed upon At Home cards - the name of the
  hostess, with the words " At Homo " under-
  neath it, being printed in the middle of the
  card, with the day and date underneath the
  words " At Home." The address should be
  printed on the right-hand corner at the bottom
  of the card, and any amusement provided for
  the guests should be added on the left-hand
  corner. The letters R.S. V.P. may be written
  or printed on the card, but in the case of an
  afternoon At Home it is not usual to add them,
  as answers as a rule are not expected to these
  functions. If an answer is required, however,
  the letters R.S. V.P. should be added. The
  name of the person invited should be written
  in ink on the top loft-hand corner.
  
  Balls and Dances. - Invitations to balls and
  dances are sent out on ordinary At Home
  cards, the word " Dancing " being printed in
  the corner of the card. The word ball should
  never be used on the card, the same form of
  
  
  invitation being used for both small dances and
  large balls ontaihng a most lavish expenditxu-e.
  
  An acceptance to a ball invitation is WTitten
  on ordinary notepaper. The following is the
  usual form of acceptance : -
  
  "Mr. and Mrs. Black have much
  pleasure in accepting Mrs. Brown's
  kind invitation for Friday, the 6th
  of yovember."
  
  Garden Parties. - Invitations to a Garden
  Party should bo issued in the name of the
  hostess upon " At Homo " cards. Any outdoor
  amusement provided, such as tennis, should be
  written in the lower left-hand corner of the
  card. It is also usual to add the words " and
  party " after the name of the person invited.
  When Garden Parties are given on a very large
  scale, the invitation may take this form : -
  
  "Mrs. A. requests the pleasure
  of Mr. and Mrs. B.'s company at a
  Garden Party on "
  
  Weddings. - Wedding invitations are now very
  plain. Black lettering is much more used than
  the silver lettering which was formerly con-
  sidered indispensable, although the latter still
  has a certain vogue. Tlie invitations may be
  printed on sheets of notepaper which form a
  kind of combination of a notepaper sheet and
  envelope, having a flap at the upper end which
  is folded over and so posted ; or they may be
  issued on a simple card with envelope to match,
  or printed on ordinary notepaper. The word-
  ing should be as follows : -
  
  " Mr. at\d Mrs. Crane request the
  pleasure of Mr. and Mrs. Mason's
  company at the vianiage of their
  daughter Laura, with Mr. Reginald
  Dark, on Monday, \7th June, at St.
  Paul's, Knightshridge., and after-
  wards at 2 Eaton Square.
  
  R.S.V.P."
  
  Acceptances and Refusals. - Formal invitations
  sent in the third person should be answered in
  the same manner if the answer is an acceptance.
  In sending a refusal it is always more courteous,
  however, to give some explanation, and this
  should in the case of intimate friends be written
  in the third person. Thus : -
  
  " Mr. and Mrs. X. regret that
  absence from town prevents them
  from accepting Mrs. Z. 's kind invi-
  tation for the ith of November."
  
  is more courteous than : -
  
  " Mr. and Mrs. X. regret that they
  are unable to accept Mrs. Z.'s kind
  invitation for the 4th of July."
  
  Although printed cards of refusal are in use,
  it is always more courteous to send refusals in
  writing. In some cases it happens that though
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  333
  
  
  one member of the family invited to a dance
  or other party is prevented from some reason
  from accepting, yet the other members are able
  to accept. The circumstances in a case of the
  kind should always be explained by letter.
  Thus:-
  
  "Dear Mrs. X.-l regret that I
  shall be out of town on the day of
  your dance, or I should have much
  pleasure in accepting your kind in-
  vitation. My sister, however, will
  be at home, and will be very pleased
  to accept. - Yours sincerely."
  
  GeDeral Hints regarding Invitations. - Formal
  invitations need not be given to luncheon parties,
  smaU informal At Homes, nor christenings.
  
  One invitation card is sufficient for the
  husband, wife, and daughters of a family, but
  separate cards must be sent to the sons.
  
  Invitations should always be answered
  promptly.
  
  In inviting a friend to stay with her on a
  visit, a hostess shouJd always be careful to
  specify the exact time the visit is to last.
  
  The title, " the Honourable," is never written
  on cards of invitation.
  
  PAYING AND RECEIVING CALLS
  
  Paying Calls. - A strict observance of the
  etiquette governing the paying and returning
  of calls is all -important, as any neglect or ignor-
  ance of the rules of visiting exposes the oiTender
  to the danger of receiving the " cold shoulder "
  from her friends, so.netimes to the extent of
  being excluded from all their dances. At Homes,
  and other entertainments.
  
  A mother with grown-up daughters should be
  especially punctihous in this direction. Many
  mothers, once their daughters have attained
  years of discretion, show the inchnation to shift
  most of their social duties upon the shoulders of
  their girls. This is a great mistake. Once her
  daughters are " out," a mother should be more
  than ever on the alert in regard to her social
  obligations if she h£is their welfare at heart.
  It should be her endeavour to see that they get
  asked out to the right places to meet the right
  people, and that every opportunity is given them
  of meeting desirable friends and making suitable
  marriages. If she withholds these opportunities
  from them by any laxity in the performance of
  her social obligations, then she fails most
  lamentably in one of her most important duties
  towards them.
  
  Etiquette for the Visitor. - All caUs should be
  returned within a week or ten days. If the
  person on whom the call is due has an At Home
  day, the call should be made on her At Home
  day. Afternoon calls, or " morning calls,"
  as they ure often designated, are made between
  the hours of ^ and 6 o'clock, a first or strictly
  formal call being usually made before 4.30,
  
  
  If driving when making a call, a lady should
  send her footman to inqxiire if llrs. X is at
  home.
  
  If Iklrs. X is not at home, she should give him
  the necessary cards to leave (see p. 330).
  
  If walking when making the call, she should
  ask the servant who answers the door, " Is ilrs.
  X at home ? " If the answer is in the negative,
  the necessary cards must be left (see p. 330).
  
  If, however, the answer is in the affirmative,
  the visitor should follow the servant to the
  drawing-room, giving her name to the servant
  to be announced.
  
  Never give a visiting card to the servant when
  the mistress of the house is at home.
  
  The hostess will advance to meet the visitor
  and shake hands with her ; the \'isitor should
  then take a seat and engage in conversation
  with her hostess.
  
  A visitor should ciiltivate ease and self-
  possession in conversation and manners. A
  flurried manner will show that she is not accus-
  tomed to go out much into society.
  
  When a second guest is announced, the first
  guest should take her leave as soon as possible
  afterwards.
  
  It is not necessary for a lady to rise when
  introduced to another \a8itor.
  
  Wlien one \isitor leaves, it is not necessary
  for the other to rise. Visitors who have been
  introduced to each other at an afternoon call
  merely bow upon lea'vdng. They shoxild also
  bow if they have spoken to each other without
  being introduced.
  
  When the visitor is a gentleman, he should
  leave his hat and stick in the hall upon arrival.
  Formerly it was the custom for men to take their
  hats and sticks with them into the drawing-
  room when making calls, but this has now been
  superseded by the newer custom.
  
  A gentleman visitor should hand round the
  tea and cakes to the ladies. When a lady rises
  to leave, he should open the drawing-room door
  for her. He should of course rise each time
  another visitor enters, as no gentleman should
  remain seated whilst his hostess is standing.
  
  Receiving Calls. - A lady should always be
  careful to intimate to her parlour-maid early each
  afternoon if she will be at home or " not at
  home " to callers. When a servant is not sure
  that her mistress is free to receive visitors, and
  has to make the inquiry whilst the caller waits,
  if she comes back with the answer " not at home,"
  it might often be interpreted by the caller as
  meaning that the lady called upon is at home to
  other people but not to her. For this reason
  it is always better to give definite instructions
  as to callers early in the afternoon.
  
  The mistress of a house cannot be too care-
  ful in training her servants as to their correct
  attitude towards callers. Even the soUtary
  " general " can be made to understand that it
  is great discourtesy to leave a caller upon the
  
  
  334
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  doorstep whilst she goes to find out if her
  mistress is in ; and yet this has been done time
  after time in houses where the mistress is either
  careless in regard to the training of her servants,
  or else is notau fait herself in the social rules.
  
  If a servant is in doubt as to whether her
  mistress is " at home," she should ask the caller
  to come in, saying, " Will you come in, please,
  while I inquire," returning as soon as possible
  with the answer.
  
  \Mien the mistress of the house is at home,
  the servant should reply to the inquiry in the
  affirmative, stepping aside to allow the caller
  to enter. On wet days she should reheve the
  caller of her umbrella, any extra wraps, such £is
  mackintoshes, cloaks, &c., and then preceding
  her she should lead the way to the drawing-
  room. Outside the drawing-room door the
  servant should pause, making the inquiry,
  " WTiat name, please ? " She should Usten
  attentively to the name given by the caller, then
  opening the drawing-room door wide, and
  standing well inside the doorway - never behind
  the door - she should announce the name of the
  visitor clearly and distinctly. Should the
  mistress, however, not be in the drawing-room,
  she should merely say " My mistress will be
  down directly," or words to that effect, and
  should at once go to apprise her mistress of
  the caller's arrival.
  
  A servant should not knock at the drawing-
  room door before ushering in visitors.
  
  The hostess should never keep a caller waiting
  whUe she hastily dons another dress. If she
  has intimated to her servant her intention of
  " being at home " she should naturally be pre-
  pared to receive \'isitors, and should if possible
  bo in the drawing-room during the calUng hoiu-s.
  
  If she is in the drawing-room when the caller
  is announced, she should rise to meet her, shake
  hands, and offer her a chair near her own. If it
  is a first call and the two have therefore no
  intimate subject in common, she should lead the
  conversation to topics of general interest which
  are likely to appeal to almost every woman. It
  should be the aim of the hostess to put her guest
  at her ease, and encourage her to shine in con-
  versation. The tactful hostess can converse and
  stimulate conversation without an effort, and
  without the assistance of the inevitable post-
  card or photograph album, which form the in-
  variable resource of the hostess in suburbia who
  is unaccustomed to the etiquette of calls. (See
  the Art of Conversation, p. .352.)
  
  The servant should know that tea should be
  brou;'ht up to the drawing-room as a matter of
  course, and should bring it in at the usual time.
  If, however, the call happens to be an unusually
  early one, and the hostess is anxious that her
  guest should be shown the usual afternoon
  hospitality, she should ring the bell and indicate
  that she wishes tea served at once and before
  the usvial hour.
  
  
  When the visitor rises to take her leave, the
  hostess should ring the bell to intimate to the
  servant that she should be ready in the hall to
  show her out. If there is only one caller, the
  hostess should accompany her to the drawing-
  room door, or even to the top of the stairs,
  W8iiting until she heis gone down, as an additional
  mark of courtesy.
  
  When one or two people call on the same after-
  noon, the hostess should rise to receive each
  caller.
  
  It is always better to introduce the callers
  to each other where there are only two or three.
  Upon regulaj At Home days, when a number
  of guests are present, it is unnecessary to do
  this, the hostess using her own discretion as to
  what introductions she will make ; but on
  ordinary occasions when two or three callers
  are in the room at the same time, it is always
  more courteous to introduce them, if only for the
  purpose of including them in the general con-
  versation.
  
  If, however, there is some potent reason why
  an introduction would not be feasible between
  two callers, a tactful hostess can manage to
  draw them both into the conversation without
  introducing them.
  
  Tea is brought in by the servant, and placed
  upon a small table near the hostess. Care
  should be taken that the tea equipage is of the
  daintiest - the silver brightly poUshed, the tea-
  cups and saucers, tea-cloth and doyleys spot-
  lessly clean, and that the cakes and bread and
  butter are daintily and tastefully arranged.
  
  The hostess should pour out the tea herself ;
  she should also hand round the cups to her
  guests, unless there is a gentleman present, when
  he would be naturally expected to perform the
  ordinary courtesies in this direction.
  
  When there are two or more callers present,
  the hostess should rise and shake hands as each
  one takes leave, but she should not see each
  caller to the drawing-room door. If any one
  of the callers is of much higher rank than the
  others in the room, however, it is permissible
  for her to do so.
  
  When the host is at home he might accompany
  each departing guest down into the hall. This
  would be a special mark of courtesy. In any
  case he should see each guest to the drawing-
  room door, waiting at the top of the stairs until
  she has descended.
  
  The At Home Day. - Many people with a large
  circle of acquaintances set apart a day once a
  week or once every fortnight to receive their
  friends who wish to call upon them. This day
  thus set apart is known as an At Home day, and
  a lady always has her At Home day printed upon
  her cards. The At Home day must not be con-
  founded with the " afternoon At Home." The
  latter is a social function or afternoon party on
  a large scale, whilst the At Home day is merely
  the regular day set apart by a hostess to receive
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  335
  
  
  calls, and even although the circle of acquaint-
  ances may be so large that the number of callers
  on an At Home day is sometimes very great,
  yet the two are quite distinct.
  
  On her At Home days the hostess should of
  course be in the drawing-room all the afternoon
  ready to receive her guests ; tea should be
  brought in at the usual time, and placed upon a
  small table near the hostess.
  
  A plate-stand containing thin bread and
  butter, sandwiches, hot cakes, petits fours, or
  other small fancy cakes, and cut cake, should
  be placed near the tea-table. One of these
  stands is almost indispensable for afternoon tea,
  and the wicker ones can be obtained at very
  moderate prices. The sandwiches should be
  very deftly cut. They should be very tiny, and
  are usually in shape of a small triangle. Water-
  cress, cucumber, egg, potted meat and jam
  sandwichbs are the most suitable for afternoon
  teas.
  
  Tea is usually brought in at about four o'clock
  upon an At Home day. The mistress can always
  ring for fresh tea when she requires it. Tea
  should never be served in the dining-room ex-
  cepting on the occasion of large afternoon At
  Homes.
  
  Some ladies make it a point of never being
  " at home " to callers except upon their At Home
  days. When a lady has an At Home day, her
  friends should contrive to make their calls upon
  that day.
  
  At Home days are specially useful for people
  who, living in tho town, have a large acquaintance
  in the suburbs, or vice versd.
  
  VISITING
  
  The Guest. - When invited to stay at a friend's
  house, the visitor should keep two things well
  in mind :^
  
  1. To conform to the rules of the household.
  
  2. Never to outstay her welcome.
  
  The time for the visit is usually specified by
  the hostess, and the visitor should strictly adhere
  to it. More often than not such a plirase as
  " Can you not stay a little longer ? " is a mere
  fa^on de parler on the part of the hostess, and
  must not be taken literally.
  
  In cases where the wish of the hostess is
  manifestly sincere, and she asks you as a favour
  to stay a little longer, do so if you can manage it,
  but always remember that it is better to leave
  too soon than to stay too long.
  
  If you are just upon an ordinary visit to a
  friend's house, and perhaps the only visitor,
  your day will be well mapped out for you.
  Always be punctual in yoiu- attendance at meals.
  Be down in time for breakfast. In ordinary
  middle-class homes, where a certain routine
  prevails, breakfast is not served at all hours for
  the convenience of guests.
  
  When visiting friends, a certain amount of
  
  
  tact is indispensable. Do not always be at your
  hostess's elbow when she is busy with household
  duties ; know when to be at hand and when to
  make yourself scarce. If upon any occasion you
  see that you are in the way, and that your
  hostess is too much overburdened with a sense
  of duty towards you to leave you to your own
  devices, make some excuse in the way of letters
  to write or some other similar plea, and so leave
  her undistiirbed to whatever work she has in
  hand.
  
  Occasional little deUcate attentions on the
  part of the guest, such as a gift of a few flowers,
  are much appreciated by a hostess, conveying
  as they do that the guest appreciates the trouble
  that is being taken upon her behalf.
  
  Dress. - What dresses to take with you on a
  visit will depend altogether upon the position in
  life of your hostess. If she is in very humble
  circumstances it would be unkind to flaunt before
  her eyes fine clothes with which she cannot hope
  to compete. On the other hand, she would
  resent it if, knowing you habitually dressed well,
  you brought all your oldest and shabbiest clothes
  to wear when staying with her. WTiatever the
  circumstances, yovu- clothes should be always
  fresh and neat. A trim tailor-made for morning
  and outdoor wear is indispensable, with a good
  supply of plain and dressy blouses. An afternoon
  dress and hat, a smart demi-toilette for informal
  evenings at home, and an evening dress and
  cloak for going out to dinner-parties, &c., would
  meet the sum of your requirements for a week's
  stay.
  
  Be careful that your boots and gloves are of
  the neatest. A lady is known as such by atten-
  tion to these details.
  
  Luggage. - A common error into which women,
  and especially young girls, fall when going away
  for a short visit is in regard to the enormous
  amount of luggage they take with them. This
  on occasions proves a source of actual annoyance
  to the hostess, especially if the luggage is of a
  large and bulky nature. It not only gives extra
  trouble to the servants in carrying it upstairs,
  but on many occasions a particularly unwieldy
  trunk has caused damage to the banisters and
  wall-paper when being conveyed to the visitor's
  room. In these days of neat compact luggage,
  such a state of things is inexcusable. A neat,
  light compressed cane dress-box for a week's or
  even a fortnight's visit is sufficient, with perhaps
  a small hat-box in addition, whilst often a good-
  sized handbag will meet all the requirements of
  a week-end \isit. \Vliatever luggage you may
  take, be careful above all that it is light and of
  normal size. Let it be as smart and fresh-looking
  as possible. Shabby luggage invariably con-
  veys an unfavourable impression, yet many
  women are apt to be very negligent in this
  important detail.
  
  General Hints. - It should alwajra be the aim
  of the visitor to give sis Uttle trouble as pos-
  
  
  336
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  sible. She should in the first instance keep
  her bedroom neat and tidy. Many young
  girls have a habit of leaving their dresses here,
  there, and everywhere about the room - teeiring
  up papers and throwing them anywhere ; in
  fact, leaving their tilings in such a general state
  of disorder that it takes the housemaid quite
  a long time to put the room stredght. This
  is very thoughtless behaviour on the part of
  the guest. She should bo careful always to
  leave her bedroom scrupulously tidy. Upon
  getting up in tlie morning she might strip the
  bed of its bed-clothes, and open the windows
  wide, seeing that all her dresses are neatly put
  away before going down to breakf eist. She should
  also be very careful not to leave books and
  needlework Ijing about in the various reception
  rooms.
  
  WTiatever untidy waj's she may have fallen
  into at home, she should be careful to be most
  punctilious as far as orderliness is concerned
  when away. Many hostesses are caused ex-
  cessive annoyance by the untidiness of their
  visitors - annoyance which is all the greater, as
  etiquette forbids them to express their dis-
  approval.
  
  It is always a mark of cotortesy for a visitor to
  write a letter to her hostess as soon as possible
  after her return home, expressing the great
  pleasure she has derived from her visit. Many
  people dub this custom old-fashioned. This
  it may be, but at the same time it is one of the
  good old-feishioned customs which, happily for
  the laws of poUteness, is still de rigueur.
  
  Tips. - The question of tips is a vexed one
  and the cause of much perplexity to the average
  woman. Their amount will altogether depend
  upon the extent of the establishment of your
  hostess. Where only one servant is kept, for a
  week-end visit 28. would be sufficient ; for a
  week 3s. would about meet the case, and 5s.
  would be ample for a fortnight's stay. Where
  there are two servants, cook and housemaid,
  the housemaid only need be given a tip, for it is
  she who brings you your hot water in the morning,
  attends to your room and sees to your comfort
  generally. The same scale of tips as that
  mentioned for the one servant would be suit-
  able for her.
  
  Where there are both housemaid and parlour-
  maid, tips should be given to each upon the scale
  alreeuiy mentioned.
  
  A young girl is never expected to give so much
  as a married woman, but her tip should in no
  case be under 23. Two shillings would be ample
  for % week's visit, where one or two servants
  are kept. In houses where there are three
  servants, she might give 28. to the parlour-
  maid, and 2s. to the housemaid after a week's
  visit.
  
  Where a butler is kept a married lady staying
  without her husband, or an elderly unmarried
  lady, would naturally give him 5e. after a week's
  
  
  staj'. Young girls are never expected to tip
  men-servants.
  
  The Hostess. - The hostess .should do all in her
  power to make her guest's stay a pleasant one
  without unduly fussing over her. The latter
  attitude only serves to make the guest uncom-
  fortable and mar her enjoyment. Let your
  guest enjoy a sense of freedom, and do not always
  give her the feeling of being tied to your apron-
  strings. Study her tastes and try to conform to
  them. See that everything in her room is in
  order for her comfort - that the writing-table is
  well furnished with notepaper and ink, and the
  pin-cushion supplied with pins. The window-
  ciu"tains should be clean and bright, and a few
  flowers daintily arranged in vases would add
  materially to the cheerfulness of the room. One
  or two of the latest novels might also be placed
  on the table, and a cosy easy-chair on which she
  could recline and indulge in a qviiet read would
  be much appreciated.
  
  Attention to these little details go much
  towards contributing to the enjoyment of the
  visitor, betokening as they do the truly hospitable
  hostess. Above all, let your visitor " feel at
  home " in every way. This is the essence of
  true hospitality.
  
  Country House Visiting. - House parties at
  country houses are very popular in society, and
  in'vatations for these are most eagerly sought after.
  The hostess usually specifies the time for which
  the invitation is extended. In the case of a
  visit of this kind, the obligation of leaving at
  the proper time and not outstaying your welcome
  is more than ever imperative. Necessarily the
  number of bedrooms is Umited, and if a succes-
  sion of visitors is expected, your room will be
  required for the next visitor.
  
  During your stay you will generally find the
  morning hours free. Punctual attendance at
  breakfast is not necessary. Breakfast is served
  during certain hours, and each guest can serve
  herself when she comes down. Many takj the
  morning meal in their bedrooms. Luncheon
  also is in most cases an informal meal, when
  unpunctuahty is excusable, but never on any
  account be late for dinner. Be in the drawing-
  room at the required time beforehand, and
  never absent yourself after dinner.
  
  Try to make your hostess feel that you are
  enjoying yourself, and bo pleasant and agreeable
  to the other members of the party. Spare the
  servants unnecessary trouble on your behalf, and
  reward them suitably upon departing.
  
  Tips. - Tips on the occasion of a country-house
  visit amount to a not inconsiderable item of
  expenditure, as the wealthier and higher the
  position of your hostess the higher the rate of
  tips expected by tl.j servants. It is a general
  rule that men give more than women, and that
  very little is expected from young girls. The
  rule is to tip all those servants who perform
  special services for you. Thus where a husband
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  337
  
  
  and wife are staying together on a visit, the
  husband tips the butler, valet, coachman, and
  any other servant who has waited upon him,
  whilst the wife tips the housemaid and the
  maid who may have assisted her in dressing (if
  she has not her own maid with her). The tips
  for the maids are usually calculated at the rate
  of a shilling per day for short visits, but the tip
  should never amount to less than 5s. Where a
  guest makes use of the services of her hostess's
  lady's-maid, she should give the latter 10s.
  
  The men-servants in large houses as a rule
  expect gold from the gentlemen. An elderly
  unmarried woman, or a married woman on a
  visit without her husband, should also tip the
  butler and coachman - 10s. to the butler, and 5s.
  to the coachman for a week's visit would be
  sufficient. A man, as a rule, would give double
  these tips.
  
  In the shooting season tips to the gamekeeper
  f oiTn a very heavy item in the gentlemen's tipping
  list. Gold is absolutely de rigueiir ; for one day's
  partridge shooting the tip to the gamekeeper
  would be £1, whilst the loader would get from
  2s 6d. to 5s. Any defalcation in this direction
  on the part of a guest would be repaid the next
  season by his relegation to an impossible place
  in the battue.
  
  Dress. - Dress should be an all -important con-
  sideration to the members of a country-house
  party. Motoring and riding, as a rule, play a
  prominent part in the amusements afforded. In
  the summer, garden parties, lawn tennis and
  croquet are almost a foregone conclusion. It
  will be necessary therefore to take toilettes
  suitable for each and every function. A neat
  well-cut tailor-made is indispensable. It should
  be of the latest fashion, and made to clear the
  ground, as long skirts are particularly outre out
  of doors in the country. In the hot weather
  a good supply of dainty lingerie frocks will
  be found useful. For dinner full evening dress
  is always indispensable ; the ladies as a rule also
  change their frocks for tea, smart afternoon
  dresses being worn upon this occasion. Care
  should be taken that the dresses taken upon a
  country-house visit are all fresh and neat. The
  woman of small means will find this question of
  dress a great tax upon her resources ; but as she
  cannot hope to vie in her toilettes with hor
  wealthier sisters, let her soe that she is at least
  dressed suitably for all occasions. Though her
  dresses may be few in number, and in quality
  and style may not come up to the art of a
  Worth or a Paquin, yet if they fit well, and she is
  always suitably attired, she may rest happy in
  the knowledge that to be always suitably dressed
  is to have acquired the art of dressing well.
  
  ENTERTAINING
  
  Dinners. - Dinner -giving is one of the favourite
  methods of showing hospitality adopted by
  
  
  society ; but rash indeed would be the host and
  hostess who attempted to entertain in this
  manner without a knowledge of dinner-party
  etiquette.
  
  Invitations for large dinner-parties are issued
  three weeks beforehand ; in some cases even this
  lengthy notice is extended, more especially if
  the party is of great social importance. For
  ordinary small dinner-parties, however, from a
  week to ten days' notice is considered sufficient.
  The invitation to a dinner is always issued in
  the name of the host and hostess (see Invita-
  tions, p. 332), and an acknowledgment (whether
  acceptance or refusal) should come promptly
  from the invited guest. People should always
  be more prompt in answering invitations to a
  dinner than in any other case. So much depends
  upon just the right number of guests being
  present and their suitable pairing ; and how can
  a hostess make her arrangements in this direction
  if she does not know until the last moment which
  guests may be expected. Any discourtesy in
  this respect is not soon forgiven by a hostess,
  and the offendei is very often excluded from her
  dinners in the future.
  
  Punctuality at a dinner-party is another im-
  portant rule. It is the height of discourtesy to
  keep a hostess and her guests waiting ; always
  make a point of arriving fuUy a quarter of an
  hour before the time mentioned. 8.30 is the
  usual hour for large dinner-parties in town,
  though they may be given at any time between
  8 and 9 o'clock. In the country, however, they
  often begin as early as 7.30.
  
  Ladies take off their cloaks upon arrival in
  a room set apart for the purpose, whilst the
  gentlemen leave their hats and coats in the hall
  if there is no room set apart as a gentleman's
  cloak-room. The servant precedes each guest
  to the drawing-room and announces him or
  her in the usual way (see p. 334). Formerly a
  husband and wife upon being announced would
  enter the drawing-room arm-in-arm. This
  fashion is quite out of date now ; the lady
  enters first, and is followed by the gentleman.
  The host and hostess come forward to shake
  hands with each guest.
  
  Precedence. - The laws of precedence must be
  strictly observed at all dinner-parties (see p. 356).
  When dinner is announced by the butler (or
  parlour-maid where there is no man-servant),
  the host offers his right arm to the lady of highest
  rank and leads the way with her to the dining-
  room. The other couples follow in strict order
  of precedence, the gentleman of highest rank
  following last with the hostess. Husbands and
  wives should not be sent down together. In the
  dining-room the hostess takes the top of the
  table, the gentleman who has taken her in to
  dinner taking the place at her left hand. The
  host waits standing in his place at the bottom
  of the table until all his guests are seated - he
  indicates the places they are to take as they
  
  
  338
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  enter; the lady of highest rank seats herself at his
  right hand. At large dinner-parties a card on
  which the name of the guest is \vritten is usually
  put before each place. A lady should always
  sit at the right hand of the gentleman who has
  taken her in to dinner.
  
  At the conclusion of the dinner the hostess
  bows to tlie lady of highest rank, and the latter at
  once rises and leads the way from the dining-
  room, followed by all the ladies in the order in
  whicli they entered, the hostess following last of
  all. The gentlemen rise at the same time as the
  ladies, and remain standing until they have all
  gone out. The host or gentleman nearest the
  door opens it for them, and closes it after them.
  In the drawing-room coffee is almost immediately
  served to the ladies. Here the hostess may make
  what introductions she thinks fit between her
  lady guests. Coffee is taken to the dining-room
  a few minutes afterwards, and the gentlemen
  usually remain over their wine for about twenty
  minutes, after which they join the ladies in the
  drawing-room. The suggestion to rejoin the
  ladies is usually made by the gentleman of
  highest rank, who leads the way to the drawing-
  room, the host following last.
  
  All the guests shovdd shake hands with the
  host and hostess upon departure, and the host
  should conduct the lady guests who are unac-
  companied to their carriages.
  
  Selecting the Guests. - Much of the success of
  a dinner-party depends upon the discrimination
  exercised on the part of the 'host and hostess
  in selecting their guests. It is always as well
  to include one or two brilliant conversationalists
  in their Ust. Good talkers are invaluable at a
  function of the kind, and prove a great help to
  the host and hostess. Needless to say, people
  who are in any way uncongenial to each other
  should never be asked at the same time.
  
  To give a successful dinner-party is not such
  an easy matter as it wovdd seem. Everything
  depends upon the way it is arranged, and the
  arrangement should be well and carefully
  thought out beforehand. But " the best-laid
  schemes o' mice and men gang aftagley," and
  the guest who disappoints his or her hostess at
  the last minute is often the means of upsetting
  the most carefully -planned arrangements. Here
  again the tactful hostess should not be at a loss.
  If she hp.3 very many intimate friends and rela-
  tions she can often prevail upon one of these to
  fill the gap as a very great favour without incur-
  ring the risk of giving offence. It would not do,
  of course, to give a tardy in\'itation of the kind
  to an ordinary friend or acquaintance. To do so
  would be to commit a discourtesy which would
  often be greatly resented by the ^person so
  asked.
  
  Some Hints for the Hostess. - A hostess must
  avoid betraying any fussinoss and nervousness
  of manner over little details that at times go
  wrong at a dinner-party, however well it may be
  
  
  organised. Some women sometimes fuss them-
  selves into a veritable fever over trifling mis-
  takes that more often than not no one else will
  have noticed. A hostess should always be calm
  and at her ease whatever happens - bright and
  alert to the exigencies of conversation, having
  the tact to divert it into different channels when
  it seems to bear upon subjects which might not
  be acceptable by all present. Given a tactful
  host and hostess, the right people as guests, a
  well-selected and well-cooked dinner, choice wines
  and good service, the success of the dinner can-
  not fail to be assured.
  
  Luncheons. - There is a pleasing absence of
  ceremony about luncheons that commends
  itself to many, and for tliis reason luncheon
  parties within recent years have attained a
  considerable vogue. It is at luncheon that a
  hostess is in the habit of entertaining her more
  intimate friends, and the informal little gather-
  ings at the luncheon hour are, as a rule,
  wholly enjoyable both for the hostess and for
  her guests.
  
  Formerly at ordinary luncheons the servant,
  after having handed round the first dishes, would
  retire from the room leaving the hostess and
  her guests to serve themselves to sweets. It is
  more general now for the servants to hand round
  the dishes and remove the plates after each
  course, the guests helping themselves between
  whiles ; whilst at strictly formal luncheon
  parties waiting is de rigueur. Where there are
  children in a family these are generally present
  at the luncheon table.
  
  When expected guests arrive at the luncheon
  hour they are shown at once to the dining-room,
  but should they arrive beforehand, the hostess
  receives them in the drawing-room. The guests
  do not enter the dining-room arm-in-arm as for
  dinner, but singly, the ladies going first and the
  gentlemen following them.
  
  All the ladies should not sit together, however ;
  each gentleman should place himself beside a
  lady, if the places are not previously allotted
  by the hostess. The hostess usually leads the
  way with the lady of highest rank to the dining-
  room, or the host should do so if he is present,
  the hostess following last. The laws of prece-
  dence are not usually strictly in force, although
  it will be found that a woman of good breeding
  will invariably make way for one of higher
  rank than herself, so precedence is seldom
  altogether disregarded even at an informal
  luncheon party. Ladies should not remove
  their hats for lunch, but they may take off their
  wraps. When the host is present, the gentlemen
  guests usually remain in the dining-room with
  him for a short time after luncheon when the
  ladies have adjourned to the drawing-room.
  The hostess gives the signal for this adjourn-
  ment to the lady of highest rank present, and
  the latter leads the way out, the hostess following
  last. Where the host is not present, however,
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  339
  
  
  gentlemen and ladies leave the room at the
  same time. Coffee is losually brought into the
  dining-room at the end of luncheon.
  
  Formal invitations are very rarely given to
  luncheon parties, a verbal invitation in many
  cases being deemed sufficient. Very Uttle
  notice is necessary, but in the case of a formal
  party a week's notice is sometimes given. The
  usual hour for luncheon is from 1.30 to 2. It is
  etiquette for the guests to leave as soon as
  possible after the adjournment to the dravsing-
  room, unless they are specially requested to
  stay longer by the hostess. Strict punctilious-
  ness must be observed in this respect.
  
  Afternoon At Homes. - There is no more
  favoiu-ite social fimiction for ladies, from both
  the point of view of the hostess and the point
  of view of the guest, than the afternoon At
  Home. It is a form of entertainment that
  recommends itself above all to the hostess of
  limited means, because it is one that can be
  effected upon quite a small scale, and at the
  same time enables her to make some sort of
  return for the hospitality she may have received
  from her wealthier friends.
  
  The kinds and styles of afternoon At Homes are
  many and various. There is the large party
  given on the scale of an evening reception, when
  sometimes over two hundred guests are invited.
  An At Home given on this scale necessitates
  almost as much preparation as for an evening
  reception. Usually on these occasions some
  high professional talent is engaged for the en-
  tertainment of the guests. At large At Homes
  an awning should be '^ut up, and a carpet set
  down at the front entrance, and cloak-rooms
  should be provided. Refreshments should be
  served in the dining-room from a long table or
  buffet, and the tea and coffee shoxild be poured
  out and handed round by the maid -servants,
  the gentlemen usually helping themselves to
  champagne cup or other refreshment. (For
  refreshments given at large afternoon At Homes,
  see p. 252.)
  
  The lady guests are escorted to the tea-room
  by the gentlemen.
  
  At large At Homes the hostess should receive
  her guests at the drawing-room door, which
  should remain open, the hostess standing within
  the doorway. Servants should always be in
  attendance to call the guests' carriages as they
  leave, and the hostess does not ring the bell to
  signalise each departure as on the occasion of
  afternoon calls.
  
  Small At Homes. - Small At Homes are those
  to which a small number of friends are invited,
  and as a rule no special entertainment is pro-
  vided. The hostess receives her guests in the
  drawing-room as at afternoon calls (see p. 334).
  Tea may be served in the dining-room or in
  the drawing-room - generally in the former ;
  although if the number of guests is very limited
  it is better to serve it in the drawing-room. It
  
  
  is handed round to the ladies by the gentlemen
  present.
  
  At large At Homes entertainments of some
  kind are usually provided, but at small At
  Homes the hostess should be on the alert to
  entertain her guests. She should move amongst
  them freely and join in their conversation.
  The guests are free to move about as they like
  and speak to their various acquaintances on
  these occasions.
  
  Invitations to large afternoon At Homes
  should be sent out a fortnight in advance, and
  for small afternoon At Homes a week in advance.
  (See Invitations, p. 332.)
  
  Bridge Teas. - Afternoon At Homes are some-
  times given for the purpose of playing bridge.
  Parties of this kind are known as Bridge Teas,
  and they usually begin about 3.30. It is neces-
  sary for the guest to arrive fairly punctually on
  these occasions.
  
  For a Bridge Tea an informal note of invita-
  tion is usually sufficient.
  
  Evening Parties. - Evening parties vary con-
  siderably as to their quahty and extent, from the
  briUiant official or poUtical reception graced by
  all the shining Ughts of diplomacy and politics,
  to the simple little social gathering at which the
  guests must rely solely upon the host and
  hostess, and the congenial company provided,
  for their entertainment. The strictly official
  and diplomatic parties axe termed " Receptions,"
  and are occasions of the utmost formality. All
  other evening parties are termed " At Homes."
  
  At Homes may be given on a very large or upon
  a very modest scale. At the large evening At
  Homes some form of entertainment is usually
  provided for the guests, and an elaborate supper
  is one of the features of the evening ; whilst for
  the smaller At Homes the entertainment is of
  qviite informal nature, and only light refresh-
  ments are served.
  
  At large At Homes the hostess should receive
  her guests at the head of the stairs or just inside
  the drawing-room door, whilst the host is in the
  drawing-room to welcome them as they enter.
  The approach to the front entrance should be
  carpeted, an awning should be put up, and a
  servant should be in attendance to open the
  carriage doors for the guests as they eirrive, and
  to summon carriages and cabs for them as they
  leave.
  
  Cloak-rooms should be placed at the disposal
  of both ladies and gentlemen, and tea and coffee
  should be served to the guests as soon as they
  arrive. The nature of tlie entertainment to be
  provided is usually specified on the inxntation
  cards - professional humorists at the piano,
  raconteurs, &c. Pierrot troupes are now very
  much the vogue for evening At Homes. The
  hours for these evening functions vary from
  about 10 or 10.30 till about 1, although At
  Homes given on a Saturday should end at
  midnight. Supper is served usually about
  
  
  340
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  11 o'clock. Tlie host should take the lady of
  highest rank present in to supper. On ordinary
  occasions the hostess usually likes to see the
  principal guests in to supper before following
  herself ; but if she does not require to do tliis
  she should follow the host with the gentleman
  of the highest rank. When a royal prince is
  present at a social function of the kind she
  should lead the way to the supper -room with
  the royal guest.
  
  At small informal parties where hght refresh-
  ments only are served, the gentlemen as a rule
  escort the ladies to the room in which is the
  buffet, and help them to whatever they require.
  
  It is not necessary to take leave of the host
  and hostess after receptions.
  
  Hiring Suites of Rooms. - In many cases a
  hostess is unwilling to turn her house topsy-
  turvy for the sake of a large reception or an
  evening party. In these circumstances she en-
  gages a suit" of rooms at an hotel or elsewhere
  in which to entertain her guests. Most of the
  large hotels make the letting out of rooms for
  these occasions a special feature of their business,
  and will also undertake the entire catering if
  required. Rooms other than hotel suites may
  also be had suitable for the purpose ; town halls,
  galleries, rooms belonging to various institutions,
  &c., are let for these occasions, and may be had
  for quite a moderate sura.
  
  Caterers. - The large catering firms nowadays
  cater for all sorts of parties at a certain figure
  per head, sending their own trained servants,
  and providing cutlery, glass, decorations, napery,
  and everything necessary to the attendance and
  table equipment. When a hostess is giving a
  reception at her own home, she can do so with
  the minimum of trouble if she has secured the
  services of a good firm of caterers. The trained
  servants sent out by these firms are all experts
  in regard to the formalities required, and all the
  usual incidental details which prove such a source
  of anxiety to the hostess will be taken off her
  hands. In small estabUshments manned by a
  proportionately small staff of servants whore an
  entertainment has been planned on a scale much
  beyond the average resources of the household,
  the caterer's aid is invaluable. And what is not
  the least recommendation of the catering system
  is, that everything is cleared away and the house
  restored to its normal order within the least
  possible time, and with the minimum of delay by
  the assistants who are sent down for the purpose,
  the household being usually enabled to resume
  its normal routine on the very next day. Only
  tiiose who have experienced the usual domestic
  upheaval which follows any large entertainment
  will be able to appreciate to the full extent the
  benefit conveyed in this manner.
  
  Bridge Parties. - " Bridge " forms the raiaon
  d'Stre of another very popular kind of evening
  party. A bridge party usually begins about nine
  o'clock, and all the guests should bo punctual in
  
  
  their arrival. In most cases prizes are awarded to
  the winners in the game. There is a prize for
  ladies and a prize for gentlemen. In some cases
  second prizes are also awarded. The hostess
  should show a httle discrimination in the selection
  of the prizes, choosing articles that would be Ukely
  to appeal to the recipients of both sexes. Some-
  times very handsome prizes are given, but there
  is no need to go to great expense as long as the
  gifts are suitable. The card tables are usually
  numbered, and small cards are given to the
  guests as they enter, on which the number
  of each table is specified, together with the
  names of the four guests who have to sit at
  each table. Coffee is usually brought in to the
  drawing-room for the guests at the beginning of
  the evening. Either supper or hght refreshments
  are served during the evening. In most cases
  supper is given at the end of the play about mid-
  night or soon after, but in some cases it is served
  earUer in the evening, and the play resumed
  afterwards. The host leads the way to the
  supper -room with his partner in the game. The
  other partners follow, the hostess following last
  of all with her partner.
  
  Balls and Dances. - Dancing has ever been, and
  ever will be, the favourite form of amusement
  amongst the young people of both sexes ; it
  follows, therefore, that the most popular enter-
  tainment that can be given by a hostess is a ball
  or a dance. A ball is a dance given upon a very
  large scale. A great number of invitations ewe
  sent out ; the arrangements for supper are
  most elaborate, the floral decorations are of the
  best, and a full band is engaged for the benefit
  of the dancers. To give a ball in the true
  sense of the word is to entail a very la\'i8h expon-
  diture ; for this reason an entertainment of the
  kind can only be contemplated by a hostess
  who is abundantly furnished with this world's
  goods.
  
  At a dance the arrangements are not so
  ambitious. The number of in\'itation8 issued
  seldom amount to more than 100 to 150 ; the
  decorations, though tasteful, are simple and not
  costly. The supper is not upon such an elaborate
  scale as that of a ball, and in many cases no set
  supper is given, light refreshments served from
  a buffet being considered sufficient, whilst the
  music is often supplied by a pianist unaided by
  other instrumentalists.
  
  In issuing invitations for a dance, the hostess
  should be careful not to ask more guests than
  will be able to dance comfortably upon the floor
  provided. There is no pleasure in the crowded
  dance, when it is impossible for the dancers to
  take two clear steps at a time without getting
  into the way of some other couple. Excessive
  crushes detract materially from every one's
  enjoyment, and to avoid them should be the
  first consideration. A good floor in the dancing
  room is of the utmost importance. The floor
  should be level and well pohshed ; for a small
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  341
  
  
  dance a smooth drugget of brown Holland well
  stretched over the carpet will be found to meet
  all requirements, but in many houses nowadays
  the floors are of parquetry, the carpeting con-
  sisting solely of rugs which can easily be removed.
  In these circumstances, as a poUshed floor is the
  floor par excellence for dancing, the floor should
  be polished. (For a good method of Floor
  Polishing, see p. 66.) The hostess must have
  a certain number of rooms to place at the dis-
  posal of her guests. There should be a cloak-
  room for the ladies, with a maid or maids in
  attendance. Where a large number of guests
  are present, it is as well to have books of dupU-
  cate cloak-room tickets, a ticket to be attached
  to each cloak, and the dupUcate handed to the
  owner. A good supply of needles and cotton,
  tape, pins, &c., should also be available, as
  scarcely a dance passes without some Uttle
  accident in the way of torn skirts and flounces.
  The largest room should of course be devoted to
  the dancing. The halls and landings might serve
  as lounges. They should be tastefully arranged
  with cosy chairs, palms and flowers. At large
  dances there should be, in addition to the supper-
  room, a room set aside for light refreshments,
  which should be served tliroughout the evening.
  This extra room would not be required at
  smaller dances. A room should also be set
  aside in which the gentlemen can leave their
  coats and hats, as if the hall is utilised for the
  purpose it does away with all possibility of its
  being used for a lounge. Where the hall is so
  small, however, that it could not be used for a
  lounge in any case, tl.a gentlemen might leave
  their coats and hats there, faiUng any other
  room. The doors of the dancing-room are
  usually removed for the occasion.
  
  Where one of the reception-rooms has to be
  utilised as a dancing -room, there is not so much
  scope for decoration as in the larger establish-
  ments with a regular ball-room. The room
  should be well lighted, however, and it should if
  possible be decorated in one colour scheme. For
  instance, the lights could be shaded with pink
  shades, the mantelpiece and fireplace could be
  covered with banks of pink roses or pink
  carnations. At very large balls the floral
  decorations form a very considerable item of
  expenditure - the banisters are decked with
  veritable banks of flowers, floral arches are
  erected over some of the doorways; in fact,
  every available space is literally covered with
  tastefully arranged blossoms. A decorative
  scheme of the kind, however, is not as a rule
  within the ken of the average hostess, but she
  should make a point of introducing pretty
  floral decoration wherever possible to add to
  the charm of the surroundings.
  
  It is always as well that some male friend or
  relation of the hostess should be deputed to
  fulfil the dutif^" of master '^f the ceremonies.
  The daughteis of the house also should afford
  
  
  their mother all the assistance in their power
  before giving themselves up to the enjoyment
  of the evening. Where a number of elderly
  people are present as chaperons, cards or any
  other similar entertainment might be organised
  in another room, when space permits, on their
  behalf.
  
  Music. - The music shoiild always be of the
  very best. A piano and one or two stringed
  instruments form an ideal combination, but
  where a piano' alone is provided, at all events
  let the pianist be a professional well used to
  dance music. There is nothing more trying for
  the dancers than to be compelled to dance to an
  indifferent musical accompaniment. Some one
  should be at hand to take the pianist's place
  when the latter has to go to supper. This is an
  important detail which must on no account
  be overlooked. One of the daughters of the
  house, if a good musician, could well take the
  place for this short interval.
  
  Receiving the Guests. - The hostess should
  stand at the head of the staircase or at the door
  of the dancing -room to receive her guests. She
  should shake hands -n^th the guests as they
  arrive. Gentlemen and ladies do not enter the
  dancing-room arm-in-arm. The ladies go first,
  the gentlemen follow. Programmes with the
  order of the dances are handed to the guests,
  although at some of the largest private balls
  dance pro^ammes have been to a great extent
  done away with. The dance is usually opened
  by the hostess herself, or if she has grown-up
  daughters, by one of her daughters. It is
  etiquette for the men present to ask the daughters
  of the hostess for at least one dance. The host
  should take the lady of the highest rank in to
  supper. The laws of precedence in regard to the
  other guests are usually waived at dances. As
  a rule, they pair among themselves and follow
  according to their inclination ; but the host
  must always lead the way to the supper -room.
  
  Fashionable Dances. - Among the favourite
  dances now in vogue are the valse, quadrilles,
  lancers, polka, two-step, cotillion and Sir Roger
  de Coverley. A dance usually begins from
  9.30 to 10 o'clock ; in the case of a small
  dance, carriages as a rule can be called between
  2 and 2.30, but the larger dances are carried
  on till any time up to 4 in the morning. Cinder-
  ella dances are so called because they end at mid-
  night. Where a dance is given upon a Saturday
  it usually takes the form of a Cinderella.
  
  Public Balls. - Public balls are those for which
  tickets are sold. It is always as well to form a
  party to attend these functions, otherwise there
  is not much chance of an enjoyable evening, it
  being impossible to dance with people with whom
  one is unacquainted.
  
  County Balls form the chief events of the
  season in the country. All the best people
  invite large house parties for the purpose of
  attending them, and the event as a rule is one
  
  
  342
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  of some social importance. Charity balls and
  ordinary subscription dances also come under
  this heading of public balls. The dances of the
  kind given in London are many and various, and
  the tickets vary in price according to the scale
  upon which the dances arc given.
  
  Private Subscription Dances. - Sometimes pri-
  vate subscription dances are got up amongst
  friends. The arrangements are usually in the
  hands of two or three ladies, who circulate the
  news of the dance and the price of the tickets
  amongst the people of their acquaintance. A
  room and a band are liired, and the arrangements
  placed in the hands of a firm of caterers. For a
  dance of this kind to be a success a great deal
  of organising capacity on the part of the pro-
  moters is necessary.
  
  Etiquette at Naval, Military, and Hunt Balls. -
  These functions as a rule are brilliant in the
  extreme. In the first two cases the officers, and
  in the last case the members of the Hunt appear
  in uniform, and the scene is usually very pic-
  t\iresque. Large parties are usually formed for
  attendance at these balls. It is always necessary
  on these occeisions for the guests to bring their
  cards of invitation with them and hand them to
  the official in charge.
  
  Juvenile Parties. - Christmas time may well
  be called the cliildren's season, for it is the
  pivot as it were round which all the juvenile par-
  ties revolve. Most of them take place during the
  Christmas holidays, and seldom is such whole-
  hearted enjoyment manifested by grown ups
  and little ones alike as on the occasion of a really
  well -managed juvenile party.
  
  These parties vary a great deal as to the nature
  of the entertainment provided. Sometimes they
  take the form of regular miniature balls with
  dancing as the chief amusement, the tiny
  partners copying in every way the manners and
  etiquette of the grown ups. Parties of this kind
  are more suitable for boys and girls of from
  twelve years of age and upwards - the very tiny
  tots are apt to become too precocious by frequent
  attendance at miniature dances. On the other
  hand, attending an occsisional juvenile dance
  is good for the little ones, ineismuch as it has a
  good influence upon their manners and goes a
  long way towards curing any tendency to ex-
  cessive shyness they may possess.
  
  The best form of juvenile party, however, is
  that in which dancing is combined with other
  forms of amusements in which the very little tots
  as well as the elder boys and girls may throw
  themselves whole-heartedly into the enjoyment
  provided. Old-fashioned games such as forfeits,
  blind man's buff, &c., can bo indulged in, and
  these should always be organised by one or two
  of the younger grown ups who understand
  children, and are not above taking a part in the
  game themselves.
  
  A magic lantern is also an entertainment
  appreciated by the little ones, and at Christmas
  
  
  time a Christmas tree from which presents are
  distributed, a lucky bag, or a bran pie will be
  found to appeal greatly to the juvenile idea of
  enjoyment.
  
  The time for children's parties depends to a
  great extent upon the scope and charaxjter of
  the entertainment provided. Four till seven
  would be the correct time for an ordinary tea-
  party with games. Five to ten is a favourite
  time for parties on a more elaborate scale at
  which dancing combined with games and other
  entertainments are provdided. For a juvenile
  ball, six to eleven is a favourite hour, very often
  the proceedings terminating with a grown-up
  dance as soon as the juvenile party is concluded.
  
  Organising a Children's Party. - A children's
  party requires careful organising. The necessity
  for the company to include one or two grown ups,
  who can arrange games and take part in them
  themselves, has already been pointed out. Tea
  should be served about half-an-hour after the
  time notified for the arrival of the Uttle ones.
  Plenty of bread and butter, cut cake and
  cakes of all kind should be provided. If the
  party is to be over very early and no other meal
  is given, it is better to have tea later in the
  afternoon, and to make jellies and creams a
  feature of the tea menu, not omitting bon-bons,
  which should always be provided at parties for
  the little ones, as they invariably prove an irre-
  sistible source of enjoyment.
  
  Where several forms of entertainment are
  given, at least three rooms should be at the dis-
  posal of the httle ones, one for tea and supper,
  one for dancing, and one for games. Tea and
  supper could be served in the dining-room,
  dancing could proceed in the drawing-room,
  and the games could be held in the morning-room
  or library. Failing this extra room, however,
  the drawing-room could be made to do duty for
  both dancing and games.
  
  Tlie games should take place after tea and Isist
  about an hour. After this the little ones nhould
  have a short time for dancing, then the conjuring
  or other entertainments could be giver. This
  order of course can be varied in accordance with
  indi\ndual requirements. Presents from the
  Christmas tree are usually given towards the
  end of the evening. (See Indoor Games.)
  
  Light refreshments are usually provided for
  the children before they leave, whilst at juvenile
  balls a regular supper is provided. The hght
  refreshments should include lemonade, sand-
  wiches, jollies, creams, fruit, and ices where
  possible.
  
  Garden Parties. - The summer season has its
  own special programme of entertainments which
  occur year after year with unvarying regularity.
  Chief amongst these is the garden party, a
  favourite form of entertainment with both
  young and old. June and July are the favourite
  months for town garden parties, August and
  September for those given in the country.
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  343
  
  
  Invitations are usually sent out three weeks
  beforehand in the name of the hostess, and it is
  usual to specify upon the card any particular
  entertainment to be provided (see Invitations,
  p. 332). The success of the function of course
  will materially depend upon the weather ; but
  guests are expected to turn up if it is fine or
  wet, unless there is a regular and persistent down-
  pour of rain. Every hostess, however, should
  be prepared for eventualities, and the wise
  hostess takes care to have one or two rooms in
  readiness in which she can receive her guests,
  and in which tea and other refreshments can
  be served and entertainment provided. She wiU
  be able to regulate matters to such an extent
  that she can with no trouble transpose her
  garden party into a regular afternoon At Home,
  and send her guests away wholly satisfied with
  their entertainment however unpropitious the
  weather iray have been.
  
  Garden parties may be given upon a large or
  a small scale. For the simple httle family affair
  where the guests number from twenty to thirty
  young people who have been invited to play a
  friendly game of tennis, the arrangements can
  be of the simplest. In this case tennis wiU be
  the raiaon cfUre of the entertainment. The
  young people should arrive in suitable tennis
  attire, and simple refreshments in the way of
  lemonade and other cooling drinks, and ices
  where possible, might be handed round at
  intervals to the guests. Tea could be served
  either in the garden or indoors. One point to
  be remembered is that in the strawberry season
  there should always be an ample supply of
  strawberries and cream - there is nothing in the
  way of light refreshments which will be more
  appreciated by the young people. It adds
  materially to the enjoyment of the party to have
  a director of games who will arrange the different
  sets with due regard to the capabihties of the
  players.
  
  Large Garden Parties. - At large garden parties
  the arrangements are upon a much more elabo-
  rate scale. A marquee is usually erected upon
  the lawn, and there tea, ices, and all kinds of
  light refreshments, including champagne cup,
  claret cup and strawberries and cream, grapes,
  peaches and melons are served. More often
  than not a band is engaged to play, and in this
  case a bandstand must be erected for the
  occasion. Smaller tents are often found here
  and there in the garden for fortune-tellers,
  palmistry, &c. The entertainments provided
  for the guests axe many and various, and the
  number of people invited very large. The
  ladies should wear the lightest and daintiest of
  summer dresses. Laces and flimsy muslins are
  the most suitable materials for young people.
  Serges and stuff dresses would be out of place.
  The hostess receives her guests upon the lawn.
  They should all go up and shake hands with her
  upon arrival, and introduce the friends they
  
  
  have brought as " party " before they mingle
  with the crowd and seek out their acquaintances.
  The hostess does not at a garden paxty intro-
  duce people, but leaves them to find their own
  friends.
  
  Plefreshments may be served in the house, if
  preferred. In any case, it is always as well to
  serve a great part of the refreshments indoors
  in case of weather eventualities in the shape
  of unexpected thunder-storms, showers, &c., it
  being wiser not to place too much reliance upon
  the clerk of the weather even under the most
  favourable auspices. At very large garden
  parties given in the country during the season
  it is usual to provide special trains for the con-
  veyance of the guests from toTSTi. In these
  cases the times of the different trains are speci-
  fied on the back of the invitation cards. It is
  always courteous for the guests to take leave
  of the hostess before going, whenever possible.
  Garden parties as a rule last from 3.30 till about
  7. The hours are generally specified upon the
  cards of invitation.
  
  Picnics. - Of the many entertainments peculiar
  to the summer season, a well-organised picnic
  is perhaps the most enjoyable. Picnics should
  only be arranged when the fine weather seems
  to have well settled in, and in this respect one
  important thing the women of the peirty should
  keep in mind is to dress in accordance with the
  weather, if they do not wish their enjoyment
  to be altogether marred. This ad\ace is some-
  times a little hard to follow. In many instances
  a picnic is by way of being a notable event to
  one or two of the young girls amongst the guests.
  They will have pro^^ded themselves with dainty
  toilettes for the occasion. Judge of their chagrin
  therefore if the day dawns threatening and
  cloudy, if not actually wet. But if they are to
  have their full sum of enjoj'ment they must
  resist all temptation to wear their cherished
  finery and don some dress more smtable to the
  weather - otherwise throughout the day they
  will be worried about the chances of spoiling
  their fine clothes, and even if they do not actually
  do that, they run the risk of catcliing a heavy
  cold which will probably have the effect of
  preventing them from joining any other picnic
  parties of the season. It will be well, therefore,
  to be wise in time, and let no other consideration
  but common -sense prevail in the choice of their
  attire.
  
  Good Organisation Necessary. - For a picnic
  to be a complete success, it is necessary that it
  should be well organised at the outset, and that
  no detail should be overlooked. A great deal in
  the first instance depends upon the selection of
  a suitable spot. England is replete with beauti-
  ful little country places abounding in romantic
  scenery. Very often some historical ruin is the
  centre of these rural spots ; in the case of an
  exciu'sion to one of these the picnic would
  therefore be instructive as well as amusing.
  
  
  344
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Then the riverside places abound in beautiful
  scenery, and present the addition£il attractive
  prospect of a pleasant row to vary the programme
  of the day. When one hves in the country, the
  opportunities for picnics are of course unUmited,
  but near every town there are rural spots easily
  reached by train or tram at small expense, and
  the prospect of a picnic may be said to be even
  more attractive to the dwellers in the town
  than it is to the dwellers in the country.
  
  Small Picnics. - For a small party a picnic is
  a comparatively simple matter, one or two tea-
  baskets equipped with the necessary table
  requisites, such as cups and saucers, spoons,
  forks, knives, plates, methylated spirits lamp
  upon which to boil the water, a kettle which
  usually consists of a teapot and kettle com-
  bined, tins for the biscuits, cakes and bread and
  butter, salt, &c., will hold these and all the other
  necessary provisions. Nothing as a rule is for-
  gotten in a properly equipped tea-basket, and
  the tins are usually labelled in accordance with
  the goods they are to contain, so there is no
  chance of anything being overlooked. Special
  sets of grease-proof paper plates and dishes are
  sold for picnics. They may be had in all sizes
  and include meat plates, dishes, pudding plates,
  tea plates, &c. A picnic -box containing a com-
  plete set of cardboard dishes and plates sufficient
  for a small picnic may be purchased for 9M.
  Small baskets containing ample provisions for a
  picnic may also be had at very moderate prices
  from most caterers.
  
  Large Picnics. - For large parties, however, tea
  or luncheon baskets will not hold sufficient. It
  is always as well to take one tea-basket on
  account of its handy equipment in the way of
  methylated spirits lamps, tins for condiments,
  &c., but a large hamper should be requisitioned
  for the packing of the provisions.
  
  If the picnic is to be for luncheon, a properly
  equipped luncheon basket with glasses, knives,
  forks, &c., should be taken together with two
  other hampers, one to contain the wine, lemonade,
  &c., the other the table-cloth and various
  articles of food. In packing these bsiskets care
  should be taken to put the heaviest articles at
  the bottom of the basket and to place the tilings
  in the basket as nearly as possible in the order
  in which they will be required, leaving the table-
  cloth uppermost. It is as well also beforehand
  to make a list of everything that is to be packed,
  and to check this hst before the provisions are
  placed in their respective baskets.
  
  Packing the Provisions. - An important thing
  to remember in regard to a picnic is the fact that
  " loo many cooks spoil the broth." One or two
  persons at most should be held responsible for
  seeing that the proper things are placed in their
  respective baskets. If too many interfere, the
  chances are that each one will show a tendency
  to leave the details to the others, with the result
  that many things will be overlooked. Very
  
  
  often a picnic is for tea alone ; but if it is pro-
  posed to make a day of it, the host will often
  arrange for luncheon to be supplied at some
  rural inn first, and for the tea picnic to take
  place afterwards ; or else the luncheon may be
  taken in the open air and tea subsequently
  provided at the inn. It is always as well for
  the host to have some knowledge of the locality
  of the place in which the picnic is given. He
  should always know the nearest country inn in
  the neighbourhood in the case of the provisions
  falling short, or some important table necessity
  having been overlooked, in which case the
  deficiency could be easily supplied.
  
  The informal picnics where people wait upon
  each other are by far the most enjoyable.
  Wealthy people as a rule motor down to the spot
  selected, sending their servants beforehand to
  make all arrangements. The latter remain to
  wait upon the party, and are responsible for
  things going right in the way of food supplies.
  It cannot be denied that picnics are enjoyable
  under these circumstances, more especially to
  those who Uke to take things easily, but after all
  a picnic is an informal gathering at best, and to
  rob it of its informality is to rob it of half of its
  charm. At large parties it is of course necessary
  to have one or two servants to take charge of
  the provisions in transit, to unpack them, to
  open the wine, and to repack the things when
  finished with ; but during the meal let them be
  as little in evidence as possible. The guests will
  far prefer to help each other and to help them-
  selves.
  
  Contribution Picnics. - Sometimes a picnic is
  organised by three or four people. In this way
  the individual expenses are very materially
  lessened. For a picnic of this kind, however,
  good organisation is more than ever essential if
  things are not to go wrong. The ladies should
  agree between themselves as to what part of the
  entertainment each is to be responsible for, and
  what provisions each is to supply. Only in this
  way can the dangers of both omission and over-
  lapping be averted.
  
  Boating Parties. - Very often a boating party
  is made the raieon d'Hre of a picnic. The boats
  must be hired in suitable time, and care must
  be taken to include good oarsmen in the party.
  Either provisions are taken in tea-baskets or else
  one of the many riverside hotels is fixed upon
  beforehand for tea, and the rowing party makes
  this spot its destination. The party very often
  returns home by train on these occasions.
  
  Steam Launch Parties. - Steam launches can
  also bo hired by the day for picnics. Many
  people club together to share in the expense, and
  the company is as a rule a very large one. Gener-
  ally a riverside place where tea may be had is
  fixed upon as the destination of the party, and
  they return home by launch also. On the
  whole, it may be said that outdoor parties of
  any kind given during the summer are of all
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  345
  
  
  forms of entertainment the most enjoyable,
  providing that the fickle clerk of the weather is
  in a sunny mood and that the company gives
  itself up whole-heartedly to the enjoyment of
  the hour, leaving the worries of the moment to
  take C6ire of themselves.
  
  WEDDING ETIQUETTE
  
  The Engaged Girl. - When one of the daughters
  of a household becomes engaged to be married,
  there are many points of etiquette to be kept
  in mind, both by herself and her parents and
  the parents of her fiance.
  
  In the first place, after the announcement of
  an engagement, the father, mother and relatives
  of the bridegroom to be must at once make
  the acquaintance of the bride and her relations
  if they have not been previously acquainted.
  They should call upon the father and mother of
  the intended bride as soon as possible, and their
  calls must be returned with the utmost promp-
  titude. It must be borne in mind by both
  famiUes, that if they are to avoid that unpleasing
  state of friction which is often manifested be-
  tween the relations-in-law of a young couple,
  they must begin by avoiding any little breach
  of etiquette which is likely to cause offence on
  either side, and which often is the beginning of
  actual lack of harmony between relations by
  marriage.
  
  The bridegroom's relations will of course wish
  to make the acquaintance of their son's future
  bride. For this purpose it is usual for them
  to ask the latter upon a short visit, as soon as
  the engagement is announced.
  
  The visit to her future relations is one of the
  most trying ordeals a young engaged girl has
  to undergo. She knows that at the best, the
  attitude of her fiance's parents towards her
  ■Rail be one of criticism, and that they are in-
  wardly debating within themselves whether she
  is really good enough for their son.
  
  A tactful girl, however, will come triumphantly
  through this ordeal. She will always bear in mind
  that she is taking the son away from his people,
  as it were, and this will make her all the more
  considerate towards the family in which she is
  about to enter. She will refrain from mono-
  polising all his time, for instance, and from
  flaunting that air of proprietorship wMch in
  some girls is particularly aggressive. She will
  encourage him to continue in all the little
  attentions he was wont to bestow upon his
  father imd mother, and not exact the whale of
  liis attention to herself. She will, in fact, so
  ingratiate herself with every one by her un-
  selfishness and consideration that by the time
  her visit is over, she will be looked upon by all
  as a decided acquisition to the family, and her
  fiance will have the satisfaction of knowing
  his choice is unanimously approved.
  
  Conduct of tne Engaj,ed Couple. - An engaged
  
  
  couple should be careful not to advertise the
  fact too freely to the world at large. Any
  effusive demonstration in public is the height of
  bad form. A girl who insists, for instance, at a
  dance on dancing all the evening with her fiance
  is guilty of a grave transgression against the
  laws of etiquette.
  
  Engaged couples are nowadays allowed much
  more of each other's society than in olden times.
  Independence is th: motto of the age, and the
  young girl acts up to it by going about with
  her fiance to places of public amusement un-
  chaperoned. To act strictly in accordance with
  etiquette, however, a young girl should always
  be chaperoned by one of her relatives on these
  occasions. It is a rule which is as often as not
  honoured in the breach as in the observance,
  but it is a rule which prevails all the same.
  
  Where the engagement is to be a short one, it
  is better for the engaged couple not to go out
  much into society except amongst their relatives
  and friends. If the engagement is destined to
  be a long one, however, this rule cannot be
  observed.
  
  Breaking off an Engagement. - In the case of
  an engagement being broken off, all letters and
  presents on both sides should be returned with
  the least possible delay.
  
  Fixing the Wedding Day. - The choice of the
  wedding day remains with the future bride, as
  tliis has been her time-honoured pri\alege. There
  are certain superstitions in regard to weddings
  which she should do well to bear in mind if she
  does not wish to go against the prejudices of
  elderly and superstitious relatives, ilay, for
  instance, for some reason or other is considered
  an unlucky month for a wedding, and the
  Lenten season is as a rule avoided in regard to
  the celebration of marriage. In older times
  the solemnisation of marriage in tliis season was
  forbidden, so it may be said that the reluctance
  of the average bride to have her wedding in Lent
  has its rise in a tradition handed down from the
  past.
  
  Forms of Marriage. - ^The wedding day fixed,
  the next tiling to be thought of is in what form
  the marriage is to take place. There are four
  different modes of celebration of marriage in
  England. They are-
  Marriage by Banns.
  
  Marriage by Ordinary Licence.
  
  Marriage by Special Licence.
  
  Marriage by Registrar.
  
  Marriage by Banns. - This is the form of
  marriage most usually adopted. Banns must
  be published on tliree consecutive Sundays in
  the parish in which the prosisective bridegroom
  resides, and also in the parish in wliich the
  prospective bride resides, and both must have
  resided in their respective parishes fifteen days
  previously to the first publication of the banns.
  The marriage must take place within three
  months of the banns being published, or re-
  
  
  346
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  publication will be rendered necessary. The
  marriage must be solemnised in one of tlie
  churches where the banns were pubhshed, and
  the clergyman of the other church must give a
  certi6cate of such publication to the clergyman
  about to perforin the ceremony.
  
  By Ordinary Licence. - Marriage by hcence is
  a convenient alternative to the pubUcation of
  banns. In London application should bo made
  by one of the parties to be married at the Vicar
  General's office at the Court of Faculties, or
  at the Bishop of London's Registry. In the
  countrj' it is usual to apply to a clergyman who
  is also a surrogate, and he will obtain the
  licence by return of post from the Bishop's
  Registrar.
  
  Fees. - The fee in London is £2, 12s. 6d. in-
  clusive of stamp duty, and varies in the country
  from £1, 15s. to £2, I2s. 6d., according to the
  diocese. The licence is granted without previous
  notice, and is available as soon as issued, but one
  of the parties must declare on oath that there is
  no legal impediment to the marriage, and also
  that one of the parties has resided at least fifteen
  days in the parish in which the wedding is to
  take place.
  
  Marriage by Special Licence. - A special licence
  can be obtained at an average cost of £29, 8s. by
  approval of the Archbishop of Canterbury after
  application at the Faculty Office. It enables a
  marriage to be celebrated at any time or place,
  and does away with the necessity of the residen-
  tial quaUfications.
  
  Marriage by Registrar.- (1) By Certificate.- A
  marriage can now be celebrated in a Registrar's
  Office without any religious ceremony. Notice
  must first be given in the prescribed form by
  one of the parties to the intended marriage, if
  both have continuously resided in the registrar's
  district during the seven days immediately
  preceding the notice. If each has resided for so
  long in different districts, a notice must be given
  to each registrar. Twenty-one days after this
  notice the marriage can take place, and during
  this period the notice is pubhcly exhibited in the
  registrar's office. The fee for entry of notice
  is Is., for issue of the certificate Is., and for per-
  forming the marriage ceremony 5s.
  
  (2) By Licence. - The Registrar, howevei, can
  grant a licence by which the ceremony can take
  place one whole day next after the notice. For
  instance, if notice were given on a Monday,
  the marriage could take place on a Wednesday.
  Fifteen days previous residence in the district is
  necessary on the part of either the prospective
  br'do or the prospective bridegroom, and the
  notice need not bo suspended in the office of the
  registrar as is the case when a certificate is
  applied for.
  
  The cost of a licence is £1, 10s., and besides
  small fees for entries and certificate of notice,
  lOs. stamp duty. The fee for performing the
  marriage ceremony is 10s.
  
  
  The arrangement of all these matters in regard
  to the ecclesiastical and legal part of the cere-
  mony devolve on the bridegroom, and ail fees are
  paid by him.
  
  Marriages in Scotland. - In Scotland there are
  two forms of marriage, regular and iiregular.
  The ceremony of what is known as a " regular
  marriage " is performed by a minister after the
  banns have been published on three consecutive
  Sundays in the parish in which the prospective
  bridegroom resides, and also in the parish in
  which the prospective bride resides. Custom,
  however, has made deviation from this law
  permissible, and in practice proclamation on
  one or two Sundays is deemed sufficient. Most
  frequently the Scottish wedding takes place in the
  house of the bride's parents, although a large
  number of weddings are now celebrated in cliurch.
  As an alternative to having the banns proclaimed
  the bride and bridegroom elect may give notice
  to the registrar of the district in which they h.ave
  resided for fifteen days immediately preceding
  the notice. The fee for entry of notice is 7s. 6d.
  The notice is publicly exhibited for seven days,
  after which period a certificate of publication
  of notice of marriage is granted (fee Is.). This
  certificate must be given to the minister per-
  forming the ceremony. Where banns have been
  proclaimed the certificate of proclamation of
  banns must be given to him in like manner.
  
  In " Irregular Marriages " no official celebra-
  tion is necessary, the declaration of the consent
  of the parties to take each other for husband
  and wife being deemed sufficient. It is neces-
  sary, however, that either the husband or the
  wife should have resided in Scotland for at least
  twenty-one days before the mutual consent to
  marriage is made. The declaration should be
  made before witnesses, who will be able to testify
  to the fact that it was made when the parties
  apply for registration of the marriage. All
  irregular marriages should be registered within
  throe months after the marriage, application for
  the purpose being made to the sheriff. Regular
  marriages require to be registered within three
  days. A registration scliedule for the purpose
  must be obtained from the registrar of the parish
  in which the ceremony is celebrated.
  
  Fees at a Wedding. - There is no set figure for
  the amount of the fee to be given to the officiating
  clergyman ; these must be regulated by the
  position and means of the bridegroom. It
  should never, however, be under £1, Is. This
  fee should be placed in an envelope and laid on
  the vestry table after the ceremony, with the in-
  scription, " For the Rev. , with compliments
  
  and thanks." ^ The fee to the clerk should not
  be less than lOs. Then there are many and sun-
  dry fees to be given to vergers, and pew attend-
  
  1 If the clerpryman is a relative, or a very (?reat friend of
  the family, no fee is given, but it is usual to make him some
  present, generally a piece of Bilver, as a souvenir of the
  occasion.
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  347
  
  
  ants, all of whom expect to be remembered on
  the auspicious occasion.
  
  The Bridegroom Pays all Fees. - All fees in
  connection with the actual celebration of a
  wedding ceremony are defrayed by the bride-
  groom, and are paid previous to the ceremony or
  immediately after it. It is usiial for the best
  man on these occasions to see to the paying of
  fees for the bridegroom. The latter either gives
  him the requisite amount beforehand, or else
  the best man lays out the money required,
  which is refunded to him afterwards.
  
  Other Expenses of the Bridegroom. - In addition
  to the paying of all the necessary fees, there are
  several other expenses entailed upon a bride-
  groom. At the commencement of his engage-
  ment he has to present his future bride with a
  handsome engagement ring, in accordance with
  the never -varying custom. Then various gifts
  on the part of an engaged man to his fiancee
  during their engagement are always a foregone
  conclusion. He is also expected to give his
  bride a handsome present upon her wedding
  day, in addition to the all-important wedding
  ring. He has also to provide his bride and
  her bridesmaids with their bouquets, and he
  must give each of the bridesmaids a present,
  which usually takes the form of some piece of
  jewellery, such as a bangle, a brooch, or a
  pendant. In addition, the bridegroom has to
  provide the carriage to convey the bride and
  himself from church and afterwards from her
  parents' house to the station, although in the
  country as a rule the carriage is provided by
  the father of the brio i.
  
  In regard to their future home the bridegroom
  has to supply all the furniture, plate and linen.
  Large contributions towards the plate, however,
  are usually given in the form of wedding pre-
  sents, so his expenses in this direction are often
  materially lessened.
  
  Expenses of the Bride's Parents. - First and
  foremost amongst the expenses of the bride's
  parents comes the trousseau, which should be
  prepared with due regard to the position in ilfe
  which their daughter will occupy. AH the
  Unen should be marked with her married name.
  Then there are various At Homes and parties
  given before the marriage in celebration of the
  engagement. On the wedding day the bride's
  parents give the wedding reception and pay for
  all floral decorations in the church. If the
  service is a choral one, they must bear all the
  expenses of the choir. The bride's parents
  also pay for the carriages used by themselves
  and their household. They do not pay for the
  carriages of the guests invited to the wedding.
  Tips are £is a rule expected by all the coachmen
  and footmen on the wedding day, and these
  usually amount to about 5s. in each case. In
  accordance with time-honoured custom they are
  all given champagne or other wine in which
  to drink the bride's health. Where wedding
  
  
  favours are given these are also supplied by the
  parents of the bride. The bride usually gives a
  handsome wedding present to the bridegroom
  on the wedding day.
  
  The Eve of the Wedding. - The evening before
  the wedding it is customary for the bride's
  parents to invite one or two of the near rela-
  tives of both bride and bridegroom to dinner.
  The bridegroom and his best man are also
  present.
  
  Bridesmaids. - The number of bridesmaids will
  depend upon the scale upon which the wedding
  is to be. Six bridesmaids make a favourite
  number for ceremonious weddings, with occasion-
  ally two httle boys, or a httle boy and a Httle
  girl, to act as train-bearers. At very quiet
  weddings one or two bridesmaids will be suffi-
  cient. The bridesmaids should be chosen from
  the relatives of both famihes, the sisters of the
  bride and bridegroom (where there are sisters)
  being usually asked to perform the office. The
  bridesmaids provide their own dresses, and in
  making the selection of the colour and style of
  dress to be worn by her bridesmaids, the bride
  should always be careful to select something that
  will be equally becoming to all. She should
  also bear in mind that the style of the dresses
  should be such as will enable them to be worn
  on future occasions.
  
  The Bride's Dress. - The bride is as a rule
  dressed eitirely in white, unless the wedding is
  a quiet one and she is meirried in her travelling
  dress, or else that it is her second marriage.
  Silk, satin, cripe de chine, or ninon, chiffon or
  lace over silk or satin are the favourite materials
  for bride's wear. The dress is trimmed with
  orange blossom - and a long white veil is worn
  over a wreath of orange blossom. White gloves,
  shoes, and stockings are also worn ; everj'thing
  must be en suite^ the bouquet she carries being
  also of white blossoms.
  
  When the Bride is a Widow. - A bride who is a
  widow should not wear a bridal veil or orange
  blossoms. Brides who have been married be-
  fore often wear their travelling toilettes for the
  ceremonj'. Delicate greys of aU shades, fawns,
  and other light colours are usually selected. For
  a ceremonious wedding, however, a widow may
  wear white, but it should be relieved by some
  touch of colour. A widow is not attended by
  bridesmaids at her wedding. There is no
  obhgation for her to be given away by
  her father or other male relations at the cere-
  mony, although it is usxial for either her father
  or one of her male relatives to perform this
  office on her behalf.
  
  The Best Man. - The responsibihties of the
  best man, who should always be a bachelor, are
  many and varied. He is the right-hand man of
  the bridegroom, as it were. He should accom-
  pany the bridegroom to the church, and see
  that he does not leave the wedding ring behind
  him. He must see that all the arrangements
  
  
  348
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  in reg€ird to the bridegroom's carriage, both for
  conveying him and his bride from the church,
  and from the bride's house to the station, are
  in order. He must be ready to reheve the
  bridegroom of all the Uttle incidental worries in
  his power. For instance, the best man often
  actually sees to the taking of the railway tickets,
  and the safe conveyance of luggage for the honey-
  moon trip. The best man has also, as a rule, to
  attend to the payment of all fees incidental to
  the wedding, either before or after the ceremony
  on the bridegroom's behalf. He must also sign
  the register in the vestry afterwards.
  
  Going to the Church. - The bridesmaids should
  arrive at the church a short time before the
  bride. If the bride's sisters are acting as
  bridesmaids they should drive to the church in
  the carriage with their mother, the carriage
  afterwards returning for the bride and her
  father ; but when she has no sisters she generally
  drives to the church \vith her mother, her father,
  having preceded her, meeting her at the church
  door.
  
  The bridegroom and the best man should
  arrive at the church before the bride, and stand
  together below the chancel steps, or kneel at
  a prie-Di''u until shortly before the bride's
  arrival. The best man should make it his care
  to see that the bridegroom is in good time at the
  church.
  
  In the Church. - The bridesmaids assemble in
  the church, or inside the church near the west
  door, in two rows facing each other, waiting for
  the bride's arrival, and ready to fall in behind her.
  
  The General Company. - The bridegroom's re-
  latives should seat themselves at the right of
  the nave of the church, the bride's relatives
  seating themselves upon the left.
  
  The Bridal Procession. - If the wedding is a
  choral one the choir and clergy march in silence
  to the west end, and are ready at a signal agreed
  upon with the organist to strike up the pro-
  cessional hymn. The bride enters the church
  leaning on the right arm of her father or guardian,
  and follows the choir to the chancel step, the
  bridesmaids, two and two, following her. The
  bridegroom takes his place at her right side
  with the " best man " standing behind liim. He
  neither embraces nor shakes hands with the
  bride, but simply bows to her. The father
  stands at the bride's left hand. Her mother
  sits in the front seat with the nearest relatives.
  
  And now the service begins. At the question
  " Who giveth this woman, &c.," the father bows
  to the clergyman, and stepping in front of the
  couple, joins their right hands together, and
  then goes back to his place. Now is the time
  for the gloves of the bride to be handed with
  her bouquet to the care of the chief bridesmaid,
  who holds them to the end of the service.
  The bridegroom should unglove as soon as the
  service begins. It always creates an awkward
  pause if the bridegroom has to hunt in his
  
  
  pockets for the ring. He should have it ready
  when required by the priest to place it upon
  the book. After the first blessing, the bride
  and bridegroom alone follow the priest to the
  altar, the others remaining at their stations,
  not chatting together, but reverently joining in
  the service.
  
  When all is finished, the bride, leaning on her
  husband's left arm, and followed by her brides-
  maids, father and mother, and the principal
  relations and friends, go to the vestry to sign
  the book and give congratulations. On going
  slowly down the cliurch, the bride takes her
  husband's left arm, both recognising their friends
  with smiles or bows, the bridesmaids follow two
  and two, and then the bride's mother. The
  " best man " waits until the last to see everybody
  into their carriages. The Bishop of London has
  lately condemned the custom of throwing rice
  or confetti in the church porch or within the
  raiUngs at the west end. Sensible people will
  approve the bishop's action and govern them-
  selves accordingly.
  
  The ceremonial described is that of the Church
  of England. The actual form of the wedding
  ceremony will, of course, differ in regard to
  different creeds, but in every case the social
  etiquette remains the same, whatever the re-
  ligion of the bride and bridegroom may be.
  
  Where wedding favours or button-holes are
  given to the guests, they should be distributed
  by the bridesmaids in the vestry and in the
  church. Wedding favours should be worn on
  the left side.
  
  The Wedding Reception. - Formerly it was
  compulsory for a marriage ceremony to take
  place before noon, hence the origin of the
  " wedding breakfast " as the most suitable form
  of hospitahty to show to the guests. But since
  the time in which the ceremony can be per-
  formed has been extended, fashionable marriages
  now as a rule take place about from 2 to 2.30,
  hence the old-fashioned wedding breakfast has
  been superseded by the afternoon reception or
  At Home. The invitations should be issued
  tliree weeks before the wedding day (for
  Wedding Invitations, see p. 332), and it is usual
  for the guests invited to give a wedding present
  to the bride or bridegroom. The presents have,
  as a nile, all arrived before the day, and a room
  is usually set apart in which they can he displayed
  for the benefit of the guests.
  
  The arrangements for the wedding reception
  are of a similar nature to those for an afternoon
  At Home (see p. 339). The guests are received in
  the drawing-room, and they should at first shake
  hands with the host and hostess, and afterwards
  with the bride and bridegroom. The hostess
  should stand at the drawing-room door, and
  the bride and bridegroom should stand together
  in some prominent position in the room.
  
  After the presents have been inspected the
  company adjourn to the luncheon or tea room
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  349
  
  
  in the following order : The bride and bride-
  groom lead the way, followed by the bride's
  father with the bridegroom's mother. Next
  come the bridegroom's father and the bride's
  mother. After them the best man with the
  chief bridesmaid, and the remainder of the
  bridal party. Then follow the general company
  without any prescribed order of precedency.
  
  The Refreshments. - The refreshments pro-
  vided at a wedding tea are similar to those for
  an afternoon At Home, but champagne is of
  course de rigueur at a wedding, and in the centre
  of the buffet stands the bride's cake. The room
  is cleared of furniture, and the buffet extends
  along the length of it, servants being stationed
  behind it to pour out tea, coffee, &c. The
  number of toasts which were formerly proposed
  at the old-time wedding breakfasts are now as
  a rule dispensed with, but the officiating clergy-
  man or some old friend of the family briefly
  proposes the health of the happy couple ; the
  bridegroom repUea and the bride cuts the cake,
  a small portion of which is handed to each guest.
  
  Wedding Limcheons. - The wedding hospitaUty
  sometimes is extended in the form of a luncheon,
  which is taken either sitting down or standing
  up. The latter is the more usual form, especially
  when the company is a very large one, the sitting-
  down luncheon being adopted when those in-
  vited consist mainly of the near relatives and
  most intimate friends of the bride and bride-
  groom. In the case of a luncheon the menu is
  naturally more extended and varied than that
  of a wedding tea. At a standing-up luncheon
  the gentlemen help the ladies and themselves
  to the various dishes, whilst at a sitting-down
  luncheon the servants wait as usual. At a
  sitting-down luncheon the bride cuts the cake
  after the sweets have been served.
  
  Departure of the Newly-Married Couple. - As
  soon as the bride has cut the cake and the healths
  have been drunk, she retires to change her dress
  for the wedding journey, accompanied by the
  head bridesmaid, if the latter is a near relative,
  and the company adjourns to the drawing-room.
  When the bride comes down again the farewells
  are made, and the bridegroom leads her to the
  carriage. The old-fashioned custom of throw-
  ing a slipper after the bride " for luck " is still
  adhered to - rice is also thrown, but confetti
  should be avoided. It is most troublesome to
  get rid of, and besides the colour sometimes
  comes off, and if the bride's travelling dress is a
  light one it is liable to get spoiled by a too
  profuse confetti shower. If something must be
  thrown diminutive horse shoes of silver paper
  are now sold, and they are being largely used at
  weddings for the purpose. They do not cling
  to the clothing, and are much safer to use than
  either rice or confetti.
  
  After the Wedding. - The Wedding Trip. -
  There is a tendency on the whole nowadays to
  curtail the wedding trip. Sometimes it lasts
  
  
  little more than a week, at other times it is
  abandoned altogether, the honeymoon being
  spent in the new home of the young couple.
  Formerly a wedding trip of from three to four
  weeks was considered de rigueur. At the present
  time the length of the trip is purely a matter of
  individual inclination and convenience.
  
  Wedding Cards and Cake. - Formerly it was
  the custom to send out to friends and relations
  sUces of wedding cake packed in small white boxes
  bordered in silver. Wedding cards printed in
  silver were also sent out in the name of the
  newly -married pair, and on these cards the
  maiden name of the bride crossed through with
  a silver arrow would also appear as a symbol
  that she had given up her maiden name for
  ever. Sometimes several hundred of these cards
  and packets of cake would be sent out, and to
  superintend their dispatch was quite a labour
  of love on the part of the bride's family after
  the wedding day. This custom, however, has
  now largely fallen into disuse, and is only kept
  up by old-fasliioned people. Neither cards nor
  cake are now sent out by people who wish to
  be considered up to date. (For etiquette in
  regard to cards and calls for a bride, see
  p. 330.)
  
  Wedding Anniversaries. - It is a pleasing
  custom among most married people to celebrate
  each year the anniversary of their wedding as
  it comes round by each giving the other some
  httle gift. Tlie husband often takes his wife
  out to dinner and to the theatre afterwards.
  In these annual celebrations neither relations,
  friends, nor acquaintances have any part -
  though in the case of a very near relative a
  congratulatory letter might sometimes be
  sent.
  
  Silver and Golden Weddings. - Silver Weddings
  and Golden Weddings, however, are both ob-
  served, and usually an At Home or dinner-
  party is given in honour of the occasion. The
  Silver Wedding is the twenty-fifth anniversary
  of the marriage, and the Golden Wedding is
  the fiftieth. In the first case the invitations
  may be printed in silver, in the second case in
  gold ; but they often take the form of an
  ordinary At Home card with " Silver Wedding "
  or " Golden Wedding," as the case may be, in the
  right-hand corner. Presents are usually made
  to the married couple by their friends and
  relatives on the occasion of both Silver and
  Golden Weddings.
  
  CHRISTENINGS
  
  A christening party is, as a rule, limited
  to the near relatives of the peirents of the
  infant, and therefore partakes of much of the
  informality of a strictly family gathering. The
  invitations to a cliristening take the form
  of ordinary letters, and they should, if possible,
  be sent out a full week before the event.
  
  
  350
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  The ceremony usually takes place in the
  morning, and the relatives invited upon arrival
  at the church seat themselves in the pews
  neao-est the font. If the child is a boy it must
  have two godfathers and one godmother, and
  if a girl two godmothers and one godfather.
  The godmother (the chief godmother if there
  are two) holds the child during the first part of
  the service, and places it on the left arm of the
  oflBciating clergyman when he is ready to take
  it. WTien the clergyman asks for the child's
  name, the chief godfather should pronounce it,
  taking care to do so clearly and distinctly. \Vhen
  the child has been christened, the nurse, who is
  standing at the right of the clergyman, takes it
  from him. After the service the father accom-
  panies the clergyman to the vestry to give the
  necessary particulars for the registration.
  
  Fees. - The verger, pew-opener, and other
  church attendants will expect gratuities on the
  occasion of a christening. It is usual to give
  the officiating clergyman some souvenir of the
  occasion, which generally takes the form of a
  piece of silver, but money is not given as a
  rule. However, in many instances the parents
  present the clergyman with a cheque to be
  devoted to the requirements of the parish or
  to any good work he pleases.
  
  Christening Presents. - The godfathers and
  godmothers must make presents to their god-
  child. Silver mugs, silver bowls, silver spoons
  and forks are typical presents for both godfathers
  and godmothers to make. In many instances
  the godmothers' presents consist of some simple
  yet good piece of jewellery when the infant is
  a girl, such as a pearl necklax;e, a jewelled cross,
  or pendant. Often also the godmother's present
  takes the practical form of a handsome robe
  and cloak. The presents are usually sent the
  day T3efore the christening.
  
  Tips to the Nurse. - Each of the sponsors
  makes a present of money to the nurse varying
  in amount from 53. to £1 according to their
  individual means.
  
  After the Ceremony. - The entertainment given
  to the relatives and friends of the parents after
  the ceremony may take the form of a lunch, a
  tea, or a dinner-party in the evening.
  
  Christening Lunch. - If a lunch is given, it
  takes place as soon as the party have returned
  from church. The christening cake should
  occupy the central position on the luncheon
  table, and the health of the infant should
  always be drunk in champagne. The cake is
  cut at dessert.
  
  No precedence is observed upon going in to
  luncheon, the hostess and other leuiies go first
  and the gentlemen follow. The clergyman who
  performed the ceremony, if present, should sit
  at the hostess's left hand, and each lady should
  be placed at the right hand of a gentleman if
  there are an equal number of ladies and gentle-
  men. If the party is a large one the places
  
  
  should be indicated by little cards on which
  the names of the guests are inscribed.
  
  Christening Tea. - The entertainment very
  often takes the form of a tea. This is served
  in the dining-room, the hostess receiving her
  guests in the drawing-room first. All go down
  to the tea-room together, the host and hostess
  included. The refreshments are the same as
  at an At Home, with the addition of the
  cliristening cake. Coffee and tea are poured
  out and handed round by the servants, but the
  host and hostess should attend to the needs of
  their guests in the way of handing cakes, &c.
  
  Christening Dinner-Party. - In some caaes the
  friends and relations are in\ited to a dinner in
  the evening. The precedence is the same as
  for an ordinary dinner-party. The christening
  cake is cut at dessert by the hostess, and the
  infant's health drunk at the same time.
  
  FUNERALS AND MOURNING
  
  The gloom cast over a family by the death
  of a dear one leaves the bereaved relatives with-
  out much heart for forms and ceremonies. Yet
  there are certain formahties which must be ob-
  served even in these last acts to be performed
  in tribute to the memory of the departed.
  The arrangements for the funeral fall naturally
  upon the head of the family. Women are
  .''pared as much as possible any share in the
  mournful details. Where it is the head of the
  family who has died, either the eldest son or
  the nearest male relation takes the matter in
  hand. But in some instances a woman is so
  alone in the world that she has to rely strictly
  upon herself to see that the leist rites are
  faithfully and fittingly performed.
  
  The funeral is at once placed in the hands of
  the undertaker, and is arranged on a scale
  suited to the means of the family. Any wishes
  expressed by the deceased as to his leist resting-
  place are of course respected. A doctor's
  certificate should be obtained as soon as possible
  after the death (see p. 376). As soon as the
  day for the funeral is settled upon, letters should
  be written on black-edged notepaper to near
  relatives and friends who would wish to attend,
  apprising them of the date, hour and place.
  An announcement of the death, together with
  the date and time of the funeral, is also as a
  rule inserted in one or two of the chief news-
  papers. The undertaker will often see to this.
  In fact many details can be left in his hands,
  as he thoroughly understands the etiquette of
  funeral procedure. Friends and relatives at
  once begin to send wreaths and ether floral
  offering unless the not very frequent request of
  " No flowers " has been made. Formerly it
  was not considered etiquette for the ladies of
  a family to attend a funeral : now they can do
  so if they wish. Needless to say black should be
  worn by all attending the funeral.
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  351
  
  
  All the blinds of the house should be pulled
  down after the death, and they should be kept
  lowered until after the funeral has taken place.
  
  If the funeral takes place in the morning it
  is usual to invite the friends to some light
  luncheon. If it occurs in the afternoon they
  should be offered tea upon their return to the
  house. Friends, as a rule, however, refrain from
  availing themselves of invitations, unless they
  have had to come from a very great distance.
  
  Letters of Condolence. - Upon hearing of the
  death, letters of condolence should be sent by
  friends and relations. These should always be
  written on black-edged notepaper.
  
  To Inquire Cards. - After the funeral, cards
  " With kind inquiries " should be left by friends.
  When the family feel once more able to receive
  calls they send out cards " With thanks for
  kind inquiries." Friends may call after the
  receipt of these cards of acknowledgment, but
  not before.
  
  Periods of Mourning. - The etiquette in regard
  to mourning is not now so strict as of yore,
  and the periods of mourning have in most cases
  been materially shortened. More especially in
  regard to the regulation mourning wear has the
  change of fashion been most marked, for whereas
  crape was formerly worn for almost any and
  every kind of moiirning, it has now been almost
  universally discarded excepting for widows'
  wear, whilst even in the latter case it is worn
  as a trimming only, and altogether put aside
  at a comparatively early date in the mourning
  period.
  
  Mourning for Widows. - There are two ac-
  cepted periods of mourning for a widow. In
  the case of the longer period mourning should
  be worn for two years, whilst eighteen months
  represents the time mourning should be worn
  during the shorter period.
  
  Crape when worn is used as a trimming only,
  and it is only worn for the first six or eight
  months - sometimes it is not worn at aU by
  widows, and in many cases chiffon or some other
  dull material takes its place.
  
  Thie Widow's Cap. - The widow's cap and
  veil have been discarded in many cases. The
  usual period for wearing the cap is a year and
  a day. The veil may now be of cliiffon instead
  of crape. Lawn cuffs and collars are worn
  during the first year.
  
  Jewellery. - Diamonds may be worn quite
  early in the period of mourning, and gold
  jewellery after a year. Diamonds and pearls
  are often worn with very deep mourning.
  
  Half Mourning. - In the longer period of
  mourning, half mourning begins after one year
  and nine months. In the shorter period half
  mourning may be worn after fifteen months.
  
  For Fatlier or Mother. - ^The regulation period
  in which mourning is worn for a parent is twelve
  months. During this time black with crape is
  worn for six luonths, black without crape for
  
  
  four, and half mourning for two months. The
  wearing of crape is optional, but black must be
  worn for the first ten months. After three
  months the black may be reUeved by touches
  of white.
  
  For a Son or Daughter. - The regulation period
  of mourning for a son or daughter is the same
  as for a father or mother.
  
  Young Children. - For young children mourning
  is worn for six months, and for infants three
  months' mourning is sufficient.
  
  Brother or Sister. - The period of mourning
  for a brother or sister is from four to six months.
  During the longer period black is worn for five
  months, and half mourning for one month.
  During the shorter period black should be worn
  for two months, and half mourning for the re-
  maining two months. If in accordance with
  older customs crape is worn, the crape should
  be worn for the first three months, black without
  crape for two months, and half mourning for
  one month during the longer period. During
  the shorter period crape should be worn for
  two months, and black without crape for the
  remaining two.
  
  The prevaihng method, however, is to follow
  the first rule and discard crape altogether.
  
  Jewellery. - Diamonds and pearls can be worn
  after one month - gold after two months.
  
  For a Stepmother. - If the stepmother has
  filled the place of their own mother for her
  stepchildien from their childhood, they should
  wear mourning for her for the same period as if
  for their own mother. In other cases the period
  of mourning would be for six months - black
  for four months, and half mourning for two
  months.
  
  For an Uncle, Axint, Nephew, or Niece. -
  Moviming should be worn for either three months
  or six weeks. During the longer period black
  should be worn for two months, half moiirning
  for one month. Diu-ing the shorter period
  black should be worn for three weeks, half
  mourning for three weeks. Crape should not
  be worn for these relations.
  
  For a Grandparent. - Mom-ning shoiild be worn
  for either six or four months. During the longer
  period black should be worn for tliree months,
  and half movu-ning for tlirce months - after six
  weeks it may be relieved with white. During
  the shorter period the time for the wearing of
  mourning and half moiu'ning should also be
  equally divided. Formerly crape was worn for
  the first three months of the mourning period.
  
  Jewellery. - Diamonds may be worn after one
  month - gold after six weeks.
  
  For a First Cousin. - For a first cousin, black
  should be worn for one month, or black for
  tliree weeks, and lialf moiu-ning for three weeics.
  
  Relations by Marriage. - For relations by
  marriage the shorter of the two periods wliich
  prevail for blood relations is usually adopted.
  
  Periods of Seclusion. - When persons in mourn-
  
  
  352
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  ing should begin once more to enter upon social
  duties is a much debated question, and one
  which must to a large extent be governed by
  special circumstances. The general rules upon
  the subject are as follows : -
  
  A widow should not accept invitations for a
  period of tliree montlis. During this time she
  should only \'isit her relations and very intimate
  friends. After tliis she may gradually resume
  her social duties, but she should not be present
  at balls or dances till a year has elapsed.
  
  Parents, Sons, and Daughters. - A parent
  mourning for a son or a daughter should remain
  in seclusion for six weeks. Balls and dances
  should be avoided for six months. The same
  rules apply to a daughter who is mourning for
  a parent.
  
  Brother or Sister. - For a brother or sister the
  period of seclusion is three weeks. Balls and
  dances should be avoided during the whole
  period of mourning if the latter is the shorter
  four months period ; or during five months if
  the mourning is of the longer period.
  
  Grandparents, Uncles, and Aunts. - For grand-
  parents, uncles, and aunts, the period of seclusion
  is about a fortnight.
  
  Notepaper and Cards. - During the period of
  mourning all notepaper and visiting cards
  should have black edges. The black edge is
  decreased in thickness as the period of mourning
  draws to a close.
  
  THE ART OF CONVERSATION
  
  The art of conversation is indispensable to
  a woman's social equipment. There is nothing
  more pleasing than the cultured conversation of
  a well-bred woman ; nothing more wearisome
  than to Uston to the trivial talk of a woman
  as lacking in breeding as she is in brains. It
  does not follow that the most learned people
  are the best conversationalists, although the
  exigencies of conversation require as a rule that
  a woman should be well read. Any woman with
  a fair education can cultivate the art of talking
  well, provided she has tact, a good memory, and
  a pleasant well-modulated voice. Harsh strident
  tones detract very materially from the charm of
  a conversationalist. Very often this defect is
  noticeable in girls who have been educated at
  large public schools, where the habit of shouting
  at recreation time is insensibly contracted. Every
  care should be taken to cure this habit of shout-
  ing, for although the voice may lack that actual
  sweetness of timbre which is such a potent
  charm, yet well-modulated tones go far to make
  up for this deficiency.
  
  A good conversationalist is before everything
  a good listener. She does not monopolise all the
  talking, but will adroitly lead to a subject of
  particular interest to her friend, and then listen
  carefully to what he or she has to say, putting
  in an appropriate remark hero and there aa
  
  
  occasion warrants. The secret of conversation
  hes as much in the art of making others talk
  &s of talking oneself. For a hostess good con-
  versational powers are imperative. She must
  know the secret of drawing out her shyest guest
  and making her talk at her ease. She must
  also know how to make a conversation general,
  and discreetly change the subject if the topics
  touched upon seem hkely to load to discord.
  
  Topics to bo Avoided. - ReUgion and politics
  are topics of conversation which should always
  be avoided. They are subjects upon wluch
  difference of opinion is very rife, and may often
  lead to heated arguments which are as tiresome
  and unpleasant as they are ill-bred.
  
  Slang and Word Clipping. - There is a growing
  tendency towards the use of slang in almost
  every class of society at the present day. Words
  are also chpped and abbreviated in such a
  manner as to almost render them unrecognisable.
  The gentlewoman would do well to avoid this
  tendency, as nothing jars upon the refined ear
  more than the mutilation of a good language,
  and no matter how inured we may become to
  colloquial slang, it never sounds well from a
  woman's Ups. In whatever society slang or
  word clipping is used, the fact remains that it
  is contrarj'^ to all the laws of refinement and
  good breecUng.
  
  Pronunciation. - Words should be pronounced
  distinctly and never slurred. The omission to
  sound the letter g in the suffix " ing," as in the
  word " dancing," is almost as great a sign of
  lack of education as the omission or addition
  of the letter " h." Cookneyism should also
  be avoided. There is no more marked vulgarity
  than a Cockney accent. When engaging nurses
  for their children, parents should pay particular
  attention to their pronunciation. Children
  always adopt the accent of those who are con-
  stantly with them, and Cockneyism contracted
  in this way is most difficult to cure. Any
  defects in children's speech should bo carefully
  observed and corrected by their parents if they
  do not wish the defects to become permanent.
  Whispering in company is considered the height
  of ill-breeding. People who have private matters
  to talk about should select a suitable occasion
  upon which to discuss them, and not offend
  others by excluding them from the conversation
  in this very marked manner.
  
  Current Topics. - A woman should keep herself
  well informed upon current topics of interest.
  She should read the criticisms of new plays and
  the reviews of new books. She will do well to
  keep herself au fait with current literature, as
  this is to many an absorbing topic of conversa-
  tion. She should in addition cultivate the faculty
  of remembering whatever she sees, hears, or
  reads.
  
  Tact is the quintessence of good conversation.
  The tactful woman will never be at a loss to
  find a subject of interest to her listeners. She
  
  
  will discountenance scandal and other ill-natured
  small talk- and when in spite of all her efforts
  a dispute of any kind should occur in conversa-
  tion between her friends or guests, she will pour
  oil upon the troubled waters of discord by
  quietly leading the conversation into a calmer
  and safer channel. (For how to address titled
  persons m conversation, see p. 354.)
  
  
  THE ART OF READING ALOUD
  
  U a correct accent and a good pronunciation
  are necessary in ordinary conversation, how much
  more are they indispensable for the woman who
  IS called upon to read aloud for the pleasure and
  entertainment of others. Good reading is an
  accompUshment quite as worthy of cultivation
  and as capable of imparting pleasure to others
  as vocal or instrumental music.
  
  Tone.- The cultivation of a correct tone of
  voice for reading is essential. There are some
  people whose voices for conversation are aU that
  can be desired, but who if asked to read before
  a hall containing a large number of people fail
  to make themselves heard except by those who
  are sitting qmte near them. In these cases the
  voice lacks what is called " carrying power "
  or resonance. There is nothing better for the
  cure of this defect in the voice than constant
  practice of reading aloud in the open air
  Practice of this kind will gain timbre for a voice
  naturally dull or faint.
  
  Delivery.- Articulation must of necessity be
  cleaj and distinct -^ach word should be uttered
  dehberately with due regard for its correct pro-
  nunciation. The sing-song method of reading
  should be altogether tabooed. This defect is
  often incurred by the reader letting his (or her)
  voice drop after every comma, semi-colon and '
  colon, to the same extent as after a full stop
  l-auses after stops must of course be carefullv
  regarded, but care must be taken not to give
  them more than their proportionate value -for
  instance, the reader must pause longest after
  the full stop, not so long after the colon, still
  less after the semi -colon, whilst after the comma
  the pause should be almost imperceptible. The
  interrogation mark, indicating a question, and
  the note of exclamation, expressing sudden feel-
  ing, require almost the value of the full stops.
  The reader should try to cultivate a natural
  manner. Whilst proper emphasis must be given
  to the passages which require it, any attempt
  at declamation should be avoided. Reading
  sliould ho fluent and not faltering or hurried
  Ihere is nothing more annoying to the hearers
  Chan a reading rendered in staccato or ierkv
  tbnes. Last, but not least, feehng and ex-
  pression are essential attributes to good reading.
  The reader should be able to convey as much
  as IS in her power to her listeners the intention
  of the author. .Vuhout feeUng, reading is little
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  353
  
  more than a mechanical exercise- without ex
  pression it becomes both wearisome and mono
  tonous often to such an extent as to have the
  ettect of sending the unfortunate hearers to sleep
  One final word of warning-   a,re much more noticeable in reading aloud than
  in conversation. A stutterer should never
  attempt to read before company until he (or
  she) is cured of this defect. Nothing can be
  more trying to people than to listen to a person
  whose dehvery is marred by such an infliction.
  Keadmg aloud is excellent practice for the
  stammerer, but let her read aloud to herself
  until this defect is altogether cured.
  
  THE ART OF LETTER- WRITING
  
  The woman who can write exactly as she
  speaks who can talk on paper to the recipient of
  her letter just as easily as if she were actually
  conversing with her, is mistress of the art of letter-
  writing, for in being able to write as we speak
  hes the secret of good composition, and therefore
  ol good correspondence.
  
  In writing letters a woman must of course-
  be gmded by the degree of intimacy which
  exists between herself and the person to whom"
  her letter is addressed. In writing to her friends
  her powers of composition may have full play
  whilst communications to slight acquaintances'
  must of necessity be brief.
  
  > ^№^ *?. ^^^^ ^ Letter.-JIany women find
  It difficult to begin their letters-others find
  equal difficulty in concluding them. One
  sensible rule to observe in beginning a letter is
  to avoid starting off with the pronoun " I "
  1 ^^l^\i>^^^ " I hope you are quite weu!"
  with which a number of women still begin their
  letters IS as old-fashioned as it is ungraceful.
  It the letter must be commenced with a pronoun
  coinmence it with the pronoun, " You," referring
  to the person to whom you are siting before
  reterrmg to yourself.
  
  Business Letters.- Business letters should of
  course bejvritten in a business-like manner ;
  they should be as brief and succinct as possible.
  Business letters when very short may be written
  m the third person. In other cases the first
  person should be employed, the beginning
  Dear Sir, and the subscription, " Yours
  truly, being usually adopted. The name and
  address of the person to whom a business letter
  IS sent should be placed cither at the beginning
  of the letter on the left-hand side above the
  Dear Sir, ' or at the end of the letter after
  the signature on the left-hand side. For business
  letters Yours truly," and " Yours faithfullv."
  are the usual forms of subscripton. In ordinary
  letters the subscription depends upon the degree
  of intimacy between the correspondents. Yours
  sincerely, and Yoiu^ very sincerely, are the forms
  most generally used.
  Necessity for Spelling Names Correctly.- Care
  
  
  354
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  should always be taken that the name of the
  person to whom the letter is addressed is spelt
  correctly. Some people are very sonsiti%'e as
  to the proper spelling of their names. A Mrs.
  Smyth, for instance, nught resent it very much
  if a correspondent were to address her as " Mrs.
  Smith." It is always as well to ascertain the
  correct orthography of tlie names of acquaint-
  ances before writing to them.
  
  Letters in the Third Person. - Letterato strangers
  may be written in the tliird person ; but only
  if the communication is very brief. In other
  cases it is better to write in the first person as
  usual, as the constant repetition of names in
  a long letter written in the third person would
  not read well. In this case the letter should
  begin " Sir," or " Madam," and be subscribed
  " Yours truly." Invitations are generally
  written on cards, and in the third person (see
  p. 332).
  
  Notepaper. - A woman should be very parti-
  cular in regard to her notepaper, as this is one
  of the many Uttle details by which her claim
  to refinement will be judged. The notepaper
  should always be of the best in quality and of
  medium thickness, and the envelopes should
  match it in every way, being of a size to exactly
  fit the sheet of notepaper when it is folded.
  
  Crests and Armorial Bearings not used. -
  Crests and armorial bearings should not be
  blazoned upon notepaper. The address should
  be stamped clearly in plain lettering at the
  top of the first page. White, black, or violet
  are the favourite colourings for the lettering.
  Dies should always be used for stamping the
  addresses on notepaper. These can be specially
  made at moderate charges of from 4s. 6d.
  upwards, and can be used time after time,
  the stationer undertaking the stamping for a
  small charge.
  
  Lever Embossing Presses. - A very convenient
  method, however, for stamping notepaper at
  home is by means of a lever embossing press.
  This is a small hand instrument into which a
  
  
  lever Embossing Press.
  
  die is fitted, and by placing the notepaper over
  the die and depressing the lever, each shoot of
  notepaper can be stamped aa required. This
  instrument is all the more useful to have at
  hand when it is remembered that in the best
  
  
  regulated household the supply of stamped
  paper is apt to run short, and ponding the stamp-
  ing of a fresh supply by the stationer very
  often plain paper has to be used. The possession
  of a lover embossing press renders such a state
  of affairs impossible - it is always at hand, and
  for this reason many women find it an indis-
  pensable adjunct to their writing-tables.
  
  How to Address Persons of Rank. - It is essential
  that every woman shoiild know how to address
  persons of rank in writing, both as regards the
  addressing of the envelope and the beginning
  of a letter. There is, of course, a great differ-
  ence between the methods of addressing titled
  people employed by their friends and those
  employed officially and by strangers. For
  instance the friends of a duke would call him
  " Duke " when in conversation with him, whilst
  strangers would adopt the formal term " Your
  Grace." In writing the formal term would be
  " My Lord Duke," whilst a friend would write
  at the beginning of his letter " Dear Duke."
  
  MODE OF ADDRESSING PERSONS OF RANK
  
  In conversing with persons of rank, avoid the
  constant repetition of their title. The following
  table refers to the forms to be observed in
  formal communications :
  
  (a) = How to address the envelope.
  
  (b) = How to begin the letter.
  
  (c) = How to refer to a person's rank when
  conversing with him.
  
  Royalty -
  
  The King ; (o) To His Majesty the King ;
  
  (b) Sir, under His JMajesty the King ;
  
  (c) Your Majesty.
  
  The Queen : (a) To Her Majesty the Queen ;
  
  (b) JNIadam, under Her Majesty the Queen ;
  
  (c) Your Majesty.
  
  The Prince of Wales / (o) To His Royal High-
  ness the Prince of Wales ; (b) Sir ; (c) Your
  Royal Highness. Similarly in regard to
  other members of the Royal Family.
  
  Nobility and Gentry -
  
  Duke and Duchess ; (a) To His (Her) Grace
  
  the Duke (Duchess) of ; (6) My Lord
  
  Duke (Madam) ; (c) Your Grace.
  
  Duke's eldest son has a courtesy title, and is ad-
  dressed aa if it were his by creation. Uuke's younger
  
  gong : (a) To the Riglit Honl)le. Lord James ;
  
  (b) and (c) Sir. Uulce's daughters: (a) To the
  
  Right Honble. Lady Jane G. (6) Madam ; (c)
  
  Your Ladyship.
  
  Marquis and Marchioness : (a) To the Most
  Honblc. the Marquis (Marchioness) of
  
  ; (6) My Lord Marquis (Madam) ;
  
  (c) Your Lordship (Ladyship). Marquis's
  children same as for those of a Duke.
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  Earl and Countess i (a) To the Right Honblo.
  
  the Earl (Countess) of ; {h) My
  
  Lord (Lady) ; (c) Your Lordship (Ladyship).
  
  Earl's eldest son takes courtesy title and is addressed
  accordingly. Earl's younger sons: (a) To the
  
  Honble. Charles R ; (b) and (c) Sir. Earl's
  
  daughters same as for those of a Duke.
  
  Viscount and Viscountess similar to Earl and
  Countess. All their sons and daughters are
  styled Honourable, (a) To the Honble. John
  (Mary) S ; (6) and (c) Sir (Madam).
  
  Baron and Baroness and their children similar
  to Viscount and Viscountess and their
  children.
  
  Baronet ■ (a) To Sir Edward D B^ironet
  
  or Bt. (not Bart.) ; (6) Sir; (c) Sir Edward.
  
  His wife: (o) To Lady D ; (6) Madam;
  
  (c) Your Ladyship,
  
  Knight : (a) To Sir John F ; (6) Sir ; (c) Sir
  
  Johp. His wife, same as Baronet's wife.
  
  Omit Kt. after the name on the envelope, and
  avoid in speaking the use of the surname.
  The Clergy -
  
  Archbishop : (a) To His Grace the Lord Arch-
  bishop of ; (b) My Lord Archbishop,
  
  or Your Grace ; (c) Your Grace.
  
  Bishop : (o) To the Right Reverend ; (6) My
  Lord Bishop ; (c) Your Lordship.
  
  
  N.B.-Aa a matter of courtesy the same form is
  usually adopted in addressing bishops, whether
  they are English Suffragan, or Colonial or Scotch
  or Irish bishops. '
  
  Dean : (a) To the Very Reverend The Dean
  
  of ; (6) Vt y Rev. Su- ; (c) Mr.
  
  Dean.
  
  Archdeacon : (a) To the Venerable the Arch-
  deacon of ; (6) Venerable Sir ; (c) Mr.
  
  Archdeacon.
  
  Clergymen : {a) To the Rev. C. D
  
  (6) Rev. Sir ; (c) Sir.
  
  If the Christian name is not known, leave
  
  blank : Rev D, not Rev, Mr. D.
  
  • If a clergyman possesses the right to
  
  be styled Honourable or Right Honourable, this
  should precede his address as a cleric ; e.g. The
  Right Honble. and Right Reverend
  
  A Canon or Prebendary is addressed like ordinary
  clergymen except that Canon or Prebendary takes
  the place of the Christian name or initial
  
  Ihe wives of bishops and other clergymen derive no
  title from the official rank of their husbands.
  
  The JuncEs, Mayors, &c. -
  
  The Lord Oharicellor : {a) To the Right Honb?e.
  
  the Lord High Chancellor ; or to the Right
  
  Honble. Earl Russell, Lord High Chancellor ;
  
  (6) My Lord ; (c) Your Lordship.
  
  This style is also adopted in addressing the
  
  Lord Chief Justice, the Master of the Rolls, and
  
  the Lords of Appeal.
  
  Vice-chancellor • (o) To the Honble.
  
  Vice-chancellor ; (6) and (c) Sir.
  
  
  Puisne Judges :
  Justice
  
  
  355
  
  (o) To the Honble. 5Ir.
  J (6) and (c) Sir, but " My
  Lord " when on the Bench.
  
  Judges are usually Knights ; but the
  above mode of address is more comphmen-
  tary than that used in the case of Knights.
  Their wives are addressed as the wives of
  Knights.
  
  Judges of the County Court i (a) To His
  
  Honour Judge ; (6) and (c) Sir, but
  
  " Your Honour " when on the Bench.
  
  Justices of the Peace i (a) W. Smith, Esq.,
  J.P. ; (b) and (c) Sir, but " Your Worship "
  when on the Bench.
  
  Lord Mayor i (o) The Right Honble. the
  
  Lord Mayor of ; (6) My Lord ; (c)
  
  Your Lordship. His wife : (a) The Right
  
  Honble. the Lady Mayoress of ; (6)
  
  Madam ; (c) Your Ladyship.
  
  In Scotland, Lord Provost takes the place
  of Lord Mayor. His wife does not share
  in his title.
  
  [The chief magistrates of London, Dublin, York
  Liverpool, iranchester,Birmingham, Bristol, Leeds,
  Sheffield, Newcastle, Cardiff, Belfast, and Cork arc
  Lord Mayors ; and those of Edinburgh, Glasgow-
  Aberdeen, Perth, and Dundee are Lord Provosts.]
  
  -, or in a
  
  
  Mayors : (a) The ]\Iayor of
  
  
  memorial or other formal address. To his
  
  Worship the Mayor of ; (6) and (c)
  
  Sir, but " Your Worship " when in Court.
  
  Aldermen : (a) To Alderman Sir James ,
  
  or To Mr. Alderman Jones ; (6) and (c) Sir.
  
  Officers of the Army and Navy -
  
  (o) The professional rank must always pre-
  cede any other title ; e.g. Admiral Sir
  WilHam Eyton ; Captain James Martin,
  R.N, ; Lieut, Nairn, R.N. A Meutenant in
  the army is addressed simply as Esquire,
  but above that grade the rank is expressed ;
  e.g. General Sir Edward Iving, Colonel The
  Honble. Arthur Bayne ; Major Thompson ;
  (6) If the officer is untitled begin the letter
  by writing " Sir " under the name and office.
  [Friends, of course, would write Dear
  Admiral, Dear General, &c., as the case
  may be.] The wives of officers, hke the
  wives of clergymen, do not derive any title
  from the official rank of their husbands.
  
  Special Cases -
  
  Ambassadors take the title, as do also their
  wives, of " Excellency " ; (a) To His
  
  Excellency the Earl of , Ambassador
  
  to ; (6) according to rank ; (c) Yoiu-
  
  Excellency.
  
  Privy Councillors are addressed as " Right
  Honourable," but their wives not so.
  
  Governors of Colonics : (a) To His Excellency
  , Governor of ; (6) Accord-
  ing to rank ; (c) Your Excellency.
  
  
  356
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Cardinals : (a) To Hia Eminence ;
  
  (6) and (c) Your Eminence.
  
  Dowagers. Care should bo taken to dis-
  tinguish Dowagers by putting their Christian
  name before the title, thus : The Right
  Honble. Jane, Countess of Wigan.
  
  Maid of Honour : (a) The Honble. Miss ;
  
  (b) and (c) IMadam.
  Obs. It is courteous to add to the ordinary
  addivss : -
  
  (1) The letters Indicating the order of knighthood
  
  that the addi-essee possesses, Buch as K.G.,
  K.C.B., &c.
  
  (2) The letters il.P. in the case of a Member of
  
  Parliament.
  
  (3) The letters K.C. in the case of a King's Counsel.
  
  (4) The letters indicating a Doctor's degree- D.D.,
  
  D.C.L., LL.D., M.D., &c.
  
  
  RULES OF PRECEDENCE
  
  (1) The precedence of the members of the
  Royal Family depends on their relationship to
  the reigning sovereign, and not on their relation-
  ship to any of his predecessors.
  
  (2) Ambassadors take precedence immediately
  after the Blood Royal ; envoys and ministers
  accredited to the sovereign after dukes and
  before marquises.
  
  (3) The five degrees of honour among peers
  correspond with tlie titles - duke, marquis, earl,
  viscount, baron. Of those belonging to the same
  rank, seniority of creation settles the place in
  the scale of honour.
  
  (4) Peers have precedence according as they
  are of England, Scotland, Great Britain, Ireland,
  or the United Kingdom.
  
  (5) Precedence depends partly on rank and
  partly on place or office ; thus, the Lord Steward
  and the Lord Chamberlain of H.M. Household
  are above all peers of their own degree.
  
  (6) Younger sons of rank A precede even
  the eldest son of rank B ; thus the younger sons
  of a Duke precede the elder sons of a Marquis
  or Earl, and so on.
  
  (7) All sons of Viscounts and Barons precede
  Baronets, but the eldest sons and daughters of
  Baronets walk before the eldest sons and
  daughters of Knights of any degree whatsoever,
  Knighthood not being an hereditary honour.
  On the other hand, the eldest sons of Knights
  precede the younger sons of Baronets.
  
  (8) The official precedence of a husband or
  father confers no personal precedence on his
  wife or children ; e.fj. the Lord Chancellor or
  the Speaker of the House of Commons does not
  transmit any rank or place to his wife or children
  from his official position but only from his
  personal rank.
  
  (9) Any one who is entitled to both personal
  and official precedence is to be placed ticcording
  to that which implies the higher rank.
  
  (10) Unmarried women take precedency from
  
  
  their father, " share and share alike," which is
  not the case with sons.
  
  (11) Married women share their husbands'
  dignities, but can confer none of thou' own
  upon their husbands. Nor can the daughter
  of a peer, unless a peeress in her own right,
  transmit any rank or place to her cliildren.
  
  (12) Distinctions of bu-th, creation, or descent
  are a woman's own, and remain if she marry a
  commoner ; but if she marry a nobleman she
  must take her husband's place in the order of
  precedency.
  
  (13) The wife of the eldest son of any degree
  precedes the daughters of the same degree, and
  both of them precede the younger sons of the
  next higher degree. Thus the wife of the eldest
  son of an Earl walks before an Earl's daughter,
  and both of them before the wife of the younger
  son of a Marquis ; and the wife of a Marquis
  precedes the wife of the eldest son of a Duke.
  
  TABLE OF PRECEDENCE AMONG MEN
  
  
  The King.
  
  The Prince of Wales.
  
  King's other Sons.
  
  King's Uncles.
  King's Nephews.
  
  
  (Ambassadors. See rule (2).)
  
  Archbishop of Canterbury.
  
  [In Scotland, Moderator of the General Assembly
  
  if in attendance at a royal function.]
  
  Lord High Chancellor, or Lord Keeper
  
  if a Peer.
  
  Archbishop of York.
  
  The Prime Minister.
  
  Lord Chancellor of Ireland.
  
  Lord President of the Privy Council.
  
  Lord Privy Seal.
  
  Lord Great Chamberlain.
  
  Lord High Constable.
  
  Earl Marshal.
  
  Lord Steward of H.M. Household.
  
  Lord Chamberlain of H.M. Household.
  
  The last five rank above all Peers
  
  of their own degree.
  
  Dukes.
  Eldest Sons of Dukes of the Blood Royal.
  
  Marquises.
  Eldest Sons of Dukes.
  
  Eabxs.
  
  Younger Sons of Dukes of the Blood RoyaL
  
  Eldest Sons of Marquises.
  
  Younger Sons of Dukes.
  
  Viscounts.
  
  Eldest Sons of Earls.
  
  Younger Sons of Marquises.
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  357
  
  
  Bishops.
  
  (1) London, (2) Dvirham, (3) Winchester.
  
  English Bishops, according to Seniority
  
  of Consecration.
  
  [In Scotland, the Primus of the Episcopal Chivrch
  
  immediately follows the Moderator of the
  
  Greneral Assembly.]
  
  [In Ireland the Bishops of the Disestablished
  
  Church are now placed on equality with those
  
  of the Roman Communion, all alike taking
  
  rank according to seniority of
  
  Consecration.]
  
  Secretary of State and Chief Secretary to the
  
  Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, if at least a
  
  Baron.
  
  Barons.
  
  Speaker of the House of Commons.
  
  Commissioners of the Great Seal.
  
  Treasurer of the Household.
  
  Comptroller of the Household.
  
  Master of the Horse.
  
  Vice-Chamberlain of the Household.
  
  Secretary of State and Chief Secretary to the
  
  Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, if below
  
  the rank of Baron.
  
  Eldest Sons of Viscounts.
  
  Younger Sons of Earls.
  
  Eldest Sons of Barons.
  
  Knights of the Garter.
  
  Privy Councillors.
  
  Chancellor of the Exchequer.
  
  Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster.
  
  Lord Cliiof Justice of the Iving's Bench.
  
  Master of the Rolls.
  
  Lords Justices of Appeal, and the President of
  
  the Probate Divorce and Admiralty Division.
  
  Judges of the High Court of Justice.
  
  Knights Bannerets made by the Sovereign
  
  in person.
  
  Younger Sons of (1) Viscounts. (2) Barons.
  
  Bakonets.
  Knights Bannerets not made by the
  
  Sovereign in person.
  Knights Grand Cross of the Bath.
  Knights Grand Commanders of the
  
  Star of India.
  
  Knights Grand Cross of SS. ]\Iichael
  
  and George.
  
  Knights Grand Commanders of the Order
  
  of the Indian Empire.
  
  Knights Grand Cross of the Royal
  
  Victorian Order.
  
  Knights Commanders of the Bath.
  
  Knights Commanders of the Star of India.
  
  Knights Commanders of SS. Michael and George.
  
  Knights Commanders of the Order of the
  
  Indian Empire.
  
  Knights Commanders of the Royal
  
  Victorian Order.
  
  Commanders of the Royal Victorian Order.
  
  Knights Bachelors.
  
  
  Companions of the Bath.
  
  Companions of the Star of India.
  
  Companions of SS. Llichael and George.
  
  Companions of the Order of the Indian Empire.
  
  Members of the Fourth Class of the Royal
  
  Victorian Order,
  
  Companions of the Distinguished Ser\-ice Order.
  
  Members of the Fifth Class of the Royal
  
  Victorian Order.
  
  
  Eldest Sons of the Younger Sons of Peers.
  
  Eldest Sons of Baronets.
  
  Eldest Sons of Knights of the Garter.
  
  Eldest Sons of Bannerets.
  
  Eldest Sons of Knights according to their father's
  
  precedence.
  
  Younger Sons of Baronets.
  
  Younger Sons of Knights.
  
  Esquires and Gentlemen.
  
  TABLE OF PRECEDENCE AMONG LADIES
  
  
  The Queen.
  
  The Princess of Wales. ^
  
  The Queen Mother.
  
  Daughters of the Sovereign.
  
  Sisters of the Sovereign.
  
  Aunts of the Sovereign.
  
  Wives of the Uncles of the Sovereign.
  
  Nieces of the Sovereign.
  
  Duchesses.
  
  Wives of the Eldest Sons of Dukes of the
  
  Blood Royal.
  
  Marchionesses.
  
  Wives of the Eldest Sons of Dukes.
  
  Daughters of Dukes.
  
  Countesses.
  
  Wives of the Younger Sons of Dukes
  
  of the Blood Royal.
  
  Wives of the Eldest Sons of Marquises.
  
  Daughters of Marquises.
  Wives of the Younger Sons of Dukes.
  
  Viscountesses
  
  Wives of the Eldest Sons of Earls.
  
  Daughters of Eai-ls.
  
  Wives of the Younger Sons of Marquises.
  
  Baronesses.
  
  Wives of the Eldest Sons of Viscounts.
  
  Daughters of Viscounts.
  
  Wives of the Younger Sons of Earls.
  
  Wives of the Eldest Sons of Barons.
  
  Daughters of Barons.
  
  Maids of Honour to the Queen.
  
  Wives of Kniglits of the Garter.
  
  Wives of Bannerets made by the King in
  
  person.
  
  ' There beinp no Princess of Wales at present the Queen
  Mother comes next in precedence to the Queen.
  
  
  358
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Wives of the Younger Sons of Viscounts.
  Wives of the Younger Sons of Barons.
  
  
  Wives of Baronets according to the dates of
  
  their husbands' creation.
  Wives of Bannerets not made by the Iving
  
  in person.
  
  Wives of Knights Grand Cross of the Bath.
  
  Wives of Knights Grand Commanders of the
  
  Star of India.
  
  Wives of Knighta Grand Cross of SS. ]\Iicha"il
  
  and George.
  
  Wives of Knights Grand Commanders of the
  
  Order of the Indian Empire.
  Wives of Knights Grand Cross of the Royal
  
  Victorian Order.
  
  Wives of Knights Commanders of the Bath.
  
  Wives of Knights Commanders of the
  
  Star of India.
  
  Wives of Knights Commanders of SS.
  
  Michael and George.
  
  Wives of Knights Commanders of tho Order
  
  of the Indian Empire.
  
  Wives of Knights Commanders of the Royal
  
  Victorian Order.
  
  Wives of Knights Bachelors.
  
  Wives of Companions of the Bath.
  
  Wives of Companions of the Star of India.
  
  Wives of Companions of SS. INIichacl and George,
  
  Wives of Companions of the Order of the
  
  Indian Empire.
  
  Wives of Members of the Fourth Class of the
  
  Royal Victorian Order.
  
  Wives of Companions of the Distinguished
  
  Service Order.
  
  Wives of Members of tho Fifth Class of the
  
  Royal Victorian Order.
  
  
  Wives of the Eldest Sons of the Younger
  
  Sons of Peers.
  
  Daughters of the Younger Sons of Peers.
  
  Wives of the Eldest Sons of Baronets.
  
  Daughters of Baronets.
  
  Wives of the Eldest Sons of Knights of
  
  the Garter.
  
  Wives of the Eldest Sons of Knights Bannerets.
  
  Wives of the Eldest Sons of Knights.
  
  Daughters of Knights.
  
  Wives of the Younger Sons of Baronets.
  
  Wives of the Younger Sons of Knights.
  
  Wives of Esquires and Gentlemen.
  
  PRESENTATION AT COURT
  
  The reign of King Edward VII. saw many
  ehanges in regard to tho ceremonies connected
  with presentations and attendance at Court, and
  it is presumed that tho rules proscribed by our
  late king will be continued by King Goorgo. In
  Queen Victoria's reign presentations were made
  at " Drawing Rooms," which were held in the
  day-time. Now the evening " Court " has super-
  seded the old-time drawing-room. Tho time at
  
  
  which these Courts are held is 10 p.m., and the
  Lord Chamberlain gives previous notice as to
  what time the company is expected to arrive.
  Attendance and presentation at the Courts are
  by invitation only, these invitations being con-
  veyed through the Lord Chamberlain. Ladies
  who wish to be presented at Court can only
  be presented through one of their relatives or
  acquaintances who has already been presented.
  The one who makes the presentation must
  attend the same Court as the lady she is pre-
  senting.
  
  Former Presentations. - Ladies who have been
  presented at any Drawing Room held during
  the reign of Iving Edward VII. do not require
  to be again presented to King George and
  Queen Mary. Whenever these ladies wish to
  attend a Court or make a presentation they
  should send in their names and the names of
  those whom they wish to present to the Lord
  Chamberlain, before the date by which the
  Lord Chamberlain gives notice that all names
  must be sent in.
  
  Who may be Presented at Court. - All those
  of good social position and of good reputation
  are eligible for presentation at Court. No lady,
  however high her rank, would be admitted
  to Court if there were the least stain upon
  her reputation. The wives and daughters
  of members of the aristocracy, members of
  parliament, the various professions, bankers,
  merchants, in fact, all people of recognised sub-
  stantial position are eligible for presentation,
  providing a lady who has already been presented
  is willing to fulfil this office for them.
  
  Making Presentations. - The lady making the
  presentation must be personally responsible ior
  the character of the lady she presents. She
  may present hei own daughters or daughters-
  in-law and only one other lady in addition.
  Presentations at each of their Majesties Courts
  are limited by Royal Command.
  
  Oflicial Presentations. - Presentations may be
  made officially by the foreign ambassadresses,
  the wives of members of tho Cabinet, and of
  other official personages in tho several depart-
  ments of the State. The restriction in regard
  to tho presentation of one person only does not
  apply to official presentations.
  
  Ladies have to be presented again upon their
  marriage and upon accession to titles. A lady
  having been presented on her marriage may
  attend any subsequent Court by invitation, but
  if sho has no official position, she is only expected
  to attend a Court once every fourth year.
  
  Preliminary Formalities. - Only married ladies
  may make presentations. An unmarried lady,
  however high her rank, does not possess this
  privilege. When a married lady desires to bo
  presented she should write to the Lord Chamber-
  lain requesting this honour, and stating in full
  the name and rank of her husband, and of her
  parents, and of the lady who is presenting her.
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  359
  
  
  In the case of a girl debutante her mother or
  the relative who is to present her should make
  the application. It is necessary for a lady
  making a presentation to attend herself at the
  Court at which the presentation is to be made,
  though it is not necessary for her to accompany
  the person whom she presents. A married lady
  presented at a Com-t can herself make a presenta-
  tion at the same Court, but the person presented
  by her must enter the Presence Chamber after
  her and not before her.
  
  Etiquette of Presentation. - At the beginning
  of the year the Lord Chamberlain inserts a
  notice in the newspapers requesting those who
  wish to attend one of the Courts diu-ing the
  year to send in their names ; usually the number
  of Courts to be held aniounts to four, sometimes
  five. Ladies who wish to attend them send
  in their names, and also the names of the
  ladies thoy wish to present. The Lord Chamber-
  lain then forwards to each lady a card to be
  filled up with full particulars, and when tliis
  has been duly done and all is found satisfactory
  an intimation is received from the Lord
  Chamberlain that her name has been put on
  the list for attendance at the Court, and the
  invitation arrives.
  
  Privilege of the Entree. - The Diplomatic
  Circle, Cabinet Ministers and their wives, and
  the members of the Household have what is
  known as the Privilege of the Entree. They
  enter at the gate of the Palace situated outside
  Buckingham Gate. The rooms next to the
  Presence Chamber are allotted to them. Those
  who have the privilo'j;e of entree are received
  by their Majesties according to precedency and
  before the general assembly. In regard to the
  general assembly there is no precedency as to
  which ladies enter the Presence Chamber, the
  earhest arrivals being the first admitted to
  their Majesties' presence. Those who have the
  privilege of entree have also the privilege of
  making the first presentations.
  
  Arrival at the Palace. - Upon arrival at the
  palace a lady leaves her cloak in the cloak-room.
  She must not forget to take her invitation card
  with her. After being divested of her cloak she
  goes through the hall and up the Grand Staircase
  of the Palace to the corridor, carrying her train
  upon her left arm. Her train must be carried
  in tliis way until it is taken down and spread out
  for her before entering the Presence Chamber.
  She will not have to touch it in any way as all
  this is done for her. In her right hand she holds
  her box^quot - in her left hand the in^vitation
  card. This she must be careful to hold right
  side uppermost so that the name can be read
  at once. When she has reached the corridor
  she must show the invitation card to the page
  in waiting, and then pass through into one of
  the saloons. If the saloons are full she takes
  a seat in the corridor until there is room for
  her to enter. From tiie saloons she passes in
  
  
  her turn to the Picture Gallery. Here her train,
  is let down and spread out by two pages in
  attendance, and she crosses through the Gallery
  to the Presence Chamber, giving her card to the
  usher at the door. There is usually a long line
  of ushers, but the card is given to the nearest one
  and is passed on by hinn until it reaches the
  Lord Chamberlain. There will be a long Une of
  ladies passing in turn to make their curtseys
  in the royal presence. The debutante will make
  one of that hne, and she must pay particular
  attention to her deportment, because the least
  gaucherie will make her conspicuous. The skirt
  of her dress will be long enough in front to hide
  her shoes - these should never be shown in any
  circumstances ; the walk should be a graceful,
  gliding movement, the feet gently pushing the
  long silken skirts forward to prevent any danger
  of tripping or other similar contretemps.
  
  An important Point. - One important point for
  the debutante to remember is that she must
  never stand still once she has taken her place
  in the hne of ladies who have entered the
  Presence Chamber. She must keep walking,
  taking very tiny steps if necessary, and if the
  space between herself and the lady" in front of
  her is so limited that the train of the latter is
  in her way, it is permissible for her to gently
  push it aside with her foot.
  
  The Curtsey. - When it is her turn to curtsey
  before the King the Lord Chamberlain reads
  the name of the debutante, pronouncing the
  magic words " to be presented." The debutante
  must be right in front of the Eang as she
  makes her curtsey. Needless to say, the curtsey
  should be the perfection of grace, and requires a
  great deal of rehearsal beforehand. Keeping the
  body gracefully erect she should glide the left
  foot backwards, and bending the knees, but not
  the back, make the obeisance ; the right hand
  containing the bouquet should be lowered
  slightly so that the bouquet may not be in the
  way. All appearance of nervousness and
  fluster should be avoided. Wliilst paying her
  homage the debutante should endeavour to
  wear a cheerful expression, and as she rises
  from the curtsey she should gracefully incline
  her head to the King in acknowledgment, then
  beginning on the right foot as she rises she
  should take three gliding steps towards the
  Queen, ciirtseying to her in the same way.
  After rising and gently inclining her head as
  to the King, she must follow the Une of ladies
  who have already been presented, making her
  way out of the Presence Chamber, ^\^lcn she
  reaches the door she must turn quickh', holding
  out her left arm with the elbow b>nt to receive
  her train, wliich the page will throw over it.
  She must bo sure to do this quickly in order
  to catch it at the proper moment, or much
  awkwardness might result.
  
  Ladies do not now step backwards when leav-
  ing the Royal Presence, nor do they curtsey to
  
  
  360
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  any other members of the Royal Family but
  the King and Queen. Formerly upon being
  presented to Queen Victoria eacli lady had to
  remove the glove from the right hand, and
  when the words "to bo presented " were
  tittered by tlie Lord Cliamberlain the Queen
  would extend her hand, and the debutante
  placing her own ungloved hand beneath Her
  Majestj-"s, would kiss it as she made her curtsey.
  Now a lady upon being presented does not kiss
  the King's hand, but only curtseys to the
  King and then to the Queen, who bow in
  return.
  
  There are so many points of etiquette in
  r^ard to a presentation at Court that it is
  absolutely necesseiry for a lady about to be
  presented to take at leeist one lesson in deport-
  ment beforehand. Mrs. Wordsworth of 47
  Harrington Road, South Kensington, London,
  •who is one of the best-known authorities on
  Court etiquette and deportment, coaches debu-
  tantes for the occasion of their presentation.
  She teaches them how to hold their trains, how
  to walk, how to curtsey, and how to conduct
  themselves generally in the Royal Presence.
  A lady's first appearance at Court is apt to be
  somewhat of an ordeal when she is not quite
  au fait with the procedure, and even if she is
  fortunate enough not to make any actual faux
  pas, her fear of doing so will keep her mind in
  a state of constant perturbation. On the other
  hand, she will have acquired the ease born of
  self-confidence if she goes to Court fittingly
  prepared. By arrangement with ^Irs. Words-
  worth, classes for the purpose of instruction in
  Court deportmonfe may be held by herself or her
  assistants at all provincial and country districts.
  Private lessons can also be arranged in the
  same manner.
  
  Court Dress. - Ladies must wear full Court
  dress when attending or being presented at
  Court ; the train to the dress must not be less
  than three and a half yards in length. The
  bodice must be low, and the sleeves short. The
  train may be of any shape, and it may either
  hang from the shoulders or from the waist.
  A presentation dress should be white, but it
  may be trimmed with coloured flowers if desired.
  
  Plumes. - The head-dress consists of a veil
  of white tulle and plumes. All ladies, married
  and unmarried, must wear plumes. The married
  ladies wear three white plumes, the unmarried
  ladies two.
  
  High Court Dress. - For the benefit of old
  ladies and those who suffer from delicacy or
  ill-health, the Queen has approved of a High
  Coui t dress which maj' be worn by those to whom
  for any of these reasons the ordinary low Court
  dress is unsuitable. The bodice is cut square
  or heart-shaped in front and filled in with
  white. At the back the bodice may be high
  or cut down the same way as the front.
  The sleeves to the bodice are of elbow-length.
  
  
  Ladies who wish to appear in High Court
  dress must first obtain the Queen's permission.
  
  White gloves only should be worn, excepting
  in cases of mourning.
  
  Bouquets are carried by both married and
  unm"m:ied ladies.
  
  CHURCH DECORATION
  
  Women are often called upon to assist in the
  decoration of their parish chiu-ch at various
  festivals, and if they do not actually help in
  the work they may hke to send in some floral
  contributions. In doing this it is well to re-
  member that all the colours employed in tlio
  decoration of the church have some special
  significance. Thus : -
  
  White signifies innocence, glory, and joy.
  
  Red stands for (o) the fire of love which the
  Holy Ghost kindles within us ; (6) the blood of
  the Martyrs.
  
  Gold signifies glory.
  
  Blue signifies Heaven, knowledge, contem-
  plation.
  
  Purple signifies penitence and fasting.
  
  Black, death and darkness.
  
  Green, the hope and desire of Heaven.
  
  In regard to floral decoration, therefore, white
  is the most appropriate colour for the wiiite
  daj's, such as Cliristmas, the Circumcision, the
  Epiphany, and Easter. WTiite and gold are
  generally used for the latter festival, the Easter
  Lily being a particularlj^ appropriate flower for
  altar decoration on Easter Sunday. On Palm
  Sunday the altar may be decorated with palms ;
  the general decoration may also include bos,
  yew, and wiUow.
  
  Red is the colour for Pentecost and feasts
  of martjTS.
  
  Purple is the colour for Lent, with the excep-
  tion of Good Friday, when black is used. As
  a rule there should be no floral decorations
  sent for either Advent or Lent ; this rule is,
  however, generally departed from on the third
  Sunday in Advent, the fourth Sunday in Lent,
  and Holy Innocents' Day.
  
  Christmas time is undoubtedly the festival
  of the year when church decoration assumes
  its most interesting aspect. Many church
  workers eagerly volunteer their service not
  only in regard to the decoration of the altar,
  but also in regard to that of tlio whoie church.
  Holly is the leading feature of the church de-
  coration, whilst ivy, rosemary, and bay enter
  into the general decorative scheme. Wreaths
  of holly, ivy, and other green leaves are twisted
  in and out around all the pillars, and wherever
  there is a window-ledge or recess it is banked
  with holly and green leaves. Very few people
  know how to make wreaths and festoons properly.
  It is always best to have a =olid foundation of
  fine cording, and to make up bunches of holly
  and leaves, tying them to this cording foundation
  
  
  ETIQUETTE AND SOCIAL GUIDE
  
  
  361
  
  
  at regular intervals of a few inches the one from
  the other. The bunches of holly and leaves
  can be tied with fine twine, and the worker
  should have all the necessary implements, such
  as scissors, string, &c., ready to hand. If the
  wreaths or festoons have no foundation of the
  kind, and the various bunches are only tied
  together and joined to one another without
  the support of cord, they are apt to break away
  
  
  from each other and thus present an untidy
  appearance.
  
  If several workers are engaged in decorating
  the church at Christmas time it is always as
  well to have some scheme of organisation by
  which each member is allotted a particular
  task ; under these circumstances the work is
  brought to a quicker and a much more satis-
  factory conclusion.
  
  
  LIST OF LADIES' CLUBS
  
  The following is a list of the principal Clubs in London with the Entrance and Subscription Fees.
  
  Ahbreviatioiis- A.V.- Annual Subscription or Fee.
  E.F.- Entrance Fee.
  CM.- Country Member.
  
  LONDON
  
  Albemarle (Ladies and Gentlemen).- 37 Dover Street, W. E. F. £6, 6s. A. F. £6, 6s.
  
  Alexandra.- 12 Grosvenor Street, W. E. F. £2, 2s. A. F. £5, 5s. C. M. £4, 4s.
  
  Alliance.- 61 Curzon Street, Mayfair, W. A. F. £3, 3s.
  
  Austral (Ladies and Gentlemen).- 38 Dover Street, W. E, F. £2, 2s. A. F. £3, 3s, C. M.
  £2, 2s.
  
  Athenoeu7n.-U Dover Street, W. E. F. £5, 6s. A. F. £5, 5s.
  
  Army and Navy. - 2 Burlington Garden, W. E. F. £3, 3s. A. F. £5, 5s.
  
  Empress.- 35 Dover Street, W. E. F. £5, 5s. A. F. £5, 5s.
  
  Empire.- m Grosvenor Street, W. E. F. £5, 5s. A. F. £8, 8s.
  
  Ladies' Imperial. - 17 Dover Street, W. E. F. £5, 5s. A. F. £5, 5s.
  
  Ladies' Park.- 32 Knightsbridge, S.W. E. F. £5, 5s. A. F. £4, 4s. and £3, Ss.
  
  Lyceum.- US Piccadily, W. E. F. £2, 2s. A. F. £4, 4s. C. M. £3, 3s.
  
  New Century. -Hay Hill, Berkeley Square, W. E. F. £2, 2s. A. F. £1, Is.
  
  New County.- 21 Hanover Square, W. E. F. £2, 2s. A. F. £3, 3s.
  
  New Era.- 67 Curzon Street, Mayfair, W. E. F. £2, 2s. A. F. £3, 3s. C. M. £2, 2s.
  
  New Victorian.- 30a Sackville Street, W. E. F. £2, 2s. A. F. £3, 3s.
  
  Pioneer.- 5 Grafton Street, Piccadilly, W. E. F. £3, 3s. A. F. £3, 3s. and £2, 2s.
  
  Sesame (Ladies and Gentlemen).- 28 and 29 Dover Street, W. E. F. £6, 6s. A. F. £6, 6s.
  
  University. - 4 George Street, Hanover Square, W. E. F. £1, Is. A. F. £1, 10s.
  
  Victoria.- U5 Victoria Street, S.W. E. F. £2, 2s. A. F. £5, 5s. C. M. £3, 3s.
  
  TFn  £1, Is.
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  How to keep within her income or allowance besides leaving a margin for savings and unforeseen
  expenses is a problem wliich many a harassed housewife heis failed to solve. The simple rules in
  regard to the suitable apportionment of the allowance and the best methods of keeping check upon
  expenditure, which are given in the first part of tliis chapter, have been compiled as the result of
  actual experience - they have been tried and found successful. In addition, all that every woman
  ought to know in connection with the management of her affairs, including such important questions
  as banking, insurance, and those points of law wliich are liable to crop up in ordinary every-day life,
  are described and explained in as simple a manner as possible.
  
  
  Allotment of the Income. - The value of money
  is one of the first things every woman should
  learn, and tliis is especially necessary in the
  case of those who have anything to do with
  household management, as the basis of all good
  housekeeping lies in the proper control of the
  household purse.
  
  It would be a very good thing if every young
  girl could be taught to keep an accurate account
  of her own pocket-money as a preliminary to
  undertaking expenses on a largo scale.
  
  Successful management does not depend so
  much on the size of the income, but rather upon
  the spending of it to the best advantage. Those
  who get into trouble with a small amount would
  no doubt have similar difficulties if their income
  were doubled or even trebled.
  
  First of all then it is important to ascertain
  the exact amount of your income, or at least
  how much of it may bo safely expended on the
  various items which come under the heading
  of Household Expenses.
  
  When starting housekeeping it is a good plan
  to portion out the income so as to make it cover
  all the expenses that are likely to occur for a
  period of, say, throe months, six montlis, or a
  year. For this purpose each detail of expen-
  diture must bo jottod down under a distinctive
  heading, such as rent, food, clothing, education,
  &c., and a certain sum allotted to each division.
  Everything must be bomo in mind, not only
  the Current Expenses, i.e. those which run on
  from day to day, such as rent and taxes, house-
  hold expenses, insurance, charities, clothing,
  and perhaps school fees, &c., but also Occasional
  Expenses, such as holidays, travelling, recrea-
  tion, hospitalities, pcssible medical attendance,
  and any special outlay. An effort should also
  be made to have a Reserve Fund, so that some-
  thing at least, even although it may be a small
  amount, is saved each year. The list must then
  be added up and the amount of the expenses
  
  
  compared with the amount of the income.
  If the sum of the income exceeds that of the
  expenditure, tilings are quite safe, we are living
  witliin our means ; but if it is less, one or other
  of our expenses must be cut off or curtailed.
  
  Many schemes for the proportionate allotment
  of the income have been drawn up, such as the
  following : - •
  
  
  Bent and taxes ....
  Household expenses .
  Clothing and charities
  Education and travelling .
  Insurance, incidental and sa\ing
  
  
  But a table of this sort can only serve as a guide
  and not by any means as a hard-and-fast rule
  to go by. In fact, it is quite impossible to
  draw up any scheme which will apply to every
  household, as conditions vary so considerably.
  
  This drawing up of a plan demands a certain
  amount of careful calculation, and perhaps
  just at first it will be impossible to arrive at
  the best division of the means at disposal, but
  if after a few months' trial this or that part of
  the scheme is found not to work well, it is easy
  to make alterations until the best possible allot-
  ment of the income is secured.
  
  When the income is a fixed one this is com-
  paratively easy ; it is whore it is fluctuating or
  uncertain that the greater difficulty comes in,
  and in this case one can only plan for a shorter
  time and count on the lowest sum.
  
  To begin with, the amount necessary to pay
  for rent will vary in different places, and while
  one-sixth might bo found necessary for a suitable
  house in town, in country districts one-eighth or
  oven one-tenth of the income would be ample. It
  must be remembered that the amount of rent
  paid will very much influence the style of living,
  and that it is not wise to go beyond a sum that
  is in proportion to one's means.
  
  Then, again, education foes will be very heavy
  
  
  362
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  363
  
  
  in some families, or special training fees in
  order to equip one or other of its members for
  a chosen career in life, while in other households
  this kind of outlay is practically nil.
  
  Doctors' fees may never be required some
  years, while at other times they may be abnor-
  mally heavy.
  
  Then expenses due to appearances amount
  to a considerable sum in some cases, and they
  cannot well be curtailed without damaging the
  reputation of the head of the house. This is
  especially noticeable in the households of pro-
  fessional men or women where a shabby, mean
  appearance either in dress or household appoint-
  ments would materially injvu-e their career.
  
  With regard to clothing, where much can be
  made at home the expense is decidedly less,
  but where this is impossible a larger sum must
  of necessity be allowed.
  
  Thus it will be seen that there are certain
  expenses which can be reduced in some houses
  and not in others, and that the plan must be
  made out accordingly.
  
  It is best therefore for the head of the family
  to make out his or her own plan, always being
  careful to keep the expenses within a safe limit.
  The income should always overlap the outlay,
  and, in addition, there should if possible be a
  Reserve Fund, as mentioned above.
  
  A certain sum having been apportioned to
  each set of expenses a system of book-keeping
  should then be started.
  
  Where a husband and wife are at the head of
  the house it very often happens that the man
  pays all the expense,- except those connected
  with clothing and the house - keeping proper,
  handing over to his wife a fixed sum weekly
  or monthly for these requirements. This will,
  of course, simplify the book-keeping for the
  house-mistress, although under all circum-
  stances the method to be adopted is very much
  the same.
  
  It is one of the duties of the mistress of the
  house to keep an accurate account of all money
  that comes under her charge. Many women
  have a strong objection to keeping accounts
  and content themselves with a rule of thumb
  method of managing their affairs ; but this
  haphazard way of dealing with money is almost
  sure to lead to trouble sooner or later. A house-
  keeper who keeps accounts will be amply repaid
  for her trouble, and although at first it may
  seem irksome and almost too gi'eat a strain
  upon one's time and thought, yet when once
  a simple method of book-keeping has been
  mastered the entries become almost mechanical
  and cause no trouble. Correct accounts are a
  most valuable help against habits of extra-
  vagance, and a neat record of one's income
  and expenditure is a possession by no means
  to be despised.
  
  An elaborate system of book-keeping is not
  necessary ; in fact, the simpler the plan adopted
  
  
  the better. There should first of all be a
  Cash-Box. Every woman who has charge of
  money should furnish herself with a cash-box
  fitted with lock and key in which to keep all
  the money she has in hand. If this box has
  separate divisions in which to put gold, silver,
  and coppers, it will be all the more useful. This
  is very important when considerable sums of
  money have to be dealt with, and even when
  the amount is small it is alwaj's wiser not to
  leave money in open places. To lock it up is
  not a sign that we mistrust people's honesty ;
  at the same time it is not fair to put temptation
  in any one's way.
  
  The next thing is a Cash-Book. This should
  be of a very good size and be ruled with money
  columns. There are several different house-
  keeping books on the market, ruled ofi with
  different headings under wliich to put the
  different items, but these are, as a rule, too
  complicated, and a simple account-book can be
  made to serve the purpose admirably.
  
  The cash-book should show three things at a
  glance : (1) the amount of money received to
  date ; (2) the i mount of money paid out to
  date ; and (3) the balance.
  
  On the right-hand page enter all pajTnents
  made, putting the date to each day before be-
  ginning the entries. This is called the credit
  side, and is a record of all that goes out.
  
  On the left-hand page enter all money you
  have in hand to begin with, then anj' money
  received or drawn from the bank with the cor-
  responding dates. This is called the debit side
  and is a record of all that comes in.
  
  This is all that is required for the daily entries,
  and ten minutes a day should suffice for the
  transaction if the work is carried out with
  regularity and accuracy.
  
  Tlien at the end of the week or on a fixed
  day each week the account should be balanced.
  
  To Balance the Account. - To do this first add
  up very carefully the columns on both pages,
  and then compare the amount spent on the
  right-hand page with the amount on the left-
  hand page. If the amount on the credit side
  is less than the sum entered on the debit side
  the money remaining in the cash-box should
  equal the difference. This is called the Balance
  in Hand, and should be added on to the right-
  hand page in order to make both columns aUke.
  
  After ruling off the account the cash in hand
  should be brought down to start the debit side
  of the next week's account. When a page is
  finished, whether it be the left-hand or the
  right-hand one, the entries on both sides should
  be stopped, and if one page has a blank space
  left a line should bo drawn diagonally across it
  to show that no further entries should be
  made there.
  
  Tlie plan given on the next page will serve to
  show what is meant by the above explanation.
  It is intended as a guide to method only.
  
  
  364
  
  
  THE WOMxVN'S BOOK
  SPECIMEN PAGE OF CASH BOOK
  
  
  Week ending May 14 -
  
  £
  
  s.
  
  d.
  
  WccJc ending May 14 -
  
  £
  
  a.
  
  d.
  
  May 9
  
  Amount in band
  
  0
  
  15
  
  0
  
  May 9
  
  Grocer
  
  0
  
  7
  
  4
  
  ,. 9
  
  Cash received .
  
  0
  
  0
  
  0
  
  ,. 9
  
  " 10
  " 10
  " 10
  
  " 11
  " 11
  
  " 12
  
  " 12
  
  12
  
  " 13
  
  Dairy
  
  Newspapers
  Baker
  Stationery
  Household repairs
  Flowers
  
  Window-cleaning
  Washing .
  Cab fares .
  Chemist .
  Servants' wages
  
  0
  0
  0
  0
  0
  0
  0
  0
  0
  0
  2
  
  5
  0
  3
  
  4
  6
  
  1
  2
  
  4
  4
  2
  
  12
  
  0
  9
  6
  8
  1
  0
  6
  3
  0
  11
  0
  
  4
  
  14
  
  0
  
  1
  
  ., 14
  
  Cash in hand .
  
  1
  5
  
  1
  15
  
  0
  
  £
  
  5
  
  15
  
  0
  
  £
  
  0
  
  This keeping of a cash-book is the simplest
  form of book-keeping, and if all that is required
  is a simple record of the food bills and working
  expenses of the household it may be deemed
  sufficient ; but if the expenditure of the whole
  income has to be accounted for something more
  will be necessary. The drawback to this simple
  form is that there is no attempt at classification,
  and it does not show how the expenditure is
  being divided under the various headings of
  food, clothing, rent, &c., and whether the limits
  agreed upon at the commencement are being
  adhered to. To obtain this information the
  different items would require to bo separately
  posted to another book, and this book would
  bo called The Lrdger.
  
  To Post the Ledger. - At regular intervals all
  the items in tho cash-book should bo cleissified in
  another book. It is just a question how many
  headings should bo made for household expen-
  diture ; an over-detailed classification should bo
  avf'ided, as it makes too much demand upon
  our time. Hero, again, simplicity coupled with
  accuracy should bo aimed at.
  
  The number of headings must vary according
  to circumstances, but tho minimum might be
  the following : -
  
  1. Rent and taxes.
  
  2. Food account.
  
  
  3. Other household expenses.
  
  4. Clothing.
  
  5. Education, books, and stationery.
  
  6. Insurance aud charities.
  
  7. Travelling and holiday expenses.
  
  8. Incidental expenses.
  
  The ledger need only be made up once in three
  months, or at most once a month. We shall
  then have an exact statement as to where tho
  money has gone, and if retrenchment is nocosfaary
  it will serve eis a distinct guide as to where wo
  shall require to curtail expenditure.
  
  The following table will serve as a guide to
  the arrangement of the Ledger.
  
  Quarterly Expenditure
  
  £ .. d.
  
  Rent and taxes 15 0 0
  
  Food Account 30 10 0
  
  Other household expenses . . . 12 14 0
  
  Clothing II 18 0
  
  Education, books and stationery . 14 0 0
  
  Insurance and charities .... 8 17 0
  Travelling and holidays .... 660
  
  Incidental expenses 5 9 0
  
  £104 14 0
  
  Or, if the mistress of the house has only the
  money spent on household bills to account for.
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  365
  
  
  Grocer . .
  Fishmonger
  Baker . .
  Butcher
  
  
  a simple and more detailed analysis might be
  made out monthly in the following manner : -
  
  Monthly Household Bills
  
  2 2 0
  
  10 0
  
  12 0
  
  2 10 0
  
  Milk, eggs and butter 1 10 0
  
  Greengrocer 10 0
  
  Wasiiing 180
  
  Repairs 0 12 0
  
  £11 4 0
  
  HOUSEHOLD EXPENSES
  
  This term applies to all expenses connected
  with housekeeping proper, such as food, washing,
  fuel and light, servants, wages, cleaning materials,
  repairs, &c., so that the fixed sima which has
  been allotted under the above heading will re-
  quire to be judiciously apportioned amongst the
  various items mentioned in order that it may
  be used to the best advantage.
  
  With regard to the actual food allowance,
  there is great diversity of opinion as to what
  should be spent per week. Certain fixed stan-
  dards have indeed been set up which have come
  to be regarded as reasonable, but these will
  naturally vary with individual circumstances, as,
  for instance, the number to be fed, individual
  taste and requirements, and the means at
  disposal.
  
  The allowance for f". od is generally calciilated
  at a certain sum per head. This sum will vary
  in accordance with the number of people to be
  provided for, a smaller amount per head being
  necessary in the case of a lai'ge family than in
  the case of a small one, the expense per head
  in the case of one or two people being much
  greater than in any other circumstances. For
  a grown-up family of moderate means, where
  all the members dine at home and meat is eaten
  every day, and all have good healthy appetites,
  lOs. per head per week would be thought a very
  fair sum to provide a nice table with good
  variety, a Httle extra being allowed for any
  visitors. If this sum is beyond what can be
  afforded a sufficiency of good nourishing food
  can be provided for much less, or from 5s. to 8s.
  per head, but this will require more thought
  and management, and such things as game and
  poultry would not figure largely on the bill of
  fare. It is generally necessary to allow the same
  amount for servants as for the other members
  of the family. Of course, there are many whose
  means are not limited who will consider the
  above figiu-es ridiculously small, and who would
  require 15s. or even £1 per week to supply all
  their warts. The reason why a moderate
  amount in many cases proves insufficient is
  very often owing to waste of material, extrava-
  
  
  gance in buying, or lack of knowledge as to
  how to make the most of things.
  
  A small food allowance presupposes favour-
  able opportunities for marketing, as, for instance,
  in the case of people living in the country where
  garden produce is cheap and also farm produce,
  although, on the other hand, they may have to
  pay more for their groceries and butcher meat.
  
  In order to use a food allowance to the best
  advantage, a certain knowledge of cookery and
  the dietetic properties of food is also necessary.
  The house -mistress must just make up her mind
  as to what is a legitimate amount to spend on
  food, and if it comes to having to curtail ex-
  penses there are always other ways of doing it,
  but there must be a sufficiency of good whole-
  some food before everything else.
  
  It is not always an easy matter to cut down
  expenditure, and few people enjoy economising,
  yet in hundreds of cases it has to be done.
  Saving can be effected in many ways. For
  instance, one can discontinue the use of wine and
  other Ivixuries, reduce the number of servants,
  have washing done at home, make one's own
  clothes, and last, but not least, avoid spending
  money on trifles. This is a perfect habit with
  some people. Shop windows have such a fasci-
  nation for them that they can rarely pass by with-
  out going in to buy some knick-knack or other,
  spending as much money in this way as they
  do on drefs, and there is nothing to show for it.
  Sales are also a temptation to many : they are
  persuaded to buy an article or piece of material
  for which they have not the slightest need,
  simply because the price looks cheap, and they
  do not like to miss what seems to them a bargain,
  when in reality it is waste of money. The
  greatest point of all in cutting down expenditure
  is to prevent waste and to adopt economical
  methods without in any way being mean and
  stingy.
  
  Payment of Household AccouQts. - It is just a
  question whether it is better to pay ready money
  or to have weekly, fortnightly, or monthly ac-
  counts. If the ready-money system is adopted
  it means more entering up each day, and there
  is more detail work. A small note-book would
  require to be kept in addition to the cash-book
  in order to jot down each payment when it is
  made, as it is useless to burden one's memory
  unnecessarily. But it is not easy to pay ready
  money for everything, and upon the whole
  weekly payments, which practically amount to
  the same thing, are preferable, as they save the
  trouble of so many small payments. A set
  of house-books too save an amount of trouble,
  and seem to keep the matter in a more concise
  form. In small households this system should
  certainly be adopted, and especially so if the
  income is a limited one. Running up long bills
  is not economical, and if you wish to be well
  served you should make up your mind to pay
  the house-books regularly.
  
  
  366
  
  
  THE WO^IAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Of coxirse there are special circumstances
  where it is not convenient to pay weekly, and
  where even the trades-people prefer a montlily
  payment, but the books sliould in any case
  be made up and chocked weoklj'. If accounts
  are only rendered once a month it is much
  more difficult to keep a check on the items, and
  mistakes are apt to pass uimoticed.
  
  The Checking and Filing of Bills. - Each bill
  as it is received should be carefullj' examined
  and the various items checked and verified.
  Bills should never be paid until this has been
  done. Tlie small vouchers which ought to ac-
  company all goods sent in by the trades-people
  must be kept for this purpose, and also all
  weight tickets such as would be sent with meat
  or coal. With regard to milk and bread, which
  are usuallj* taken daily from a man at the door,
  it is a good plan to keep a small book or slate
  at hand in which the daily amount is marked
  down.
  
  All bills, when they have been paid, should be
  receipted and kept for future reference. Occa-
  sionally a bill may be presented a second time,
  and this mistake may happen even with the
  best houses, and unless the receipt can be pro-
  duced the pajonent will in all probability have
  to be made again. Loose bills can either be
  kept on files bought for the purpose, or they
  can be folded lengthwise with the name and
  date of payment outside, and then encircled
  with an india-rubber band. Tliey must always
  be arranged in an order which ^^'ill allow of
  ready discovery.
  
  BANKING
  
  The Business of a Bank. - The bank is a most
  important factor in both our commercial and
  social life. Nearly all payments in business are
  made through the medium of a bank, and almost
  every individual of any standing in private hfo
  has a banking account.
  
  Besides taking charge of the money of liis
  customers, it is a banker's business to pay
  cheques issued by them, to collect the value of
  cheques paid to them, to attend to and discount
  their bills, and, if necessary, to take charge of
  their securities, their jewels, or other valuable
  property. The money that is paid into a bank
  is not allowed to lie idle in its safes. If that
  were so there would be no profit in a banker's
  business. A large proportion is lent by the
  bank at a much higher rate of interest than
  is paid to depositors. The difference in this
  interest represents the banker's profits.
  
  Interest. - Interest is a certain sum paid in
  return for the use of money. It is always
  calculated at so much per cent. {i.e. per hundred)
  jjer annum. Thus -
  
  2i per cent. =£2, lOs. in every £100, Cd. in every £1.
  5 per cent. =£5 in every £100, is. in every £1.
  7J per cent. =£7, lOs. in every £100, Is 6d. in every £1.
  10 per cent. =£10 in every £100, 2s. in every £1.
  
  
  Simple and Compound Interest. - The sum
  upon wliich interest is eillowed is called the
  " principal." The interest allowed upon the
  original " principal " only is called " simple
  interest." ^\^len, however, the simple interest
  is allowed to accumulate and be added to the
  principal, it ranks as an increased principal, and
  interest calculated upon the larger sum obtained
  in this way is known as " compound interest."
  
  Bank Notes. - Some banks have a right to
  issue bank notes to the public. These are
  printed on special paper and are equivalent to
  their amount in cash. English bank notes are
  issued for sums of £5 and upwards, while
  Scottish and Irish banks issue £1 notes as well.
  Bank of England notes are legal tender, and are
  accepted both in Britain and abroad almost as
  readily as gold. £1 Scotch or Irish notes are
  only of the value of 19s. lid. in England.
  
  How to Open a Banking Account. - Some
  women have a very vague idea of the formalities
  to be observed in opening a banking account,
  and of the difference between what is known
  as a Deposit Account and a Current or Credit
  Account.
  
  In opening a banking account it is usually
  necessary to have an introduction to the bank
  from some person known to it. £50 is usually
  the minimimi sum for which London banks
  will open an account ; but there are, of course,
  exceptions, and accounts are opened for much
  smaller sums by most of the suburban and
  provincial houses.
  
  The Deposit Account. - If it is wished to leave
  the money on deposit at interest the bank will
  have to be notified that a " Deposit " account
  is to be opened. The customer will then have
  to write her signature clearly and distinctly in
  the bank's signature book for purposes of
  identification, and she will receive a receipt
  from the bank known as a " Deposit Receipt."
  In London interest should be paid on the sum
  deposited at the rate of 1^ per cent, below bank
  rate (see p. 309) ; that is, if the bank rate is
  4 per cent, she will obtain interest at the rate
  of 2 J per cent.
  
  A week or a fortnight's notice is usually re-
  qiu'red by a bank before the withdrawal of money
  left on deposit. It is as well to ascertain what
  notice is required before banking money in this
  way. Many banks, however, are willing to pay
  the money without notice when necessary. The
  deposit receipt should be sent to the bank every
  six months in order that the interest may be
  calculated. The latter may be withdrawn or
  arVled to the principal as preferred.
  
  Joint Deposits. - A deposit may be made
  jointly by more than one person. In this case
  all the names will appear on the receipts, and
  the money will not be paid over except on receipt
  of all the signatures ; so it would, where desired,
  be convenient to have the receipt made out
  payable upon the signature of a certain one only.
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  367
  
  
  If the depositor dies, the money can be with-
  drawn by the executor or administrator upon
  production of the probate or letters of ad-
  ministration.
  
  It is never wise to be secretive in regard to
  money deposited with a bank, for if the de-
  positor should die and the receipt were over-
  looked or lost, and consequently no demand
  ever made for payment, the bank would not
  think of communicating with the deceased per-
  son's relatives, and at the end of six years
  the unclaimed deposit would become the bank's
  own property.
  
  Credit or Current Account. - A current account
  is one from which the customer may draw money
  by cheque at will, and into which she can make
  payments when convenient.
  
  A woman should be careful never to vary her
  signature in signing cheques, but to keep it in
  every way the same as that by which she signed
  her name in the signature book. Until the
  officials at the bank become familiar with her
  writing all signatures on cheques are compared
  with that in the signature book for identifica-
  tion, and should there be any marked discrepancy
  between the two, difficulty in obtaining payment
  of the cheques might result.
  
  The bank generally makes a charge equivalent
  to an eighth per cent, upon the withdrawals
  for the working of a small account.
  
  After the customer has compUed with the
  preliminaries of signing her name in the bank's
  signature book, and paying in the money, the
  bank will hand her a " paying-in " slip book,
  a " pass-book," and a cheque-book.
  
  The Paying-in Book. - Each page of the
  paying-in " slip book " is perforated down the
  centre. Particulars of the amount paid in,
  whether by gold, silver, or notes, country or
  London cheques, are filled in on each side of the
  perforation, then the book is handed to the
  receiving cashier, who tears off the right-hand
  slip for the use of the bank, initialling the one
  that remains in the book, leaving it both as
  record and receipt in the hands of the customer.
  
  The Pass-Eook. - In the customer's pass-book
  the bank enters all records of the account in
  regard to sums paid in and withdrawals. In a
  little pocket in the pass-book are placed all
  cheques whicli have been paid away by the
  customer and returned to i\ e bank in the course
  of business. It is as well to keep these cheques,
  as they form incontestable proof and receipts of
  money paid out. The pass-book should be left
  in the hands of the bank as much as possible
  in order that the accounts can be regularly
  kept.
  
  The Cheque-Book.- The cheque-book is a book
  containing a certain number of stamped forms
  called " cheques," which every bank suppUes
  to its customers, who are charged with the cost
  of the stamps. Each cheque is perforated so
  that it can be easily detached from the book.
  
  
  To the left of the perforation is a small counter-
  foil which remains in the book, and upon
  which a record of each payment by cheque is
  entered.
  
  Tlie cheque presents many mysteries to the
  average feminine mind. Briefly, a bank cheque
  is an order in writing to a bank from its customer
  to pay on demand a certain sum of money to
  a person whose name is given on the cheque.
  Each cheque is hable to a stamp duty of one
  penny, and the stamp is usually impressed upon
  the printed form. The person who draws the
  cheque is called the " drawer," and the person
  or firm to whom it is payable is called the
  " payee."
  
  A cheque may be drawn " to order " or "to
  bearer." In the former case the " payee "
  can obtain payment at the bank named by
  writing her name across the back of the cheque.
  This is known as " endorsing " a cheque.
  
  An order cheque always needs endorsing,
  whereas it is not necessary to endorse a cheque
  made payable to " bearer " ; any person can
  obtain payment on presenting a " bearer "
  cheque.
  
  Alteration on Cheques. - A cheque can be
  altered from " bearer " to " order " by running
  the pen through the former word and sub-
  stituting the word " order." This may be done
  by the drawer or the payee, but only the drawer
  may alter a cheque from " order " to " bearer,"
  it being necessary in this case to put his or her
  initials under the correction made. Any altera-
  tion in the amount must be initialled by the
  drawer.
  
  Great care should always be taken in filling
  in a cheque. The first figure of the sum payable
  should alwaj-s be placed close to the £ mark,
  so that there is no possibiUty of another figure
  being placed before it. In the same way the
  dots or hyphen separating the pounds from
  shillings should be close to the last figure of the
  pounds, so that there is no chance of adding a
  figiu-e to the pounds total.
  
  Crossing Cheques. - Cheques are crossed for
  greater safety and to ensure their being paid
  into a banking account. When crossed cheques
  are used the risk of fraud is greatly minimised.
  A crossed cheque cannot be exchanged for
  cash at the coimter of the bank of the drawer ;
  the payee must pay it into her own bank if she
  has one. If not she must get change for it
  from some one who has.
  
  Different Methods of Crossing Cheques. - A
  cheque is crossed generally by drawing across its
  face two parallel transverse lines either with
  or without the words "and Co." between them.
  Cheques so crossed cannot be exchanged for
  cash at the counter of the bank. The payee
  must employ her banker to collect the money for
  her by paying it into her bank account. If she
  has not a bank accoimt she must get some one
  who has one to cash it for her.
  
  
  368
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  It is crossed specially (1) by inserting the
  name of the bank through which the pajTiient is
  
  
  Examples of General Crossings.
  
  to be made, in the crossing, or (2) by inserting
  the name of the person to whose account the
  payment is to be made, or (3) by inserting
  both the name of the bank and the name of the
  person to whose account it has to be credited.
  
  
  Examples of Special Crossings.
  
  
  U) Means that the cheque can only be cashed through
  Parr's Bank.
  
  (2) Means that only the payee can get cash for the
  cheque, and only from the hank where he has an account.
  
  (3) Specifies not only tlie account to which the cheque
  is to be paid, but the biuik where such account is kept.
  
  The crossing of a cheque does not affect its
  negotiability, and if a crossed cheque has been
  stolen after being endorsed, the person who
  takes it from the thief in good faith and gives
  value for it can enforce payment of it, even
  though the cheque has been stopjjed. The loss
  will fall upon the payee. In order to destroy
  the negotiability of a cheque, the words, " not
  negotiable " must form part of the crossing.
  Whoever then takes the cheque can have no
  better title to it than the person who gave it to
  him had.
  
  Aa a still further safeguard to prevent the
  addition of figtires, it is well to %\Tite across the
  cheque that the sum is under a certain amount.
  For instance, the words " under ten pounds "
  written across a cheque for nine pounds would
  clearly indicate that the amount was £9 and
  not £90, and all possibiUty of fraud would
  be prevented.
  
  Dishonoured Cheques. - A cheque is said to be
  dishonoured when it is returned from the bank
  because the drawer has not sufficient money to
  his (or her) credit to meet it. Cheques returned
  in this way arc qronerally marked " R.D." (refer
  to drawer) or " N.S." (not sufficient funds).
  
  Stopping Payment. - A drawer can stop pay-
  
  
  ment of a cheque after having parted with it
  by immediately notifying her banker in writing
  not to pay it on presentation. Full details as
  to date, amount, and name of payee should be
  given. A payee who has lost a cheque after
  ha\dng endorsed it should at once notify the
  drawer of tliis fact, so that payment is stopped
  before any one else has had time to cash it.
  
  How to Write a Cheque on Ordinary Paper. -
  All cheques should be drawn upon the form
  provided by the banker ; this tends to prevent
  forgery, and at the same time is more convenient
  to the customer, as the counterfoils in the
  cheque-book may be made a useful means of
  record. But there is nothing to prevent a
  cheque being drawn upon an ordinary sheet of
  paper if the customer so desires, though in that
  case the signature should be written across a
  penny postage stamp.
  
  Cheques Payable to Self. - An order cheque
  may be made payable to the drawer. In this
  case it must be filled in " Pay to Self," and must
  be endorsed by the drawer.
  
  Delay in Cashing Cheques. - Cheques should
  always be presented for payment as soon as
  possible. When the payee holds back a cheque
  for as long as six months, the banker will not
  cash it until he has obtained the consent of
  the drawer. Cheques are subject to the Statute
  of Limitations, and therefore payment cannot
  be enforced if they are presented after six years.
  
  Overdrafts. - A customer who is able to furnish
  her bank with good securities may obtain an
  advance or " overdraft " from her bankers
  should she so wish it. On any of the following
  securities overdrafts may be arranged : - Consols,
  Colonial Government Stock, Municipal Bonds,
  railway debentures, good industrial stoclta and
  shares, personal securities and life policies.
  
  The money lent in this manner by the bank
  is debited with interest to an account called the
  " loan account." The whole sum is then placed
  to the customer's current account, and the
  customer has to pay interest on the whole sum
  borrowed, even though the necessities of her
  case may require part of the sum to lie to her
  credit in the current account.
  
  Unless an overdraft has been arranged with
  her bank it is dangerous for a woman to draw
  cheques for a larger amount than the balance
  at her credit. By doing so she incurs the dis-
  credit of having her cheques returned dis-
  honoured from the bank to the payee.
  
  Circular Notes. - When a woman going abroad
  wishes to avoid the risk and trouble of carrying
  large sums of money she can obtain from her
  banker " circular notes," in each of which the
  banker requests his foreign correspondents to
  pay to the person named in an accompanying
  letter a certain sum. This letter is called " a
  letter of indication," and is signed by the banker
  and by the payee, in order to lessen the risks
  of personation and of forgery. It contains a
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  list of the foreign banks at which the circular
  notes can be cashed. These notes are of no
  value without the letter of indication and vice
  versd.
  
  Bank of England. - The most important of all
  oiir banks is the Bank of England. It may be
  said, indeed, to be a national institution.
  
  It fixes the rate of interest, is the bank in
  which the revenue collected by the Government
  from all parts of the country is deposited, and
  is the agent for the Government in transacting
  all such financial business as relates to the
  raising of Government loans whether for perma-
  nent or for temporary purposes. It also holds
  the cash reserves of other banks and manages
  the bvisiness in connection with the National
  Debt. Apart from these special circvmistances,
  the Bank of England is in the same position as
  all other banks, transacting business as a private
  bank in the same manner as they do.
  
  Bank Rate is the name given to the price at
  winch the Bank of England states it is willing
  to grant loans.
  
  The raising of the bank rate means that more
  will be charged upon loans and paid upon
  deposits. The lowering of the bank rate means
  that less will be charged upon loans and paid
  upon deposits.
  
  The bank rate varies with the supply of and
  demand for gold. A high rate indicates that
  there is a scarcity of money in the market, and
  the bank rate is raised whenever there is Hkely
  to be an outflow of gold from England. When
  the bank reserve is high, and there is a great
  influx of money, the rate is lowered.
  
  The London banks generally allow interest on
  deposits at 1^ per cent, below bank rate unless
  the latter is very low.
  
  The Bank Return. - Every week the Bank of
  England issues a report as to its financial posi-
  tion. This is known as the " Bank Return,"
  and every week each of the leading newspapers
  publishes an analysis of the bank rotiirn in what
  is known as the " Money Article."
  
  The return is made up by the bank on
  Wednesday, and a copy posted up outside the
  bank on the following Thiu-sday afternoon.
  
  The Post Office Savings Bank.- The Post Office
  Savings Banks are established by Act of Parlia-
  ment, and every depositor has the direct security
  of the State for the repayment of deposits.
  
  Unlike ordinary banks, where it is very seldom
  that an account can be opened for less than
  £50, m the Post Office Savings Bank an account
  may be opf led for one shilling.
  
  For the savings of a woman of limited income
  the Post Office Sa\'ings Bank is the ideal medium,
  for interest at the rata of 2^ per cent, per annum
  IS allowed on every complete pound deposited,
  and any sum from one shilling upwards, but
  excluding pence, is accepted as an ordinary
  deposit. The depositor can open her account
  at any post office in the United Kingdom
  
  
  365
  
  She is handed a book, at the beginning of which
  she must sign her name, address, and occupation,
  intimating whether she is married or single'
  In this book the Post Office officials enter each
  payment as it is made, stamping it with the
  stamp of the office into which the money is
  paid. Tliis constitutes a sufficient receipt for
  any sum under £5; but for sums of £5 and
  upwards a receipt is received by post from the
  head of the Savings Bank Department in
  London, In this book all withdrawals are also
  entered. Money withdrawals can be made from
  any post office branch in the Kingdom. For
  sums of over £1 a withdrawal form must be
  asked for, and this, when filled in, is posted to
  the chief office of the Savings Bank Department
  in London, the depositor receiving in the course
  of a day or two a warrant for payment of the
  amount she wishes to withdraw. She can
  obtain payment of this warrant at any post
  office on the production of her bank book, into
  which the necessary entries have to be made.
  She can also pay money in to her account at any
  post office.
  
  Any sum up to a pound may be withdrawn
  '' on demand " at any post office by filling in a
  " withdrawal on demand form," but in these
  circumstances the depositor is required to hand
  over her book, which is sent to the head office
  of the Savings Bank Department for examination.
  No charge ^or postage is made to the depositor,
  if in the United Kingdom, for any letter passing
  between her and the chief office on Post Office
  Savings Bank business.
  
  No more than £50 can be deposited in one
  year except for investment in Government
  Stock or for the purchase of an Annuity or
  Insurance (see p. 372). Except for the same
  purposes no deposit can be made which causes
  the balance due to a depositor, including interest,
  to exceed £200.
  
  Forms to which stamps may be affixed are
  supplied at the post office for the assistance of
  children and others who are unable to save more
  than a penny or two at a time. For each penny
  saved a stamp is purchased and affixed to the
  form. When twelve stamps have been affixed
  in this manner, the form can be handed in at
  any of the post offices as a shilling deposit.
  
  It \ril] be seen that the Post Office puts every
  facility in the way of people with hmited in-
  comes for saving their " mite," however small
  it is, with the added benefit of a fair rate of
  interest and also the advantage of economy in
  the working of its accounts, and absolute
  security.
  
  Post Office Savings Bank Accounts may be
  opened on behalf of children under seven years
  of age, but in this case the money may not be
  withdrawn until the child has attained that age.
  All childi-en of seven years and upwards might
  well be encouraged to save their money in tliis
  simple way. The sense of responsibiUty im
  
  2a
  
  
  370
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  parted by the management of their own little
  accounts will tend to inculcate a knowledge of
  the value of money, combined with a habit of
  thrift which cannot fail to stand them in good
  stead in later years.
  
  DEBT
  
  A debt is a certain svun of money owed by
  one person to another. The person who owes
  money is termed the debtor, and the person to
  whom the money is owed is known as the
  creditor.
  
  Recovery of Debt. - If, after several applica-
  tions for payment of a debt by the creditor, the
  debtor still fails to pay it, the usual means of
  procedure for the creditor to take for its recovery
  is to sue the debtor for it.
  
  Where to Sue lor a Debt. - If the debt is less
  than £20 the creditor must bring his action in
  the County Court. Where the debt is between
  £20 and £100 the creditor ottght to bring his
  action in the County Court, unless he is certain
  that the debtor has no defence to the claim,
  in which case he may bring it in the High Coiirt
  and obtain summary judgment against the
  debtor, a more expeditious way than the process
  of the County Court. \Vhere debt exceeds £100
  proceedings must be first instituted in the High
  Court, though in some cases the High Court
  will remit the action for hearing in the County
  Court.
  
  Limitations of Actions lor Debt. - Actions to
  recover ordinary debts must be brought witliin
  six years from the time when they became duo,
  or within six years of the last pajTnent or any
  part of the principal or interest, or within six
  years of the last acknowledgment in writing of
  the debt, which acknowledgment must uncondi-
  tionally import a promise to pay : a conditional
  promise will cause it to be invalid as an ac-
  knowledgment.
  
  In the case of debts due upon a bond or other
  instrument under seal, including mortgage debts
  and debts under a Bill of Sale, the period of
  limitation is twenty years, and in action for the
  recovery of money charged on lands for the
  recovery of the land itself the time limit is
  twelve years.
  
  Banliruptcy. - The law of bankruptcy affords
  relief to insolvent debtors who, by surrendering
  their property for the benefit of their creditors,
  are in return relieved from liability in regard to
  their debts. A petition of bankruptcy can be
  filed by the debtor himself, or by his creditors.
  The Court then issues a " Receiving Order," by
  which the Official Receiver becomes the receiver
  or protector of the property until a trustee has
  been appointed by the creditors. Within seven
  days of the receiving order being made the
  debtor must furnish to the Official Receiver
  a statement of his affairs, and after he heis
  - furnished this statement he must attend for
  
  
  public examination before the Registrar, on
  which occasion he must answer questions on
  oath. Within fourteen days after the receiving
  order a general meeting of the creditors is held,
  and this meeting decides whether the debtor
  shall be adjudged bankrupt, or whether a com-
  position or an agreement shall be accepted
  from him. If he is adjudged bankrupt, the
  creditors then appoint a trustee to wind up the
  bankrupt's estate. On the appointment of the
  trustee the property of the bankrupt pa.sses to
  him, and it is his duty to realise the property
  and to divide the proceeds among the creditors.
  
  Discharge. - At any time after he has been
  declared a bankrupt, but not until his public
  examination has been concluded, the bankrupt
  may apply for liis discharge. The Coiu-t will, as
  a rule, grant the discharge provided that a good
  dividend has been paid to the creditors, that
  the bankrupt shows that his accounts have been
  properly kept, that he has not been recklessly
  extravagant or indulged in reish or hazardous
  speculation, or been guilty of misdemeanour in
  his business.
  
  Until he does get his discharge the bankrupt
  labours under many disabilities ; one of the
  chief of these is that should he obtain credit
  without disclosing the fact that he is an un-
  discharged bankrupt, he is guilty of a criminal
  offence, and is liable to imprisonment.
  
  Married Women and Bankruptcy. - A married
  woman carrying on a trade separately from her
  husband can be made a bankrupt.
  
  INSURANCE
  
  Insurance is a matter little understood and
  little entered into by women, who, however, are
  beginning to look into it more closely now that
  the passing of the " Workmen's Compensation
  Act " has made the insurance of servants by
  their employers a matter of almost vital neces
  sity in every house.
  
  Insurance may be defined as " a conu-act by
  which a person (called the insurer or assurer),
  in consideration of a lump sum of money, oi' of
  a periodical paj-mont called the premium, under-
  takes to pay to another (called the insured
  or assured) a larger sum on the happening of
  a particular event. The deed in which the
  contract of insurance is contained is called the
  policy of insurance, the term policy being derived
  from a Latin word signifying promise.
  
  Nearly every risk to which wo are liable may
  be insured against, including epidemic illness,
  accident, and sickness. Football and cricket
  clubs frequently insure against loss in the
  receipts from the sea.son's play. Organisers of
  bazaars and other entertainments do the like.
  
  The more common forms of insurance are Life
  Assurance, Fire and Marine, to which may be
  added Accident and Biu-glary Insurance.
  
  Life Assurance. - The word "assurance" is
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  really the correct term when a life policy is taken
  out, insurance being applied to all other policies ;
  but colloquial use has made now the word
  insurance apply to both Ufa and other policies,
  hence the term " insurance " is pretty generally
  used for both. In life assurance, in return
  for the payment of a stipulated premium pay-
  able at regular intervals, the insurance company
  undertakes to pay a lump sum to the person or
  persons for whose benefit the contract is made,
  upon the death of the person insured. Life
  insurances may also be taken out for a certain
  number of years at a much less premium than
  that charged for the whole life. If the person
  insiu-ed dies witliin this period the whole amount
  of the insurance is payable upon his (or her)
  death to the next of kin.
  
  Careful attention to all the conditions laid
  down in an insurance policy is necessary. A
  very slight misunderstanding on the part of the
  person who is taking out the insurance may,
  in the event of loss, result in the company deny-
  ing their liability on the grounds that the con-
  ditions have not been fully complied with.
  
  Assurance or Insurance with Profits. - In an
  insurance which carries profits the company
  allows the policy-holder a share in the sur-
  plus or profits of the company. For this privi-
  lege a higher rate of premium is charged. At
  the end of every five or seven years a valua-
  tion is made of the properties or assets of the
  company and its liabilities. The siu-plus or
  profits of an insurance company represent the
  figure at which its assets exceed its expenses
  and Habihties. This su plus is ascertained and
  distributed at certain fixed intervals, usually
  every five or seven years. The profits so gained
  are called bonuses, and are distributed amongst
  the policy-holders in the form of bonus additions
  to their accounts. The policy-holder may either
  draw the bonus in cash, have it added to the
  amount for which he (or she) is insured, or use it
  as a fund for reducing the payment of futiu-e
  premiums. One or two insurance companies
  have adopted the practice of a yearly valuation
  and bonus distribution.
  
  Insurance Faculties for People of Limited Means.
  - Formerly it was a somewhat heavy under-
  taking for men and women of limited means to
  insure their lives. Either quarterly or annual
  payments of the premium were the rule, and
  with some people, more especially those of
  fluctuating incomes, payments of a lump sum
  at these intervals was well-nigh impossible.
  Also, if tho premiums were not promptly paid,
  the policies would expire, and tho sum of money
  already paid as premium would consequently
  be forfeited. Much greater facilities are now
  bemg placed in the way of people of limited
  means and men and women workers.
  
  Premiums can be paid in small sums and at
  short intervals. Many of the companies now
  accept small monthly payments with a time
  
  
  371
  
  allowance of a fortnight in which to make each
  payment, and a system has been adopted for
  using what is termed the " surrender value " of
  the pohcy held - generally about one-third to
  
  one-half of the premiums already paid as a
  
  fund for the continuance of payments which
  for a time the holder finds it impossible to meet,
  so that the pohcy may not lapse.
  
  Should the investor desire to discontinue the
  insurance, many of the companies allow either
  the surrender value in cash or a fully paid up
  policy for a reduced amount, free from payment
  of any further premiums.
  
  A number of the companies have also aban-
  doned the practice of charging a higher rate
  for the insurance of women than that charged
  for insuring men, and the medical examination
  which was formerly always necessary before the
  making of an insurance contract has now to a
  large extent been done away with.
  
  Endowment Insurance. - Endowment insur-
  ance secures the payment of a lump sum to the
  person insured when he (or she) attains a certain
  age stipulated in the pohcy. By regular pay-
  ment of the premium, therefore, a young woman
  of from twenty to thirty could at the age of say
  forty-five be entitled to the payment of any
  sum from £100 upwards, according to the
  amount for which she is insured. Should she
  die before that age the whole of the insurance
  money woul 1 be paj'able to her heirs. In con-
  nection with this scheme of insurance many
  offices make a feature of annuities both " Im-
  mediate " and " Deferred."
  
  Immediate Annuities are secured by the pay-
  ment of a lump sum down to the Insurance
  Company. Deferred Annuities, payable after
  the person insured has reached a certain age,
  can be secured either by payment of a single
  premium, or by quarterly, half-yearly, or yearly
  premiums in accordance with the varj-ing
  conditions enforced by different insurance com-
  panies. The "annuities" and "endowment"
  forms of insurance make ideal investments for
  the woman worker dependent upon her own
  resources, for by payment of a small sum
  annually, under either of the schemes, she can
  secure herself against penury in her old age,
  when she will no longer be able to work as in
  her youth.
  
  Endowments for Children. - Tlie object of the
  endowment of children is to afford parents the
  means of having their children educated and
  started in life. They by this means secure to
  every child which may be born to them a
  given sum, to bo paid in each case on tho cliild
  attaining any specified age, say from 14 to 21
  years. Tlie advantages offered to yoimg
  married persons by thus securing a fixed sum
  for every one of their children, however groat
  tho number, must bo ob\nous to every person
  who reflects on the care and anxiety atten-
  dant on providing for a numerous family. The
  
  
  372
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  necessary funds are thus furnished wherewith to
  meet the school expenses of sons and daughters,
  the support of sons at college, the dowry of
  daughters, and the entry of sons or daughters
  into the professions or commercial life.
  
  Government Annuities and Insurance. - Imme-
  diate or dofi^rrod annuities, if not less than
  £1, and not exceeding £100, receivable half-
  yearly with Government security for the pay-
  ment of the money at the proper time, may be
  purchased through the medium of the Post
  Office Sa\'ings Bank on the lives of persons of
  either sex, and of the age of five years and
  upwards. On the death of an annuitant a
  single payment equal to one-fourth part of tlie
  annuity is made to the representative, if claimed
  within two years.
  
  Persons between 14 and 65 years of age may
  insure their lives through the medium of the
  Post Office Savings Bank for sums of not less
  than £5 and not more than £100, with Govern-
  ment security for the payment of the money.
  The lives of children below 14 years, but not
  under the age of 8 years, may be insured for
  £5 but no more.
  
  Insurable Interest. - In order that a contract
  of insurance may be valid the insured must have
  what is called an insurable interest in the thing
  insured ; that is to say, he must have a pecuniary
  interest in, or must be liable or accountable for,
  any loss arising in regard to it.
  
  Thus a man may not only insure his own life,
  but he may also insiure the life of another,
  providing he has an insurable interest in that
  other's life. A wife has an insurable interest
  in her husband's life, being dependent on liim
  for support ; so, too, are children dependent upon
  thoir father. But a husband has no such interest
  in the life of his wife, unless he has an income
  or other monetary advantage depending upon
  her life. A creditor has an insurable interest
  in the life of his debtor for the amount of the
  debt, and on the creditor's death ho can recover
  the amount of the debt, even although it has
  been paid off. Employers have also an in-
  surable interest in their workmen or servants,
  being liable to them in cases where they have
  sustained injury, or been killed in the course
  of their employment.
  
  Control Exercised over Life Offices. - Every
  Life Assurance Company established since 1870
  in the United Kingdom must deposit £20,000
  in the High Court, and no certificate of incor-
  poration can be issued until the deposit has
  been made. As soon as the insurance fund
  accumulated out of premiums amounts to
  £40,000 the deposit is returned. If the com-
  pany carries on other business besides that of
  life insurance the receipts in respect of the life
  insurance must be kept in a separate account
  and be placed in a separate fund called the Life
  Insurance Fund of the company. This fund
  must exist solely for the security of holders of
  
  
  life policies, as though the company carried on
  no other business than that of life insurance.
  
  Every Life Office doing business in this country
  must render annual accounts and reports to the
  Board of Trade. Copies of these must be fur-
  nished to poUcy.'holders when required. It
  must be remembered, however, that the Board
  of Trade has no control over the conduct of a
  Life Office when once it has been started. There
  is, therefore, no guarantee that the business of
  any company is being properly carried on.
  
  Stamps. - Policies of life insurance must be
  stamped as follows : -
  
  
  ". d.
  
  
  Where the sura insured does not exceed £10 .
  Where the sum insured exceeds £10 but does
  
  not exceed £25
  
  Where the sum insured exceeds £25 but does
  
  not exceed £500, for every £50 or part of £50
  Exceeds £500 but does not exceed £1000, for
  
  every £100 or part of £100 ....
  Exceeds £1000, for every £1000 or part of
  
  £1000
  
  
  10 C
  
  
  On policies of insurance against accident or
  sickness the stamp is one penny. Policies of
  insurance against employers' liability are charge-
  able as agreements - this is, if under hand, 6d.,
  if under seal, 10s.
  
  How to Assure or Insure. - A person who
  wishes to assure his (or her) life must first apply
  to a Life Office, and the Assurance Company will
  send a proposal form to be filled up by the person
  who has to be assured.
  
  In this proposal form it is required to give
  accurate answers to the questions therein set
  out, concerning his (or her) health, habits of
  Ufe, and family history; sometimes a medii;al
  examination will have to be undergone, but
  under certain conditions many of the principal
  insurance companies have done away with the
  necessity for this.
  
  The greatest care should be taken in faith-
  fully answering those questions in the " pro-
  posal " or " declaration," for this proposal is
  the basis of the contract, and it is on the faith
  of the answers contained in it that the policy
  is granted ; and excepting in the case of a
  " non-forfoitable " policy, if the answers are
  untrue, however innocently they may be made,
  the policy falls to the ground and the insurance
  money cannot be recovered, though the premiums
  paid may be returned unless the untruthful
  answers have been wilfully or fraudulently made.
  In addition to the declaration the Life Office
  usually requires a reference to one or two in-
  timate friends of the person about to be insured.
  Their replies are treated as confidential. When
  all these requirements have been satisfactorily
  met, the Life Office grants the policy on payment
  of the first premium.
  
  Accident Insurance. - Accident insurance is a
  contract by which the Insurance Company under-
  takes tu prov-ide against loss if the insured sus-
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  tains accidental injury or disablement, either
  partial or temporary, and to pay the sum in-
  sured for to the personal representative of the
  person insured shoiild his death result from an
  accident.
  
  The rate of premium for accident insurance is
  determined chiefly by the occupation. Accord-
  ing to the nature of the occupation the risks are
  divided into three classes - ordinary, medium,
  and hazardous.
  
  To insure for £100 in case of death, with full
  benefits for disablement, the rates per annum
  in some of the principal offices are : -
  
  s. d.
  
  Ordinary risks ... ... 8 6
  
  Medium risks 12 0
  
  Hazardous rislis 14 0
  
  These rates only apply to accidents happening
  in Europe ; but some offices issue " world-
  wide " pohcies which also indemnify for accidents
  taking place abroad at considerably higher
  rates.
  
  Many newspapers and other periodicals con-
  tain free accident insurance coupons for sums
  varying from £100 and upwards. The condi-
  tions printed upon the coupon must be fulfilled
  in order for the insurance to be effective. Such
  newspaper insurances most often indemnify
  against accidents when travelling by rail or boat.
  
  Fire Insurance. - Fire insurance indemnifies
  the policy-holder for any loss or damage to his
  property sustained by fire.
  
  The maximum amount of compensation
  which can be claimed is stated in the policy, but
  indemnity is only given for the actual damage
  suetained. There is, therefore, no advantage in
  over -insuring property or in insuring it for its
  full value in each of several different offices.
  The latter procedure would only serve to benefit
  the insurance companies, for instead of one
  company being obliged to pay the full value of
  the property, the liability would be shared
  between the several offices with which it has
  been insured.
  
  The rate of premium varies according to the
  property insured. On ordinary dwelling-houses
  the rate is usually two shillings per cent, and
  seldom less than Is. 6d. per cent. In the case
  of factories, shops, &c., that entail more than
  ordinary risks, and in the case of theatres, dis-
  tilleries, chemical works, and other such places
  which are exposed to peculiar danger, rates are
  fixed by special arrangement, the premium in
  extreme ca^^es being £2 or even £3 per cent.
  
  Fire insurances are usually effected for a
  year, the policy being renewable on the pay-
  ment of another premium. Fifteen days, called
  " days of grace," are allowed at the end of the
  year in which to renew the policy. Should a
  fire occur during these fifteen days the company
  is still liable, provided that it is intended by
  both parties to renew the policy.
  
  
  373
  
  Insurance of Domestic Servants. - Under the
  Workmen's Compensation Act, 1906, every em-
  ployer is liable to compensate his employees
  for injuries arising out of and in the course of
  their employment, although such injuries may
  be the direct results of carelessness on the part
  of the injured person, or even disobedience to
  orders.
  
  As this act applies to all domestic servants,
  male or female, the master and mistress of every
  household should realise the responsibility which
  the keeping of servants entails upon them in
  this connection, for compensation up to £1
  a week is payable dxiring the servant's total
  or partial incapacity for work, and this may
  well involve the payment of an armuity for
  Ufe, whilst if the injxzry results in death, a lump
  sum of money of as much as from £150 to £300
  is payable (see law of Master and Servant, p. 377-
  78). It 13 essential for the master of a house to
  protect himself against liabihty, which might
  arise in regard to accident to his servants, by in-
  surance. jMost of the insurance companies make
  a special feature of domestic servant insurance.
  The usual premium payable for the insiu-ance
  of an indoor servant amounts to from 2s. 6d. to
  5s. per annum. Great care should be taken on
  examining the insurance policy that it indem-
  nifies against all risks. It should in all cases
  declare that the insurance comjiany indemnifies
  the employe!- against all liabilities under -
  
  Tlie Workmen's Compensation Act, 1906.
  The Employer's Liability Act, 1S80.
  Fatal Accidents Act, 1846.
  And at Common Law.
  
  Tlie following are the rates of premium charge-
  able for the insurance of domestic servants by
  the EiOyal Exchange Assurance Company : -
  
  BENEFITS OF POLICIES
  
  .Scheme l grants complete indemnity against legal
  liability.
  
  Premmms
  
  Indoor domestic servants (male or female) . . .26
  
  Gardeners 50
  
  Grooms, coachmen, and stable hands (not hunting) . 7 6
  Chauffeurs and motor-car attendants . . . . 20 0
  
  Scheme 2B (the ideal policy) grants full wages during
  first four weeks' incai)acity, and half wages thereafter in
  accordance with the Workmen's Compensation Act, and
  medical expenses not exceeding £5 for each accident.
  
  Pretniums
  
  g. d.
  Indoor domestic servants (male or female) . . .50
  
  Gardeners 70
  
  Grooms, coachmen, and stable hands (not hunting) . 10 0
  Cliauffeurs and motor-car attendants . . . . 30 0
  
  The liability to pay compensation to
  
  Casual or Occasional Servants
  may be covered by the addition of 25 per cent, of the
  premium chargeable for permanent indoor and outdoor
  servants under Scheme 1. Minimum extra premium 2s. 6d.
  
  
  374
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Burglary Insurance. - Burglary insurance is a
  recent development in tho business of insurance.
  Generally speaking, the law in regard to fire
  insurance applies to burglary insurance. The
  rate charged in regard to loss by burglary or
  housebreaking is usually Is. 6d. in every £100's
  worth of goods insured. If the insured wishes
  to insiu-o against theft, either by strangers or by
  workmen or servants employed in liis house,
  the rate is 2s. per cent. Against burglary,
  housebreaking, theft, and fire the rate is in
  some offices 3s. 6d. per cent. Thus if a house-
  holder effected such a combined poUcy on goods
  worth £2000, the annual premium would be
  3s. 6d. for every flOO's worth of goods insured;
  that is, £3, 10s. altogether. Every such policy
  must bear a penny stamp.
  
  LEGAL NOTES
  
  Husband and Wife. - Before entering upon the
  matrimonial state every woman should have a
  clear appreciation of what her legal status as a
  married woman will be, and to what extent her
  identity becomes merged in that of her husband.
  
  Married Woman's Property. - Formerly theposi-
  tion of a married woman left much to be desired.
  Whatever personal property she possessed as a
  single woman would become her husband's upon
  marriage. If she had property in land it passed
  under his control, and he was entitled to draw
  all the rents and income derived from it. Also
  any money lois wife earned in business, in the
  professions, or in any kind of employment
  became liis. A wife had no power to make
  contracts. On the other hand, the husband was
  liable for any debts contracted by his wife
  before marriage.
  
  The Married Woman's Property Act of 1882
  served to place matters upon a much more
  equitable basis. Now a married woman can re-
  tain and control her own property, drawing all
  the income from it. She can keep any money
  she may earn in business or in any other em-
  ployment. She can now take out an insurance
  policy on her own life or that of her husband ;
  in fact, she is to all intents and purposes in the
  same position as a single woman in regard to tho
  power of managing her own property.
  
  Domicile. - The legality of a marriage usually
  depends on whether it was celebrated in accord-
  ance with the law of the husband's domicile,
  so that girls marrying foreigners, even in Eng-
  land, should bo careful to ascertain beforehand
  from the consul of the country to which the
  particular foreigner belongs whether all the
  requirements of the foreign law have been ful-
  filled ; as otherwise thoy may find that the
  husband may repudiate the marriage when he
  returns home. Many unfortunate English girls
  are trapped and ruined in this way.
  
  Maintenance. - As long as the marriage rela-
  tionship is undetermined, a husband is bound
  
  
  to maintain his wife. A wife is also bound to
  maintain her husband if necessary, but only if
  slio has separate property wliich will enable her
  to do so.
  
  Husband's Liability for Wife's Debts.- (1) Be-
  fore Marriage. - Tho JIarried Woman's Property
  Acts, 1882, provides that the husband is only
  liable for his wife's debts contracted before mar-
  riage to the extent of the assets ho received
  with her.
  
  (2) After Marriage. - It is a principle of law
  that a wife can only pledge her husband's credit
  in so far as she is acting as his agent for tho
  pm-pose. The liability of the husband for the
  debts of his wife in this respect vary according
  to whether they are cohabiting or not. If
  husband and wife are living together and the
  wife is in the habit of ordering goods for which
  her husband pays he will be considered as hold-
  ing her out as his agent to pledge his credit,
  and will be bound to pay debts incurred by her.
  If, however, he warns the tradesmen not to
  supply her with goods, or if he gives her a
  sufficient allowance with which to pay her bills,
  he will not be Hable. If husband and wife are
  living apart owing to the misconduct of the
  former, the wife can pledge the husband's credit
  for the supply of necessaries to herself.
  
  Gifts and Loans between Husband and Wife. -
  A wife may give to and receive from her hus-
  band gifts of every description. Evidence should
  always be forthcoming, however, that a gift
  has been made more, especially if it does not
  leave the possession of the donor. With regard
  to loans made by a wife to her husband the
  Married Woman's Property Act, 1882, provides
  that " any money or other estate of the wife
  lent or entrusted by her to her husband for the
  purpose of any trade or business carried on by
  him or otherwise, shall be treated as assets of
  her husband's estate in case of bankruptcy,
  under reservation of the wife's claim to p
  dividend as a creditor for the amount of value
  of such money or other estate after out 7iot
  before all claims of the other creditors of the
  husband have been satisfied." Thus, if a woman
  has lent money to her husband and he has
  subsequently been declared bankrupt, she can-
  not receive any payment until all the other
  creditors have been paid.
  
  Marriage Settlement. - In spite of tho com-
  parative freedom now enjoyed by a wife in the
  management of her affairs, she is apt to be at
  times unduly influenced by her husband, and
  many a woman has been known to have lost
  the whole of her property in an effort to pay
  her husband's creditors ; consequently, in order
  that she may continue to enjoy the benefit of
  income settled upon her at marriage unre-
  strained by any interference on the part of
  her husband, it is usual to insert a clause in
  the settlement called " restraint upon anticipa-
  tion." Not only does this provision protect
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  375
  
  
  the wife from the influence of her husband, but
  it is also a safeguard against extravagance on
  her own part, for she is deprived of the power
  of selling, mortgaging, or charging her property
  in any way.
  
  Legal Position of Married Women in Scotland.
  - Formerly the married woman in Scotland
  laboured under great legal disabilities. The
  whole of her personal property was subject to
  the Jus Mariti of the husband ; that is to say,
  as head of the wife he was deemed to have sole
  right over her property. He could sell or even
  make gifts of it at his pleasiu-e, and his creditors
  could seize it for payment of his debts. Only by
  a special pre-nuptial contract could his rights in
  this direction be modified. The husband could
  also draw all the rents and income derived from
  his wife's landed property. He was also, prior
  to the Married Woman's Property Act of 1877,
  entitled to any earnings his wife might derive in
  business, or by her proficiency in literature, the
  arts or any other employment. The Married
  Woman's Property Act (Scotland) of 1877 de-
  creed that the wife could retain her earnings,
  and by a later Act in 1881 her condition was
  still further ameliorated. This second Married
  Woman's Property Act decreed that all property
  coming to a woman after the passing of the Act
  was her own, that all incomes, &c., from her
  estate might be paid to her, that property she
  held in her own right could not be seized by her
  husband's creditors in payment of his debts.
  But there is this important difference in regard
  to the legal status of a married woman in
  Scotland as compared with that of a married
  woman in England - ^whereas the English-
  woman has full power to manage her estates
  and make contracts on her own behalf, her
  sister in Scotland has no such powers. Her
  luisband retains the right of managing her
  property, the wife having no power to act in
  this direction without his consent. She cannot
  enter into any contract or dispose of her property
  in any way, except by will, without liis ap-
  proval ; she cannot sue at law or be sued ; but,
  on the other hand, she cannot be imprisoned for
  debt. Only where a special settlement in regard
  to the administration of her property has been
  made before marriage can the husband's rights
  in this direction be restricted.
  
  Women married before 1881 canrot partici-
  pate in the benefits of the Act unless the husband
  signs a deed to the effect that he is willing the
  property should bo hold by his wife in accord-
  ance with the new law.
  
  The Importance of Making a Will.- All
  persons, men or women, who possess property
  of any kind should realise the importance of
  making their wills in order to insure that their
  property is distributed according to their wishes
  after death.
  
  For a will to be valid, according to English
  law, it must be in writii g anu signed at the foot
  
  
  or end by the testator, or, if the latter is too ill
  to write, the signature can be made by some
  other person under his direction, the testator
  affixing liis mark. The will must be signed in
  the presence of two or more witnesses, who, in
  their turn, must attest and subscribe the docu-
  ment in the presence of the testator.
  
  A will need not assimie any particular form.
  Any writing duly signed and attested by two
  witnesses is sufficient.
  
  A will cannot be made by any person vmder the
  age of twenty-one. A married woman may now
  make a will in the same form sis that of a man,
  but she would have to make a new will in order
  to bequeath property acquired by her after the
  termination of her married life either by the
  death of her husband or her divorce from him.
  A will is always revoked by the marriage of
  the testator, so that both men and women with
  property should make new wills after marriage.
  
  Executors. - It is always adxasable for the
  testator to appoint an executor or executors
  to wind up her estate and distribute her property
  according to her will.
  
  Administrators. - Where the deceased person
  has left no will, there can be no executors and
  no probate. The property, if " realty," will go
  to his heir-at-law, and, if " personalty," to his
  next-of-kin. But as it is desirable that some
  one should wind up the estate and distribute it
  among those entitled to it, the Ck)iu't will appoint
  a person called an Administrator, and grant
  him " Letters of Administration."
  
  Codicils. - With the exception of the cases
  above mentioned, a will can only be revoked by
  another will or codicil inconsistent with the
  former one. WTiere a codicil is made wliich,
  though not consistent with the first will, does
  not actually revoke it, the first will is vaUd in
  so far as it is consistent with the later will or
  codicil, but the later will is alone valid as to
  the parts where they are not consistent.
  
  Wills in Scotland. - No set form of wording is
  necessary for the drawing up of a will in Scotland.
  It should be signed by the testator and attested
  by two witnesses.
  
  Should the will, however, be what is termed a
  " holograph " will ; that is to say, should it be
  written in the testator's own handwriting and
  signed with his signature, it will be valid without
  the attestation of witnesses. A holograph will
  unsigned would not, of coiu'se, be valid.
  
  Intestacy of Husband. - Should a man die in-
  testate, leaving a wife and childien, one-third
  of his personal estate will go to his wife and the
  other two-thirds will be divided between his
  children. Should he leave no childien the \nie
  takes it all if the value is tinder £500 ; if over
  that value she takes £500 with interest at 4 per
  cent., and half the residue, the other half going
  to the next of kin.
  
  A wife is also entitled on her husband's death
  to a dower for life in one-third of liis lands.
  
  
  376
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Intestacy of Wile. - \\'hen a wife dies intestate
  the whole of her personed property reverts to
  lier liuaband. He is also entitled to a life estate
  called " curt<>sy " in her freehold lands.
  
  Parent and Child. - The parents of a child are
  said to be its natural guardians ; that is to say,
  they have the right to the control of it until such
  time as the child attains the age of twenty-one, or
  marries, if the ceremony takes place before that
  age is reached. The primary right as guardian
  rests with the father, but he may be deprived
  of the care of them if, in the opinion of the Court,
  it is deemed to be in the interests of the children
  that they are taken out of his custody. After
  the death of the father the mother is the natural
  guardian of their cliildren. Should the father,
  however, in his will appoint a testamentary
  guardian for Ins cliildren, this delegated guardian-
  ship will over-ride the rights of the mother.
  
  Maintenance. - The duty of a father to main-
  tain his children until they can support them-
  selves is a natural one, and unless the neglect to
  do so would bring the case witliin the criminal
  law, there is no legal obligation upon him. A
  number of statutes, however, deal with the
  subject. First of these was the Poor Law Act
  of '43 EUzabeth, c. 2, which cast upon parents
  " of sufficient abiUty " the duty of maintaining
  their cliildren under a penalty, and this was
  extended to a later Act to the case of a man's
  stop-children. The Act of '57 & '58 Vict., c. 41,
  imposes on parents the duty of providing ade-
  quate food, clothing, medical aid, and lodging
  for children in their custody until the boys at-
  tain fourteen years and the girls sixteen. The
  liabiUty of the parents under the first statute
  ceeises when the children attain the age of six-
  teen, unless they are from infirmity incapable
  of supporting themselves ; but if the parents
  retain the children in their custody they are
  Uable for their maintenance until they come
  of age.
  
  Births and Deaths, Registration of - Births. - In
  the case of ovory child born alive it is the duty of
  the father and mother of the child, and, in default
  of the father and mother, of the occupier of the
  house in which, to his knowledge, the child is
  born, and of each person present at the birth,
  and of the person having charge of the child,
  to give the local registrar of births information
  of the birth within forty-two days and to sign
  the register. If the birth is not registered
  within three months many formalities must be
  gone through, and fees are imposed, and after
  twelve months a birth can only bo registered
  by the Registrar Genfral's express authority.
  
  Registration of Deaths. - When a person dies
  in a house it is the duty of the nearest relatives
  of the deceased present at the death, or in
  attendance during the la.st illness, to notify the
  registrar within five days of the death ; and,
  in default of such relatives, the obligation lies
  upon every other relative dwelUng in the same
  
  
  district as the deceased. If there are no such
  relatives the information must be given by the
  occupier and inmates of the house in which the
  death took place, and by the person causing
  the body of the deceased to be buried.
  
  Where the deceased has been attended during
  his (or her) last illness by a registered medical
  practitioner, the latter must sign and deliver
  to one of the persons required to give informa-
  tion concerning death a certificate stating to
  the best of liis knowledge and belief the cause
  of death. This certificate must be dehvered to
  the registrar when information concerning the
  death is given.
  
  Vaccination. - Parents are required under a
  penalty of twenty shiUings to have their chil-
  dren vaccinated before they are six months
  old, either by the pubUc vaccinator or by some
  medical practitioner. If, however, the parent
  makes a statutory declaration within four months
  of the child's birth that he conscientiously
  behoves the vaccination would bo prejudicial
  to the health of the child, he will be exempt from
  the penalty, but he must dehver the declaration
  to tlie vaccination officer witliin seven days of
  obtaining it.
  
  Master and Servant. - There are many points
  in the law of master and servant as applied
  to the domestic servants of a household which
  the average woman finds somewhat difficult to
  understand. The most important things to re-
  member in this connection will be dealt with
  here briefly and expUcitly in a way which it is
  hoped will tend to enlighten the housewife as to
  the exact scope of her responsibilities towards
  her servants.
  
  Wife as Husband's Agent. - As all dealings with
  servants are mainly conducted by the wife as
  superintendent of the domestic side of the
  home, the mistress is more often than not re-
  garded as having supreme control over them.
  She it is who engages them, allots their various
  duties, provides for their outings and holidays,
  and dismisses them when their work is un-
  satisfactory. This is a typical instance of the
  wife acting as her husband's agent, for whore
  husband and wife live together it is the husband
  who is the legal head of the servants of a house-
  hold. It is the husband who is liable for the
  payment of their wages, and the Courts would
  compel him and not the wife to pay them. He
  it is who is responsible for the contract of
  engagement, and upon him rests the onus of
  responsibility for injuries caused to other people
  by his servants' wrongful or negligent acts, and
  it is he who is liable to compensate his ser-
  vant for any injuries they may have received in
  the course of their employment. The word
  " master " is therefore in no way the meaning-
  less term it is supposed to be in the average
  home when applied to the control of servants,
  and although the mistress, as housewife, retains
  the active management of these members of the
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  377
  
  
  household, yet she can only be said to be acting
  upon her husband's behalf, for he is in every
  way responsible to and for them.
  
  Notice. - Upon the engagement of a servant,
  what is laiown as a " contract of service " is
  entered upon between master and servant ; that
  is to say, the master engages the servant to
  fulfil certain duties wliich the latter undertakes
  to perform for remuneration to be agreed upon
  between them.
  
  C\istom ordains that the contract of service
  may be terminated by either servant or master
  giving a calendar month's notice. In Scotland
  forty days' notice must be given. If the master
  chooses to discharge the servant without notice,
  he must, unless the dismissal is justifiable, pay
  to the servant a calendar month's wages in
  addition to the wages up to the day of dismissal.
  The wages payable in such a case would be the
  actual money wages, and no allowance need be
  made for board and lodging. Shovild a servant
  depart without giving the master notice, any
  wages earned by him (or her) since they were
  last paid axe forfeited. The master may take
  an action against him (or her) for breach of
  contract.
  
  Dismissal without Notice. - In several cases a
  servant may be dismissed without either notice
  or wages in lieu of notice. They are : -
  
  (1) Wilful disobedience of a specific order.
  The disobedience must be wilful and the order
  specific. A mere casual neglect to obey a
  general order would not as a rule justify instant
  dismissal.
  
  (2) Incompetepce. - A servant must be able
  to perform the duties lor which he or she was
  engaged, and which he or she undertook to
  perform upon engagement.
  
  (3) Habitual Neglect of Duty. - Consistent
  neglect of duty may at times result in such
  serious consequences as to justify instant dis-
  missal.
  
  (4) Gross misconduct, insolence, or dishonesty.
  
  (5) Illness. - If the illness is one that is likely
  to be of a very long period. A mere temporary
  iUness constitutes no reason for the dismissal
  of a servant.
  
  Temporary Illness of Servant. - A master is
  bound to pay the wages of his servants during
  temporary illness. He is not liable for medical
  aid unless he sends for the doctor or authorises
  him to be sent for. In this case he must pay
  the bill and is not entitled to deduct it from
  the servant's wages.
  
  Ejecting: a Servant. - If a servant refuses to go
  upon being dismissed, it is always better to call
  in a policeman to see that he (or she) leaves the
  premises. A master is allowed to forcibly eject
  a servant, but he must be careful in doing this,
  as there is no knowing how far the law may be
  exceeded, and a charge of assault consequently
  preferred by the servant. It is always as
  well therefore tc have " policeman upon the
  
  
  scene to be witness that everything is in proper
  order.
  
  When a servant is suspected of theft, it is as
  well also to call in a policeman to search his (or
  her) boxes. A master should never undertake
  this himself, as, if the theft could not be proved,
  he would be Uable for damages.
  
  Breakages. - A servant is not Uable for
  breakages ; hence, unless an agreement has been
  arrived at upon engagement that he or she is to
  be held liable under the terms of the contract,
  it is illegal for a master to deduct the value of
  the breakages from the servant's wages.
  
  Master's Liability for Servant's Negligence. -
  Masters are responsible for the injuries caused
  to other persons and their property by the
  wrongful or negligent acts of servants, if such
  servants are acting within the scope of their
  ordinary duties and within the general scope of
  their master's authority. Thus if a chaixffeur,
  wliile driving his master's motor car in the
  ordinary course of his employment, were by his
  negligence to collide with another vehicle, the
  master would be responsible for the damage
  sustained by that other vehicle. If, on the other
  hand, the accident occurred when the chauffeur
  had taken out the motor car not in the coui'se
  of his employment, but for his own pleasvu-e,
  the master would not be liable.
  
  Servants' Characters. - A mistress (acting as
  agent for the master) is not legally bound to give
  a character to a servant ; but if she gives one
  it must be true. Care must be taken that all
  the statements made are jiistified ; the mistress
  should state all that she knows of good about the
  servant as well as of bad. The statements made
  in giving a character are said to be " pri\aleged,"
  and if an action for Ubel is taken by the servant
  the mistress is protected on this same score of
  privilege', even where the words complained of
  are vmtrue, provided that they were written
  without malice and in the belief that they were
  true. If, however, malice can be proved, the
  plea of privilege will be of no avail, and the
  servant will be entitled to damages.
  
  It is very wrong of a mistress to give a good
  character to a servant whom she knows to be
  dishonest. Any emploj-er engaging a dishonest
  servant by reason of such untrue character is
  entitled to damages from the person by whom
  the servant was recommended.
  
  Master's Liability for Servant's Injuries. - A
  master is liable for any injuries sustained by his
  servants arising out of and in the com*se of their
  employment, even althougli such injuries may
  be the direct results of carelessness on the part
  of the injured person, or even disobedience to
  orders, though in the latter case the servant is
  not entitled to compensation unless death or
  permanent disablement should result from the
  accident.
  
  The term domestic servants includes generally
  all those who are engaged in the menial work
  
  
  378
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  of a household either indoors or out-of-doors,
  though no compensation could be claimed by a
  relation of the master of the house engaged in
  doing menial work. The amount of compensa-
  tion payable as fixed by the Workmen's Com-
  pensation Act, 1900, is as foUow-s : -
  
  In the Case of Death. - Where death results
  from the injury, if the servant loaves any persons
  wholly dependent upon his earnings, the persons
  so dependent are entitled to receive a sum
  equal to the servant's earnings in his (or her)
  employment during the last three years. If the
  servant has not been so long in the employment,
  they are entitled to a sum equal to one hundred
  and fifty-six times his (or her) average weekly
  earnings. In no case must this sum be less
  than £150, nor must it exceed £300 ; so it will be
  seen that should a servant meet death by acci-
  dent, leaving relatives dependent upon liim,
  £150 represents the minimum amount of the
  master's Uability. If the servant leaves no
  dependents his master will be Uable for tho
  expeiises of medical attendance and burial to
  the extent of £10.
  
  Disablement by Accident. - Where total or
  partial incapacity for work results from an
  accidental injury sustained by the servant out
  of and in the course of his (or her) employment,
  he (or she) is entitled to receive a weekly pay-
  ment during the incapacity not exceeding half
  of his (or her) average weekly earnings during
  the last twelve months if ho (or she) has been
  so long employed, but if not, then for any
  less period during which he (or she) has been
  in the employment of the same employer,
  but in no case must the weekly payment
  exceed £1. Earnings in the case of an indoor
  resident ser\'ant would include not only
  wages but also an allowance for board and
  lodging.
  
  In the c"ise of accident to a servant who is
  under twenty-one years of age, and whose average
  weekly earnings are less than 20s., a weekly
  payment equal to the whole of tho amount of
  his weekly earnings will be payable, but tlus
  weekly payment must not exceed 10s.
  
  So it will be seen that in the event of disable-
  ment the msistor will be liable for weekly pay-
  ments up to £1, and in the event of the injury
  being a permanent one tho compensation would
  require to be paid during the whole of the
  aervanVa life.
  
  The position of the master of tho house,
  therefore, is one of somewhat heavy responsi-
  bility in this connection, but he can relieve him-
  self of this to some measure by insurance. For
  a nominal sum per annum the chief insurance
  companies will take all risks. It is well worth
  an annual outlay of from 58. to la. 6d. each year
  to bo protected in this way, and it should bo tho
  first act of a master, after engaging a servant,
  to effect an insurance policy in his or her name.
  Care should be taken, however, that tho policy
  
  
  covers all risks (see Insurance of Domestic
  Servants, p. 373).
  
  Casual Labour. - Casual labour in the strict
  
  sense of tho term does not come within tho
  meaning of the act. Thus if, as often happens, a
  man is employed on one or even two odd occa-
  sions to perform some such menial duty as
  chopping wood, he could not claim compensa-
  tion were he injured while so employed. On
  the other hand, the boy who is engaged to come
  daily to clean knives and boots, the charwoman
  who comes regularly once or t\v4ce a week, may
  be said to come within the scope of the Act,
  although their work may be said to be of a
  casual nature. The insurance companies also
  insure against risks entailed by labour of this
  kind.
  
  The Law of Landlord and Tenant. - Before
  taking a house or any other property it is always
  advisable to have some idea of the chief points
  in the law of Landlord and Tenant, otherwise
  the intending tenant might often find himself
  faced with serious responsibilities wliich he had
  not the remotest idea of incurring. Few women
  have even a superficial knowledge of the legal
  points involved in the letting and taking of
  houses, the various kinds of leases and tenancies,
  the tenant's obligations to liis landlord, and
  vice vers A. Yet a little knowledge in this
  direction has often been the means of a con-
  siderable saving of both worry and expense.
  Some of the most important rules covering the
  relation of landlord and tenant will here be
  dealt ^vith.
  
  Landlord and Tenant. - A landlord is tho person
  from whom lands or tenements aro taken, and
  a tenant is one who holds property from the
  landlord for a certain Umited period subject
  to tho payment of rent.
  
  Varieties of Tenancies. - ^There are various
  kinds of tenancy: (1) A tenancy at will is a
  tenancy wliich either the landlord or tho tenant
  may terminate at any moment without notice.
  (2) A tenancy at sufferance arises wh.:re a
  tenant continues in possession after the expira-
  tion of his tenancy. He cannot bo regarded as
  a trespasser, but he is liable to be turned out
  by the landlord at any moment. If he retains
  possession after receiving from the landlord a
  proper notice in writing to quit, he is liable to
  be sued for double the yearly value of the
  property for the time he remains in possession ;
  if he holds over after himself giving notice of
  his intention to quit, he may be sued for
  double rent.
  
  (3) A Tenancy from Year to Year. - ^The law
  does not look with favour on tenancies at will,
  therefore when a tenant at will has paid rent
  or done anything else which may bo fairly taken
  to show an intention to create a yearly tenancy,
  the tenancy becomes automatically a tenancy
  from year to year. Tenants ought, therefore,
  before entering into their tenancies, if thej'
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  379
  
  
  wish the tenancy to be for less than a year, to
  make the agreement quite clear with the land-
  lord ; for though no term is specified tenancy
  will in the first instance be a tenancy at will ;
  the mere payment of rent will convert it into
  a yearly tenancy, but this does not apply to
  weekly tenants.
  
  Leases. - The contract by which property is
  let for a term of years is called a lease.
  
  The leases in connection with the letting of
  dweUing -houses are usually either for three,
  seven, fourteen, or twenty-one years. People
  often prefer to have an agreement instead of a
  more formal lease in the case of tenancies of
  less than tliree years ; but except for very short
  terms, it is generally better to have a lease
  stating clearly all the conditions tmder which
  the tenancy is held. A lease for a term of three
  years or less where the rent received amounts to
  two-thirds of the full improved value, can be
  made verbally if accompanied by the giving
  and taking of the premises, but such a plan
  is seldom adopted and by no means to be
  recommended.
  
  In Scotland, where a lease is for more than
  one year, it must be in writing, specifying a
  definite term, and a definite sum as rental. A
  verbal lease can be made, however, for a year
  or less. Letters between landlord and tenant
  agreeing to a lease are also valid in certain
  circumstances. All leases must be duly stamped.
  
  Covenants. - All leases contain a number of
  covenants or conditions which the landlord and
  tenant respectively bind themselves to observe.
  The very employment in a lease of certain
  technical expressions implies the creation of
  certain covenants. Thus the use of the word
  " demise " implies a covenant on the part of
  the landlord that the tenant shall be entitled
  to the quiet and undisturbed enjoyment of the
  premises, unless there is any express covenant
  in the lease with a contrary effect.
  
  There are in most leases what are called
  " usual covenants," being covenants on which
  the landlord can insist when there is nothing to
  the contrary in the agi-eement for the lease.
  Tliey are four in number : -
  
  (1) Tenant to pay rent.
  
  (2) Tenant to pay rates and tases, except the
  landlord's property tax and tithe rent charge.
  
  (3) Tenant to allow the landlord to enter the
  premises from time to time to see that they are
  in a proper state of repair.
  
  (4) Tenant to keep the premises in a proper
  state of repair throughout the tenancy, and to
  deliver them up in such a state at the end of
  the term.
  
  In addition to the usual covenants there are
  a large number of special covenants to be found
  in all leases, for the respective landlords and
  tenants can always agree to whatever additional
  covenants ihey please. These additional cove-
  nants fall into two general classes : - (I) Personal
  
  
  covenants ; (2) Covenants rurming with the land.
  The latter kind are binding on all those to whom
  the tenant assigns the property, whereas the
  former are in general only operative between the
  respective parties to the lease.
  
  Rent. - The principal duty of every tenant is
  to pay rent, whether there is a covenant to pay
  it or not, for if there is no agreement between
  the parties stipulating as to the exact sum
  payable, the tenant is bound to pay a reason-
  able Sinn for the use and occupation of the
  premises, unless, of course, there is an agreement
  that the tenant shall have the premises rent
  free, as might well happen if he is in the employ-
  ment of the landlord, and has the right to occupy
  the premises as part of his remuneration.
  
  The amount of rent payable in any particular
  case is usually arranged for in the lease or
  agreement which may also appoint times for
  the payment of the rent. But in the cases where
  there is no stipulation as to when payment is
  to be made, the law says that it is due on the
  last day of the year of the tenancy if the tenancy
  be for a year or more, and on the last day of
  the tenancy if it be for less than a year. As a
  matter of general practice the rents of houses
  are paid quarterly on the proper quarter days,
  and sometimes monthly.
  
  Though the rent becomes due on the morning
  of the day on which it ought to be paid, it cannot
  be legally considered in arrear until midnight
  on that day.
  
  Rates and Taxes. - Taxes paid by Landlord. -
  All rates and taxes are as a rule paid by the
  landlord in the case of furnished houses or flats.
  In the case of unfurnished houses the Land-
  lord's Property Tax is in the first instance usually
  paid by the tenant ; but he is entitled to deduct
  the amount so paid from the rent, so that it
  eventually falls on the landlord ; similarly the
  tithe rent charge must in all cases eventually be
  paid by the landlord. Tliere are also certain
  other rates and taxes which the landlord will
  have to pay, unless there is a special agreement
  by which the tenant binds himself to paj' them.
  They include the sewers rate for permanent
  improvement to the sewers, the land tax, and
  the poor rates on property let for less than
  three months. Wlienever the tenant is called
  upon to pay any of these rates he must do so,
  but unless he has agreed to pay them he may
  deduct the amount so paid from the rent. The
  landlord must pay rates and taxes when the
  rateable value of the premises does not exceed
  £10, or where they are let to weeklj* or monthly
  tenants.
  
  Taxes to be Paid by Tenant. - There are, how-
  ever, certain taxes which, in the absence of any
  agreement to the contrary between the landlord
  and tenant, must be borne by the tenant. They
  include the water rate, the county, borough,
  highway and general district rates, poor rates
  on property let for more than tlu-ee months
  
  
  380
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  (unless the tenant is merely a lodger), and the
  ordinary assessed taxes.
  
  The owners of unoccupied houses are not
  liable for payment of tlio poor rate, but if the
  tenant comes into possession after the levying
  of the rate he may be called upon to pay a pro-
  portionate part of it, according to the length
  of the period of his occupation.
  
  Repairs. - As a general rule, the landlord cannot
  bo called upon to execute repairs unless he has
  agreed to execute them. As for the tenant,
  where there is no express agreement as to repairs,
  he is bound to use the premises in a tenant-like
  manner. Tlius he must not do damage to the
  premises, and he can ganerally be compelled to
  do such repairs as are necessary to keep the
  premises wind and water-tight ; but unless he
  has agreed to do so, a yearly tenant cannot be
  called upon to execute any substantial repairs,
  though a tenant under a lease would in such a
  case be compelled to executo substantial repairs.
  
  In many cases it happens that the respective
  landlords and tenants agree together that each
  will be responsible for a certain portion of the
  repairs. Thus it is by no means uncommon
  for the landlord to agree to execute all repairs
  to the outside of the premises, whilst the tenant
  agrees to repair the inside. But the amount of
  repairs to be done and the person to pay for them
  is generally a matter of arrangement between
  the parties at the time of the execution of the
  lesise or agreement.
  
  The landlord is bound in letting furnished
  premises to see that they are in a fit state for
  habitation (see p. 381), but in the case of un-
  furnished premises he can only be made liable
  under the Housing of Working Classes Act,
  1885, in respect of premises let at a low rental
  to persons of the working class and under the
  Housing Town Planning Act, 1909, in regard to
  dwellings let for three years at rent not ex-
  ceeding £-10 in London, £26 in certain districts
  with a population of 250,000 or upwards, and
  £16 elsewhere. As regards all other kinds of
  unfurnished premises, the landlord, apart
  from any agreement to the contrary with his
  tenant, is under no obligation to put the
  premises in a state of repair, or even into an
  inhabitable condition before tlie tenancy f:om-
  mences ; and further, he cannot, apart from
  the agreement, be called upon to rebuild the
  premises if they are destroyed by fire during the
  tenancy, though the tenant can be compelled to
  pay the rent during the period in which the
  premises remain uninhabitable. It is advisable,
  therefore, for tenants about to take unfurnished
  premises to see that the landlord agrees to put
  them into a thorough state of repair before the
  commencement of the tenancy, and to insist
  upon a covenant being inserted in the lease or
  agreement to the effect that the payment of
  rent shall cease if the premises are rendered un-
  inhabitable by fire.
  
  
  In Scotland the laxidlord is boimd in letting
  a house to put it in a habitable condition. If
  he does not do this the tenant may tlirow up
  liis lease. In addition the landlord is bound to
  keep the premises wind and water-tight and the
  drainage system in order during the tenancy.
  The tenant in his turn must take good care of
  the premises, returning them to the landlord in
  the condition in wliich he founi.! them.
  
  Fixtures. - There are two Idnds of fixtures -
  landlord's fixtures and tenant's fixtures. The
  tenant's fixtures are those in which a tenant is
  entitled to remove and take away with him on
  giving up the tenancy, unless, of course, tliey
  did not originally belong to him ; whereas the
  fixtures he must leave behind, whether he has
  l)ut them up himself or not, are called landlord's
  fixtures.
  
  Garden Fixtures. - An ordinary tenant of a
  house, no matter how he may have improved
  the garden by the planting of plants, rose-trees,
  slirubs, and other horticultural embellishments,
  cannot reviove these without the consent of the
  landlord upon the expiry of his tenancy, for by
  law they have become the landlord's property
  in consequence of the legal maxim " whatever
  has been firmly affixed to the grovmd has become
  part of the ground." This law, however, does
  not apply to market gardeners or nui-serymen,
  if they have complied with the terms of the
  Agricultural Holdings Act and the Market
  Gardeners' Compensation Act. They may re-
  move what they have planted.
  
  Domestic Fixtures. - In regard to fixtures
  which tenants have affixed to property for
  their own convenience, the practical effect of
  the present nole is that the landlord may claim
  all buildings and other permanent improvements
  to his property ; the tenant may remove orna-
  mental and pm"ely domestic fixtures belonging
  to liim, such as tapestries and gas-brackets, &c.,
  but he is only entitled to them if they can be
  easily removed, without material injury to the
  property. Practically the same rule in regard to
  the removal of fixtures prevails in Scotland.
  
  Distress. - If a tenant falls in arrear with his
  rent the landlord may enter upon the premises
  and seize and sell a sufficient quantity of the
  tenant's goods to satisfy the debt. There are,
  however, certain things which he is not entitled
  to distrain, such as things in actual use at the
  time, the wearing apparel, bedding and trade
  implements of the tenant if under £5 in value,
  and the goods of a lodger where the latter has
  complied with the terms of the Lodger Goods
  Protection Act.
  
  No distress may legally be levied between
  sunset and sunrise, or on any Sunday, Christmas
  Day, Good Friday, or any day appointed for a
  public thanksgiving.
  
  Removal of Goods by Tenant. - If, after the rent
  has become due, a tenant fraudulently or clan-
  destinely removes any of his goods from the
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  381
  
  
  premises the latter may follow and seize them
  witliin a period of thirty days after, unless they
  have been bond fide sold for value to a person
  without knowledge of the fraud.
  
  Lodger's Property. - The goods of a lodger are
  protected from distress levied on Ms imme-
  diate landlord if he observes the conditions of
  the Distress Amendment Act, 1908. By this
  Act, if the superior landlord of the lodger's im-
  mediate landlord endeavours to distrain on the
  lodger's property for the rent due from the
  immediate landlord, the lodger must : -
  
  (1) Serve on the superior landlord or his
  bailiff a written declaration that the property is
  his, and also stating what rent, if any, is due
  from him to the superior landlord, and under-
  taking to pay to the superior landlord any rent
  so due or to become due until the arrears of rent
  due to the superior landlord have been paid off.
  
  (2) AixPex to tliis declaration a correct in-
  ventory of the property.
  
  In Scotland the landlord has what is termed
  " hypothec " or real right in security for rent
  over the furniture of his tenant. He may make
  the hypothec effectual by sequestration of the
  goods within three months of the date upon
  wliich the rent fell due. Sequestration may be
  followed by the sale of the goods carried out by
  an officer appointed bj^ the sheriff. Goods are
  only subject to hypothec for each successive
  year's rent, and not for arrears. Where goods
  so subject are removed bj' the tenant, the land-
  lord may obtain a warrant from the sheriff to
  bring them back. He is also entitled to prevent
  the tenant frona ^em'^^ang his goods not only
  when the rent falls due, but also during any
  period of the tenancy, unless a tenant can give
  good security that the rent will be paid. Coin
  of the realm, bonds, bills and wearing apparel
  are not subject to the hypothec of the landlord.
  
  Furnished Houses and Lodgings. - Wliere a
  tenant takes a furnished house or lodging there
  is an imphed warranty in law on the part of the
  landlord that the premises are reasonably fit
  for human occupation. So if by reason of bad
  drains or any other cause the house is rendered
  unfit for habitation, the tenant is entitled to
  terminate the tenancy. If, however, the land-
  lord has agreed to keep the premises in a state
  of repair, he is entitled to notice of want of
  repair and an opportunity to put it right, before
  the tenant is justified in leaving. This implied
  warranty as to fitness for human occupation
  only exists where the property is let furnished.
  If the piopertj' is lot unfurnished, the tenant is
  not entitled to terminate the tenancy on finding
  the drains in a bad state, or the house unfit for
  occupation.
  
  Flats. - The landlord is bovmd to keep the
  stairs in good condition.
  
  Liability of the Landlord or the Tenant to
  Third Parties. - The tenant is Uable for injiu-ies
  to third parties caused by the dangerous condi-
  
  
  tion of the premises. There is a statutory duty
  imposed on the owner or occupier to fence in
  or cover over all dangerous places or holes
  abutting on the highway, e.g., to keep in good
  repair the area railings and coal-cellar covers
  on the pavement. When, therefore, a passer-
  by is injured by reason of these things being in
  dangerous condition, he has usually a right of
  action against the tenant and not against the
  landlord. The same is the case when the con-
  dition of the premises themselves is the cause
  of injury to other people or to their property.
  The landlord and not the tenant will, however,
  be Hable (1) where he (the landlord) has agreed
  to keep the premises in repair, or (2) where he
  has let the premises in a dilapidated condition.
  Of course, if the injured party is a trespasser he
  has no remedy whatever.
  
  Sub-letting a House. - The lessee of a house
  may sublet it unless he has bound himself by
  the terms of the lease not to do so. It is
  extremely common to find in leases a covenant
  to the effect that the tenant will not underlet or
  assign the house without the written consent of
  the landlord. The main difference between an
  underlease and an assignment is that the latter
  is for the whole of the remainder of the term
  of the original tenant's lease, whereas the former
  would only be for part of the term.
  
  \\Tiere tenants agree not to underlet or assign
  without the consent of the landlord, it is advis-
  able that they should insist on the following
  adchtional words being added to the covenant : -
  " But such consent is not to be unreasonably
  withhold in the case of a respectable and re-
  sponsible person." If then the consent is un-
  reasonably refused the tenant may assign
  without incurring the forfeiture of the lease.
  
  Termination of a Tenancy. - ^Vhere a house has
  been taken for a stated period the tenant does
  not require to give notice to the landlord of his
  intention to quit. But where the tenancy is a
  yearly tenancy, or a monthly or quarterly one,
  notice is required, for a yearly tenancy does not
  mean a tenancy for a yeew, but a continuing
  tenancy from year to year.
  
  Notice of Removal. - Where the parties have
  not come to any special agreement, the amount
  of notice proper for a yeai'ly tenancy is half a
  year, and for a quarterly, monthly, or weekly
  tenancy it is a quarter, or a month, or a week
  respectively.
  
  When to give Notice of Removal. - Tlie law
  provides that a yearly, quarterly, monthly, or
  weekly tenancy can only bo properly dotorminod
  at the end of the year, quarter, month, or week
  of the tenancy ; so that the tenant must give
  his notice the reqiiisite amount of months or
  weeks before the end of the period of the
  tenancy. Thus he cannot terminate a yearly
  tenancy at any time by giving six montlis' notice.
  A yearly tenancy commencing ou the 1st of
  January can only be terminated on the 31st of
  
  
  382
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  December, so that the half year's notice should
  be given by the 1st of July. The tenant may
  not, by giving the notice at the end of August,
  terminate it at the end of the following Februarj'.
  The half year's notice required to terminate a
  yearly tenancy does not necessarily mean six
  calendar montlis. The notice should be for at
  least half a year - that is 183 daj's.
  
  Other Ways of Terminating a Tenancy. - By
  Surrender. - When both parties agree to put an
  end to the tenancy before the completion of the
  term, the tenant must make a surrender to the
  landlord, which in all cases must be in writing
  and generally by deed.
  
  By Forfeiture. - Most leases give the landlord
  the right to re-enter the premises and terminate
  the lease on the breach by the tenant of any
  one of the important covenants of the lease.
  Where such a right of entry is reserved to the
  landlord, he will be presumed by law to have
  waived it if he accepts the payment of the rent
  after he has gained knowledge of the breach of
  the covenant.
  
  Responsibility for Fire. - If the tenant of a
  house has covenanted to repair, he must in every
  case remedy or rebuild in the case of damage
  to or loss of the premises by fire, unless he has
  been careful to make a special condition that
  liability for damage by fire shall not form part
  of the covenant. It is always as well for the
  householder to protect himself from loss or
  damage by fire by a clause of the kind, or by
  insuring liis property with a good insurance
  company, or by seeing that a covenant for
  insurance by the landlord is included in the
  lease. (For conditions of Fire Insurance,
  see p. 373.)
  
  Chimney on Fire. - Should a chimney catch
  fire in London the occupier of the hovise is liable
  to a penalty of 203., even though the fire be
  caused by some one else's carelessness, though he
  can in the latter case recover from this person
  the penalty he has paid if he can prove the
  neglect. In towns outside London the penalty
  is only lOs., but it is not recoverable if the
  occupier can show the fire did not in any way
  arise from carelessness, neglect, or omission on
  his part or that of his sorvant.
  
  Sanitary Regulations. - It is an offence to
  build a house without proper drainage in any
  urban district. Wliere any house is without a
  drain sufficient for its effectual drainage the
  local authorities must, by written notice, require
  the owner or occupier of the house, within a
  reasonable time, to make a covered drain
  emptying into the local authority's sewers
  or cess-pools under the direction of the
  authority.
  
  Every houije must be provided with one or
  more water-closets as required, furnished with
  a suitable water-supply, and all the necessary
  arrangements to ensure its efficient working.
  Where, however, there is not a sufficient sewerage
  
  
  or wator-supptj' a " privy " or earth closet may
  be substituted.
  
  Every house must also have a sufficient
  ash-pit, dust-bin, or other receptacle for ashes
  and refuse. Failure to comply with those regu-
  lations renders the occupier liable to a fine of
  £5, and a further fine of 40s. for each day the
  offence continvies, or the sanitary authority
  may do the work themselves and recover from
  the owner or occupier. Closets, privies, and
  ash-pits must not be allowed to got into a con-
  dition which is offensive or injurious to health.
  The occupier of the house is in these circum-
  stances liable to a fine of £5, or a further fine
  of 40s. for every day they remain in this
  condition.
  
  Infectious Diseases. - Disinfection of Premises.
  - Every Local Government Board may make
  regulations enforcing the cleansing and disin-
  fection of premises, bedding, &c., in the case of
  a house which has been visited by an infectious
  disease. It is an offence under the Infectious
  Disease (Prevention) Act, 1890, to knowingly
  cast infected refuse into any ash-bin or receptacle
  for refuse. Outgoing tenants are fined for leav-
  ing premises infected, unless they give notice
  of infection to the landlord.
  
  Tlie letting of a house where infectious disease
  has prevailed within a period of six months prior
  to the letting also involves a heavy penalty.
  
  Removal of Refuse. - Local authorities have
  power to undertake or contract for the removal
  of house refuse from private premises ; and
  where they have exercised this power it is an
  offence for any one else to remove or obstruct
  authorised persons from removing such refuse.
  But there is a provision exempting occupiers ol
  houses from liability in respect of such refuse as
  is produced on their own premises and intended
  to be removed for sale or for the occupier's
  own use if it is meantime kept so as not to be
  a nuisance. If the local authority, after having
  undertaken or contracted for the removal of the
  refuse, unreasonably neglects to have it removed
  wnthin seven days of being requested in WTiting
  to do so by the occupier of the premises, it
  renders itself liable to penalties.
  
  House Duty. - This is known by the names of
  House Tax, House Duty, and Inhabited House
  Duty. All inhabited dwellings of £20 and
  upwards are chargeable. Liability to pay this
  tax falls upon the occupier and not the owner of
  a house. The rate of duty varies with the
  annual value of the house, and for ordinary
  dwelling-houses is as follows : -
  
  On hoTises where the annual value of the
  
  premises does not exceed £40 . . .3d. in the £.
  Where it exceeds £40 but not £C0 . . . Cd. in the £.
  Exceeding £00 9d. in the £.
  
  A lower scale is charged under certain con-
  ditions to lodging-house keepers and those
  engaged in trade.
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  383
  
  
  Time for Payment. - In England the year
  calculated in the assessment of this tax is from
  April 5 to the following April 5, and in Scotland
  from May 24 to the following May 23 ; in all
  cases the tax is required to be paid on January 1
  of that year.
  
  Land Tax. - Tlie tenant pays this in the first
  instance, but she is entitled to deduct it from
  the amount paid for rent, unless she has by the
  terms of the lease or agreement agreed to bear
  the charge herself. Persons whose incomes do
  not exceed £160 a year are exempt from the
  paynaent of land tax, wliilst those whose incomes
  do not exceed £400 are exempt to the extent
  of one-half.
  
  House and Estate Agents' Commission. - House
  agents are as a rule employed to negotiate the
  sale or lease of a house or property. Thus where
  a lease or a purchase has been effected through
  their agency they are entitled to a commission
  upon the proceeds of the same payable by the
  seller or lessor of the property.
  
  This commission only becomes payable when
  the sale or lease has been effected in consequence
  of the agents' introduction.
  
  The following are the usual fees and charges
  in London of House and Estate Agents and
  Auctioneers for letting house property, factories,
  shop property, &c. : -
  
  When let on agreement for not more than
  tliree years, 5 per cent, on the first year's rent ;
  when for a longer term, 7^ per cent., and, in
  addition, 5 per cent, up to £1000 and 2i per
  cent, on the residue upon any premium or
  consideration. Also R per cent, on the pur-
  chase price of any plant, fixtures, fittings, &c.,
  which may be purchased by the tenant. Where
  the rent is weekly, one week's rent is charged.
  
  Income Tax. - The Income Tax is payable by
  all persons whose annual income exceeds £160.
  At present the amount levied is Is. 2d. in the
  £ upon unearned incomes and on earned incomes
  of over £3000, and Is. in the £ on earned incomes
  of between £2000 and £3000. On all earned
  incomes up to £2000 the tax is 9d. in the £.
  All whose incomes do not exceed £160 are en-
  tirely exempted from payment, wliilst a rebate
  is allowed of the amount of the tax on £160
  when the income is less than £400 ; £150 when
  less than £500 ; £120 when less than £600, and
  £70 when less than £700. A special allowance
  equal to the amount of the Income Tax upon £10
  is allowed to Income Tax payers whose income
  does not exceed £500 in respect of every child
  under t>io age of sixteen. In addition to the
  ordinary Income Tax a Super Tax of 6d. in the
  £ is payable by persons whose total income ex-
  ceeds £5000, for every £1 of income above £3000.
  
  Rates. - ^Rates differ from taxes inasmuch as
  they are contributions levied by some local
  authority either for local government purposes
  or for the purpose of providing for the poor.
  Whilst taxes are levied by the Government and
  
  
  are of general application, the term '• rate "
  also applies to a charge made by a public com-
  pany (i.e. a water company) for services rendered.
  Under this designation can be classed the water
  rate and the gas rates.
  
  Wlio Pays tlie Rates. - The occupier of a house
  and not the owner is generally the person who
  is primarily liable for the payment of the rates,
  though there are some rates which the owner
  must pay. In the case of a landlord and tenant
  the parties frequently agree between themselves
  that the liability shall ultimately fall upon
  the landlord.
  
  Each locality has its own rates governed by
  its own needs. Rates are assessed on the net
  annual value of the property. The rateable
  value of a property is arrived at by deducting
  from the gross value the tithes, cost of ins\ir-
  ance, repairs and other expenses incidental
  to property which detract from its gross
  value.
  
  Gas and Water Rates. - Tlie gas and water
  rates are usually a charge made by a public
  company for services rendered. Gas is usually
  paid for according to the quantity consumed as
  measured by the meter. The private Acts of
  most gas companies have provisions dealing with
  the testing of gas meters and the recovery of
  overcharges if the meters do not register cor-
  rectly, but many of the Acts provide that allow-
  ances for the incorrectness of meters can only
  be made on the current quarter account. Water
  rates, however, are generally assessed, and are
  payable on the rateable value of the premises,
  though it is not unusual for an extra charge
  to be made when garden hoses are employed,
  or where there is otherwise reason to believe
  that an abnormal supply of water will be
  used.
  
  The Hire Purchase System. - To people of
  limited means who cannot afford the disburse-
  ment of a substantial lump sum, the facilities
  for furnishing their homes on the hire purchase
  system present many decided advantages.
  Briefly a hire purchase agreement for the
  purchase of furniture or other goods amounts
  to tliis - the goods become the property of the
  person who hires them when he has completed
  the purchase by a specific number of payments
  made periodically. Until all the payments have
  been made the goods belong to the person who
  lets them out. Should default be made in pay-
  ment, the owner may retake possession of his
  goods and all pre\aous instalments paid by the
  hirer will be forfeited.
  
  It is always 6is well, before entering into a
  hire purchase agreement, to see that it is being
  effected with a reputable firm. Many of the
  chief hire purchase traders belong to a society
  whose object is to see that the system is honour-
  ably kept up, and that the mere fortuitous
  failure to pay an instalment is not made the
  means of depriving the hirer of the benefit of
  
  
  384
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  his contract altogother. Firms belonging to
  this society will usually subject this rule to
  considerable modification in favour of a hirer
  who has a comparatively respectable character
  and position, and if there is reason to beUeve
  that liis default is in the nature of a temporary
  suspension of payment only. As a rule it pays
  the hire furnisher better to conclude the sale
  with the hirer even for an extended credit than
  to take back goods in a second-hand condition
  and find a pui-chasor for them, more especially
  as a reputation for harshness would be fatal
  to his success in business in any restricted
  locality.
  
  Stamps. - A hire purchase agreement requires
  R. sixpenny stamp if its subject matter is of the
  value of £5. If below that value no stamp is
  necessary.
  
  Excise Licences. - The chief excise licences
  which concern the householder according to the
  position he occupies and the extent of his
  establishment are : -
  
  The licence on male servants.
  The licence on armorial bearings.
  The licence on carriages and motors.
  The licence on dogs.
  
  Male Servant. - Every person who emploj^
  a male servant must obtain a licence, pajang
  for such hcence 15s. for each servant employed.
  The licence is annual and expires on the 31st
  day of December each year. The term " ser-
  vant " in this connection apphes only to what
  may be described as a personal servant, not to
  a workman or labourer employed in any handi-
  craft or trade. But if a farm labourer is em-
  ployed daily to drive a pony cai'riage, then a
  licence is necessary. It is also necessary in the
  case of a tradesman who employs a man to
  attend to a vehicle solely used for the purpose
  of pleasure. A gardener employed at a weekly
  wage and who works for his employer a number
  of hours per day cannot be employed without a
  licence even if he is at liberty to work for other
  people. Trade servants, including those en-
  gaged in hotels and refreshment houses, game
  watchers and persons not residing in employer's
  house engaged for a portion only of each day,
  are not servants in that sense and do not require
  to bo licensed.
  
  Penalties for Employing Male Servants without
  a Licence. - It is tho duty of any person employ-
  ing male servants to render a declaration to this
  effect to tho Inland Revenue authorities in tho
  month of January each year. The penalty for
  nerjlecting to deliver or refusing to deliver such
  declaration is £20, or for employing a male
  servant without a proper licence, or employing
  more male servants than authorised by the
  licence, is also £20.
  
  Armorial Bearings. - The general regulations
  and penalties affecting the use of armorial
  bearings are the same as those which apply
  
  
  in the case of " male servants." The licence
  must bo taken out annually, and the duty
  payable is £1, Is., but if used on the carriage
  the amount is increased to £2, 2s. Any person
  wearing or using armorial bearings, even as
  an ornament, is bound to take out a licence.
  The wearing of a signet ring with a lion
  rampant engraved thereon renders the wearer
  liable to duty, so is the user of notepaper
  Avith a similar device printed on his note-
  paper.
  
  Certain persons are exempted from making
  declarations, or taking out licences, either for
  the employment of malo servants or the use
  of armorial bearings. These are : (1) Members
  of tho Royal Family ; (2) sheriffs and mayors
  of corporations serving an annual office therein
  in respect of any servants or carriages kept
  for the purposes of office during the year of
  service ; (3) persons wearing by right of office
  any arms or insignia of members of tho Royal
  Family, or of any corporation or royal burgh in
  respect of the use of any such arms or insignia ;
  (4) any person ordinarily resident in Ireland,
  who is a representative peer on the part of Ire-
  land or a member of the House of Commons,
  and not residing in Great Britain longer than
  forty days before and forty days after such
  session.
  
  Carriages. - For every carriage which has foui*
  or more wheels and is fitted to bo drawn by two
  or more horses or mules, or drawn or propelled
  by mechanical power, a licence costing £2, 2s.
  must be taken out by the owner. If a four-
  wheeled carriage is fitted to be drawn by one
  horse only, then the cost of the licence is
  £1, Is. This amount is reduced to 15s. if
  the one-horse carriage has less than four
  wheels ; the licence for all kinds of hackney
  carriages is 15s.
  
  Vehicles Exempt from Licence. - Carriages
  which are kept but not used at any time during
  the year do not require to be licensed, neither
  do vehicles constructed and used solely for the
  conveyance of goods of trade or husbandry.
  Those latter must have tho Christian name and
  surname and address of the o\Amor printed on
  them in letters of not less than one inch in length.
  If, however, a tradesman uses his trade vehicle
  for tho purpose of giving his friends or his
  family pleasurable jaunts, and not solely for
  tho purposes of his trade, he will bo roquii-ed to
  take out a licence ; moreover, the vehicle must
  bo constructed or adapted for trade purposes.
  Therefore a wardrobe dealer cannot avoid the
  duty if he conveys goods in a governess cart,
  even if he has his name and address painted
  upon it and does not use it for pleasure or
  any other purpose than in tho exercise of his
  calling.
  
  Motor Cars and Cycles. - A person employed
  to drive a motor car is a male " servant," and
  the employ or is liable to an annual dutj' of IDs.
  
  
  MANAGEMENT OF MONEY AND LEGAL GUIDE
  
  
  385
  
  
  in respect of such a driver. The duties payable
  on motor cars are as follows : -
  
  
  Motor bicycles and tricycles ....
  Motor cars not exceeding 6| h.-p. .
  
  ,, exceeding 6 h.-p. but under 12 h.-p.
  
  
  16
  26
  33
  
  40
  60
  
  
  £, s. d.
  
  10 0
  
  2 2 0
  
  3 3 0
  
  4 4 0
  6 6 0
  8 8 0
  
  10 10 0
  
  21 1 0
  
  42 0 0
  
  
  Registration of Motor Cars and Motor Cycles. -
  Every cai' must be registered and must bear a
  mark indicating its number and the County
  Council for which it is registered. The fee for
  registration is £1, but in the case of motor cycles
  it is 5s. The penalty for using a car without
  being registered or using a car the mark on which
  is obscured or defaced, is for a first ofience a
  penalty not exceeding £10, and for a subsequent
  offence a penalty not exceeding £50 or three
  months imprisoninent.
  
  Licence of Drivers. - Every person driving a
  motor car must have a licence, the fee for
  which is 5s. The licence is good for twelve
  months, and must be produced by the driver
  when demanded by a police constable, otherwise
  the driver is liable to a fine not exceeding £5.
  No person under the age of seventeen years can
  obtain a licence for driving a motor car, but
  in the case of motor cycles the age limit is
  14 years.
  
  Any person who drives a motor car without
  being Ucensed is hable to a fine not exceeding
  £20 for a first offence, and for a subsequent
  offence to a penalty not exceeding £50 or three
  months imprisonment.
  
  Regulations as to Lights, Bells, and Horns. -
  During the period between one hour after sunset
  and one hour before sunrise, the person in charge
  of a motor car must carry attached thereto
  lamps so constructed and placed as to exhibit
  lights in accordance with the regulations of the
  Local Government Board. Moreover, all motor
  cars must carry bells or other instruments
  warning of their approach. Failure to comply
  with these regulations incurs the penalty of a
  fine not exceeding £10.
  
  Dog Licences. - With a lew exceptions which
  will be detailed below, persons wishing to keep
  a dog must take out an annual Hcence for the
  purpose. The cost of each dog Ucence is 7s. 6d.
  The licences are issued by the Inland Revenue
  department, and may be obtained at any post
  office. A register of the persons licensed and
  the number of dogs for wliich they hold licences
  is kept, and is open to the inspection of police
  constables and justic>>s of the peace. All dog
  licences expire on December 31, irrespective of
  the date of issue. No rebate is allowed if the
  licence is operative for less than a year. The
  
  
  licence does not apply to a particular dog ; it ia
  the owner who is licensed to keep the dog, and
  he cannot transfer the Ucence to another person,
  even if that person should become the owner of
  the dog.
  
  Dogs Exempted from Payment of Duty. - In the
  following cases no hcence is required : -
  
  (1) For dogs under six months old.
  
  (2) Hound puppies under twelve months old
  not entered or used with a pack of hounds.
  
  (3) In the case of a dog kept and used solely
  by a blind person for his guidance.
  
  (4) Dogs kept and used solely for the purpose
  of tending sheep or cattle. The number in this
  case is restricted to two.
  
  Penalties for Keeping a Dog without a Licence.
  - A person keeping a dog without a licence or
  keeping more dogs than he is Ucensed to keep,
  or refusing to produce a Ucence on the demand of
  an Excise Officer or constable, renders himself
  liable to a penalty not exceeding £5.
  
  Dog Owner's Responsibilities. - The most im-
  portant question in regard to dogs from the
  point of view of the owner is in connection with
  the degree of responsibiUty which attaches to
  her for acts committed by her canine pet. The
  old saying that every dog is entitled to its first
  bite is not entu'ely accurate, but it gives a rough
  idea of the principles upon which the Courts
  have acted. In order to make an owner Uable
  for an assault committed by a dog upon a
  person, the Court demands that there must be
  some evidence of knowledge on the part of the
  owner that the dog had a disposition to bite
  people. It would be possible to prove this
  knowledge in many ways, even although the
  animal may not have actually bitten any one
  before. Should a dog injure cattle his owner
  is Uable for damage whether he was aware
  of the mischievous propensity of the dog or
  not.
  
  Damage to Dogs. - A person is entitled to
  kill a dog in self-defence, and in certain circum-
  stances in defence of his property. Tlius a
  landowner may kill a dog which is actually
  chasing sheep or rabbits in a wari-en if the act
  is necessary for the safety of his property,
  but not otherwise ; and a dog in pursuit of game
  may also be shot by the owner of the game,
  but not if the bird or animal piirsued is out of
  danger.
  
  Collars. - The Board of Agricultm-e has power
  to make orders for prescribing and regulating
  the wearing of collars by dogs when out of doors,
  each collar to have the name and address of the
  owner inscribed upon it on a plate or badge
  attached to it. By an order dated 22nd of
  October, 1 906, the Board has exempted packs of
  hounds, dogs used for sporting purposes, the
  capture of vermin, or the tending of sheep, from
  this regulation.
  
  Stray Dogs. - Where a police officer has reason
  to believe that any dog found in a highway or
  
  2b
  
  
  386
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  place of public resort is a stray dog, he may
  seize the dog and retain it until the owner has
  claimed it and paid all expenses incxirred by
  tefison of its detention. But the owner, if
  known, is entitled to a notice that the dog has
  been so seized, and will be liable to be sold or
  destroyed if not claimed within seven clear days
  after the service of the notice.
  
  Railway Companies and Dogs. - When a dog
  is sent from one place to another by rail the
  railway company will only be hable to the
  owner when a dog is killed or injured as a result
  of the negligence or default of the servants of
  the company.
  
  The company is, in addition, permitted to
  make conditions hmiting the liabihty it is pre-
  pared to assume ; but in order to make them
  binding upon the public it is necessary first
  that the conditions should be reasonable, and,
  secondly, there must be a memorandum of the
  contract between the parties signed by the
  consignor of the dog or his agent. A very
  usual form of such condition is one which Hmits
  the liabihty of the company to a small fixed sum,
  unless the full value of the dog is declared, and a
  certain percentage paid upon the excess value
  over the sum fixed. If, however, the railway
  officials allow the dog to be despatched with-
  out this condition being signed, the owner
  can recover the whole amount of the loss,
  whether he has paid an additional percentage
  or not.
  
  Railway Companies' and Passengers' Luggage. -
  A railway company is liable to passengers for
  loss of their luggage. Of course, if the passenger
  carries the luggage in the carriage in which he
  
  
  is seated, he assumes control over it himself,
  and the company is then only hable for loss due
  to the neghgence or wilful misconduct of their
  servants ; whereas if the luggage is placed in the
  van, the company is liable for any loss or damage,
  no matter how caused, except damage arising
  through some inherent defect in the luggage
  itself, such as bad packing.
  
  A railway company, however, is not liable for
  loss or injury to gold or silver articles, clocks,
  jewellery, watches, bills, money securities,
  pictures, stamps, maps, writings, plated goods,
  glass, china, silks, furs, or hand-made lace if the
  value exceeds £15, unless their value is declared
  by the passenger, and an increased charge paid.
  Railway companies may hmit their liability in
  regard to carrying cycles, making a condition
  that such machines are carried at their owners'
  risk. But these conditions must be agreed to
  by the owner of the cycle and signed by him,
  and even then the company will be responsible
  for any loss caused through the negligence or
  fault of their servants, but they will not be hable
  as common carriers.
  
  The liability of the companies for passengers'
  luggage begins from the moment the luggage is
  handed to their servants for conveyance to the
  van or carriage or to be labelled, and ends when
  the luggage is dchvered to the passenger and
  placed on his cab. If the luggage is merely
  handed to a porter to look after it without any
  further directions, the company is not hable for
  damage that may occur to it. The luggage must
  be handed to the porter for immediate or present
  and not for future conveyance. A passenger
  must claim his luggage within a reasonable time.
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  Sewing has been from olden times an art the practice of which has been the special privilege
  of women. In many ancient stories and histories the typical woman is introduced to us plying
  her needle. Thus we see in the " Odyssey " Penelope awaiting her royal husband, Ulysses, working
  at her famous piece of linen or tapestry, and of the model woman described in Proverbs we are
  told : " She seeketh wool and flax and worketh willingly with her hands . . . she maketh herself
  coverings of tapestry . . , she maketh fine linen," &c.
  
  We can see in our museums and palaces beautiful needlework done by women of all times ; yet,
  strange though it may seem, for the last generation or two until quite recently needlework has
  been looked down upon by a certain class of people, with the most lamentable results, for this
  ignorance is usually displayed by those to whom the saving effected by a knowledge of practical
  sewing would come as an inexpressible boon.
  
  Fortunately much is done nowadays in schools and training colleges for the teaching of needle-
  work, and the girl of the present day, the mother of to-morrow, will know how to add to the comfort
  and happiness of her home by the clever and timely use of her needle.
  
  It should be the duty of the head of every household to see that the house linen and the children's
  clothes are kept in order, and to mend them when there is no one else to do it. "A stitch in time
  saves nine " is one of the truest sayings, and a mother should teach her children to sew as soon
  as they can be safely trusted with needle and thread.
  
  Every girl or woman can become a neat sewer, and it is important that to begin with she
  should know the making of every stitch as well as the diff orent materials and their use. Our
  object here is to explain these essential factors in a simple and comprehensive manner in order to
  make them as easy as possible for the beginner.
  
  
  THE WORK-BASKET AND WHAT IT
  SHOULD CONTAIN
  
  First of all each worker must have her own
  work-basket independently of the household
  mending bag or basket. A wicker one is best,
  as it is lighter and easier
  to carry about. A light
  wicker portable work-table
  with two fixed trays and a
  handle is also useful where
  there is much mending to be
  done, and it can be bought
  for a few shillings.
  
  The T.'ork-basket should
  be of medium size, lined,
  and furnished with pockets
  round the sides to keep
  sewing cotton, tapes, &c.,
  apart and in order, the centre portion being
  allotted to the work itself.
  
  The work-basket should contain : -
  Two pairs of scissors - one large pair for
  cutting-out, with one blade pointed and the
  other round, the latter to be held underneath
  the material when cutting ; and one small pair
  for cutting threarls, for unpicking and any finer
  work. The rings of the scissors ought to be
  
  387
  
  
  Work-Basket
  
  
  round and large enough for the fingers to enter
  comfortably.
  
  A good thimble - a silver one to be preferred,
  and one that fits the finger comfortably.
  
  A good supply of ordinary needles of the best
  qualitJ^ To test if they are good try to break
  one between the fingers. If the temper of the
  steel is first rate it will break off sharply, but
  with difficulty ; if it breaks too easily, like a
  piece of glass, or bends, the needle is not good.
  The needles should be long-eyed to be easily
  tlireaded, and the holes ought to be well pohshed,
  so that they will not fray nor break the thread.
  For working the ordinary seams in plain needle-
  work short needles are best, but for other work
  longer ones will be required. It will be useful
  to have an assortment of different sizes of
  needles from Nos. 5 to 12 to suit the various
  tliicknesses of thread that will be used. There
  ought also to be a small supply of other kinds
  of needles, such as crewel needles, darners,
  chenille needles, Berlin wool needles, &c. It is
  a good plan to buy a needle-case fitted with
  the best quality of needles and containing all
  the different shapes and sizes that may be
  required.
  
  A small emery cushion to polish rusty needles.
  
  Five or six reels of white cotton, one of them
  
  
  388
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  \-ery fine to match No. 10 needles, and two or
  three reels of black cotton. (The numbers vary
  with different meJiere.)
  
  A card or reel of whito darning cotton for
  stockings.
  
  A card or reel of black darning cotton for
  stockings.
  
  A card or reel of tan darning cotton for
  stockings.
  
  A few skeins of white embroidery cotton.
  
  A reel of white silk, medium size.
  
  A reel of black silk, medium size.
  
  A reel of black silk, tliick for button-holes.
  
  Also a card or reel of cotton or silk of the
  colour of each dress, pair of gloves, stockings, &c.,
  for mending.
  
  Darning wool to match the stockings and
  imderclothing.
  
  A reel or skein of whito and one of black Unen
  thread may be very useful for sewing linen,
  holland, and other strong materials.
  
  Wliitљ crochet cotton for fancy stitches.
  
  A box of mixed pins.
  
  One or two bodkins for running in tapes
  and ribbons.
  
  A stiletto for piercing holes to make eyelet
  holes, &c.
  
  Pieces of tape, white and black of different
  sizes, linen and cotton.
  
  Linen buttons in assorted sizes.
  
  Pearl buttons in assorted sizes.
  
  \Vhito and black hooks and eyes of different
  sizes.
  
  A tape measure marked with inches on one
  side and centimetres on the other.
  
  A small pin-cushion.
  
  Machine needles, cotton, &c., should bo kept
  with the machine outfit ; they will be more
  handy in the machine drawer. The small
  articles, such as hooks and eyes and buttons,
  should be kept in a little box or a small bag ;
  or a glass bottle with a screw lid is good, SiS the
  contents can so easily bo seen.
  
  SIMPLE STITCHES
  
  General Hints. - Before describing the different
  stitches used in plain needlework it might be
  as well to give a few preliminary instructions.
  
  The position of the body when sewing is very
  important. Whatever the work may be there
  is never any need to sit in an awkward position.
  The height of the chair ought to be in propor-
  tion to that of the table at which one is sitting,
  and if this is somewhat high a foot-stool may
  be used. There must be no undue stooping
  of the body, and the work must be held suffi-
  ciently high to prevent more than a slight in-
  clination of the head.
  
  Sewing should always be done in a good
  light ; there must be no straining of the eye-
  sight.
  
  The work should never be pinned to the knee,
  
  
  as this causes the body to take an ungainly
  attitude, but should be fixed to a small weighted
  cushion on the table when it is necessary to
  keep it in a certain position.
  
  The thread must never be bitten off with the
  teeth, but neatly cut with a pair of scissors.
  
  Both thread and needle must be adapted to
  each other, and also to the material with wluch
  they are to be used. Fine cotton and fine
  needles should be used for fine material, and
  thicker needle and cotton for coarser material.
  The needle ought always to be chosen a little
  thicker than the cotton in order to make a
  hole large enough for the latter to enter easily.
  The end of the cotton which hangs loose from
  the reel should always be put through the
  needle first and the thread used the way it
  unwinds. It wU bo loss likely to break and
  fray out if this is done. Never sow with a bent
  needle, as it will be impossible to make noat
  and even stitches, and if it becomes sticky pass
  it several times through the emery cushion.
  Be careful how you commence and finish each
  new seam. The thimble should be worn on
  the middle finger of the right hand.
  
  The following explanations of stitches are
  made as simple and varied as possible. The
  best way to master a new stitch is to read each
  explanation t^^^ce through, study the illustra-
  tions of it thorouglily, and only then begin
  attempting it. Practice will show that this is
  not waste of time. It ^vill be a little slower
  perhaps at the commencement, but the worker
  will soon find herself doing quicker and more
  accurate work.
  
  Also be very exact in the measurements,
  one-eighth, one-sixth, one quarter, &o., of an
  inch; those will become so familiar with time
  and practice that thoy will hardly need to be
  measured.
  
  Basting or Tacking. - Basting or tacking is
  used to keep the different parts of the garments
  together, or to fix the seams and ^/atterns
  straight and securely before they are sewn.
  It is really a preparation soam, and should bo
  
  
  liasting or Tacking.
  
  done most carefully, and never be overlooked
  under pretence that it is waste of time. It
  will be found in the long run that on the contrary
  it is a groat saving of time, besides being the
  only sure means of producing noat and even
  work. Begin by making a knot at the end of
  a fairly long piece of cotton, as tacking threads
  are more easily taken out when there is a knot by
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  389
  
  
  which to take hold of them. Basting or tacking
  cottona shoiild be used if possible, preferably
  pink, pale blue, or any colour that will not soil
  white material, and wliich will be easily seen.
  Hold the material Ughtly, yet firmly, so that it
  may not slip, and make the stitches just above
  where the hne of running, hemming or seaming
  stitches will be. Begin at the right-hand side,
  put in the needle straight down, and bring it
  out on a horizontal Mne a quarter of an inch
  further on ; pass ov^r half an inch and put
  the needle in again and out another quarter
  of an inch farther, and so on, making the stitches
  twice as large as the intervals left between them.
  At the end of the seam put the needle twice
  in the same stitch, making what is called a
  back-stitch, so as to fasten off the thread.
  
  Hemming. - Hemiuing is used to fasten down
  the raw edge of all materials, to fell, or fold
  down a seam. Nearly aU articles of household
  linen and underclothing require hemming. The
  piu-pose of the hem is to strengthen and orna-
  ment the edge of the material. It can, if wished,
  be finished off prettily with fancy stitches or a
  lace edging. A great deal of hemming is done
  by machine ; this certainly saves time and
  trouble and does for longer or coarser articles,
  but neat work done by hand is always more
  elegant, lasting, and valuable.
  
  A hem is of different widths according to the
  piece of work for which it is used. It varies from
  the eighth of an inch hem at the end of a mushn
  frill to the one of three or four inches or more
  in width at the foot of a petticoat or a dress.
  
  Laying the Hem. - The hem must be cut per-
  fectly straight, to a thread if possible. Cahco,
  muslin, and cotton materials generally tear to
  a tliread, but as they are apt to pull cross-
  ways, especially those that are stiffened, one
  should first try on a piece of the material if
  it tears well. After tearing hold the material
  by the two opposite corners diagonally and
  pull it carefully until the raw edges are in a
  straight horizontal line again. This done, hold
  the wrong side of the material towards you.
  Turn down the raw edge towards you : tliis first
  fold should be one-quarter or one-third of an inch
  wide, according to the width of the hem. In
  musliuj, nainsook, or any light materials the first
  fold should be exactly as wide as the hem itself so
  that the raw edges do not show through. Now
  fold ovec the hem for the second time to the
  desired width. Do the folding on the table if pos-
  sible, making the hem of the required depth, and
  press down firmly with the nail of the thumb.
  Some people prefer to hold up the material in the
  right hand and fold it as they go along, pressing
  it down with the thumb of the left hand. This
  method, however, has the disadvantage of creas-
  ing the material, tlms detracting from that
  " new " appearance which adds to the value of
  hand-made garments.
  
  To ensure the even folding of wide hems it
  
  
  is a good plan to use a card notched to the
  width of the hem and to measure every three
  or four inches before pressing down for the
  second folding. In hemming serge or any
  material that will not crease, the first folding
  down should be tacked, and the card-measure
  apphed to every stitch for the second folding.
  
  Flannel hems are only turned down once.
  
  When hemming the four sides of a square
  turn down the two opposite sides first, then
  the two other opposite sides, so that the corners
  may be aUke. When the hem is turned down
  it should be tacked unless it is too smaU. ilake
  the tacking stitches about one-eighth of an inch
  above the edge.
  
  Sewing the Hem. - Hold the hem in your left
  hand. The cotton should be about the tliick-
  ness of the tlxreads of the material. Do not
  take it too long. Insert the point of the needle
  under the second fold of the hem at the right-
  
  
  Hemming.
  
  hand side, two threads from the edge of the
  hem. Draw it tlirough, leaving an end of
  cotton half an inch long. Shp this end under
  the fold towards the left, and hold the hem
  secm-ely over the first finger so that it does
  not slip.
  
  Insert the point of the needle in the material
  just below the edge of the fold, two or tlu-ee
  tlireads to the left of the place where the needle
  was first put in. Direct it slantingly upwards
  to the left, take two or tlu-ee tlireads diagonally,
  and bring the needle out through the fold of
  the hem, on the same Une and five or six thi-eads
  apart from the first place the needle came
  through. Go on thus holding the needle
  slantingly, the point upwards until the cotton
  is finished. When taking a new length of
  cotton, tuck the ends under the fold of the
  hem.
  
  To fasten off, work twice over the last stitch
  and cut the cotton close to the fold if it is a raw
  edge that will be covered. If it is a selvedge,
  or the top hem on a square henuned on all sides,
  the hem should be continued to the end of the
  material, then the corners should be carefully
  seamed. At the end of the seam make a
  double stitch, insert the needle between the
  fold and the hem at the top, bring it out on
  the wrong side the length of the needle, and cut
  the tliread close to the hem. If the cotton is
  lightly pulled when cutting it will disappear in
  the fold.
  
  
  390
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Avoid pvilling the cotton in hemming or the
  material will be puckered ; only pull it if the
  hem is a circular one, and convex, or if you
  fell a seam on the cross £is on the sides of a
  chemise or a night -govrn, when the stitches
  should then be very close together. If the hem
  is concave, as round a neck or an armhole, the
  material will need to be stretched to he flat,
  or else it must be snipped with the scissors ;
  this should be thought of when tacking, and
  in hemming the material should be carefully
  stretched on the left forefinger.
  
  Felling. - ^Tliis is the same as hemming. The
  term is always apphed in connection with seams,
  where two pieces of material are joined together
  and one edge is folded in and hemmed down,
  as in the " run and fell " seam.
  
  Running and Gathering. - ^Running is a stitch
  used for joining together two pieces of material,
  as in a run and foil seam ; it is also used for
  making tucks. It does not make a strong
  seam, and should not be employed where there
  is much strain. It is a stitch sometliing hke
  tacking, only the stitches are much shorter and
  are all of the same size. If the material is thin,
  like muslin or soft hke silk, several stitches may
  be taken up at once on the needle. Hold the
  work in the same way as for basting. Do not
  
  
  Running.
  
  knot the cotton, but begin at the right-hand
  side with a back-stitch. When ready to take
  a fresh needleful of cotton, first work over the
  last stitch twice with the old cotton, pulUng
  the needle for thaso extra stitches through one
  piece of the material only, then cut off the
  thread, put the needle with the new cotton in
  the second last stitch ; make a double stitch
  in the last two stitches also through the single
  material, then proceed with the running to
  the end. Fasten off with a back-stitch. For
  gathering, the stitches should be double the size
  of the spaces (see p. 395).
  
  Seaming or Top Sewing is very like over-
  Cfisting, only the stitches are finer and closer
  together. It is used to join two pieces of
  material together as in the sew and fell seam,
  and is worked over the edge of the material.
  V^'hen two selvedges have to be joined it is
  generally this stitch which is used. Place the
  two selvedges together with the wrong sides out-
  wards and tack them about one-eighth inch down.
  For seaming, hold the work upright between
  the left thumb and forefinger. Begin at the right-
  hand end, leaving about half an inch of cotton
  to be worked over with the first few stitches.
  
  
  Sew over and over the two selvedges, making
  neat slanting stitches and just deep enough to
  hold the pieces together. There must bo no
  knots made in seaming. When a new piece
  of cotton is required, work over the two ends
  with the first few stitches. The ends must
  remain near the surface of the seam, and the
  stitches must be taken underneath so as to
  
  
  Seaming or Top Sewing.
  
  hide them and make them secure at the same
  time. Then continue to the end of the seam.
  To fasten off, work backwards over the last
  three stitches exactly in the same holes so as
  to make three neat Uttle crosses ; after the third
  insert your needle to the right in the middle of
  the stitches and bring it out to the left at the
  end of the seam. Then cut off the cotton and
  take out the tacking threads. Open out the
  work on the table and flatten it carefully from
  right to left with the thumb-nail.
  
  Stitching. - In stitching a short stitch is taken
  on the upper and a long one on the under side,
  then the needle is taken backwards through the
  hole made by the last stitch. Stitching is used
  to finish off neck and wrist bands, and for seams
  where a very strong even stitch is required.
  Stitching is always worked on two or moro
  thicknesses of material. It is apt to tire the
  eyes, and should not be worked for too long
  at a time ; in fact, long -stitched seams should
  be done by a good machine. When stitching
  bj' hand, if a straight lino of stitches is required,
  it is bettor to draw a tliread of the material.
  Tliis requires a little skill and careful attention.
  Choose a thread thicker than the others if
  
  
  Stitching.
  
  possible, keeping of course in the correct place
  where the stitching ought to be. Insert the
  needle under it about half an inch from the
  right-side end and bring it out. Secure it firmly
  between the thumb and forefinger of your right
  hand, and hold the whole width of the material
  where the stitching is to be worked in your left
  hand also between tho thumb and finger. Then
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  391
  
  
  ease the material from the thread by rubbing
  it gently along, beginning at the right-hand
  side, with the thumb and forefinger of your left
  hand, and make it gently sHp on the tliread.
  When the tliread breaks, which often happens
  in light materials, it is easily found again, as
  the material is slightly creased near the broken
  part. Take it up again half an inch from the
  broken end and go on drawing very gently.
  
  Back-stitching is much the same as stitching,
  only the stitch is taken half-way back instead
  
  
  Back-Stitching.
  
  of all tho way, leaving a small space between
  each stitch.
  
  Overcasting. - Overcasting is not used as a
  rule for any of the seams or any sewing worked
  on calico or Mnen materials. It is used for
  edges or seams in dress bodices, sleeves, and
  skirts when the raw edges cannot be hidden
  in any other way. It is difficult to overcast
  
  
  ' rvTrimnnnnmrrv
  
  
  Overcasting.
  
  very evenly. The sticches are usually worked
  from left to right as in illustration. Be very
  careful in overcasting not to draw the thread too
  tightly or the edge would curl. When the seam
  has to be smpped to allow it to curve outwards,
  the overcasting should follow the cuts, be done
  neatly over the angles, and two or three close
  stitches made inside the snips so that the
  material should not um-avel near the seam.
  
  DIJTERENT CALICO SEAMS
  
  Seams are used to join together widths or
  pieces of material. They vary according to
  the materials or garments they are used for.
  There are six different kinds of calico seams : -
  
  (1) The Top-sewing Seam, which is used for
  the joining together of two selvedges.
  
  (2) The Sew and Fell Seam.- Used for caHco
  garments, such as chemises, drawers, night-
  dresses, men's shirts, and any garments which
  need to be joined very strongly.
  
  (3) The Run and Fell Seam.- Used for cahco,
  muslin, and garments of hghter material.
  
  (4) The French Seam. - Used especially for
  thin materials and silk, for making slip-bodices
  and outer garments, as overalls, pinafores, and
  any garments of which as little as possible of
  the seam must be seen on the right side.
  
  
  (5) The Mantua-maker's Seam. - Used for
  fine materials, more especially used in dress-
  making for pockets, sleeves, seams of skirts,
  and any garments that have no hning. It is
  much used also for fancy articles, as silk bags,
  reticules, &c.
  
  (6) The Counter Hem. - Used sometimes for
  under bodices, nightgowns, shoulder seams,
  infants' first shirts, and baby clothes in general.
  
  Notes. - When making the seam in a garment
  the fell should always fall towards the back.
  The \vidth of seams must always be the same
  tliiroughout. If one breadth of the material is
  straight and the other gored, i.e. on the cross,
  the gored breadth should alwaj's be next to the
  worker. The corresponding seams in garments
  should always be worked to pair with each
  other ; that is to say, if one seam is begun at
  the top the corresponding one must be begun
  at the bottom, as in sleeves, for instance.
  
  The Sew and Fell Seam. - To make a sew and
  fell seam turn down an eighth of an inch on
  the wrong side of one of the pieces of material
  
  
  Fig. 1.
  
  to be joined. Turn down an eighth of an inch
  on the right side of the other piece of material ;
  turn back tliis folded edge nearly a quarter of
  an inch, still holding the material exactly in the
  same way. This double fold must always be
  on the front %vidth of the material when joining
  the pieces of a garment together. If one side
  of the seam is on the cross, as in nightgowns,
  the double fold should be made on the straight
  side.
  
  Put the two pieces of material together edge
  to edge with the right side outside and the folds
  inside, and tack an eighth of an inch from the
  top, beginning at the bottoni of the garment.
  Then seam neatly together, beginning at the
  bottom of the garment (fig. 1).
  
  
  Fig. 2.
  
  When the seaming is done, take out the
  tacking threads, open the seam, and press it
  doMm flat on the table with the thumb-nail in
  
  
  392
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  the same direction as the seaming has been
  worked. Turn over the work on tlie wrong
  side, tack down the fold and neatly fell it.
  Then take out the tacking tlireads (fig. 2).
  
  The Run and Fell Seam. - The run and fell
  seam is simpler and easier than the sow and
  fell seam, and can often be used instead of it.
  To make a run and fell seam turn down an
  eighth of an inch on the right side of one of the
  pieces of material to be joined and crease it
  well down. Place the raw edge of the second
  piece of material under this crease so that the
  two right sides of the material are turned in-
  wards face to face.
  
  Tack the two pieces of material together begin-
  ning at the right-hand side a Uttle distance from
  
  
  FlO. 3.
  
  the edge. Be careful to put the needle through
  the three thicknesses. Then run the two pieces
  neatly together just below the tacking thread,
  taking a back-stitch every six stitches or so.
  Take out the tacking threads and press the
  seam perfectly flat, so that the raw edge is
  
  
  Fio. 4
  
  hidden els in a hem. Tack the fold down neatly
  and then fell it (fig. 4).
  
  The French Seam. - To make a French seam
  put the two pieces of material together edge
  
  
  Fifl. 5.
  
  to edge with the right sides outwards. Tack,
  then run, with an occasional back-stitch an
  eighth of an inch down from the top edge
  (fig. 6). Remove the tacking thread, turn the
  
  
  Fio. 6.
  
  
  work over to the wrong side, and press the seam
  carefully so that it forms the top edge. Tack
  
  
  an eighth of an inch down from the top and
  run below this, being very careful to take in
  the raw edges on the other side (fig. 6). If the
  material is heavy, or if the seam has to be very
  strong, stitching may bo worked instead of
  running.
  
  The Mantua-maker's Seam. - Lay the two raw
  edges of the materials together, the right sides
  inwards, and so that the top width hes an
  eighth of an inch below the under width. Turn
  down that eighth of an inch of the under-width
  
  
  Fia. 7.
  
  over the top width. Again turn down the
  two materials together an eighth of an inch
  deep. Tack through the whole thickness very
  carefully. Then hem, being very c£u*eful to take
  every stitch through the under-side (fig. 7).
  
  Remove the tacking stitches. The seam will
  stand in a ridge instead of lying flat.
  
  The Counter Hem. - For counter hemming,
  turn down a fold an eighth of an inch deep on
  the right side of one of the widths of material.
  
  
  Jig. 8.
  
  Turn down a fold an eighth of an inch deep on
  the wrong side of the other width of material.
  Place the two folded edges over one another
  and pin the seam down the middle, then tack
  down the fold on the right side. Turn over
  and tack down the fold on the wrong side, or,
  if the material hes easily, it may be tacked once
  only down the centre (fig. 8). Take out the pins
  and hem down the fold on the right side, then
  
  
  Fio. 9.
  
  hem on the wrong side (fig. 9). Some people
  stitch this seam instead of hemming it down.
  In that case both rows of stitches should be
  made on the right side, and the tacking made
  so that the stitches should be very near the
  edge of both folds.
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  393
  
  
  A False Hem. - A false hem is used to join a
  piece or strip of material on to another garment.,
  It is meant either to lengthen a garment or to
  strengthen it. The material used for the false
  hem need not necessarily be the same as that
  of the garment. Cut and join together a strip
  of material long enough for the false hem
  required.
  
  The joining should as much as possible be
  done on selvedges and top sewn. K that is not
  possible, fold down the raw edges of the materials
  to be joined half an inch wide. Put the folds
  down back to back, so that the raw edges be
  outwards, and overseam. Open the seam out
  so that the folds he flat on each side.
  
  When the strip is prepared, place it against
  the garment the right sides inwards, and the
  
  
  Fig. 10.
  
  two edges even one with the other. Tack and run
  them together quarter of an inch at least from the
  top (fig. 10). Then turn over the false hem and
  fold it down half an inch above the seam, so
  that the latter does not show on the outside.
  Tack this fold cajrefully half an inch from the
  foot, then place the garment very flat on
  the table, with the wrong side uppermost, and
  fold in the raw edge of the false hem half an inch
  
  
  Fig. h.
  
  inwards. Tack it very carefully an eighth of
  an inch above the edge. Then hem it down
  (% 11).
  
  DIFFERENT FLANNEL SEAMS
  
  Flannel seams differ from calico seams in
  that they are not made with double folds, as the
  material is too thick. There are three different
  kinds of flannel seams : -
  
  I. and II. - The Open Flannel Seams, used when
  a very flat seam is required, as in baby clothes,
  barracoata, flannel vests, bodices, &c.
  
  ni. - The Closed Flannel Seam.used for stronger
  
  
  garments, as flannel petticoats, flannel shirts,
  night-dresses, &c.
  
  The Open Flannel Seam. - ^I. To make an open
  flannel seam, place the two jiieces of flannel
  together, the right sides inwards, and the edges
  exactly parallel. Tack, then run them to-
  gether a httle more than an eighth of an inch
  down from the top. Take out the tacking
  threads. Open the seam out and turn down
  each edge of the flannel on to its own piece
  of material. Flatten at the join and tack down
  
  
  Fig. 12.
  
  if necessary. Herring-bone each fold down,
  taking one thickness of material only, first the
  fold at the top and then the material below in
  turns (fig. 12). (For Herring-boning, see p. 397.)
  
  II. There is another way of feUing an
  open flannel seam. When the seam is run
  and flattened down, work only one row of
  herring-boning in the exact centre of the seam
  on the wrong side, one stitch above the join
  and one below alternately, being very careful
  to work through both thicknesses and show neat
  running stitches on the right side of the work.
  This seam is not so neat as the first, only it is
  quicker and quite strong. Tlie raw edges are
  not wide enough to unravel.
  
  The Closed Flannel Seam. - To make a closed
  flannel seam put the two pieces of flannel together
  with the right sides inwards, the top piece of
  flannel an eighth inch below the under. If one
  of the widths is gored, put the gored one on the
  top of the other. Tack one-sixth of an inch below
  the gored edge, then run and back-stitch just
  below the tacking. Take out the tacking threads.
  Fold the longer edge over the shorter one, making
  
  
  Fio. 13
  
  the seam as flat as possible, and tack in position.
  Then herring-bone dowTi and remove the tacking
  threads (fig. 13).
  
  TUCKING
  
  To Measure and Make Tucks. - Tucks are folds
  of material taken double and resting on the
  single material. They vary in width according
  to the material and the garment. In muslin,
  nainsook, cambric, &c., for baby gowns, fine
  
  
  394
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  tan, ^Cut
  
  
  blouses, rabats, handkercliiefs, &c., they are very
  small. In underliaen tliey are a little wider. In
  flannel petticoats they are often one or two
  inches deep ; also at tlie foot of drosses, &c.
  
  Sometimes they are arranged in sets with a
  space between or ^^nth a deeper tuck between.
  These sets should always be uneven in nvunber,
  t.e. 3, 5, 7, &c.
  
  They may also be graduated in size. For
  instance, the tuck above the hem would be the
  largest, the next one would be smaller, and
  BO on until the top one, which would be smallest
  of all.
  
  In making tucks it must be remembered that
  efich tuck occupies tliree times its width, i.e. : -
  
  1. The surface side of the tuck.
  
  2. The under side of the tuck,
  
  3. The width of material the tuck lies upon.
  So for a tuck a quarter of an inch deep, you
  
  require to leave tliree-quarter inches width, not
  counting the space left
  between the tucks. Those
  spaces vary according to the
  width of the tucks and also
  according to taste ; there
  is no definite rule. Gener-
  ally, if the tucks are moder-
  ately narrow, the space
  should bo the size of the
  tuck, so that a quarter of
  an inch tuck would require
  one inch of material, i.e.
  the three-quarter of an inch
  required for the making of
  it, plus a quarter of an inch for space. If the
  tucks are wide, the spaces should be a half or
  a third of the size of the tucks.
  
  When tucks are very narrow or in sets, each
  tuck may touch the running stitches of the
  preceding one without hiding the stitches.
  But, again, this is according to taste. Tucks
  must never overlap each other.
  
  When you have decided upon the size of the
  tucks, the best way is to make a tuck-marker
  by notching a piece of cardboad or stif? paper to
  the right depth so that each tuck may be very
  
  
  Tuck- Marker.
  
  
  Tucking.
  
  accurate. Carry the marker along the tuck as
  you tack it every throe or four inches. Some
  people prefer to use a tape measure or a small
  inch ruler, but this is not such an ea.sy forrr of
  
  
  measureinent. The method of making the tuck-
  marker is shown in the diagram.
  
  In fine materials it is sometimes a good plan
  to draw a tlu-ead where the running stitches
  are to be worked and work along that. Never
  draw a thread at the edge of the tuck, as it
  would soon wear out with washing and ironing.
  
  For running the tucks fold them upwards,
  as the running stitches must be worked on
  the under side. Jlako the running stitches one
  thread below the tacking stitches. Make no
  back-stitches except in beginning and fastening
  off, and be careful to show on the top of the
  tuck a row of neat and even stitches.
  
  PIPING
  
  Piping is used for strengthening tlie neck
  and armholes of outer garments as overalls and
  frocks ; also for trimming purposes.
  
  For piping use a piece of cotton cord or fine
  string if proper piping cord cannot be procured.
  String does not look so well, as it is too stiff.
  The cord must be inserted in strips of material
  generally cut on the cross or bias (see p. 434).
  treasure from the cross-way edges one and one-
  eighth inches and cut strips along them until you
  have the length required for the piping. When
  one strip is cut it is quicker and surer to put
  it down again on the material cross edges to
  cross edges, and to cut the other strips from it.
  Stitch the pieces together a little more than
  an eighth of an inch from the top, then open
  out the seams and flatten them well. Be care-
  ful to stitch aU the joins on the wrong side of
  the material. Any scraps of the material may
  be used for the strips, only be very careful to
  cut them of equal width.
  
  When the strip is the proper length, tiu-n down
  three-eighth of an inch on the wrong aide of the
  material \vithout stretching the work. Crease
  well down, then lift up the fold and place the
  cord along the crease. Turn tho fold down
  
  
  Fio. 14.
  
  again and tack along through both thicknesses of
  material (fig. 14). Tho tacking stitches require
  to be smaller than ordinary tacking stitches.
  Place the narrow edge of the piping exactly on
  to the raw edge of the right side of garment and
  tack carefully through the three thicknesses of
  material. Run and back-stitch quite close to
  the cord, but be careful not to put the needle
  through it (fig. 15). Take out the tacking
  threads and cut the cords the required length.
  Turn over and press carefully so that the
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  cord stands out along the top. Then fell the
  edge of the piping on to the material.
  
  When the piping has to come in the middle of
  two thicknesses of material, as at the foot of
  a lined yoke, the cross -way strips of material
  should be cut tliree-quarters to one inch wide.
  Then fold in two and put in the cord as before.
  The piping must be placed first to the right side
  
  
  Fig. 15.
  
  of the garment with the uppermost edges exactly
  even ; tht-n the bottom of the yoke on the top
  with the edge uppermost and even with the
  other two edges, so that the piping is between
  the garment and the yoke. Tack in position,
  then stitch through all thicknesses close to the
  cord. Then turn up the yoke, and hem down
  the yoke lining over all the raw edges on the
  wrong side of the garment.
  
  Piping can be used to draw the tops of frills
  and flounces. A crease should be made where
  the material has to be drawn, the cord placed
  inside on the wrong side of the garment, then
  secured with running on the right side. When
  the running is done, hold the left-side end of the
  cord in your left hand and shp the material
  gently along with the Ihiunb and forefinger of
  your right hand. Several rows of this piping
  and drawing make a very effective trimming.
  
  GATHERING, STROKING, AND SETTING IN
  
  Gathering stitches resemble running stitches,
  only in gathering you leave more tlireads than
  you take up, so as to make the gathers deeper and
  easier to keep in order and to give a fluted and
  grooved effect. You may take up two threads
  and miss four, or take four and miss six, accord-
  ing to the amount of material that has to be
  gathered into a given space. Gathering is
  worked on the right side of the material across
  the selvedge. It must be done very evenly.
  The cotton used in gathering should bo coarser
  than the one used for ordinary sewing. Do not
  double the cotton, as it is apt to twist and knot,
  and if one thread breaks it looks untidy. The
  material gathered should as a rule be "at least
  half as wide again as the band or yoke into
  which it is required to fit. Find the middle of
  the material and mark it vnth a pin or stitched
  cross. Divide again into quarters and mark
  them. Turn down the top edge a quarter of
  an inch, crease it well down, and then open it.
  The gathering stitohes must be made along the
  crease. Begin the gathering at the right-hand
  
  
  395
  
  side. If there are hems on the sides, leave them
  perfectly flat and never gather over them.
  When the end is finished, unthread the needle
  and make a knot in the thread. If the
  material to be gathered is wide and requires
  several gathering threads, begin those where
  the halves and quarters are marked. Begin
  and end each time as directed.
  
  Place a pin at the end of the gathers and also
  before each new thread, with the point to the
  top edge. Hold the thread in your left hand
  and draw the gathers to the right with the right
  hand, leaving them slightly loose. Twist the
  cotton round the top and bottom of the pin
  about three or four times. The work is now
  ready for stroking.
  
  Stroking. - Stroking is the placing of all the
  gathers evenly side by side. Hold the work in
  the left hand, the right side of the material
  towards you, and begin at the left side and work
  towards the right. It will be found easier to
  pin the right-hand side of the work on to a lead
  cushion (see fig. 16). Use a wool needle, as
  this will not scratch the material. Hold the
  
  
  Fig. 16.
  
  needle in your right hand slantingly, the point
  upwards. Raise each gather gently with the
  point of the needle and stroke down into the
  little ruck which lies between, mo\ang it gently
  to the left. Hold the gathers firmly under your
  left thumb until they are all stroked. Tlie top
  part above the gathering threads should be
  stroked in the same way.
  
  Setting In. - ^Take the band or piece of material
  into which the gatherings have to be set, di\-ide
  it into halves and quarters and mark as on
  the gathered part. Undo the gathering tlu-eads
  from the pins. Place the folded edge of the
  band exactly over the gathering thread and pin
  together the halves and quarters respectively.
  Loosen the gathers exactly to the size of the
  band and fasten the gathering tlireads again to
  the pins. Arrange the gathers evenly below
  the band with the point of the needle, putting
  in more pins if necessarj'^ and tack in position.
  Hem neatly, taking up each of the gathers on
  
  
  396
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  the needle. When nil the gathers are set in
  take out the piiis, thread each gatlu-riiig thread
  and finish it off, passing it through to the
  wrong side and making two or three double
  stitches. Then turn over the work. Tack
  down the wrong side of the band exactly
  
  
  Fig. 17.
  
  on the hemming stitches. Fell it, being very
  careful that the stitches do not show through on
  the right side.
  
  When the band is stitched by hand it should
  be stitched after the first side of gathers are set
  in two or three tlireads above the gathers, and
  the felling done afterwards. A thread might be
  drawn previously where the stitching is to be
  worked.
  
  If the stitching is done by machine it should
  be done tlirough the whole band after it has been
  felled.
  
  WHIPPING
  
  Whipping is used principally for the gather-
  ing up of lace frills or for frills naade of very
  fine material such as muslin or cambric. It
  is also used instead of hemming on the raw
  edges of very fine frills. Tliese should bo cut
  by the thread or torn across tlie selvedge. Tlio
  width of the frill will depend upon the purpose
  for which it is to be used : for ordinary under-
  clothing it should be from an inch to two inches
  deep. The length should bo twice that of the
  hem or band to be trimmed, or oven longer if
  the material of the frill is very fine, if the
  frill is deep, or there are comers to be turned.
  Make a hem as narrow as possible at the foot of
  the frill ; or it may be hom-stitchod. If several
  widths of material aro required for the frill, seam
  them neatly together b< fore beginning. If the
  frill is to be round as for a wrist-band, join the
  ends Ijefore beginning to whip. Divide the frill
  and the band on which it has to Ix) gathered
  ir to halves or quarters accorfling to length.
  Take a rather coarse cotton and a fresh noodloful
  for each section of the frill. To whip the frill
  hold it as for hemming the top. To start it
  turn a very tiny hem down and work two or
  three hemming stitches. Hold the material
  between the thumb and forefinger of your left
  hand, keep the forefinger quite still, lot the
  
  
  frill rest on it, and rub the thumb up and down
  so as to roll dovm the top raw edge, making a
  very tight and very neat roll.
  
  When you have rolled down an inch insert tho
  needle at the back of the roll very close to it, the
  point towards you slanting towards tho loft. The
  stitches should be slanting on the wrong side and
  straight on the right side (fig. 18). Put the needle
  
  
  Fia. 18.
  
  through one thickness only and never tlu-ough
  the roll, or tho cotton would not draw easily.
  The stitches must be very neat and regular, about
  one-eighth inch apart. Whip the inch prepared,
  and then roll another inch, and so on, drawing it
  up slightly as you go along. When the frill is
  whipped pin the halves, quarters, &c., on to the
  band exactly as for setting in gathers, the top
  right-hand side of the band against the top right
  side of the frill, holding the wrong side of the
  frill towards you. Seciu-e the end of the whipp*
  ing thread of the frill by twisting it round a
  pin as for gathering, and arrange the fulness
  evenly.
  
  To sew the frill on the band begin at the right-
  hand side with two or tliroe seaming stitches,
  then put the needle at the back, taking the
  smallest possible amount of the band and bring
  it out in front passing under the middle of each
  little roll. Each seaming stitch must be exactly
  on the whipping stitch of the roll (fig. 19). At
  
  
  FIO. 19.
  
  
  the end fasten off as in seaming. Finish off and
  cut off the whipping cotton. Raise up the frill
  on the right side and flatten the seam well with
  the thumb-nail.
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  397
  
  
  FANCY STITCHES
  
  Herring-boning. - So called because it is sup-
  posed to resemble the back-bone of a herring.
  This stitch is used principally for flannel seams
  (see p. 393) and for the seams of patches (see
  p. 415). It is a good plan to practise it first
  on a piece of canvas with coloured cotton or
  wool. To herring-bone a flannel hem begin at
  the left-hand side, hold the work as for hemming,
  and work from left to right. Put the needle
  under the fold close to the edge, bring it out on
  the top, and make one double-stitch. Then from
  the hole where the cotton comes out count four
  threads down (or their equivalent) and four to
  the right ; insert the needle in the fourth and
  bring it out horizontally two threads to the left.
  Then from the hole where the cotton comes out
  count four tlireads up and four to the right, and
  again insert the needle and bring it out horizon-
  tally two threads to the left. The needle must
  always be held horizontally, and each stitch con-
  sist of two tlireads taken towards the left, which
  shows a double row of small running stitches on
  the other side. Finish off neatly. Keep the
  cotton well^ behind the needle and do not allow
  it to pass under the point. Tlie stitches must
  lie smoothly without puckering the material. It
  is not easy to count the threads in flannel, but
  if the size of the stitches has been learnt on
  canvas it will be easy to keep them regular with
  a httle care and practice.
  
  Feather and Coral Stitching. - ^Feather and
  coral stitches are used to ornament both flannel
  and cotton garments. They are often worked
  in the centre of a narrow band, on both edges of
  a wider one, along a hem, or between tucks. For
  cotton goods use crochet cotton, coarse or fine.
  
  
  Feather Stitching.
  
  
  Coral Stitching.
  
  
  according to the nature of the work. For
  flannel use flax thread or flannel silk. Work
  with a crewel needle.
  
  The great point in both kinds of stitches is to
  rnake them very regular and to keep the middle
  rib on a straight line. As it is impossible to
  
  
  count the threads, a Uttle practice is necessary to
  make the stitches regular. When making the
  stitches on the front of a garment always work
  downwards, and if there are several hues of
  feathering begin them all at the top, so that all
  the stitches lie in the same direction.
  
  Single Feather Stitch. - Take the threaded
  needle and seciare the end of the cotton by making
  two or tliree stitches in a seam at the back of
  the work where they won't be seen, then slip the
  needle through the front ready to begin the
  stitches. Hold the cotton under the left thumb ;
  insert the needle a httle distance to the right-
  hand side a very Httle higher than the place where
  the cotton comes out, slanting it to the left ;
  bring it out a httle below the place it was brought
  out before ; be very careful to pass the point of
  the needle over the cotton held by the left
  thumb. This makes a little " V " towards the
  right caught at the foot.
  
  Again hold the cotton under the left thumb,
  turn the needle to the right-hand side this time,
  and insert it as far again from the middle rib
  as it was inserted before to the right ; slant it
  towards the right, and bring it out in the middle
  rib a httle below the preceding stitch, being
  always careful to pass the point over the cotton
  held by the left thumb. This makes a httle " V "
  towards the left also caught at the foot.
  
  Repeat this, making a slanting stitch towards
  the right, then towards the left alternately,
  until you have the length required.
  
  To finish off pass the needle and cotton to the
  wrong side close to the place it came out, being
  careful to catch the loop, and cut off close to the
  work. Be careful not to draw the cotton too
  tightly or it will pucker the material ; it should
  rather be left somewhat loose to allow for
  shrinkage in the washing.
  
  The Double Feather Stitch is so called because
  it consists of two stitches worked one below the
  other to the right, then two to the left of the
  middle rib. It is very effective and less stiff in
  appearance than single feather stitching.
  
  The Treble Feather Stitch consists of three
  stitches -o-orked one below the other, first to
  the right and then to the left alternately ; it is
  rather more elaborate than the other kinds of
  feather stitching, but very pretty, especially
  worked in fine stitches on the top of a chemise
  or on the knee-band of drawers, &c. As the
  middle rib in both double and treble feather
  stitches curves somewhat right and left with
  each group of little stitches, care must be taken
  to make these curves very regular.
  
  The Coral Stitch resembles feather stitch; in
  fact, one is often mistaken for the other, although
  they are worked in a different way.
  
  Smgle Coral Stitch. - Use the same cotton,
  silk, needle, &c., as for feather stitcliing.
  Hold the needle straight down instead of slanting
  it either to the right or to the left. Bring out
  the needle to the front of the work and hold the
  
  
  398
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  cotton \rith the left tliunib as before. Insert
  the needle a little to the right exactly on a line
  with the hole where it came out, and take a few
  threads straight down on a vertical line. Pass
  the point of the needle over the cotton held by
  the left thumb.
  
  Again liold the cotton under the left thumb and
  insert the needle a httle to the left exactly on a
  horizontal Une from where it came out ; take the
  same number of tlu-eads straight down on a
  vertical line and bring up the point of the needle
  over the cotton held by the left thumb, and
  repeat tliis working from right to the left until
  the lengtli required is finished.
  
  The Double Coral Stitch is worked in very much
  the same way as single coral stitch ; only two
  stitches are made towards the right, then two
  towards the left, and so on. The needle is in-
  serted a little more slantingly towards the left
  and the right than in the single coral stitch.
  
  Blanket Stitch. - The blanket stitch, also called
  loop stitch, is a kind of button-hole stitch worked
  on the ends of blankets to prevent their un-
  ravelUng and to give them a more finished
  appearance.
  
  Turn do^vn the raw edge of the blanket a
  Uttle way and tack it very flat with a needle and
  cotton. A selvedge will not require to be turned
  do-"-n. The stitch may be worked in bright red,
  pale blue, or any pretty coloured wool.
  
  There are several different patterns of blanket
  stitch which can be varied according to taste. To
  work the ordinary blanket stitch (fig. 20) begin at
  
  
  and a qutu-tor of aia inch apart from each other
  at the foot.
  
  Other blanket stitches can be made by vary-
  ing the length of the stitches and giving them
  
  
  Fio. 20.
  
  the left-hand comer and hold tho work with the
  right sido uppermost. Bring the needle through
  from the back to the front about half an inch
  from tho edge or above the fold. Insert it again
  a quarter of an inch to the right, holding it
  vertically downwards, and slip the point over
  tho wool. Tho needle and wool sho>ild be drawn
  straight downwards, but not too tightly, and so
  as to make a nico ridge of stitches along the
  bottom. Again insert the needle one quarter of
  an inch to the right of the previous stitch and
  bring it vertically down through the loop, and
  so on.
  
  To turn comers, make three stitches (or five
  if necessary) quite close to each other at the top.
  
  
  Fio. 21.
  
  
  different slopes, as in fig. 21. This is a little
  more fanciful in appearance.
  
  A Scallop Edge. - Scalloping may be used on
  a hem or as an edging for flannel garments.
  The stitch is generally worked on double
  material, as at the edge of a hem or false hem,
  but when used as a trimming only, as in a
  flannel frill, single material is sufficient. The
  scallops may be cut in cardboard (three or four
  together), placed at the edge of the material and
  traced lightly in pencil. A better and simpler
  plan is to use a transfer pattern and iron it on to
  the garment. Test a little piece of the transfer
  on an odd piece of the material to see if the iron
  is properly heated, and then be careful to pin
  it in a straight line on the garment about a
  quarter of an inch from the edge. The scallop-
  ing stitch is made in the same way as the blanket
  stitch, and should be worked with flax thread,
  washing silk, or fine well-twisted wool.
  
  To begin with, run along the two edges of the
  scallops with ordinary embroidery cotton to out-
  line the pattern. Thread a crewel needle with
  the tliread or silk you have chosen ; make five
  or six running stitches from right to left in the
  first scallop on the loft to fasten in the end and
  bring out the needle at the left-hand point.
  Hold your tliread or silk down under the left
  thumb ; put the needle in just above the top
  row of tacking stitches, bring it out just below
  the bottom row of tacking stitches with the point
  above the thread. Draw the needle and thread
  through downwards, and see that the knot rests
  exactly at the foot of the scallop. Make the
  next stitch close to the first in the same way.
  The needle must be held perpendicularly with
  the point towards you, and as the bottom part
  of the scallop is wider than the top, the stitches
  must slant very slightly to the left to begin with,
  be straight in the middle, then slant very
  slightly to the right. A nice improvement is to
  work a spot in the centre of each scallop (fig. 22).
  This pattern can be found in transfers, or it is
  easy to mark a dot above each scallop and make
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  399
  
  
  it the centre of a tiny ring. These spots are
  worked in what is called satin stitch, sewing
  across in straight stitches. Commence with a
  small stitch at the side, increase towards the
  
  
  Fig. 22.
  
  
  middle, and then decrease to the end. Slip the
  needle at the back through the stitches, make
  a very small back-stitch and cut off.
  
  Another way of working a narrow scallop is
  to keep the top of the stitches in a straight Hne,
  as in fig. 23, the length of the stitches being
  graduated from very short at the corners to wide
  
  
  Fig. 23,
  
  
  in the middle. All the stitches should lie verti-
  cally. If the scallop is wished thicker it may
  be padded before the embroidery is commenced.
  Make several chain stitches along the centre of
  them, a single one at the ends and two or three
  longer ones in the centre.
  
  Hem-stitching. - Hem-stitching is used in
  many cases instead of the ordinary hemming ;
  it makes a very pretty trimming and is easily
  learnt. It can be done on any material from
  which the threads are easily drawn. Pocket-
  handkerchiefs, sheets, tea-cloths, &c., are all
  much prettier when finished with a hem-stitched
  edge. The width of the hem varies according
  to taste and the nature of the article being
  worked upon.
  
  Before beginning to hem-stitch see that the
  edges of the material are perfectly straight.
  When you have decided upon the width of the
  hem, measure double that \Adth. from the edge of
  
  
  the material, plus a Uttle more for turning in, and
  draw out four threads as explained for stitching
  (pp. 390-91). When the threads are drawn, lay
  the hem very carefully and tack it exactly where
  the first thread has been drawn out. In a
  square article tack down the two opposite sides
  first, then the other two sides.
  
  A hem-stitch can be worked either from the
  right or from the left-hand end of the hem. If
  you begin at the right-hand end, insert the
  needle under the fold and take two threads of
  
  
  Fig. 24.
  
  the material and shp the end of the cotton well
  under the fold. Hold the needle in a horizontal
  position, take up four of the loose tlireads on it,
  and draw the cotton through. Then put the
  needle again into the fold two threads up, holding
  it slantingly, the point towards the left (fig. 25).
  Again hold the needle horizontally, take four
  threads, and so on.
  
  Be careful to draw the cotton rather tightly
  when holding the four threads so as to draw
  them well together ; also do not pass over any
  loose threads.
  
  Be careful at the corners where the loose
  threads are double to take eight threads on the
  needle, i.e. four on the wrong and four on the
  right side, and draw them well in so that the
  stitches do not appear larger. Seam the edge,
  and shp the needle tlirough in position to begin
  the next hem.
  
  When hem-stitching is worked from left to
  right bring out the needle and cotton in the fold
  
  
  Fig. 25.
  
  two threads up, then hold the needle horizont-
  ally and take up four of the loose threads to-
  wards the right. Hold the cotton under the left
  thumb, bring the needle back, and insert it in the
  space of open threads and bring it through two
  
  
  400
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  threads of the fold, holding it vertically, the
  point up, and so on {fig. 24). If there are more
  than four tlireads drawn, a second row of hem-
  stitching may be worked at the other side of the
  open space by turning the work upside down
  (fig. 25).
  
  FASTENINGS
  
  To Sew on Buttons. - Pearl buttons are much
  prettier for underlinen, but unfortunately they
  cannot bear the pressure of the mangle or
  wringer and are generally crushed under the
  weight of the machine. It is better, therefore,
  to sew linen buttons on all articles that undergo
  frequent wasliing. Linen buttons should be of
  the best quality or they will soon be crushed
  out of shape.
  
  Before sewiiig on any kind of button make a
  back-stitch on the right side of the garment to
  secure the cotton, as a knot is not permissible.
  
  Buttons should alwaj^s be sewn on double
  material, so, if necessary, strengthen the place
  where the button has to come with a piece of
  tape on the wrong side, or a Uttle square of the
  same material neatly felled on the wrong side.
  
  It is a mistake to take very thick cotton for
  sewing on buttons, as it makes the beginnings
  
  
  љ ў @
  
  
  Pearl Buttons.
  
  and fastenings off untidy, and the middle of the
  button too bulky.
  
  If the button has two holes in it slip the
  needle in one of these, take the stitches through
  from hole to hole and through the thickness of
  the garment four to six times, then slip the
  needle between the garment and the button
  close to the middle, and " stem " the button, i.e.
  wind the cotton round and round four or five
  times, slip the needle to the back, make one or
  two back-stitches, slip the needle through half
  an inch of the thickness, and cut the cotton
  close.
  
  Buttons with four holes can be eewn in dif-
  ferent ways, as shown in the above diagram.
  
  Linen buttons without holes can also be sewn
  on in a variety of styles as shown below.
  (1) By working stitches in a small circle. In
  order to get a perfect circle, the centre of the
  
  @љ@
  
  Linen Buttons.
  
  button may be marked with the hollow end of a
  small key or anything that will serve ^he pur-
  pose. Rick round the circle with a needle to
  
  
  mark the place of the stitches, then sew round
  with small even stitches. The circle must be
  small so that the button-hole can lie very flat over
  the button. (2) The circle may have a cross in
  the middle. (3) A star can be made in the
  middle by working six or eight stitches all
  meeting in the centre. (4) Or, again, a hori-
  zontal bar of foiu" or five stitches worked over in
  button-hole stitch like a loop. The last method
  is a very strong and secvu-e way of putting on
  a linen button.
  
  It is very important that a button should bo
  sewn on exactly in its proper position. If the
  exact spot is not otherwise Bnarked, place the
  button-hole side of the j.armont very evenly on
  the top of the corresponding button side and
  stick a pin tlirough the hole. Then slip the
  button-hole carefully over the pin, put the pin
  in more securely, and sew on the button in the
  place indicated.
  
  Button-holes. - It requires groat skill and
  attention to make button-holes well. They
  should be worked on double material. If the
  material is single, strengthen it on the back with
  a neatly felled oblong of the same material,
  which should not be seen on the right side.
  All button-holes are cut in the same way. A
  pair of button-hole scissors may be used, although
  they are not a necessity. The slit of the button-
  hole should be a little longer than the diameter
  of the button to allow it to pass through easily.
  The best way to cut a button-hole is to make a
  crease in the material at the place it is to be
  made ; insert the point of the scissors on the
  mark and cut very slowly and carefully the
  length required. Try to keep by the thread
  of the material, and be careful the scissors do
  not slip.
  
  Vse coarser cotton for button-holes than
  for ordinary sewing. For flannel or woollen
  materials use silk twist if possible ; it makes a
  strong and pretty stitch.
  
  Button-holes are made with two barred ends
  when they are in front of a chemise, night-dress.
  
  
  Button-holes.
  
  shirt, &c., and with one round end and one
  barred at the end of a band for a dress, &c. In
  the latter case the round end comes against the
  button. Sometimes the holes are made with
  two round ends, but this is not so usual.
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  401
  
  
  To work a button-hole some people begin by
  making either a line of small running stitches
  round it to prevent the edges from unravelling,
  or making one or two long stitches the length
  of the button-hole and working over these, but
  a little experience in button-hole making will
  render this preparation unnecessary. Sufficient
  cotton must be taken to work from end to end,
  as there must be no join in the sides of a button-
  hole. The cotton may be joined at a barred end
  but not at a round one.
  
  To begin with, slip the needle between the
  two thicknesses of material, bring it out at the
  left-hand end of the button-hole four threads
  down from the cut edge. Draw the cotton
  through, leaving an end of an inch which can be
  caught in with the stitches. Work from left
  to right. Hold the opening of the button-hole
  over the left forefinger, insert the needle at the
  back and bring it half-way through to the front
  and through the same hole as before. With the
  thumb and forefinger of your right hand bring
  the double cotton from the eye of the needle,
  and pass it under the point from left to right ;
  draw the needle out, pull the cotton upwards
  away from you, and tighten the little knot or
  loop which must lie exactly on the cut edge.
  This forms what is called a purl edge. Work
  the next stitch one or two threads to the right
  and again four threads down, bring the thread
  over the needle and repeat until you have
  reached the end of the hole. To make a barred
  end put the needle in at the bottom of the last
  side stitch and " strand " the ends, i.e. put
  two or three threads of cotton across to make
  the foundation of the bar. As the button-hole
  stitches are made four threads deep, you have
  eight threads on the two sides, plus one in the
  middle (the fifth) corresponding to the slit of
  the button-hole. The bar consists then of nine
  button-hole stitches, worked with the knots
  meeting those of the sides. These nine button-
  hole stitches must be worked through the two
  thicknesses of material like the side stitches.
  Then turn the work the opposite way, work the
  second side like the first, and, if necessary, make
  a bar at the other end.
  
  To finish off insert the needle at the top in
  the hole of the last stitch ; draw the cotton
  through to the wrong side, weave along the
  button-hole stitches, and cut the end close to the
  work.
  
  To make a round end the stitches must be
  made in a semicircle close together, and radiat-
  ing like the spokes of a wheel.
  
  To Mend a Button-hole. - Cut off very carefully
  all that is left of the knots in the centre ; draw
  out any little threads that come out easily
  without uru-avelling the material more than is
  necessary. If many threads come out overcast
  the button-hole with fine cotton, then work it
  all over again with the same cotton or silk as was
  first used. As a rule, it k better to remake the
  
  
  barred ends ; the general appearance of the
  button-hole will be neater.
  
  Hooks and Eyes can be attached to garments
  in different ways ; the most essential point is
  to put them on very neatly and securely. The
  positions will vary according to the make and
  fashion of the dress ; the best way of sewing
  them on is as follows : - Use button-hole twist
  or cotton to match the colour of the material.
  Find the position of the hook and make a
  small stitch where it has to be put. Hold
  the hook in position with your left thumb and
  work round the two rings and through the
  material with close blanket stitches and then
  make several seaming stitches over the stem.
  Finish off with a back-stitch close to the hook,
  sUp the needle through the material without
  showing it on the right side, and cut the cotton
  off close.
  
  To sew on the eye mark its position exactly
  opposite the hook. Begin in the same way, and
  work round the two rings with blanket stitches,
  taking the stitches through the material. When
  both rings are covered and fastened on the
  material, blanket stitch the eye itself without
  going through the material.
  
  The object of so covering the hook and eye
  with blanket stitches is to make them look neat
  and also to prevent them from coming un-
  fastened so easily.
  
  When the rings of the hooks and eyes are to
  be covered with Uning or other material, it is
  
  
  Fig. 26.
  
  
  riG. 27.
  
  
  unnecessary to work them round with stitches.
  In this case it suffices to fasten them on very
  securely by making four or five stitches round
  each ring and two or three along the stem as in
  fig. 26. For the eye, make about four or five
  stitches at the foot of each ring, one where the
  two rings join and two or three at the sides.
  Finish off as before.
  
  Tlie hook is sometimes put with the tongue
  against the material and the back uppermost, as
  this is supposed to make a more secure fastening.
  Work two or three close seam stitches at the
  foot of each ring, two or three where the rings
  are joined together, and fasten off as before
  (fig. 28).
  
  Little round rings are sometimes used instead
  of eyes. These should be fastened to the
  garment with four or five blanket stitches taken
  through the material, and then the rest of the
  ring is covered with blanket stitches.
  
  Patent hooks are provided with little holes.
  Sew them on by making three or four stitches
  in each hole through at least two thicknesses of
  the material. Then tlu-ee or four stitches quite
  
  2c
  
  
  402
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  at tlie point round the back of the thinnest part
  of the hook. Patent ej'ea are se^m on vrith
  three or four stitches taken from ring to ring
  
  
  Fig. 28.
  
  
  Fig. 29.
  
  
  and tlirough at least two thicknesses of material
  (fig. 29).
  
  Eyelet Holes are used as outlets for a draw-
  string in an under-garment, in the neck of a
  pinafore, or in the neck and sleeves of infants'
  garments, &c. They are also used in dress-
  making instead of eyes, in which case they should
  be worked in silk, or, preferably, twist the colour
  of the material. Eyelets made as an outlet for
  a string in the neck of a garment should be made
  an inch apart in front of the garment if the neck
  is round. If divided in front or at the back,
  one eyelet should be made on the upper side of
  the garment half an inch from the left-side edge
  through the single material only ; the other
  eyelet should be made on the wrong side of the
  garment half an inch from the right-side edge
  and through the single material only. Or,
  the string may be allowed to come out at the
  right-hand side, tlirough the edge of the hem
  or the casing, when only the one eyelet hole will
  be required. \Vhen the place of the eyelet hole
  has been determined, pierce a hole with a stil-
  etto or with the end of a small pair of scissors.
  
  
  Eyelet Hole.
  
  Do this through one or two thicknesseo accord-
  ing to the purpose of the eyelet holes. Slip tho
  needle with cotton or silk under the first thick-
  ness of material, and hide the end of the latter
  by pushing it in with the point of the needle.
  Then work from left to right over the raw edges
  of the hole with very neat and close overcasting
  stitches about four threads deep. When you
  have worked all round, run the needle and cotton
  through the stitches at the back and cut off
  close to the work. Button-hole stitches can be
  made instead of overcasting stitches, the Icnots
  or loops being brought to the inside edge of the
  eyelet.
  
  
  A Loop can be made in conjunction with a
  hook instead of an eye, or with a button instead
  of a button-hole. When you have found the
  
  
  Loop.
  
  place of the loop, pass the needle and cotton or
  silk througli the double material, work about
  four stitclies or strands about one-quarter of
  an inch long, then bind the strands together,
  working from left to right with close blanket
  stitches over the cotton or silk only. When
  the loop is intended for a button, it is generally
  put at the edge of the garment. Make the
  strands loose enough to receive the button ; on
  no account must they be too long.
  
  
  TAPES, BINDING, ETC.
  
  Tapes. - Tapes are made in both cotton or
  hnen, the hnon being stronger than the cotton.
  They are to be had in various widths, and the
  size chosen depends upon the purpose for which
  the tape is to be used. Tapes are used as strings
  on aprons, cliildi-en's pinafores, and various
  under-garments, &c., as loops for hanging towels,
  kitchen cloths, &c., and also for strengthening
  pm"poses.
  
  Strings. - ^Theso must be sewn on perfectly
  flat. Turn down about one-eighth of an inch at
  one end of the string and make a second fold as
  far from the first as the tape is wide, but turned
  the other way. This second fold is to mark a
  little square where the stitches should be worked
  on the tape. Place the string on the edge of
  the wrong side of the material with the narrow
  fold downwards, and the second crease just
  meeting the edge of the material. Pin the
  string in position, fold it back from the edge
  of the material and on a level with it. Hold
  the string and material together very securely
  between your left thumb and forefinger, and
  seam the tape on to the material with very small
  stitclies. Then turn back the string and fell
  neatly the three other sides on to the material.
  If the material is double, the stitches should not
  show through.
  
  Tlie free ends of strings should have a neat
  one-eighth inch hem on the wrong side, or the
  end can be made neat with blanket stitches
  taken rather deeply to prevent the tape from
  unravelling.
  
  Another way of sewing on a string to a hemmed
  end is to place the narrow fold of the string
  two threads above the hem and work two neat
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  403
  
  
  rows of stitching on the right side of the
  material, one just above the hemming tlirough
  the edge of the tape, and another at the edge
  of the hem through the hem and the tape.
  Fell the selvedge sides of the string without
  showing the stitches through on the right side.
  
  When tapes are sewn at the edge of a hem,
  the first fold can be inserted under the hem in
  its proper place and tacked along the hem. The
  two selvedge sides of the string should be felled,
  and the stitching on the fourth side may be
  worked either on the edge of the hem on the right
  side, or further down if the hem is deep and if
  the edge is required to overlap the other side.
  
  Loops. - To make a loop, measure the length
  of tape required and fold it in two. Turn in the
  raw edges and put one end in its place, either at
  the edge of the hem or to make a square. Fell
  round thjee sides (the two selvedges of the tape
  and the foldod end), but do not finish off. Place
  the other end of the loop on the right side of the
  material and slip the needle through and fell
  three sides of the tape on the right side exactly
  on top of the stitches on the wrong side. Make
  a row of stitching through both tapes just above
  the edge of the material and finish off (fig. 30).
  
  Another way is to sew the loop on the wrong
  side of the material. Fold the tape in two,
  
  
  ^
  
  
  Ij
  
  
  Fia. 30.
  
  
  Fig. 31.
  
  
  crease well, and open it again. Place the two
  ends side by side as in fig. 31, so as to form
  a three-cornered point. Prepare and sew the
  loops as before, either inserting them under the
  hem or felling them above. Notice that as the
  ends of the tape He side by side you must sew
  them together when you have reached the
  middle, cross neatly under these stitches when
  you have come to the top and go on with the
  felling. Stilch or seam both
  tapes at the edge of the
  material.
  
  If the loop is sewn at the
  corner of a cloth the ends aro
  turned down once only, and
  the loop placed so that the
  edge of the turning down
  should m.eet the hem (fig. 32).
  The point of the corner must
  be exactly at the joining of the
  two loops. Fell and seam the loop as before.
  Another method for a corner loop is to double
  
  
  A
  
  
  Fig. 32.
  
  
  the tape obliquely and place the ends so that
  they overlap each other. Place the raw edges
  uppermost, meeting the edge of the cloth and
  forming the basis of a triangle. Stitch firmly
  
  
  Fig. 33.
  
  
  Fig. 34.
  
  
  across both, then turn over and stitch round
  the corner (figs. 33 and 34).
  
  Strengthening Tapes are used at the bottom
  of front openings of chemises and night-dresses,
  at the wrist openings of sleeves, and the hip
  openings of children's knickers, &c., to prevent
  them from getting torn. The strength and
  width will depend upon the garment and material
  on which it has to be sewn. To put on a
  strengthening tape at the foot of the opening of
  a chemise or night-dress cut a piece of tape one
  to one and a half inches long, and make a fold
  at the two raw ends. Place this at the bottom
  of the opening on the wrong side of the garment
  with the folds facing the material. Fell it
  neatly along the four sides without showing the
  stitches on the right side. For the wrist opening
  of a shirt or for children's knickers turn down
  a fold at the end of the tape, but on different
  sides. Fold the tape obhquely in the middle ;
  this will bring the narrow folds on the same
  side. Place the tape on the wrong side of the
  garment, the folds facing the material, -^rith the
  obUque fold exactly over the end of the opening.
  Pin in position, then tack, being very careful
  to keep the end folds on the thread of the
  material. Hem all round the edges of the tape.
  
  
  Fig. 35.
  
  and at the edge of the opening work a few
  button-hole stitches for the sake of strength.
  If the material is double be very careful not to
  show the stitches on the right side (fig. 35).
  
  Binding. - Binding is a process used to
  strengthen the edges of material by sewing a
  covering over them. Tliis covering may consist
  
  
  404
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  of a strip of the material, or of tape, braid,
  ribbon, or a special binding. Flannel garments
  are frequently bound at the edges instead of
  being hemmed, tape, ribbon or Prussian binding
  being used. In tailoring the seams of coats and
  jackets are very often covered with a binding.
  In dressmaking, too, the raw edges of the
  material are often finislied with Prussian binding
  or ribbon instead of being overcast. Binding
  can also be used instead of overcasting to
  strengthen the eurmholes of sliirts, blouses,
  night-dresses, and such-like, when a piece of
  thin material cut on the cross shovJd be used.
  
  To sew on braid or ribbon binding fold it
  lengthways, crease it well along the middle,
  lay it over the edge of the material to be bound,
  one half to the right side and one half to the
  wrong, and tack it carefully in position with a
  needle and cotton. Hem first the right side,
  and then the wrong side. Some people can
  manage to hem only once on the right side
  and through the three thicknesses, but it is
  not to be recommended, sis it is very difficult
  to make the stitches neat and to bring them
  through regularly. This can, however, be
  done with a sewing machine. To bind with
  the same material as the garment, cut and
  prepare the strips as for piping (see p. 394).
  The strips of material may be cut on the straight
  to bind a part that is on the straight also, but
  never to bind a part that is on the cross or
  slanting in the least, as it would be sxire to
  pucker. They should be from a half to one inch
  in width, according to the thickness of the
  material to be covered. Fold them lengthways
  like the braid and make a crease ; then for the
  first part, proceed as for putting on a false hem
  (see p. 393). Place the edge of the binding
  against the edge of the material on the right
  side and run it along about a quarter of an inch
  from the edge. Then turn it upwards, and
  flatten the seam well ; fold it down at the crease,
  and fell it neatly on the wrong side. ^Vhen
  there is a comer to bind round, make a small
  pleat in the binding on each side of the material
  at right angles with it ; hem the fold of the
  binding in a neat diagonal line going from the
  inside angle of the hem to the outside angle of
  the material ; slip the needle under the binding
  back to the hem, and continue hemming. Do
  the same at all the comers and on both sides of
  the work.
  
  To Braid a Skirt. - Before using skirt braid
  it is a good precaution to soak it in cold water
  and allow it to shrink. This often prevents the
  foot of the skirt from puckering. It you do not
  care to do this, bo careful to leave the braid
  looser than the material, as it is sure to draw in
  when moistened by rain or the dampness of the
  roads. If the ordinary flat braid is being used,
  fold it double and run or hem it on the wrong
  side of the skirt, placing it so that it shows
  below the edge of the skirt and so serves as a
  
  
  protection to the material. The stitches should
  be taken through both selvedges of the braid
  and one thickness of the material, but should
  not show on the right side. Or, instead of
  doubling the braid, it may be sewn singly and
  flat on the skirt, a small edge of one selvedge
  being allowed to show below the foot of the
  skirt. In this case two rows of sewing will
  be necessary - a row of hemming along the
  lower selvedge and a row of running worked
  through the braid and one thickness of the
  material close to the edge of the skirt. None
  of the stitches must be allowed to show on the
  right side. Brush braids must always be sewn
  on by the latter method.
  
  PLEATING
  
  To pleat material is to make it lie in flat,
  smooth folds, more or less deep according to the
  fulness required.
  
  Pleating is extensively used in dressmaking
  at the top of skirts and in the arranging of frills
  and flounces. It is also used at the top of petti-
  coats, aprons, overalls, children's frocks, &c. It
  is more suitable than gathering for thick material
  as it is less bulky.
  
  Pleats like tucks should be arranged on the
  right side of the material and they must be very
  accurately measured. They are generally held
  in position by a band or yoke, or by a row of
  stitching as in a frill or flounce.
  
  There are two kinds of pleating : - Kilt-
  pleating and box-pleating.
  
  Kilt-Pleating. - For this kind of pleating allow
  material twice or three times the length of the
  band or piece of material to which it is to be
  attached.
  
  When pleating for a flounce, the folds should
  all lie in one direction and be of equal size.
  
  
  Eilt- Pleating.
  
  A space may be left between the pleats if
  there is not sufficient fulness to allow of their
  being close together, but if, on the other hand,
  there is ample material, it may be necessary
  to make them overlap slightly. Tlie size of
  the pleat will also depend upon the amount of
  material at disposal and the fulness required.
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  405
  
  
  When once the size, &c., has been carefully
  gauged it is a good plan to make a measure by
  notching a card as in tuck-making, and to use
  that as a guide for the other pleats and spaces
  between them.
  
  Tack the pleats as they are made about one-
  quarter of an inch from the upper edge, or if
  there are only a few they may be held in position
  with pins. Be careful to keep the material lying
  straight, and see that the three edges at the top
  are perfectly level.
  
  In the making up of a garment pleats are
  often made to lie in opposite directions. They
  should always lie in the direction in which most
  fulness is needed, generally away from the
  front. Here, again, careful measurement is
  necessary in order to make both sides alike.
  Sometimes a pleat is stitched down part of its
  length so as to make it Me very flat, as in a
  kilted skirt.
  
  When the pleats have to be put between the
  folds of a band, as on the top of an apron, make
  and place the band in the following way : -
  Fold in the edges of the band and join the
  ends neatly or leave them open as required.
  Mark the centre and pin it exactly to the
  centre of the garment. Tack it along in position
  through the one side, only making the folded
  edge of the band he on the top of the tacking
  threads of the pleats. Then hem the band to
  the material, being particular to take all the
  stitches through all the thicknesses of the
  pleats.
  
  When the right rAde is finished, turn over and
  tack the band down on ohe wrong side exactly
  on the top of the hemming stitches already
  made. Hem down without letting the stitches
  show through to the right side.
  
  Some people prefer to stitch the band. If
  this is done by hand, stitch the right side only
  instead of hemming it two or three threads
  above the folded edge of the band (a thread
  might be drawn previously for this stitching),
  then hem down on the wrong side as above.
  
  
  Box-Pleating. - This differs from kilt-pleating
  in that each alternate fold is made in a different
  direction. The width of the pleats may vary
  according to the' purpose for which they are
  
  
  Box-Pleating.
  
  Or the band may be stitched on by machine
  through the two thicknesses at once. Careful
  tacking will be required for thi? to prevent the
  work being twisted.
  
  
  H
  
  
  Double Box- Pleating.
  
  used and the amount of material at disposal, but
  each couple must be exactly alike and careful
  measurement is again necessary.
  
  Sometimes a double and even a treble box-
  pleat is made by laying one or more folds on the
  top of each other, first to one side and then to
  the other. Each upper fold should be slightly
  narrower than the one below it. A double box-
  pleat may be used in a very full flounce, when
  the pleats may be stitched half an inch from
  the top and the edge allowed to rise, the top
  being pre%'iously ended with a very narrow hero
  or some narrow trimming.
  
  MARKING
  
  In household hnen the marking should be
  placed where it is easily seen when the article is
  folded, generally in the left-hand corner, unless
  it is embroidery, when the letter may be placed in
  a more conspicuous position.
  
  Body linen is marked very much according
  to fasliion and the style of the garment. If it
  is done by embroidery it should be placed where
  it can be seen on the front below the opening or
  trimming, or near the left shoulder, but if the
  marking is done in ink or with Cash's lettering,
  it should be in a less conspicuous spot, such as
  the inside of a band or the wrong side of a hem.
  
  Stockings should be meirked on the inside of
  the hem at the top or below the hem on the right
  side if done by hand.
  
  There are several different ways of marking,
  as for instance : -
  
  (1) IMarking with ink.
  
  (2) Marking with Cash's or other embroidered
  imtials, monograms and names, or
  
  (3) Marking by hand with a needle and
  tliread.
  
  (1) Marking with Ink is very suitable for
  collars and cuffs, also where there are large
  supplies of household linen, but it sliould not
  be employed for dainty ai-ticles (see p. 265).
  
  
  406
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  (2) Marking with Cash's Lettering.- These can
  now bo bought in many cUfferent designs and
  colouring, and special names can bo ordered at
  so much per dozen (see p. 265). To sow them
  on, turn in the raw edges very evenly, tack m
  position, and then hem round very neatly.
  
  Letters and monograms embroidered on fine
  cambric or muslin can also be bought separately.
  The price will vary according to the quality and
  design. Some of them are most elaborate and
  very decorative, and, if neatly placed, will have
  
  
  day there does not seem to be so much time
  for work of tliis kind, and once the stitch is
  learnt the letters themselves can very easily bo
  copied from a printed design (see illustration).
  
  Cross stitch consists of two oblique stitches
  placed one on the top of the other and crossed in
  the middle (fig. 36). It is most easily worked on
  a material in which the threads can be counted.
  If from the nature of the texture this is im-
  possible, a piece of canvas should be tacked
  evenly on the top of the material where the
  
  
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  Cross-stitch Letters and Figures.
  
  
  the appearance of being embroidered on the
  material itself.
  
  They should either bo hemmed on with very
  fine, almost invisible stitches, or button-holod
  round with fine sowing cotton.
  
  (3) Marking by Hand.- For this many different
  stitches can be used from simple to very ela-
  borate ones.
  
  Cross Stitch is one of the simplest. Many
  years ago it was the general custom to mark
  personal linen, clothes, and napcry with cross
  stitch; and we have all seen most elaborate
  canvas samplers with letters of the alphabet,
  figures, and the quaintest ornaments and
  mottoes, worked by our mothers and grand-
  mothers when they were girls. In the present
  
  
  marking is required and the stitches worked
  over that. The canvas must bo more or less
  fine, according to the kind of material, and
  sufficiently largo to take in all the letters.
  Blankets, for instance, would require rather a
  coarse canvas in order to make tho letters look
  large and handsome, while table-linen would
  look bettor with a finer lettering. The tlireads
  of tho canvas must bo drawn out when the work
  is finished. Care must be taken when sewing
  that none of the stitches are taken through the
  threads of tho canvas, but only through the
  holes. An expert sewer might be able to mark
  on any material without the aid of the canvas
  for a guide, but it is not so easy for an amateur.
  Tho stitches are generally made over two
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  407
  
  
  threads of the material, and care must be
  taken that all the stitches lie in the same
  direction. If larger letters are required the
  
  
  * --4- 4-
  
  J t ^^-^
  
  X 4lt 1^<1 jTi
  
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  J^ ^^
  
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  -t ""^ A
  
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  Fig. 36.
  
  stitches must be worked over three or fovir
  threads accordingly.
  
  To fasten off pass the needle straight through
  to the back and weave it tlirough about half-a-
  dozen stitches. The back of the work must be
  kept as tidy-looking as possible.
  
  Ingrain cotton (blue or red) or wliite em-
  broidery cotton is the best to use for marking
  cotton or linen articles and a pretty coloured
  wool for marking blankets.
  
  The Leviathan Stitch. - This is a httle more
  elaborate than the simple cross stitch, as it has
  the addition of a vertical cross in the middle
  (fig. 37). It is most suitable for large letters
  or for initials.
  
  The Eyelet Stitch. - This is another fancy
  stitch also used for a large style of marking. It
  
  
  Fig. 37.
  
  
  Fig. 88.
  
  
  consists of eight stitches worked over two or
  three threads all radiating from one central
  hole (fig. 38).
  
  Back Stitch and Chain Stitch are also very useful
  for marking, especially such articles as kitchen
  towels, ordinary sheets, &c., and anything that
  requires a whole word and several figures. Tlie
  lettering can first be traced in pencil and then
  worked over in one or the other stitch.
  
  Chain stitch is worked like feather or coral
  stitch (see p. 397), only it is done on a single
  line following a pattern (fig. 39). Bring out
  the needle at the beginning of the letter, and
  hold the cotton down with your left thumb.
  Put in the needlo whero it came out and bring
  
  
  it along the pattern the length of two or three
  tlireads ; be very careful to bring it out above
  the cotton. Put the needle in again where it
  
  
  Fig. 39
  
  came out last, bring it out the same length as
  before above the cotton, and so on, following the
  traced hne so as to form the letter required.
  Back-stitch may be used in the same way.
  
  Tlaese stitches are very useful for marking
  twill or any material where the threads cannot
  be counted.
  
  MENDING
  
  Mending, like sewing, is an art and one to which
  no woman should be a stranger. Though it is
  often considered a thankless task to have to
  repair an old garment damaged by accident or
  by use, it is none the less a necessary one, and
  a good piece of mending should be as worthy
  of exhibition as a prettily made new garment.
  The ability to mend skilfully and neatly is a
  gift every woman should covet.
  
  A good mender means a good sewer and one
  who possesses plenty of common sense. Althovigh
  numerous directions and rules can be given for
  the various methods of patcliing and darning,
  it requires some knowledge and skill to apply
  these - to know when it is better to put in a
  patch, or when a darn would be preferable;
  also how to make a darn that will be durable
  and at the same time not conspicuous, and,
  finally, to get the longest life possible out of each
  article that comes under our care.
  
  As soon as a girl is old enough she ought to
  be taught to do her own mending and sometimes
  a httle of the household mending as well. This
  more than anjiihing else will teach her to be
  neat and orderly and to be careful with her
  clothes.
  
  All holes and rents should be mended before
  the clothes are sent to the washing, and if it is
  not convenient to do this thoroughly they should
  at least be drawn together with needlo and
  cotton to prevent the friction of washing mak-
  ing them worse. Table-linen must always be
  mended before washing, as mending it after-
  
  
  408
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  wards would crush and spoil its appearance.
  The same applies to anything that is starched.
  
  Wlien such tilings as buttons and tapes are
  wanting it is best to sew these on after washing.
  
  A special supply of mending materials should
  be kept in a box in the linen cupboard, in a
  drawer, or in any other convenient place. It
  might contain pieces of Unen, pieces of cotton,
  damask, flannel, woven material, &c., and any
  special material similar to the garments or house-
  hold linen in use. It is a good precaution when
  bu}nng clothes, especially clothes for growing
  children, to getwa httle extra material for altering
  and mending purposes.
  
  Tliere should also be a large portable mend-
  ing-basket which would have to be prepared
  each week by the one who has the rosponsibiUty
  of the household mending. It should contain
  only the articles to be mended and the necessary
  materials for mending taken from the general
  supply.
  
  A deirning bag for the household would also
  be found a convenience. It might contain all
  the stockings requiring mending and be pro-
  vided with a pocket to contain the special darn-
  ing wool required.
  
  DARNING
  
  Stockings
  
  To Mend Stockings. - Stockings should be
  mended very carefully in order to make them
  last as long as possible. There are different
  ways of mending them, and the style adopted
  must depend upon the degree of wear and the
  texture and thickness of the material.
  
  The mending must be done in wool, cotton, or
  silk, according to the kind of stockings, and it
  must match them exactly in colour. The thick-
  ness of thread to be used will depend upon the
  land of mending to be done. For strengthening
  purposes it is better to take it rather thinner
  than the thread of the stocking itself, but when
  there is a hole it may bo of the same thickness.
  
  Mending is usually done on the wrong side of
  stockings, except in cases where the feet are very
  tender, when it is bettor to darn them (^n the
  right side.
  
  Strengthening a Thin Place. - If there is a worn
  or thin place in a stocking without any actual
  hole, it should bo strengtlioned to prevent it
  wearing further. Turn the stocking on the
  wrong side and stretch the piece to be darned
  over the loft hand, over a piece of smooth card-
  board, or over a darner or wooden egg sold for
  the purpose. The stocking must not be stretched
  too tightly or the darn will have a bulged-out
  appeturance when finished.
  
  Commence about an inch to the right of the
  worn piece, and insert the neetlle with the point
  pointing upwards and the thumb on the top.
  Take up one loop or thread and miss one alter-
  
  
  nately until you have aa many stitches as you
  
  can hold on the needle. Then draw the noodle
  
  through, leaving an inch of thread at the end.
  
  Continue in this way until you have reached the
  
  top of the weak place. Now
  
  turn your hand and hold the
  
  needle vertically with the point
  
  turned downwards this time and
  
  the thumb underneath. Work
  
  downwards, taking up the
  
  stitches which were missed in
  
  the first row and missing those
  
  wliich were taken up. A loop
  
  of the thread must be left at
  
  the end of each row to prevent
  
  the work dragging. For the
  
  first four or five rows make each row a stitch
  
  longer than the preceding one, then make the
  
  rows the same length until the thin place ia
  
  covered, when the rows may be decreased in
  
  length to correspond with the other side. This
  
  prevents all the strain coming upon one thread
  
  of the woven material. If a new tliread is
  
  required take it at the beginning of a row.
  
  Leave one inch ends while you are working.
  
  
  iDanier.
  
  
  -O'.'i'.'ln
  
  (1 I I I I I I'
  
  
  I'll
  
  I I 1 1 I in
  
  •'•'•'•I'"
  
  
  Fig. 40.
  
  and when the darn is finished these may be cut
  off to quarter of an inch (fig. 40).
  
  Note. - If the material is fine, as in n woven
  stocking, tliree or four threads or their equivalent
  can be missed and taken up alternately instead
  of one.
  
  Strengthening New Stockings. - Some people
  darn over the heels of stockings when they are
  new in order to make them last longer. This
  is especially necessary in the case of children's
  stockings and boys' stockings in particular -
  when the knees might also be strengthened with
  advantage.
  
  This strengthening dam should be done with
  wool a little thinner than that of the stockings.
  Use a long thin needle. Run lengthways over
  the stocking web, taking up one threeid and
  leaving three. In the next row turn and take
  up the centre thread of those you missed and
  miss the three next and so on, always taking one
  and missing tlu-ee alternately throughout the
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  409
  
  
  whole process. Leave a loop at the end of each
  row. Work pretty loosely so that the stocking
  does not pucker.
  
  Note. - In fine stockings take up and leave
  more threads in proportion.
  
  To Darn a Hole - Ordinary Method. - First
  prepare the hole. If it is a fine webbed stocking,
  pick or cut away carefully any rough frayed-out
  pieces, but not more than is necessary, as the
  smooth threads that are left help to strengthen
  the darn. With a coarser make or hand-knitted
  stocking pick out carefully the loose ends of
  wool and weave the longer ones in with a darning
  needle.
  
  Turn the stocking on the wrong side and
  stretch the hole over the left hand or over a
  stocking-darner. A wooden or china egg is
  useful if the hole is in the toe or the heel of the
  stocking, but elsewhere it is inclined to make
  the darn b\ilge out.
  
  A considerable portion of the material round
  the edge of the hole should be darned in order to
  strengthen it, so commence at. the right-hand
  side a little distance from the edge of the hole.
  
  Some prefer to commence at the left-hand
  side and to darn from left to right, but this is a
  matter of taste. Commence in the same way
  and make the same stitch as for the strengthen-
  ing darn, increasing the length of the rows vmtil
  the hole is reached, when they may be all alike.
  The hole itself must be covered with straight
  strands of the thread and the darning stitches
  extended a little way above and below. Then
  continue the strengthening; darn beyond the
  hole as on the first sidj. Be sure to leave loops
  of the thread at the end of each row, other-
  wise when the stocking is washed the darn will
  
  
  Fig. 41.
  
  shrink and pucker. These first rows are called
  the warp rows, as they run the lengthways of
  the stocking.
  
  Turn tlie work sideways so that the top and
  bottom of the hole become the sides and begin
  what is called the weft rows, those which run
  across the thread of the material. Commence
  at the lower right-hand corner of the darn and
  at the same distance from the edge of the hole
  as the warp rows were commenced.
  
  
  Point the needle upwards and take up and
  miss alternately the stitches of the waxp rows
  and continue thus until the other side of the
  darn is reached. When crossing the hole, the
  darn should form a lattice -work of threads and
  the darning must be carried as far to the right of
  the hole as it was to the left, and the rows
  decreased in length in a similar manner.
  
  If the stockings are very fine two or three
  threads may be missed and taken up instead
  of one, only be very careful to sUp the needle
  through any loose stitch at the top or at the
  bottom of the hole.
  
  These darns may be made square if preferred,
  but it is not such a good plan, as the whole strain
  rests on one thread of the material (fig. 41).
  
  If the hole is large it is a good plan to lace it
  across with a few threads of fine cotton or wool
  before commencing the darn. This will hold it
  together and keep it in shape.
  
  A " Jacob's Ladder." - So called when a stitch
  breaks and drops down row after row until a
  ladder of threads is formed. This is easily
  mended if taken in time, but it rapidly extends
  and becomes very unsightly if neglected. If it
  occurs in a fine stocking, turn it on the wrong
  side and darn up and down the length of the
  material over the weak place and a little distance
  to each side. Be careful to catch up the dropped
  stitch or stitches and thus prevent them from
  running down further. Care, too, must be taken
  not to drag the threads, and loops must be left
  at the ends of the rows.
  
  In hand or machine-knitted stockings of a
  coarser make the dropped stitch may often be
  taken up with a crochet hook and worked up
  each strand of wool, or steps of the ladder, as it
  were, in turn. The crochet hook is inserted in
  the bottom loop and the first bar is drawn through
  it, and so on with all the bars in tiu-n. When at
  the top, fasten off securely with a darning
  needle. If several loops have run down, pick
  up each one in turn from right to left.
  
  New Pieces in Stockings. - A good knitter will
  cut the worn-out heels and toes and even the
  whole feet from hand-knit stockings and knit
  new ones in. She can even knit pieces on the
  legs and seam them neatly in place.
  
  In worn stockings, too, a good mender will be
  able to put patches cut from another stocking
  that is otherwise worn out. To do this, cut
  the sides of the hole even to a thread and pick
  out the ends of tliread that are left. Then
  ravel out the top and bottom of the space until
  you have a row of loops strong enough to support
  a join. Next take a needle and fine soft cotton
  the colour of the stocking, and button-hole the
  sides of the hole very closely. Now cut a piece
  of webbing for the patch, making it quite even
  with the thread and a little longer than the hole
  into which it is to be fitted. This extra length
  allows for any drawing up in the fixing, and, if
  superfluous, can easily be unravelled to fit the
  
  
  410
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  space at the last. Neatly button-holo the sides
  of the patch \vith the same cotton as was used
  for the stocking, and then graft it in at the top
  (Grafting, see below). Now turn the stocking on
  the wrong side and overseani the edges together
  by the upper edges of the button-hole stitch.
  Turn the stocking again to the right side, ravel
  out the end of the patch until it fits the hole
  exactly and graft it in. Care must be taken to
  make the seams very soft and flat.
  
  SPECIAL DARNING
  
  Swiss Darning. - This special darning can only
  be done on articles of stocking-web tissue, either
  hand-knitted or woven - such as boys' stockings,
  golfing stockings, jerseys, &c. It is another
  method of thickening and strengthening any
  part that is thin. The stitch is worked on the
  right side of the material and, when well done,
  the direction of the stitches of the material
  is so carefully followed that the darn itself is
  scarcely seen. The wool used must be of
  exactly the same texture and colovir as the
  article to be mended.
  
  The piece to be mended should be lightly
  tacked on to a piece of cardboard to keep it in
  shape and secure. There must be no straining
  of the material.
  
  If the webbing of the material is examined it
  will be seen that the stitches slant alternately
  upwards and downwards, and that they form
  ribs on the right side and loops on the wrong.
  The darning stitches must bo worked in hori-
  zontal rows from right to left. Commence at
  the top right-hand side of the thin piece to be
  darned, and bring the needle out from behind
  between two of the stitches which slant upwards.
  Then insert the needle in a slanting direction
  upwards, pass it horizontally under the rib to
  the left and draw it out. Put it in again at the
  place where the first stitch was started, pass it
  under the next rib as before, and repeat in turn
  to the other end of the thin place. Now invert
  the work and make another row in the same way,
  covering the stitches that slant downwards tliis
  time, and repeat this working backwards and
  forwards until you have darned as much as is
  necessary. This is not a difficult kind of darning,
  and at the same time it is very satisfactory and
  effective.
  
  Grafting. - Grafting is very useful in repairing
  socks, stockings, vests, Jerseys, and similar gar-
  ments of a material that is very regularly and
  not too finely woven. It is a very simple and
  neat method of fixing new feet or tops on
  children's stockings.
  
  Ravel out the wool until the loops of both
  edges to be joined are quite whole and distinct.
  Then take a needle and wool exactly the same
  as that of the garment, match the loops on the
  right-hand side of the pieces to be joined and
  make a fastening. Lay the work over the
  
  
  fingers as for hemming, taking care that the
  loops of the two edges are exactly opposite each
  other. Insert the needle horizontally tlirough
  two loops of the upper edge and draw out the
  tliread. Next insert it one loop back on the
  under edge and bring it out one loop forward.
  Continue thus, taking alternately two loops at
  the top and two at the bottom until the end
  of the join is reached. If tliis is well done the
  seam should be almost invisible.
  
  Stocking- Web Tissue. - Like Swiss darning,
  this is used for mending articles of thick stock-
  ing-web tissue either hand-knit or woven. It
  is really the weaving in of a new piece to the
  material to fill up a hole, and is preferable to
  the ordinary darn, as it is less noticeable.
  
  Tlie same stitch is used as in Swiss darning,
  only in the stocking-web darn a foundation com-
  posed of strands of cotton must be made on
  which to work.
  
  This kind of darn is always worked on the
  right side of the material, and wool exactly the
  same as that of the garment must be used.
  
  First prepare the hole by unravelling the
  loose ends of wool until there is an even row of
  loops top and bottom. Weave in the longer ends
  with a darning needle on the wrong side. Turn
  back the worn edges on tlie sides, leaving half a
  rib on each side of the hole at the top. Then
  tack a piece of cardboard at the back of the
  hole and under the place to be darned. Be
  careful neither to over-stretch nor contract the
  hole, but to keep it lying perfectly flat. The
  webbing, too, must be perfectly vertical so that
  the corresponding loops at the top and bottom
  of the hole are exactly opposite each other.
  
  When the hole is arranged take a needle and
  coloured sewing cotton and connect the loops
  top and bottom, as in fig. 42, and in the following
  
  
  Fro. 42.
  
  manner : - ^Make a knot and pass the needle
  tlirough the card and first loop at the bottom
  right-hand corner of the hole. Pass it through
  the half and the next loop at the top, then back
  through first loop at the bottom, taking the next
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  411
  
  
  one also on the needle. Now pass it tlirough
  the two next loops at the top, and continue
  in this way, taking alternate loops top and
  bottom until the loops are all picked up. Then
  pass the needle through the half loop at the edge
  of the hole and the card and fasten off.
  
  Care must be taken to make the strands just
  the size of the hole. The strands will appear
  as a double row of threads, and the Swiss darn
  is worked on these.
  
  Take a needle with the darning wool, slip it
  under the work and fasten it on at the right-
  hand bottom corner about two or three stitches
  from the edge of the hole. Swiss darn over
  these two or three stitches. Then put the needle
  tlii'ough the first loop of the hole and draw it
  out. Pass it under the two cotton tlireads
  coming out of that loop and then back into the
  middle of the same loop. Now take up the
  next loop to the left and draw the needle out
  and repeat until the other side of the hole is
  reached (fig. 42). Swiss darn over two or three
  stitches in the webbing as on right-hand side.
  Next invert the work and work another row in
  the same way, and work backwards and forwards
  
  
  until the hole is filled up (fig. 43). Sometimes it
  may be necessary to pusli the stitches into place
  with the point of the needle, as they must he
  in even horizontal rows. Join the new piece
  of webbing just made to the loops at the other
  side of the hole by grafting stitches (see p. 410).
  When finished, cut and draw out the foundation
  threads very carefully and remove the card.
  
  DARNING OF LINEN OR COTTON MATERIAL
  
  Thin Places. - To darn thin places, ravelhngs
  of the same material should be used when
  practicable. The darn can then be made almost
  imperceptible. If not, use cotton or tliread as
  similar to the material as possible. Use long
  and thin needles for this kind of work.
  
  Turn the work on the wrong side. Take up
  and leave one, two, three, c four threads accord-
  ing to the thickness of the material. Work
  
  
  the first set of Unes along the selvedge way of
  the material rather close to each other and half
  an inch beyond the thin place on all sides.
  Alternate the stitches and leave loops as in the
  other darns. If the place is very thin, or if
  there is a hole in the middle, reverse the work
  when the first side is finished and cross it.
  When crossing take up the mending cotton only.
  Take up one thread and leave one, and so on
  
  
  FlQ. 44.
  
  (fig. 44). Alternate in the next row : continue
  as far as necessary. Finish off as before.
  
  This darn may also be made diamond-shaped
  or with a waved edge, which prevents all the
  strain coming on one tliread of the material.
  
  Cross-cut Darns. - A cross-cut tear is so called
  because it is made across the thread of the
  material. It may occur in table-cloths and
  doyleys that have been cut witii a knife or in
  other linen cut by laiindry machinery.
  
  To mend this kind of hole begin by trimming
  off the ragged edges of the cut, then prevent
  the cut from opening by drawing it together
  on the wrong side with a few stitches. Tliese
  must be made rather loosely with very fine
  sewing cotton. For darning take ravellings of
  the material or proper darning cotton. Measure
  half an inch at both ends of the length of the
  cut, and make two parallel creases on the
  
  
  I ! • . I
  
  
  Fro. 45.
  
  
  thread of the material. Then make two
  creases perpendicular to these and tliis will
  give a square holding the cut diagonally in
  the middle (fig. 46).
  
  Put in the needle at the comer No. 1 of this
  
  
  412
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  square and work downwards, taking up two
  threads and missing two until you reach tho
  corner No. 2. Count the number of stitches
  already made and continue in tlio same Uno,
  making the same number of stitclies again.
  For instance, if you have seven stitches from
  1 to 2, make seven stitches beyond, and this
  finislies the first Une.
  
  Then count two tlireads to the right and two
  upwards and begin the second hne there. All
  the lines must laave tho same number of stitches,
  and as this row is one stitch shorter at the
  bottom it must be one stitch longer at tho top.
  Tho stitches must be alternated as in other
  darning, and a small loop must be loft at the
  ends.
  
  When you reach the slit the stitches of
  each row must be taken under it so as to keep
  the raw edges on the wrong side. This may
  make some of the stitches uneven, but it must
  be done as neatly as possible.
  
  When you have reached the corner No. 3, cut
  off the darning thread. The darn will be in
  the shape of a rhomboid (fig. 45). Turn the work
  sidewaj^. Begin again at No. 1, work to 4, and
  continue on ; double the number of stitches.
  This line and the following must have the same
  number of stitches as those of the first rhomboid.
  Commence one stitch further up and increase
  one each row so as to make a rhomboid as
  before.
  
  In working the second rhomboid, when you
  reach the square tho stitches should meet those
  of the first ro\vs of darning and form neat Uttle
  Vs or steps. When the darn is finished, care-
  fully remove the tacking stitches.
  
  Unless the tear is quite small it is a good plan
  to tewk a piece of ceirdboard at the back before
  beginning to darn.
  
  Hedge-Tear Dam. - The hedge-tear darn is
  used to mend triangular tears often caused by
  the material catching on a nail or hedge.
  
  As in other darns, take ravellings of the
  material if possible ; if not, what resembles
  the material most in make and shade. Cut off
  any loose threads round tho tear and draw the
  edges together with very fine sewing cotton.
  
  Begin on the left-hand side about three-eighths
  of an inch from the end of tho tear, take
  up two threads and leave two, making
  stitches above and below the tears. Begin the
  second row two threads to the right and
  two threads above tho first row, taking up
  the threads that have been left and leaving
  each two threads corresponding to tho spaces.
  All the rows must be exactly tho same length.
  Leave one-eighth inch loops as in other dams.
  When passing the hole, keep the edges of the
  tear on the wrong side as much as possible.
  
  When you have reached the comer of the
  tear, continue working to tlio right as much as
  half the width of one side of the tear. Cut off
  the thread and turn the work sideways so that
  
  
  tho undarned end of tho tear Ues at the left.
  Commence darning at the left and three-eightlis
  of an inch away from the end of tho tear on tho
  other side. Work towards tho right, making
  
  
  n.p.p.p.p.no.nnnnn
  - 1
  
  
  bbbi
  
  
  Fig. 47.
  
  rows exactly the same length, and with the same
  number of stitches as in the first piece of darning.
  
  Half-way along the tear you will meet the
  stitches of the side already darned, and this
  should form a square of Vs or httle steps as in
  the cross-cut darn. All the stitches must show
  through neatly on the right side (fig. 48).
  
  When finished, remove the tacking stitches.
  
  
  bUU I I
  
  
  Fia. 4S.
  
  
  The weakest part of the tear will now be
  strengthened with tho crossed row of stitches.
  
  This darn also may be worked over a piece of
  cardboard if it is found easier.
  
  
  PATCHING
  
  Patches are used to cover holes or a worn or
  torn piece of material, and they are a means of
  making household goods last much longer than
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  413
  
  
  they otherwise would do. They are as a rule
  preferable to darns as they are less conspicuous.
  
  A good housekeeper will have at hand plenty
  of material at different stages of wear for all
  patching purposes. The patch should be of
  the same strength as the material to be mended :
  it is therefore unwise to employ a new piece of
  the same material. If a new piece of material
  must be used, it sTiould be thinner in texture
  than that of the article to be patched. If it is
  calico, print, or anything of a stiffish nature, it
  should be washed before being used, to make it
  softer.
  
  Patches may be of any size and any shape
  required, but square and oblong ones are the
  most generally used. Circular and triangular
  patches are sometimes worked on flannel or
  woven material, but, if possible, they should be
  avoided unless they can be quite hidden. The
  patch must at all times be cut large enough to
  well cover the hole or worn part, and a little
  extra allowed for turnings.
  
  The chief points to attend to in putting in
  a patch are - first, to fix it well, and, secondly,
  to make the corners he very flat and without
  wrinkles. This once mastered, with care and
  perseverance the work is fairly easy as the
  stitches are all of the simplest.
  
  The thread of the patch must in all cases lie
  with the thread of the material, and the sewing
  also must be worked by a thread.
  
  There are several different kinds of calico and
  linen patches, i.e. -
  
  (1) Seam and fell patch.
  
  (2) A patch hemm. d on both sides.
  
  (3) A run and fell patch.
  
  (4) A shaped patch.
  
  (1) Seam and Fell Patch. - Cut the patch large
  enough to cover the hole and the thin part of
  the material surrounding it, plus an extra inch
  on each side. Be careful to cut it very evenly
  and with the threads running in the same
  direction as the material on which it is to be
  laid. Commence by turning down a narrow
  fold all round the patch on the right side, the
  selvedge side first and then the other two.
  Mark the fold by the threads of the material and
  see that the corners are perfectly straight.
  Place the patch on the wrong side of the garment
  with the folds facing it ; see that the warp and
  woof of both materials lie in the same direction
  and that the hole comes in the middle of the
  patch. Pin the four corners carefully in position,
  then tack and hem round very neatly, beginning
  in the middle of one of the sides, and making
  a stitch exactly at each corner. When finished
  take out the tacking stitches and turn the work
  over to the right side. Shp the scissors in the
  hole and cut diagonally to within one-third of
  an inch of each corner. Cut away the worn-
  out part very evenly to a thread, leaving one-
  third of an inch of edging all round. Then
  turn in the raw edges very evenly with the aid
  
  
  of a needle, snipping them in the corners to the
  depth of one-eighth of an inch to prevent any
  puckering. Then tack round and see that all
  lies flat and smooth.
  
  Fold back the garment so that the fold and
  the patch form a double edge. Overseam very
  neatly, beginning with the middle of one of the
  sides, and be particular to make a stitch exactly
  at each corner. When finished remove the
  
  
  Fig. 49.
  
  tacking threads and flatten the work well
  (fig. 49).
  
  The first side may also be seamed instead of
  hemmed.
  
  A patch may be laid on the right side of the
  material instead of on the wrong ; this is a
  matter of individual choice.
  
  (2) A Patch Hemmed on both Sides is more
  quickly made and is often used for old things
  where a large patch is necessary. Cut and
  prepare the patch as before, and lay it either
  on the right or wrong side of the material as is
  most convenient. Tack in position and fell
  down the first side. Turn over, cut away the
  worn pajt, and turn in the edges as in fig. 49.
  
  
  Fig. 50.
  
  Fell or hem the second side, take out all tacking
  threads, and flatten well (fig. 50).
  
  (3) Rmi and Fell Patch. - This patch is best
  suited to large holes. It is somewhat more
  difficult to arrange than Nos. 1 and 2, but if
  neatly done the results are very satisfactory.
  
  Take the article to be patched and outline
  the hole with four well-marked creases on the
  right side of the material. The creases ought
  to be made at least an inch beyond the worn
  part on each side and even with the thread of
  the material. Cut the patch to a size to corres-
  pond exactly to tliis marked space and allow
  
  
  414
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  a little extra for turnings. Tnrn in the raw
  edges on the wrong side, crease them well down,
  and open out again. This is merely to make a
  mark as a guide for the sewing.
  
  Place one of tlie sides of the patch against the
  crease on the fabric - the two right sides to-
  gether and the two creases precisely one on the
  top of the other. The patch is not placed over
  the hole, but lying quite to one side of it. Run
  the two pieces together from corner to comer
  and exactly along the creases. Then turn the
  patch over, allowing it to take its proper position.
  
  Now sew along the second side in the same
  way, being most particular about the turning of
  the corner so as to avoid puckering. The hole
  may be made a little larger if necessary so as
  to allow the fingers to be slipped inside. Sew
  the other two sides in the same way and then
  
  
  Fig. 51.
  
  turn the work over. Cut away the worn part
  and fell down the edges inside (fig. 51).
  
  (4) A Shaped Patch. - Thisis sometimes required
  if a hole occurs near the seam of a garment, as
  for instance under the arm of a night-dress or
  chemise or in the side of a slip-blouse.
  
  Unpick the seam for about one inch beyond
  the length required for the patch. Cut a patch
  the size required and tack it carefully in position
  and straight to a thread of the material. Hem
  or fell the edges which lie on the garment, and
  then cut the remainder to the curves of the
  seam. Turn the work over, cut away the worn
  part and fell neatly. The rest of the patch will
  thus become part of the seam in place of the
  worn part which has been cut away.
  
  If both sides of the seam of the garment are
  worn a similar patch must be put on the other
  side. They should, if possible, be exactly alike ;
  they will then join more neatly at the seam
  (fiR. 52).
  
  Print Patch. - When mending print or any
  other material with a marked design the patch
  muft be cut so as to match exactly the pattern
  of ■ he material. For this reason it is sometimes
  necessary to cut tlie patch larger than it need
  otherwise bo, and the hole need not always be
  in the middle. Sometimes, too, it will be found
  better to cut the patch of an uneven shape, as
  the stitches will show less if they are not in
  straight lines.
  
  Having cut the patch to the best shape
  
  
  possible, turn down the edges on the wrong
  side, to the depth of about one-eighth of an inch,
  and place it on the right side of the garment
  following the thread of the material and the
  lines of the pattern ; put a pin in each corner
  and then tack carefully in position.
  
  Then fold back the material from the patch
  so that the edge of the material and the edge of
  the patch form a double edge, and overseam
  round very neatly, holding the patch nearest
  you. Commence at the centre of one of the
  sides and be particular to make a stitch exactly
  in the corners. Fasten off, slipping the needle
  through to the wrong side, making one or
  
  
  Fio. 52.
  
  two back-stitches, and smooth out the seam so
  that the patch lies perfectly flat. This is the
  only seam which shows on the right side of a
  print patch.
  
  Turn the work over to the wrong side and cut
  away the worn pieces to within a quarter of an
  inch of the edges as in other patches. Then
  begin at one corner and overcast the two raw
  edges together with neat blanket stitches. The
  stitches must not show through on the right
  side.
  
  Flannel or Woven Material Patches. - Flannel
  patches differ from those made on cotton or
  linen in that the raw edges are never turned
  down, as the material is too thick. They are
  worked with herring-bone stitches instead of
  being felled. The patch itself may be square,
  oblong, triangular, or round, according to the
  shape of hole to bo covered.
  
  Square and Oblong Patches are worked the
  same way and are preferable to the other shapes
  when it is possible to use them. Cut the patch
  according to directions given for calico patch,
  and notice that the way of the nap, i.e. the fluff
  on the flannel, corrasponds with that of the
  garment. Place the right side of the patch
  downwards on the wrong side of the garment,
  the threads of the material running in the same
  direction, and the middle of the patch over the
  middle of the hole. Put a pin in each corner
  and then tack down carefully with fine sewing
  cotton. Herring-bone round the edges, beginning
  in the middle of one of the sides. Commence by
  inserting the needle between the two thicknesses
  of material and four threads up from the edge
  
  
  PLAIN SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  415
  
  
  of the patch. Be csireful with the corners to
  make them all alike. Finish off by making one
  or two back-stitches over the last herring-bone
  stitch and slipping the thread through between
  the two folds of material.
  
  Turn over to the right side. Cut away the
  worn part of the garment to within one quarter of
  an inch, or about eight threads off the herring-
  bone stitches, which show through like running
  stitches. This will allow four threads for the
  herring-bone on the right side, and four threads
  for the space between those and the other
  stitches. Now herring-bone the geurment on to
  
  
  1 )
  
  
  
  
  Fig. 53.
  
  the patch, beginning in the middle of one of the
  sides. Work the corners as before and finish
  off (fig. 53).
  
  A Triangular Patch is sometimes found more
  practical than a square or oblong for mending
  under armholes or at the neck of a garment.
  It is prepared and placed in the same way as
  a square patch, and the corners must be neatly
  finished. Care must be taken when tacking
  
  
  Fia. 54,
  
  and herring-boning along the crossway sides, as
  the material will be inclined to stretch (fig. 54).
  
  A Circular Patch is most suitable for a hole
  occurring in the elbow of a garment. It is a
  little more difficult to manipulate, as the edges
  are apt to stretch. Prepare and place it as
  above and tack it very carefully in position.
  The herring-boning will differ a little from the
  regulation stitches, as they cannot be worked to
  a thread; and as the inner circle is narrower
  than the outer one the top stitches must be made
  closer than the bottom ones on the WTong side,
  and on the right side the bottom stitches closer
  than the top ones (fig. 55).
  
  Patching of Woven Material. - Woven material
  
  
  can also be patched in the same way as flannel
  if the garment is old and the hole to be mended
  very large. Darning in this case would not be
  
  
  N.
  
  f
  
  '^
  
  ^
  
  \
  
  ^m0^
  
  /
  
  Fig. 55.
  
  suitable. Fix the patch according to directions
  given for a flannel patch and herring-bone with
  fine wool instead of cotton.
  
  SPECIAL MENDING
  
  Fine Maslin should be mended in the same
  way as other cotton material. Any dsiming
  should be done with very fine soft cotton, and
  if a patch has to be inserted the hems should
  be made very narrow, and, where possible, hidden
  with a tuck.
  
  Blankets. - These are such precious articles
  that they should be darned and patched as long
  as possible, and T\hen they become too shabby
  to put on the top of the bed they can be used
  as under-blankets or binders. All thin places
  should be darned with wool of the same colour.
  If the place is very thin a piece of thin open
  flannel might be put at the back and the
  darning done over that. WTien there are
  actual holes, patching is better than darning,
  and the herring-boning should be done with
  fine wool instead of cotton. If the sides of
  the blanket become ragged and shabby they
  should be trimmed with a pair of scissors,
  then a narrow fold made and herring-boned
  down ; or, the edges may be worked over with
  blanket stitch in the same colour of wool as the
  ends of the blanket.
  
  Woven Under-garments. - These are also very
  precious articles, and ought to be mended and
  made to last as long as possible. Each week
  when they come from the washing they should be
  examined, and at the first signs of wearing must
  be carefully darned. It is also important to
  mend all under-garments at the end of a season
  if they are to be laid away for some time.
  
  If a thin place occurs in a hea\-y woven
  material a piece of thinner woven material of an
  elastic nature may be put at the back and the
  darning done over that, or the worn piece may be
  
  
  416
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  cut away and a neat patch inserted. Hand-
  knitted underclothing is best mended with the
  stocking-web dam, or a new piece might be
  knitted in.
  
  The wear of woven gsurments may be much
  increased if the parts which undergo most
  friction are carefully strengthened before the
  garment is worn.
  
  Table-Linen. - Mend according to general direc-
  tions given for mending linen materials. The
  question as to whether a patch or dam is
  best must depend upon the positiod and size of
  the piece requiring repair. Tlie aim must be to
  mend so skilfully that the damaged part is as
  little observed as possible.
  
  A hole must always be patched unless it is
  quite small, when it may be filled up with darn-
  ing. In patching the pattern of the damask
  must be matched as closely as possible as in
  print patching. If a hole occurs in the middle
  of a table-cloth it is sometimes a good plan to
  fix in a centre taken from an old serviette.
  
  Flourishing tlu-ead is the best to use for darn-
  ing purposes, or a linen thread that is not glazed.
  Instead of darning by the ordinary method, a
  clever worker will copy the design of the damask
  by missing and taking up more or less of the
  warp strands of the darn, but this is very trying
  for the eyesight and could only be undertaken
  by an expert worker.
  
  When the corners of a table-cloth become
  worn or torn in the washing, they should be
  rounded off very neatly and hemmed. The
  four corners should bo made aUke.
  
  Mending of Tweed or other Cloth. - This mend-
  ing being applied to outer garments, it is very
  important that it should be very neat and show
  as Uttle as possible on the right side. As a rule,
  for thin places and holes it is better to tack a
  f)atch at the back and darn over it on the right
  side. Ravellings of the same material should be
  used- When finished put a damp cloth over
  the wrong side and press it well with a hot iron.
  If there is a lining the back seam must be un-
  picked and the patch sUpped between the cloth
  and the lining. The darn must be pressed
  before the lining is sewn together again.
  
  If the garment is not lined, the raw edges of
  the patch can be darned into it neatly at the
  back ; but this should only be attempted by
  really good workers, as, even if the stitches do
  not show through very much, the work is apt to
  pucker.
  
  An esksier way is to overseam or blanket stitch
  the raw edges of the patch and press them well
  with a hot iron.
  
  Pine Drawing. - This stitch can be used for
  mending a rent or cut in cloth of a close tex-
  ture which does not unravel easily. The stitch
  itself is very simple, and, if carefully made, should
  be almost imperceptible. Use a thread of the
  same material if possible, or, failing that, silk or
  wool to match it. Silk must never be used on
  
  
  a dull fabric as the stitch would bo perceptible ;
  in fact, if the material is very fine there is
  nothing better than a himian hair for mending
  a cut of this kind.
  
  If the edges of the tear are very much un-
  ravelled, work the longer tlireads in, then cut
  the rest quite straight. Hold the work flat
  over your left hand between your thumb and
  first finger with the right side uppermost, make
  a knot at the end of the thread and bring out
  the needle on the right side of the tear close to
  top and keeping the two edges very well
  together. Point the needle the other way and
  bring it out, and similarly through the other
  side. Draw the thread closely to make the
  edges of the cloth meet, but not to overlap
  (fig. 56). Continue taking a stitch on each side
  
  
  Fig. 56.
  
  alternately till the join is finished. Finish oft
  with one or two back-stitches. Press the join
  under a damp cloth with a hot iron.
  
  Old German Seam. - This is very similax to
  fine drawing and can servo the same purpose.
  The stitches are made much closer together ;
  they should not bo more than two or three
  tlireads apart.
  
  Stoting is often used by tailors for mending
  a tear in material that does not easily fray out.
  Take a thread of the material and make a knot
  at the end. Fold back the material so that the
  edges of the tear are outside and perfectly even.
  Hold the work as for seaming, and begin quarter
  of an inch at the left of the tear. Work from
  left to right, making very close stitches and
  taking up a very small amount from each edge.
  Continue to one quarter of an inch beyond the
  tear on the right-hand i^ido. Finish off vnth
  about six stitches to the left, crossing the last
  six seaming stitches. Iron on the wrong side
  
  
  PLAIIs^ SEWING AND MENDING
  
  
  417
  
  
  with a damp cloth over the material. If the
  work is well done the tear shovild be almost
  invisible.
  
  The " Stoppeur." - There is a special kind of
  darning for tweeds and cloths done by the
  " stoppeur." " Stoppeur " is to mend a hole so
  that it is absolutely invisible on the right side,
  and only loose threads are seen on the wrong
  side. It is done with threads exactly like those
  of the material, and the design itself is copied.
  This is rarely done by an amateur ; but if an
  awkward hole or cut occurs in a good garment,
  such as a tailor-made gown or overcoat, it is
  worth while to send it to the professional
  " stoppeur," who will mend it for a very reason-
  able charge.
  
  To Mend Silk. - It is not easy to mend silk
  nicely, as, like fine muslin, it is only used for
  dressy garments and fancy articles, all of which
  are more or less conspicuous.
  
  As a rule, it is best to darn it finely with silk
  of the same colour, or to put a patch on the
  wrong side and to darn over that. If there is a
  decided hole, then it may be better to insert
  a patch in the same way as on a print article.
  As far as possible in the mending of light silk
  seams and tucks should be made use of to hide
  part of the patch. Lace insertions, too, especi-
  ally in. children's frocks, come in very useful for
  the mending or hiding the insertion of a patch.
  
  To Mend Gloves. - The style of mending must
  depend upon the material and texture of the
  gloves. The thin places in
  cotton, silk, or woollen gloves
  must he very neatly darned
  with fine cotton, silk, or wool
  of exactly the same shade and
  texture. Little wooden eggs of
  different sizes can be bought
  singly or by the half-dozen for
  slipping inside the fingers when
  mending gloves. There are also
  small sticks with rounded ends
  for the same purpose.
  
  Split seams in cotton and silk
  gloves must be stitched on the
  wi'ong side of the glove with fine
  silk or cotton of the same colour. Care must
  be taken not to pucker the seam and to com-
  mence and finish off the thread securely with-
  out knots.
  
  If a woven or knitted glove splits between
  the fingers or at the wTist owing to its being too
  tight, darn the opening neatly so as to allow
  a little more width. If the same thing happens
  to a kid glove, take some silk of the same colour
  and button -hole stitch the edges of the slit,
  working round and round several times if
  necessary to fill up tho space. Then tm-n the
  glove on the wrong side and close the hole by
  catching the end loops together, either with
  overcasting or with button-hole stitches.
  
  If there is a decided hole a better way is to
  
  
  Glove-Menders.
  
  
  procure a piece of the same kid from, an old
  glove and to cut a patch of a suitable size. Put
  this under the hole or sHt and over-seam all
  round the edges on the right side with very
  close stitches. Use fine sewing silk of the same
  shade as the glove. Turn to the wrong side and
  herring-bone down the edges of the patch with
  pretty large stitches. The stitches on the
  patch should be taken through the single kid
  only, so that only one set of stitches show
  through to the right side ; and these must be of
  the very smallest. Suede, chamois, and all sorts
  of skin gloves can be mended in this way.
  
  SEWING BY MACHINE
  
  No household should be without its sewing-
  machine. Although good handwork is always
  more valuable, and in many cases it cannot
  be replaced, where there is a large amount of
  sewing to be done, some more rapid method of
  getting through the work must be resorted to.
  
  There is no limit to the work that can be done
  on a good sewing-machine, and when we con-
  sider the hours of hand-sewing it can save, not
  to speak of the work which would otherwise
  have to be given out or bought " ready made,"
  the initial expense in buying the machine should
  never be grudged.
  
  Not only will a machine do the long plain
  seams, but it has now so many accessories that
  it can be made to hem, braid, tuck, gather,
  quilt, bind, &c., as well.
  
  It is very important to buy a good machine
  and one by a reliable maker. It is a mistake
  to be led away by a cheap price or to buy one
  second-hand ; in most cases it will be found that
  a second-hand machine is worn out in some
  part and will be an endless source of worry.
  Invest in a really good article ; it will give endless
  satisfaction and will last a lifetime if reasonable
  care be taken.
  
  There are two different kinds of machines :
  (1) those that sew with a single thread - ^the
  Chain-Stitch Machines, and (2) those that have
  two threads - the Lock-Stitch Machines. There
  is sometliing to be said in favour of both kinds.
  In the former there is less mechanism, and the
  working of the machine is very simple. The
  work can easily be undone when required, and
  provided the ends of thread are well fastened, the
  stitching is perfectly secure. It is peirticularly
  good for Hght work, such as the sewing of silks
  and mushn. A little hand chain-stitch macliine
  can be had so small and light in weight that it
  can easily be carried about or can be packed up
  for travelling without any trouble.
  
  The lock-stitch machine gives a double stitch,
  as there are the two threads, one above and the
  other below in the shuttle. The work is very
  strong and secure and can only be undone with
  difficulty.
  
  Both kinds of machines can be worked either
  
  2d
  
  
  418
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  by hand or by foot. The special advantage of
  the treadle machine is that both hands are left
  free to guide and arrange the work.
  
  The treadle machine is objected to by many on
  the grounds that it is bad for a woman's health,
  but the evils have been much exaggerated, and
  unle&s the machine is a particularly heavy one
  and it is worked for hours in the day, there is
  nothing to be feared. If there is only a small
  amount of sewing to be done a small hand-
  machine will no doubt serve the purpose, but if
  it is wanted for use in a large household it is
  almost wiser to buy one with the treadle, as this
  can always be detached and the machine worked
  by hand if desired.
  
  Full instructions for the use of the machine
  are given with each special make ; in fact, most
  makers offpr lessons free of charge to each pur-
  chaser, and this will be found of great assistance,
  as it is difficult to learn from any printed direc-
  tions. There are, however, several important
  points to be borne in mind when using any
  machine, and a few general hints may be found
  useful.
  
  One is apt to attribute to the machine all
  the faults of bad work, when in reality it is often
  nothing but inexperience on the part of the
  worker.
  
  (1) The machine must be kept clean and in
  good order. It ought to work easily and with
  little or no noise ; in fact, some of the newest
  makes are almost silent. If it works heavily it
  is almost a sure sign that it requires oiling. It
  wears a machine to work it when insufficiently
  oiled, to say nothing of the difficulty in working,
  being very tiring for the worker. Oiling must
  be done regularly and the best machine oil used.
  This is very important, as oil of an inferior quality
  is almost sure to clog. By means of a little oil-
  can oil all the parts where there is friction -
  these are generally indicat,ed by little holes in
  the machine - and then wipe off any superfluous
  oil with a soft duster.
  
  The machine must always be kept free from
  dust. There is always a certain amount of
  fluff coming off the different fabrics that are
  sewn, and this lodges in the various parts of the
  machine, so that it is well to wipe it ovor when
  the work is finished.
  
  Then from time to time a more thorough
  cleaning is necessary. Use a little petrol instead
  
  
  of the ordinary oil and work the machine several
  minutes. Then clean the other parts with petrol,
  wipe off with a soft cloth, and grease in the
  usual way.
  
  A machine should be kept covered when not
  in use.
  
  (2) The furnishings used with the machine
  should be of the best. The needles must be
  good and well proportioned to thickness of
  thread and material. It is always well to keep
  a supply of different sizes in reserve, and if
  these are stuck into a piece of greased flannel
  this will preserve them from rusting.
  
  Tlie sewing thread, too, must be good and of
  a smooth and even make. It is impossible to
  produce a good stitch with a poor quality of
  cotton; besides,if there areknots or badly -twisted
  parts, there will be the continual annoyance of
  breaking the thread. The tliickness of the
  thread must also be proportioned to the size of
  the needle, and in the lock-stitch machine the
  shuttle thread shoxild always be a little finer
  than the upper one.
  
  (3) The tension must be right. Very careful
  attention should be given to the instructions
  regarding this, because unless properly regulated
  it will be impossible to work the machine satis-
  factorily.
  
  When beginning to work the machine it is
  always better to test the stitch on an odd piece
  of material before starting on the work itself.
  
  
  DARNING BY MACHINE
  
  The Singer Sewing Machine Company have
  introduced a new method of darning by machne
  which ought to be an immense boon to the busy
  housewife. The process is very simple, and the
  special attachment which can be bought for
  3s. can be used on any lock-stitch so%ving-
  machine.
  
  Full particulars can be had by w'  calling at any of Singer's shops, where a special
  lesson will always be given to purchfisers free
  of charge. Both woollen and cot ion goodo can
  be darned by means of this little appliance, and
  the expert worker will be able to darn curtains
  and lace so as to match the texture of the
  material. The work is quickly done and has a
  very neat and f Tiooth appearance when finished.
  
  
  HOME DRESSMAKING
  
  
  In this article no attempt has been made to go into the more scientific side of dressmaking, in-
  cluding such subjects as drafting patterns, making fitted bodices or tailor-made garments ; such
  knowledge can only be acquired by taking a thorough course of technical lessons - it cannot be
  imparted by books.
  
  The woman who wishes to make a study of dressmaking in all its branches should undoubtedly
  arrange to take lessons either privately or at one or other of the many technical schools. It is for
  the assistance of the woman who wishes to eke out her dress allowance by making her own skirts
  and blouses and simple frocks, with the aid of one or other of the many paper patterns which are now
  so easily procurable, that this article has been written, and we trust that the many hints embodied
  in this chapter in regard to the adaptation of stock patterns to individual figures, and the cutting
  out and making of simple yet smart garments will be of real practical iise to the home worker.
  
  
  Economy of Home Dressmaking. - The ex-
  travagance of the present age in regard to dress
  has been made at various times the subject of
  much comment in the newspapers. Men cor-
  respondents have aired their so-called grievances
  in the form of letters to the press, complaining
  that where their grandmothers in their time
  could do with one or two new dresses every year,
  their wives and daughters are not content with
  less than half-a-do2;en. On the surface there
  would appear to be a certain amount of justi-
  fication for this complaint, wliich will, however,
  bear the brunt of more searching investigation.
  The fact is that we enjoy so many advantages
  to-day in the way of reduced cost of dress
  material and accessories that, on comparing the
  cost of dress fifty or sixty years ago to what it
  is now, the balance of expenditure will be found
  to be pretty evenly adjusted. Nowadays a
  woman would hold up her hands in horror if
  called upon to pay six or seven shillings a yard
  for the material of her most ordinary gowns ;
  yet this was looked upon by our grandmothers
  as a very moderate expenditure indeed. Neither
  would the woman of to-day dream of spending
  a small fortune on the heavy silk brocade of
  which the best gown of every self-respecting
  woman of our grandmothers' time was invari-
  ably built. Good dress materials are now well
  within the reach of the most modest purse ; and
  where a woman can make a large number of her
  gowns herself, she will manage to dress very weU
  indeed on a comparatively smaU outlay.
  
  Not the least remarkable aspect of the present
  era in dress is the rapid growth of home dress-
  making. In former times the home-made dress
  was usually an object weird and wonderful in
  its clumsiness and lack of stjle. Nowadays the
  rapid advance made in the science of dress-
  
  
  making has come to the aid of the home dress-
  maker, with the result that she is able to turn
  out very creditable and well-fitting gowns.
  
  Paper Patterns. - The now well-known paper
  patterns are the outcome of this progress in the
  dressmaking art. Patterns well drafted and
  well designed and, above all, well cut may be
  purchased for a few pence. These patterns
  have been designed by expert di'essmakers and
  fitters, and with their aid many women and girls
  manage to keep up a very good wardrobe upon a
  very small dress allowance indeed. Nowadays
  there is scarcely a woman who has not attempted
  to make a blouse for herseK at some time or
  other and witli success. In olden times a woman
  had to use her own brains in the designing and
  cutting of her gowns. Nowadays the brains of
  the experts who design the various patterns are
  at the command of every woman who chooses
  to avail herseK of the opportunities offered.
  All she has to do is to carefully note and follow
  the instructions given with the pattern. If she
  is careful in regard to these, her work cannot
  very easily go wrong.
  
  The necessity for getting a good and reliable
  pattern before attempting to make a dress or a
  blouse is obvious. Among the many patterns
  which have found favour with the home worker,
  those sold by Messrs. Butterick & Co. of 83 and
  84 Long Acre, London, W.C, deservedly take a
  prominent place. These patterns are to be had in
  nearly every size, and the instructions for their
  use are so concise and so clear, that women with
  only the most elementary idea of dressmaking
  can turn out really smart garments for them-
  selves with the aid of Butterick patterns.
  
  If it is a woman's first attempt at dressmaking,
  she should select a shirt blouse or a plain skirt
  of the simplest description on which to try her
  
  
  419
  
  
  420
  
  
  THE WOISIAN'S BOOK
  
  
  " 'prentice hand." One* she has turned out a
  really Buccossful ehirt blouse or a plain unlined
  skirt, she may attempt more ambitious things,
  for in dressmaking, as in every other science,
  once the rudiments are mastered the rest will
  become easy.
  
  In ordering a blouse pattern it is necessary to
  give the correct bust measurement. In sending
  for a skirt pattern the waist measurement, and,
  what is even more important, the measurement
  round the hips about five inches below the waist-
  line should be given.
  
  Dressmaking Accessories. - Ha\ang secured a
  good pattern, the home dressmaker should turn
  her attention to the other necessary accessories.
  She will require a pair of sharp cutting-out
  scissors, a pair of small button-hole scissors, good
  needles and thread, a measuring tape, and a
  tracing wheel for tracing the pattern lines and
  
  
  Tracing "VMieeL
  
  marks in the material. Tailors' chalk or coloured
  thread could be used for marking heavy materials
  on which the tracing would not show. A good
  treadle sewing-machine is of course a very
  valuable accessory to dressmaking ; there should
  also always be a plentiful supply of pins.
  
  The table on which the material for cutting
  out is laid should bo large enough to allow for
  the various pieces of the pattern to be spread
  out full length upon it. Tlie pattern should be
  pinned to the material or adjusted in such a way
  as to prevent it from slipping out of place.
  
  A Useful Dressmaking Board. - It is an im-
  portant rule of dressmaking that all the different
  pieces of a garment should be tacked together
  on a table, or, failing this, some other smooth flat
  
  
  Dressmaking Board.
  
  surface. A plain piece of board will answer the
  purpose quite well. It should be after the style
  and size of an ordinary drawing-board, with one
  side scooped out to form a curve, as shown in
  tne illustration. If there is no member of the
  family sufficiently versed in the art of homo
  carpentering, any joiner will supply and cut out
  the board for a trifling sum.
  
  \Mien seated at work the worker should take
  the board upon her knees ; the curved part will
  fit into her waist. She should place her feet upon
  a footstool in order to support the board more
  
  
  firmly. In this way she will have a very effective
  little impromptu table at her command upon
  which all her tacking can be done with the
  greatest ease.
  
  Dress-Stands. - A woman who makes her own
  gowns will find her work much simplified if she
  has a good dress-stand for fitting purposes.
  This she can have made to her own measure, or,
  if it has to do duty for several members of a
  family, one of the expanding dress-stands, which
  can be adjusted to any figure, will be found most
  useful. In arranging the pleats of a skirt at the
  back and securing an even hang all round, a
  dress-stand is almost indispensable. Separate
  bodice-stands may also be had padded for pinning
  for an outlay of only five or six shillings. The
  padded stands are undoubtedly the most iiseful
  ones to have.
  
  Dressmaking Stitclies. - The home dressmaker
  must of course have a knowledge of the simple
  needlework stitches, such as tacking, basting,
  running, gathering, hemming, seaming, sewing,
  stitching, back-stitching, slip-stitching, &o., for
  description of which refer to needlework section
  (p. 388).
  
  Tailor's tacking is the stitch used in conveying
  the different notches and perforations of a
  pattern through the different breadths of the
  
  
  Tailor's Tacking.
  
  material to be cut when chalk cannot be used.
  With a double thread of basting cotton baste
  through pattern and material with oiit. long
  stitch and two short ones, leaving the long
  stitch loose enough to form a loop, then take
  hold of the two pieces of material, separating
  them about a quarter of an inch and cut them
  as shown in illustration. Coloured cotton is
  usually used for tailor's tacking.
  
  Blouse Patterns. - Blouse patterns are cut in
  different stock sizes according to the bust
  measurement, and when the proper bust measure
  is given the pattern will fit if a woman is of
  correct proportions. There are many figures,
  however, wliich differ from the average. One
  woman may have an unusually high waist,
  another may have an unusually long one. Again,
  the arms of another may be very short in pro-
  portion to the rest of hor figure, whilst in another
  case the arms may be unduly long. The follow-
  ing simple instructions and diagrams for altera-
  tion of patterns will be found useful in all theso
  cases.
  
  
  HOME DRESSMAKING
  
  
  421
  
  
  One important thing to remember is that in
  all cases in which an alteration is necessary,
  the alteration must be effected on the pattern
  before it is placed upon the material for cutting.
  
  Before cutting out pattern be sure to read
  carefully all instructions on pattern envelope.
  In most patterns diagrams of all the separate
  pieces of the patterns together -with instructions
  for cutting out are given.
  
  If a blouse pattern is too long-waisted and
  requires shortening, a tuck should be made in
  both front and back pieces in the position
  
  
  Fig. 1.
  
  
  shown in fig. 1. If the pattern is too short-
  waisted and requires lengthening, cut pattern
  across as shown in fig. 2, lay the di\'ided
  portions upon another piece of paper separating
  them far enough to make the pattern of the
  
  
  Fia. 2.
  
  req\iired length, and paste them on the paper,
  cutting out a new pattern according to the
  altered outline.
  
  For widening the shoulder should be raised,
  and increased turnings allowed at under-arm
  seams.
  
  In the Butterick patterns an allowance is
  always made for fitting at shoulder and under-
  arm seams. With other patterns, however,
  this is not always the case, and
  it is most necessary to carefully
  read the directions sent with
  the pattern in order that you
  may allow extra width for fitting
  and finishing if no allowance is
  made.
  
  The dotted line in fig. 3 shows
  ^^ere to make a tuck in the
  blouse sleeve fur shor+sning it, or to cut it
  across for lengthening it.
  
  
  Fig. 3.
  
  
  To shorten a two -piece sleeve pattern make
  tucks in each piece above and below the elbow
  of the size required as shown in illustration. If
  the sleeve need lengthening cut across the pattern
  in the same places, separating the pieces to the
  required distance.
  
  GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING
  BLOUSES
  
  When all the necessary alterations have been
  made in the pattern it should be carefully pinned
  to the material, and before taking the pieces off
  mark all seams, notches, or perforations in the
  pattern with chalk, or use the tailor's tacking
  stitch in coloured thread through both breadths
  of the material (see p. 420). If the blouse is to
  fasten at the back, the front portion of the
  pattern is laid to a lengthwise fold. If, as in the
  case of shirt blouses, the fastening is to be in
  front, the edge of the front portion of the pattern
  should be laid to the selvedge or to a straight
  tliread rvmning parallel with the selvedge.
  
  In cutting out sleeves be careful not to cut
  both sleeves for one arm ; this is a mistake very
  often made by the beginner.
  
  When the blouse has been cut out, baste pieces
  together with notches evenly matched ; slightly
  stretch the shoulder seam of the front piece or
  pieces whilst basting to make the bloxise fit
  evenly at the neck. Also stretch the neck
  portion of the blouse whilst basting on the
  collar. All parts of unlined bloiises should be
  sewn together with French seams (see p. 392) for
  the sake of neatness. When French seams are
  used, however, the blouse will set better if the
  seams are opened up from the bottom tothe waist-
  line-the sides of the opened-out seams should
  be neatly turned over and hemmed. If the
  blouse is sewn into a small " basque band,"
  sometimes called a " belt stay," at the waist,
  this will dispense with any unnecessary fulness
  below the waist-Hne, and the blouse will set
  better and not pouch out loosely over the waist-
  band, as blouses are often inclined to do.
  
  Failing the belt-stay, a draw-string inserted
  at the back of the blouse should be used. This
  should be just at the waist-line ; if placed too
  high it will show above the waist-belt ; if too
  low the blouse will pouch out imtidily at the
  back. Another effective way of keeping a
  blouse in place is to stitch a webbing band
  to the back and to fasten it round the waist
  before putting on the skirt. If, in addition, two
  strong hooks are sewn upside down on the
  webbing band and two eyes sewn on the skirt-
  band to fasten with the hooks, bodice and skirt
  can be securely kept together in this way with-
  out any danger of the blouse riddling up or the
  skirt slipping beneath the waist-band.
  
  Making the Sleeve. - The seams of blouse
  sleeves should be first basted, and then very
  carefully sewn together. The top part of a
  
  
  422
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  blouse sleeve is gathered over the shoulder. Tlie
  gathering must be made between the notches
  shown in the sleeve pattern, and each sleeve
  must be carefully sewn into the armhole with
  the notches in the top of the sleeve even with
  the notches in the armhole. Tlie sleeve is also
  gathered at the wrist into the cuff. To Bnish
  off the armhole neatly a narrow piece of cambric
  cut on the cross should be stitched in the same
  seam that stitches the sleeve into the armhole,
  and afterwards turned over and stitched around
  to form a binding to the armhole, as shown in
  
  
  Binding a Sleeve.
  
  illustration. If the top of the sleeve is not too
  full, however, it can be sewn in with a French
  seam.
  
  The sleeves of shirt blouses are nearly always
  made to open a few inches up the arm ; the
  position of this opening varies with fashion.
  Sometimes the opening may be at the inside
  arm seam and sometimes at the back of the
  
  
  Fia. 4.
  
  sleeve. For a shirt cuff the sleeves are slashed
  at the wrist and an overlap and an underlap
  sewn on, as shown in fig. 4. The overlap
  should be adjusted so as to entirely conceal the
  underlap.
  
  The Collar. - Collar patterns are always given
  with the blouse patterns. Collars are cut on
  the straight of the material and slightly curved
  to fit well into the nock. For short necks the
  collar must necessarily be rather low, and
  therefore very little curve is required, a straight
  band being often found sufficient. High collars,
  however, require to be well curved. With
  shirt blouses detachable linen or muslin collars
  
  
  are often worn over a plain neck-band. For
  dressy blouses, however, when high collars are
  worn these should be boned when finished to
  make them set well. It is always better to
  have collar supports which can be removed with
  little trouble when the blouse has to be washed
  or cleaned. The celluloid collar supports are
  admirable for this purpose. They should be
  sewn in on either side of the collar with the top
  coinciding with the Une of the neck from the
  ear and the bottom of the support slanting
  slightly forwards. Collars of dressy blouses
  usually fasten at the back, and a collar support
  should be sewn at each side of the fastening.
  When the collar fastens in front a collar support
  should be sewn at each side of the front fasten-
  ings. When ordinary collar boning is used, be
  careful that this is finished off very neatly and
  covered with some soft covering, as in many
  instances painful and unsightly sores upon the
  neck have been caused where this important
  detail has been neglected.
  
  From a plain shirt blouse pattern may be
  evolved many a blouse of a much daintier kind.
  The fastening may be made at the back instead
  of at the front, the latter being cut to the fold
  of the material. Such blouses may be made of
  silk, lace, muslin, net, crepe, de chine, or other
  dainty materials, and prettily trimmed with
  lace and insertion or hand embroidery. The
  plain shirt blouse is capable of many stages of
  evolution, and a well-fitting pattern should be
  carefully kept, as in time the home worker may
  evolve many ingenious ideas for making use of it
  in some new way. W^ith plain loose blouses a
  separate blouse slip should be worn instead of
  lining. Blouse slips need not be boned ; they can
  be of cambric, lawn, or washing silk, and are
  very easy to make.
  
  Buttons and Button-holes. - Shirt blouses are
  usually fastened in front with buttons and
  button -holes. Care should be taken that buttons
  and button -holes are even. To ensuie this,
  take a piece of light cardboard, make a notch
  in this corresponding to the distance required
  between each button -hole, and, beginning at the
  waist-line, mark the position of the button -holes
  by means of this notched card, marking each with
  a pin. The waist should be taken preferably
  as the beginning of the measurement, as there
  should always be a fastening at the waist-line,
  and this can be asstired in this way. Make
  corresponding measurements for the buttons on
  the left side of the blouse front. (For making
  button -holes, see p. 400.)
  
  Skirts. - Skirt patterns may have three, five,
  seven, nine or more gores ; skirts with only three
  gores require darts in order to be fitted to
  the figure. A beginner often finds difficulty in
  arranging these darts, therefore it is better that
  she should select a skirt with five or seven gores
  for her first attempt.
  
  As has been said before, when ordering a skirt
  
  
  HOME DRESSMAKING
  
  
  423
  
  
  pattern particular attention must be paid to
  the measurement round the hips. If the hips
  are large in proportion to the waist, then order
  by the hip measurement, as although this entails
  receiving a pattern with a slightly larger waist,
  the latter can easily be taken in. For the
  length of skirt take your measiirement from the
  waist to the floor in front, at the back, and over
  the hips. For walking length about two inches
  will have to be deducted from the measurement
  thus obtained. Now compare length obtained
  by measurement with the length of the pattern.
  If the pattern is too long, make it shorter by
  
  
  Fig. 5.- lengthening and Shortening Skirt Patterns.
  
  putting a tuck of the necessary size in each
  piece of the pattern about six inches below the
  hip-line. If it is too short, lengthen it by cutting
  across and separating the pieces to the distance
  required. Pin all pattern pieces carefully to the
  material, and mark all notches and perforations
  before taking the pieces off. In the case of
  women who are not of average proportions,
  alteration in length is not the only alteration
  which wiU have to be made. The skirt of the
  woman with a prominent abdomen, for instance,
  is apt to stand out in front unless properly
  cut. Although only a very simple alteration is
  necessary to secure a perfect fit, few women
  go to the trouble of finding out how this altera-
  tion can be made, and are surprised if their
  skirts hang badly through lack of it. An
  extra allowance should be made at the top of
  the front and side gores when the abdomen is
  
  
  Flo. 6.
  
  
  prominent, the extra depth being gradually
  diminished until it is reduced to next to nothing
  at the hips. Fig. 6 wU convey a good idea of
  the alterations to be made ; the extra length at
  
  
  the top of the skirt wiU prevent it from standing
  out in front. Care must be taken not to make
  the waist smaller when extendiiig the gores ; in
  order to avoid this the side edges oi the gores
  must be increased as shown in illustration.
  When a skirt has to be altered in this way it is
  better to cut it out first upon some cheap coarse
  lining and fit it on before cutting the material.
  
  To cut out Skirt Patterns. - If the material
  has a pile or " up and down," all tops of gores
  must be laid in the same direction when placed
  upon the material ; if there is no up and
  down, the gores may be arranged for cutting
  with the top of one gore fitting in with
  the bottom of another. The front piece of
  pattern is marked with a notch on one side, the
  side without the notch being placed to a length-
  wise fold ; the other patterns are marked with
  notches on each side, thus the first side gore has
  one notch on one side and two notches on the
  other, the second side gore has two notches on
  one side and three on the other, and so on.
  Tlie edge of a pattern piece with the less number
  of notches must always be placed to a selvedge
  or straight thiread from the hip downwards, the
  hip of course being shaped to the figiure ; thus
  in a gore which has two notches on one side and
  tliree notches on the other the side with the
  two notches would be placed to the straight
  selvedge or straight thread, whilst the side with
  the three notches would naturally fall on the
  slant or the " cross " of the material.
  
  The Pile of Cloth.- All woollen and cloth skirts
  should be cut with the pile running towards the
  bottom of the garment, but velvet or plush
  garments should be cut so that the pile runs
  upward. In cutting out the v£irious pieces of
  the garment care must be taken that in each one
  the pile runs in the same direction.
  
  Stripes, Checks, and Plaids. - In cutting the
  various pieces of a garment in striped, checked,
  or plaided materials care must be taken that
  the stripes, checlvS, and plaids are properly
  matched. For tliis reason a greater quantity
  of material will be required than in the case of
  plain stuffs. It is important in these cases to
  select a position for the top of the material. All
  the pattern pieces should then be placed with
  their upper parts in the direction selected. It
  is as well to place the pieces of the garment
  ah'eady cut on the material next to the adjoining
  piece which is to be cut. This will form a very
  good guide as to the best method of cutting the
  next piece. In matching plaids and patterns
  in this way a Uttle waste of material is often
  unavoidable.
  
  Stitching the Seams of Skirts. - The different
  pieces of the skirt should bo carefully basted
  together before stitching. Lay the skirt on a
  table while putting it together. Tlie straight
  side of each gore should always be held towards
  the worker. The straight edge of the gore
  always goes to the bias edge of another gore.
  
  
  424
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  excepting at the back, where the two bias edges
  come together. Care should be taken not to
  stretch the bias edges whilst basting. All the
  seams should bo basted from the top downwards ;
  the skirt should then be tried on and any un-
  evenness at the hem corrected. If possible, it
  is as well to place the skirt on a dress-stand, or
  for tho person who is to bo fitted to stand upon
  a stool and get some one to mark on the bottom
  of the skirt with pins or chalk in an even line
  the exact length required. All skirts, excepting
  those of very light flimsy materials, such as ninon,
  &o., should be stitched by machine. In all
  cases they should bo stitched from the top down-
  wards. In machining side-back seams always
  have the back next the " feed " of the machine
  and the side-back next the pressure foot. When
  the seams have been stitched, press them open
  and overcast them. (For Overcasting, see p. 391.)
  When stitching seams of very light materials,
  such as washing silk, fine muslin, stitch a piece
  of tissue paper in the seam. This can bo after-
  wards pulled off, and will prevent the material
  from puckering.
  
  Finishing the Top of Skirts. - The waist-band
  may be made of cotton belting. If single belt-
  ing is used it is stitched on the right side, and
  the raw edges on the wrong side are faced with
  silk or Prussian binding. Where the belting is
  double, this should be opened out, one end being
  stitched at the front of the skirt, the other taken
  over the back. Another way of finishing the
  top of the skirt is by means of a " cording " ;
  this method is especially suitable for stout
  figures. To do this cut on the cross a piece of
  strong silk or other stuff one inch and a quarter
  wide; it must be a perfect bias. Place a medium-
  sized cord along this strip of silk or stuff, double
  the silk over, and run the silk and cording to-
  gether, taking care not to stretch either the top
  of the skirt or the cording. Baste skirt and
  cording together by placing the side having the
  narrow seam of silk against the right side of
  the skirt with the cording towards the bottom.
  After basting, back-stitch to the skirt by hand,
  the right side of the skirt towards you, then turn
  in the edge to the inside and finish off neatlj'.
  
  Plackets. - The placket of a skirt may bo
  placed either at the side or at the back. The
  opening of the placket should be only as long as
  is necessary for the skirt to be slipped on and
  off easily. The seam should be opened out
  about ten or twelve inches from the waist
  according to the size round the hips, but in all
  C£"es the shorter the placket the better. Two
  Btrios of material, each half an inch longer than
  the placket opening, should be cut. One strip
  must be about four inches and the other strip
  about two inches wide. The wider strip is
  doubled over and sown to the left side of the
  skirt to form an underlap, whilst the other strip
  is faced to the right side (see fig. 7).
  
  Pockets axe seldom worn nowadays, as there
  
  
  is not much room allowed for them in the tight-
  fitting skirt of the moment. Where a pocket
  is found indispensable, however, it should be
  made of lining to match the skirt and placed
  in the placket either at the side or at the back
  of the skirt. It usually takes the form of a kind
  
  
  Fig. 7.
  
  of pear-shaped bag, and is cut with the centre of
  the pocket to the fold of the material. Open it
  out and cut slip for pocket in the centre, where
  pattern has been placed against the fold. Face
  the opening with a piece of the dress material.
  Fold again after facing, stitching all round
  except at the opening ; finish with French seam,
  and back-stitch pocket in the placket by hand.
  
  Finishing the Bottom of the Skirt. - Never turn
  up the hem of a skirt before the waist-band has
  been adjusted. The bottom of the skirt may
  either be turned over and hemmed, or finished
  with a false hem. In turning over the skirt for
  the hem care must be taken that the latter is of
  the same depth all the way round. To ensure,
  this take a piece of cardboard, make a notch
  in this of the depth required, and, using
  this as a measure, turn up hem all the way
  round to the depth of the notch. If the
  skirt is hemmed, the fulness at the top should
  be gathered slightly before basting it to the
  material. Baste carefully before stitching. The
  skirt may bo hemmed by hand or machine-
  stitched. The hems of cloth and serge skirts
  are usually machine-stitched, sometimes being
  finished off with two or three or more rows of
  machine-stitching. Needless to say, the rows
  of stitching must be perfectly even or the
  appearance of the skirt will bo spoiled.
  
  In accordance with present fashions stiffening
  is not much used in the hems of skirts. Where
  an interlining is preferred, bias strips of lining
  or canvas are inserted in the hem. It is better
  to avoid very stiff interlining, as the latter very
  soon cuts the material. The edge of the skirt
  may bo finished off with braid or binding to
  prevent it from cutting. Brush or velvet
  braiding are very good for the purpose. (For
  Method of Braiding Skirts, see p. 404.)
  
  Making a False Hem. - A false hem may be
  made with pieces of material cut on the cross,
  
  
  HOME DRESSMAKING
  
  
  425
  
  
  or in the shape of the bottom of the skirt. In
  the latter case it is necessary to take the skirt
  pattern as a guide in cutting out. If the hem
  is faced with bias strips the odds and ends of
  material left over from the cutting can be
  utilised. A bias facing should always be stretched
  slightly at its lower edge and shaped to the skirt
  by pressing. Before putting on a false hem turn
  up the lower edge of the skirt on the wrong side
  and baste it ; tixcn up also the lower edge of the
  false hem. This should be tiu-ned under and
  basted to the wrong side of the skirt (fig. 8). The
  
  
  Fig. 8.
  
  raw edge of false hem at the top may be turned
  in or bound with binding ribbon or braid. When
  it is basted into position, stitch skii't and false
  hem together. The hem should be well pressed
  with a warm iron on the inner side when finished,
  and all fulness at the top shrunk out by damping
  and then ironing.
  
  Pressing Seams. - There are many details of
  dressmaking which the amateur more often than
  not altogether neglects ; chief amongst these is
  the pressing of seams. Careful pressing is of
  the utmost importance to the appearance of the
  finished garment. Special skirt, bodice, and
  sleeve boards may be bought for the purpose,
  but, failing these, the home worker can press her
  garments quite well without them. Skirts and
  coats require a large flat surface, and should
  be ironed on a large ironing-board on a table.
  Sleeves, however, should always be pressed on a
  rounded surface. Failing a sleeve board, either
  an old broom-handle or a rolling-pin covered first
  with an old piece of blanket and then with a
  smooth white cloth, would make a very good
  substitute ; a large round ruler might also be
  made to answer the purpose. The seams of
  cloth garments should be damped before pressing.
  It is not necessary, however, to damp the seams
  of lighter and softer materials. All darts should
  bo pressed over a tailor's cushion where possible.
  Seams of silk and velvet garments should not
  be pressed upon a table or board. When it is
  necessary to press seams in silk or velvet, hold
  one end of the seam in the left hand, and let
  some one else hold the other end. Then with
  the right hand run the iron along the seam,
  
  
  pressing it open or closed as desired ; in this
  way the iron touches only the seam. If no
  assistant is at hand, lay the iron on its side and
  use both hands to draw the seam across the edge
  of the iron. The hem of a silk skirt may be
  
  
  Tailor's Cushion.
  
  pressed in the iisual way on the table or boeurd,
  but do not have the iron hot, and press only the
  hem.
  
  GENERAL HINTS
  
  Shrinking Materials. - ^It is important to re-
  member that all woollen materials should be
  shrunk before they are cut and made up. If
  this is not done, the dress will probably not only
  shrink if exposed to rain, but it will also spot.
  When buying woollen materials always inquire
  if they have been slirunk. If not the shrinking
  will be usually undertaken at the shop at which
  the material has been bought for a small charge
  per yard, or it may be accomplished at home in
  this manner : - Lay an ironing blanket evenly
  upon a good-siz;ed table. Place the material
  face downwards upon the blanket, ha\ang first
  cut off the selvedges. Then take a strip of heavy
  unbleached muslin or drilling one yard wide and
  two yards long, wet and wring tliis out, and then
  place it over the material. Now press several
  times with the hot iron, shrinking only a small
  portion at a time. After doing tliis remove the
  muslin and press directly on the material until
  dry. Double-width material should be folded
  the right side inwards whilst being pressed.
  Some of the thinner woollen goods will not stand
  pressing in this way. It is as well always to
  experiment with a small piece of the material.
  If it is found that it becomes shrivelled up, it is a
  sign that water should not be used ; press instead
  with a moderately warm iron.
  
  An important point for the home dressmaker
  to remember is that some hght summer wash-
  ing materials, such as drill, duck, pique, linen,
  spotted muslins, require shrinking as much as
  woollens, for if this is not done dresses of these
  materials will in most cases shrink a great deal
  after their first visit to the laundress.
  
  Inhere is another important detail in regard
  to dressmaking in which the home dressmaker
  often fails, i.e. neatness in finishing. A care-
  lessly finished garment reflects but little credit
  upon its wearer. Neglected turnings and frayed
  edges, badly adjusted hooks and eyes, crooked
  button-holes, puckered hems, all betoken the
  
  
  426
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  careless worker. Every part of the garment
  should be neatly and carefully finished.
  
  \Vlien making a skirt never forget to sew two
  little loops made of ribbon binding, skirt lining,
  or black tape to the inner side of the waist-band,
  one at each side of tlie waist, by which to hang
  up the skirt. This is only a little thing, but it
  helps to keep the shape of the skirt much longer
  than if it were hung up by the material itself.
  
  Trimmings. - These play an important part in
  the fashioning of tasteful garments, and must
  be chosen with discrimination and taste. The
  skilful worker can transform quite a simple little
  blouse or skirt into very dressy garments in-
  deed by the judicious addition of trimmings.
  Ornamental buttons may be utilised with great
  effect. These may be had in all kinds of shapes
  and designs, and are also often made of the same
  material as the dress. In this latter case the
  home worker must make the buttons herself,
  purchasing button moulds of the si^e required.
  These may be bought at any draper's and are
  covered by cutting out pieces of the material
  and gathering them on to the moulds.
  
  Hand Embroidery is a very favourite trimming
  for blouses. A good transfer pattern should be
  procured and ironed on to the part to bo em-
  broidered. These patterns are often given away
  gratis by fashion papers, and should be carefully
  treasured in case occasion for using them arises.
  The transfer should always be tacked or
  pinned in the position required, the right
  side next to the material, and then pressed
  with a moderately hot iron. The iron,
  must not be too hot, however, or the blue
  ink of the pattern will become obliterated,
  whilst if too cold no impression will be
  made. Very often in the case of blouses
  made of the heavier materials, instead of
  embroidering a transfer design, a most
  ornamental effect is achieved by applying
  a very narrow braid to the outline. The
  braid should be slip-stitched on with silk
  to match it, pressing well on the wrong
  side when finished. All pas.sementerie and other
  similar trimmings should be carefully tacked in
  position before actually sowing them to the
  garment.
  
  SOME SIMPLE PATTERNS
  
  The following are smart yet simple styles
  which may be easily carried out by the home
  dressmaker. Patterns similar to those illustrated
  may be obtained upon application to The
  Butterick Publishing Company, Long Acre,
  London, W.C.
  
  A Shirt Blouse. - Fig. 9 shows a very simple
  yet up-to-date little shirt blouse well within the
  scope of the amateur worker. It is finished
  with a simulated box-pleat in front and four
  tucks running from the shoulder on either side.
  The back is finished with two long forward-
  
  
  turning tucks to give the effect of a large box-
  pleat. The pattern may be had in bust sizes
  32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, and 46 inches. Two
  yards of material 44 inches wide will be sufficient
  to make the blouse for a woman of 34 or 36-inch
  bust measurement. The pattern is cut out with
  allowance for tucks, the position of the tucks
  
  
  Fia. 9.- A Butterick Pattern.
  
  being marked on the pattern with lines of
  perforations.
  
  To cut out the Blouse. - All pieces with largo
  triple perforations should bo cut to a lengthwise
  fold ; these include the back and the belt-stay.
  All the other pieces must be cut with the large
  double perforations lengthwise.
  
  
  Pattern Pieces of Fig. 9.
  
  To Make the Blouse. - To make the bcx-pleat
  fold under the edge of the right front at notches,
  stitching quarter of an inch from the fold, and
  make a backward -turning tuck, creasing the
  material for the purpose at the line of small
  triple perforations. Malio a three-quarter inch
  horn on left front piece, turning hem under at
  largo single perforation. On each side of the
  front make four backward -turning tucks,
  creasing the material for the piu-pose at the
  lines of small single perforations marked on
  pattern, stitching three-quarters of an inch
  from each crease, extending the tucks yoke
  depth. In the back make a forward -turning
  tuck on either side, creasing on lines of small
  single perforations and sewing three-quarters of
  an inch from each cmnse. Then gather the
  fronts and back at small double perforation in
  waist-line and three-quarters of an inch above.
  
  
  HOME DRESSMAKING
  
  
  427
  
  
  terminating gathering-in line with single per-
  forations just above.
  
  Baste seams with notches matched, gather
  sleeves at top between notches and at bottom
  into Cliff. Join sleeve seam and baste sleeves
  into armholes with corresponding notches in
  top of sleeve and armhole. If the blouse is cut
  with a sailor collar, the neck must be cut slightly
  lower in front.
  
  If the blouse is finished with a belt-stay, cut
  the latter out with the triple perforations on
  pattern to a lengthwise fold, and sew it under
  gatherings at waist -line with the notches at the
  bottom of the belt-stay meeting the under-arm
  seams.
  
  Tlie blouse should always be tried on before
  the seams are actually stitched, and any little
  arrangement of the fulness or other adjustment
  can be made.
  
  A Useful Overblouse. - The overblouse given in
  the illustration (fig. 10) makes a very useful little
  garment, as it may be slipped on over a blouse
  which has already seen good wear, giving it quite
  a rejuvenated appearance. It
  can also be worn over a specially
  made guimpe or underslip and be
  fashioned out of ninon, net, lace,
  silk, cashmere, or velveteen, in
  accordance with the taste of the
  wearer. One and seven-eighth
  yards of material forty -four inches
  wide, or three and three-eighth
  yards of material twenty-seven
  inches wide would be required
  Fig. 10.- a But- ^O'^ wonTien of from thirty -two to
  terick Pattern, thirty-six in bixst measure. It
  is very easy to make, as the gar-
  ment is cut in one piece. Before cutting
  out make necessary alterations on pattern,
  lengthening or shortening the waist about
  two and a half inches above the waist -line.
  The latter will be indicated upon the pattern
  by a hne of small double perforations. For
  wide material place the pattern with the edge
  having large triple perforation to a lengthwise
  fold. To avoid piecing when narrow material
  is used, cut with edge having large triple
  perforation lengthwise, allowing three-eighths
  of an inch for seaming. Cut trimming band
  for neck with triple perforation to lengthwise
  fold. Baste seams wdth perforations and
  notches matching. Turn hems under at each
  side of back. Gather along double perfora-
  tions at waist -line and three-quarter inch above,
  termmating gathering-in line with large single
  perforations.
  
  Sew notched edge of sleeve-band to bottom of
  sleeve with seams even and notch on upper
  side.
  
  Sew trimming band on flat with neok edges
  and front centres even.
  
  There are nictny ways in -n liich the overblouse
  idea may be extended and developed from the
  
  
  renovation point of view. By the addition of a
  skirt tunic it becomes transformed into a useful
  overdress. This may be carried out in ninon,
  lace, or net, and, worn over an old evening dress,
  will serve to give the latter quite a new lease of
  life. Light overdresses of the kind look especi-
  ally well over satin, and as this material has had
  a certain vogue during the past two seasons for
  evening wear, it may be presumed that many a
  woman will have hidden away in some corner
  of her wardrobe a satin dress which in ordinary
  circumstances would have been put aside as
  having fulfilled its mission, but which, if she is
  wise, she can easily utilise in this very simple
  way.
  
  A very useful and at the same time dainty
  evening gown can also be made by attaching
  the overblouse in semi-princess style to a simple
  five-gored skirt. This would look
  very well carried out in ninon and
  worn over a silk or satin underslip,
  whilst made in soft silk it would be a
  very simple style suitable for a young
  girl's evening gown.
  
  In cutting out the overblouse of soft
  material for evening wear, extra width
  should be allowed for gathering. If
  of very thin transparent material it is
  advisable to cut out an underbody of
  the same shape in silk or satin, only
  the latter should be quite plain and the
  overblouse gathered on to it. Three
  rows of gathers edged with a tiny
  frill, as shown in illustration, make a Evening
  very effective finish for evening wear. Gown.
  Carried out in cashmere and worn
  over a simple guimpe, the sleeves and yoke
  of which are faced with lace, the same
  idea may be applied in the fashioning of a
  pretty afternoon gown. In this latter case the
  trimming should consist of the bands of con-
  trasting material as finish to neck and sleeves
  instead of frills and gathers. To make the
  whole dress five yards of material
  forty-four inches wide would be
  required for women of thirty-six-
  inch bust measure, and for under-
  body of evening gown one yard
  of forty-five-inch material would
  be necessary.
  
  A Simple Skirt. - ^Tlie gored skirt
  pictured in illustration is a very
  simple pattern that may easily be
  attempted by the home dress-
  maker.
  
  Before cutting out on woollen
  stuffs the material should be
  shrunk (seep. 425) and the selvedge j.jg ii._a But-
  cut off. terick Pattern.
  
  The diagram (p. 428) shows the
  pieces of the skirt pattern. Some inexperienced
  amateurs have made the mistake of thinking that
  the single pieces joined together would make
  
  
  428
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  a •whole skirt. Naturally they onlj' represent
  the half ; tlie sccoud half of the front goro is
  obtained by placing the front of it indicated by
  three large perforations in the pattern to a
  lengthwise fold ; the other pieces are cut in
  duplicate. As already pointed out, notches are
  made in eiich piece of the pattern to mark the
  
  
  /
  
  
  Pattern Pieces of Fig. IL
  
  position of the gores. In cutting the material
  these notches must be carefully marked, and in
  basting the skirt the pieces with a corresponding
  number of notches must be tacked together.
  Full instructions for cutting and making
  correctly are always given upon the pattern
  envelope.
  
  For an average-sizjed figure four yards of
  material forty -four inches wide will be required.
  A Princess Undersllp. - The vogue for such
  ethereal fabrics as ninon, voile, lace, and net
  for afternoon and evening weeu*, together
  with fashion's mandate that the figure must
  be slim, and that therefore under -garments
  must be well fitting, has tended to decidedly
  extend the sphere of usefulness of that very
  comfortable and neat garment the " prin-
  cess " underslip. There can, indeed, be no
  more useful accessory to the wardrobe, for
  instance, than one of these slips in black
  or whit" satin, for it can be worn under
  almost any kind of gown, and is at the
  same time dressy enough for the smartest
  occasions. Soft satin, it must bo re-
  membered, is an excellent material for
  wear, and is also wawhable, two very ex-
  cellent recommendations for the woman
  with a small drees allowance, whilst made
  out of nainsook or batiste the slip is very
  usefi-.l for wearing with summer lingerie
  dresbes.
  
  For a slip with flounce six and a quarter
  yards of material thirty-six inches wide
  with fourand one-eighth yards flouncing,eighteen
  inches deep will be required. Ribbon beading
  and lace can bo used for trimming if desired.
  ,Jcks running iciven in fig. 12 may bo made
  The back is finise flounce, with long or short
  
  
  sleeves, low or liigh neck, or the flounce may
  be made to button on to the skirt, so that two
  or tlu-ee different flounces suitable for vary-
  ing occasions may bo made to go with the one
  garment, thus affording a pleasing variety in
  wear.
  
  Two alternate fronts are given in the pattern
  pieces. The piece marked (1) is placed with the
  triple perforations to a lengthwise
  fold where no seam in front is desired.
  For narrow material and where there
  is to be a centre seam use the piece
  marked (2). The other pattern pieces
  consist of side-front, side-back, back,
  two styles of sleeves, sleeve-band,
  collar, one quarter of dust ruflfle,
  flounce and band to be used when
  the flounce is made to button on to
  the garment. If the under -garment
  is to be made of satin or silk, and
  the dust ruffle is to be accordion
  pleated, cut the latter from pattern
  piece ntmibered 12 according to in-
  structions given below, and send it
  to an accordion pleater, who will do
  the work for a small charge. The
  pattern is adaptable to either the
  medium sweep or the round length. Butterlck
  
  If flouncing is desired, cut the Pattern,
  pattern of flounce (No. 11), with
  front edge having a cluster of four small per-
  forations on a fold and lower edge at border ;
  if of other goods in either length, cut with front
  edge on lengthwise fold. Cut " 12 " the depth
  and four times the length of its pattern, " 13 "
  twice the length of pattern lengthwise ; piece
  
  
  Pattern Pieces of Fig. 12.
  
  with large triple perforation on lengthwise fold ;
  other pieces with large double perforation
  lengthwise.
  
  To Make. - Gather sleeve along top between
  notches. If full sleeve is used, gather this at
  
  
  HOME DRESSMAKING
  
  
  429
  
  
  bottom also. Join parts with notches matched,
  and, furnishing an opening at centre-back, seam
  above cluster of four notches for back closing,
  or at centre-front seam jxist below lowest single
  notch for front closing. If flounce is to be
  pleated, make tliirteen backward -tiirning pleats
  at each side by creasing from each small single
  perforations in top to corresponding perforation
  below, and bring creases over to large single
  perforation, as indicated by small arrows on
  diagram.
  
  If a gathered flounce be preferred, gather
  top of flounce and dust ruffle, and join dust
  ruffle to bottom of gores. Sew flounce to slip
  at line of large single perforations, or, if flounce
  is to be buttoned on, join ends of band ; sew
  one long edge of band to top of flounce and
  sew other long edge over seam. Work equally
  spaced button -holes on band, and sew corres-
  ponding buttons to sHp as far above large
  single perforations as required for top of
  flounce to come at perforations when adjusted.
  
  Then sew the upper edge of a row of inser-
  tion to the slip so that it will cover the band
  when slip is buttoned on. Trim with edging,
  insertion, and ribbon beading.
  
  For an inverted pleat at back, crease from
  large single perforations near waist-line to cor-
  responding perforations below, and bring both
  creases over to back edges of extensions.
  
  Try on, bringing closing edges of slip together,
  and making alterations if necessary at outlet
  seams.
  
  A Useful Evening Cape. - The Toga cape has
  supplied a long -felt wa.it on the part of the
  home worker, for it is a simple pattern of
  an evening cape easy to cut and easy to
  
  
  Fig. 13. -a Butterick Pattern.
  
  make, yet at the same time bearing the all-
  important hall-mark of style. It is a fashion
  also which promises to die hard on account of
  its general all-round usefulness. Satin, cash-
  mere, or other soft and easily draped material
  is the best to use in making tliis cape. The
  
  
  material should be as wide as possible to avoid
  the necessity of a centre seam. Three and seven-
  eighth yards of material fifty-four inches wide,
  or four and three-quarter yards forty -four inches
  wide, or seven and three-eighth yards of twenty-
  seven -inch material would be required. There
  is only one piece to the pattern.
  
  To Cut. - If material without nap or distinct
  
  
  Pattern Piece of Fig. 13.
  
  
  up or down is used, cut with back edge (part of
  pattern showing double perforation) to a cross-
  wise fold : if the material has a distinct up or
  down out with edge having a double perforation
  crosswise, allow three -eighths of an inch on
  this edge for seaming.
  
  To Make. - Tack the two edges of the top
  together to form a loop at the point indicated
  by single perforation on pattern. Try on to see
  that it hangs well and that the tacking comes
  just at the back of the neck with the fulness
  hanging in folds as illustrated. The simplest
  method of adjusting the front of the cape is to
  allow it to hang straight, a pretty ornamental
  buckle being used as a fastening. Trim with
  hand embroidery or fancy braiding and fasten a
  tassel to the lower end of loop. The wrap may
  be lined if desired.
  
  A Simple Morning Dress. - In the chapter upon
  the " Choice and Care of Dress " it is said that
  every woman should have a simple but neat
  dress for morning wear, especially when she has
  a number of little household duties to attend to.
  This dress should be made preferably of washing
  material and should be cut just long enough
  to clear the ground, or even shorter if required.
  It should fit the figure neatly, yet loosely enough
  to be comfortable and to allow free movement
  of the limbs. All these important qualities,
  which are so indispensable for a really useful
  house dress, will be found in fig. 14.
  
  This pictures a morning dress composed of a
  neat blouse bodice attached to a plain seven -
  gored skirt in semi -princess style. The skirt
  may be finished off with a flounce at the foot or
  
  
  430
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  else may bo left quite plain, according to in-
  dividual taste. For the dress without the
  flounce four and so von -eighth yards of material
  forty-four inches wide would be
  required for a woman of thirty-six-
  inch bust measure, one and a
  quarter j'ards extra material of the
  same width being necessary for the
  .J. , flounce. The dress may be made up
  
  ra!"^'"|/ with or without a lining. We shall
  " ' explain the latter method as being
  the easier of accomplishment by the
  home worker.
  
  Before cutting out blouse bodice, try
  on to see position of waist-line ; if the
  latter is too high or too low rhake the
  necessary alterations by slashing or
  pleating pattern (see p. 421). Also
  make the necessary alterations on skirt
  pattern. This latter can have either
  inverted pleats at the back, or be
  finished with gathers, or else be left perfectly
  plain. If the last-named method be preferred
  
  
  Pattern Pieces of Fig. 14.
  
  
  it will be necessary to cut oS back edge of
  back gore of pattern at the line of small single
  perforations.
  
  To Cut. - If two bias edges are to meet at each
  side seam, for striped or plaid material cut the
  side and back gores with line of small triple
  perforations lengthwise, or if a bias edge is to
  meet a straight edge, for plain material cut these
  gores with large double perforations lengthwise.
  Cut all pieces with edges having large triple
  perforations on a lengthwise fold, and other
  pieces with large double perforations length-
  wise. Either a bishop sleeve or a leg of mutton
  sleeve may bo used - patterns of both styles are
  usually given.
  
  To Make. - Baste seams and join gores with
  notches and perforations matching. Finish off
  right front of blouse with box-pleat, gather
  sleeVe at top between notches. If the bishop
  sleeve pattern is used, slash up at the wrist,
  and finish with a lap seven-eighth inch wide.
  Gather sleeve at bottom between notches.
  Turn under end of cuff in line with large single
  perforations for a hem. Gather the front and
  
  
  back of blouse at the bottom and also one and
  a quarter inches above, terminating gathering at
  large single perforations. Either a turn-down
  collar or a high standing collar may be used.
  Roll the former at line of perforations, or sew
  on the latter with ends meeting at centre -back.
  If flounce is used, it should be cut four times
  the length of pattern. Fold under top of this
  seven-eighths of an inch and gather half an inch
  from fold, or if a heading is not desired, cut off
  top of flounce half an inch and gather at top.
  Sew flounce along gathering to skirt with lower
  edges even.
  
  For inverted pleats crease the back gore on
  line of large single perforations, and bring
  creases to centre seam. If preferred gathered
  at back, gather gores between small double
  perforations (see diagram).
  
  Join the skirt to the blouse with front and
  back centres even.
  
  Sew a belt one and a half inch wide when
  finished flatly over joining of skirt as illustrated,
  and join loose edge of front gore to belt.
  
  A Kimono Dressing-gown or Jacket. -
  For a simple yet pretty style of dressing-
  gown, the now familiar kimono is difficult
  to beat. The trend of fashion also loaves
  it practically untouched, for it bids fail?
  to remain a long time with us, if only
  for its usefulness, which is undisputed.
  
  If it is wished to keep strictly to
  the kimono idea, a material with a
  floral pattern is the best to use. Pretty
  Japanese silks, prints, or cottons with
  floral designs make up very effectively,
  a band of some plain contrasting
  material being used as a
  finish. For warmer gar-
  ments plain flannels and
  nun's veiling may be used.
  
  For the dressing-gown given
  in our illustrations fovu* and one-
  eighth yards of material forty-
  four inches wide will be needed
  for women of thirty-six-inch bust
  measure, with two yards of con-
  trasting material twenty or more
  inches wide for trimming bands.
  A dressing-jacket may be made
  from the same pattern by cutting
  off the front and back pieces and
  the front trimming band at th'^
  line of large single perforations
  running across the pattern pieces.
  A long or a short sleevo may be
  made. For the latter cut off
  the sleeve pattern at the line
  of small single perforations.
  Lengthen or shorten kimono at bottom, and the
  sleeve near notches in side edges. A two-and-a-
  half-inch hem is allowed both for dressing-gown
  and dressing-jacket. Cut all pieces having large
  double perforations lengthwise of the material
  
  
  I;
  
  
  Fia. 15.- A But-
  terick Pattern.
  
  
  HOME DRESSMAKING
  
  
  431
  
  
  To Make. - Gather sleeve along top between
  notches. Join parts with notches marked.
  Try on, bringing front edges of fronts together,
  
  
  Pattern Pieces of Fig. 15.
  
  making alterations, if necessary, at seams. Sew
  bands of contrasting material to neck and front
  edges of garment, and sleeve-bands to sleeves.
  For the dressing- jacket two and three -eighth
  yards of material forty -four inches wide, or two
  
  
  and three-quarter yards thirty-six inches wide,
  with one and three-eighth yards contrasting
  material twenty inches or more wide for bands,
  win be required.
  
  This pattern is also capable of development
  into a useful theatre coat when satin, one of the
  heavier silks, or cloth in some pretty art shade
  is used. The kimono shape has long been in
  favour for evening wear, and its popularity is
  by no means on the wane. When used in this
  way the garment should be neatly lined with
  satin, silk, or polonaise. The sleeves may either
  be gathered into a cufi or allowed to fall loose
  according to indi^ddual taste. Needless to say,
  it should be finished off very neatly, and the
  facings of neck and sleeves should be interlined
  with stiff muslin or other kindred material.
  
  Note. - When ordering any of the patterns
  illustrated from the Butterick Publishing Com-
  pany, mention The Woman's Book, and quote
  number appearing under illustration.
  
  Useful Measurements
  
  
  12 inches .
  
  3 feet
  36 inches .
  100 centimetres
  109
  
  1 metre .
  
  8 finger-lengths
  
  
  1 foot
  1 yard
  1 yard
  1 metre
  1 yard
  about 40 inches
  1 yard
  
  
  HOME MILLINERY
  
  
  This chapter has been written for the benefit of the amateur and home worker, and not for that
  of the woman who wishes to earn her Uving as a milUner. For this reason, therefore, only the prin-
  ciples of simple miUinery, well witliin the scope of the average woman who is obliged to eke out a small
  dress allowance by making or trimming most of her own or her children's hats, are detailed. How
  to make a prettj' bow or rosette, how to sew on feathers, how to make and sew in a head-lining,
  and to line the brim of a hat, are all fii-st steps in millinery which must be mastered by the homo
  worker, and by means of numerous illustrations and diagrams wo have endeavoured to explain
  these essential preliminsu-ies in as clear a manner as possible.
  
  A description of the more intricate work, such as the making of wire frames, &c., has been omitted,
  as a course of special lessons under a teacher would be necessary to acquire proficiency in this.
  
  It is not within the scope of a book of this kind to deal with the latest styles in regard to hats, for
  fashion varies to such an extent that even the latest style in millinery at the time of writing would
  probably be demode by the time this article had passed through the printer's hands. There are
  certain principles of milUnery, however, which cannot alter. Tliese are fully dealt with ; and if they
  are carefully studied and successfully put to practical use by the home worker she will find it qviite
  easy to adapt them to the prevailing modes. The knack of arranging flowers and other trimmings
  can scarcely be taught. It comes as the result of natural taste and artistic instinct. We cannot
  all be originators of artistic ideas in millinery, but at least we can endeavour to copy the ideas of
  others.
  
  This can be done by carefully studying the shop windows and fashion papers, noting the prettiest
  styles and endeavouring to apply them to our own needs. In this way and by constant and perse-
  vering practice, artistic efforts may be achieved by every woman who puts her heart into her work.
  
  
  MILLINERY EQUIPMENT
  
  Apart from the special requirements for each
  hat the necessary implements and material for
  home millinery are few and inexpensive.
  
  If millinery is undertaken regularly at home
  it will be well to lay in a supply of the following,
  and then it will not be necessary to buy small
  quantities each time a hat has to
  be made or re-trimmed.
  
  (1) Millinery phers. Is. per pair,
  used for cutting wire instead of
  scissors.
  
  (2) Millinery or straw needles of
  various sizes.
  
  (3) Stoel pins, long and slender,
  with sharp points.
  
  (4) Silk wire, Ifd. a ring ; satin
  wire, 2d. per yard, black and white.
  
  (5) Ribbon wire for wiring ribbon
  bows. Id. per card, black and white,
  and cotton wire, Jd. to 6d. per ring.
  
  (6) Black and white sarcenet for
  head-linings, Is. 3d. per yard, or thin cotton.
  
  (7) Black and white china ribbon for running
  through head-linings, id. per yard.
  
  (8) Soft and stiff muslin in both black and
  white, 2|d. to 6|d. per yard.
  
  
  (9) Buckram, 6fd., or spartra. Is. Jd. per yard,
  
  for making shapes, bandeaux, &c.
  
  (10) Strong sewing cotton, Nos. 16 or 20, or
  sewing silk in black and white, and any special
  colour to suit the hat that is being trimmed.
  
  The home milUner will also be well advised
  to keep a piece-box into which odds and ends of
  lace, silk, ribbon, &c., can be put. Little pieces
  of this description will often bo found of service
  and be the means of saving many a penny.
  
  HEAD-LININGS
  
  Every hat or bonnet should have a head-
  lining to make it tidy, and also to prevent the
  rough straw or edges catching the hair. This
  should bo put in before any trimming is com-
  menced, although in the case of the brim re-
  quiring lining this would naturally come first.
  
  A head-lining is generally made of black or
  white sarcenet, but any light weight and soft
  finished quality of silk, such as thin glac6, China
  or pong6o, will do equally well. In very light
  lace or net hats a net or chiffon lining can be put
  in, while in cheap hats a soft cotton or mufilin
  will serve the piu-pose. For dark hats, black
  or a colour to tone with the material must be
  used, while white is the best for light-coloured
  
  
  432
  
  
  HOME MILLINERY
  
  
  433
  
  
  hatB, although sometimes a colour to match the
  straw is used for the crown. This is sometimes
  necessary if the straw is of a very transparent
  make. Odds and ends of silk and ribbon may
  often be utilised for this purpose.
  
  The lining for a hat should be cut in two
  pieces, a round or square-shaped piece for the
  crown and a long-shaped piece to go round the
  sides. The side lining may be cut either on the
  cross or on the straight. For the breadth
  measure the height of the crown and two inches
  over, and for the length measure the inside
  circle of the crown, allowing one and a half
  inches over for the join. Commence to sew the
  lining in at the centre of the back either by
  stabbing through the crown or sewing it in aa
  in fig. 1, sewing with an overcasting stitch
  
  
  Fio. 1.
  
  from right to left. The stitches must not show
  on the right side. Where the head-lining meets
  at the back slip the needle through the lining
  and slip-stitch or hem the two sides together.
  Make a narrow nem on the edge of the lining, and
  draw this up with narrow China ribbon after the
  hat has been trimimed.
  
  The crown top lining may be either square or
  round and of a size to fit the hat. Line it with
  tissue paper, and either paste it in with a very
  little paste or sew in \vdth a tacking stitch, i.e.
  a long stitch inside and a very small stitch on
  the outside of the crown.
  
  Tlie lining of a bonnet is put in in the same
  way, only the ends of the lining are not joined
  together, but hemmed down at the base of the
  bonnet.
  
  If the home milliner does not wish to take the
  trouble of making her own head-linings, most
  of the large drapery estabUshments sell them
  ready for sewing in. Tliey will cost from 6d.
  to 9d.
  
  BANDEAUX
  
  A bandeau is used to make a hat fit more
  comfortably, to make it smaller or larger, or to
  raise it off the head in one part or another. It
  is also used for sewing on trimmings.
  
  A bandeau is generally made of buckram or
  spartra wired at the edges and then covered
  with velvet or silk. Velvet is largely used for
  the purpose, as it clings to the hair. For a very
  light hat three thicknesses of stiff net may be
  
  
  used instead of buckram, wired at the edges and
  then bound with silk or velvet cut on the cross.
  It can then be covered with tulle or chiffon.
  This will not of course be so strong aa the buck-
  ram bandeau.
  
  To Make a Round Bandeau. - This is used to
  make a hat either smaller or larger and also to
  raise it off the head. Cut buckram or spartra on
  the cross one and a half inches deep and of a
  size to fit the head, allowing one inch for joining.
  Join into a circle and wire top and bottom with
  silk wire, using a button-hole or wire stitch,
  (see fig. 2). Be careful to lap the wire one inch
  
  
  Fig. 2.
  
  at all joins. Then cut some velvet on the cross
  four inches deep and of a length to go round the
  bandeau, allowing for turnings. Place the strip
  of velvet inside the bandeau with a half-ii^ch
  turning above the edge. Tack in position
  through velvet and buckram (fig. 3). Then bring
  
  
  FiQ. 3.
  
  the velvet up on the right side, turn in the raw
  edges, and shp -stitch the two together. This
  bandeau should be stab-stitched into the hat
  after the head-Uning is sewn in.
  
  Black velvet is most generally used for sill
  bandeaux, although they can be made of a colour
  to match the hat.
  
  A Small Bandeau - Tliis is made in the same
  way as the circular bandeau. It is used to
  tilt the hat off the head in the front, back or
  
  
  SIDE QANOe/vu
  
  
  FRONT BANDEAU
  
  
  sides as the shape requires. Any trimming
  that is desired may be attached to it.
  
  A Flat Bandeau. - This is one of the most
  fashionable bandeaux of the present day. Cut
  
  2e
  
  
  434
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  a circle in buckram ten inches across and cut
  away the centre two inches from the outer edge.
  Wire round both edges the same as in the other
  bandeaux. Cover with velvet on one side only.
  Turn the outer edge over to the wrong side and
  BOW it down, then notch the inner edge, and
  catch down the notches on the wrong side of the
  buckram (fig. 4). Place the bandeau with the
  raw edges next the hat and tack it into position.
  An easy way to find correct position is first to
  
  
  Fio. 4.
  
  place the bandeau on the head (velvet side next
  the hair), and then to put the hat on the top.
  Take off hat. holding the bandeau in its proper
  position.
  
  VELVET
  
  Most people know that there is a pile on velvet;
  that is to say, one way will feel rough and the
  other smooth when it is stroked with the hand.
  
  In cloth the pile or smooth way always runs
  down, but in velvet it is just the reverse, as it
  runs up. There are two ways of finding out
  the up and down of velvet - by feeling it or
  by looking at it. Either pass your hand very
  gently over the surface and feel how the pile
  runs, or hold it up to the light and see how the
  light afTects it. It should appear dark ; if it
  looks light it is the wrong way of the material.
  
  Velveteen should not be used in millinery as
  it is too heavy.
  
  The greatest care must be taken in cutting
  and placing velvet to have the pile running the
  same way in each piece, or one piece will look
  lighter than another.
  
  When covering a hat the velvet should shade
  from the front to the back. It is always best to
  cut out all the pieces together, and then a mistake
  is not so likely to be made.
  
  When lining or binding a hat with velvet the
  brim should be held with another piece of velvet
  to prevent the fingers marking it.
  
  When fixing two pieces of velvet together
  needles or fine steel pins should be used, as the
  ordinary pins would make marks on the smooth
  surface. It should always be tackod or sewn
  with silk, as cotton will also mark it, and the
  tacking threewls should not be pulled out
  roughly, but cut here and there with a pair of
  scissors and then gently drawn out.
  
  
  To Cut Velvet or Silk on the Cross. - Lay the
  
  material on the table with the right side upper-
  most and the selvedges running the length of
  the table. Take the bottom left-hand corner
  and fold it across to the right until the selvedge
  threads run straight with the weft threads
  (fig. 6), and cut through the fold. The fold
  
  
  Fig. 5.
  
  is the exact cross of the material : if the exact
  cross is not cut the bind or whatever the cross-
  way pieces are losed for will not set smoothly
  when put on the hat.
  
  To Join Silk and Velvet on the Cross. - Cut the
  strips of the material off the cross-cut end and
  of the width required. The joins in a crossway
  piece of material always run on a slant, which
  
  
  Fig. 6.
  
  
  means that they are joined on the straight of
  the material. Place the two selvedges or two
  slanting pieces together so that a pointed and a
  blunt end are together as in figs. 6 and 7. Velvet
  is better joined by hand with small back-stitches
  
  
  Fig. 7.
  
  made about half an inch down from the selvedge.
  Care must be taken that the dtirk shade in both
  pieces runs the same way. Silk may be joined
  by machine.
  
  To Hem Velvet. - There is a special stitch for
  hemming velvet called the " Catch Stitch."
  Tvu"n down the velvet once and commence
  sowing at the left-hand corner. First take a
  stitch on the turning without going through to
  the other side, then a very small stitch just
  below the turning taking up a mere thread of
  
  
  HOME MILLINERY
  
  
  435
  
  
  the back of the velvet. No stitches must show
  on the right side (fig. 8).
  
  Roll Hemming Velvet. - In this method the
  velvet is turned down twice and the stitches do
  
  
  Fia. 8.
  
  not show. Turn down less than quarter of an
  inch to the wrong side, then turn over again
  quarter of an inch, thus hiding the raw edges.
  With a needle and silk take up one or two
  threads on the back of the velvet and a long
  stitch on the under part of the double fold.
  Draw the thread as tight as possible without
  puckering, when the stitches should be invisible
  and the hem have a round appearance.
  
  A Rouleau. - Tliis is generally put on the
  under-brim of a hat about one inch from the
  edge, to cover the hat and to give the brim a
  more finished and softer appearance. A velvet
  roiileau a shade darker than the hat itself always
  looks well.
  
  Take a crossway strip of velvet about an inch
  wide and tiirn the raw edges over to the wrong
  side, making them meet in the centre. Lace
  
  
  Fia. 9.
  
  them together, taking a stitch first under one
  side and then under the other (fig. 9).
  
  To Make a French Fold. - Cut a piece of velvet
  on the cross three times the width the fold is
  to be when finished. Fold over one edge, then
  fold over the other edge, turning one edge over
  more than the other (fig. 10).
  
  Next turn over the narrow turning halfway on
  to the wider turning, so that no raw edges show.
  
  
  Fia. 10.
  
  slip-stitch this fold down, taking great care that
  the stitches do not show through on the right
  side.
  
  Velvet Ears. - Cross-cut ends of velvet are
  frequently used in the making of bows, as the
  material is too thick to allow of many loops.
  
  
  They are also economical, as they use up the small
  pieces of velvet.
  
  There are several different ways of making
  these : -
  
  Fig. 11. - Take a strip of velvet, tvirn the
  long point over to meet the shorter one, pile to
  pile, and stitch across the open side. Then turn
  
  
  FlQ. 11.
  
  
  Fig. 12.
  
  
  inside out, push the blunt end of a pair of
  scissors into the point, and fix in position with a
  few slip-stitches. Hem the remainder of the
  strip on both sides.
  
  Fig. 12. - Take a straight end of velvet
  and turn over one of the points crossways pile
  to pile. Sew the side edges together and turn
  inside out, pushing the point weU out.
  
  Or take a cross-cut end and Une it with a
  piece of velvet or silk the same shape. Put
  the two right sides together and sew round
  with the exception of the straight end. Tvirn
  inside out and finish as before.
  
  OTHER PRELIMINARIES
  
  Wiring the Edge of a Hat. - ^The edge of a hat
  is usually wired to keep the brim in shape.
  When a hat in unhned and without a binding or
  facing of any kind, wire of the same colour as
  the straw should be used. A medium-sized satin
  wire is best, as there is more thickness for the
  stitches to sink into and be hidden. The wire
  should be placed at from a quarter to half an
  inch from the edge of the brim on the under or
  wrong side of the straw.
  
  The wire, when possible, should be stab-stitched
  on ; that is to say, the stitches taken through
  from one side to the other so as not to bend the
  hat or wire. The size of the stitch will depend
  upon the kind of straw ; a smaller stitch will be
  required for the finer makes than for those of
  a coarser quality. In machine-made hats there
  is often a double row of straw round the edge
  between which the wire can be slipped, and then
  the straw can be caught down to keep the wiro
  in position. Some of the finer makes of straw,
  such as Panama and Leghorn, are strong enough
  to enable the wire to be simply sewn to one of
  the braids without taking the needle tlirough to
  the ^v^oug side.
  
  Care must be taken to make the stitches aa
  invisible as possible, and strong silk of the same
  colour as the wire should be used for sewing.
  
  
  436
  
  
  THE WO^IAN'S BOOK
  
  
  To join the wire allow an extra inch for over-
  lapping and cut off with the pincers. Unwind
  the silk of both ends and push back the cotton
  under covering, trimming it off where it is not
  required. Then re-wind the silk over the two
  ends together tightly and neatly.
  
  In all good hats, and especially those of a fine
  make of straw, it is usual to cover the wire with
  a rouleau of velvet, silk or tulle, unless the brim
  of the hat is lined entirely. In tliis case the
  cotton-covered wire will serve the purpose, and
  it may be sewn on with a loose button-hole
  stitch.
  
  To Bind the Edge of a Hat. - Whatever material
  is used it should be cut on the cross. First
  wire the edge of the brim, unless the hat is very
  firm and does not require the extra stiffening ;
  then cover the wire with a piece of musUn cut
  on the cross to prevent it showing through and
  marking the velvet or whatever material the
  binding is made of. Cut the material twice the
  width required plus one inch for turnings. Join
  neatly on the cross and get the necessary length.
  
  Tack down half an inch turning on each side
  of the strip and fold the bind in half. Slip a
  pair of scissors inside, and with the blunt point
  stretch the fold to enable the bind to he flat
  on the round of the hat. Then pin in position,
  arranging that a join does not come in the front,
  and tack round the outer edge through the hat
  and the two thicknesses of material, rather
  stretching it on. Slip-stitch the bind on to the
  hat first on the upper and then on the under side
  of the rim.
  
  Linings for Hat-Brims. - At the present time
  tulle, net, soft silk, satin, and velvet are the most
  fashionable for lining the under-brims of hats,
  but of course any soft material can be used.
  Figs. 13, 14, 15 illustrate three very pretty
  methods of preparing a lining, and the material
  for these can be cut either on the straight or on
  the cross.
  
  For fig. 13 measure round the edge of the hat
  and allow half as much again for the fulness.
  
  
  Fig. 13.
  
  Cut the width the widest measurement of the
  brim, plus one and a half inches for turnings.
  
  Put in gatherings at equal distances apart,
  and fix on to hat ; by the outer and inner
  gathering sometimes the centre gathering also
  has to be fixed. Slip-stitch the join neatly
  together.
  
  In fig. 14 allow same width round as in fig. 13,
  
  
  but in the width the tucks must be allowed for.
  For each tuck allow twice its width.
  
  In fig. 15 cord is required. The cord can bo
  bought in many sizes at a penny a bundle in
  black and white. Cut material the same size
  
  
  i/i^'^M^y
  
  
  Fia. 14.
  
  as for fig. 14. The cord can either be put in after
  the tucks are made or the tucks may be made
  over the cord.
  
  Plain Under-Brims made of satin, velvet, or
  silk are very much used nowadays. These
  should be cut out and put on in the same way
  
  
  Fia. 15.
  
  as in covering the under-brim of a buckram
  shape (see p. 440).
  
  Ruching. - A niching may bo made of silk,
  net, tulle, ribbon, lace, &c., and consists of a
  succession of box-pleats made tdong the length
  of the material and fastened down in the centr(\
  
  When made of single box-pleata tliree times
  the length of the finished ruching will be required,
  for double box-pleats five times, and for treble
  seven times as much. Thus, to make one yard
  of ruching of double box-pleats, five yards of
  ribbon or other material would be required.
  
  The single box-pleat is formed by making a
  pleat in the ribbon to the right and another to
  the left, leaving one to one and a half inches
  between, and making the inner folds of each
  meet at the back, but this simple pleating is
  seldom used for millinery purposes.
  
  For a double box-pleated ruche start by making
  a pleat towards you and then another exactly
  on tho top ; make another ploat away from you
  at about one and a half inches distance and
  another exactly underneath. Tack the pleats
  in position along tho centre, and continue thus
  until the required length is made.
  
  Care must be taken to make the pleats of
  equal width.
  
  The treble box-pleat is made with three pleats
  to either side.
  
  To give the ruche a lighter appearance raise
  the top pleat on each side and tack them together
  a little way in from the edge (fig. 16).
  
  
  HOME MILLINERY
  
  
  437
  
  
  When a ruching is made of silk the edge is
  usually miofihed or frayed out. The silk must
  be cut on the cross in strips four and a half or
  five inches in depth, and then joined to get the
  required length. A yard of silk will make a
  ruching for a fair-sized hat. Fray out the edges
  
  
  with a pin to the extent of a quarter or half an
  inch, drawing out the threads the way of the
  silk. Make up the ruching as above, and when
  the edges of the pleats are tacked together this
  will form a very light and feathery-looking
  trimming and one which is very serviceable.
  
  Quilling consists of a number of pleats placed
  nearly on the top of each other and fixed along
  one edge. It is used principally for the fronts
  of babies' bonnets, and can be made of ribbon,
  chiffon, or lace.
  
  A Chiffon Quilling. - Cut a piece of chiffon
  twice the depth required, fold it in half, and
  pin to keep it in position. Place the strip
  lengthways on the table and commence pleating
  at the end farthest from you. Make one pleat
  about half an inch deep away from you,
  make another the same size but underneath the
  last pleat, so that one pleat is on the top and
  one underneath. Make the next pleat on the top,
  placing it so that it covers up half of the first
  pleat made. Continue thiis first pleating on the
  top and then underneath, making the pleats all
  the same size and placing each one to centre of
  the last. Sew along the raw edge to keep pleats
  in position.
  
  THE MAKING OF BOWS AND ROSETTES
  
  General Hints. - The ribbon must be handled
  very lightly if the bow is to have a fresh appear-
  ance. The novice usually errs in experimenting
  too much, with the result that the daintiness
  which marks first-class millinery is altogether
  wanting.
  
  When making bows for the first time it is as
  well to commence by practising on strips of
  stiffish muslin, or old ribbon, or even with tissue
  paper, and then when the knack of making loops
  has been acquired the new ribbon may be
  handled without fear.
  
  If the bow is in ribbon it is better, if possible,
  to keep it in one piece ; it can then be unpicked,
  ironed out, and renovated and made up in a
  different way when wanted. This can of course
  only be done with good ribbon. In any case,
  it is better not to cut the ribbon in separate
  loops.
  
  Do not be too sparing in the quantity of the
  ribbon used or you will spoil the effect. A bow
  
  
  should have a nice firm and rounded appearance
  when finished, and in order to obtain this the
  two ends of each loop must be pleated in opposite
  directions. The pleated ends must be secured
  by winding them ro\ind and round with strong
  cotton or hnen thread.
  
  When pulUng the loops into position do so by
  placing the forefinger into each loop, being care-
  ful not to flatten it down or it will be wanting
  in that smart and stylish appearance which is
  so necessary.
  
  The number and size of the loops will depend
  upon the style of bow that is required, but all
  the loops and ends must appear to come from
  one centre ; there must only be one root to the
  bow, and that must be as tight as possible. A
  single stitch or two may be taken where necessary
  to keep the loops in place,, but these must always
  be under a fold and invisible. It may sometimes
  be found better to mount the loops on a small
  tab of stiff net.
  
  Although there are many different styles of
  bows, and fasMons are apt to vary in this respect,
  if you succeed in making one shape well you will
  be able to make them all with very little diffi-
  culty.
  
  Wiring. - When the loops are long and it is
  wished to have them standing out well in a
  certain direction, the ribbon should be wired.
  The wire may be pinned down the centre of the
  ribbon on the wrong side, made up with the
  loops, and then fixed in position with one or two
  stitches taken on the back of the loops. Ribbon
  wire is the best to use ; or a fine lace wire the
  same colour as the ribbon may be neatly tacked
  along the centre of the ribbon on the wrong side.
  
  A Bow for the Back or Front of a Hat. - From
  two to two and a quarter yards of ribbon about
  six inches wide will be required. Commence at
  one end of the ribbon, leaving four or five inches
  
  
  Fia. 18.
  
  
  to form an end, then pleat into small pleats and
  twist round with cotton (fig. 17). A needle can
  be used if desired to keep the fastening tight.
  Then measure the length of loop required and
  
  
  438
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  pleat the other end in opposite direction from
  the first pleats (fig. 18). Make three more loops
  in the same way, and arrange them bo that two
  of the loops lie in an opposite direction to the
  
  
  Fia. 19.
  
  
  other two, then leave an end to match the one
  left at the beginning (figs. 19 and 20). The tie
  over should be made of a separate piece of
  ribbon, and can be large or small according to
  
  
  Fio. 20.
  
  fashion and on the straight or cross of the
  material.
  
  Bow for the Side of a Hat. - About three yards
  of ribbon seven inches wide will be required.
  Make in the same way as the above, only it is
  usual to have all loops and no ends. The loops
  which lie towards the front of the hat may be a
  little shorter than those which he towards the
  back. The tie over should be rather broad, and is
  better put on after the bow has been fixed to the
  hat. Unless the ribbon used is very stiff, a bow
  like this would require to be wired.
  
  Bows of Piece Silk, Velvet, &c. - A bow made
  of silk cut from the piece is generally cheaper
  than one made of ribbon. A fairly large-sized
  bow can be made with one and a half or
  two yards of silk at Is. lid. per yard. The silk
  should be cut on the cross in strips about nine
  inches wide and then joined together in one
  length. Hem the edges with sewing silk the
  same colour and then make up the bow the same
  way as in ribbon. If the bow requires wiring,
  make a fold at the edge of the silk and stitch
  along twice to form a casing, then slip in a silk
  •Trire before making up the bow.
  
  When bows are made of piece velvet the
  material must bo cut on the cross and joined in
  the same way as for a silk bow. When making
  the loops, fold and pleat through two thicknesses,
  as if done separately as in ribbon the wTong side
  of the velvet would show too much. Velvet bows
  are often lined with silk or ribbon of the same
  
  
  or a contrasting coloiu" ; when this is done the
  bow should be made up as a ribbon bow.
  
  Lace Bows. - Laco insertion made into a largo
  bow makes a very effective trimming for a hat.
  The lace should always be wired before making
  it up. Use fine lace wire to match in colour if
  the lace is fine, and tlie ordinary silk N^-ire for
  a strong make and when a very firm bow is
  required. Fix the wire into position with a loose
  button-hole stitch along both sides of the laco
  on the wrong side and across the ends, which
  are generally mitred. Make up the bow in the
  same way as a ribbon bow.
  
  The Butterfly Bow. - This kind of bow should
  be made fairly small, as it is supposed to repre-
  sent a butterfly. It consists of two loops and
  two upstanding ends in the
  centre. Make it in the same
  way as other bows, only com-
  mence with a loop instead of
  an end. Malce a second loop
  the same size and lying in
  the opposite direction, and
  then a tliird exactly in the
  middle of these two. Sew the
  end under and stab stitch through the root to
  make it very secure. Place a tie-over through
  the third loop, pulling tlie loop sharply up, and
  cut slanting across to form the two ends.
  
  The Alsatian Bow. - This is made in a slightly
  different manner from other bows, and when
  finished it has a very flat appearance. It is
  made with two loops each side and a broad
  
  
  Butterfly Bow.
  
  
  Alsatian Bow.
  
  tic-over, and is used for sailor hats of all sizes,
  for ttu-ned-down mushroom shapes, and also
  for niu-ses' bonnets.
  
  Cut off two lengths of ribbon, one length four
  inches longer than the other. Take erch piece
  separately, and fold the cut edges to the centre
  so that they just touch. Then lay the one on
  the top of the other, and pleat them together
  once in the centre, stitch into position, and
  cover the stitches with a broad tie-over.
  
  To Finish the Ends of Ribbon. - This may bo
  done in the following different ways : -
  
  (1) By cutting them across diagonally.
  
  (2) By leaving them straight and fraying out
  some of the silk to form a fringe. If a small
  piece of the solvedgo is cut off at each side this
  can be done quite easily.
  
  (3) By making a wide hem at the ends and
  three or four pin tucks (very small) just below it.
  
  (4) By cutting the end like a fish tail.
  
  (5) By embroidering or braiding a small
  design on the ribbon.
  
  Lace Quills. - These are usually made of piece
  
  
  HOME MILLINERY
  
  
  439
  
  
  lace. Pieces left over from making the yoke of
  a blouse or dress will often be enough to make
  very pretty quills. A piece of lace nine inches
  long and about two inches wide will
  make one of a nice size.
  
  First of all cut out a paper pattern
  the shape of a qmll, place it on the lace,
  taking care that the pattern of the lace
  comes well in the centre of the quUl.
  Cut round pattern, leaving quarter-inch
  turnings, wire all round with silk wire,
  turning the quarter-inch turnings over
  the wire. Leave about three inches
  of wire at both ends and twist them
  together to make a stem. Cover the
  edge of quiU on the right side with
  fancy braid, rucliing, straw, jet, or
  any other fancy trimming.
  LaceQmlL Rosettes.- There are two kinds of
  icsettes, those formed of a succession
  of loops of ribbon or ribbon velvet, and those
  made of silk, tulle, or net, &c.
  
  To Make a Ribbon Rosette. - ^Rosettes can be
  made of any width ribbon from one inch to sis
  inches wide ; whatever the width the making is
  exactly the same.
  
  Commence as in fig. 21 and make a loop,
  then make a second loop quarter of an inch from
  
  
  Fia. 21.
  
  the first one, and continue making loops in this
  way until there are a sufficient number for a
  rosette of the size reqioired (fig. 22).
  
  Cut a small circle of net or buclo-am and wire
  round, then fix the loops to this, as in fig. 23,
  beginning at the outer edge and working towards
  
  
  Fio. 23.
  
  
  Ra. 21.
  
  
  the centre. It should have a nice round com-
  pact appearance when finished (fig. 24).
  
  
  Cross way Silk Rosette. - Cut the silk on the
  cross the width required and join pieces together
  until you get sufficient length. Fold the edges
  together and gather along with a strong cotton.
  Draw up and fix on a round foundation of net
  
  
  or buckram, commencing at the outside edge and
  working towards the centre (figs. 25 and 26).
  
  Tulle Rosette. - The tulle should be used on
  the straight. For a fairly large rosette take
  one yard of tulle and fold it lengthways. Make
  the first fold the depth required, then make
  another fold on top, then another and another,
  and so on until all the material is used, pleating
  it up Uke a fan (fig. 27). Pin the folds into posi-
  
  
  tion and put in a gathering tliread at the lower
  edge. Draw up and sew together or fix on
  foundation. The rosette will now have rather a
  fiat appearance, as the folds wLU cling together,
  so pull it out to make it look round and fluffy.
  
  Rosette of Narrow Ribbon. - These should be
  moiinted on a small round of stiff net or muslin.
  Tack the ribbon on this in small loops, commenc-
  ing at the outside edge and working towards the
  centre. Make the loops stand up as much as
  possible, and let those in the noddle be a Uttle
  longer and higher than those at the edges. Tliis
  makes a neat tight-looking rosette suitable for
  the trimming of children's bonnets and hats.
  
  SEWING ON TRIMMINGS
  
  All trimmings must be sewn on with as few
  stitches as possible and these few stitches must
  be firm and strong. The sewing must never be
  overdone ; if too many stitches are used, the
  trimmings will have a set and ugh' appearance,
  instead of being light and graceful. This is
  especially noticeable in the sewing on of flowers
  and feathers.
  
  Feathers and Quills. - First sew the quill of the
  feather on to a small piece of stiff net or buckram
  
  
  440
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  (fig. 28). Then pin it in position on the hat vrith
  a hat-pin. Do not put the pin through the
  feather itaelf, but put it first into the hat, then
  over the feather and into the hat again. \Vlien
  making a hat for yourself tliis sliould be done
  before the glass. Then having fixed
  the feather in the right position,
  stab-stitch it through the net,
  taking the needle backwards and
  forwards until the feather is quite
  secure. Fix the tip of the feather
  in position with a tie-stitch. First
  tie the cotton on to the tip of the
  feather (fastening it on to one of
  the cotton loops at the back if it
  is an ostrich plume), leaving an
  end, then take a stitch through the
  Flo. 28. ^^^ ^^^ bring the needle back again.
  Tie the two ends of the cotton
  together in a firm knot and cut off. The feather
  must not on any account be tied tightly
  down.
  
  Flowers must be arranged as naturally and
  as artistically as possible. Small flowers, such
  as violets, cowslips, forget-me-nots, button roses,
  &c., look best when arranged in clusters and
  the large flowers in sprays. Cut off any un-
  necessary length of stem ; bend up the remainder
  and sew over and over on to the hat. Fix the
  flowers themselves into position with a tie-stitch.
  The heavier flowers should be mounted on a
  wire.
  
  In wiring, carry the wire up the length of the
  stem to the flower itself, then wind it round the
  stem and bring it down to the bottom again.
  When flowers are wired they do not require so
  much sewing to the hat, as they keep so much
  firmer.
  
  When many flowers are used it is better to
  make them up first into a spray or wTeath,
  using fine wire to fasten them together, and
  then tie -stitch them here and there on to
  the hat.
  
  Ruching. - Sew this on to the hat from behind
  or take the stitches through the pleats where
  they will not be seen.
  
  A Rouleau of Velvet, &c. - This should be
  slip-stitched on to the hat with a fine needle and
  silk the same colour as the hat.
  
  Bows. - Put the needle through the back part
  of the tie-over and stab-stitch it through the
  hat. Repeat tliia several times until the root
  of the bow is secure. Then arrange the loops
  becomingly, handling thorn lightly, and fix them
  in position with invisible tie-stitches.
  
  A RIVER OR COUNTRY HAT
  
  Material Required. - A hat shape, IJ yards
  muslin embroidery 20 inches wide or 1 yard 36
  inches wide, 1 yard plain muslin, trinuning
  of ribbon or flowers.
  
  Making. - Buy a simple hat shape in buckram
  
  
  or spartra similar to fig. 29. Spartra is the
  better material of the two, as it does not spoil
  so readily with damp. Although it is possible
  to make these shapes at home, they can now be
  bought so cheaply that it is scarcely worth the
  trouble. A hat for the river or country should
  bo trimmed in such a way that it will not got out
  of order quickly, therefore it is better to have
  something quite simple, and if colour is intro-
  duced it should be capable of change to suit
  
  
  Fig. 29.
  
  various costumes. Nothing is prettier for the
  purpose than white embroidered muslin, which
  can easily be washed or cleaned when it be-
  comes soiled.
  
  Lay the embroidered muslin on the table with
  the right side uppermost and place the hat shape
  on the top with the front to one of the corners,
  so as to have the material for the front on the
  cross. Cut round, allowing an extra half-inch for
  turnings. Remove the hat, mark the size of the
  crown in the centre, and cut out, again allow-
  ing half an inch for turnings. (In order to get
  the exact size of the brim and crown a piece of
  paper maj' be pinned on to the shape, cut out,
  and then used as a pattern.) This piece is for
  covering the upper brim, so cut a piece the same
  size for underneath. Line the two brim pieces
  with plain muslin and tack together. Slip the
  material for the upper brim over the hat and
  notch the inner edge to fit the base of the crown.
  Tack the notches down to the crown of the hat.
  If the brim of the hat bends down very much
  it will be necessary to cut the material at the
  back and make a seam to make it lie smoothly.
  Stretch the embroidery well over the brim of the
  hat, fold the turning over the edge, and pin to
  keep it in position. Catch-stitch down to the
  \vire or buckram shape with even stitches. Lay
  the under-brim piece of embroidery on to the
  shape and fix into position wth pins. Notch the
  inner rim and sow the notches up to the inside
  of crown. Make a turning on the wTong side of
  the outer rim and slip-stitch round to edges of
  top covering, commencing at the back of the hat.
  The edge may bo further finished with a rouleau
  of velvet or a narrow braid.
  
  To Cover the Crown. - Cut a round of the em-
  broidery eighteen to twenty inches in diameter,
  line it with plain muslin and gather round the
  edges with strong cotton (fig. 30). Draw up and
  slip over the crown of the hat. Tack round edges
  close to the brim, and put a few stitches in the
  crown to keep fulness in position. Or, if pre-
  ferred, the crown of the hat may be covered quite
  
  
  HOME MILLINERY
  
  
  441
  
  
  plainly by stretching it down to the base with
  the fulness arranged in email pleats. Put in
  head-lining before trimming.
  
  
  FiQ. 30.
  
  
  Trimming. - This may be made of ribbon or
  flowers, or a coloured scarf may be tied round
  and finished with a bow and ends at the side.
  Fig. 31 shows a trimming of ribbon, and this
  
  
  ria. 31
  
  could easily be made up separately from the hat,
  and if two or three were made up in different
  colours of ribbon they could simply be fastened
  to the hat with a strong pin and changed when
  required to suit different costumes. A wreath
  of pretty flowers or of flowers and ribbon could
  be used in the same way.
  
  FLOWER TOQUES
  
  The " flower toque " is an almost universal
  favovu-ite for dainty wear, and when properly
  made looks very smart and pretty.
  
  A variety of flowers can be used for making
  a toque of the kind, and they may be chosen in
  accordance with the season - primroses, violets or
  hyacinths for the spring, roses for the summer,
  geraniums for the autumn. For the last-named
  season very pretty little toques have been made
  of grapes ; in fact, the home worker will find
  that there is abundant material to hand with
  which to carry out pretty ideas, and the more
  her dexterity increases, the more ideas she will
  
  
  get. The flowers can be used either with or with-
  out foliage.
  
  The foundation of the toque may be either
  of wire (green wire if it can be procured) or
  stiff millinery net.
  
  Although the directions given below apply
  specially to the making of a toque of roses, the
  method is very much the same whatever kind of
  flower is used.
  
  A Rose Toque. - Required. - A wire or net
  shape, roses, foliage, green tulle or net, ribbon op
  velvet.
  
  Method. - Choose a shape that suits you well ;
  it should be rather small in size. Prepare it first
  by swathing it or covering it over with green
  tuUe or net of the same tone as the foUage used.
  Then commence sewing on the flowers. Cut the
  stems of the roses and leaves quite short so that
  they can be sewn flat to the shape. Commence
  at the top of the crown and sew the roses tight
  through the centre to the shape. Place them
  close together until the whole of the top ia
  
  
  Fig. 32.
  
  covered with flowers, introducing a few leaves
  if wished (fig. 32).
  
  If there is a distinct turned-up brim to the
  toque, tliis might be covered with foliage only
  or with foliage and tulle, and a twist of tulle
  should be put romid between the crown and
  brim. Or if the brim is very narrow and bend-
  ing downwards, it might be covered with dark
  green or black velvet, which is always becoming
  next the face.
  
  The toque may be left plain, or finished off
  
  
  Fia. 33.
  
  with a smart bow of ribbon or velvet at the side
  (fig. 33), or with loops of narrow velvet and a
  
  
  442
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  standing-up spray of roses, or with an artificial
  oeprey, according to what is most becoming.
  
  FUR IN MILLINERY
  
  Fur was never more fashionable than it is
  to-day, and it is employed largely both in mil-
  linery and dressmaking.
  
  The fact of its being so much in demand has
  raised its price considerably, and it is not every
  one who can afford a new hat or toque of the
  most fasliionable shape every year. But it is
  wonderful what can be done with odds and ends
  of fur, and how, in millinery especially, they can
  be utilised and made into something quite
  stylish. All small pieces of fur should be kept
  as well as old fur ties and muffs, as they can
  often be made into a toque when good for
  nothing else. Or, if not sxiflficient to make the
  whole hat, they might at least cover the
  brim, while the crown could be made of cloth
  or velvet to match the costiune that is being
  worn.
  
  The Cutting of Fur. - Fur should always be cut
  on the •wrong side and with a sharp-pointed
  knife. Place the fur on the table with the skin
  side uppermost and mark with a coloured pencil
  
  
  Cutting Fur.
  
  or chalk where you wish the cutting to come.
  Then get some one to hold the fur stretched out
  while you cut through by the marked Une.
  
  To Join Fur. - Place the two pieces with right
  sides together, being careful that the fur all lies
  one way, or the join will show. Place a piece of
  cardboard two or three inches long between the
  pieces, with the edge close to where the join is
  to be. Push down the hairs of the fur so as to
  leave edges of skin clear to sew through. Then
  overcast the two pieces together with a fur-
  sewing needle and strong sowing cotton, No. 24
  or 30. Make the stitches rather deep and close
  together and draw them tight, moving along the
  cardboard as rfriuircd.
  
  To Make a Fur Toque. - Required. - Pieces of
  fur, a wire shape, brown tulle, brown satin.
  
  Method. - A wire frame of the turban shape
  is the one most suitable for a fur toque. First
  cover the frame all over with a thin brown
  lining or net, then prepare a strip of fur wide
  enough to cover the brim and long enough to go
  round. Join it into a circle and place it on the
  frame, oi'ranging that the join comes where
  
  
  it will not show. Pin it in position and then
  tack with a turning over the top and underneath
  the brim. The under port of the brim wliich
  comes next the hair is generally made of brown
  satin, as it is cooler for the head, and also because
  fvir would BO quickly wear if it were on that part.
  Then take a piece of fur large enough to cover
  the crown, and do not cut it up more than is
  necessary, as next year, when remodelling, the
  hat will be much easier to arrange if there ia
  
  
  Fur Toque.
  
  some allowance for alteration. Stretch the fur
  smoothly over the crown, arranging any fulness
  in small pleats at the sides. Tack it in position
  from the wrong side as far as possible to avoid
  catching in the hair with the cotton. A fold of
  tulle or chiffon should be placed between the
  brim and crown to cover edges. Finish off with
  a pretty feather mount, a handsome quill, a
  rosette, or other ornament, according to fasluon
  and individual taste, or, if preferred, the toque
  may be left perfectly plain.
  
  THE MAKING OF STRAW HATS
  
  These are made either by hand or machine.
  As the home-made straw hat will not be subjected
  to the stiffening and blocking process that the
  bought one receives, it will be more suc';essful
  if made over a wire frame, wearing better and
  keeping its shape longer than if made without
  this support.
  
  As said before, shapes can be bought so cheaply
  - the average price for a wire one being Is., or,
  if made to order. Is. 6d. to 2s. - ^that it does not
  repay the trouble to make one, and the amateur
  always finds this a difficult job.
  
  It wU be wise to commence with a simple
  shape similar to fig. 34, ■which has no peculiari-
  ties in form, and if this is a success something
  more difficult may be attempted, and a close
  examination of any straw hat will show you how
  to proceed.
  
  Choose a frame which suits you well, light in
  weight and of the size you wish. The straw for
  covering is sold in bundles of twelve yards, in
  any colour and many different styles, and the
  
  
  HOME MILLINERY
  
  
  443
  
  
  price will vary from Is. to 6s. per bundle, accord-
  ing to quality and make. Two bundles will
  cover a medium-sized hat, or three might cover
  two smaller ones. Choose a nice phable straw,
  as it will be easier to work with than the stiffer
  makes.
  
  If the straw is very stiff and dry it is a good
  plan to moisten it first by wrapping it in a damp
  cloth and leaving it over-night. This wiU enable
  it to be stretched and pulled more readily without
  breaking. If the straw is a kind that unravels
  quickly, the end should be wound round with
  strong thread of the same colour before com-
  mencing.
  
  To Cover the Brim. - First pin the straw
  neatly round the edge on the upper side of the
  brim, starting at the back and fixing it to the
  outside wire. The straw must be perfectly flat
  and lie easily. Sew on to the outside wire,
  taking small stitches on the right or upper side
  and larger underneath. In fixing the second
  row do not cut off the straw, but let it continue
  on. The second row is sewn to the inside edge
  of the first row of straw. Continue sewing
  round and round until the crown is reached,
  lapping each row one quarter of an inch over the
  
  
  Fia. 34.
  
  edge of previous row hiding the stitches as far
  as possible beneath the pattern of straw (fig. 34).
  If the brim is wider at the front than at the
  back, it should be M'idened by a few extra rows
  of straw put on and sloped away under the outer
  row at the back or sides of the hat.
  
  Cover the under-brim in the same way, starting
  at the back and working up to the head-line.
  When fixing the straw on under-brim the needle
  should always be put in slanting, so that small
  stitches are made on both sides.
  
  To Cover the Crown. - The top of the crown
  should be covered with a circle or plaque of
  straw made in the hand and not
  straight on to the shape. To make
  this plaque, wind the cotton tightly
  round the straw to make a firm
  point to start with, then draw the
  braid of straw around this to form
  the centre, easing it in to make it
  flat. In the loosely made straws
  a drawing thread is sometimes put
  at the edge of the straw to facilitate
  the process, or the outer edge may
  be stretched (fig. 35).
  When the centre circle is well formed, continue
  sewing the straw in rows round and round, taking
  small stitches on the right side and larger ones
  on the WTcng. Each row must be stitched
  
  
  Fio. 35.
  
  
  and eased to the previous one so that they lie
  perfectly flat. If this top piece is made too
  tight it will bulge out when placed on the frame.
  At the beginning the rows should overlap each
  other considerably, and as the circle increases
  the edge may be extended nearer to the edge
  of the preceding row. When large enough,
  fasten off the end of the straw so that it will
  not unravel, and slope it gradually under the
  last row. Make the plaque about half an inch
  more in diameter than the top of the frame,
  and then sew it on to the wires in two or three
  places.
  
  Side-Band. - This is formed by sewing a row
  of straw to the edge of the crown piece, com-
  mencing at the side or back, or where the join
  is likely to be hidden by trimming. Leave an
  end of straw of about one inch at the beginning,
  and this can be caught and covered by the second
  row. Continue sewing one row under the other
  until the side is covered, easing the straw
  smoothly on to the shape and finishing the end
  by turning it up under the preceding row. Tack
  the side-band to the last row of the brim, and
  the hat will be ready for its head-lining (p. 432)
  and trimming.
  
  Trimming. - ^This style of hat may be trinuned
  in a variety of ways, but for heird wear there is
  
  
  Fig. 36.
  
  nothing more useful than a scarf drapery or a
  good ribbon trimming with a styhsh bow at the
  side or front (fig. 36).
  
  MUFFS
  
  The tendency at present is for muffs to be very
  large and either oblong or square ; but fashion
  changes very rapidly, and the directions given
  below are for an ordinary medium-sized m"iff
  which can easily be manufactured at home.
  Although black satin is used in the construction
  of it, the material may be varied to suit indivi-
  dual taste and requirements. Black or other
  coloured velvet, for instance, trimmed with fur
  is always effective, or a piece of the same
  
  
  444
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  material as the costume worn would also look
  well. Tlien, again. £or evening wear a lighter-
  looking muff might be made of crlpe de chine
  edged with marabout or ermine.
  
  The Uning may be made of any coloured silk
  which will tone with the outside. A white or
  Ught-coloured lining is always best for smart
  wear, as it does not soil the gloves.
  
  Strips of fvu- from one to four inches wide can
  be bought at most of the big drapers, the price
  of course varying according to the value of the
  special kind of fur.
  
  
  Mofl of Black Satin and Fur
  
  Required. - 1| yards black satin, fur edging, IJ
  yards coarse calico, down or wadding.
  
  Method. - Divide the length of satin into two
  equal parts, measuring 27 inches by 20 inches,
  and sew each of these pieces together by the
  raw edges, so that they form a round. Cut
  two pieces of calico, about half an inch smaller
  in length and width than the satin, and sew
  them together in the same way. Slip the two
  calico circles one inside the other, and stitch
  the two together at one end. Fill equally all
  round with down, and sew up the other end.
  Slip this down bed into one of the satin circles,
  turn the raw edges of the satin over on to the
  
  
  Average measurements would he
  
  Round face .
  
  Forehead to back of neck
  
  Round neck from ear to ear
  
  
  calico, and fix firmly into position. Sew on the
  fur round each end, making the joins come at the
  bottom of the muff. Slip in the lining and hem it
  in half an inch from the edge (fig. 37).
  
  
  CHILDREN'S MILLINERY
  Baby Girl's Bonnet
  
  Required. - \ yard satin, J yard muslin, \ yard
  Baroenot, 3 yarda ribbon (3 inches wide for
  rosettes and strings), 2 skeins embroidery silk.
  
  Mtthod. - The shape shown in illustration is
  very comfortable, easy to make, and requires
  little fitting. Throe measurements are required
  - round the child's face, across the back of the
  neck from ear to ear, and from the forehead to
  the back of neck. When possible it ia easier to
  take the measurements from an old bonnet, and
  to make each new bonnet a trifle larger than the
  last.
  
  
  14 inches.
  11 "
  11 ..
  
  
  Cut out a paper pattern similar to fig. 38,
  join at the notches, pin or tack up the seams and
  try on the child. If it fits veil, unpin the
  pattern and cut out in the satin, muslin, and
  sarcenet. All the pieces must be the same size,
  and turnings must be allowed everywhere
  
  
  Fio. 38.
  
  except at the seams where the notches are-
  First tack the satin and muslin together, fix
  the side seams and sew them firmly together.
  Turn the satin over the muslin all round the raw
  edges and catch-stitch the raw edges of the satin
  to the muslin.
  
  To make the revers, take a piece of muslin
  the length of the front of the bonnet from end to
  end and iour inches wide, and shape as in fig. 39.
  Then cut out in satin, allowing an exti'a half -inch
  for turnings, and place the two together, tacking
  the satin down over the muslin.
  
  The revers can now be embroidered with any
  simple pattern, or it may be trimmed with a
  ruching of ribbon, passementerie, or swansdown
  edging. After it has been trimmed, line in the
  back with sarcenet and fix it to the bonnet.
  
  Make two rosettes (see p. 439) out of the
  ribbon, sew them to each side of the bonnet,
  and use the remainder of the
  ribbon for the strings. Cut one
  string longer than the other,
  and sow in at each side of the
  bonnet on the wrong side. Join
  up the scams in the sarcenet
  head-lining, slip it inside, turn
  in the raw edges one-quarter inch
  from the edges of the satin, and
  hem neatly all the way round
  
  (fig- ^^)- , , Fia. 3U.
  
  A quilling of chiffon or ribbon
  
  can be put round the front of the bonnet ; it
  
  gives it a softer appearance, but does not suit
  
  all children.
  
  This shape of bonnet may be made up very
  
  prettily in other materials ; they are often made
  
  of material to match the ooat the child ia wear-
  
  
  HOME MILLINERY
  
  
  445
  
  
  ing. Embroidered muslin is especially pretty,
  and should either be left without lining or lined
  with a very thin cambric which will wash easily.
  In winter, if the bonnet is required warmer, it
  may be interlined with flannel or delaine, or
  with a layer of wadding or domet. Although
  the inside lining is generally made of sarcenet,
  any soft material can be used, such as satin or
  silk from the lining of a dress or coat.
  
  Baby Boy's Hat (age six months)
  
  Materials required. - J yard satin, 20 inches
  wide, 6 yards satin ribbon about 2| to 3 inches
  wide (3| yards to be used for the ruching, 1|
  yards for strings), J yard stiff muslin, J yard
  sarcenet, J yard book muslin.
  
  The only measurement required for this is
  the size round the child's head. An average size
  would be 21 inches.
  
  Any kind of material can be used for this style
  of hat as long as it is not stiff and hard. Satin
  wears well, as the dust does not cling to it. Boys'
  hats are usually made with less trimming than
  baby girls' bonnets.
  
  Making. - After having measured the child's
  head, cut a piece of muslin that length plus
  tvirnings and 2| inches wide. Fold in half
  widthways and then join into a circle.
  
  Twenty inches of satin is needed for the
  crown of hat. Cover the band with the satin
  that is left over, both inside and outside, tack
  the outside on Srmly, but leave the satin inside
  loose, as this is hemmed down after the band has
  been fixed on the crown.
  
  Take the 20 inches of satin and make it
  into a circle ; in the middle of this circle cut
  a round hole 3^ inches in diameter. Gather
  round the edges of tliis hole, and fix it on to
  a button about the size of a shilling. A piece
  
  
  Fia. 40.
  
  of cardboard will do to make the button, and
  it should be covered with two thicknesses of
  satin.
  
  Now line the top piece with the book muslin.
  Lay the satin as flat as possible on the muslin
  and cut the muslin the same si^e. Gather the
  two together one half -inch from the raw edges.
  Draw up to the siz;e of the head-band (fig. 40).
  
  For the Head-lining. - Cut a round 14 inches
  in diameter from the half-yard sarcenet, gather
  round the edge also to the size of the head-
  
  
  band. Tack it into the satin crown. The crown
  is now ready to be fixed on to the band. Pin on
  the band, letting the raw edges of the crown come
  between the band and the satin lining ; stitch
  on firmly.
  
  Make a ruching of the satin ribbon (see p. 436),
  and sew on to the band. Fix on the strings
  
  
  Fia. 41.
  
  at each side so that they come just underneath
  the ruch, and make the right-hand string rather
  longer than the left. Hem up the satin on the
  inside of band, and the hat is finished (fig. 41).
  
  Silk Hat for Little Girl
  
  Required. - 2 to 2J yards washing silk, 2 rings
  of washing wire, 1 large reel of sewing silk, ^
  yard of stiff net, ^ yard book muslin.
  
  Making. - Silk hats, or Liberty hats as they
  are usually called, are generally made of wash-
  ing silk, such as China or Japanese silk. The only
  measurements required are the size round the
  head and the width of the brim.
  
  Cut a lengthwise strip of the silk 11 inches
  deep, and this will make a brim 5 inches wide
  when finished. Fold in half lengthways and fix
  with a few pins. Measure one inch from the
  fold and half an inch from the raw edges, and put
  in a row of machine stitching or a row of running
  in both places. Measure half-way between these
  two rows and put in another row. Then put
  in more rows as in diagram, so as to form casings
  to take in washing wire. At one end of the
  
  
  Fia. 42.
  
  
  strip do not take the stitching quite to the end,
  as it will be easier to join it to the other end if
  this is left plain (fig. 42). Then insert the wire
  
  
  446
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  in the casings, putting in two pieces at the same
  time where the casings come together.
  
  Join the head wire to the siae required to fit
  head, and then join the others bo that they he
  in a flat circle when placed on a table. Join the
  silk neatly over the wres by shp-stitching.
  
  Next cut a band in stifl net, the size of the
  head in length (average twenty inches) plus one
  inch for joining and two and a half inches deep.
  Wire tins top and bottom, and cover with a
  circle of stiff net or buckram, and bind the lower
  wire with a piece of silk. Fix the brim to this
  crown by stab-stitching it through.
  
  The crown piece of the hat is formed by cutting
  a round of silk eighteen to twenty inches in
  diameter and gathering it round the edges. Shp
  this over the hat and fix it round the base of
  crown. This round of silk may be embroidered,
  tucked, or have insertion let in as desired.
  
  Put in a head-lining and then trim the hat
  with ribbon or some of the silk with which it is
  made. If piece silk is used a simple twist round
  the hat with a nice full rosette at one side and a
  smaller one catching up the brim will be all that
  is necessau-y (fig. 42). Or in ribbon, a twist round
  
  
  Fig. 43.
  
  and a nice soft bow in the front or at the side.
  A rosette of soft lace with a wreath of daisies
  or tiny pink rosebuds makes another dainty
  trimming for those who prefer flowers. Silk
  elastic should bo fastened to the inside of the
  hat or white ribbon ties if they are preferred.
  
  
  The trimming should be of the simplest and
  daintiest description.
  
  VEILS
  
  A Wedding Veil. - Unless this is made of real
  lace, Brussels net is usually bought for the
  purpose. Two yards of net two yards wide will
  make a fairly large veil. A hem two inches
  wide should be made on the right side of the
  veil. Be careful in laying the hem to turn over
  two inches twice and not to make a narrow
  fold to begin with or the raw edges would show
  tlirough the thin net. Pay particular attention
  to the corners. The hem should be kept in
  position with a row of running stitches made
  in filoselle silk. A small design may be em-
  broidered in the corners, or a narrow fancy
  border all the way round looks very effective.
  The veil may also be decorated with sprays of
  flowers.
  
  When real lace is used for a wedding veil it
  will be very much more becoming if it is lined
  with the finest white chiffon.
  
  A wedding veil can be worn over the face
  or not as desired ; the style of wearing it alters
  somewhat each year. It is generally kept in
  position with a wreath of orange flowers.
  
  When the veil is worn over the face, two
  small wreaths are sometimes worn, one under
  the veil and the other on the top, then when
  the veil is thrown back, the flowers imdemeath
  make a softer line round the face.
  
  When the veil is worn off the face it is eithef
  twisted round the head in the form of a tiu-ban
  or pleated up in a manner to suit the wearer.
  
  A Confirmation Veil. - This can either be made
  of Brussels net like a wedding veil or of fine
  lawn. One and a quarter yards of fine lawn at
  Is. per yard would bo sufficient. A narrow hem
  sliould be made all the way round.
  
  Make a mark in the centre of one of the sides
  and sew on a tape or ribbon twelve incV.os at
  each side of this centre mark. These tapes are
  tied at the back of the neck under thj veil,
  and a kind of cap is formed in this way.
  
  
  HEALTH AND THE TOILET
  
  
  A WOMAN should cherish her health as her most valued possession, for good health is assuredly
  as potent a factor in promoting her happiness as ill-health is in destroying it. It is one of a
  woman's first duties therefore towards herself and towards her household to keep in that perfect
  physical state of well-being which does so much to help her with the trials and wonies of
  everyday life, for a healthy body and a healthy mind are as a rule synonymous. The healthy
  woman, by very reason of her vitality, permeates cheerfulness and happiness around her. WTiilst
  good health is the most potent minimiser of all our troubles, ill-health may be said to be the
  originator of most of the evils of ill -temper, irritability, and morbid despondency. Hence, if we
  would be happy, first and foremost it should be our aim to keep well.
  
  
  How to keep well. - By strict attention to
  the laws of hygiene much may be done in
  the way of keeping our health and guarding
  against the inroads of disease. Yet how many
  women are there who possess even a superficial
  knowledge of the principles of hygiene ? and
  how many more, having this knowledge, go so far
  as to put it into practice ? Tliis may be due in
  the main to an ignorance of the importance of
  hygiene, and a failure to realise the fact that
  it is only possible to maintain good health by
  a strict observance of the fundamental health
  laws.
  
  Cleanliness may be regarded as the basio
  principle of hygiene. Tliis applies not only
  to cleanliness of person, wliich is of course
  essential, but not sufficient in itsoLE for the
  preservation of health. In order to keep well
  it is necessary also that we should have pure
  food, pure air, pure water - cleanliness and
  wholesomeness, in fact, in all our surroundings.
  Neglect any of these essential factors and the
  health, and through the health the appearance,
  will suffer in the long run.
  
  It should be a woman's aim in life not oiily
  to be healthy in body and mind, but also to
  always look her best. The two as a rule go
  together. A healthy body and a healthy mind
  have more effect upon the personal appearance
  than can at first be appreciated. All successful
  culture of beauty must have for its foundation
  that purity and wholesomeness of living wliich
  in its tuiTi forms the groundwork of good health.
  Of what avail, for instance, is the possession of
  classic features if the beauty of the face is
  marred by a muddy complexion and unsightly
  skin blemishes ; or of what use a well-built
  figure if it is hidden by stooping shotilders and
  an ungainly gait ? On the other hand, a woman
  with the bloom of health upon her cheeks, and
  the signs of physical well-being in her upright
  
  
  cari'iage and the elasticity of her step is indeed
  " a thing of beauty and a joy for ever," however
  plain and commonplace her features may be.
  
  Personal Cleanliness. - Personal cleanliness is
  essential for the woman who would not only
  keep hygienically sound in body, but who wishes
  also to enjoy the aid to beauty furnished by
  a clear and good complexion. It is useless to
  expect the complexion to be good when the caro
  of the physique and person is totally neglected.
  Strict attention in the first instance is required
  to the eliminating organs of the body. It
  should be seen that these are regularly made to
  do their duty. Where gastric disturbances are
  habitual no amount of external care will free the
  complexion from blemishes. As soon as the
  skin becomes muddy and unhealthy-looking,
  therefore, the first step is to ascertain whether
  there is any functional disorder to which this
  state of things may be attributed. ]\Iost often
  it can be traced to faulty digestion, which is in
  its turn attributable either to tmstutable diet
  or insufficient mastication of food. Insufficient
  mastication of food is often caused by bad and
  diseased teeth, which are so rendered powerless
  to perform their natural functions. The care
  of the teeth plays an important part in our
  personal hygiene, and it is a subject which is
  fully dealt with on p. 464.
  
  BATHS
  
  The first consideration in regard to her
  personal cleanliness should be the daily
  bath. The temperattu'e of the bath should
  of course be adapted to indi%'idual require-
  ments, but it must be remembered that
  the warm bath with a liberal use of soap is
  essential for cleansing purposes. A cold bath,
  where it can be taken, acts more as a stimulant
  than a cleansing operation, but it disagrees with
  
  
  447
  
  
  448
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  many people, and regular cold bathing with
  some would do more harm than good. An
  unfeiiling test as to whether the cold bath is
  beneficial to the individual can be found in the
  reaction which sets in afterwards. If a glow of
  heat is felt after bathing it may be taken as a
  sure sign that it has done good. If, however,
  Bhivering fits occur, the cold tub should be
  altogether avoided. INIuch of the stimulating
  effect of a cold bath may be obtained by thor-
  oughly sponging the body with cold water after
  a warm bath has been taken. This procedure
  is effective in nainimising the tendency to catch
  cold, which often arises from leaving a warm
  bathroom for a room of a much cooler atmo-
  sphere. Cold baths are baths of a tempera-
  ture below 60 degrees Falirenheit ; warm baths
  are from 92 to 98 degrees Fahrenheit, whilst
  hot baths exceed the latter temperat\ire. In
  Turkish and Russian baths variations of tem-
  perature play an important part in the cleansing
  process, producing a copious action of the skin
  which effectually cleanses it of all its impurities
  and secretions. These baths, however, prove
  entirely unsuitable to some constitutions, and
  should not be taken excepting under medical
  advice. Where they can be taken the general
  effect upon the tone of the skin and complexion
  is most beneficial.
  
  " Do not be sparing with the soap and water "
  is a good maxim to bo observed in taking the
  daily bath. Where the water is hard it should
  
  
  Loofah Bath-Strap.
  
  be softened with a little borax, some Scrubb's
  Cloudy Anamonia, or a prepared water softener,
  such aa Lavender Bath Salts. A few drops of
  toilet vinegar or eau de Cologne also added
  will have a wonderfully refreshing effect. Good
  vigorous rubbing and scrubbing are the next
  essentials. A loofah bath-strap or a flesh-brush
  should be brought into requisition for this pur-
  pose. The friction of either will cause the skin
  to feel a healthy glow. Then again, a brisk rub
  
  
  Flesh-Brush.
  
  c'own with a large bath towel when the bathing
  process is over will give a pleasant feeling of
  invigoration, doing more than anything else to
  stimulate the pores of the skin to healthy
  action.
  
  Hip and Sponge Baths. - Most houses and flats
  possess bathrooms in these days of up-to-date
  conveniences. Failing a regular bathroom, the
  
  
  daily ablution should be performed in a hip or
  a sponge bath. One advantage possessed by
  these is that they admit of the bath being taken
  into the bedroom, and thus all risk of catching
  cold from being exposed to varying atmospheres
  in going backwards and forwards to and from
  a bathroom is obviated. These small baths
  can be had at all prices ranging from 10s. and
  upwards.
  
  Rubber Camp-Baths. - ^For travelling, rubber
  camp-baths are very useful. Those are usually
  made to fold into a small compass and can be
  packed in waterproof cases. They range in
  price for lis. 6d. and iipwards, according to size.
  
  Sea-Baths. - Sea-bathing is very invigorating,
  and when making a stay at the seaside it is as
  well to bathe as much as possible. If bathing
  in the sea does not agree with you, the same
  symptoms of shivering that manifest themselves
  after a cold bath are apparent. Under these
  circumstances, needless to add, sea-bathing
  should be avoided.
  
  It is unwise to let the salt water get into
  the hair when bathing, for it has the effect of
  rendering it harsh and dry, and giving it a faded
  appearance. Before going into the water the
  hair should be tightly coiled and pinned on to
  the top of the head, and a well-fitting waterproof
  or oilskin cap worn over it. This is a precaution
  which should be taken by every woman who
  wishes to keep her hair bright and glossy at
  the seaside. Constant saturation of the hair by
  salt water during the stmtimer months h£is such
  ill effects upon its appearance that it sometimes
  takes months to bring it once more to its normal
  condition.
  
  Salt Baths at Home. - A salt bath may \je
  enjoyed at home by adding salt to the bath
  water in the proportion of four pounds of salt
  to every sixteen gallons of water. Brills & Tid-
  man Sea Salts are very good for the purpose.
  They can be obtained at Is. 4Jd. and 9Jd. the
  dozen packets respectively. Ordinary table salt
  can also be used in this way.
  
  Care of Sponges. - Sponges may be kept in
  very good condition if they are not allowed to
  lie in soapy water and the soap is well rinsed out
  of them after use. It is better, too, if they can
  be hung up to air and not left lying in a damp
  condition. A piece of tape can easily be tlireaded
  through the sponge and tied so as to form a loop
  to hang it up by.
  
  If a sponge should become slimy and sticky
  it can be cleaned by soaking in salt and water
  or strong ammonia and water. Allow it to
  remain in either of these for several hours,
  squeezing it occasionally, then wring out and
  rinse in plenty of cold or tepid water.
  
  THE SKIN AND COMPLEXION
  
  Wrinkles and their Causes. - The skin is a
  mirror, as it were, in which all the defects in our
  
  
  HEALTH AND THE TOILET
  
  
  449
  
  
  personal hygiene are plainly featured. Want of
  cleanliness, clironic stomach disorders, such as
  indigestion and constipation - sedentary Uving,
  unrelieved by any sort of exercise - all show
  themselves in the dull and muddy complexions
  and unsightly skin blemishes vritli which so
  many women are afflicted, and which they so
  often try in vain to cure. Hygienic care of the
  body is the first essential for the woman who
  wishes her skin to be pure and her complexion
  healthy. Perfect cieanMness internally and ex-
  ternally must be the rule for those who wish
  their complexion to be pure and healthy.
  
  Habitual constipation is one of the most re-
  lentless foes the complexion can have. It
  arises from a variety of causes of which sedentary
  habits, want of exercise, unsuitable diet are tho
  most prolific.
  
  A glass of pure cold water taken upon rising
  in the morning, and half-an-hour before each
  mealj a glass of hot water or lemon and water
  before going to bed at night, a little fruit taken
  at breakfast -time, gentle friction of the bowels
  after the morning tub, a good walk in the open
  air, and some simple physical exercises (p. 455),
  together with strict attention to diet, will do
  much towards ameliorating tliis state of affairs.
  In many cases a glass of hot water taken upon
  rising and half-an-hour before each meal is
  efficacious.
  
  Overwork and worry are powerful deter-
  rents to all culture of beauty. No amount of
  care can undo the havoc wrought by unstrung
  nerves or a worrying disposition. Do not worry
  over petty things. Remember that " every
  cloud has its silver lining." There are times in
  this Ufo, it is true, when trouble comes upon us
  with a heavy hand, yet the minor, every-day
  worries are more often than not of a woman's
  own making, and it is the habitual worrying
  of a discontented disposition which, more than
  anything else, leaves its mark upon the face with
  so remorseless a hand. Try and cultivate a
  more cheerful outlook upon life if you would
  permanently rid yotu'self of these vexing little
  lines between the brows.
  
  There are lines, however, that are imprinted
  upon the face by laughter. These lines have a
  character all their own - they give the face a
  cheerful, happy expression, and add to rather
  than detract from its beauty. But it is the
  wrinkles that arise from impoverislunent of the
  subcutaneous tissues caused by ill -health, faulty
  hygiene, and worry, wliich we must set ourselves
  to cure, in the first place, by removing tho cause ;
  in tho second place by strengthening and
  nourishing the skin and keeping it in good con-
  dition with the aid of gentle massage treatment.
  
  Very few women know how to wash their
  faces properly. A mere superficial dab with a
  soapy sponge is often deemed sufficient for the
  purposes of cleanliness. The soap is not pro-
  perly washed off and a hurried and perfunctory
  
  
  drying serves to complete this portion of the
  toilet. These women are surprised that their
  skin becomes coarse and ill-nourished-looking,
  besides showing a tendency to wrinkle. The
  sldn of the face is constantly giving off waste
  matter thi-ough its pores, besides receiving dust,
  dirt, and other impurities upon its surface. By
  the mistaken treatment thus described the pores
  of the skin become clogged up with the soap
  which is left to dry on th.e face, and are so
  prevented from doing their eliminating work
  properly - blackheads and pimples ai'e the in-
  evitable result.
  
  It is above all important that the face bo
  washed in soft water. Hard water is most
  deleterious in its effect upon the skin and com-
  plexion. It can always be detected by the
  difficulty in getting the soap to lather in it -
  thick crusty flakes forming on the surface of
  the water and clinging to the sides of the bath.
  After washing in very hard water the skin
  experiences a feeling of roughness which is
  decidedly unpleasant. This alone should indi-
  cate in one measui-e the injury that can be
  done by its constant use.
  
  Rain water is the best to use, but this is not
  always available. Borax and oatmeal axe both
  good water-softeners - boiling wiU also tend to
  soften hard water to a certain extent. One of
  the simplest of water-softeners, however, and
  one of which the properties in this direction are
  but Httle known, is to be found in lemon juice.
  Two tea-spoonfuls of the juice of a lemon added
  to a basinful of warm water will be found
  sufficient. Lemon juice has the added recom-
  mendation of being congenial to most skins,
  whereas oatmeal and even borax would be too
  drying for many. Oatmeal is especially suitable
  for very greasy skins. The most pleasant way
  to use it is to place a quantity in a small muslin
  bag, sew this up, and place it in the water a
  little time before it is required. The same bag
  will do duty for three or four days, after which
  the oatmeal will have to be renewed.
  
  The face should be well washed in warm
  soft water twice a day - in the morning and
  at night. The night toilet is of the utmost
  importance, as, if it is neglected, the dust and
  dirt accumulated during the day will fill up tho
  pores of the skin and prevent its healthy action.
  A good pure soap and hot water sliould be used.
  Sponges or face flannels should be thoroughly
  clean. It is better, however, to wash the faco
  with the hands, rubbing with a brisk circular
  movement. In the morning toilet soap will not
  be necessary. A few droi>s of tinctiu'e of benzoin
  added to the water makes an excellent skin tonic.
  
  When coming in from a walk, a game of tennis,
  or any other similar exercise on a hot summer's
  day, do not make the mistake of at once waslung
  the face in cold water to get cool, as this is very
  bad for the skin and complexion. Instead, rub
  a very little cold cream into the skin ; allow
  
  2f
  
  
  450
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  this to remain on for a few minutes, then wash
  off in soft warm water.
  
  To Whiten Neck and Arms. - It is as well to
  bathe the neck and eirnis in milk every night
  for a few nights before going to a dance. When
  going out in the evening the appearance of the
  neck and arms will be much improved if, after
  washing, glycerine and rose-water mixed in
  equal proportions is well rubbed into the skin ;
  then dust over with some good powder. Allow
  this to remain on for some time, then Avipe
  gently off, when the skin will be found to look
  beautifully fresh and white.
  
  Rough Elbows. - Tlie skin often assumes a
  coarse and scaly appearance at the elbows, being
  extremely rough to the touch. To remedy tliis,
  in the first place the habit of leaning the elbows
  upon desk or table must be abandoned. Plenty
  of friction is necessary to rejuvenate the skin.
  Rub some common salt well into the elbows at
  night, then wash in warm water, and after drying
  -apply a little cold cream. In the morning rub
  bi'iskly with a good rough loofah.
  
  For Red Arms. - ^Rub the arms every night
  with diluted lemon juice in the proportion of
  two-tliirds lemon and one-third water. Batliing.
  the arms in milk at night-time is also an effica-
  cious remedy.
  
  MASSAGE
  
  Every woman should know how to massage
  her face and neck, as persistent massage serves
  not only to keep the dreaded wrinkles at bay,
  but also to give tone to the complexion, pre-
  serve the contour of the face, and correct any
  tendency to undue plumpness or leanness.
  There is nothing like massage for filhng out
  ugly hollows in the cheek and neck, or toning
  down over-flabby cheeks, which are every bit
  as unsightly as the unduly thin ones. Mas-
  sage, to be effective, it should be remembered,
  must be persistent. It is not sufficient to
  practise it only when the inchnation seizes us.
  Make a point of massaging the face thoroughly
  once or twice a week, whilst gentle massage
  movements should be used every night when
  applj-ing skin food or other emoHient.
  
  After having given the face its usual v,ash
  with soap and warm water, dry it well, and with
  the tips of the fingers apply a coating of good
  skin food. Only use as much skin food as the
  skin can comfortably absorb.
  
  Now, seated in front of a mirror, it is time to
  bejrin operations.
  
  JMace the tips of the first and second fingers
  of etich hand so that they meet in the centre of
  the chin, begin massaging each side of the chin
  from this point, continuing the movement up-
  weu'ds and outwards, following the contour of
  the face. All movements in face massage
  should be circular and upwards. Rub the food
  in gently, but firmly, with the tips of the fingers.
  
  
  Next turn your attention to the lines which
  are apt to form at the corners of the mouth. To
  prevent or cure these, rub the sldn food in very
  firmly with the palms of the liands with an
  upward and circular movement, beginixing at
  eacli side of the mouth and extending over the
  cheek. This movement will also serve to fill
  out the hollows in the clieeks if they are undulj'
  thin, and reduce their plumpness if they are
  inclined to be fat and flabby. After this move-
  ment, gently tap the cheeks with the tips of
  the flngors. Tliis will servo to give them tone,
  stimulate the circulation, and have a beneficial
  effect upon the complexion generally.
  
  Then turn your attention to the httle lines
  which form under and at the corners of the eyes.
  All movements round the eyes sliould bo very
  gentle, as the skin here is very elastic and incUned
  to stretch.
  
  Rest the tips of the first and second fingers
  of each hand on the temple, and with the tips
  of the second fingers massage under the eyes
  from the nose and upwards to the temples
  across the little network of ^v^inkles that form
  at the corners of the eyes. If the skin wrinkles
  very much under the touch of the fingers as the
  movement is in process, it is a sign that the touch
  is too heavy. The movement must be very
  slow and very gentle - a rough movement ^vill
  do more harm than good.
  
  Now it is time to attack the horizontal
  wrinkles which do so much to mar the beauty
  of the forehead. Rub firmly across these
  wrinkles with a hght, upward, and circular
  movement ; rub persistently until the food has
  worked its way well into the skin. Then with
  the tips of the first and second fingers rub firmly
  across these ugly little vertical Unes between
  tlie brows, stretching the skin out smootWy.
  The nose then requires its share of attention.
  The pores of this organ are apt to become coeirse
  and large. To correct this cover the finger-tips
  with skin food and massage from the base of the
  nostrils along each side of the nose upwards,
  afterwards gently applying the skin food along
  the nose and upwards towards the brows.
  
  Now with a piece of clean wliite rag wipe
  away all superfluous skin food from the pores.
  For most skins it will be found advantageous
  after this treatment to sponge the face in soft
  warm water to which has been added from eight
  to ten drops of tincture of benzoin or any other
  good astringent skin tonic, drying it gently with a
  soft towel.
  
  Massaging the Neck. - Attention should be
  given to the lines which form upon the neck
  and to any tendency there may be to the
  unsightly " double chin." Massage will correct
  and prevent both.
  
  Cover the neck with skin food, and with the
  tips of the fingers rub gently across the horizontal
  lines, which are often the result of wearing very
  high or very stiff collars, then massage firmly
  
  
  HEALTH AND THE TOILET
  
  
  451
  
  
  round the throat, afterwards gently tapping the
  flesh under the chin several times. This will do
  much to tone the flesh and prevent undue flabbi-
  ness. Wipe off all superfluous skin food when
  the massage is finished. After the massage the
  following simple exercise will do much towards
  strengthening the muscles of the neck and
  checking any undue tendency to the formation
  of a double chin. Crane the neck, stretching the
  chin forward as far as it will go, then keeping it
  still stretched ; bend the head slowly backwards
  as far as it will go till it almost touches the
  shoulders at the back, then bring the head
  slowly forward again until the chin is allowed
  to rest on the chest. Repeat the movement
  several times, then vary it by turning the face
  with the cliin raised in the same position first
  to the right \intil the face is looking over the
  right shoulder, and then to the left in the same
  manner. Where the double chin is pronounced
  skin foods should not be used; the neck should
  bo well massaged with the fingers, and a cliin-
  strap should be worn at night.
  
  When the neck has become dark and dis-
  coloured-looking through the constant wearing
  of high collars and furs, rub a little lemon juice
  diluted with water (one-third water to two-
  thirds lemon juice) into the skin every night,
  when it will soon regain its normal colour.
  
  The benefits of face and neck massage have
  now become so universally recognised that the
  weekly visit to a " beauty specialist " forms an
  estabhshed routine engagement for many women
  of the wealthier classes who, instead of practising
  complexion treatmcit at home, can afford to
  pay for treatment by experts. HaK-an-ho\ir a
  week spent at an estabUshment like Pomeroy's
  in Bond Street, London, for face treatment and
  massage will be found to have the most beneficial
  results in preserving the healthy tone of the
  skin. The fees average 7s. 6d. for each face
  treatment, or 30s. for a course of six. One
  treatment would do much to initiate the home
  masse'oso into the mysteries of massage, making
  an excellent foundation for the home treatment
  which is to follow. The skin foods and other
  complexion specialities of this firm may be
  had from the principal chemists throughout the
  country.
  
  OTHER TREATMENT
  
  The Steam Face-Bath. - For some skins, more
  especially those with coarse open pores, it will
  be found beneficial to give the face a steam bath
  about once a week. To do this, fill a basin with
  very hot water, to which the juice of half a lemon
  has been added. Cover the head with a large
  towel, bend over the basin, lotting the towel
  completely screen the face, and remain in this
  position until the face has become thoroughly
  steamed. Then wash in soap and water and
  rinse it well.
  
  
  The pores will now be cleansed. As they will
  have been thoroughly opened by this treatment,
  to contract them once more fill another basin
  with warm water to which about twelve drops of
  tincture of benzoin should be added, and bathe
  the face again for a few minutes. Then splash
  it all over with cold water, and dry with a soft
  towel. A little good face cream gently rubbed
  into the pores with the finger-tips will complete
  the treatment.
  
  Electrolysis is the best-known method of re-
  movang disfiguring superfluous hair. It should
  always be applied by an expert. Most of the
  skin and complexion speciahsts have expert
  operators in electrolysis for the purpose of re-
  moving superfluous hair.
  
  CLOTHING
  
  The proper choice of suitable clothing for
  varying seasons forms an important factor in
  regard to our health.
  
  In winter the clothing should be Ught and
  warm - never heavy ; in the summer it should
  be light and cool. All clothes should fit suffi-
  ciently loosely to give the limbs and respiratory
  organs their full freedom. In so far as protec-
  tion against cold is concerned, woollen fabrics
  are superior to all other materials. Light
  woollen combinations or vests should be worn
  next to the skin in winter, and even in the
  summer when athletics, outdoor games, or any
  kind of violent exercise is indulged in, it is as
  well to wear a light woollen undervest, for wool
  is the only fabric which can be depended upon
  to absorb perspiration ; and there is less risk
  of catching cold than when wearing hnen or
  cotton next to the skin, as those fabrics become
  extremely damp after exercise, and very often a
  severe chill is the result.
  
  The Jaeger underwear possesses both the
  quaUties of warmth and Ughtness of texture in
  addition to that of durabihty ; and so from a
  hygienic point of view is excellent. There are
  agents for Jaeger clothing in almost every towni
  in the United Kingdom, so that it is easily ob-
  tainable.
  
  Colour should also play an important part in
  the selection of our clothing for the different
  seasons. For summer white is the ideal colour,
  as it is the one that absorbs the least heat.
  This is the reason why in tropical climates white
  is as much worn by men as by women. On the
  other hand, black or dark -coloured garments
  attract the sun and absorb the greater amount of
  heat. These dark colours are ideal for winter
  wear, but they should not be much worn in
  summer.
  
  The Corset. - Tighi-lacing. - Few women realise
  how very injurious to their health tliis practice
  is. Tight -lacing has the effect of compressing
  the body to the point of deformity, and severe
  injury to the internal organs is often the result.
  
  
  452
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Happily the " wasp " waist is no longer the
  fasliion of the moment, but there is a tendency
  to unduly compress the hips and lower portion
  of the body, which may often have most injurious
  results. Great care should be taken in the
  selection of corsets. It is wrong to economise
  in tliis direction. A httle more money spent
  on the corset and a little less on dress and finery
  would ha%-e the effect of resulting in a much
  cleaner bill of healtli for many a woman who is
  accustomed to stint herself in this direction.
  Clieap corsets should never be worn ; they are
  usually stiff, hard, and unyielding, not giving
  freedom to the movements of the body. The
  best corset -makers are now, however, building
  their corsets with more regard to the hygienic
  laws than was manifested years ago. Good
  corsets now are fairly elastic and pliable. They
  are well planned and built, and are stocked in
  almost every size. It is always as well, if possible,
  to have the corset fitted, as this will ensure
  perfect ease in wear. Various makes are speci-
  ally adapted for very full and very thin figures,
  and it is as well to bear this in mind when
  making a selection. Wliere the corset is fitted,
  the corsetiere will, of course, adapt it to the
  special requirements of her customer.
  
  It is as well to avoid the varying extremes
  of fashion in this direction. Though at one
  moment the " wasp " waist may be the decree,
  at another •' no hips," and slenderness almost
  to emaciation will be de rigueur, no woman who
  respects her health will become fashion's slave.
  By doing so she will often only succeed in
  making herself grotesque.
  
  The sensible woman always knows how to
  strike the happy " medium " whatever the
  fasliion may be ; there is no more pleasing sight
  than a good, well-proportioned figure well and
  sensibly corseted with due regard to the natural
  laws.
  
  Boots and Shoes. - Suitable footgear is a most
  important consideration. The question of fit
  is paramount. The boot must be made to fit
  the foot, and not th'^ foot distorted out of all
  shape to fit the boot. Ill-fitting boots serve
  to deform the feet if their wear is persisted in,
  causing corns, bunions, enlarged joints, and
  ingrowing toe-nails and often other ills (see
  p. 464).
  
  Tight boots also impede the proper circulation
  of the blood, and chilblains in this way are often
  caused. The practice of wearing very high heels
  is particularly r prehensible. A woman wearing
  boots or shoes of this description cannot possibly
  want in a natural fasliion; the weight of the
  body is thrown forward upon the toes, being
  robbed of the support which the heels would
  have given it in the more natural circumstances ;
  the heel of the shoe is placed in the middle of
  the foot under the arch of the instep- the result
  is to spoil and weaken the arch of the foot, and
  rob it of its natural spring : the gait becomes
  
  
  awkward, jerky, and ungainly in the extreme,
  and that freedom and swing of movement
  typical of a healthy and graceful carriage is
  conspicuous by its absence.
  
  Well-cut boots and shoes with medium-sized
  heels and round toes are the ideal footwear.
  Very pointed toes are responsible for a great
  many of the toe deformities. It is not at all
  necessary that the footwear should be clumsy
  in order to be hygienic. Boots and shoes can
  bo made just as neatly and as daintily with
  moderately sized heels as with high ones. They
  should have good strong soles, and not the thin
  brown -paper mixture which is so often charac-
  teristic of the cheap boot. It is a bad plan to
  economise in shoe leather - many a fatal chill
  has been traced to wet feet as a result of wearing
  poor shoes in inclement weather. In all cases
  where the soles of the boots or shoes are not
  waterproof, goloshes should be worn. Mothers
  should make their young daughters realise the
  importance of keeping their feet well protected
  from damp. Girls are apt to be very neglect-
  ful in this direction, and much ill health and
  even chronic invaHdism in after life is very
  often the result. (For Waterproofs, Kaincoats,
  see p. 306.)
  
  FOOD AND DIET
  
  The question of food and diet is an all-im-
  portant one, but it is a question in which wo must
  be guided to some extent by common-sense.
  Constitutions vary, and one woman's meat is
  only too apt to prove another woman's poison.
  In these days of dietarian extremists, of which
  the vegetarians form a typical faction, it proves
  sometimes very hard to strike an even balance
  for oneself in regard to the food question. It
  may be at once said that extremes in diet as in
  all other things are harmful, and should be
  avoided. For most people an all meat diet
  would be as injurious as a strictly voget'^rian
  one. Special diets are of course prescribed in
  special circumstances, but apart from these
  exceptions, as a general rule a mixed meat
  and vegetable diet is the most suitable in a
  temperate climate like ours. One important
  maxim to bear in mind is " Avoid everything
  that disagrees with you, no matter how pleasing
  it may be to the palate." Various forms of
  diet must of coiu-so he adopted to suit individuals
  in special cases. For instance, the woman who
  is inclined to (besity should avoid sugar and
  all starchy foods, confectionery and pastries ;
  whilst, on the other hand, the ultra-thin woman's
  diet should consist to a larg'o extent of the very
  foods that the stout woman should avoid.
  
  The normally healthy woman, so long as she
  is guided by the maxim never to take anything
  that disagrees with her, need not be hampered
  by any of these restrictions, but, and this
  is all -important, her meals should be taken
  
  
  HEALTH AND THE TOILET
  
  
  453
  
  
  at regular intervals and she should never eat
  between meals. It is the average woman's
  tendency to err particularly in regard to the
  quantity of food she takes. She either eats too
  much and too often, or else she eats too little.
  Nowadays people are more incUned to err in
  the former respect than in the latter. Three
  good meals a day are ample for the sustenance
  of health and strength, and the harmful practice
  of eating between meals should be abandoned.
  Dainties and sweets of various kinds should not
  be partaken of indiscriminately at any hour to
  the prejudice of the appetite at meal-time.
  Eating between meals more often than not is
  the basis of loss of appetite, indigestion, and
  other similar troubles. A great many people
  err in this respect, more especially in regard to
  our five o'clock tea. There is no harm in
  indulging in " the cup that cheers," with perhaps
  a thin slice of bread and butter or a biscuit,
  but there is a growing tendency to make quite
  a full meal at this time-honoured afternoon
  function, and where dinner or even supper
  follows at a two or a three hours' interval at
  most, the practice is one calculated to do harm
  to the strongest digestion.
  
  It may be said at once that tea and sometimes
  coffee are taken to excess in the average middle -
  class home. They are both prolific causes of
  indigestion, and many a faulty digestion can
  be traced to excessive indulgence in either.
  Girl and women workers are the most incHned
  to indulge in the tea habit to excess. Tlie evil
  in their case is increased inasmuch as our
  women workers ab a rule are those who err
  not only in taking insufficient food at meal-
  time, but also in not selecting it with due regard
  to its nutritive properties. Hundreds of girl
  clerks may be seen in our great cities at
  the luncheon hour taking a meal of buns or
  pastries, supplemented with a liberal allowance
  of tea.
  
  Economy practised in regard to food is false
  economy, and it is doubtful whether, even from a
  monetary point of view, it proves economy in
  the long run. A few years ago, perhaps, it was
  difSenlt to get a good meal for an expenditure
  well within the limits of the city worker's purse,
  but to-day things have undergone a remark-
  able change in this direction. At most of our
  light refreshment shops, for instance, a well-
  cooked chop or a steak may be obtained for the
  sum of sixpence. Taking into consideration
  the fact that the average price of tea is two-
  pence a cup at least, and that pastries are as a
  rule twopence each, the fallacy of the tea and
  cake diet from the point of view of saving is
  obvious. It is a bad principle in any case to
  attempt saving on our meals. There are many
  other Uttle details in whicli economy may be
  practist'd, but economj' practised in regard to
  the food qi:ostion is apt to cost very dear in
  the end. There is no need to partake of a heavy
  
  
  meal at luncheon time. Where the work is
  of a sedentary nature heavy eating in the middle
  of the day is injudicious. The diet might con-
  sist of eggs one day, meat and vegetables on
  another day, and fish the next, and so on ; but
  let the cup of tea be absent from the mid-day
  meal.
  
  We should always regulate the quantities of
  our meat and vegetable foods in accordance with
  the varying seasons. Thus in summer time
  fresh green vegetables, fruit, new-laid eggs
  should play an important part in our diet, and
  meat should not be taken in such large quantities
  as in the winter.
  
  Too much stress cannot be laid upon the
  inaportance of good cooking. Bad cooking robs
  food of many of its most nutritive properties,
  whilst good cooking appeals to the palate,
  giving a healthy tone to the appetite, and in
  this way stimulates the digestive forces. Over-
  indulgence in sweets or pastries is ruinous to a
  good complexion, and all highly seasoned dishes
  and pickles, chutney, and other similar condi-
  ments should be avoided. On the other hand,
  fruit and green vegetables may be indulged in
  to the heart's content with the most beneficial
  results. Oranges especially are notable as com-
  plexion beautifiers. The woman who takes
  four or five oranges a day will find them most
  useful as digestive stimulants. Apples too are
  invaluable aids to a good digestion. Needless
  to say, the fruit should be in perfect condition.
  Both unripe and over-ripe fruit should be
  rigidly avoided.
  
  SLEEP
  
  Sleep is one of the essentials of life, for
  neither health nor strength can be maintained
  without it. Wlien for some reason or other
  sleep cannot be obtained, the nervous and
  muscular system very rapidly become exhausted,
  for neither the brain nor the body can procure
  the needful rest from the wear and toil they are
  subject to during the day. During sleep the
  phj'sique is not only resting but building up a
  fresh reserve of strength - it is, as it were,
  undergoing repair ; for the mxiscular system
  as well as the brain recuperates itself under the
  infliience of absolute rest, storing up nutriment
  brought to it by the blood in preparation for
  the next day's toil and activity.
  
  Periods of Sleep. - Infants, cliildren, and old
  people require longer periods of sleep than
  others. From fifteen to twenty-eight years of
  age nine hours' sleep should be taken. After
  twenty-eight until old age, eight hours will be
  sufficient.
  
  Tlie bedroom should be quiet, dai-k, cool, and
  well ventilated, and the window sliould be kept
  open at the top, summer and winter, to let the
  fresh air in. If you feel cold, put extra covers
  on the bed and a wai'mer dressing-gown wliilst
  
  
  451
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  doing yoiir hair, but never seek added warmth
  at the expense of ventilation.
  
  Time lor Sleep. - Tliero is much truth in the
  old adage -
  
  " Early to bed, and early to rise
  Makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise."
  
  The truth of it is borne out again in the fact
  that the sleep obtained before midnight is often
  designated as " Beauty Sleep." Regularity in
  the bed-time hoiu" is not possible to all, but
  where it is possible its results are most beneficial.
  We have all experienced that jaded feeling which
  is the result of keeping late hours for some nights
  running, and even though we try to make up
  for it by sleeping several hoiu" later in the day
  we never feel quite the same as if we had had
  our rest at the normal hour.
  
  There are a number of people, such as journa-
  lists and those of the theatrical profession, who,
  from the nature of their calling, are bound to
  reverse the natural order of things, turning day
  into night and night into day. These should be
  careful always to make up their full eight hours
  of sleep. Care should be taken that when they
  have to rest far into the day-time, their bed-
  rooms are well darkened, and that they are not
  disturbed bj' any sounds of the riash and bustle
  of the daily household work. (For Insomnia,
  its Causes and Cure, see Home Nursing.)
  
  EXERCISE
  
  Regular and systematic exercise is absolutely
  necessary for the maintaining of good health.
  Exercise taken in the open air is the most bene-
  ficial, the healthiest women being those who en-
  gage in outdoor sports such as golf, tennis, hockey,
  &c., for these not only keep the miiscles of the
  body in good condition, but they entail a certain
  amount of time spent in the open air, and the
  more fresh air a woman is able to breathe the
  better it will be for her health, and incidentally
  for her complexion and her good looks in general.
  Walking exorcise is especially good ; it has been
  said that every woman and girl should walk at
  least five miles daily, but very few attain that
  standard. Nowadays when buses, trams, &c.,
  are to be found at every turn, and transit of
  every kind is so accessiVjlo and so easy, a woman
  is inclined to walk as little as possible, to the
  general detriment of her health and good looks.
  Many women workers are compelled to lead
  sedentary lives. If those women would only
  make up their minds to walk to and fro from
  their offices and places of business instead of
  taking tram or bus, they would find their health
  materially improved. Even if doing so entailed
  their getting up half-an-hour earlier ( very morn-
  ing, the little self-denial practised in this way
  would be amply repaid by the abundant benefits
  to be derived.
  
  For the woman in easy circumstances walking
  is equally necessary, however much she may be
  
  
  tempted to take her outings in carriage or motor.
  The aimless, shambling walk without sot purpose
  will not do her any good. In walking one
  should always have an object in view, the stride
  should be fiirm and light, the carriage erect.
  Needless to ay, liigh-heeled shoes should be
  altogether tabooed, as they tlirow the whole
  weight of the body upon the toes, instead of
  the pressure being first upon the heel and
  the ball of the foot, and last upon the toes,
  as is necessary for the natural movement in
  walking. Wallcing up and down a room for
  about ten minutes daily with a book well
  balanced upon the head will do a great deal
  towards improving the carriage of the head and
  shoulders. Some good physical exercises morn-
  ing and evening will be found most beneficial ;
  in fact, where the life is a sedentary one, it
  may be said that they £ire necessary for the main-
  tenance of health (see below).
  
  BREATHING
  
  Few women have reaUsed the value of deep
  breathing as an incentive to vitaUty and health ;
  fewer still know how to breathe correctly. In
  breathing the lips should be kept closed and
  the breath inhaled and exhaled through the
  nostrils. Six to ten deep breaths taken regu-
  larly every morning upon rising will act as a
  wonderful tonic to the system. Standing erect
  with the hands upon the liips, inhale a deep
  full breath whilst slowly rising upon the tips
  of the toes - then slowly exhale wlulst bringing
  the heels to the ground again. This breathing
  exercise should be repeated at least six times
  every morning or evening, and the number of
  breaths could be gradually increased to ten or
  twelve with the utmost benefit. Through the
  day-time, when working, walking, or indulging
  in any kind of exercise, a woman should practise
  the art of breathing correctly, inhaling and ex-
  haling the breath through her nostrils an'', not
  through her mouth, as is the habit with many.
  
  SOME SIMPLE PHYSICAL EXERCISES
  
  Tlie following simple physical exercises may
  bo practised at home with much benefit. Any
  particular exercise or exercises may bo selected
  and practised by a woman in accordance with
  her particular requirements.
  
  First Exercise. - Position. - Stand with head
  erect and shoulders well squared, arms hanging
  at the sides, the finger-tips touching the thighs,
  heels close together and toes turned out (fig. 1).
  
  Bend the forearms upwards, with the palms
  turned inwards and the fingers pointing to the
  shoulders (fig. 2).
  
  Throw out the arms sideways parallel with
  the shoulders, keeping the palms downwards
  (fig. 3).
  
  Second Exercise. - Stretch out arms sideways
  
  
  HEALTH AND THE TOILET
  
  
  455
  
  
  PHYSICAL EXERCISES
  
  
  Fia. 1. Fig. 2.
  
  
  Fig. 3.
  
  
  Fig. 5.
  
  
  Fig. 6.
  
  
  Fig. 7.
  
  
  Fig. 8.
  
  
  Fig. 9.
  
  
  Fig. 10.
  
  
  Fig. 11.
  
  
  I^G. 12.
  
  
  Fig. 13.
  
  
  FIG. 11.
  
  
  456
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  (fig. 3), then bend forearms until the hands are
  in front of the shoulders (fig. 4). Then quickly
  stretch arms sideways.
  
  Third Exercise. - Bend arms aa in fig. 2, then
  stretch arms upwards (fig. 5).
  
  Fourth Exercise. - Bend arms as in fig. 2,
  then from this position stretch them forward,
  with the palms inward and the fingers well
  extended (fig. G).
  
  The above exercises are especially good for
  chest development.
  
  Fifth Exercise. - Stretch arms upwards (fig. 5),
  then, with the feet firmlj- on tho floor and without
  bending tho knees, bend the body slowly back-
  wards (fig. 7). This exorcise has most bene-
  ficial effects in strengthening the back. Tlio
  beginner should take up her position at first
  near a wall against which she can support herself
  by her hands £is she bends.
  
  Sixth Exercise. - Stretch tho arms upwards
  (fig. 5), then, without bending the knees, bend
  forwards until the tips of the fingers touch
  tho floor in front (fig. 8). The knees must
  not be bent under any consideration. If you
  cannot touch the floor at fii'st, bend as far as
  5'ou can without bending the knees ; the rest
  will come with practice. This exercise is of
  enormous value in giving suppleness to the
  figure, reducing obesity and strengthening the
  abdomen. It should be performed regularly by
  those who are incUned to stoutness. After
  practising Exercise V. and Exercise VI. separ-
  ately, practise both movements one after the
  other, bending backwards and forwards in turn
  several times.
  
  Seventh Exercise. - ^Trunk -twisting movement.
  Place the hands behind the neck, the finger-tips
  just meeting (fig. 9), twist tho body slowly to
  the right (fig. 10). Tlion after turning slowly
  to the front again, twist the body to the left
  in the same manner. This exercise gives supple-
  ness to the figure and has a most beneficial
  effect upon the internal organs.
  
  Eighth Exercise. - Lie down on floor with arms
  extended behind tho head and the feet well to-
  gether. Gently raise the left leg as high as it
  will go (fig. 11), then slowly lower it to the
  floor again. Raise and lower the right leg in
  the same manner. Repeat several times, then
  raise and lower both logs together (fig. 12).
  This is also an effective exorcise for reducing
  superfluous flesh and curing constipation and
  digestive troubles.
  
  Ninth Exercise. - Bend tho knees as in fig. 13,
  plaf'ing both hands on the ground in front of
  you. Then, without bonding the arms, throw
  out the logs to the rear (fig. 14). Bond tho
  arms until tho chest nearly touches tho floor
  (fig. 15). Then straighten the arms until the
  position is again the same as fig. 14. Return
  to position shown in fig. 13.
  
  Tlus exercise is also very good for digestive
  troubles.
  
  
  The Value of Housework. - Housework is a
  source of exercise wliich has a decidedly health-
  giving value. Turning mattresses and making
  beds are very ordinary and seemingly unin-
  teresting houseliold duties, but from the point
  of view of health thoy are good ; tho more
  energy and interest a woman displays in
  following the ordinary routine of her domestic
  duties, the less danger does she run of
  becoming a victim to nerves and other kindred
  feminine complaints. Slie must not overdo
  things, however, as it is as harmful to work too
  hard as to work too little, but if she goes through
  with her light household duties cheerfully and
  ^nllingly, taking pleasure in her work, they
  cannot but be productive of physical benefit
  to her. It is not every one who can indulge
  in tennis, golf, and other similar outdoor and
  health-giving exercises, but there are very few
  women who have an excuse for not availing
  themselves of the exercise to be had in the daily
  routine of household work. Let them therefore,
  if they value their health, make the most of
  their opportunities in this direction.
  
  CARE OF THE HAIR
  
  No woman who values her appearance can
  afford to neglect her hair, for a fine, well-kept
  head of hair forms indeed a " woman's crowning
  glory," whereas dull-looking, ill-kept tresses tend
  to show more than anything else that she lacIvS
  that dainty and scrupulous care of her person
  which should prove one of the chief charac-
  teristics of her sex.
  
  Brushing the Hair. - Tlio hair should be
  thoroughly brushed for at least from five to eight
  minutes each morning and evening, and even
  longer if it is particularly thick and luxuriant.
  Care should be taken in tlie selection of the
  brushes. These should bo of medium hardness
  - extremely hard brushes do more liarm than
  good. A moderately stiff brush might be used
  for the hair, and a softer one for the scalp.
  Part the hair in two divisions from the centre
  of the forehead to tho nape of the nock, then
  brush it at each side with firm, even, and rapid
  but not unduly heavy strokes. Few women
  understand the knack of hair -brushing, and
  more harm than good is done by an unduly
  harsh treatment with tho brush. The brushing
  should be sufficiently brisk and vigorous to set
  the oil glands of tho scalp in action. A healthy
  glow is felt over tho head and scalp when tho
  brushing is properly dono.
  
  Combing the Hair. - It is as well to take out
  tho tangles with the comb before brushing,
  taking caro not to brealc tho hair by pulling it
  too hard. The teeth of the comb should not
  be too sharp ; they should be firm and strong,
  however, and not easily breakable. Tortoise-
  shell combs are the best, but these are not
  within the reach of every purse. Very good
  
  
  HEALTH AND THE TOILET
  
  
  457
  
  
  combs can be obtained for the expenditiire of
  from Is. 6d. to 2s. ; but great care should be
  taken in their selection. The scalp should never
  be scraped with the comb, as this induces irri-
  tation and dandruff ; neither should " back-
  combing," which is the name given to the pro-
  cess of fluffing out the hair by combing it back
  from the ends to the roots, in order to give it
  the appearance of an added thickness, be much
  practised.
  
  After thoroughly brushing and combing the
  hair at night it is best to do it up in one or two
  very loose plaits, in order to give it a much-
  needed rest from the strain to which it has been
  subjected bj' the exigencies of the coiffure during
  the day-time. When the hair is tightly braided
  it cannot enjoy the benefit of this rest.
  
  Scalp Massage. - Much benefit can be derived
  from gently massaging the scalp with the tips
  of the fingf^rs, using a quick, circular movement.
  Part the hair in the middle, massage gently
  from and round the parting, then separate the
  hair in strands, and massage the scalp from and
  round the smaller partings thus made. The
  friction so caused stimulates the oil glands, and
  does much to promote their healthy action.
  Tliis massage may take place night or morning,
  but preferably in the morning, when the scalp
  is not tired. For very dry hair a little cocoa -
  butter might be applied with the tips of the
  fingers during the massaging process ; it should
  be rubbed gently into the scalp and not allowed
  to go over the hair.
  
  Washing the Hair. - Too frequent washing of
  the hair is injurious, as it has the effect of re-
  moving the natiiral oil. No hard-and-fast rule
  can be laid down as to how often the hair should
  be washed ; it is a matter which depends upon
  the nature and quantity of the hair and the
  condition of the scalp. People with abnormally
  greasy hair, for instance, require to wash it once
  in a fortnight or tliree weeks to keep it in a good
  condition ; whilst dwellers in the to^\Ta are
  compelled to wash their hair- more often than
  people who live in the country.
  
  On the other hand, people with dry hair
  should wasli it as seldom as is compatible with
  perfect cleanliness. A good plan for those whose
  hair tends to drj'-ness is to rub oil well into the
  scalp twenty-four hours before wasliing. This
  will obviate any tendency of the hair to become
  harsh and brittle after the shampoo. One im-
  portant point to remember is that soap should
  never be rubbed on to the hair during the wash-
  ing process. The best way to wash the hair is to
  dissolve a little good soap in hot water (Castile
  Soap is very good for the purpose), beat it into a
  lather, and then rub it well into the scalp until a
  lather is formed all over the head. Continue this
  operation in fresh hot water, still rubbing the
  lather well in. Tlien thoroughly rinse in hot
  water until all the soap is removed. A final
  rinsing can be given in cold water if required.
  
  
  Be careful to thoroughly dry the hair after
  washing, as a failure to do this often causes the
  dandruff which is so prejudicial to the health of
  the hair. Many good shampoo powders are sold
  which can also bo used in this way. The yolks of
  one or two eggs beaten up to a froth and mixed
  with hot water also make a very good shampoo.
  
  If people would onlj' realise the cleansing
  properties of thorough brusliing they would not
  need to wash their hair so often. It is most
  important, however, that the brushes should be
  kept scrupulously clean. Attention to these
  details go a long way towards keeping the hair
  and scalp in a healthy condition.
  
  Where the hair is inclined to be unduly dry
  and brittle, a little Rowland's Macassar Oil or
  cocoa-butter should be well rubbed into the scalp
  twice a week. The former preparation should
  be used sparingly, two or three drops being
  sufficient to impart a delightful gloss. For un-
  duly greasy hair a little bay rum i-ubbed into
  the roots twice a week will be found to have
  beneficial results in most cases.
  
  Soda should never be used in washing the
  hair, for although it gives it a pretty, fluffy
  appearance, and tends to make fair hair look
  fairer, yet it is very injurious, having a most
  drying and irritating effect upon the scalp,
  causing the hair to split and break, and after
  a time to fall, if constantly used. Occasional
  tipping (i.e. cutting the ends of the hair) and
  singeing is beneficial when the hair is broken
  and the ends uneven, but the old idea that
  constant tipping and singeing was absolutely
  necessary to keep the hair in good condition is
  now altogether exjiloded.
  
  Toilet Brushes. - It is very important to keep
  hair brushes verj' clean. Tlaey should always
  be kept under cover and not allowed to lie about
  exposed to the dust. Then wash them once a
  week or as often as occasion requires. Put
  sufficient hot water into a bowl or basin to cover
  the bristles of the brush and add a good tea-
  spoonful of borax, a lump of soda, or enough
  ammonia to make the water smell rather
  strongly. Allow this to become luke-warm.
  Remove all hairs from the brush and dab it up
  and down in the water until it looks quite clean.
  The water must not be allowed to come over
  the back of the brush, or it is liable to loosen it
  and destroy the polish on the wood. Rinse
  thorouglily in cold water, wliich will prevent
  the bristles from becoming soft. Shake out the
  water, wipe the back of the brush with a towel,
  and dry as quickly as possible in the open air
  or in a warm atmosphere.
  
  Soda should not be used for fine and expensive
  brushes as it might spoil the appeai-ance of the
  backs ; borax or ammonia are safer materials.
  
  Polished wood or ebony backs can bo rubbed
  up with a little furniture polish when the brushes
  are dry ; tortoise-shell or ivory backs with a
  little sweet oil.
  
  
  458
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  To Wash Combs. - Make a lather of soap and
  wator. Take a small nail brush with crisp but
  not unduly hard bristles, and apply the soap-
  suds to the comb, biiishing from the back of
  the comb to the edges of the teeth (left to
  right) with a brisk even movement. This
  brings out the dirt more effectively than by
  brusliing the comb lengthways. Rinse well
  in cold water. Xever lot the comb lie in hot
  water - doing this is apt to bend it and make
  it brittle.
  
  Falling Hair. - Falling hair may as a rule be
  regarded as a sign of ill health, hence it is
  necessary that any bodily condition which may
  be discovered as tending to produce the affliction
  in question should be duly corrected. Among
  lotions which may be used for strengthening
  the growth of the hair and preventing its falling
  out is that used by the late Sir Erasmus Wilson.
  It consists of : -
  
  Strong liquor of ammonia . . . J an ounce.
  
  Chloroform J an ounce.
  
  Oil of sesame } an ounce.
  
  Oil of lemon } an ounce.
  
  Spirits of rosemary being added up to 4 ounces.
  
  A little of tliis . should be rubbed into the
  scalp with a small sponge every other day.
  The hair should bo parted from the nape of the
  neck to the forehead, and the tonic well rubbed
  into the parting thus made. Then the hair at
  the sides should be separated into strands, and
  the tonic applied to the scalp at the smaller
  partings. This tonic is especially good for dry
  hair.
  
  For greasy hair the following preparation
  should be used : -
  
  Cantharides 2 drachms.
  
  Oil of lemon J an ounce.
  
  Bed lavender 2 druchms.
  
  Spirits of Rosemary up to 4 ounces.
  
  A little paraffin well rubbed into the scalp
  at night-time with the tips of the fingers in
  some cases swjta as a very efficient tonic.
  
  One important point to remember is that the
  hair and scalp should be well shampooed before
  first beginning to use a hair tonic if the utmost
  benefit is to bo derived from its use.
  
  Grey Hairs. - As a rule fair-haired women do
  not become grey with advancing years as soon
  as their dark-haired sisters, and the woman with
  dark hair is also the one most liable to be afflicted
  with premature grej'ness.
  
  Premature greyness can in many cases be
  arrested, whilst the greyness that comes of
  advancing years must neces-sarily take its course.
  The woman whose locks show a tendency to
  become grey before she has attained the ago of
  thirty should at once consult a good hair
  specialist, and so try to nip the mischief in the
  bud.
  
  Grey hairs, like wrinkles, are often caused
  
  
  by constant worry or disorder of the nervous
  system, and the general health requires atten-
  tion if the progress of the wintry locks is to
  be arrested. It h£is been said that constantly
  washing the hair with soda is very conducive
  to premature greyness. An excessively dry con-
  dition of the scalp should be avoided, and some
  good nourishing hair tonic regularly applied.
  
  Dyeing the Hair. - The woman who wishes to
  dye her hair to hide the grey of advancing years
  would do well to think before she takes this
  step. Locks that are dyed serve in some in-
  explicable manner to emphasise the lines on the
  face, and thus, if she manages to conceal age by
  art in one direction, she only succeeds in em-
  phasising it in the other. The young woman,
  however, whose locks present early the pepper
  and salt appearance which is often a prelude to
  complete greyness, cannot be so much blamed
  if she attempts to conceal by art what natural
  means have failed to cure. One word of warn-
  ing, however, in this direction - never attempt
  the dyeing process yourself ; go to a good and
  experienced hairdresser who knows from ex-
  perience of the safest preparations, and who is
  an expert in applying them in the proper
  manner.
  
  The amateur hair dyer has often awakened in
  the morning to find her locks turned green or
  some other weird colour. All her efforts to
  alter their appearance has been unavailing, and
  she has been compelled to go to a hair specialist
  in the long riui. Needless to say, all her trouble
  and anxiety would have been saved if she had
  followed this course in the beginning.
  
  False Hair. - False hair enters so largely into
  the scheme of fashionable hair-dressing that a
  few words on tho subject will not be amiss.
  False curls, plaits, twists of all kinds are re-
  quisitioned in the present-day coiffures, even
  by those whose locks are natiirally abundant.
  The wearing of masses of false curls over tho
  natural hair cannot but bo harmful to th^ scalp,
  which becomes unduly heated as the fresh air,
  so essential to the health of the hair, is ex-
  cluded. The weight of a light, false plait or
  twist wound round tho head is almost imper-
  ceptible, and so additions of this kind to tho
  natural locks cannot do much harm, but it is
  hoa\'y masses of curls and coils which should bo
  avoided. If some addition is required to the
  tresses, the best way is to save up one's hair
  combings until there are sufficient for a plait,
  a switch or coil, and send them to a good hair-
  dresser to be made up. The combings must bo
  kept in a well-closed box, and they should not
  bo kept too long before being made up, or they
  will become dull and lose their colour.
  
  The Coiffure. - Whatever care may be given
  to other details of the toilette will be nullified
  to a certain extent by an ill-dressed head of
  hair. The clever woman realises that her looks
  depend a great deal upon the suitable arrange-
  
  
  HEALTH AND THE TOILET
  
  
  459
  
  
  ment of her tresses, and she takes pains to dress
  her hair to suit her face. When she possesses a
  pretty forehead and well-arched eyebrows she
  dresses her hair well away from the brows,
  knowing that it is the style which will suit
  her best.
  
  If her face is unduly long, with prominent
  features, she shuns the middle parting, which
  could only add to its length. If, on the other
  hand, it inclines to undue squareness or plump-
  ness, she avoids the pompadour, which would
  only tend to accentuate these defects.
  
  There is nothing more unsightly than Ul-
  kempt, straggly tresses, unless it is the hair
  brushed up so stiffly and strained so tightly as
  to give an appearance of being pulled out by
  the roots.
  
  Tliose who are wise realise that the hair is a
  frame, as it were, to the face, which can be
  made to beautify the picture it surrounds, or
  else to detract very materially from its beauty.
  
  Tlie best coiffures invariably convey an idea
  of natui-alness of arrangement, although artificial
  waving and other expedients may have been
  resorted to in order to bring about the desired
  results.
  
  Waving and Curling the Hair. - It is not given
  to us all to have natm-ally wavy or curly hair.
  For those who are so fortunate as to possess it,
  the difficulties of hair-dressing are materially
  lessened, for wavy hair has a way of arranging
  itself naturally and becomingly with very httle
  care. It has the advantage also of never look-
  ing really untidy, although " artistic untidiness "
  is generally the effect of curly tresses, for the
  little curls rebel at being unduly restricted by
  hairpins and ribbons, and have a knack of
  breaking away from the restraint of these
  accessories of the coiffure upon the least pro-
  vocation, but with the happiest results.
  
  Where the hair is inclined to be fluff j' much
  may be done to simulate the natural wave.
  Of all forms of artificial waving that of doing up
  the hair in good waving pins is perhaps the
  most satisfactory for the woman who dresses
  her own hair.
  
  Nowadays, it is true, very excellent waving
  and curling tongs and irons are sold, but to
  use them satisfactorily requires the knack of a
  trained coiffeur. The home use of curling and
  waving irons of all kinds should be discouraged,
  for the hair is often invariably impoverished by
  constant burning with hot tongs. It requires
  an expert to use them properly. If you
  must use them, take a course of lessons in
  waving from a good hairdresser, or, bettor still,
  go to the hairdresser once a week or once a
  fortnight to have the hair waved. What is
  called the " Marcelle " wave will last a week or
  even a fortnight with fluffy hair, and tho
  hairdresser's charge as a rule does not come to
  more than Is. M..
  
  The Use of Waving and Curling Pins.- Of
  
  
  curling and waving pins those sold by Messrs.
  Hinde are perhaps amongst the best. Tliey
  can be obtained from almost any hairdresser or
  draper in the United Iviiigdom, and are very
  easy to use. Upon getting up in the morning
  separate the part of the hair which is to be
  waved into strands, and twist each strand
  round a waver. By the time the toilet is com-
  plete and it is time to begin the coiffure, upon
  taking out the pins it will be found that the hair
  is well and naturally waved. If the hair is
  inclined to be abnormally greasy, it will not
  wave quite so quickly, then it will be neces-
  sary sometimes to leave the pins in over -night.
  This should not be done often, however, as the
  hair needs rest during the night-time, and
  should not be subjected to any unnecessary
  strain if this can be avoided. A little rum or
  spirit of any kind rubbed on to the hair before
  waving will very often act as a most effective
  curling fluid ; often also by slightly warming
  the pins in the flame of a candle or a gas jet
  before using, the hair will be found to wave much
  more quickly. Fringes are very little worn at
  the present day ; a few stray curls here and
  there on the forehead are the utmost concession
  made by fashion to those who find a fringe of
  some kind necessary. One of Hinde's curlers
  will be all that is necessary for the curling of
  the present-day fringe. \Vhere the hair is
  unusually dank and greasy two might be used,
  but care must be taken to avoid the very
  stiffly curled fringe which is now so terribly
  deniode.
  
  Dressing the Hair. - In almost every successful
  coiffure the front and back portions of the hair
  are dressed separately. After having waved the
  hair, part it first of all from ear to ear. This
  will separate the front and back portions.
  
  Comb up the back portion towards the centre
  of the back of the head, and if the hair is long
  tie it in the required position, or fasten it with
  a hair-binder. It is better not to tie short hair,
  as more can be made of it if left loose. Then
  take the front portion, shaking it down over
  the face, and comb it well. If the pompadoiu*
  effect is required, separate the hair into three
  divisions, gently fluff the centre part of the
  division with the comb, turn it up and fasten
  into position with an ornamental comb. Do
  the same with each of the side pieces, taking
  care not to leave a parting on either side. With
  fluffy hair the pompadour effect can be achieved
  without the aid of a pad ; with very straight
  hair a light pad is necessary - it must be a verj'
  light one and the hair must not be strained too
  tightly over it.
  
  If a parting is required, part in two in tho
  middle, take up each side separately, gently
  push the hair forward, and keep it in place
  with side -combs. Tlio harsh, even parting is a
  thing of the past nowadays ; the hair is always
  parted loosely, and a little wave made to fall
  
  
  460
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  over tlie forehead on each side. If preferred
  the parting can be made to come to one
  side.
  
  These preliminary steps carefully attended
  to, the foundation of a good coiffiu-e is made ;
  the hair can now be done in the style pre-
  ferred.
  
  Fashionable Coiffures. - In the winter season
  190&-10, a stylo of hairdi-cssing known as the
  " Turban Coiffiiro " was introduced into England
  fiom Paris, and became pretty generally adopted
  by all those who wished to bo " in the fashion."
  
  
  A typical English Coiffure.
  
  This style of head-dress, however, though
  admirably suited to our fair neighbours across
  the Channel, was by no means universally
  becoming to English faces. The foundation of
  the coiffure was a large turban frame which
  fitted the head like a cap ; the hair was drawn
  through a hole at the base of the frame and
  arranged over it in a flat chignon or turban,
  whilst a straight band of hair drawn round the
  chignon so formed completed the coiffure. By
  reason of its general unbecomingness to English
  faces the reign of the " Turban " was short-
  hved. English hairdressers met together in
  conference to deliberate whether it was not
  possible to design coiffures in England instead
  of adopting the Paris stylos. As a result of
  their deliberations, a typical English coiffure
  has been introduced which bids fair to lead
  the fashion for some time to come.
  
  The curls which were so great a feature of
  the fashion in coiffures during the early part
  of 1909 have boon revived, only with a differ-
  ence. Tlioy are much larger, and are generally
  built on frames still retaining something of the
  tiirban shape. Those are encircled by a coil
  of hair drawn in many cases through tortoise-
  shell rings, which form part of the ba"k-comb.
  As an alternative a straiglit flat slide is worn
  at the base of the hair. For evening dross throe
  short ringlets are allowed to fall over the nape
  of the neck at the back. Tlifse ringlets are as
  a riile absent from the coiffure in the day-
  time, although for very dressy occasions they
  may sometimes be worn ; on these occasions.
  
  
  however, the dress collar would have to
  bo low.
  
  The arrangement of the very dressy form of
  the now coiffure can seldom bo effected by a
  woman herself without tho help of a lady's-
  maid, and some extraneous aid to her own locks
  in tho form of curls, switches, &c. The simpler
  forms, however, do not require so much elabora-
  tion, although the same idea is maintained, and
  a woman can effect tho fashionable arrangement
  of her tresses without oven the aid of a hair-
  frame in the following way.
  
  If tho hair is long and plentiful, after arranging
  and waving the front portion, take up all the
  hair at the centre of the head at tho back and
  tie it or fasten it with one of Hinde's hair-
  binders in the centre of the head, leaving the
  under portion of the hair hanging loose over
  the shoulders. Then separate the bound por-
  tion into strands, making several large curls,
  take up the under portion and coil it loosely
  round the curls, fix one of tho fasliionable hair-
  slides in the hair just above the nape of the
  neck, and the coiffure is complete.
  
  With short hair, the hair should not be bound.
  It should be separated into two portions in the
  way already described ; the under portion should
  be well pinned back while the upper portion is
  being curled, then it should be divided into
  two strands, whicli should be made to cross one
  over the other at the back and twisted round on
  either side of the head to give the appearance
  of one complete strand.
  
  A woman sometimes finds it very difficult to
  make the fashionable cvu-ls by twisting strands
  of hair over her fingers ; the curls are apt to
  break and become loose when made in this
  manner. Messrs. Burnet & Temple, Ltd., of
  3 and 4 Fitchetts Court, London, E.C., have
  brought out a very simple and ingenious device
  by which curls and puffs can be made with the
  
  
  least amount of troviblo. This consists of a
  small wooden stick round which the hair is
  rolled ; the stick is fittud with gi-ooves through
  which a safety hairpin is inserted, fastening the
  curl in place when the stick is removed.
  
  It must be remembered that fashions in
  millinery have a most decided influence upon
  fashions in hairdressing ; a woman must
  nowadays dress her hair to suit her hat, and
  the latest evolution of the coiffure may bo
  ascribed to the vogue for very large and
  
  
  HEALTH AND THE TOILET
  
  
  461
  
  
  picturesque head-gear which has prevailed for
  so long. As a relief from large hats, the turban
  toques are equally fasliionable, and the simpler
  form of hairdressing described is suitable for
  either the one form of millinery or the other,
  the only difference being that the bouffant
  and vraved effects at the sides should be more
  elaborate when wearing a large hat than with
  the toque. In this latter case the side dressing
  may be comparatively simple.
  
  Combs and Slides. - Ornamental combs and
  slides play an important part in the present
  styles of hairdressing. The slide is particularly
  useful as well as an ornamental accessory.
  Placed as it is at the back of the coiffure, it
  prevents the hair becoming caught in the hooks
  or buttons of a high collar, and helps to keep
  the cm-Is trim and tidy. Combs have very
  deep, wide borders, which serve to convey
  the appeaiunce of hair-slides when placed in
  the hair. Very large tortoise-shell hairpins are
  also worn ; in fact, it may be said that as waving
  and curling is a feature of present-day hair-
  dressing, the popularity of combs, fancy pins,
  and other similar accessories will largely increase,
  as they are most effective in accentuating the
  deep waves and curls, and at the same time
  serve to keep them in place, imparting a
  " finished " appearance to the coiffure.
  
  CARE OF THE HANDS
  
  Many a woman who is on the whole particular
  in regard to her general appearance is apt to
  neglect the care of hei hands. This is a great
  mistake, as ill-kept hands and nails are un-
  sightly in the extreme, whilst a well-groomed
  hand is not only pleasant to the eye, but is also
  one of the best indications of refinement a
  woman can possess.
  
  Housework is often made the excuse for lack
  of care in this direction. The average woman
  is apt to entertain the idea that well-kept hands
  are incompatible with the proper fulfilment of
  domestic duties. Tliis is quite a fallacy, for
  v^dth a little care the busy housewife can keep
  her hands in as good condition as the lady of
  leisure, who can afford to spend half-an-hour or
  an hour at her manicurist whenever she feels
  so inclined.
  
  Thin rubber surgeon's gloves should be worn
  when doing work which necessitates the hands
  being constantly in and out of the water, such
  as washing dishes, scrubbing, &c. A pair of
  old gloves should always be kept in readiness
  " for wear when dusting, sweeping, or performing
  other similar duties. They should, if possible,
  be a size too large, so as not to restrain the
  circulation in any way. Gloves should also be
  worn when engaged in gardening and other
  out-of-door work.
  
  How to Keep the Hands Clean. - Cleanhness
  is, of course, the fii'st essential in this portion
  
  
  of the toilet. The hands should be well washed
  in good soap and warm water softened with a
  Uttle borax or some good toilet vinegar night
  and morning, and, whenever neceasary, during
  the day. A good nail-brush with firm bristles
  should be used for scrubbing the nails, and
  pumice stone or lemon or both for remoxing
  stains from the hands and fingers. When the
  hands become soiled and greasy after the per-
  formance of household duties, a little cold
  cream or white vaseline should be rubbed well
  into them before and after washing, in order
  to keep the skin smooth and soft. On home
  washing days, when there is a great deal of
  laundry work to be done, after being immersed
  for a long time in the wash-tub the hands are
  apt to assume a rather harsh, wrinkled appear-
  ance. This can be cured by dipping them into
  a Uttle vinegar ; they should then be rubbed
  with cold cream, as after the performance of
  other household duties.
  
  After washing and drying the hands before
  going to bed at night, glycerine and rose-water,
  or red lavender, mixed in the proportions of
  two parts glycerine to one of red lavender,
  should be rubbed into the skin. To do this
  thoroughly it is well to rub the mixture well
  into the palms and then rub the hands together
  as in washing.
  
  When the work of the house has been abnor-
  mally heavy, and, in spite of all precautions,
  the hands have become a little rough, it is
  advisable to wear a pair of large chamois
  leather gloves at night, or a pair of old kid
  gloves one or two sizes too large. Gloves of
  the normal size would not do. They would
  only restrict the healthy circulation of the
  blood, and red, not white hands would be the
  result.
  
  Drying the Hands. - ^The importance of
  thoroughly drying the hands after washing
  cannot be too highly estimated. A neglect of
  this causes the skin to become red and coarsened,
  and in winter time chapped hands and often
  chilblains are the result. Many a busy house-
  wife is content, after hurriedly washing her
  hands, to dry them perhaps on a kitchen roller
  towel, the latter being most probably wet
  already through constant use. Every bit as
  much care should be taken in drying the hands
  as in washing them. Tliey should be dried first
  with an ordinary linen towel, and then well
  rubbed with a soft Turkish towel. An added
  precaution to take would be to dust tliem over
  with fine oatmeal, a Uttle Fuller's earth, or any
  good toilet powder.
  
  For the treatment of chilblains, see Homo
  Nursing.
  
  Care of the Nails, Manicure. - Every woman
  should be able to manicure her hands and nails
  for herself. The process is a very simple one
  and only requires a Uttle care and the proper
  implements.
  
  
  462
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  The following articles are necessary for the
  use of the homo manicurist : -
  
  A packet of orange sticks for pushing back the skin.
  
  A small nail file.
  
  A small brush.
  
  A pair of curved nail scissors.
  
  Some good cold cream.
  
  A box of nail powder.
  
  A nail polisher.
  
  Some fine emery or sand-paper.
  
  Cases contmning the orange sticks, nail file and
  brush and polisher can be obtained from any
  perfumers for the small sum of lO^d. or one
  
  
  Curved Xail-Scissors.
  
  
  Nail Polisher.
  
  
  shilling, wliilst most leather merchants sell
  compact little cases containing -the curved
  scissors as well for from 2s. 6d. to 3s. 6d. The
  manicure powder can be obtained from all
  perfumers and chemists in boxes of from six-
  pence upwards. It is as well of course to get as
  good a set of implements as possible, as a little
  additional money spent on the original outlay
  will pay in the long run.
  
  To Manicure the Nails. - ^Take some warm
  ■water and make a good lather of soap-suds.
  Add a few drops of Eau de Cologne or toilet
  vinegar and the juice of half a lemon. Soak
  the fingers for from five to ton minutes in the
  soap-suds. This process has the effect of
  softening the nails so that they axe ready for
  attention. Then after having rubbed a little
  cold cream well into the skin round the base of
  the nails, press the skin well back with the orange
  stick, not only at the base but all round the
  nails. By doing this those half-moons which
  are so dainty and attractive a feature of well-
  kept nails are brought into view. Tlie cuticle
  of the nail should never be touched with the
  scissors unless it is absolutely necessary to use
  them to cut a hang -nail.
  
  The nails should now bo cut round the edges
  if necessary, and filed into shape with thf' little
  file. The curve of the nail shovild be trimmed
  to follow that of tho finger-tips. The ideal nail
  is of an oval form, and although we do not all
  have the good fortune to possess oval finger-tips,
  a little careful manipulation in the trimming of
  the nails will do a great deal in giving them an
  oval appearance as far as possible. Constant
  practice works wonders in the proper manipula-
  tion of the nail file.
  
  After the nails have been carefully filed, a
  little of the sand-paper should bo used to smooth
  away tho rough edges.
  
  Finally the nail powder should be applied
  with the bru.sh, and the nails should be gently
  polished with the poHshor. The latter consist
  
  
  of a little instrument somewhat in the shape of
  a miniature ii'on with the flat part co^•erod with
  chamois leather. If no polisher is available,
  it is often sufficient to rub the nails against the
  palm of the hand.
  
  After tliis treatment has been gone through,
  the nails will assume that pink and polished
  appearance which adds so muoh to tht^ir beauty,
  and which is quite easily attainable by the
  expenditure of a little care.
  
  The manicuring process should be gone
  tlirough at least once a week. Every day, how-
  ever, the cuticle of the nail should be pushed
  back with the orange stick after washing, or
  even with the towel. The polisher should then
  be used with light rapid friction, and this daily
  attention will keep the nails in proper condition.
  
  A very good substitute for ordinary nail-
  polishing powder can be obtained from Messrs.
  Pritchard & Constance, of 64 Haymarkot,
  London. It is sold under the trademark of
  " Amami " Polishing Stone, for the moderate
  price of sixpence. Amami Nail-PoUshing Stone
  is no trouble : merely rub on the moistened palm
  of the hand, first the stone, and then the finger
  nails ; the thumb nails should be done sepa-
  rately. A lasting pearly polish appears at once.
  The substance of the stone, in addition to being
  quite harmless, tends to preserve in good con-
  dition both the nails and the cuticle.
  
  Wbere the nails are unduly dry and brittle,
  a little olive oil rubbed into them at night will
  do wonders in restoring them to good condition.
  
  CARE OF THE EYES, EYEBROWS,
  AND EYELASHES
  
  Not only are the eyes the all-essential organs
  of sight, but they have also been described as
  the " Jlirror of the Soul." They reflect our
  thoughts, our intellect, our emotions, and our
  sympathies, giving to the face that spiritualness
  which forms its chief beauty. Tliej' ''an be
  made indeed the most formidable weapon in
  the armoury of woman's charm, and yet they
  are the very organs of lier body which she is
  the most inclined to abuse and neglect.
  
  The average woman thinks nothing of strain-
  ing her eyes over books or needlework in an
  indifferent light. It is bad for the eyes even
  in a good light to strain them over small print
  or minute stitches for hours at a stretch. Tho
  eyes require rest as much as the other organs
  of the body, and if they are required to do more
  than their fair share of work they are bound to
  suffer in the long run.
  
  In the evening, when artificial light is required,
  bo careful to sit with your back to the light, so
  that it is thrown on the pages of the book,
  and not straight into the eyeballs. The light
  should be shaded. Dark green shades are the
  most restful to the sight, and lamps and lights
  should be covered with them wherever possible.
  
  
  HEALTH AND THE TOILET
  
  
  463
  
  
  Electric light, which is apt to bo dazzling in its
  brilliancy, should always be shaded in green
  or some other soft colour.
  
  From the point of view of our personal hygiene
  the care of the eyes and eyebrows, eyeUds and
  eyelashes, should receive daily consideration.
  
  The eyes are natxirally at their best, of course,
  when the health is at its best. Notliing can
  impart to the pupils the brilliancy of good
  health. Very often drugs such as belladonna
  are resorted to to give them the sparkle and
  sliine which for some cause they lack. This is
  a most injurious practice, and can be productive
  of nothing but harm.
  
  Wlien washing in the morning care should
  be taken that the secretions which have accumu-
  lated in the corner of the eyes during sleep are
  removed. These, be it noted, shoxild be washed
  out with warm water. It is inad\dsable to rub
  into the corner of the eyes with a towel in order
  to dislodge the secretions, as inflammation is
  very often caused in this way. At night-time
  also care should be taken that the eyes are
  given their proper share of consideration in the
  evening toilet.
  
  Use of the Eye-cup. - When the secretions
  which accumulate round the eyes during the
  night are found to be so unduly heavy as to bo
  difficult to dislodge in the morning, to thoroughly
  purify the eye it will be found necessary to use
  an eye-cup. Tliis is a little glass cup made in
  the shape of the eyeball. It should
  be filled with warm water in which
  a pinch of boracic powder has been
  dissolved. Kold the cup towards the
  eye, lower the head slightly to meet
  it, and it will be found that the eye-
  cup fits round the eye exactly. Tilt
  the head backwards and forwards, holding the
  cup into position, and open and close the eyelid in
  the water until the eye is thoroughly cleansed.
  Dab gently with a small piece of soft rag to dry,
  and repeat the treatment with the other eye.
  The eye-cup can also be used at night to remove
  tho dust and dirt which have accumulated
  during the day. In all cases where the nature
  of the daily occupation forces the eyes to go
  through a hea\'y strain, such as literary work,
  constant typeing, proof-reading, dressmaking,
  &c., the daily use of the eye-cup will prove a
  most beneficial tonic.
  
  When the eyes have been so severely strained
  that they are red and inflamed round the rims,
  and the secretions are so extensive that it is
  sometimes difficult to open the lids in the
  morning, a lotion should be used after bathing.
  This should be prescribed by a good oculist.
  In all cases of persistent trouble with the eyes
  an oculist should be at once consulted. There
  are people who, upon the first signs of eye-strain,
  rush to the nearest optician, buy a pair of glasses,
  and think that they have done all that is re-
  quired. This mode of procedure may answer
  
  
  Eye-cup.
  
  
  with luck, but most ofton it results in per-
  manent injury to the eyesight. There is
  nothing more injurious f(r the eyes than un-
  suitable glasses. Glasses should only be made
  to the prescription of a good oculist who, after
  thorough examination and testing of the patient's
  sight, knows exactly what is required. Very
  often glasses are not required, and a simple
  lotion will sot the trouble right. So those who,
  upon the first little trouble with their eyes, are
  inclined to at once buy spectacles, should be
  wise and find out first if they are really needed
  before they ruin their eight for life.
  
  Eyebrows and Eyelashes. - Well-marked eye-
  brows and good lashes are invaluable aids to
  beauty, and although it is not possible for us
  all to attain the Mgh arched brows and long
  curling lashes which form the ideal of the artist,
  yet with care we can train our brows and lashes
  to sometliing very near it.
  
  ■Wliere the brows and laishes are thin, vaseline
  or cocoa-butter well rubbed into them at night
  serve to promote their growth ; but the treat-
  ment must be persisted in regularly to pro-
  duce results.
  
  When the eyebrows are unduly straight,
  by careful manipulation with the fingers when
  applying the vaseUne, and pinching the hair
  with a semicircular movement upwards, thej'
  can be trained into something like the arched
  brows we all covet. The vaseline should be
  applied to the eyelashes gently and carefullj',
  either with the tip of the first finger or the end
  of a match covered witli a piece of soft rag.
  It should be applied under tho lashes, which
  should be gently coaxed outwards and upwards
  to induce them to curl at the tips. 'Wlien tlus
  has been done, dab the eyelids gently with a
  piece of clean soft rag to remove all superfluous
  vaseline, which, if allowed to remain, might
  cause the lashes to stick together. Under no
  consideration attempt to touch the lashes with
  the scissors under the impression that by
  clipping their growth will be improved.
  
  The hair should never be dressed to fall
  very low over the forehead so as to cover the
  brows. A coiffure of this kind tends to wear
  away the eyebrows and impede their growth.
  
  Brusliing the brows with a small brow -brush
  night and morning goes a long way towards
  improving their appearance.
  
  There is not much use in ha\-ing pretty brows,
  however, if we mar them by continual frowning.
  The frowning habit gnoNvs upon one imper-
  ceptibly, and it is a habit very hard to correct.
  Persistent frowning brings those unsightly little
  lines between the brows which does so much to
  spoil their beauty. Tliej' can be removed in
  time with persistent care and treatment (see
  p. 450) ; but a habit once contracted is hard
  to get rid of, and no matter liow often the little
  lines are effaced, if the frowning habit con-
  tinues they will reappear.
  
  
  464
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  CARE OF THE TEETH
  
  Too much stress jannot bo laid upon the
  extreme importance of the proper caxe of tho
  teeth. Indigestion and other gastric troubles
  are often traced to decayed and defective teeth.
  To masticate food properly good teeth are of
  paramount importance. To keep the teeth and
  mouth clean is one of the surest methods of
  keeping them sound. Care should bo taken,
  therefore, that all particles of food which collect
  between the teeth are dislodged by aid of the
  tooth-brush.
  
  The teeth should be brushed at least twice a
  day, night and morning, and also after meals
  if possible. A good tooth powder should be
  used, and tho teeth bruslicd not only across,
  but also up and down, the teeth of the upper
  jaw being brushed downwards, and those of the
  lower jaw beting brushed upwards. Attention
  should also be paid to tho gums. They should
  be brushed as carefully as the teeth. Tho
  mouth might be also rinsed with a good anti-
  septic mouth wEish every evening. Calvert's
  Carbolic Tooth Powder or precipitated chalk are
  very good for cleansing purposes, and used in
  conjunction with a mouth wash, in accord-
  ance with the directions given, will serve to
  keep the mouth and teeth in a clean and whole-
  some condition. ^Vhere teurtar accumulates upon
  the teeth to any great extent, it should be
  scraped off by a dentist. It is superfluous to
  add that when tooth decay does make its
  appearance tlie dentist should at once be
  consulted and the ill thoroughly remedied. It
  is not generally kno\vn that a milk diet is very
  injurious to the teeth; tho milk, becoming acid
  on the gums, destroj'S the enamel. This may be
  obviated by using a good pinch of carbonate
  of soda in the water with which the teeth are
  brushed.
  
  The care of her teeth is apt to be too much
  neglected by tho average woman ; and yet it is
  quite a simple matter to keep them clean and
  healthy, and a little care in this direction brings
  its reward an hundred -fold. Leaving all ques-
  tions of health apart, haA and badly-kept teeth
  spoil the prettiest face, whilst good, well-kept
  teeth have often the effect of redeeming a
  countenance from actual plainness.
  
  CARE OF THE FEET
  
  Regular care of tho feet is as important as
  regular care of the hands.
  
  The toe-nails should bo kept well trimmed,
  but they should not be cut too short. Unlike
  the finger nails, they should bo cut straight and
  not in a curve, as it is injurious to cut too far
  down into the side of the toe-nail. Doing this
  serves to increase the tendency of the nail to
  grow inwards at the comers where such a ten-
  dency eidsts. Boots with pointed toes should
  
  
  never bo worn, as they compress the toos in-
  wards in accordance with tho shape of the
  boot, in some cases to such an extent that
  the great and little toes very nearly meet.
  The pointed shoe or boot is the cause of bunion.s,
  corns, and nearly every foot deformity. When
  corns and bunions make their ai^poaranco they
  should be at once treated, as, if neglected, they
  not only cause a large amount of pain, but in
  some cases actually cripple the sufferer. (For
  treatment, see Home Nursing. )
  
  To Cure Ingrowing Toe-Nails. - An ingrowing
  toe-nail can very often be cured in its first stages
  by the following simple means : - With a sharp
  pair of scissors make a V-shaped incision in
  the centre of the top of the nail, and insert a
  piece of cotton wool between tho nail and the
  toe at the corner in which the nail shows a
  tendency to grow into tho flesh. The nail will
  gradually grow at each side towards the incision
  until the latter is closed, and the tendency to
  grow inwards at the corner of the too will thus
  be effectively checked.
  
  Perspiring Feet. - Some people are afflicted
  with feet that perspire to an abnormal degree.
  Tliis is an extremely unpleasant affliction,
  arising very often from some defect in the
  general health. It frequently occurs in children,
  often disappearing altogether as they grow older ;
  but with adults, as a rule, the trouble is more
  persistent.
  
  In all cases strict cleanliness must be observed.
  The feet should be bathed at night in warm
  water to which a little Condy's Fluid heis been
  added in tho proportion of a tea -spoonful of
  Condy's Fluid to a pint of water. They should
  bo bathed in tliis way after any considerable
  exercise has been indulged in. Light woollen
  stockings should be worn - never cotton ones -
  and these should be frequently changed. Some-
  times it will be found necessary to put on a
  fresh pair of stockings every day. Strict atten-
  tion must also bo given to tho general health.
  In many cases it will be found that a good tonic
  will be beneficial.
  
  Tired and Sore Feet. - There are some kinds of
  work which entail a woman being a groat deal
  on her feet, and often her foot become very
  tired and sore in consequence. There is nothing
  more refreshing in these circumstances than to
  sponge the feet with a little methylated spirits.
  This treatment will cause tho soreness and
  fatigue to disappear, and will, in addition, be
  wondorfuUy refreshing.
  
  CARE OF THE EARS
  
  Wax should never be allowed to accumu-
  late in tho ears. When the wax has become
  so hardened that it is difficult to dislodge,
  take enough soda to covnr a threepenny piece,
  dissolve this in a dessert -spoonful of water, and
  gontly drop it into the ear at night. This
  
  
  HEALTH AND THE TOILET
  
  
  465
  
  
  will serve effectively to loosen the wax. In no
  case attempt to dislodge wax by means of
  hair-pins or any other sharp instrument. Much
  injury can be done to the ears in this way.
  In many cases it will be necessary to syringe
  the ear with a special ear syringe.
  
  MAKING UP
  
  How far it is justifiable to have recourse to
  art as an aid to good looks is, and has ever been,
  a much debated question. Before, however,
  trying to improve her appearance by the aid
  of " make up," a woman should pause and
  think, for once she has started making up there
  will be no going back ; she will have to con-
  tinue to do so. The pity of it is that it is most
  often the women whose skins and complexions
  leave nothing to be desired who are the first
  to havo recourse to the aid of the rouge -box,
  and who thus inevitably ruin their natural com-
  plexions in the cult of the artificial.
  
  There are some women, however, who, from
  chronic ill-health or other causes, have such
  sallow, unpleasing -looking skins that one cannot
  blame them for seeking some sort of an aid to
  beauty - that is to say, if they make up so
  cleverly that the most practised eye cannot
  detect it. The art of make up lies in concealing
  the fact that art has been called in as an aid
  to natiu-e. It is the clumsy and vulgar display
  of rouge, the emphasising of the fact that the
  complexion is fals-?, that jars so much upon
  persons of refinement. On the other hand, one
  cannot help but admire the woman who makes
  up so cleverly that no one can tell her com-
  plexion is not natural.
  
  The first care of the woman who makes up
  must be to do it well ; secondly, and by no means
  loss important, she must never allow herself
  to be seen without her make up. She should
  make up the first thing in the morning, and not
  follow the example of some women who make a
  point of donning their complexions with their
  visiting toilettes. A woman who acts in this
  way carmot conceal the fact that she has
  recourse to art, as the difference between her
  natural complexion and her artificial one will
  be too marked to escape general notice.
  
  How to Make Up. - If a woman must make
  up it ia necessary that she should know how to
  do so without injuring the texture of her skin
  in the process. Before attempting to apply the
  
  
  rouge, the face should be thoroughly washed
  with soap and warm water. After drying rub
  some good skin food well into the skin pores
  and wipe it o2 with a piece of soft rag. Tlien
  apply a smaU quantity of the rouge to the
  cheeks, finishing the process by dusting some
  good powder over the face. Take off all
  superfluous powder with a clean face chamois
  leather.
  
  Rouge may be had in the form of liquid,
  powder, or paste.
  
  Powder. - Powder for the face is now in such
  general use that it has almost ceased to be
  regarded as a cosmetic. Yet in spite of this,
  great care must be taken in its application.
  The face thickly coated with powder is not
  pretty to look upon, and the pores of the skin
  become very much coarsened as a result of its
  indiscriminate use. Then some of the cheaper
  powders contain very injurious ingredients.
  Some face powders are, however, great boons to
  very greasy skins, but they must only be lightly
  dusted over the face with a clean powder puff
  or face leather, and then all superfluous powder
  should be dusted off. Care should be taken to
  use only the pure powders, avoiding all pre-
  parations containing merciuy and arsenic.
  The Poudre Simon is one of the best face powders
  to be had. It should be used sparingly in con-
  jimction with Creme Simon if possible. The
  Creme Simon, which is not the least bit greasy,
  should be gently massaged into the skin, and
  then rubbed off and the powder applied after-
  wards.
  
  Care must be taken to remove all traces of
  powder and make up before retiring to rest at
  night. To do this some good cold cream or
  white vaseline should be rubbed lightly over
  the face with a gentle massage movement,
  then wiped off with a piece of clean soft rag,
  and the face washed with soap and wsurm
  water.
  
  Papiers Poudris. - ^The little leaflets known as
  Papiers Poudr^s are invaluable to the woman
  who is a great deal out of doors in the warm
  weather. They consist of diminutive sheets
  of paper finely powdered at one side and enclosed
  in a booklet from which they are easily detach-
  able. One of these little leaflets gently passed
  over the face when it is greasy and perspiring
  will remove not only superfluous moisture, but
  all dust and dirt. The Papiers Poudr6s may
  be piirchased from most chemists.
  
  
  2q
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  "With mothers who wish conscientiovisly to fulfil their duty towards their children in every way
  a certain sense of responsibility is ever present. They do not always know how to act in varying
  circumstances wliich may crop up, whether in connection with the rearing of their children in ii\f ancy,
  the care of their health in childhood, or the important question of education in later years. It is
  said that knowledge comes with experience, but too often this knowledge will have been only too
  -deeurly bought I The advice in regard to the management of children contained in this chapter is
  the result of experience, and it is trusted that many a mother who is in doubt in regard to any parti-
  cular question of child management, may find a way out of her difficiilty by referring to these pages,
  -and so take swivantage of the experience gained by others.
  
  
  PREPARING FOR MOTHERHOOD
  
  Very soon in the married lives of most young
  wives comes a time when the knowledge is
  brought home to them that they are to be called
  upon to fulfil woman's noblest mission - the
  mission of motherhood. To the really womanly
  wife, the thought that she is to become a mother
  will be sweet indeed, joy tempered with a sense
  of reverence maybe at the great responsibility
  of the little Ufe to be entrusted to her care. That
  there should be a little nervotisness at the pros-
  pect, too, is perhaps not unnatural, but it should
  be but passing when it is remembered that, by
  careful living during the months prior to baby's
  birth, nature will be materially assisted, and
  will, in her own way, reward the expectant
  mother who has helped her.
  
  A woman can never sufficiently realise the
  importance of those months before her little one
  is born. She should remember that if she builds
  up her strength during this period, she will not
  • only be much better fitted for the ordeal before
  her, but she will also fulfil her responsibility to
  the little life in her keeping, for it is well known
  that upon the care taken of herself by the mother
  during pregnancy will largely depend the future
  health of her child.
  
  The expectant mother should lead a simple
  and regular yet gently active life, a strict ob-
  servance of the laws of hygiene being more than
  ever important at this period, when not only her
  own welfare, but also that of her child must be
  ecured. Too much stress cannot be laid upon
  the necessity for plenty of pure fresh air, whole-
  some food taken at regular meals, sufficient
  exercise, judicious rest, and hygienic and cheer-
  ful surroundings. If any of these are wanting,
  then the health of both mother and child will be
  needlessly jeopardised.
  
  Pure Air. - Plenty of pvire freeh air is the first
  
  
  important essential. Enjoying the benefit of
  the air out of doors is not sufficient - indoors all
  the rooms should be fresh and well ventilated.
  The bedroom window especially should alvraj's
  be kept open at the top. Plenty of fresh air at
  night will do a great deal to obviate that tendency
  to sleeplessness which often manifests itself
  towards the end of the period of waiting.
  
  Exercise. - Sufficient exercise, including the
  daily walk in the open air, is also a necessity.
  The woman wlio thinks her whole day should
  he spent reclining upon a couch, and imagines
  herself incapable of exertion of any kind, is
  storing up much future ill for both herself and
  her child. She must have regular exercise,
  going cheerfully through the performance of
  hght household duties, though any straining in
  the way of reaching up to high shelves, lifting
  heavy weights, &c., must, of course, be avoided.
  
  Though exercise in moderation is beneficial, it
  should not be indulged in to excess. A woman
  should not take such long walks as to cause
  exhaustion, nor should she indulge in violent
  exercise such as is afforded by tennis and other
  similar games. Riding and cycling should also
  bo given up. Tlie enthusiastic follower of all
  kinds of athletic pursuits should take special
  warning, for if she continues to indulge in these
  pastimes to any groat extent, she will use up all
  her strength and energy and will therefore have
  no reserve to draw upon when the time comes
  when both will be so greatly needed. Another
  important thing to bear in mind is that during
  the first three months and the last few weeks
  of pregnancy travelling by bus, train, or tram
  should be avoided as far as possible, for the
  disturbing influence of the severe jolting often
  experienced in this way is most injurious, and
  a miscarriage at times may be the result.
  
  Diet. - Strict attention to diet is all-important.
  Meals should be taken at regular intervals.
  
  
  "66
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  467
  
  
  Eating should not be indiilged in between meals.
  Heavy and highly seasoned foods should be
  avoided, also pastry and other sweet things
  likely to cause that much -dreaded ill - indigestion.
  Plenty of fruit and green vegetables should be
  taken, as these will tend to prevent constipation.
  Very fattening and starchy foods should be only
  taken sparingly. Excessive tea or coffee-drink-
  ing is most injurious - though, if taken in modera-
  tion, tea is really an excellent beverage. Plenty
  of milk should always be taken if possible. Good
  cooking is essential. The diet should also be
  pleasantly varied, as the distaste for food so
  often resulting from monotony must be avoided
  at all costs. It is a mistake to think that stimu-
  lants are necessary during this period. Indeed,
  they are apt to be actually harmful at times,
  and should never be taken excepting under
  medical advice.
  
  The Daily Bath. - This is most important in
  pregnancy. There is less likely to be kidney
  trouble when the bath is taken regularly. Any
  puffiness of the face or Hmbs should, however,
  be reported to the doctor, as early treatment
  will often prevent tiresome complications later
  on.
  
  Rest. - The maxim " Early to bed and early
  to rise " should be religiously observed by the
  expectant mother. At least eight hours of sleep
  should be aimed at. Ten o'clock is a good
  hour for retiring, 7 or 7.30 o'clock a good time
  for rising in the morning, and unless there
  is trouble with " morning sickness," breakfast
  should be taken downstairs. A freshly-made
  cup of tea takon before rising is often helpful.
  Every day an hour's rest should be taken in a
  darkened room on bed or sofa after the mid-day
  meal. Rest of the body is not the only essential,
  for rest of the mind is almost as important in
  every way. On account of the severe strain to
  which her nervous system is being subjected,
  a woman is more inclined to give way to irrita-
  biUty and nerves at this than at any other time.
  She should guard herself against this tendency
  by being firmly determined never to worry
  over trifles, and doing her utmost to maintain
  an attitude of calm equanimity. Self-control
  should be aimed at upon all occasions, and a
  cheerful, happy, and contented frame of mind
  should be cultivated. Any tendency to morbid
  despondency must be sternly combated. It
  must be remembered that cheerful and beautiful
  surroundings do more than anything else to
  foster cheerfulness of mind, a fact that should
  be remombered by friends and relations. Any
  sudden news entailing either excessive grief or
  excessive joy is harmful, and shocks of any kind
  should be avoided. Late hours and all kinds of
  excitement sliould be altogether abjured. Going
  to At Homes or theatres means spending a num-
  ber of hours in stuffy, ill-ventilated rooms and in
  an atmosphere of excitement which is far from
  beneficial. The expectant mother should be
  
  
  prepared to forego these amusements, realising
  that a power of self-sacrifice is not one of the
  least attributes which will qualify her for the
  noble mission of motherhood. All social inter-
  course, however, need not be abandoned during
  these months of waiting. Simple little social
  gatherings and the society of bright and cheerful
  friends will do good. It is the constant striv-
  ing after pleasure and excitement, the strain of
  keeping up with an endless round of social en-
  gagements, which is harmful. All morbid and
  sensational literature should be avoided. Let
  the woman who is to be a mother cultivate
  beautiful thoughts by reading wise and beautiful
  books. Let her frame of mind be such as will
  fit her to guide the mind of the Uttle life entrusted
  to her care. Such, no doubt, has been the mental
  attitude of the mothers of many of our wise men
  and brave heroes, and such should be the mental
  attitude of the mother who wishes to qualify
  herseK in every way for the high calUng of
  motherhood.
  
  Dress during this period is an important
  consideration. In the first place hygiene and
  comfort must be studied, and as far as possible
  an effort must be made to avoid appearing
  conspicuous. In regard to the wearing of
  corsets, opinions differ, though it is generally
  acknowledged that it is \^er not to discard
  them. To wear tight stays would be foolish
  and harmful, and corsets of the straight -fronted
  type mu.^t be altogether tabooed. There are
  special corsets, however, particularly suitable
  for maternity wear. These are very hghtly
  boned, opening at the sides, and expandable.
  They are very comfortable and afford great
  support to the figure. If the breasts become
  very enlarged and tender, what are known as
  " bust corsets " should be worn over the regular
  stays. They may be obtained from most drapers
  for a very small outlay. All clothing should be
  warm and hght, whilst compression of any part
  of the body should be avoided. Suspenders
  should be worn instead of garters, as the latter
  tend to impede the circulation. High-heeled
  shoes are always injiu-ious, but they are more
  than ever so at this time. Wliile care is taken
  to dress hygienically and sensibly, a woman
  should not give way to the inclination of being
  careless and indifferent in regard to her personal
  appearance. She should endeavour to drees
  both indoors and out of doors as neatly as pos-
  sible under the circvuustances.
  
  It is inadvisable to spoil good clothes by alter-
  ing them and attempting to adapt them to the
  increasing figure. Good gowns tinkered about
  with in this way can seldom bo worn afterwards.
  It is also most injurious for a woman to endeavour
  to squeeze herself into tight gowns at those
  times. She will naturally wish to avoid looking
  conspicuous, bvit she will only make matters
  worse by resorting to the measiu-es above
  described. Special maternity dresses with ad-
  
  
  468
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  just able bands arc made at all the leading Iswlies'
  costumiers and outfitting establisliments, and
  every woman who prizes her health as well as
  her appearance should invest in one or two of
  these garments at such times. It is quite easy
  to ask for the lady at the head of the costume
  department at one of these establishments and
  explain to her wliat is wanted. The dresses are
  fitted by expert fitters who thoroughly under-
  stand their work, and such a garment cannot fail
  to prove satisfactory in every way. Ladies
  also make a mistake in wearing heavy loose
  voluminous cloaks at these times. A well-
  fitting skirt specially made and a long coat are
  the ideal outdoor wear for the expectant mother.
  None but dark colotu-s should be worn, as hght
  colours only serve to attract attention to the
  figure.
  
  Indoor gowns should be made of voile and
  other light-weight materials, as these do not tend
  to look bulky at the waist. Skirts to indoor
  dresses should also be specially made mounted
  upon elastic bands, the front gore extending
  above the waist-band so that it can easily be let
  down, with pleats at the side that can be let
  out. These skirts can often be undertaken at
  home by the good needlewoman with the aid of
  a suitable pattern. A prettily made tea-gown
  is also a very useful garment for indoor wear.
  
  INCIDENTAL AILMENTS
  
  A woman is very prone to various nervous and
  digestive cUsorders at this time, and though
  these can Ido greatly minimised by careful living,
  yet thoy are apt to occiir in some form or other
  in spite of every precaution, and always call for
  judicious treatment. Chief amongst these ail-
  ments are : -
  
  Morning Sickness. - During the early months
  especially vomiting is apt to occur almost at
  the same time every morning. Strict attention
  to the diet must be paid. The action of the
  bowels must also be properly regulated. Rest in
  bed daily until the time when the vomiting is
  apt to occur has passed will often prove a good
  preventative. Very often nausea and sickness
  occur after meaLs. If this trouble is pcrsiftent a
  doctor should be consultcd,and the paticntfahould
  be put upon a special diet.
  
  Sleeplessness is another common feature of the
  condition, especially during the later months.
  As a rule, it will bo found much ea-^ier to resume
  one's rest after a thorough rousing and a cup of
  hot milk, with maybe ton minutes' light reading,
  t! an to toss from side to side endeavouring in
  vain to court the sleep one needs so badly.
  Material comfort will also help, and, besides two
  pillows beneath the head, try a third, placed
  (parallel ^vith the others) beneath the ribs, so
  that, while lying on the side, the arm can be
  placed between the two sets of pillows without
  suffering undue pressure. Heavy meals at night
  
  
  should bo avoided, and the bedroom should be
  properly ventilated.
  
  Toothache may, during pregnancy, generally
  be relieved bj' taking fifteen to twenty grains
  of phosphate of lime, incorporated in tho food,
  twice daily.
  
  Heartburn is due to indigestion, and rich food
  should be strictly avoided by those subject to
  this distressing complaint. Take occasionally
  some calcined magnesia (the dose to be advised
  by chemist or doctor), or half a tea-spoonful of
  bicarbonate of soda in a wine-glassful of warm
  water.
  
  Constipation will probably cease if fresh fruit
  be eaten each morning on rising. See to it
  that sufficient drink is taken also, particularly of
  cold water, early in the day. If possible, over-
  come the constipation by attention to diet
  rather than by drugging, but on no account
  allow it to continue, or your recovery may be
  considerably retarded after baby's arrival.
  
  Nervous Worry may evidence itself by a
  tendency to magnify trifles, which at other times
  would pass unnoticed, into positive calamities,
  while noises, sights, and smells which, under
  ordinary circumstances, would be accounted
  notliing, will sometimes thoroughly upset a
  woman in this condition.
  
  She will also often give way to tears upon the
  least provocation. A regular simple mode of
  life with the avoidance of all excitement and
  determined effort to exercise self-control will do
  much to remedy this state of things.
  
  Varicose Veins and swelling of the feet are
  apt to occur. In these circumstances it is neces-
  sary to rest with the feet up as much as possible.
  The legs should be bandaged ; crepe bandag'.'S
  are much the best for the purpose, as they aie
  light, elastic, easily washed, and give great
  support. Tlacy should be three inches in width
  ai^d cost about Is. 8d. each.
  
  THE MOTHER'S REQUIREMENTS
  
  Early selection should bo made of tho room
  in which the lying-in is to take place in order
  that everything is in readiness. Tlie room
  chosen should be as large and airy as possible,
  and situated preferably in a quiet part of the
  house, where there will not be undue disturb-
  ance from street and other noises. Cleanliness
  and freedom from germs is indispensable, and
  a few days before the room is likely to be
  required it should be thoroughly cleaned. The
  bod should not be placed with one side to the
  wall, but in a position which will allow plenty
  of space at either side. A screen will bo useful
  to keep off draughts. A fire should be laid in
  the grate, so that it can be Hghted when needed
  and a kettle placed in readiness in which water
  can bo boiled, as plenty of hot water will bo
  required.
  
  Do not leave everything until tho last moment,
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  469
  
  
  or in an emergency unstiitable and unnecessary
  purchases will likely be made. As a rule, the
  niirse or doctor will give instructions as to what
  to provide, but if not it will be wise to have the
  following in the house : -
  
  Three yards gamgee tissue.
  
  One pound absorbent cotton wool.
  
  Two or three packets sanitary towels (2s. 6d.
  size).
  
  One bottle Lysol (disinfectant).
  
  One pot good vaseline.
  
  One or two dozen nickel safety-pins.
  
  Two and three-quarter yards fine linen towel-
  ling for binders.
  
  A mackintosh sheet one yard square (this must
  be mackintosh on both sides).
  
  A bed-pan (sUpper shape preferred).
  
  Some yellow soap (Castile or Prinu-ose).
  
  A leel of white hnen tliread.
  
  A bottle of castor-oil.
  
  A small supply of brandy.
  
  One dozen night-lights (eight hovirs size).
  
  A rubber hot-water bottle.
  
  Night-dresses and bed-linen (well aired).
  
  A supply of bedroom towels.
  
  BABY'S OUTFIT
  
  This should bo all in readiness about two
  months before baby is expected. The number
  and style of the Httle tilings will to a large extent
  depend upon the social position of the mother
  and the means at disposal, and the following
  suggestions arc only offered as a guide.
  
  Baby's Bassinette or Cot. - This is an absolute
  necessity, as a baby should never be allowed to
  sleep in the same bed as its mother. Tliere are
  several different kinds of cots at prices ranging
  from a few sliillings to several pounds. There
  is no need to buy anything elaborate unless one
  is willing to spend a large sum.
  
  For a simple bassinette perhaps there is nothing
  betterthan one of the Japanese travelling baskets.
  The two pieces should be comfortably lined with
  
  
  Japanese Basket.
  
  quilted sateen or some good washing material,
  and while one piece serves as the bed, thr other
  can be placed over the end to act as a shade and
  screen. Tliis improvised bassinette has also the
  advantage of being very light and easily moved
  about, and, again, if travelling has to be done it
  will form a receptacle for baby's little wardrobe.
  Then there are also the basket and metal cots.
  These are generally trimmed with pink or blue
  sateen covered with wlute muslin and laco or
  
  
  with a simple covering of some pretty light -
  coloured washing material. There must always
  be a curtain or hood to protect the little sleeper
  from the light or a draught, and the cot must also
  
  
  Basket as Cradle.
  
  be raised above the ground on a steady stand.
  Tt is best to have it the height of the mother's
  bed.
  
  A well-made wicker bassinette costs from
  3s. 6d. and upwards, and a stand 5s. or 6s. extra,
  while the metal cots swung on a stand can be had
  for 10s. and upwards. If bought ready trimmed
  they -will cost from about 30s. extra, according
  to the material chosen and the amount of work
  put on it. Many, however, prefer to trim their
  bassinette at home, and for a few shillings it is
  quite possible to make a very dainty little bed.
  The accompanying illustration shows one of the
  simplest styles. Pink and blue are the favourite
  
  
  Trimmed Bassinette.
  
  colours for trimming a bassinette, although somo
  prefer to keep them all white. Cotton sateen
  with a covering of plain or spotted muslin are the
  usual materials employed. Tlie inside must first
  be lined ^rith quilted sateen or with plain sateen
  and a domette interlining. Cut the muslin frill
  half as full again as the size of the cot and deep
  enougli to allow of a wide hem. Or it may be
  edged with some pretty lace. Tliere should also
  be a frill of the coloured sateen under the muslin,
  but this %\-ill not require to be so wide. Draw
  up both frills, sew them to the edge of the cot.
  
  
  470
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  T\\e curtain is made with muslin lined with the
  coloured satoen and is generally trimmed with
  laco. It should bo two and a half or three y6""ds
  in width and long enough to clear the ground by
  four or five inches. Draw it up vrith a strong
  tape at the top and fix it to the arm of the cot.
  Then finish o£f with rosettes of coloured ribbon.
  
  The other requirement for the cot will bo a tiny
  hair mattress, a little rounded pillow to fit the
  head part, some warm soft blankets, a piece of
  mackintosh, and a dainty cover made of the same
  sateen and muslin as the covering of the cot, and
  prettily trimmed with lace, or if the weather is
  cold a hght eiderdown quilt may take its place.
  There should also be a tiny hot-water bottle -
  an ordinary ginger-beer bottle with a tight screw
  and a woollen bag will serve the purpose.
  
  The little mattress may either be stuSed with
  hair, or, if this is too expensive, dried fern leaves,
  cocoanut fibre, fine shavings, or chaS all make
  good substitutes, and it is much wiser to use one
  of the cheaper materials and renew frequently
  than to stuff the mattress with hair and go on
  using it in an unhealthy state.
  
  The Basket. - This is \ased to hold all the re-
  quirements for the baby's toilet, and is generally
  lined and trimmed to match the bassinette. A
  
  
  Untrimmed Basket.
  
  flat vmlined basket can be bought for from 2s. 6d.
  upwards, and one on a stand for about 7s. 6d. -
  the trimming usually costs 78. or 8s. extra.
  Here, again, the work of lining can easily be done
  at homo when expense is a consideration. The
  iiiside should be fitted with two or tliree pockets
  
  
  Trimmed Basket.
  
  to hold the smaller articles, and there must be a
  pretty cover to lay over the top. Sometimes tho
  high baskets are made on casters, when they can
  be easily moved about.
  
  The basket should contain the following : -
  a tiny hair brush, a fine soft sponge, good pure
  Boap in a soap-bos, refined Fuller's earth or fine
  
  
  talcum dusting powder, a closed puff-box, a pot
  of white vaseline, boracic Unt and some old soft
  handkorcliiefs, a pin-cushion with good supply of
  safety-pins, needles, white cotton, a thimble, a
  pair of scissors, narrow tape, a bodkin. Then on
  the top might be laid a set of clothes ready for
  tho little stranger's arrival - a flannel binder, a
  knitted woollen vest, a flannel nightgown, soft
  napkins, a fine white shawl, and a square of
  flannel.
  
  Other Requirements. - A little bath, one or two
  soft bath-towels, and two bathing aprons for
  nurse.
  
  THE LAYETTE
  
  Essentials in Clothing. - All clothing must be
  warm, porous, and light. Warm, because heat
  is as important as food to the young life, and
  we must do our utmost to guard our little ones
  against chills ; porous, to allow the pores of the
  skin to act freely and thus keep it in a healthy
  condition ; and light so as not to encumber
  movement nor cause any waste of power. The
  garments must at the same time be elastic,
  fitting the part closely but not too tightly, in
  order to leave room for growth and the regular
  expansion of the Uttle frame. Wool in some fornl
  or other is the substance best adapted to meet
  all these requirements ; it is far better than the
  muslins and lace so invariably associated with
  a baby's outfit. Tlie material should be as
  fine and soft as possible. Wincey, delaine, nun's
  veihng, and viyella are all suitable for the upper
  garments, as they will wash and keep their
  colour well, while the finest flannel may bo used
  for underneath. Another advantage of the
  woollen outfit is that the garments can easily
  be washed at homo. It is also more economical
  as far as washing is concerned, because the
  clothes do not crease nor soil so quickly, and if
  tho rule is followed that all clothing be aired in
  the fresh air and afterwards by a fire before being
  put on again, a petticoat, a dress, and a night-
  dress will often last a week.
  
  It is also important to have tho clother simply
  made so that they may be readily put on and
  taken off and washed without difficulty. The
  weight, too, must be evenly distributed. White
  is always to be preferred to any colour, especially
  for the young infant.
  
  There have been many attempts at reform in
  infants' clothing, but old customs dio hard, and
  although woollen garments are more generally
  introduced into the layette than formerly, there
  are still some mothers who insist upon having
  the little beings decked out in a mass of starched
  lace, frills, and embroidery. However, as a rule,
  baby is now dressed in a more common-sense
  way ; ornamentation has to a largo extent given
  way to comfort and utility, and tlio welfare of the
  little body comes first. The old style of low neck
  and short sleeves is rarely seen ; tho pretty little
  lawn shirt, the first garment to be put on, is also
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  47r
  
  
  a thing of the past, and is replaced by a wool or
  silk vest, while the dainty embroidered ca^js are
  also condemned as fitting too closely to the head
  to be healthy.
  
  Although woollen garments are recommended,
  there is no need to have them clumsy and ugly.
  The material may still bo fine and the stitches
  small, wliile the little frocks give ample scope
  for embroidery and dainty needlework. In
  fact, there is no objection to cambric and silk
  frocks still being worn as long as there is a
  sufficiency of woollen clothing underneath.
  
  First Clothing Required. - ^The mistake is often
  made in providing too much clothing, al^d it is
  forgotten that the baby will outgrow the first
  little garments in a few weeks and that it is
  really a waste of money to buy an unnecessary
  amount. There must, of course, be a large enough
  supply to keep the baby in a clean and healthy
  condition and to allow for frequent washing.
  
  The following list includes all that is necessary
  for the first tliree months, but of course it may be
  indefinitely enlarged, according to fancy and the
  means of the mother : -
  
  Four vests of fine woven or knitted wool or
  
  of silk and wool.
  Three binders.
  
  Four long flannels or barracoats.
  Four woollen night-dresses.
  Fom* monthly gowns- delaine, nmi's veiHng,
  
  or other woollen material.
  Six flannel squares (Pilches).
  Twenty -four Turkish towelling napkins.
  One or two small Shetland shawls.
  Four pairs knittea shoes.
  One large Shetland or knitted shawl
  One woollen hood.
  
  In addition to the above there might be two
  or three pretty embroidered muslin or silk gowns
  for special occasions.
  
  ^Vhite petticoats are now little used, and are
  only required under a light robe. A carrying
  cloak and bonnet is often preferred to the large
  shawl and woollen hood for out of doors. When
  tliis is the case, one or two little woollen jackets
  for wearing under the cloak should be supplied.
  Prettily embroidered head flannels may take the
  place of the small shawls for indoor use, but they
  are not so Hght.
  
  Although it is not usual to prepare the short
  clothes before the birth of the baby, the following
  vs^ll be required after the first tliree months : -
  
  Four larger vests.
  
  Two pair flannel stays.
  
  Fovu" pairs woollen drawers.
  
  Four woollen petticoats T^dth bodices.
  
  Four woollen dresses.
  
  Four night-dresses.
  
  Four pairs woollen socks.
  
  Twenty-four larger napkins.
  
  Six bibs.
  
  
  Here, again, the Ust may be supplemented by
  the addition of some silk or embroidered muslin
  dresses. A coat and bonnet miglit also take the
  place of the shawl and hood for out of doors.
  Although called short, they ought to come below
  the feet to begin with, and can be shortened
  after another three months by making a few
  tucks.
  
  On Making the Layette. - What a world of
  pleasure does a mother take in making with her
  own hands the tiny garments which must be in
  readiness for the arrival of " Baby," and how
  many loving thoughts are interwoven with the
  minute stitches in which it is her pride to excel.
  More especially is this the case when preparing
  the layette for her first child, for then there are
  no elder children to claim their share of attention.
  A mother should not, however, permit the pre-
  paration of baby's trousseau to encroach too
  much upon her time. She must remember that
  it is a mistake to spend hours and hours
  stitching and sewing to the injury of her
  health, and that she would be much better
  spending the time or part of the time at least
  in taking healthy exercise in the open air. On
  the other hand, sewing for baby in moderation
  will prove an interesting and pleasant pastime,
  and the Uttle flannel garments especially can
  very easily be undertaken by the expectant
  mother. A treadle machine must on no account
  
  
  * No. 32940. Infant's Long-Clothing Set.
  
  be used, although there is not the same objection
  to an easily worked hand-macliine being employed
  for the longer seams.
  
  Of course, if there £ire other willing hands to
  
  • Patterns of this set of garments may be obtained from
  Weldons, Ltd., Fashion Publisliers, 30 & 31 Southampton
  Street, Strand, London, W.C, price 6d., post free 7d. Pattern,-
  numbers should be quoted when ordering.
  
  
  472
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  help, there is no reason why the whole o£ the
  layette sliould not be made at home, and cer-
  tainly by so doing many a slulling will be saved
  and better matorial procured.
  
  Good patterns should always be used when
  cutting out baby garments. Tliose who under-
  take this work cannot do better than write to
  Weldon's for their Infant's Long-Clotliing set
  of patterns, consisting of seven different pieces
  as illustrated, price 6d., post free Id., and also for
  the Short -Clothing Set consisting of six different
  
  
  • No. 37950. Infant's Short-Clothing Set.
  
  pieces at the same price. Full directions for
  making each garment are given with the
  patterns, also particulars as to the amount of
  material required. They have been proved
  most satisfactory by those competent to judge.
  
  The tiny garments should be made of the
  finest material that can be afforded, and the
  utmost nicety is required in their manufacture.
  They must bo sewn together with the most
  delicate needlework, the seams must be narrow,
  and no part of the garments must bo hard or
  made in such a way as to cau-so discomfort.
  Tlicre must be no lumpy buttons or hooks to
  press on the tender flesh, but fine soft tape
  should bo used for the principal fastenings.
  Care must bo taken in the making of arm-holes
  and sleeves so as to avoid any pulling or strain-
  ing, and there must bo no tightness anywhere.
  Everything must be made to look as pretty as
  possible for the little stranger.
  
  rhe Binder. - This is the firpt article of clothing
  put on the baby. It should be made of a strip
  of flannel torn across the material. It should be
  six inches wide, so that half a yard of flannel will
  
  • Patterns of this set of garments may be obtained from
  Weldons, Ltd., Fashion Publishers, 30   Street, Strand, London, W.C, price6d.,po8tfree7d. Pattern
  numbers should be quoted when ordering.
  
  
  make three binders. They must not be hemmed
  or sewn in any way. The binder is used to give
  warmth to the abdomen, and it also forms a
  fomidation on wliich to pin the diaper. It
  should be rolled round the little body quite
  easily and fastened with a safety-pin with a
  shielded point, or by means of a few stitches.
  
  The Vest. - Tliis may either be hand-knitted or
  woven and should be made of the very finest wool,
  or of silk and wool. It should have high neck
  and long sleeves if for winter wear, and be long
  enough to cover the abdomen. It is always
  better to have the fastening at the side, and
  French tape or baby ribbon is always better than
  buttons.
  
  Napkins and Pilches. - Napkins are best made
  of Turkish towelling. They should be half a
  yard wide and tliree -quarters of a yard in length,
  and made single, as they are more easily washed.
  The two opposite corners should be folded to-
  gether so as to form a triangle. The folded side
  of this triangle is put round the infant's waist
  and fastened with a safety-pin to the binder.
  Then the point is brought up between the legs
  and fastened in front. The first pilch is made of
  
  
  • No. 37947. Head Flannel and Pilch.
  
  flannel and is worn over the napkin for safety's
  sake. It might either be in the form of a square
  and put on in the same way as the napkin,
  or it might be shaped as in illustration. A
  mackintosh pilch is sometimes used to save
  frequent changing, but this is most reprehensible,
  and generally shows laziness and lack of attention
  on the part of the nurse. The mackintosh acts
  as a sort of compress and is most unhealthy. It
  might be used for an hour or two on any special
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  473
  
  
  occasion when an accident is to be dreaded,
  but under no other circumstance.
  
  The Barracoat or Flannel Petticoat. - This is the
  next article of clothing. It should be made with
  the body and skirt in one and should fasten on
  the shouldei's. It is a mistake to make it too
  long, as it only adds weight - a few inches below
  the feet will be quite sufficient. Sometimes a
  second petticoat is worn made of fine lawn or
  nainsook, but this is not necessary with a
  woollen frock.
  
  The Frock. - The material of which tliis is made
  naust vary according to circumstances, and, as
  said before, some woollen material is best. Nun's
  veiUng is suitable for summer wear, while for
  winter wincey or viyella will be better. For
  daintier wear or special occasions white silk
  trimmed with lace or a dainty embroidered
  muslin might be used.
  
  Woollen Bootees and Drawers. - Little wooUen
  bootees should be worn night and day. They
  can either be knitted or crocheted, and should
  be warm and roomy. When the clothes are
  shortened, the bootees should be long enough to
  come weU up the legs for protection. Woollen
  drawers are also useful for slipping on when the
  baby is taken out of doors, and sometimes they
  are made all in one with the bootees.
  
  Bibs. - These should be made of a material
  which does not readily absorb moisture. Soft
  Turkish towelling with a scalloped edge are best
  for ordinary wear, while one made of embroidered
  silk can bo worn for best.
  
  For Outdoor Wear. - For the first three
  months there is nothmg more comfortable than
  a shawl and a Uttle knitted bonnet, although
  many mothers prefer the cloak made of fine
  cashmere or silk trimmed with swansdown or
  silk embroidery. Care must be taken when the
  cloak is used that the weight of it does not hang
  from the baby's shoulder. A Uttle knitted
  jacket should always be worn underneath the
  cloak.
  
  Gloves. - Wlien the child is older the tiny
  hands should be protected with gloves mthout
  fingers. These should be tied in at the wrist and
  fastened in place with a safety-pin.
  
  (For Children's Clothes, see p. 495.)
  
  For those who wish to buy the little garments
  ready made, most of the large drapery establish-
  ments will supply lists giving the prices of the
  various articles, and special ladies' outfitters
  are always ready to give all the necessary infor-
  mation as to quality and prices.
  
  THE MONTHLY NURSE
  
  It will first bo necessary to decide whether to
  engage a trained nurse or an untrained one, a
  choice which will doubtless be influenced by such
  considerations as income and mode of living ; for,
  naturally, the trained midwife expects a higher
  fee than her self-trained colleague. Moreover,
  
  
  she will not undertake any ordinary household
  duties, knowing full well that mother and babe
  will make such demands on her time as to leave
  no leisure for her to attend to any matters
  outside the sick-room.
  
  It is not unusual for a doctor to give particu-
  lars of several n\irses to patients whose accouche -
  monts he undertakes. Before closing with any
  one of them, it is always well to obtain references
  from previous patients similarly circumstanced
  to yourself, that you may ascertain whether,
  besides being sldlled at her work, the nurse of
  your choice is also a pleasant woman to live
  with. You do not want any one whose presence
  is hkely to prove irritating, nor who wiU be
  lacking in both tact and sympathy.
  
  The nurse is usually paid by the week or month,
  and will expect, in addition to her fee, laundry
  expenses, as well as her fare, should she come a
  long distance. If she is engaged to attend the
  patient some weeks before the expected event,
  it is usual to pay half-fee for the period of
  waiting.
  
  A good deal of possible friction will be saved
  if at the time of engagement there is a clear
  understanding as to exactly what duties the nurse
  may be expected to perform. The bedroom is
  in her sole charge and she will see to the dusting
  of it, but she will expect the relaying and hght-
  ing of the fire to be done by the maid. Attend-
  ance in the way of bringing up hot water, meals,
  &c., will also have to be given by the latter, as
  the trained nurse cannot be asked to do house-
  work of any kind. Details such as the washing
  of napkins, &c., are also points which will have
  to be settled with the nurse \ipon engagement.
  
  If possible, the nvu"se should take her mc als in
  a room by herself ; she should not be expected
  to join the servants in the kitchen. The meals
  should be served preferably in a dressing-room
  adjoining that of the patient, as in these cu-cum-
  stances, especially dm-ing the first daj's after
  the confinement, she will be at hand in caSQ
  of need.
  
  Baby's Arrival. - Once these arrangements
  are complete, everything will be in readiness for
  baby's arrival. The nurse will have probably
  taken up residence in the house a few days
  beforehand, and will thus be able to notify those
  in attendance as to when the doctor should be
  summoned. The management of the confine-
  ment will now be in the hands of the doctor
  and nurse who have undertaken the case, and
  their instructions should be carried out in evei'y
  way.
  
  If baby arrives unexpectedly when neither
  doctor nor nurse aie present, the person in
  attendance should see that he is placed in a
  position to breathe properly and that he is not
  being suffocated with clothing. Afterwards well
  wash his eyes with plain warm water and clean
  pieces of old linen, and then cover him with a
  soft warm blanket, and ho will take no hurt for
  
  
  474
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  some time, until experienced assistGince can be
  procured.
  
  THE NURSERY
  
  Whenever possible, there should bo a room set
  apart for the children of the house, a room in
  ■which they can play and spend happily the hours
  they are not sleeping or out of doors. Let the
  nursery bo one of the largest and healthiest
  rooms in the house, not a room in the attics
  ■which is liable to be too hot in summer and too
  cold in winter, nor yet one in the basement
  •which will bo dark and possibly damp as well.
  
  The ideal nursery has a south or south-west
  aspect ; it is lofty and spacious, ■with a fireplace,
  a good window that opens top and bottom, and a
  cheerful outlook. Unfortunately, it is not always
  possible to find a room fulfilling all these require-
  ments, but we can always do our best, remember-
  ing that fine healthy children cannot bo reared in
  dark and cheerless rooms, so let us give them all
  the sunsliine and good air we can if we -wish
  them to develop physically and mentally, for
  they are like the flowers which droop and grow
  pale if they are left in the dark.
  
  The walls should bo washable throughout -
  distemper, enamel paint, or varnished paper are
  all suitable coverings. A light harmoruous
  colour is best, gi'ving a feeling of restfulness. If
  paper is used, it must be of a very simple pattern ;
  in fact, there is nothing so charming as the plain
  coloured wall. Monotony can be avoided by the
  use of a simple coloured frieze with a few figures
  of animals, birds, or flowers, &c., and designed
  by some good firm. All intricate patterns and
  multiplicity of design must be avoided ; papers
  covered with pictures that tell stories only tire
  and confuse the child's mind. There might also
  be a few good pictures on the walls of objects
  that will interest children, but never permit
  anything in the way of rubbish - ^rather leave
  the walls bare. Pictures must not be hung too
  liigh.
  
  The best floor covering is cork carpet, as it is
  warm and washable and very durable. Indian
  matting and Unolcum are also good, but the
  latter is cold, and ruga would be required. Un-
  covered floors are not good, unless of the real
  parquet flooring, as splinters are apt to come off
  the wood and got into the little one's hands and
  feet - and carpets are not hygienic.
  
  As for furniture, the less there is the better,
  and what there is should be of the simplest
  description. It must be of a kind that is easily
  washed and cleaned, with as few sharp angles
  as possible, and arranged bo as to leave open
  floor space for the children to have a full clear
  run in which to exercise their limbs. A good
  steady table for meals, a few chairs, a low chair
  for nurse, a roomy cupboard, a toy-cupboard,
  a low kindergarten table with a little chair for
  each child are the principal articles required.
  
  A nui-sory guard should bo firmly fixed to tho
  
  
  fireplace, and one that covers the grate right over
  is the best. It is a convenience, too, to have a
  
  
  Nursery Fire-Guard.
  
  rail on the outside on which little garments can
  be put to warm.
  
  A good cupboard for the nurse's vise ia very
  necessary, or it might be a cupboard and chest
  of drawers combined. If meals are taken in the
  nursery this •will hold the children's special
  china, table linen and so forth, sewing materials
  and many other odds and ends.
  
  The toy-cupboard, too, is very essential if tho
  children are to be taught to be tidy, and it is well
  to allow a special shelf or division for each child.
  It must also be low enough to bo within their
  reach. A low kindergarten table with the little
  miniature chairs will also be foimd useful when
  the children are at an age to draw, paint, work
  with clay, or amuse themselves with other quiet
  occupations.
  
  Another useful addition to the nursery is a play-
  pen in which a child can be put to crawl about
  
  
  Play-Pea
  
  without any danger of its hurting itself. A
  washable crawling rug will also bo useful, and a
  cosy hearth-rug will give an appearance of com-
  fort to the room.
  
  When curtains are used they must bo made
  of some washable material. Casement curtains
  are really the best, as they do away with the
  necessity of having blinds.
  
  A high window should have one or two bars
  fixed across it for safety.
  
  A reliable clock and a thermometer must not
  bo forgotten, and if bathing is done in the
  nursery there shoiild be a good draught-screen.
  
  Cleanliness and Ventilation. - It is very im-
  portant that the nursery bo kept thoroughly
  clean ; there must be cleanliness in every detail.
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  475
  
  
  The room miist be swept and dusted every day,
  and the floor washed once a week. Care must
  be taken on the day that the washing is done
  that the children do not return to it until the
  floor is dry. Choose a time when the children
  are out of doors, or when they can spend several
  hours in another room. After the washing is
  done, both door and window must be left w^de
  open so that a ctu'rent of air may dry the room,
  and a good fire must be kept biu-ning unless the
  weather is warm and bright.
  
  The best time for cleaning the fireplace in the
  nursery is in the evening, when the children are
  in bed and nurse has finished with the room.
  The fire can then be raked out, the grate cleaned,
  and all made ready for putting a match to the
  fire in the morning. The floor of the room
  might also be swept in the evening, leaving only
  the dusting to be done next day.
  
  Good V cntilation is also very important in the
  nursery, and fresh air must be admitted freely.
  During the day all windows should be kept open
  in warm weather, and in cold weather either one
  window must be left open a little way, or a simple
  Hinck's-Bird ventilator (see p. 8) inserted.
  W^ien the children are out the windows might be
  thrown wide open. Opportunity might also be
  taken while the children are out of drying any
  wet towels, &c., but tliis ought on no account to
  be allowed when the nursery is occupied, as it
  would make the air of the room too moist and
  might be hurtful to young children.
  
  The Night Nursery. - The apartment in which
  the children sleep, whether it be the room
  occupied by the nurbd as well or a special room
  set apart for the children by themselves, must be
  chosen and furnished as carefully as the day
  nursery. The same rules as regards ventilation
  and general arrangement will apply here.
  
  The furniture should be as scanty as possible
  and of a kind that wall wash. There must bo a
  cot or little bed for each child and also a bed for
  
  
  Cot with Drop-Side.
  
  the nurse. There is nothing nicer than the little
  wliite enamelled bods with a spring or wire
  foundation, as they can be so easily washed and
  kept clean. A cot is always best when it is made
  with a lirop-side ; the bed is more easily made,
  and it is also a simpler mat^^er to get at the child.
  Very young children should have their cots
  
  
  covered with a net to prevent them getting over
  the sides and hurting themselves.
  
  The most suitable bedding is a good hair
  mattress and a low soft pillow. It is most
  important that the mattress should be fresh and
  clean ; it should be taken to pieces periodically
  and thoroughly aired and renewed if necessary.
  
  The covering must be warm, but as light as
  possible - an under -blanket, one or two upper
  blankets, and an eiderdown or light cover will be
  necessary. Good cotton sheets will also be
  required for the older children, but none for the
  baby's bed. A mackintosh sheet should also be
  supplied for the bed of a very young child.
  
  The floor of the night nursery should be
  covered with linoleum or cork carpet or left bare,
  and two or three rugs should be supplied for
  putting at the side of the beds.
  
  The nurse will also require a dressing-table for
  her own use and a chest of drawers or other
  receptacle for keeping her clothes.
  
  There should also be one or two chairs, one
  low chair and a screen. If the bath-room is
  close at hand a wash-stand will not be required.
  
  Casement curtains of a pretty green or other
  soft shade will be the best for keeping out the
  light, and will do away with the necessity for
  bUnds.
  
  Apart from the actual furniture required, the
  children's sleeping-room should be left as empty
  as possible. There should be no boxes stored
  under beds nor on the top of wardrobes, no
  garments left hanging on pegs, nor a quantity of
  books, pictures, and ornaments, which only help
  to collect dust.
  
  The window should be left open night and day,
  and when heating is necessary it should be by
  means of an open fire and not a stove. Gas
  should not be left burning in the bedroom at
  night, but a night-light may be used if a light is
  needed.
  
  THE NURSE
  
  Choice and Qualifications. - Too great care
  cannot be taken in the choice of a nurse for
  the little ones. There is hardly any position
  so full of trust and responsibility, and when a
  mother realises that the health and character
  of her children in after life will to a large extent
  be determined by the treatment they receive
  in the first years of their life, she will make every
  effort and even sacrifice rather than lot tliem be
  under the control of an ignorant or unprincipled
  woman.
  
  A good nurse ought to bo fond of children,
  good tempered, and thoroughly trustworthy.
  She must be healthy and active, bright and
  happy-looking, and capable of gentle firmness.
  It is important also that she speaks well and
  has no defect or peculiarity of any kind, as
  children are very quick to imitate both the bad
  and the good.
  
  Personal cleanliness is another important
  
  
  476
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  qualification, and as regards dress this must
  always bo neat and tidy and very simple in style.
  Some people insist upon their nurses wearing
  wlute, but this Ls not always adx-isable. For
  one thing, the continual glare of everything
  wliite, especieilly out of doors, is not considered
  good for bab}''8 eyes, and then the washing is a
  consideration, as white, if worn at all, must be
  clean. A nice soft grey or navy blue is pre-
  ferable, or grey might be worn in summer and
  blue in winter. Tlio morning-dress should be
  of linen or other washing material, and for the
  afternoon alpaca, beige, or serge would be suitable.
  An apron must always be worn indoors. The
  out-of-door costume must be quiet and neat -
  there is no occasion for her to wear the uniform
  of a hospital nurse - in fact, this should rather be
  avoided - a jacket or coat to match the dress in
  colour and a hat or bonnet with a ribbon trim-
  ming are perhaps the most suitable. White
  gloves should always be worn when taking out
  a baby.
  
  A nurse should be a good needlewoman. She
  may not be called upon to make new garments
  for the children, but she is generally expected
  to keep their clothing in order and do little
  renovations.
  
  A knowledge of laundry work and simple
  nursery cookery are also useful acquirements,
  and if she has experience in treating the simple
  ailments of children, or knows what to do in a
  case of emergency, she will be all the more valu-
  able to her employer.
  
  Unfortunately, it is not always easy to find
  all the above requirements in one woman. It
  very often happens that the one who is com-
  petent is not good-tempered and resents any
  interference, or that the good-tempered one
  lacks knowledge. This makes it all the more
  important that the mother should always take
  the chief supervision ; in fact, it is one of her
  first duties, and she ought under all circum-
  stances to reign supreme in her own nursery,
  and no matter how clever and experienced the
  niu-so may be it is never right to give her the full
  control of the children.
  
  Duties. - Ab regards the duties of the nurse and
  the order in which they are to be performed, it is
  almost impossible to set down any rules which
  will suit all cases. There must be a plan and a
  time-table, but it is for every mother either to
  make her own, or to do so in consultation with
  her nurse, and then to see that it is adhered to.
  The duties will naturally vary with the size of
  the family and the number of servants kept,
  and the mode of living. VVhen there are
  several children and two nurses are kept, the
  heeid nurse will have the entire charge of the
  infant. She will also be responsible for the care
  of the other children, but the under-nurse or
  nursemaid will assist with their dressing, &c.
  She will be responsible for the order and manage-
  ment of the nursery, the arrangement of meals,
  
  
  &c. The under-nurse will do all the rough work,
  including cleaning, wasliing of dishes, carrying
  coals, and work under the direction of the head
  nurse. When the nurso is single-handed and
  there are several children, she will either require
  help from the housemaid in the cleaning of her
  nurseries, or the mother must be prepared to
  take the cliildren for a certain time each day in
  order to give tho nurse some freedom to do a
  little washing or cleaning. Bj' this means she
  ought to be able to get tlirough much useful
  work.
  
  FEEDING
  
  There is unfortunately a growing disinclination
  among mothers to nourish their infants as natiu-e
  intended. Selfishness is as a rule at the root of
  this very unmotherly feeling. Tho mother who
  nurses her infant will require to lend a more or
  less quiet life for nine months, forgoing many
  social engagements, and rather than deny her-
  self in this respect a mother will sacrifice the
  welfare of her little one by depriving it of its
  natural food. Vanity is also often the reason
  for objection to nursing. The plea is made that
  it " spoils " the figure, whereas, as a matter of
  fact, to nurse a baby for the first few weeks of
  its life is to materially assist nature in her re-
  storing process, and shapeliness in consequence
  is regained sooner than in other circumstances.
  Nursing is good for the mother as well as for the
  child.
  
  There are many instances, of course, when it is
  impossible for the mother to niurse her child,
  but if it is possible she should look upon it as
  her first duty towards the little one to do so.
  
  Tliat the mother's milk is lacking in quantity
  or quality is not now accounted any argument
  in favour of neglecting altogether the duty of
  breast-feeding. In these circumstances a baby
  may be brought up partly on its mother's milk
  and partly on the bottle. The mother who
  finds it exhausting to nurso altogether ci^i, for
  instance, feed it herself in the day and give it
  tho bottle at night. In this way tho ht'lo one
  is not altogether deprived of its natural food.
  Time was when " the mixing of milks " was
  regarded as most unwise, but that is now past,
  and it is universally recognised that baby may
  be given the bottle as well as partially breast-fed
  with very satisfactory results.
  
  Should there be evidences of consumption or
  other disease likely to be hereditary, consult tho
  doctor as to the advisabiUty or otherwiflo of
  artificially feeding baby.
  
  The bresists must bo carefully tended during
  pregnancy, if the mother intends to feed her
  baby. See that the corsets do not flatten the
  nipples, which should be hardened by bathing
  them night and morning for the last couple of
  months, and afterwards applying a mixture
  cither of lavender water or pure eau de
  Cologne.
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  477
  
  
  The infant should be put to the breast directly
  after it has been washed, as the first milk will
  act as a mild purgative for the Uttle one. During
  the first two days of its existence an infant does
  not require to be fed more than once every four
  hoiirs. Afterwards it must be fed every two
  hours with the utmost regularity in the day and
  about three or four times in the night for the
  first two or three months - after that every
  two and a half hours, and then every three hours
  until it is weaned.
  
  Great care must be taken to keep to regular
  hours for baby's meals. If the child is allowed
  to feed at all times and at all hours directly it
  utters so much as a cry, not only will it be bad
  for the infant, but the mother must needs lead
  the hfe of a veritable slave to her baby, never
  being able to count on so much as half-an-hoiu^
  of freedom, and, what is more, she will be forced
  to neglect in a certain meastu-e both her husband
  and her home.
  
  A little patience exercised at first in adhering
  firmly to a rule will do away with the necessity
  for such a state of affairs. Even young babies
  will realise the quaUty of firmness in their
  mother when once they come into contact with
  it. At night-time in particular will a mother
  have trouble with the infant whom she has un-
  duly pampered in this respect, and the longer
  this pampering goes on the more difficult will if
  become to cure the bad habits so formed. Very
  often consideration for her husband who needs
  his rest so much will induce a mother to nurse a
  baby whenever he cries at m'ght in order to keep
  it quiet. It may be taken that the infant of a
  few months old is a reasoning being in so far
  that, as soon as he knows crying will ensure the
  gratification of his wishes, the more he will resort
  to this expedient. In these circumstances it is
  better to sleep with the child in another room for
  a few nights, and train it in the way it should go
  in this respect. With a little patience proper
  habits may be formed, although the mother who
  has been firm in the training of her httle one
  since infancy is not^ likely to be troubled in this
  way.
  
  Of course, there are exceptions - delicate
  children will require feeding more frequently
  than healthy ones, and the doctor's advice will
  have to be taken in tliis respect, but here again
  regularity should be aimod at.
  
  Weaning should take place when the infant is
  nine months old, and in any circumstances the
  mother's nursing should not continue beyond
  ten raoiiths. Prolonged nvirsing is both bad for
  tho mother and bad for the child.
  
  It is better to accomplish the weaning gradu-
  ally, beginning by gi\'ing the new food at one or
  two meals only at first, gradually substituting it
  for the natural nourishment at other meals until
  at tho end of a month the mother can leave off
  nursing altogether. This gradual weaning is
  more than ever impori-ant when it takes place
  
  
  in the hot summer weather. Whilst nursing,
  a mother should take plain nourishing food,
  avoiding everything that is rich or highly
  seasoned.
  
  Bringing up by Hand. - Wlien it is quite impos-
  sible for a mother to nurse her baby, it will be
  necessary that the httle one be brought up by
  hand. There is the alternative, of course, of
  engaging a " wet nurse," but this is not always
  advisable, for many reasons. The milk used
  should be the special " nursery milk," which is
  always sent from the dairies in sealed bottles. It
  must be diluted with barley water and sweetened
  with a little sugar, and freed from germs by
  boiling. This should be done by placing a jug
  containing the milk into a saucepan of water
  and putting this on to boil. The milk will be
  ready when the water has boiled for fifteen
  minutes.
  
  The boat-shaped feeding-bottle is the best
  kind to use, and infinitely preferable to the
  bottle with the long rubber tube. Tlie latter
  is unhygienic, because it is so difficult to keep
  the tube clean, and any milk left in will turn
  
  
  Boat-shaped Feeding-Bottle.
  
  sour, diarrhoea being often caused in this way.
  It is of the first imjiortanco that feeding-bottles
  should be kept thoroughly clean. When baby
  has finished his meal, any milk that he has left
  should at once bo tlirown away, and the bottle
  should be rinsed out, first in cold water and
  then in hot water in which a tiny piece of
  soda has been placed. It should then be
  cleaned out with a special bottle-brush, well
  rinsed, and left in a basin of cold water until
  required. Two or three bottles should always
  be in use, so that there is always one ready
  when required.
  
  Exceptional care is required in bringing the
  baby up by hand, tho least thing wrong in
  the food causing diarrhoea, which often proves
  fatal to infants. It is one of the duties of
  the monthly nurse before leaving to carefully
  instruct the mother and also the nurse in
  regard to the feeding and general care of the
  infant.
  
  The following " Feeding Cliarts " and Recipes
  have been prepared by Mrs. Berntird Mole,
  Principal of the Hampstead Nursery College,
  and will give an idea (1) of the proportions of
  milk and barley water to be given to babies
  up to the age of ten months ; (2) the gradual
  adding of other foods at nine months to eighteen
  months with some useful recipes; and (3) a
  suitable diet for babies of eighteen months old
  and upwards.
  
  
  478
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  INFANTS' FEEDING TABLE
  
  Maximum
  
  
  Age
  
  Milk
  
  Barley water or
  boiled water
  
  Total quantity
  
  Time, every
  
  1 month . .
  
  1 oz. 2 drs.
  
  1 oz. 6 drs.
  
  3 oz.
  
  2 hours
  
  2 months . .
  
  2 oz. 4 drs.
  
  2 oz. 4 drs.
  
  5 oz.
  
  2i hours
  
  3 months . .
  
  3} oz.
  
  2 0Z.
  
  5i oz.
  
  ^ hours
  
  4 months . .
  
  ' 4 oz.
  
  2 oz.
  
  6 oz.
  
  2 J hours
  
  6 months . .
  
  1 5 oz.
  
  2 oz.
  
  7 oz.
  
  3 hours
  
  6 months . .
  
  5 oz.
  
  1 oz. 4 drs.
  
  7 oz.
  
  3 hours
  
  7 months . .
  
  6 oz.
  
  loz.
  
  71 oz.
  
  3 hours
  
  8 months . .
  
  7 oz.
  
  4 drs.
  
  8 oz.
  
  3 hours
  
  9 months. .
  
  8 oz.
  
  S or 9 oz.
  
  Si hours
  
  10 months . .
  
  8 oz.
  
  8 or 9 oz.
  
  3} hours
  
  After 9 months, broth, bread and milk, rusks, Kobinson's patent barley
  
  may be given.
  >'OTE. - 1 tea-spoonful equals 1 drachm ; 2 table-spoonfuls equal 1 ounce.
  
  DIET CHART
  
  
  (9 to 18
  
  At 9 months leave off mid-day bottle and give
  broth with bread-crumbs in it, or fine sago,
  custard, or lightly -boiled egg (yolk only)
  poured over sieved crumbs.
  
  At 10 )tionths leave off breakfast bottle, and give
  bread and milk (sieved cnimbs).
  
  At 11 months leave off tea bottle, and give
  " Nursery Rusks " soaked in boiling water,
  and warm milk poured over.
  
  
  months)
  
  At 12 months leave off supper bottle and give
  
  Robinson's Patent Barley.
  Keep on with 10 p.m. hottle till 12 months,
  
  then give warm drink of milk to take its
  
  place.
  At 13 and 18 months give good dinners of
  
  broth and crumbs followed by some
  
  nourishing milk pudding and a drink of
  
  cold water.
  
  
  DIET CHART
  
  
  (After
  
  18 months
  
  7.30 A.M.
  
  12.30 P.M.
  
  6 P.M.
  
  Monday . .
  
  Tuesday . .
  
  Wednesday .
  Thursday . .
  
  Friday . . .
  Saturday . .
  Sunday . .
  
  Bread and dripping
  Bread and jam
  6 oz. warm milk
  
  Fried bread
  
  Bread and marmalade
  
  6 oz. warm milk
  
  Bread and milk
  Bread and jam
  
  Fried bread
  
  Bread and marmalade
  
  6 oz. warm milk
  
  Bread and milk
  Bread and jam
  
  Porridge
  
  Bread and marmalade
  
  EgKs
  
  Bread and butter
  
  6 oz. warm milk
  
  Minced meat and
  
  gravy, potatoes
  Suet pudding
  
  Vegetables and gravy
  Milk pudding and
  baked apple, ic.
  
  Soup and milkpudding
  Fruit
  
  Vegetables and gravy
  Fairy pudding
  
  Fish
  
  Milk puddingand fruit
  
  Stew gravj-
  Boiled batter
  
  CiT&vy and vegetables
  Fruit and milk j>ud-
  ding
  
  Robinson's patent
  barley
  
  Bread and milk
  
  Robinson's barley
  Bread and milk
  
  Robinson's barley
  Bread and milk
  Robinson's barley
  
  Note.- Tea : bread and butter, rake, or jam, and warm milk.
  Lunch : warm milk and biscuit.
  
  
  SOME NURSERY RECIPES
  Receipt (or Fine Sago
  
  2 tea-spoonfuls fine sago. I 1 teacup cold water.
  
  Method. - Simmer all the morning (not less
  than twenty minutes), tidd a little brown sugar
  and milk.
  
  
  Mntton, Veal, and Beef Broth
  
  1 lb. of meat. | 1 pint of water.
  
  Method. - Shred meat, add salt, simmer in
  double saucepan three to four hours. Another
  method for the nursery. Shred meat, add pinch
  of salt and water. Stand all the morning.
  Warm up to 130№ and serve.
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  479
  
  
  Custard
  
  6 oz. milk. I 1 tea-spoonful sugar.
  
  1 egg. I
  
  Method. - Beat egg, pour on hot milk in which
  sugar has been added. Stir till wooden spoon is
  coated.
  
  Note. - Must not boil or will curdle.
  
  Bread and Milk
  
  1 slice of bread. I 6 oz. milk.
  
  Method. - Rub the bread through a sieve,
  place in cup and pour on boihng milk in which
  a little brown sugar has been added.
  
  Note. - After twelve months old, cut bread
  with crust into cubes.
  
  Boiled Egg
  
  Method. - Carefully drop egg into boiling water,
  let it stand in hot water for eight minutes, and
  the yolk and white will be jelly-like consistency.
  Pour on to crumbs and serve.
  
  Note. - ^Must not boil or white will harden.
  
  Another method. Boil three minutes and
  use yolk only.
  
  Albumen Water
  
  1 white of egg. I i pint of water.
  
  Method. - Stir in slightly-beaten white of egg
  into half a pint warm water, add little sugar.
  
  Whey
  
  1 pint milk. 1 1 tea-spoon rennet.
  
  Method.- Heat milk to 100№ F. Stb in the
  rennet and allow it to cool (not less than seven
  minutes). Stir up w'th fork and strain through
  muslin. Heat up again to 70№ F. to get rid of
  rennet. Strain before using.
  
  Barley Water
  
  2 table-sp. coarse pearl I 1 pint of water,
  barley. I
  
  Method. - ^Wash barley in strainer by pouring
  hot water through. Put barley in jug and cover
  with a pint of boiling water. Stand all day and
  strain oS quantity for use.
  
  Nursery Rusk
  
  Cover rusk with boiling water and let it soak.
  Add warm milk and a little brown sugar when
  ready for uso.
  
  Diet for Older Children After the child is
  
  over three years old, the diet may be gradually
  enlarged until it is able to take simple dishes of
  all hinds. The food must always be simple and
  well cooked, and never highly seasoned.
  
  The most substantial meal should be in the
  middle of the day, when one of the following
  dishes might be served : fish either steamed or
  stewed or made up in some simple way with
  butter sauce, game (if not high), and poultry,
  roast, boiled or broiled meat. Salted meats
  
  
  and spiced salt fish, pork and liver should be
  avoided, also rich stews and highly -seasoned
  sauces of any kind. There should also be a
  liberal supply of vegetables in season.
  
  In winter especially the dinner should com-
  mence with a little soup ; in fact, with young
  children a good broth or milk soup might quite
  well take the place of the meat course once or
  twice a week if it is followed by a good nourishing
  pudding.
  
  As the pudding is generally the favourite dish
  with the little ones, care must be taken to have
  it well cooked and hght, and some cooks are
  very apt to be careless in this respect. A suet
  pudding in some form or other is one of the most
  nourishing dishes that can be given - the plain
  suet dumpling served with golden syrup or
  brown sugar, the dumpling with a few currants
  or raisins in it, the suet pudding with fruit
  inside, or the jam roly-poly are all excellent
  if well cooked. Even the simple milk pudding
  requires care in the preparation, because unless
  the starchy substance of which it is made is
  thoroughly cooked, it will not be wholesome.
  
  Variety must be studied as much as possible ;
  if the same dishes are served day after day the
  children become tired of them and do not take
  sufficient for their proper nourishment.
  
  Fruit in some form should be given every day,
  and as some children can take more of this than
  others, it is the duty of the mother to watch
  what agrees with each child. As a rule fruits
  are more easily taken stewed than raw. Stewed
  prunes, apples, or figs, baked apples and baked
  bananas can vary the winter diet, while in summer
  there will be the various fresh fruits in season.
  
  The older children's breakfast should consist
  of porridge or some other cereal food with good
  milk, followed by eggs or a simple fish dish, or
  toast and bacon fat, with cocoa, hot milk, or
  milk and coffee to drink. If breakfast is served
  very early a glass of milk with a biscuit, oatcake,
  or piece of gingerbread might be given in the
  middle of the forenoon.
  
  Then for tea - bread and butter \rith syrup or
  jam, some plain cake or biscuits, and either
  cocoa or warm milk to drink.
  
  The supper taken in the evening must be very
  light in character - warm milk with bread and
  butter, a well-cooked milk pudding, a dish of
  rice, or some milk soup axe all suitable.
  
  THE CHILD'S TOILET
  
  Bath. - Perfect cleanliness is another essential
  in the healthy life of the child, as without this
  the skin will be unable to discharge its functions.
  One cannot use too much water, and the some-
  what common fear that more than one bath a
  day is weakening is quite wrong ; the error made
  is more likely to be oa. the side of too Uttle
  washing rather than that of too much.
  
  All children should bo bathed at least once
  
  
  480
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  daily, and tho habit must be begun from infancy.
  Each cliild must bo provided with its own
  sponge and flannel or other washing requisites.
  
  For an infant tho tomperaturo of tho water
  should bo about 100№ F. for both tho morning and
  evening bath, and this may be continued for
  the first six months. As it gets a Uttle older
  the temperature of tho morning bath may bo
  reduced to 80№ or 85№, and after three years old
  to 65№ or 70№. With older children tho morning
  bath sliould bo given very qmckly with plenty
  of friction by rubbing, and they •will also require
  a hotter bath in the evening at least twice a
  week if it cannot be managed oftener. Or they
  may have a warm bath in the evening, and a
  quick sponge over with cold or tepid water in
  the morning.
  
  A little cliild must always be bathed in a
  warm room, and if, when older, he is taken
  to a bath-room, care must be taken to guard
  against chills.
  
  A bath must never be given directly after a
  meal. An hour at least must elapse between the
  taking of food and the bath. This is why it is
  generally found more convenient to give little
  cliildren their supper after their bath, either
  sitting at the nursery fire or in bed.
  
  The same would apply to bathing in the sea.
  Mothers should see that their children never run
  off to bathe directly after a meal. Boys especi-
  ally must bo warned, as they are inclined to
  jump into tho water at any odd time.
  
  Neither must children be forced to go into
  cold water against their will, especially into tho
  sea. A bath or bathe under these circumstances
  can do no good and often much harm, and there
  is generally a gentler way of getting them
  ewjcustomed to tho water.
  
  Some children cannot bear cold water, especi-
  ally if their circulation is poor or they are
  delicate in any way. A mother must use her
  own judgment and discretion in this matter, and
  both baths and bathing should always be under
  her supor\asion or instruction, and be given by
  some reliable person.
  
  To Bath an Infant. - The best time for the
  morning bath is about 9 or 9.30, and about
  one and a half hours after it has had a meal.
  By this time the nursery will be thoroughly
  warm and there will not bo much danger
  of chill. First put in readiness ovorytliing that
  is required. Tliero should bo a nice warm
  T^irkish bath-towel without fringes and a fine
  faCe towel ; tho little garments should be hung
  np to warm in front of tho fire, and baby's
  basket with all the toilet appliances should bo
  at hand. Put a folding-screen round the chair
  and fireplewxs so as to shut out all draughts
  from door and window, and see that both door
  and window are closed for the time being. The
  little bath might be put on a stand so as to avoid
  unnecessary stooping.
  
  Put in sufficient water to cover the baby's
  
  
  chest. Care should be taken to put in the
  cold before the boiUng water, otherwise if tho
  bath is of tin, the foot of it N^all retain tho heat
  and baby's skin might bo injured. A largo
  apron should be worn when giving tho bath ;
  one made of Turkish towolling is tho best.
  Castile or other pure soap must bo used, and
  nothing of a cheap fancy nature. A soft sponge
  or a very soft piece of flannel should bo used for
  wasliing. Needless to say, the sponges must be
  kept in a very clean and fresh condition.
  
  Wlien the infant is undressed, sponge and soap
  tho head first very gently, and being careful
  that the soap does not trickle into tho eyes.
  Careful attention must be paid to the eyelids,
  ears, and nostrils.
  
  Then wash the rest of the body, after which
  baby may be lowered gently into the bath.
  The left hand and fore-arm must support tho
  back and head of the baby while in the bath,
  while tho right hand does the sponging ; or ono
  of the patent hammock baths might be used -
  they have a piece of stout webbing stretched
  across the bath from side to side on which the
  baby rests, wlxilo both hands of the nurse are
  left free. Two or three minutes will bo quite
  long enough for the baby to bo in the water;
  it should then be lifted into a warm soft towel
  fo"r drying.
  
  P"ub gently all over with the towel, using the
  fine towel for the face and neck, and then rub
  with the hand, as this helps cu-culation. A Uttlo
  powder should also bo used to such parts as tho
  creases of the thiglis, the armpits, under the
  knees and tho throat.
  
  Tho dressing must be performed as expedi-
  tiously as possible, and by the time this is finished
  the baby will be ready for its meal and a nap.
  
  Clean Habits. - A word might bo said about
  the training of the infant in the habit of personal
  cleanliness. From infancy the nurse or mother
  should make a practice of holding the child over
  a vessel every two hours and especially after
  sleep. If this is done with regularity the infant
  very soon gives warning of its wants, and at
  tliree months the napkin ouglit to bo wetted very
  rarely during tho day, and at a year old might
  bo dispensed with except for night-wear. Of
  course there will bo exceptions, and some chil-
  dren are more difficult to train than others.
  A napkin should bo changed at once when it has
  been soiled ; if left on for hours it hinders tho
  formation of cleanly habits. Tlie shaped pilch
  should be continued for some time after the
  napkins have been given up.
  
  Care of the Hair. - During infancy the hair
  should bo soaped and washed every day, dried
  with a soft towel and brushed with a very soft
  brush. When the hair has grown, once or twice
  a week will bo sufficient for washing, and care
  must be taken that it is thoroughly dry before the
  child is put to bed.
  
  Oils and hair- washes are quite unnecessary for
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  481
  
  
  children's hair ; in fact, it will grow better with-
  out them, and good and regular brushing with
  clean brushes should be relied upon for keeping
  it pretty and soft. It is a mistake to let a Uttle
  child's hair grow too long, as it just heats the
  head unnecessarily. Neither should there be any
  tight plaiting or putting up in curls at night
  - there is no harm in plaiting it loosely, but the
  head must be left perfectly at rest during the
  hours of sleep. It is important that each child
  should be provided with liis own brush and
  comb.
  
  Care of the Mouth and Teeth. - This is very
  important, and even the mouth of the tiny
  infant must receive attention and be washed
  twice a day at least. This may either be done
  before or directly after the bath. Twist a piece
  of fine lint or gauze round the finger, dip it into
  a weak solution of boracic acid and water, and
  carefully "nd gently rub the mouth and gums
  with this. As soon as the first tooth appears
  the use of the tooth brush must be commenced
  - a very soft one at first - and this must be
  dipped into the boracic acid solution and used
  very gently. A good pinch of carbonate of soda
  in the water is also a good thing, and it preserves
  the teeth against the injurious effects of milk.
  Tooth powders and pastes are not necessary for
  the first teeth, but a little precipitated chalk or
  other simple tooth powder may be used by older
  children.
  
  The chronic ill-health and low vitality of some
  children can often be traced to their teeth, and
  they are never too young to be impressed with
  the importance of keeping them clean, not only
  for the sake of appearance, but also for the sake
  of health. The most important times for clean-
  ing are morning and evening, more especially the
  latter ; to preserve the teeth and gums it is
  particularly essential that the mouth should be
  clean before going to bed at night.
  
  It is wise to commence periodical visits to a
  good dentist at a very early stage, just to make
  sure that all is in order and that the children's
  teeth are growing in a proper manner. By pay-
  ing attention to the first set of teeth, the second
  set have a bettor chance of being somid and
  good.
  
  Nails. - The nails of children must not be
  neglected. If kept clean and neatly trimmed,
  they are likely to remain a pretty shape in after
  life. The toe-nails also must not be forgotten,
  as when left too long they often cause trouble
  in walking.
  
  Sleep.- -Sleep is one of the great essentials
  of child life. A very young infant wU sleep
  twenty hours out of the twenty -four ; in fact,
  attention to its wants will take up all the time it
  nee4 be awake, and the more it sleeps the better.
  Aft^r a few weeks it begins to require less sleep,
  until at between three to sis months it will
  likely be awake for six or sev^n hours, whilst in
  the/second year twelve hours' sleep at night and
  
  
  I
  
  
  two hours in the day wiU generally be suflScient.
  A sleep in the middle of the day should be en-
  co\iraged as long as possible ; if it is continued
  until the sixth or seventh year so much the
  better ; it will result in a stronger body and
  better nerves. A child who does not get a sleep
  in the day often becomes so weary and excited
  that it cannot sleep at night.
  
  It is very important, too, that all children
  should be in bed at an early hour, and that their
  hours should not be upset, except under some
  very special circumstances. For the first three
  years bed-time should not be later than 6.30 p.1.1.
  Children of from three to five should be in bed
  by 7 o'clock, and then the time for sitting up
  should be increased very slowly until between
  the ages of thirteen and fourteen the child is
  going to bed between 8.30 and 9 o'clock.
  
  An infant may be allowed to sleep a great deal
  out of doors in its pram or bassinette. Be care-
  ful that this is placed out of a draught and
  sheltered from the sun. The baby must always
  be in a lying-down position when sleeping ,
  when older and able to sit up, it must on no
  account be allowed to sleep in this position or
  injury may be caused to the spine and neck.
  The baby must be very comfortably wrapped up
  and placed on its side. It is a good plan also
  to change the side on which it sleeps and not to
  lay it repeatedly in the same position.
  
  A child should not be hushed or rocked to
  sleep, and an empty india-rubber teat or com-
  forter should never be employed to keep it quiet.
  Neither should it require some one to sit with it
  until it goes to sleep, or be taken up and brought
  into a lighted sitting-room because it happens
  to waken up and cry. Tliese are all bad habits
  which are quite unnecessary, and if once com-
  menced are very difficult to break off. It should
  not be necessary either to insist upon silence
  in the house after the baby has gone to bed ;
  the child who has learnt to sleep while talking
  and even music is going on in an adjoining
  room will soon sleep through any sound, and
  not be easily startled.
  
  As the child grows older the question of ac-
  customing him to sleep in the dark will also have
  to be considered. There will be no difficulty on
  this score with healthy normal children who have
  been trained from infancy to go to sleep almost
  as soon as they are laid in their Uttle cots, but as
  the child grows older lois powers of imagination
  become an important factor to be reckoned with.
  Some children are highly nervous and subject
  to night terrors - although patience and firmness
  on the part of the mother will help a great deal
  towards curing this condition, yet it would be
  absolute cruelty to force a child subject to
  nervous fears to sleep in the dark. There are
  many grown-up people who dread darkness - is
  it to be wondered at, therefore, that some chil-
  dren manifest the same weakness ? Such fears, it
  is true, are often caused by injudicious manage-
  
  2h
  
  
  482
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  ment on the part of parent* and nurses. For
  instance, threats such as " I'll ask the bogies to
  come and take you," or else stories of naughty
  little boys and girls being stolon from home at
  night-time, are quite sufficient to fill even the
  least nervously-inclined children with fear.
  Let a mother see to it, therefore, that her chil-
  dren are not frightened in tliis way, and that
  their little imaginations are not distorted by
  injudicious stories of wicked people, witches and
  ghosts, wliich are so often related to them by
  well-intentioned but stupid people, who cannot
  appreciate the harm they are doing.
  
  All over-excitement of any kind should be
  avoided ; the healthier and more childish the
  life led by the little ones, the less prone will
  they be to over-excitability and nervousness ;
  a nervous child requires the greatest care and
  management, and it is only the patient and
  careful mother who, whilst doing her utmost to
  convince her little one that his fears are ground-
  less, wiU see that he leads a healthy life in every
  way ; who will be able by care and good manage-
  ment to counteract a tendency to nervousness,
  which will get worse as the child grows older if
  no effort is made to check it.
  
  Even an infant may be taught that the night
  is to be passed quietly if, when it is necessary
  to attend to its wants, everything is done with-
  out excitement and with as little light as possible.
  
  Fresh air is the best sedative, and the child
  who has been out of doors during the day, who
  is well fed and made comfortable in bed, ought
  to go off into a quiet and refreshing sleep without
  any trouble, unless there is something physically
  wrong.
  
  As said before, the covering of the beds must
  be warm and light (see p. 475) and regulated
  according to the temperatui'e and climate. A
  little child must never bo allowed to suffer from
  cold, nor lie awake for that reason. In very
  cold weather very little children, or children
  with poor circulation, should have their beds
  warmed with a hot bottle before they are put
  into them. The window in the sleeping-room
  should always be open. Rather have a fire when
  cold than shut the window, as a fire is always a
  good ventilator. No gas must be left burning
  during the night. If for any reason a light is
  required, it is better to have a night-light.
  
  Children are very apt to kick off the bed-
  clothes at night, and for this reason flannel
  sleeping-suits are better than nightgowns, even
  for girls, or tapes may be sewn to the corner of
  the top blanket and fastened to the bedstead.
  On no account must a child be allowed to sleep
  with its head under the clothes.
  
  About 10 o'clock the nurse or mother should
  always see that the children are sleeping properly
  before she goes to bed, and the little ones ought
  to be lifted and their wants attended to until
  this is no longer necessary.
  
  Whilst dealing with this subject a word of
  
  
  warning may well be given to mothers. In
  spite of the most careful training, some children
  form the habit of wetting their beds at night.
  Very often a child afflicted with worms will do
  tliis as a result of the irritation that sets in.
  Attention must be directed to ridding the child
  of the worms before he can bo cured of this
  habit. Very often, however, a child will be
  liable to this distressing tendency in spite of
  every precaution and care and without any
  apparent reason or cause. In these circum-
  stances it is ntiore often than not that he is
  afflicted ^vith some bodily defect. Medical
  advice should at once be sought, and punishment
  should never be administered for what the child
  cannot help. All such cases demand careful
  treatment and management.
  
  Fresh Air and Exercise. - The Walk out of
  Doors. - If children are to thrive they must be
  out in the open air £is much as possible. The
  importance of this cannot be too strongly
  emphasised. Of course, some judgnnent must be
  shown as regards weather and in choosing the
  hours for the daily walk. It would be wrong
  to send out very young children in snow or rain,
  if a very cold wind were blowing, or in very
  great heat.
  
  In summer weather even the new-born infant
  may be taken out of doors after the first few da3's,
  although, of course, in winter more precautions
  must be taken, and a time must be chosen when
  the sun is shining. The little one might then
  be accustomed more gradually to a change of
  temperature by wrapping it up and taking it
  into a cooler room for a short time.
  
  For the first few walks the tiny infant should
  be taken out in its nurse's arms and a ten to
  fifteen minutes' airing will be sufficiently long ;
  after that the time might be increased gradually.
  When the monthly nurse leaves, the baby should
  be taken out in a bassinette-perambulator, or
  one in which it can lie as comfortably as in its
  little cot.
  
  The choice of the first pram is very important.
  It must be one on four wheels and well swung, so
  that there is no vibration which might injure
  the child's spine. It ought also to be fitted with
  a mattress and pillow, protected and covered in
  the same way as the bed (see p. 470). There
  should also bo a hood or canopy, to protect from
  the sun or inclemencies of weather. The baby
  must be comfortably placed in his pram, a
  warm bottle being put in if the weather is cold,
  and a light and warm covering. The perambu-
  lator must bo wheeled very steadily, and on no
  account must it be jolted down steps, even one
  or two, while the baby is in it. This bassinette-
  perambulator must bo used until the baby has
  gained sufficient strength to sit up without
  causing any strain on the spine. The same pram
  can then be adapted accordingly. A mail-cart
  should not be used until the child is between a
  year and eighteen months old, and care must
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  483
  
  
  always be taken that the little legs do not
  dangle, and also that they are well protected
  from the cold.
  
  When a child is being wheeled out of doors it
  must always be protected from the hot rays of
  the sunshine, from cold wind, or from snow or
  rain.
  
  As soon as the child is steady on its legs it
  should be encouraged to walk a little out of
  doors, as this helps to keep up the circulation -
  just a little to begin with and increasing the
  distance very gradually. The mail-cart must not
  be discarded too early, because although it is
  all-important that children should be out of
  doors, it is very wrong to drag them along when
  the httle legs and bodies are tired. Of course,
  when there is a garden or field into which the
  little ones can be tiu-ned to play and run about
  in fine weather, the life out of doors is very much
  simplified - it is the town-bred child who is to be
  pitied in this respect.
  
  Other Exercises. - The exercise that an infant
  can take is very limited, but still it has its little
  movements, and these should not be checked
  but rather encouraged, as they help to develop
  its muscles. When the child is a little older it
  should be put on the floor on a rug and allowed
  to kick and roll about, and, later on, to crawl.
  Care must always be taken that it is well pro-
  tected and not hampered with its clothing. The
  habit of tossing a baby up and down is a very
  bad one ; it should not be excited, and there is
  no occasion to hold it and nurse it all its waking
  horn's. Neither should it be hurried into walking
  - in fact, there is no occasion to teach walking, as
  the baby wiU learn by itself as soon as the little
  legs are strong enough and able to bear the
  weight of the body. The use of the play-pen is
  excellent for this, as the baby will soon drag
  itself up the sides and begin cautiously to move
  round. Then later on a baby-walker might be
  used (see illustration); the baby stands inside
  
  
  Baby-Walker.
  
  this and pushes it along. It is always better to
  let them learn to walk gradually rather than to
  press them forward, as some children are natur-
  ally more backward than others in this respect.
  At about four or five years old some simple
  movements in calisthenics or Swedish gymnastics
  may be started, but th- y must not be continued
  for too long. As soon as possible, too, the child
  
  
  should be taught to hold itself erect and to
  move gracefully. Dancing is very valuable in
  this respect, as it develops grace and gives light-
  ness of movement.
  
  Swimming is another excellent exercise for
  young children, if done in moderation and the
  child is strong enough. Then later on the
  child should be encouraged to take part in out-
  door games, the amount to be always carefully
  regulated by the mother, as the tendency in
  many cases, especially with girls, is to go beyond
  their strength.
  
  CHILDREN'S AILMENTS
  
  Symptoms of Illness. - It should be taken as a
  general rule that the less medicine given in the
  nursery the better it will be for the httle ones.
  A warm bath and a suitable aperient form the
  best panacea for most childish disorders. For
  the more serious ailments, or when in doubt in
  regard to treatment of ordinary disorders, a
  doctor should be consulted. Never on any
  account administer drugs without medical ad-
  vice. The health of many a child has been
  ruined by the administration of sleeping draughts
  by unscrupulous nurses.
  
  A great deal of the anxiety connected with the
  rearing of children lies in the difficulty some-
  times experienced in discriminating between
  the various symptoms of illness which appear.
  When a child appears to be aihng it may happen
  that the indisposition is only a sUght and tem-
  porary one ; on the other hand, the symptoms
  might be the premonition of sickening for bron-
  chitis, measles, or some other illness to wloich
  children are more or less hable. Every mother
  should keep a chnical thermometer in order that
  she may be able to take the child's temperature
  and so recognise feverishness when it is present.
  In taking the temperature of children the ther-
  mometer should be placed not in the mouth,
  but either in the armpit or groin ; it should be
  allowed to remain there ten minutes, and upon
  taking it away the temperature will be found
  to be accurately noted. The normal temperature
  is 98-4№ ; in fever it will rise to 100№ and over.
  When a child is feverish the safest plan is to
  at once put it to bed, seeing that it is kept
  warm to obviate the risk of cliill, which might
  be caught if it is exposed to cold or draught
  or allowed out in the open air in its feverish
  condition, often with fatal results.
  
  In infantine disorders a great deal is often
  indicated by the natm-e of an infant's cry - the
  low, wailing cry indicating cold is quite distinct
  from the sharp impatient cry of hunger and the
  moaning of pain, whilst a half -smothered, hoarse
  cry is often indicative of bronchitis or other
  chest troubles. An infant's breathing is often
  a guide to its condition ; for instance, hurried
  breathing followed by wheezing denotes bron-
  chitis, then there is the sharp fighting for breath
  
  
  484
  
  
  THE WOMAlf^'S BOOK
  
  
  and crowing sound eissociated with crowing
  croup.
  
  There are many other signs which indicate
  a child's condition of health, too many to be
  entered upon fully in a book of this kind.
  Suffice it to say that, in addition to tho symptoms
  mentioned, when a child's little face has the flush
  of fever, when it has tho pinched and wan look of
  pain, when its eyes become either vacant or wild
  in their expression, it may be taken that it is
  suffering from disorder of some kind which might
  turn out to be serious if neglected, and the ut-
  most precautions should therefore be observed,
  and medical advice sought in case of need or
  doubt.
  
  Teething. - The first teeth should begin to
  appear at six months, the two front teeth or
  incisors of the lower jaw coming first, the upper
  incisors making their appearance in another
  month, and the other teeth by degrees until the
  end of the second year. Some children, how-
  ever, are very backward in teething. Most
  healthy infants cut their teeth without much
  trouble, but often the gums become very swollen
  and sensitive, and the infant is feverish and fret-
  ful. Rubbing the gums with tlio fingers has a
  soothing effect, also the child may be given an
  india-rubber ring to bite, but care must be taken
  to keep this clean. At night-time a warm bath
  will often give reUef. The feverishness which is
  usually present at the time of teething makes a
  baby very susceptible to chill, and this is what
  principally causes the many infantine ailments,
  such as diarrhoea, &c., generally associated with
  the teething period. At this time, therefore,
  additional precaution against the danger of
  catching cold must be taken. During teething
  a quantity of saliva dribbles from tho child's
  mouth. This should not be allowed to go
  through the clothing or bronchitis may result.
  Change the bib frequently - a small piece of
  mackintosh placed underneath it will keep the
  clothing dry.
  
  DiarrhGea. - This may usually be ascribed to
  some fault in tho diet and occurs frequently at
  the teething period. If the infant is being
  brought up by hand, add a dessert-spoonful of
  lime-water to its bottle ; if it is being nursed
  by tho mother, give dill-water and lime-water
  mixed - a teiv-spoonful of each.
  
  Constipation should never be neglected, as it
  may load to convulsions and other ills. This
  complaint is most prevalent with infants
  brought up by hand. Care must be taken that
  the proper proportion of barley water is in the
  bottle. Give baby a drink of water first thing
  in the morning. Massage of tho abdomen will
  do good. An enema may bo given, but only
  very occa-sionally. The administration of pur-
  gatives is inadvisable as a rule, although a
  tea-spoonful of salad oil may sometimes be
  given. The child should be trained early in the
  forming of regular habits.
  
  
  Babies of a year old and upwards may be
  given with advantage the insides of well-cooked
  fruit, such as apples, bananas, &c.
  
  Thrush is an affection of the mouth due to the
  formation of a parasitic yeast which forms white
  patches on tlio gums, cheeks, and throat. The
  condition is most common in hand-fed infants,
  being often caused by dirty bottles, dummy
  teats, and general bad management. The treat-
  ment should bo an improvement in the general
  management of the baby, a httle honey and
  borax or some glycerine of boric acid should
  be applied to the white patches by means of a
  camel's-hair brush or a little cotton wool.
  
  Convulsions. - These are due to some irrita-
  tion in tho nervous system, often occurring during
  teething - and may be caused by indigestible
  food, constipation, worms, or even a pin in the
  clothing. The treatment is to detect and, if
  possible, remove the cause. The child should
  at once be stripped and placed in a hot bath of
  about 100№ F., the hot water reaching the nape
  of the neck. An enema should bo given next,
  more especially in the case of worms, and medical
  aid should be obtained. If the convulsions are
  caused by teething, the gums may be lanced
  with advantage. The approach of convulsions
  may generally be anticipated when the infant
  grinds its teeth in sleep and is subject to severe
  facial twitchings.
  
  Crowing or Spasmodic Croup. - This is due to a
  spasm in the larynx of nervous origin, and is
  most common among rickety children at teething
  time. A loud crowing sound is indicative of
  the attack, which is most distressing while it
  lasts and usually occurs at night. The ch'ld
  fights for breath, its fingers are clenched, its face
  livid. A flannel or sponge wrung out in hot
  water and applied to tho throat will often give
  reUef. Make the child sit up and give half to
  a tea-spoonful of ipecacuanha wine to induce
  vomiting, giving another doso after ten minutes
  if this does not act. Medical advice should be
  obtained, and great care taken in regard to
  general management and diet.
  
  Chills should never bo neglected, as otherwise
  bronchitis, pneumonia, or pleurisy may result.
  When a child is seen to have a serious chill put
  him straight to bed, giving him a warm drink
  and an aperient, if needs bo. Take his tempera-
  ture, and if it is above normal for twelve hours it
  will be advisable to call in medical aid.
  
  Little Ulcers. - When those appear on the
  tongue or lips give half a tea-spoonful flower of
  sulphur in a little treacle and apply glycerine
  and borax.
  
  Weak Legs and Ankles. - These are too often
  the result of forcing a child to walk more than
  is good for it at too early an age ; the little legs
  become " bandy " and scarcely seem to support
  the body. See that the child is not too much on
  his feet, and bathe the legs and ankles regularly
  in salt and water.
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  485
  
  
  Ringworm. - Shave off the hair round tlie
  siffected part and paint with iodine. Apply a
  coating of iodine daily until the ring-worm dis-
  appears. If the case is a bad one, it should be
  under medical treatment.
  
  Worms. - Children are often affected with
  these ; the best cure is to give an enema of two
  pints warm water with two table-spoonfuls
  common salt added to it - and a dose of castor-
  oil after. If very persistent, feed the child on
  rice pudding for a day or two.
  
  Sleep - Walking, or Sonmambulism. - Sleep-
  walking generally occiu-s in highly -strung school
  children who are over-worked. The treatment
  should be in medical hands, and meanwhile
  the windows and doors must be guarded and the
  child not left to sleep in a room by himself.
  
  Prolapse or descent of the lower bowel so that
  it appears externally sometimes occurs with
  children. The cause is prolonged straining at
  stool from constipation, or other source of bowel
  irritation. The prolapsed bowel should be at
  once washed and then gently squeezed back bj'
  grasping it with a clean piece of old Unen smeared
  with vasehne or olive oil. After the replacement
  of the bowel has been accompUshed, a diaper
  should be folded and passed between the legs ;
  this should then be secured in front and beliind
  to a waist-belt. In future the child should pass
  its motions lying down, all strong aperients must
  be avoided, and any prolapse corrected directly
  after the motion.
  
  TRAINING AND EDUCATION
  
  Early Training. - With the mother first of all
  must rest the responsibility of the early training
  of her little ones. It is during the first seven
  years of a child's Hfe that the most lasting im-
  pression is made on the little mind, and that the
  greatest influence is brought to bear for evil or
  for good. Great educational authorities assert
  that these first years of childhood are of the
  utmost importance in education, both mentally
  and morally, and if they are wisely ordained
  the good influence of early training and teaching
  will manifest itself throughout life ; the adverse
  influence of bad training having equally lasting
  effects.
  
  The most valuable training for a child, there-
  fore, is that which begins at his mother's knees.
  Let every mother bear this in mind, let her
  remember that tho shaping of her child's char-
  acter rests in the main with her, and let her not
  spare herself in seeing that her responsibility
  in tliis respect is faithfully and conscientiously
  discharged.
  
  A child should be made to learn early the
  lessons of obedience and self-control. This re-
  quires the utmost patience on the part of the
  mother. She must make it quite clear from the
  first that when she eTpresses a wish it must
  be obeyed, and never waver from lier attitude
  
  
  of gentle firimiess. A child very soon learns if
  its parent's word is law, or if he can make her
  alter her mind by means of a httle coaxing.
  
  It ia very hard at times for a mother to resist
  the pretty childish graces which are often put
  forward as an inducement for her to waver from
  some precept or excuse some fault, but once
  she gives way to such blandishments, she may-
  give up all idea of ever having her children under
  perfect control. The knowledge that when
  mother says a thing she means it does more than
  anything else to win the respect and confidence
  of the Uttle ones. For this reason all promises
  must be religiously kept and in the same way all
  threats of punishment fulfilled. Broken promises
  and empty threats are equally harmful. The
  first beget in the children a lack of confidence as
  well as a sense of injustice, wliilst the second
  cannot possibly have any effect upon the child
  who knows perfectly well that they will not be
  carried out.
  
  Parents should be careful to set a good example
  to their children upon all occasions, both in their
  powers of self-control and their courtesy of
  demeanour towards each other. Never give way
  to temper before a child nor enter into quarrel-
  hng or argvunent of any kind. It must be re-
  membered that in Httle ones the imitative
  faculties are developed to an almost abnormal
  extent, and that a child's character will receive
  lasting irjpressions from those with whom he
  comes into contact in early childhood. Let an
  effort be made, therefore, that he shall never
  learn anything but good from his surroundings.
  
  A mother should not allow her cliildren to be
  too much in the company of servants ; and,
  what is very important, she should be particular
  to choose a niu'se who speaks the King's English,
  correctly, as a bad accent or Cocknej-ism is very
  soon acquired by the little ones, and exceedingly
  difficult to cure.
  
  The children should be as much as possible
  with people of refinement. During the years
  which intervene between babyhood and the age
  when lessons may begin, it a good plan to engage
  a lady to be witli the little ones for a few hours
  daily, taking them for then- walks, and making
  their deportment and manners her special care.
  There are very many ladies having home ties
  which prevent them from taking any resident
  position who would be only too pleased to obtain
  a post of the kind. For the mother who has a
  number of social duties which preclude her from
  spending as much time with her children as she
  would wish, such a plan has much in its favour.
  
  In most families the children join their parents
  at luncheon, this being the dinner-hour for the
  little ones. This is a verj' good custom, as it
  enables them to acquire the manners and de-
  portment to be observed at table. A mother
  should begin early to train her child in this direc-
  tion. Bad manners should always be punished
  by banishment from the dining-room, and a soli-
  
  
  486
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  tary meal in tlie nursery. Properly trained
  children can be allowed to sit at the luncheon
  table when friends are present without any
  qualms of anxiety being felt by the parents as
  to how they will behave, whilst ill-mannered
  children will be a source not only of shame to
  the parents, but annoyance to their guests.
  
  It is not good for children to be banished
  altogether to the nursery, but, on the other hand,
  it is very bad for them to be too much with
  grown-up people. Nowadays it seems to be
  the feisliion for mothers to take their children
  about with them everywhere. Dressed like little
  fashion plates, they are taken to pay calls, to
  At Homes, to luncheons and dinners at restaur-
  ant.s - they are, in fact, treated as regular little
  men and women of the world and encouraged
  to show off upon all occasions. The little girls
  might be miniature ladies of fasMon by the airs
  and graces they are trained to assume. To
  every right-feeling mother there can be no more
  sorry spectacle than that presented by an over-
  dressed precocious child lajnng herself out for
  admiration and attention and conducting her-
  self with all the savoir faire of a woman of thirty.
  The ill-advised mother who is responsible for
  this is guilty of little less than cruelty to her
  child, whom she has robbed of the best joys of
  cliildhood by turning her into a little woman
  before her time.
  
  Grown-up people should also be very careful
  in regard to their conversation before children.
  Many things heard from the elders are stored
  up in the small memories, and are apt to come
  out upon the most awkward occasions. Never
  indulge in scandal or gossip of any kind before
  a child. Many parents err most flagrantly in
  this respect, heedlesa of the fact that by so doing
  they are sowing the seeds of unkindness and ill-
  nature in the hearts and minds of the little ones.
  
  The simpler the life led by the children the
  happier they will be. Simple meals, regular
  hours, and plenty of healthful exercise should be
  the keynote of the regime of both nursery and
  school-room. How pleasant it is to see the
  enjoyment manifested by children so brought
  up at the most simple treats and pleasures.
  They are real children in every sense of the
  ^ word, and in later life they will have none but
  \ happy recollections of a childhood passed in this
  I way.
  
  ' Pocket- Money. - A too liberal allowance of
  pocket-money should never be made. There
  is nothing more conducive to extravagance in
  Ipter years than an unlimited supply of pocket-
  money during childhood. Tlie exact sum given
  mtst of course depend upon circumstances.
  For children of from seven to ten years of age
  2d. to 3d. per week represents a fairly good
  average. At a boarding-school the allowance
  of pocket-money should depend upon the pre-
  vailing r6gime. A parent should make a point
  of obtaining enlightenment in regard to this from
  
  
  the head master or mistress, regulating the allow-
  ance accordingly. Boys or girls at school sliould
  neither have more nor less pocket-money than
  that received by their companions.
  
  Punishments. - The injudicious administration
  of punishments has served to spoil the character
  of many an otherwise well-disposed child, often
  tiirning a girl or boy of a really affectionate and
  phable disposition into a hardened little rebel.
  How few parents are there who know how to
  punish judiciously and wisely, and, what is of
  more importance, to give a punishment in pro-
  portion to the offence committed.
  
  The precept that a child is more easily led
  than driven should always be well borne in mind.
  The parents' rule should, therefore, be a gentle
  though a firm one, and the child must be brought
  to reaUse the benefits of not transgressing in any
  way against that rule, together with the penalty
  attendant upon transgression when it occurs.
  A child must always reaUse why he is being
  ptmished, and be able to appreciate the justice
  of the punishment. If he is easily made to
  understand the penalties attending certain acts,
  he will be more likely to avoid them.
  
  Take, for instance, the tiny toddler of two
  years whose powers of inquisitiveness are such
  that he develops an uncontrollable desire to
  touch and handle everything with which he
  comes in contact. Many distressing accidents
  have occurred through the mother failing to
  teach him that when he touches a certain for-
  bidden object there is always a penalty attached
  to his disobedience. For instance, there is a
  jug of hot water placed within the reach of
  master baby. He shows an inclination oo
  handle it. The wise mother will not at once
  put it out of his reach, but will say warningly,
  " Don't touch that - ^very hot - baby will burn
  himself," carefully watching him to see that he
  comes to no harm. Baby probably makes up
  his mind to disobey, but he will touch it tenta-
  tively, with the result that he does not burn his
  little fingers as he would have done without his
  mother's warning, but at the same time experi-
  ences a very disagreeable sensation, and so
  realises the result of disobedience and will not
  offend again.
  
  A child should not bo indiscriminately slapped
  for every little fault. Many parents look upon
  the most ordinary childish behaviour as naughti-
  ness, sternly repressing any tendency to high
  spirits. The constant habit of boxing a boy's
  ears, or slapping and shaking a little girl upon
  the least provocation is most reprehensible.
  It tends to foster a sense of injustice in the
  minds of the little ones, and will serve to lay the
  foundation of a stubborn and dogged disposition.
  There is nothing more harmful to the childish
  mind than that it should be labouring inces-
  santly under a sense of wrong. Children will
  rebel against all those by whom they think
  they are being treated with injustice, whereas
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  487
  
  
  with judicious management they can be as often
  as not most easily led. This explains the
  fact that some governesses and tutors have
  succeeded where others have failed. The former
  have mastered the art of the proper management
  of children through not only being just but
  through being able to look at things from a
  child's point of view ; also being able to dis-
  criminate between big and little faults, making
  their charges realise the justice of punishment
  when deserved. There has been much ai-gument
  for and against corporal punishment in the
  bringing up of cliildren, but it maj'^ be safely said
  the more it can be avoided the better. It is true
  that in case of a baby who is too young to under-
  stand reasoning, and who, for instance, shows a
  tendency to make his mouth the receptacle for
  buttons, pennies, or anything else he can find,
  one and only one sharp tap will often be effective
  in deterring the child from repeating the attempt,
  though even in these circumstances prevention
  is better than cure, and the mother would do
  well to keep all these kinds of things out of the
  child's reach.
  
  With the older children, however, the maxim
  " Spare the rod and spoil the child " should be
  taken in its moral rather than in its literal sense.
  No fault should ever be allowed to go unchecked.
  It is worse than useless to punish a child for a
  fault on one day and allow it to go unreproved
  the next. In very special circumstances a
  whipping may be necessary, but never give it
  unless after due deliberation you have come to
  the conclusion that other methods of punishment
  will fail. Never punish a cliild in a moment of
  anger at one of his offences. There is no more
  unedifying sight than that of a parent who has
  completely lost her self-control administering
  punishment to a child, a punishment which
  under the circumstances is likely to be out of
  all proportion to the offence. Give the anger
  time to cool down so that you will be able to see
  the fault in its normal proportions, then summon
  the little offender, and after reasoning gently
  with him and showing him the error of his ways
  and explaining to him why punishment has to
  be given, pass sentence. It may be said that
  constant whipping has tho effect of spoiling
  and hardening many a little nature. A child
  can be punished in many other ways. Being
  obliged to stay at home while the others go
  out with mother, being debarred from some
  favourite game, or being sent to bed an hour
  earlier than usual, all are punishments which
  tell mth children. Never punish a child by its
  fears. To lock up a nervous child in a dark room,
  for instance, is as cruel as it is inadvisable ; such
  an action may be the cause of much harm and
  actual illness to the child.
  
  Mothers should always make a rule of
  giving punishment themselves to their chil-
  dren. Never allow a nursp or other servant to
  slap a cliild. The roughness of some nurses
  
  
  when out with their little charges has often
  caused comment on the part of onlookers, and
  ladies, total strangers, have been known to
  remonstrate with them on their rough usage
  of the children in their charge. Such a state of
  things would not exist if the mother made it
  clear upon engaging a nurse that impromptu
  punishments such as slapping and shaking were
  altogether forbidden. At the same time the
  mother must carefully investigate every cause
  for complaint and be careful to uphold nurse in
  maintaining disciphne, never neglecting to mete
  out punishment when deserved.
  
  For the older children who are in charge of a
  governess the same rule miost apply in regard to
  the punishment of all the more serious trans-
  gressions.
  
  Just as delinquencies on the part of small
  offenders must be met with prompt punishment,
  so must any special little acts of good conduct
  have their reward. A word of encouragement
  here and there is of the utmost value in helping
  a child to be good. Let not this encoixragement
  be withheld, and be ready to reward the Uttle ones
  for any special pains taken in overcoming some
  fault, or performing some - to them - difficult
  task. Discretion must also govern the form
  which the reward must take. Parents are too
  apt to give money or sweets indiscriminately on
  these occasions, encouraging involuntarily a
  love of extravagance and even greediness in
  their children. Gifts of the kind now and then
  will do no harm, but do not let the rewards
  always take this form. Such treats as a walk or
  a picnic in the country, permission to invite some
  little friends to tea will be appreciated by
  children who are brought up in a becomingly
  simple manner, and who will hail with delight
  any little departure from the ordinary routine.
  
  CHILDREN'S LITERATURE
  
  1. Why do we wish our Children to Read ? - This
  
  will depend largely upon our own attitude to
  literature. If, next to a hving soul, a book is to
  us the most powerful influence in Ufe, if we have
  realised it to be " the precious life-blood of a
  master spirit," then at least one reason is not far
  to seek. It is that books may become to them
  what they have been to us in maturer years -
  one of the most potent influences in life. Life,
  we have to remember, is larger than Uterature,
  and if man's business here is " to know for the
  sake of living, not to live for the sake of knowing,"
  then surely reading, which has been called "a
  knowledge of all knowledges," has a large claim
  upon his attention.
  
  But this conscious preparation for the future
  is second in importance to the present happiness
  of the child. That a child should be happy, and
  that it should find a large part of its happiness
  in its interests, cannot be disputed.
  
  When one thinks of the intense present
  
  
  488
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  interest a child can find in literature, and of
  the powerful influence good books can have in
  after life, one is impelled to ask might not more
  be done at home to cultivate a taste for a type of
  literature much neglected by the present genera-
  tion T
  
  Is it not a mistake that as soon as a child
  begins to read himself he is little read to
  either at school or at home ? The ordinsury
  reading lesson of a child of eight is in no way
  calculated to arouse liis intellect, or to excite
  his imagination, or in any way to whet the
  literary appetite. How then is tliis to be done ?
  Either we must continue to read aloud to our
  children, or we must put within their reach
  literature in so simple a form that they can read
  it themselves.
  
  2. What do we wish them to Read ? - It will be
  interesting to form a child's ideal Ubrary chrono-
  logically, the chronology of course having refer-
  ence not to the publication of the volumes,
  but to the age of the little readers.
  
  The library will consist chiefly of nonsense,
  narrative and morals. Yes, morals, for children
  exult in them. The sense of moral distinction
  is keen. No more pregnant words exist for him
  than good and bad, cruel and kind, fair and mean,
  true and false. Therefore, morals must be re-
  garded as a requirement in children's literature.
  We might begin our library by placing ten
  books on the lowest shelf of our imaginary book-
  case, suitable for children between the ages of
  three and seven. The first volume shovild be
  a good collection of Nursery Rhymes liberally
  illustrated with story-telling pictures. The order
  in which we arrange the next six books does not
  matter. Not one of them is a continuous story,
  and portions from each may be read at pleasure.
  But it were wisdom to read these volumes from
  beginning to end before adding further to the
  library. Three are in prose - a selection from
  " .lEsop's Fables " ; a collection of Fairy Tales ;
  " Tommy Smith's Animals.^' Three are in
  verse - " The Nonsense Songs and Stories of
  Edward Lear " ; " The Poems of Jane and Ann
  Taylor " ; " Struelpeter."
  
  The interest and value of " .^Esop's Fables,"
  wisely selected, cannot be commended too highly,
  and one would wish the dissemination of the
  truths they contain to be broadcast. The
  volume of " Fairy Tales " should contain the
  prime favourites of tlio nursery, and be written
  as you would tell the tales to a child on your
  knee. "In Fairyland," by Louey Chisholm, is a
  fevourite collection. " Tommy Smith's Animals"
  ib not universally known, but it ought to be. It
  seldom fails to arouse interest and evoke en-
  thusiasm. The writer is Edmund Selous.
  
  The immortal " Struelpeter," consisting of
  stories first told by a child-loving doctor to his
  little patients, is well known.
  
  Less well known are " The Nonsense Songs
  and Stories of Edward Lear." It is a true
  
  
  work of imagination. All cliildi-en may not
  but many will revel in these tales.
  
  " The Original Poems of Jane and Ann
  Taylor," edited by E. V. Lucas, is a treasure-
  house.
  
  Seven books now occupy our lowest shelf.
  There is still room for three. The two books
  which might be placed next on the shelf are
  " AUce in Wonderland " and " The Water
  Babies," abridged by Amy Steedman. These
  are the first continuous tales that our imaginary
  child vnll hear. Of " AUce in Wonderland " no-
  thing need be said. That it is a prime favourite
  with Uttle children admits of no question.
  
  Now to read aloud " Water Babies " in the
  original to a six-year-old is an exhausting
  process. There axe words for which simple
  synonyms must be found and paragraph upon
  paragraph which must be omitted. The in-
  genuity of the reader and the patience of the
  little listener are alike taxed. An abridgment
  such as the above may be read more easily than
  any other book on the same shelf, and there are
  few books that will give such joy.
  
  Only one vacant space is now left. Surely
  there is no doubt that before the child is seven
  years old we want him to know much of the life
  of Jesus and many of the stories that He told.
  A suitable book for tliis purpose has been a long-
  felt want, but at last there appeared " A Little
  Cliild's Life of Jesus," by Amy Steedman, and
  for it countless mothers must be thankful.
  
  The above mention of an abridged " Water
  Babies " opens the question of the redaction of
  the classics generally. One hears it asked, " If
  a child reads tales re-told, will he read them lat<^r
  in the original ? " One can only hazard a guess
  as to the consequence of early familiarity, but
  it may be pretty generally expected (1) that
  those who in any case would have read the
  originals will still do so ; (2) that a number of
  those who would not have done so now will, as
  a result of having had their appetites whoLted by
  a foretaste of what the originals have to offer ;
  (3) that those who will not would not have done
  so in any case, and that for them it is surely
  better to have read the stories in simple form
  than never to have heard them at all.
  
  One may, therefore, believe in the abridged
  classic, carefully selected and reverently re-
  told (1) because there is more opportunity of
  reading to children before they reach eleven
  years of age than later, and there does not seem
  without these redactions a library of literature
  sufficient to satisfy the cravings of little boys
  and girls ; (2) because when children themselves
  begin to read, it is almost impossible to find bookfi
  they can read with ease, and we do not want
  Uterature to be in any sense a reading lesson.
  
  Although the above book-shelf is designed for
  children between the ages of three and seven,
  it is not meant that at seven the little library
  is to be left behind, but its volumes will represent
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  489
  
  
  old friendships. There axe many children who
  would rest content with a shorter catalogue,
  and others who would cry that it might be
  lengthened, but few boys or girls of six would
  be mentally overfed or starved with a book-shelf
  equipped according to the above suggestions.
  
  The higher shelves of the imaginary book -case
  we shall suppose to be for boys and girls from
  seven to eleven years of age. There might be
  placed the " Told to the Children Series," of
  which the first four volumes in the following
  complete list are included among the books
  recommended for younger children. This Series,
  although enjoyed by many older readers, is
  primarily designed for children under eleven.
  To guide choice the volumes have been tabulated
  according to their simplicity of subject-matter
  and manner of telling, and variety has been
  studiod for the sake of any who should read the
  Series consecutively.
  
  
  Nursery Rhymes.
  
  .lEsop's Fables.
  
  Nursery Tales.
  
  The Water Babies.
  
  Stories from Grimm.
  
  Tauglewood Tales.
  
  Simple Susan.
  
  Kobin Hood.
  
  Robinson Crusoe.
  
  Pilgrim's Progress.
  
  Arabian Nights.
  
  King Arthur's Knights.
  
  Uncle Tom's Cabin.
  
  Stories from Hans Andersen.
  
  Old Testament Stories.
  
  The Heroes.
  
  Gulliver's Travels.
  
  Guy of Warwick.
  
  The Rose and the Ring.
  
  
  The Faerie Queen.
  Stories of Roland.
  Stories from Chaucer.
  Stories from the Ballads.
  Stories of William Tell.
  Stories from Shakespeare.
  Stories of Siegfried.
  Stories from Wagner.
  Little Plays.
  The Iliad.
  The Odyssey.
  Stories of Three Saints.
  Stories of Beowulf.
  Celtic Tales.
  Don Quixote.
  Undine.
  
  More Tales from Shake-
  speare.
  Stories from Dante.
  
  
  The omitted volume " Stories from the Life of
  Christ " might be read after " Jesus, the Car-
  penter of Nazareth," by Robert Bird.
  
  The " Children's Heroes Series," edited by
  John Lang, is also to be warmly recommended,
  and the " Shown to the Cliildren Series " is
  notable alike for letterpress and illustration.
  A Uttle volume, "Ruskin for Boys and Girls,"
  by Mary Macgregor, is so captivating as to
  arouse interest in the series to which it belongs.
  " Grandmother's Favourites," edited by Amy
  Steedman, and " Old-Fashioned Tales " and
  " Forgotten Tales of Long Ago," edited by E. V.
  Lucas, are what their titles indicate and are all
  char/ning.
  
  Oth(>r volumes I have every confidence in
  recommending are, " Tlie King of the Golden
  River," by Ruskin ; " The Gold Thread," by
  Norman Maclood ; " The Princess and the
  Goblin," " The Princess and Cur die," and " At
  the Back of the North Wind," by George Mac-
  donald, and " Black Beauty " by Anna Sewell ;
  " In God's Garden," " Knights of Art," and
  " Legends of Italy," by Amy Steedman, and
  Jacob's " Englisli Fairy Tales." A modern
  
  
  writer of Fairy Tales who might be introduced
  to those to whom she is unknown is Mary de
  Morgan. Her volumes, " The Necklace of
  Princess Fiorimonde " and " On a Pin-Cushion "
  deserve to be far more widely known than
  they are.
  
  All histories by H. E. Marshall should find a
  place on these shelves. Boys and girls ahke
  read them as they read story-books. Room
  must also be found for the deUghtful Jungle
  Books of Rudyard Kiphng. The " Laughter
  of Peterkin," by Fiona IMacleod, will fascinate
  the imaginative child. A place must also be
  reserved for those delightful Animal Stories by
  Ernest Thompson Seton and by William Long.
  
  A good anthology should find a place on every
  booksheK. The children's favourite is " The
  Golden Staircase " by Louey Chishohn, which is
  also published in four parts as " Poetry for the
  Fo\ir, Five and Six-Year-Old," &c. Other
  excellent collections are " A Treasury' of Veree,"
  by M. Edgar, and "A Book of Verses," by
  E. V. Lucas.
  
  3. How do we wish our Children to Read? - (1)
  We must insist that the child thinks as he reads.
  This is more important than to teach him
  thoughts. (2) Every book that is worth reading
  once is worth reading twice, and this habit can
  be formed in the child while he is stiU being read
  to. (3) As the child cannot omit judiciously he
  must read his books word for word. (4) He
  m\ist read with his whole attention. In no way
  should he regard a book as a toy. (5) And,
  lastly, expressions of appreciation should be
  encouraged. He should be urged to give a
  book a fair trial. If it does not appeal to him
  let Mm put it aside, but never let his attitude
  be that the book is not a good one. A gi-eat
  deal can be done while the child is little to in-
  fluence his attitude towards books by paj^ng
  attention to how he reads.
  
  Education. - A child develops early liis powers
  of observation ; he begins to take an interest in
  his surroundings and to inquire into the why and
  wherefore of things, and it is at this time his
  real education begins.
  
  Parents very often show a remarkable lack of
  foresight by endeavouring to check the natural
  bent for inquiry taken by the little people,
  treating their questions as troublesome and a
  nuisance, and not even attempting to answer
  the most simple inquiry. This is a great mis-
  take. It must be remembered that facts of
  which we seldom think, because they are so
  familiar to us that their existence is accepted
  as a matter of course, are entirely new to the
  child whose observant faculties are beginning to
  develop, and the questions asked are usually the
  result of a real desire for knowledge. The in-
  cessant " wliy " of children is apt to become
  tiresome, but a mother should never lose patience.
  It would be a clever woman indeed who could
  answer all the questions put to her by a child.
  
  
  490
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  She would have to be a veritable walking en-
  cyclopaedia to do so ; but she Bhould do her best
  to answer them as far as is in her power. If
  she is not quite sure of the right answer
  to give, she should not take the course adopted
  by some mothers of making up a reply to
  keep the child quiet. Instead she should
  say, " I couldn't answer that, dear, just now,
  but I shall find out for you by and by,"
  never failing to keep her promise in this
  respect. A good encyclopaedia and a refer-
  ence book are almost indispensable on the
  family book-shelf; without them many of the
  little one's questions will have to go unanswered.
  There are some questions asked by claildren, it is
  true, to which it is not at all feasible that an
  answer should be given. Again, in these circum-
  stances do not tell the child untruths, or get
  cross and impatient with him, but tell him
  gently that you cannot give him the answer
  now as he is too little to understand. To
  judiciously gratify the natural bent of a child
  for inquiry and cultivate his powers of obser-
  vation is to give him the best teaching he
  can have during his early years. A child
  should never be put to book learning too
  soon. Reading and writing can be taught well
  enough when he is in his sixth or seventh year,
  and even then the lessons must be gradual and
  such as will not keep him long at his desk.
  Never force children to learn lessons too early.
  Very sharp children especially will stand in
  danger of having their brains overtaxed if they
  are too much pushed forward in this respect.
  Let the child be out as much as possible in the
  open air, enjoying healthy exercise, building up
  strength for his little body. All this time he
  will be learning - learning to take note of all that
  goes on around him, and this is all the education
  that matters in very early childhood.
  
  Let the mother who is her child's teacher set
  to work in a manner that will make teaching
  seem to him as play. It may indeed be play,
  but instructive play for all that, and to be able
  to teach in this way a mother will need to ac-
  quire not a httle knowledge herself. Educational
  authorities have now recognised the value of
  nature study in the instruction of the j'cjung.
  What useful lessons can be given in long country
  walks by a mother who can tell her child tlic-
  history of the things he sees, showing him the
  difference between the various kinds of leaves
  and flowers, telling him all about the different
  trees, the birds, the various little dwellers in the
  ponds and in the fields. What moral tales can
  be pointed out also - what better object lesson
  can there be than in the industry and providence
  of a little colony of ants or of a hive of bees ? -
  what better foundation to education can a child
  have than a habit of being able to take note of
  all these things and understand them ? Such a
  training will be to him of more value than all the
  spelling lessons and multiplication tables labori-
  
  
  ously learned and repeated with mechanical
  precision. Try to cultivate a child's reasoning
  powers before you tax his little memory. In
  this way the best results will be achieved.
  
  When the time comes for the child to set to
  work in earnest to learn to read and wi'ite,
  the same principle of making work as much
  like play as possible should bc' observed. Such
  methods are embodied in the best kindergarten
  system, notably the Froebel System. A mother
  may often find it advisable to ssnd the little
  ones to a kindergarten school for an hour or two
  every day, or else to engage a governess well
  versed in the Froebel method if she is not free
  to do the teacliing herself. If she does elect
  to teach herself and she is acquainted with this
  method, so much the better. If not, she may
  easily obtain instruction at one of the Froebel
  institutes, but generally her own method will
  be as effective as any other if she only keeps
  before her the one guiding principle not to make
  the lessons a series of monotonous repetitions
  of words learned by rote, but to make them
  as interesting as possible, graduating them in
  accordance with the child's powers of compre-
  hension, so that he can assimilate them naturally
  without any strain upon his memory.
  
  As boys and girls get older the same care must
  be maintained in seeing that their brains are
  not overtaxed in any way. Remember that a
  child's mental development should never be
  forced to the detriment of his (or her) physical
  well-being. It is a great deal to be deplored
  that some parents and teachers are slow to
  recognise the fact that a great amount of study
  is very bad for some girls and boys. These as .a
  rule are only too eager to learn, taking to theii"
  books as ducks take to water ; nevertheless,
  this avidity for learning must be checked if the
  evil results of undue mental strain are to be
  avoided. It is more natural for normal healthy
  boys and girls to shirk some of their lessons than
  to bo eager to have a double dose. Overs Liidy is
  responsible for much ill-health amongst young
  people. It unfortunately happens that at the
  age of foiu'teen to fifteen, just when our children
  require most care if they are to grow up well and
  strong, they have to enter for some public ex-
  amination, in preparation for which a certain
  amount of cramming is required. The passing
  of such an examination is often looked upon as a
  matter of almost life and death by both children
  and their parents, with the result that the former
  are encouraged to study during all their leisure
  hours and often until late at night, forgoing all
  healthful exercise and recreation in order that
  they may make sure of passing well. This is a
  very wrong policy indeed, and to it may bo
  ascribed many a nervous breakdown amongst
  our girls and boys. Never tax a child with
  learning beyond his (or her) powers. When any
  special course of study is necessary, see that it is
  strictly kept within the limits of working hours.
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  491
  
  
  Sufficient exercise and recreation are essential
  for both the mental and physical well-being of
  our children, and they must not be forgone
  under any circumstances. When children must
  enter for examination, let them begin their pre-
  parations a long time beforehand in order that
  there may be no undue rush at the end. For the
  University Locals, for instance, one year's pre-
  paration is not one bit too much, yet many
  parents expect their children to get ready for
  them in three or four months.
  
  If, although given aniple time for prepara-
  tion, a child is still unable to limit his studies to
  regular houi"S, then it must be taken that the
  task is altogether beyond liis (or her) powers,
  and it should either be put oS for another year
  or else altogether abandoned if needs be.
  
  Parents should strive early to discover any
  special aptitude displayed by their children,
  in order that they may do their utmost to bring
  out their talents in any particular direction.
  Their education should be planned first and
  foremost from the point of view of utility, special
  attention being given to knowledge that will
  prove useful to them in later hfe.
  
  For instance, study of the classics should not
  be pursued to such an extent as to leave little
  time for foreign languages in the case of those
  destined for a commercial career. When a
  child has reached the ago of thirteen or fourteen,
  a parent should see that his studies are directed
  towards specialisation for the career of his choice.
  The same applies to those girls who will have to
  earn their own living as they reach a suitable
  age. Too often parents spend all their time and
  money upon the education of their boys, where-
  as little trouble is expended upon the training of
  the gu'ls ; a few years at a boarding-school and
  perhaps a year at a " finishing " school too often
  represents the sum total of the education of the
  average girl, who, thus poorly equipped, is often
  expected to go out into the world and earn her
  own living in an age when specialisation is
  exacted if one has to earn a living wage. Such
  treatment is decidedly unfair ; when a girl has to
  work for herself she has less odds in her favour
  than a boy. Is it not all the more essential,
  therefore, that she should go out into the world
  fittingly equipped to hold her own in the career
  she has chosen ? There are many careers njow
  open to women, full details of which are given
  in another part of this book, but in connection
  with each trade or profession a certain amount
  of specialisation is necessary if it is to be followed
  with success.
  
  A girl's education, therefore, requires to be
  mapped out as carefully as that of her brothers,
  more especially if she is required to turn it to
  advantage in later life, but, and this is of the
  utmost importance, the study of domestic science
  should nor be excluded. Needlework, cookery,
  and household management should form part of
  every girl's curriculum. A mother should make
  
  
  this training her special care. Too often nowa-
  days girls are taught to look down upon house-
  work of every kind, with the result that when
  called upon to undertake the management of a
  home of their own they are totally unfitted for
  the task. S\ich mistaken poUcy is much to be
  deplored ; a woman should not only be able
  to hold her own in all branches of the womanly
  art, but she should also take a pride in being
  able to do so.
  
  Value of Accomplishments for Girls. - In the
  education of girls accomphshments should take
  a prominent place, and all talent for music,
  singing, painting, &c., should be carefully
  brought out. An accomplished lady is not only
  an ornament in society, but she serves to contri-
  bute in a large measure to the happiness of her
  own home. Accomphshments are always useful
  to a girl, and should she by any circumstances be
  compelled to earn her own livelihood, they can
  always be turned to good account.
  
  In selecting a school care should be taken to
  ascertain whether there is good instruction in
  music, drawing, painting and dancing ; and in
  regard to the first three whether the pupils
  are prepared for the examinations of the cliief
  colleges of music and art. If lessons are taken
  at home from private teachers, care should be
  taken to ascertain that these are well qualified
  in every way. It is a great advantage for Uttle
  girls to learn dancing at a very tender age. This
  helps to make their little hmbs and bodies supple
  and pliable, and their carriage and deportment
  graceful. Much of the native gaucherie of
  childliood is eliminated by early instruction in
  tliis art. As girls get older, fencing is also an
  art which is worth cultivation, as its practice
  secures an alertness and lightness of movement
  which is not so easily acquired in any other way.
  G5rmnastics are also essential, not only from the
  point of view of health and physique, but also
  from that of carriage and deportment. In most
  of our towns, girls' classes are held at the largo
  gymnasivmis, the fees for the course of instruction
  being very moderate indeed. A girl should also
  be encouraged to take part in healthy outdoor
  games, such as hockey and tennis. She should
  never be allowed to stoop when sittmg over table
  or desk, as this habit is responsible for those un-
  sightly round shoulders which do so luuch to mar
  an otherwise good figure.
  
  The doctrine of " self help " should be early
  inculcated in the minds of girls and boys aUke,
  and in this way they will be prepared for the
  responsibilities of later Hfe. Parents should
  rerciember that by giving their cliildren a good
  mental and moral education they are endowing
  them with what will pro^'e to be a most valuable
  asset in life, the importance of which cannot be
  too highly estimated. Let them see, therefore,
  that they do their duty in this direction as far
  as is in their power, and they will be happy in
  the knowledge that they have left no stone uu-
  
  
  492
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  turned to send their cliildren out into the world
  fittingly equipped for the career of their
  choice.
  
  The Governess. - For their early education
  children are often placed by parents under the
  care of a governess, and many girls receive
  their entire education from childhood to young
  womanhood in this way. Parents cannot use
  too much discrimination in choosing the lady to
  whom they are to trust the tuition of their little
  ones, but, incomprehensible though such a course
  would seem, as a rule they place economy before
  all other considerations, and where they would
  pay their cook £25 a year without a qualm, they
  grudge even £20 a year for the salary of their
  governess. This point of view is altogether
  wrong. Can parents ever be sufficiently grate-
  ful to tlie lady who conscientiously fulfils her
  duty towards her charges by givnng them a good
  foundation upon which to build their future
  education ? Is the v^'elfare of their children a
  matter of such indifference to parents that they
  grudge even a living wage to her to whom the
  children will owe so much, if her task is well done?
  The erroneous economy practised in this respect
  is responsible for the large number of uneducated
  young women who fill the position of " nursery
  governess." They are content to do indifferent
  work for indifferent wages ; in fact, in many cases
  they are not much above the level of the ordinary
  domestic servant, being called upon to combine
  the duties of governess, nurse, and general help,
  with the result that the children are not only
  badly taught, but badly cared for as well.
  
  Such a state of things should not be ; it is much
  better to let the cliildren remain in the care of a
  good nurse, taking their first lessons from their
  mother until they are of an age to be put in the
  charge of a fully qualified lady. When children
  ai^ six or seven years old, if properly trained,
  they have been taught to do little things for
  themselves, and the care of them does not entail
  so much work and worry as that of the very
  little ones. There are well-educated ladies fully
  equipped for teaching in every way who are
  quite willing to take " entire charge " of children
  of six years old and upwards, and who would
  certainly not wish to be classed as " nursery "
  governesses. There would be more room for
  the many well-educated girls and women who
  find it so hard to get positions, if mothers would
  realise the fact that those in charge of the tuition
  of even very little children must bo ladies of
  izood education if they are to adequately fulfil
  ihe important task entrusted to them. There
  are also many other considerations by which
  parents should be guided in engaging a governes.s.
  The day of the harsh, unsympathetic disciplin-
  arian is passed, or should be, with parents who
  have the welfare of their little ones at heart. A
  young bright girl who is fond of children is
  infinitely preferable to an elderly spinster whom
  age and care will probably have hardened, and
  
  
  who often has but little sjonpathy with or
  understanding of youth.
  
  Employers cannot be too tactful in their
  treatment of their governess. It must be re-
  membered that a lady so situated fills a rather
  anomalous position in a household, being of the
  family and yet not of it. Tliey should remember
  that she is a lady, and treat her accordingly.
  Children and servants should be taught to look
  upon her with respect. Some people make a
  practice of constantly finding fault with the
  governess before the children. Such conduct
  is as harmful as it is ill-bred. The authority of
  the governess must be upheld in every way by
  the parents, who must punish the children for
  any serious breach of discipline that is reported
  to them.
  
  Having assured themselves o£ the efficiency
  and reliability of the lady they have chosen, they
  must be content to place their confidence in
  her. But they must first take particular care of
  assuring themselves of her reliability. A mother
  can exercise gentle supervision during the first
  week or two of the lessons without in any way
  appearing to do so. In this way she will be
  able to form a fair judgment in regard to the
  character of the governess - whether she is just
  and has the power of self-control. If she has
  not these qualities, she is unfit to fill the position
  she occupies, however great her learning may be.
  
  In most hovises the governess will join in all
  the family meals wth the exception of dinner,
  wliich she will take by herseK in the school-room
  or another sitting-room. She should have her
  evenings free as much as possible.
  
  Choice of a School. - When a child is of an a^e
  to begin study in real earnest, the question of the
  choice of a school should be entered into. The
  first point to be considered is whether a boarding-
  school or a day-school should be selected. It
  may as a rule be said that, in the case of girle
  especially, it is better to keep the child at home,
  if possible, until the ago of fifteen has passed.
  The years between the age of thirteen and fifteen
  are usually most critical ones in respect to both
  the moral and physical development of boys and
  girls. It is during these years that they require
  the utmost care, both physically and morally,
  and by whom are they likely to be so well guided
  in both respects than by their mother. With
  boys, however, such a course is not always
  possible, more especially if they are to be sent
  to some well-known public school situated at
  a great distance from homo, or some special
  college which hoB an age limit for admission,
  such as the Osborne Naval College, where no
  student must be over thirteen years of age at
  the me of entry.
  
  BOYS' SCHOOLS
  
  Preparatory Schools. - These undertake the
  preparation of boys for public schools, eight
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  493
  
  
  being the usual age of admission. The school
  selected should preferably be one where day
  boarders are received. It is always as well
  to be informed as to the conditions ob-
  taining at these schools in regard to the eligi-
  bility to scholarships for public schools, as in
  some cases only those pupils who have been at
  least part of the time resident at the preparatory
  school are eligible. Special entrance scholar-
  ships to the various public schools may be won
  at many of these preparatory establishments.
  A list of well-known prepai-atory schools may be
  found in the Public Schools Year Book (Swan
  Sonneschein & Co., 2s. 6d.).
  
  The Public Schools. - In its narrowest sense
  the term " Public School " is limited to the great
  foundations of Winchester College (founded
  1387), Eton College (1440), Rugby School (1587),
  and Hnrrow School (1571). But the name is now
  popularly t^stended in England to such institu-
  tions as are modelled upon one or other of these
  historic foundations, and in some cases possess
  venerable traditions. They always give a first-
  class education, leading on to the great univer-
  sities or to " the Services," and are officered by a
  staff composed of high university graduates ; and
  afford a common life for the pupils and all the
  means for the pursuit of athletics, which has
  become more and more a passion with the youth
  of England. No country in the world has
  institutions comparable to the great Public
  Schools of Great Britain.
  
  With the exceptions natural to even the best
  of human institi^tions, the " pubUc school man "
  bears a stamp, moral, i lental and physical, which
  is easily recognised.
  
  These schools are usually organised in three
  departments : ( 1 ) Classical, preparing for the
  universities, certain professions, and higher
  branches of the Civil Service ; (2) Modem, pre-
  paring for the ai'my, engineering, and the leading
  positions in commercial and industrial pursuits ;
  and (3) Junior, for the younger boys who have
  not yet decided whether to enter the Classical
  or the Modern side. The usual age for admission,
  except to the Junior School, is twelve, mth
  fifteen as the extreme limit ; pupils remain as
  a rule till nineteen. Application for admission
  has often to be made three or four years or even
  longer beforehand. Entrance Scholarships and
  Exhibitions are in some cases fairly numerous,
  but they are rarely won except by boys who have
  attended a preparatory school practically con-
  nected with some public school, or who have
  worked with a private tutor, whose tuitioix has
  been especially directed towards this particular
  object.
  
  Grammar Schools. - ^Those with whom means
  are an important consideration cannot do
  better than send their boys to one of these
  schools, where the average fees are much lower
  than in the caso of the public schools. In con-
  nection with most of these schools there are
  
  
  numerous entrance scholarships, which cover
  the cost of tuition and boolvs, and perhaps part
  of the cost of maintenance as well, and not
  infrequently there are leaving scholarships to
  help the holders to a university or university
  college, or to professional education at a
  medical school, &c.
  
  Before selecting such a school it is weU worth
  inqxiiring what provision there is of leaving
  scholarships and exhibitions, and if any parti-
  cular career in life is already in view for the
  pupil, it should be seen whether the school
  makes special provision for such requirements -
  whether, for instance, if it is intended to keep
  the pupil at school till eighteen or nineteen, the
  upper forms of the school are so arranged as to
  afford suitable instruction for pupils of that age.
  If the top form of a school has an average age
  of about sixteen, the school will usually lead
  more suitably to ordinary business in the city,
  clerkships in banks, or to the lower branches of
  the Civil Service - whereas if the average age
  of the scholars in the top form is eighteen, the
  school will probably give suitable preparation
  for the universities and professions, the army,
  or the higher branches of the Civil Service.
  
  Private Schools. - Great care and judgment
  must be expended upon a selection of a school
  of the kind. The qualifications of the head
  teacher and staff in the way of university
  diplomas, teaching degrees, &c., should be con-
  sidered ; it should be seen that the number of
  qualified members of the staff is adequate to
  the variety of ages and attainments of the
  pupils, and that the provision of apparatus, class-
  rooms, laboratories, &c., is adequate. Above all,
  special inquiry should be made as to the results
  of the teacliing when submitted to the test of
  public examination.
  
  Of course the scope and aims of private schools
  vary widely ; some give an excellent preparation
  for the universities ; others for more professional
  studies (law, medicine, agricultiu-e, applied
  science, &c.) ; others for the Civil Service (first
  or second class clerkships, the excise, customs,
  post office, &c.) ; the army or the navy, &c., and
  these points must be taken into consideration
  in selecting such a school.
  
  University Education. - Admission to the uni-
  versities cannot be obtained by students under
  sixteen years of age. A university training is
  of particular use to those who wish to follow
  any of the learned professions. It is some-
  what costly, however, although, scholarships
  and exhibitions are numerous, and form a solu-
  tion of the expense difficulty for those who
  are fortunate enough to obtain them. But even
  though he be the proud winner of a scholarship,
  a young man will have to bo of frugal and
  economical habits if he hopes to make any head-
  way. The great difficulty lies in the fact that
  in the leading universities the wealthier classes
  predominate, and young men of limited means
  
  
  494
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  are apt to feel acutely their inability to be " in
  the swim." It requires sound common sense,
  total absence of pride, an ability to economise,
  and, above all, strict attention to work, to make
  a university career a success under such con-
  ditions.
  
  A fairly well-educated candidate has an
  excellent chance of obtaining a scholarship.
  Besides university scholarsliips and exhibitions,
  most of the public schools have awards at their
  disposal to help their pupils to the universities,
  whilst public bodies such as the London County
  Council are increasingly devoting their funds
  to a system of senior scholarships, with a similar
  end in view. Tlie city companies also offer
  exhibitions to help students at Oxford or
  Cambridge.
  
  GIRLS' SCHOOLS
  
  A mother cannot expend too much care upon
  the selection of a school for her daughters, both
  in regard to the tuition provided and to the
  pupils with whom she will have to associate.
  This most especially applies to boarding-schools,
  for in the case of day-schools a girl remains
  under home influence, which is more successful
  than anything else in checking the danger to be
  derived from unsuitable companions.
  
  Private Schools. - As regards these, what has
  been said in the case of boys' schools applies with
  even more force to those for girls. Some of
  them are excellent, whilst others are unsatis-
  factory and even inefficient, and the tests which
  have been recommended in connection with the
  choosing of private schools for boys should al-
  ways be applied. Inquiry should be made to
  ascertain that the school is conducted upon
  up-to-date methods, and that ample provision
  is made for the girls in the way of healthful
  exercise, outdoor games, and athletic training.
  Also that suitable food is provided. Fees at
  private schools vary to a great extent, but it is
  by no means the ca.se that the more expensive
  schools are superior to the less expensive ones.
  It is always better, where possible, to select a
  school that has been recommended by friends
  who have sent their daughters there, and whose
  reliability and good judgment are beyond
  dispute.
  
  High Schools. - In most of our towns of any
  size there are good high schools for girls which
  have been established by public companies, and
  are able to offer a good education at a moderate
  cost, so that, except in rural districts or the
  smaller towns, a parent ought to be able to pro-
  cure a good education for girls at a fee of between
  ten and twenty guineas per annum, although of
  course this figure can bo very easily swelled by
  the many " extras " which are so often necessary
  in the education of girls. The schools are
  "day " schools, but in connectoni with many of
  them there are licensed boarding-houses for
  
  
  boarders. They in most cases provide for girls
  an education as thorough as that received by
  boys in public schools of the highest class.
  
  Convent Education. - Various Anglican and
  Roman Catholic Sisterhoods supply an excellent
  education for girls. Mostly there is no question
  of creed for admission, nor is religious instruc-
  tion given where not desired ; still the religious
  atmosphere must have its influence, although
  no bias may be intentionally imparted ; on the
  other hand, the sisters are mostly ladies, who
  devote their lives to the work of education, and
  the example of their culture and refinement is
  of incalculable value. Education at most of
  these establishments is based upon modern
  methods, pupils being prepared for the university
  locals and other examinations.
  
  Colleges. - There are now colleges for girls
  which approach the rank of university institu-
  tions. Amongst these may be mentioned
  Queen's College, Harley Street, London, W.,
  wliich gives a course of instruction to pupils
  up to the age of twenty or even higher, with
  the intention, not of preparing for particular ex-
  aminations, but of fitting pupils for their duties
  in society ; the fees are thirty guineas a year
  for tuition, with extras ; boarders seventy-five
  guineas extra.
  
  The Cheltenham Ladies' College (established
  in 1854) gives special preparation for the B.A.
  and B.Sc. courses of London University, as well
  as for the Cambridge Higher Local and other
  advanced examinations, and has highly success-
  ful departments in Art, Music, and Gymnastics.
  The fees are from twelve to twenty-four guineas
  per annum, while there are fourteen boarding-
  houses whose fees vary from fifty -four to ninety-
  three guineas. Each year there is awarded at
  least one scholarship of from £25 to £45 at St.
  Hilda's Hall, Oxford, which was originally
  founded to receive the elder students of Chelten-
  ham College.
  
  University Education. - At Oxford and Cam-
  bridge women are examined and classed, but
  degrees are not yet granted them. At the other
  universities women are admitted to degrees on
  the same terms as men almost without excep-
  tion : London University led the way in 1878 ;
  the Scotch Universities followed suit in 1892 ;
  and Durham in 1895. Trinity College, Dublin,
  also h£is admitted women on the same terms as
  men. The younger universities have through-
  out their existence received women ; and the
  University of Wales admits them to a share in
  the management of the university, exactly as it
  does men. In most cases special provision has
  been made for the residence of women students,
  while usually they have shared the tuition offered
  to the men (though sometimes they have their
  own lectures, as at Cambridge and Glasgow).
  
  There are fom* halls of residence for women
  students at Oxford, i.e. Lady Margaret Hall,
  Somerville College, St. Hugh's Hall and St.
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  495
  
  
  Hilda'a Hall. At Cambridge there are two
  residential colleges, i.e. Girton and Newnham.
  Scholarships and exhibitions are offered each
  year in connection with these colleges.
  
  In connection with the London University the
  " Schools of the University " for women are
  Bedford College, the Royal Holloway College,
  and Westfield College.
  
  Coming out of a Daughter. - It is a great event
  in the life of a girl when she puts up her hair
  for the first time and goes into long frocks ; for
  when she does this she has left her childhood for
  ever behind her. In most families eighteen is
  the accepted age for a girl's introduction into
  society - in some cases seventeen years repre-
  sents the momentous epoch. The coming out
  of a daughter is usually signab'sed by a dance
  given by her parents. In higher social circles
  it is also marked by her presentation at Court
  (see p. 35S).
  
  Very often, however, her debut is made at a
  house other than that of her parents, in which
  case she should always be under the chaperonage
  of her mother or some other relation. The con-
  ventional dress for the debutante is nearly always
  white, though within the last two years colours
  of the lighter and more delicate shades have been
  worn upon this occasion. Tradition, however,
  dies hard, and white is stiU and ever will be first
  favourite in this respect. The dance toilette
  with low neck and short sleeves is of course
  de rigueur.
  
  Before her daughter's coming out a mother
  should be carefril to accustom her to the ways
  and manners of society. She should allow her
  always to be present at small afternoon parties
  and At Homes, and all other functions at which
  it is permissible for a girl who is not yet out to
  attend. Particular care should be taken to see
  that she is quite au fait in the dances of the
  season. It must be remembered that a graceful
  dancer is an acquisition to any ball-room, whereas
  the girl who is gauche in any way will prove
  a severe trial to her partner.
  
  The first dance of a debutante will be the fore-
  runner of in^'itations to many others. It is
  needless to caution a mother that she should
  exercise discretion in allowing acceptance of all
  of these. In the first place only invitations from
  people of whom the parents approve in every
  way should be accepted, and in the second place
  no girl should be allowed to lavmch at once into
  too great a whirligig of parties, balls and dances.
  This kind of thing is apt to be overdone during
  a girl's first season, and although youth is pro-
  verbially energetic, yet there are some girls who
  would be unequal to a strain of this kind. The
  wise mother will not let her pride in her
  daughter's success surmount the important con-
  sideration of care for her health, and will
  exercise a judicious cutting of the party list
  where necessary. (See also Etiquette of Balls
  and Dances.)
  
  
  CHILDREN'S CLOTHING
  
  As compared with the fasluoning of her own
  garments, the cutting out and making of chil-
  dren's clothes presents a comparatively easy task
  for the home worker.
  
  A clever needlewoman can with good patterns
  save many a penny spent on her children's cloth-
  ing. Material is cheap to buy ; it is the making
  that costs so much. Very often, too, larger
  garments, provided the material is good and
  suitable, can be utilised to make frocks and
  coats for the Uttle ones.
  
  Daintiness and simplicity are the chief
  qualities which should characterise their cloth-
  ing wherever possible. The needlework may be
  of the finest, the materials of the best, but any
  extreme elaboration in trimming and orna-
  mentation should be avoided. Simplicity per-
  tains to childhood, and in no respect does this
  simplicity shine to greater advantage than in the
  matter of dress. The unfortunate befrilled and
  beflounced little mites who are continually
  dressed up in silks and finery quite unsuitable
  for their years and are always " on show," as it
  were, miss much of the happiness of childhood.
  They are not allowed to romp and play like other
  cliildren for fear of spoiling their fine clothes.
  Soon they become self-conscious, sometimes even
  affected, and as a result develop into miniature
  little men and women of the world before they
  enter into their teens.
  
  Naturalness and simplicity are the great
  charms of childhood, and a mother is a very
  poor friend to her child if, however fond and
  loving her motives, she gives rein to her maternal
  pride by continually decking the Uttle one out
  in extravagant clothes, thus installing into the
  child's mind an abiiormal sense of the importance
  of dress and finery.
  
  Let the Httle one's clothes be always spotlessly
  clean, neat and well-fitting, but remember that
  the more simply a child is dressed the better
  she vfiW look, whilst an over-dressed child will
  invariably lay her parents open to the charge
  of vulgarity.
  
  Children's clothing must also be of a kind that
  will protect them from cold or heat. A wise
  mother will see that flannel or wool in some form
  or other is worn next the skin. If wooUen com-
  binations were worn all the year round there
  would be much less chance of the little ones
  catching cold. The textiu-e of the garment may
  of course be altered to suit the season of the
  year, a thinner make of wool being worn in
  summer than in winter.
  
  It is also important that the clothing should
  be large enough to permit of growth ; there must
  be no tightness nor restriction, and at the same
  time the garments must not be too large and
  bulky. This is sometimes difficult with growing
  chilch-en ; they have no sooner been pro\-ided
  with a set of clothes than they seem to have
  
  
  496
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  outgrown them. For this reason it is a mistake
  to proNnde large numbers of anything ; rather
  give just enough to allow for the necessary
  changing and washing, and let the cliild give
  them constant wear. This would no doubt
  mean frequent renewals, but it will be renewals
  in small quantities, and this is much to be pre-
  ferred to having to alter garments which have
  scarcely been worn, or perhaps discjird them
  altogether.
  
  Another mistake made in the dressing of
  children is to give them too many different
  garments and thus burden their little bodies and
  hamper their movements. Rather give a few
  and see that the material is of the right warmth,
  than pile on a number of unnecessary articles
  of clothing.
  
  Three or foiu- complete coverings ought to be
  quitљ enough for both girls and boys. With
  little boys, for instance, it is a mistake to con-
  tinue the petticoat stage, and at eighteen months.
  
  
  Boy's Tunic.
  
  if they have reached the running-about stage, the
  long tunic or smock with the little drawers or
  knickers below might well bo started. They
  can be made in serge, wincey, delaine, or any
  good washing materiaL
  
  Boy's Blouse. - When the little boy is older a
  blouse may take the plac^ of the smock. This is
  a garment which can very easily be made by
  the home worker. Almost any material can be
  used for this - serge, cloth, linen, print, drill,
  velvet, or silk. Short trousers would complete
  the costume, and as a rule these are best made
  in the same material as the blouse, except in
  tbi case of white silk blouses, which can bo very
  well worn with navy blue knickers.
  
  Sleeping Suit. - These should be started with
  little boys as soon as good habits have been
  formed. In fa^t, they are very often used for
  little girla aa well - especially when they are in-
  clined to kick off the bed-clothes at m'ght. If
  a good pattern is obtained, it is very simple
  
  
  to make. Viyella, wincey, or fine shirting are the
  most suitable materials.
  
  Child's Seaside Overall. - This is one of the
  most useful garments designed for the use of the
  tiny tots during recent years. It is worn by the
  little ones over their dresses when at play, and
  forming, as it does, a combination of overdress
  and loose knickers, it effectually protects the
  
  
  Seaside Overall.
  
  frock underneath from all dust and du-t. For
  babies who have reached the " crawling about
  the floor " stage it is an ideal garment. Galatea,
  gingham, and holland are suitable materials for
  the making of these overalls.
  
  The Yoke Frock. - Perhaps there is nothing
  more serviceable for the little girl of from two
  to ten years than the simple yoke frock. Thiu
  usually consists of two breadths of material
  gathered into a yoke, and as with the exception
  of the yoke no fitting is required, a frock of this
  kind is an extremely simple one to make.
  
  It is always as well to cut the skirt of the frock
  fairly long, in the first instance, maV'ng a
  number of hand-sewn tucks above the hem.
  This can be let down by degrees as thi child
  grows, and a frock of this kind has been known
  to last for years. (For Making Tucks, see p. 394. )
  
  Frocks of a more dressy nature for party and
  best wear may be made from a simple yoke dress
  pattern. If instead of gathering, the skirt is
  arranged back and front in a series of vertical
  tucks from the yoke to the waist, a pretty little
  empire frock can be made. For party wear the
  sleeves can be made short and lace insertion
  applied in different designs on the yoke and at
  the hem, whilst a pretty sash can be tied round
  the waist. In fine white cambric or washing
  silk a frock of this kind can be made to look
  very dainty indeed and fit for any dressy occa-
  sion. For a little girl of six, two yards of material
  forty-four inches wide will be required.
  
  Embroidery flouncing is much used in the
  making of lingerie dresses for the tiny tots.
  
  
  THE CHILD
  
  
  497
  
  
  Yoke frocks made of flouncing should be cut
  more in the empire style, that is to say, the entire
  artnhole should be cut in the yoke, the flouncing
  hanging straight from it without the usual
  slightly curved piece under the arm.
  
  The Djibbah. - This is an admirable style of
  garment for a little girl, and it is easily cut out
  and put together, as the sleeves are made in one
  with the rest of the garment and there is only
  one seam xinder the arm. It is also very com-
  fortable to wear, as it slips over the head and
  there is no trouble with buttons or other
  fastenings.
  
  It can be made useful for different purposes ;
  either it may be worn over a frock as a simple
  overall, or, in summer, with a little muslin or
  silk top, it will serve as a frock by itself. The
  little tops can very often be made from a silk
  
  
  Djibbah.
  
  or muslin dress which has become too short.
  The dress should be cut off at the waist and
  fastened on with a draw-string.
  
  Illustration shows a djibbah designed by
  Mrs. Drew, 32 Comely Bank, Edinburgh, who
  makes a speciality of children's clothing of an
  artistic character.
  
  Letting in Insertion. - Open-work insertion is
  a favourite ornamentation for the best lingerie
  frocks for the little ones ; the insertion should
  be added after the frock has been made up, and
  evenly laid on as required. To make it open-
  work after it has been basted on, take a pair of
  scissors and cut the back of the material upon
  which the insertion has been laid, being careful
  not to cut the latter ; turn back the edges and
  hem neatly.
  
  Hem-stitcliing Frocks by Macliine. - Hem-
  stitching makes a very dainty finish to little
  
  
  lingerie frocks, but it is not every mother who
  has the time to do this fine work by hand. Very
  effective imitation hem-stitching can be done,
  however, by machine in this manner : - After
  the hem has been turned over, cut it away from
  the rest of the skirt about a quarter of an inch
  above the place where the stitching of the hem
  would come. Then fold up enough blotting-
  paper or any other kind of soft paper to the
  tliickness of one-eighth of an inch, and insert it
  between the edges of the piece cut off and the
  lower edge of the skirt from which it has been cut,
  which are placed one on the top of the other as in
  sewing a seam, and having loosened the tension
  of the machine, make a quarter -inch seam,
  sewing both through the material and the paper.
  When the seam is finished, cut the paper carefully
  close to the stitches and pull it out. The upper
  edge is folded back, the hem edge folded over,
  and the hem is stitched with a row of fine
  machine stitching close to the edge. Another
  row of fine stitching should be made over the
  edge of the upper part.
  
  Shoes and Stockings. - The clotlaing of chil-
  dren's feet and legs is a verj' important matter.
  Woollen stockings are the best for all ordinary
  occasions, and the texture may vary in thick-
  ness according to the season of the year. They
  must fit well, because if too tight they will cramp
  the foot, and if too loose they will be liable to
  cause blisters. The practice of putting short
  stockings or socks on children is a very risky
  one, and the cause of many a dull and serious
  illness. It is very necessary to keep the legs
  warm, and only in warm weather is it permissible
  to leave them bare.
  
  Properly -fitting boots sire also most essential.
  It must be remembered that in the child the
  bones consist chiefly of gristle, and are easily
  put out of shape if under pressure of any kind.
  It is always better when it can be managed to
  have the boots made to order, but if bought
  ready made the greatest care must be taken with
  the fitting. They must be neither too large nor
  too small, the sole ought to be broad enough for
  the expansion of the toes, the heels low and the
  toes nicely rounded. Lacing boots are as a rule
  bettor than those that button. If the boot is
  badly shaped it is not only the foot that suffers,
  but the leg and spine as well. Sandals have
  been much worn of late years, but those are
  only suitable for summer wear.
  
  (For Children's Millinery, see p. 394.)
  
  
  2i
  
  
  HOLIDAYS AND TRAVEL
  
  Thsre vras a time when English people were content to spend their holidays at home, never stirring
  beyond the hmits of their own native town or village. To-day things have changed, and the annual
  migration to the country, seaside, or continent is now a typical feature of EngUsh family life. The
  progress made in the emancipation of womanhood is also typified by the number of women and
  girls who travel alone. It is for the use of those women, and for mothers who have a great deal of
  the worry and care attendant upon the organisation of their children's holidays, that the hints given
  in this chapter are primarily intended.
  
  
  THE ANNUAL HOLIDAY
  
  The annual trip to the country or seaside is
  the object of much saving and contriving and
  endless preparation on the part of both patet
  and materfamilias, as weU as much eager
  anticipation upon the part of the little ones,
  yet how seldom does it turn out to be a complete
  success.
  
  To begin with, going away with the children
  will not afford materfamilias any appreciable
  respite from her daily round of domestic duties ;
  very often indeed it will mean added work and
  anxiety. Paterfamilias also is apt to be
  worried with innumerable little trivialities con-
  sequent upon the care and management of a
  young family, which takes away a great deal
  from the enjoyment to be derived from a respite,
  however brief, from the daily business routine.
  
  The conclusion to bo arrived at is obvious.
  Since it can never be a complete holiday for
  parents to be always with their children, some-
  time or other during the year they would do well
  to have a short holiday to themselves, away from
  their family. If no more than a week can be
  managed for this, at any rate let this week be
  altogether free from all domestic cares of any
  kind. They should never attempt to make a
  holiday for themselves out of the children's
  holidays, for they will be doomed to disappoint-
  ment. Parents may derive pleasure and happi-
  ness from the enjoyment of their little ones,
  but the very planning of that enjoyroent will
  prevent them from having any real rest. They
  should make up their minds, therefore, to keep
  th ir own holidays entirely distinct from those
  of the children if thoy are to derive any real
  benefit therefrom. Tlie advisability of the
  annual holiday A deixx for parents has been a
  groat deal discussed in the columns of our lead-
  ing newspapers, many of which have conducted
  a lengthy correspondence upon the subject. The
  result has always been a concensus of opinion in
  
  
  its favour. Furthermore, it has also been advo-
  cated that pater and materfamilias should spend
  a portion of their holidays apart from each other
  as well as apart from the children - the wife going
  to her friends or relations, the husband spending
  it in the pursuit of a favourite pastime, such as
  shooting, fishing, golf, &c. There is much to be
  said in favour of this arrangement.
  
  When, for instance, a man's ideal holiday con-
  sists of either a long cross-country walking tour,
  clad in a serviceable suit of tweeds and with no
  other luggage than a knapsack on his back - or
  else when he thinks nothing is more enjoyable
  than to adopt a fisherman's life for the time
  being, going out in a saihng boat with a fishing
  fleet - in short, when his sole idea of enjoyment
  is to " rough " it in every way possible, it stands
  to reason that a woman would be out of place
  in a holiday of the kind. The sensible mater-
  familias will realise this, and will allow her hus-
  band to spend at least a week in his own sweet
  way. Having done this he will enter with much
  more zest into the scheme for the rest of the
  holidays.
  
  It heis been suggested that a four weeks' holi-
  day should be divided up as follows : -
  
  One week to be spent by husband and wife
  separately and apart from their children.
  
  One week to be spent by husband and wife
  together.
  
  Two weeks to be spent with the children.
  
  During the fortnight that the parents are
  away, the children might be sent to a farm-house
  in the country in the charge of a governess or
  nurse.
  
  This plan is not, however, always feasible, and
  in families where the children go to a boarding-
  school the parents will generally find it advisable
  to take their holiday during term time.
  
  In other cases people have not the means to
  enable them to take separate holidays, the
  family vacation of two or three weeks being the
  utmost they can af?ord. In these circumstances
  
  
  HOLIDAYS AND TRAVEL
  
  
  499
  
  
  more care than ever must be taken in planning
  out the holidays that there may be a time of
  enjoyment for parents as well as for the children.
  If the former make up their minds to spare them-
  selves as much worry as possible by careful
  organisation and arrangement, and to enter
  wholeheartedly into the amusement of their
  little ones, much will be done to achieve this
  desirable end.
  
  THE CHILDREN'S HOLIDAYS
  
  In planning the hoUdays for the family careful
  calculation must be made of the money that can
  be spent, allowing ample margin for the hundred
  and one little odd expenses that are apt to
  crop up when one is away from home. Nothing
  mars enjoyment more than the knowledge that
  one has miscalculated expenses, and that many
  pleasant little excursions have to be denied and
  other economies practised as a result.
  
  Great care should be taken in the selection of
  both locality and rooms. Where there are chil-
  dren, if the seaside is chosen, preference should
  be given not to a " show " place, where it seems
  to be the sole aim of the visitors to change their
  toilettes several times a day and be always on
  parade, but to a place where there is a vast
  expanse of sandy beach, where the little ones can
  dig and build sand castles to their heart's con-
  tent. Places on the east coast of England are
  generally bracing, whilst south -coast resorts are
  warmer and more relaxing, and this fact should
  be borne in mind, as very bracing air agrees with
  most people, but is too ;trong for some, who are
  better in a more relaxing atmosphere.
  
  It is better as a rule to take a good suite of
  rooms in preference to a furnished house. In the
  latter case the housewife will have more than
  the usual worries of house-management, for she
  will have the care and worry of looking after
  other people's furniture with the responsibiUty
  for breakages, a number of which invariably
  occur whatever precautions are taken ; and when
  the inventory is checked at the expiration of her
  tenancy, she may find that she has quite a lot to
  pay in this respect.
  
  In some cases, however, the family of little
  ones is so largo that it is not always possible to
  obtain suitable apartments for their accommo-
  dation. In these circumstances it will become
  necessary to take a furnished house. Care
  should be taken that the latter is as compact as
  possible in every way, so that housework is re-
  duced to a minimum. It will be necessary in the
  case of taking a house to take one's servants
  also. It might be possible to allow each of
  these, however, a short holiday in turn, if
  care is taken in selecting a house that is easily
  worked. Sometimes an exchange of houses
  may be arranged.
  
  In taking a honse it is as well to avoid one with
  very old furniture and fitted carpets, as a house
  
  
  of this kind will be very difficult to keep clean.
  In the case of fitted carpets, it should be insisted
  that these are lifted and well beaten and
  cleaned, and the floors thoroughly well scrubbed
  before taking up the tenancy. (Law in regard to
  Furnished Houses, p. 381.)
  
  In selecting rooms it should be ascertained
  that they are clean, airy, fight, and well ventilated.
  Many people who go to the seaside are apt to
  sacrifice one or the other of these important
  essentials to health and comfort for the sake of
  having their windows looking on to the sea
  front. This is a mistake : where large and com-
  fortable rooms may be had facing the sea, well
  and good, but everything should not be made
  subservient to a sea view. Health and comfort
  must be considered. Lodging-house keepers as
  a general rule trade upon the idiosyncrasy of
  holiday-makers to have rooms on the front at
  all costs, by asking exorbitant prices for the
  smallest apartments which boast so much as a
  narrow side-window looking on to the sea.
  
  If better rooms can be found in a road leading
  to but not actually on the front, preference
  should be given to them. Proximity to the
  beach is of course an important consideration
  where there are little ones, and if not actually
  on the front, the rooms should be chosen as near
  to it as possible.
  
  In the better -known and more fashionable
  seaside resorts in England £1, Is. a room per week
  represents the average charge for August ; in
  some places this is the figure for both July and
  August, and in others for August and September
  in accordance with the months constituting the
  " season " at each individual resort.
  
  Boarding-houses are quite unsuitable for
  children. In the first place, their presence is
  often in a meastire resented by the other guests ;
  in the second place, the fare is not always suited
  to juvenile needs, and where any exception to
  the general rule is made in their favour, the
  charges for extras mount up to a remarkable
  degree.
  
  When the holidays must of necessity take
  place during the busy season, it is essential to
  engage the rooms some time beforehand. A
  visit of inspection should always be made and
  a clear understanding as to terms arrived at.
  Be careful to find out what items will fall under
  the very elastic term of " extras," which is often
  made to apply to a great many other items in
  addition to the usual light, &c. It is better,
  indeed, to make an arrangement for all charges
  to be " inclusive," paying a little more if neces-
  sary.
  
  The Country. - A few weeks spent at a farm-
  house in some pretty country place forms an
  ideal holiday for the children. Here they can
  roam about in the fields and woods at will - the
  life on a farm is full of interest to them. They
  love to help to feed chickens and pigs and other
  denizens of the farmyard, and great is the interest
  
  
  500
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  they take in the daily round of the farmer's work.
  Then what pleasant drives may be had through
  country lanes in the pony cart or trap, which is
  usually to be hired at almost everj- large farm
  at a very moderate figure ; and what splendid
  picnics may be organised with very little trouble
  in the woods and meadows.
  
  Farm-house apartments must be taken before-
  hand, as they are very quickly snapped up during
  the summer months, ^\^len you have settled
  upon one or two likely districts, it is a good
  plali to write to the postmaster of the village,
  asking him to recommend one or two good farm-
  houses where apartments are let. Then upon
  the first available day a visit of inspection
  should be made. Be careful first of all to see
  that the sanitary arrangements are good and up
  to date. In many country places, for instance,
  it will be foimd that the lavatory is in the
  garden. This is an obvious drawback, more
  especially in case of illness, and careful inquiry
  should be made in regard to this before taking
  the rooms. However pretty and picturesque
  these may be with their old-time ingle-nooks and
  chimney-pieces, if the sanitary arrangements
  are not perfect they are best avoided.
  
  There are many advantages wliich a holiday
  at a farm-house possesses over one at the seaside.
  In the first place, rooms are much cheaper, and
  the food is usiially good. Very often no more than
  one or two famiUes at most will be taken, and
  the farmer's wife will be willing to do the cater-
  ing as well as provide lodging at a moderate
  inclusive sum per head, consulting always the
  tastes of the family and the special needs of the
  children. Not having a large number of guests
  to cater for as in boarding-houses, the guests are
  not restricted to the set menus that form the
  order of the day at the latter -named establish-
  ments.
  
  Dinner will usually be in the middle of the day
  unless a late meal is especially desired, and
  the food will be plain, but pure and wholesome
  and usually well cooked. Careful inquiries in
  regard to the quality of the cooking should be
  mskde before hiring the rooms. The reputation
  of a bad cook travels fast, and if the post-
  master Ls not au fait in regard to the qualifications
  of the farmer's wife in this respect, it will be
  found that the \-illage shopkeepers will be only
  too ready to enlighten the visitors and to recom-
  mend some other place, as it is to their interest
  v-isitors should make as long a stay as possible
  and return again the next year, and this they
  certainly will not do if their surroundings are
  either uncomfortable or uncongenial. From the
  point of view of economy a holiday at a farm-
  housefor the children is much to be recommended,
  as, apart from the lower charges for board and
  lodging, incidental expenses are also very much
  less.
  
  General Hints. - The sole secret of making the
  children's holiday a success is to see that they
  
  
  have plenty of occupation. The nature of this
  must of course Vary \\-ith the place where the
  holiday is spent. The amusements to be had
  in the country naturally differ considerably from
  those at the seaside. From the point of view
  of occupation and amusement, more varied in-
  terests as a rule will be found by the sea. Bath-
  ing, paddling, boating are all sources of great
  delight to the children, and, as a rule, the entire
  mornings may be spent on the beach, part of the
  time being occupied in bathing or paddling. Iti
  regard to the last-named amusement so dear to
  the little ones, a mother should be careful to see
  that they wear shady hats when paddling and
  that their heads are not exposed to the pitilea."
  rays of the sun dviring the warmest part of the
  daj'. The little legs and feet should also be well
  dried with a rough towel when the cliildren
  come out of the water. It is a most repre-
  hensible habit to allow them to run about with
  wet feet and legs to be dried up by the smi for
  the mere sake of getting sun -burnt.
  
  The children should be encouraged in following
  pet hobbies such as shell and seaweed collect-
  ing, photography, &c., and the parents should
  show a sympathetic interest in these and be as
  helpful as possible in their suggestions. They
  may be allowed to have a run on the sands
  before breakfast, but bathing should not be
  indulged in before the early morning meal.
  Tlicy should never be allowed to remain more
  than from five to ten minutes in the water.
  Dinner should always be in the middle of the
  day, and half-an-hour's rest should bo taken after
  this midday meal. Then the little ones will be
  ready for a walk, a drive, or any little excur-
  sion that may have been planned. For wet
  afternoons and evenings, good games should be
  organised in wliich both grown-ups and little
  ones take part.
  
  If the children are kept thoroughly occupied
  in this manner during the whole of the vacation,
  the time will pass pleasantly and hapi;ily - if
  not, the holidays are apt to drag painfully for
  both children and parents. It must be remem-
  bered also that in this variable climate of ours
  wet weather during the holidays is a factor which
  has constantly to be reckoned with, hence it
  behoves parents to go to the seaside prepared
  for eventualities of the kind, planning out a
  complete scheme of amusement for the wet as
  well as for the fine days.
  
  THE WOMAN WORKER S HOLIDAY
  
  Those who are working all the year round,
  whether it be at teaching, in an office, or in any
  other of the callings now open to women, will
  require to get the utmost out of the short respite
  afforded by the holidays from the routine of
  their workaday life. The holidays should be
  looked upon by them as a real rest and period of
  recuperation, during which they can lay in a
  
  
  HOLIDAYS AND TRAVEL
  
  
  501
  
  
  fresh store of health and strength for their next
  year of work.
  
  One word of warning in this respect. People
  who habitually lead sedentary lives must not
  rush all at once to the opposite extreme during
  vacation time. Walking fifteen to twenty miles
  a day, for instance, when one is unaccustomed to
  such exercise, can only mean a heavy strain upon
  the strength and do more harm than good.
  Rushing about from one place to another in the
  effort to cram all the sightseeing possible into a
  week or two weeks is also harmful. It is wiser
  to take things easily at first, taking the first two
  days to acclimatise oneself to one's surroundings,
  and increasing gradually the measure of exercise
  taken as the time goes on. The woman who has
  only a week or a fortnight's hoUday will find it
  harder to keep to tins rule than the woman who
  has from a month to six weeks, but she should
  keep to it as far as possible.
  
  When a tour through any part of the country
  is arranged it should be done by easy stages,
  overtiring of any kind being avoided. Women
  nowadays show a tendency to nxsh away to
  crowded resorts where prices are high, and
  neglect the many beautiful little spots with
  which our country abounds, notably in Devon,
  Cornwall, and Wales, where it is possible to spend
  the vacation in the pleasantest manner with the
  minimum amount of outlay. The one thing that
  deters people from exploring regions to them
  unknown lies in the fact that their ignorance
  of the place involves also ignorance of the
  nature of accommodation to be found there in
  the way of board anc^ lodging, and as both good
  housing and wholesome food are indispensable
  in ensuring the success of a holiday, they prefer
  returning year after year to the same spot than
  to embark as it were upon a voyage of discovery.
  For those so situated, the booklet " Holiday
  Resorts," published by the Teachers' Guild of
  Great Britain and Ireland, will be found very
  useful. It contains a long Ust of recommended
  addresses throughout the United Kingdom and
  abroad, wliich has been specially compiled for
  the use of teachers on their holidays.
  
  Boarding-Houses. - In England the " pension "
  or boarding-house system has greatly developed
  during recent years. Boarding-house life is
  both suitable and enjoyable if proper caro is
  employed in the judicious selection of an estab-
  lishment. As a general rule, it is inadvisable to
  take rooms in a house that has not been recom-
  mended by some friend, although some people
  are remarkably quick at forming judgment upon
  inspection as to whether a particular place will
  suit them or not. It must be remembered that
  at most frequented resorts during the busy
  season it will be practically impossible to engage
  a room at a boarding-house for a day to see if it
  will suit ; it will be necessary to take it for a
  week at least, ind a week of discomfort will prove
  BO much time of the holiday practically wasted
  
  
  for all the good it will do. Another thing to
  bear in mind is - do not go to a fashionable sea-
  side resort in August under the impression that
  you will get good board and a comfortable room
  at 303. a week. Augiist is essentially a month
  of inflated prices, when boarding-house keepers
  reap their harvest. All accommodation ofltered
  under two guineas a week will as a rule turn
  out to be poor, the latter sum representing the
  minimum charge during the season of all reliable
  establishments. Of course, this does not apply
  to the less fashionable resorts or places which do
  not boast of piers, bands, concerts, and the other
  manifold attractions of the up-to-date seaside
  towns, but in even the smaller seaside resorts
  prices in August are higher than at any other
  time.
  
  THE COUNTRY COTTAGE
  
  In several of our country villages pretty little
  cottages may be f o\ind in many cases at as low
  rentals as £12 a year. With many the country
  cottage has formed the solution of the holiday
  problem, not only for the summer vacation, but
  for week-ends throughout the year. A little
  place of the kind is kept up at very little
  expense. A woman or a man and wife can
  often be found to look after it and keep it
  in order in retiirn for ha\'ing the use of it
  rent free when the owners are not in occupa-
  tion. The furniture reqiiired is of the simplest
  and need represent very little outlay. Many
  people who have tried the experiment claim
  that, in spite of money spent in rent, up-
  keep, &c., the possession of a cottage of this
  kind enables them to have much longer and more
  frequent hohdays and at a lower cost than in
  any other circmnstances.
  
  THE HOLIDAY ABROAD
  
  In these days of facilities for cheap and easy
  travel and of tourist agents who conduct care-
  fully-planned-out tours abroad at a minimum
  of expense, the proportion of English people who
  spend their annual holiday upon the continent
  is decidedly on the increase. The advantages
  of such a holiday are manifold. To begin with,
  the average English woman who never stirs
  beyond the limits of her own native shores is
  apt to become too insular and narrow-minded
  in her ideas. There is nothing that has a more
  educating effect than traveUing in foreign
  countries and mixing with people of other
  nationahties, nor is there anything more cal-
  culated to broaden our outlook upon things.
  
  The continental holiday nowadays is even
  within reach of the business woman who earns
  no more than 30s. to £2 a week salary. What
  more pleasant change can she derive than by
  spending a week or a fortnight in Belgium, the
  most accessible country for people of limited
  means. It will cost her little more than a holi-
  
  
  602
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  day spent at a seaside resort at home, where
  £2, 2s. is tlie minimum season cliarge for board
  and lodging, to say notliing of railway fares and
  other incidental expenses.
  
  Unfortunately there are many English women
  who never sliow to advantage when travelling
  in other coimtries. They toil to adapt them-
  selves to their surroundings, not being able to
  realise the fact that, though many of the customs
  of the foreigners are different from ours, yet they
  have a perfect right to practise them in their
  own covmtry, and that it is the stranger who
  must conform with the customs of the country
  in wliich she is a visitor. The truth of the saying
  " In Rome one must do as Romans do " has yet
  to be realised by many an English woman who,
  when travelling; has the knack of leaving her
  good manners behind her. In this respect she
  does not err in so marked a manner as English-
  men abroad, whose aggressive personality, loud
  voice and manner, and still louder dress were
  at one time so much held up to ridicule by the
  French caricaturist. It must be admitted, how-
  ever, that this type of John Bull has become
  greatly modified during recent years, though a
  want of adaptability to their surroundings is
  still to be noted amongst a large proportion
  of English tourists.
  
  The traveller should begin by reconciling her-
  self to the fact that it is impossible for her to
  have everytliing as she has it at home, and she
  must make up her mind to conform for the tinie
  being with other tastes and other methods of
  living. The cooking at foreign hotels and
  pensions, for instance, will seemi strange at first ;
  but though it is different from what she has
  been used to, it is nearly always very good, and
  she should not spoil her pleasure and that of
  others by grumbUng at it and wishing for some
  English dish not on the menu. A gentlewoman,
  it is true, would not be likely to err in this
  respect, and a gentlewoman at home will almost
  invariably be a gentlewoman abroad, but there
  is no denying the fact that many women show
  a peculiar aggressiveness and intolerance when
  travelling which they rarely display when at
  home, ilany women also when out of their own
  country seem to develop an eccentricity in dress
  as marked as it is unusual, for at home their
  toilettes will bo irreproachable on all occasions.
  Here, again, ia an anomaly which; however inex-
  plicable, is nevertheless existent, there being a
  number of sinners in this respect.
  
  A woman should always bear in mind that
  a large number of foreigners never have an
  opportunity of visiting our mother country,
  hence the sole idea they have in regard to the
  character and appearance of English people
  must necessarily bo gathered from their observa-
  tion of the manners and habits of the English
  tourists and travellers they occasionally come
  across ; and it stands to reason if English tra-
  vellers are constantly offending against good
  
  
  manners and good taste, the impression formed
  of the EngUsh in general will be a very erroneous
  one. Travellers should always bear this fact
  in mind, and by being as circumspect in their
  behaviour and - as far as the exigencies of
  travelling allow - as careful in their dress as
  when at home, they can do much to remove the
  bad impression made by the agressive type of
  Britisher who so often frequents the continent,
  and does his best to earn for English people
  generally an unmerited measiu'e of disappro-
  bation.
  
  Dress. - The traveller should endeavour to be
  neat and well groomed on all occasions. For an
  itinerary toiu" her dress will have to be strictly
  limited to what is most useful. A neat serge
  or tweed coat-and-skirt costume for travelling
  is the first essential. With this a becoming
  small hat and a trim blouse should be worn.
  Boots should be clean and well polished and
  gloves neat and tidy. Plenty of lingerie blouses,
  an extra pair of boots, a pair of indoor shoes, the
  necessary underlinen and a dressing-gown should
  be packed away in the suit -case, and for evenings
  at the hotel or pension one of those dainty little
  crepe de chine or voile princess dresses which
  would seem to have been designed mainly with
  the needs of the traveller in view, so little room
  do they take up. A dress of this kind may be
  rolled up tightly without becoming creased in
  any way if care is taken first to adjast the folds.
  The boots should have good thick soles, as there
  is nothing more tiring than constant walking
  about in thin shoes. Strong comfortable boots
  are especially essential for walking tours, and,
  needless to say, short skirts should be worn.
  
  When making a stay at a fashionable resort,
  such as Ostend or Trouvillo, one will reqviire to
  be smartly dressed, and an ample supply of
  frocks for all occasions will be necessary.
  
  It is always advisable when travelling abroad
  to be prepared for great differences of tempera-
  ture within a comparatively small area. A
  change of winter underclothing and a warm coat
  are often very welcome even during the sammer
  months.
  
  Combined Coupon Tickets. - By means of the
  " Rundreise " or combined ticket system, the
  tourist may effect a reduction of from 20 to 30
  per cent, on her fares. This system prevails in
  Belgium, Holland, Germany, Austria, the Balkan
  States, Turkey, Switzerland, Denmark, Norway,
  Sweden, Franco, Italy, and Sicily, and full
  particulars in regard to it may be obtained from
  any of Messrs. Cook's offices, or from the offices
  of the Belgian State Railways, 53 Gracechurch
  Street, London, E.G. These tickets give the
  passenger the right to stop not only at the
  principal stations on many lines of the countries
  through which she is travelling, but at any out-
  of-the-way place. In the latter case it is usually
  necessary to get the coupon for that section
  stamped by the stationmaster immediately
  
  
  HOLIDAYS AND TRAVEL
  
  
  503
  
  
  after leaving the train. In Switzerland and
  Germany, however, the passenger is allowed to
  break the journey at any place without this
  formality. She has perfect freedom in planning
  out her own itinerary, subject to certain regula-
  tions in regard to time and distances. Only
  hand luggage is allowed free to travellers using
  Rundreise tickets.
  
  Season Tickets available for five and fifteen
  days, which enable the holder to travel as often
  as she hkes all over Belgium in every direction
  on all the Belgian railway lines (2890 miles in
  extent) are issued in England at the Belgian Mail
  Packet Booking Office, 53 Gracechurch Street,
  72 Regent Street, London, and at all Belgian
  stations at 11*75 francs (9s. 5d. =$2'35) 3rd class,
  20-50 francs (16s. 5d.=$4-10) 2nd class; 30-75
  francs (24s. 7d. = $6-15) 1st class, compartment
  reserved or saloon cars.
  
  An unmounted photograph of the holder,
  measuring one and a half inches square, must
  be suppUed to be affixed to the ticket. About
  a quarter of an hour's notice should be given
  to obtain the season tickets.
  
  Similar season tickets available fifteen days
  are issued at double the above prices.
  
  In Switzierland season tickets are issued which
  are available over most of the principal railways ;
  they do not, however, include all the mountain
  railways, although in some cases reductions are
  allowed on the latter to holders of these tickets.
  They may be obtained in London from the
  General Agent of the Swiss Federal Railways,
  11b Regent Street, from the L.B. & S.C.
  Railway Continontt.' Traffic Manager's Office,
  London Bridge, and the Great Eastern Railway
  Continental Traffic Manager's Office, Liverpool
  Street. The fare for fifteen days is £3, 8s. 1st
  class, £2, 8s. 2nd class, and £1, 16s. 3rd class.
  The Swiss Federal Railways also give a list of
  local diligence rates over the passes, and of
  addresses of the best hotels.
  
  Hotels and Pensions. - It is always better to
  go to an hotel or pension which has been recom-
  mended by friends upon whose judgment you
  may rely. Failing this the traveller cannot do
  better than expend a shilling upon the little
  book " Holiday Resorts," already mentioned.
  This contains extensive lists of recommended
  addresses of good hotels and pensions with
  moderate tariffs in most places abroad, and
  should therefore be a great help to the woman
  whose expenses must be carefully weighed and
  considered.
  
  In the season at fashionable resorts both
  hotels and pensions are subject to inflated
  prices, the latter being always cheaper than the
  former. It is always better to engage rooms
  beforehand, and in much frequented places it
  is as well to order by wire the daj' before, pre-
  paying for a reply as to whether the rooms have
  been reserved.
  
  When making a stay of a week or more at an
  
  
  hotel an arrangement for inclusive " pension "
  terms should be made if possible. In most Swiss
  hotels " pension " terms can be arranged for
  three or four days. When not on " pension
  terms," ask for the bill every few days and care-
  fully check it. It is always better, if leaving in
  the morning, to ask for the bill the eve of your
  departure, so that you have time to see if the
  charges are correct. Tips, as a general rule,
  should not amount to more than 10 per cent, of
  the bill for a week's stay at an hotel, being dis-
  tributed amongst the chambermaid, concierge,
  head waiter, boots, and any one who renders
  special service. For a long visit the percentage
  would of course be considerably lower. Not
  less than one franc to each servant is given for a
  short stay.
  
  Tips after long Sea Voyages. - For tips after
  long sea voyages, gold for the table steward
  and the stewardess is de rigueur. After a
  voyage to America or Canada, 10s. at least should
  be given to each. For very long voyages, as to
  Australia, double the amoxint should be given-
  Smaller tips are given to any other of the ser-
  vants on board who render special service.
  
  General Hints. - Travellers on the continent
  should have at least a sUght practical knowledge
  of the language of the country which they visit,
  for although Enghsh is spoken and understood
  at the chief hotels and pensions and the larger
  shops of the principal towns and resorts on the
  continenc, porters and cabdrivers show a decided
  inclination at times to double their fares for the
  benefit of those who show that they are unable
  either to understand what is said to them
  or make themselves understood. Baedeker's
  manual of conversation will be found useful in
  assisting the traveller to at least make her wants
  known in an intelUgible manner. Failing tliis,
  she should have some other handy Uttle guide
  to conversation to which she can refer. Tlie
  Baedeker Guide Books tc travelhng on the
  continent are also of inestimable use to the
  traveller who is planning out her own tour.
  It is always better, however, when going abroad
  for the first time, if totally ignorant of foreign
  languages and if unaccompanied by an experi-
  enced traveller, to join one of the tours con-
  ducted by Cook's or any other tourist agency.
  Not only are the whole tours carefully organ-
  ised and planned out by experts, the tourist
  being saved worry of any kind, but they are con-
  ducted at the minimum of expense, the charges
  including board and lodging as well as fare.
  Particulars of tours can be obtained from any
  of Messrs. Cook's offices, and from Dr. Henry
  S. Lunn, 5 Endsleigh Gardens, London, N.W.,
  Messrs. Dean & Dawson, 17 St. Paul's Church-
  yard, London, E.C., and other tourist agents.
  (For Luggage Abroad, see p. 505.)
  
  Money. - Tlie traveller abroad should make
  herself acquainted witli the coinage of the
  country which slie is \-isiting. English money
  
  
  504
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  can be usually changed by the purser on the
  steamer by which she is crossing. It is not
  advisable, however, to change too much money,
  because in most places English gold is readily
  accepted, the change (if any) being given in the
  foreign currency. It is only with the small coin
  that difficulty will bo experienced. The woman,
  for instance, who L'i taking a short trip in France
  or Belgium with £10 for expenses will only require
  to change £1 of this into small French money
  for the needs of the journey, tips to porters,
  cab fares, &c. For the rest she can obtain
  change as she requires it at either her hotel or
  pension or at any shop where she wishes to effect
  a purchase. She should be careful to ascertain,
  however, that the change is correct. The change
  in French money for £1, for instance, would
  be 25 and not 20 francs, and sometimes advan-
  tage is taken of the ignorant in this respect (see
  Foreign Money Rates). For wealthy people
  who allow themselves unUmited money during
  their holidays, the Circular Note System is of
  the utmost convenience (see p. 368).
  
  Foreign Travel as an Educator. - Besides the
  general broadening of the rriental horizon,
  foreign travel offers a pleasant and rapid method
  of acquiring a knowledge of other tongues,
  especially if a lengthened stay can be made.
  This is now so generally recognised by parents
  that many send their children abroad for the
  latter years of school life. Within the last few
  years large numbers of boys and girls have been
  sent to families abroad, their parents in England
  receiving in exchange a child to be taught
  English. This custom has become so popular
  that an agency has been opened in Paris to
  negotiate suitable exchanges. All the necessary
  information in regard to this may be obtained
  from Monsieur Toni Matthieu, Echange Inter-
  nationale, 36 Boulevard Majenta, Paris.
  
  In addition to this, travelling scholarships
  are offered by various educational bodies which
  entitle the holder to a sum of money to be spent
  on a visit abroad. The advantages of their
  studying a foreign language are obvious. Not
  only does this system offer opportunities for
  acquiring a good accent and ease of expression,
  but the more intimate and personal knowl'-dge
  gained by admission into a cultured house open
  to the student the doors of acquaintance with
  the true spirit of the language and its literature.
  
  Should the parents not be able to take their
  children, or should no suitable escort be found,
  they may safely be sent alone if notice is given
  to one of the societies formed for helping and
  pre *yecting young travellers. These societies have
  a very complete organisation throughout Europe,
  and can arrange for the traveller to be met at the
  different points and placed in the right train to
  continue her Journey, met at the final destina-
  tion, and seen into safe hands. The service is
  generally rendered gratuitously, and is absolutely
  without distinction of class, creed or nationality.
  
  
  Among such societies may be mentioned the
  pioneer of the movement. Lea Amies de la
  Jeune Fille. Similar work is also done by
  the Catholic International Association for
  tlie Protection of Girls, the " Station Work "
  department of the National Vigilance Associa-
  tion and Guild of Service for Women, and
  the Jewish Association of Protection. All these
  work in harmony, and particulars can be obtained
  on application to The Secretary, National
  Vigilance Association, St. Mary's Chambers,
  161a Strand, London.
  
  LUGGAGE
  
  What luggage to take and what not to take
  always forms a vexed question with the
  holiday-maker. The great maxim to be ob-
  served is to take only as much as is absolutely
  necessary, but individual needs vary so largely
  that this maxim is capable of a somewhat
  elastic interpretation. We often read in the
  papers of some enterprising American lady who
  has travelled round the world with no more
  extensive wardrobe than the tweed dress she
  was wearing and a small handbag containing
  linen and toilet accessories. Though we may
  wonder at and even admire her enterprise, few
  of us would be tempted to go and do likewise.
  An English woman when travelling always likes
  to feel fresh and natty, and this cannot be
  accomplished unless she has garments with her
  suitable for all occasions.
  
  It is in the quality of her luggage more often
  than in its quantity that a woman is apt to err.
  Many will travel with a trunk so heavy and un-
  wieldy as to be a positive nuisance, and not all
  the grumbling of porters and cabmen, nor the
  damage done to walls in carrying the box up and
  down stairs, will make them see the error of their
  ways. Then, again, some women are never happy
  unless, in addition to their ordinary luggage, they
  are encumbered with a number of cardboard
  hat-boxes, paper parcels, string bags, and other
  paraphernaUa, some portion or other of which
  they invariabty manage to lose.
  
  With proper luggage there is no need to put up
  with the nuisance of worrying about the safety
  of innumerable small packages. Modern luggage
  is specially constructed with regard to con-
  venience, and the old - fashioned trunk which,
  in spite of its unwieldiness, was remarkable for
  its lack of efficient accommodation for clothes
  and hats, is happily a thing of the past.
  
  The up-to-date trunk is light and compact.
  In the better kinds a number of adjustable little
  compartments are to be found in the upper tray,
  with grooves which enable the packer to make
  the divisions larger or smaller as required. Flat
  trunks may be obtained which hold dresses full
  length, but which are so light that their size
  does not form any drawback. These are speci-
  ally suitable for long voyages. On the latter
  
  
  HOLIDAYS AND TRAVEL
  
  
  505
  
  
  it should always be remembered to have a flat
  cabin trunk containing the clothing and every-
  thing needed on board ship. This can easily be
  kept in the cabin, whilst all the other luggage
  must be stored in the hold. Care must be taken
  that the cabin trunk holds everything that is
  Ukely to be needed, and the traveller, before
  packing; should make a careful list of her require-
  ments, seeing that each article on the list is placed
  in her trunk. On the whole the flat trunks are
  always more convenient than the dome-shaped
  boxes for any kind of traveUingj as they can
  easily be put out of the way under a bed if need
  be when in rooms or hotels.
  
  Neat leather or canvas hat-boxes may now be
  obtained fitted with cushions at the top, bottom,
  and sides upon which to pin the hats. There
  is little fear of millinery becoming spoiled or
  crushed when packed in one of these, and the
  woman who hkes to have plenty of variety in
  her headgear should never travel without one.
  
  For a fortnight's trip a roomy dress-basket and
  a hat-box will be aU the luggage needed. Dress-
  ing-cases are also very useful in travelling, but it
  is not every woman who is fortunate enough to
  possess one.
  
  When travelling with a large family of chil-
  dren the naaximi " as Uttle luggage as possible "
  will not apply. There are so many things neces-
  sary for the comfort of the youngsters - special
  cooking appliances, occasionally a special bed
  or cot, perambulators, mailcarts, and other imi-
  portant essentials. As, however, the cliildren's
  holiday is rarely a migratory tour, but merely
  a certain number of we.ks' sojoiorn at one place,
  the amount of luggage necessary should not
  form a great drawback. In these days of
  cheap " luggage in advance " rates much of the
  expenditure upon cabs may be curtailed, or a
  family omnibus may be hired from home to the
  station at a comparatively small cost, wliilst
  at most seaside places outside porters deliver
  the luggage from the station to one's rooms at
  a small charge per package. In regard to the
  children's luggage it is more than ever essential
  to draw up a list of all the articles that will be
  required, and to take care when paeldng that
  nothing is forgotten.
  
  Luggage on the Continent. - In the case of
  travelling on the continent, it is a mistake to
  carry an amount of hand luggage. This is
  always a nuisance. In the fii-st place, it is sub-
  ject to rigorous inspection by the Customs upon
  arrival, and the contents are apt to be well
  tumbled about during the process of inspec-
  tion, more especially when, as is usually the case,
  there are hundreds of people awaiting their turn
  for their baggage to bo examined. The same
  applies to landing in England from the continent
  - ^too much luggage should certainly be avoided ;
  it is best to limit the baggage to one fair-sized
  yet very light trunk which oan be registered
  through to its destination. There is, indeed, a
  
  
  great advantage in the continental system of
  registration, for once the traveller has taken her
  registration receipt she will not need to worrj'
  about her baggage beyond claiming it at the
  " Customs," being present when it is examined.
  It may be further remarked that the Customs
  examination in many countries on the continent
  is very lenient where registered luggage is con-
  cerned. In most cases the mere formality of
  opening the box is proceeded with, the traveller
  being asked if she has anything to declare - the
  box being closed again when she repHes in the
  negative.
  
  The dutiable articles in most places on the
  continent are tobacco, tea, spirits, soap, new
  clothes, confectionery, lace. A passenger's
  allowance of very small quantities of dutiable
  articles, however, is made in most cases. The
  registration of luggage may be effected on most
  of the railway systems throughout the different
  countries.
  
  The maxim " no hand baggage " cannot be
  applied, however, to all circumstances. In
  regard to itinerary tours which comprise constant
  railway travelling from one place to another
  with "Rundreise '' tickets (see p. 502), or in
  countries where no free allowance of luggage
  is made upon the railwaj'^s, it is wiser to have
  only luggage which may be taken in the railway
  carriage, as this, of course, is free. This might
  consist of a flat suit -case wliich can easily be put
  away under the seat and a Ught hat-box. A
  heterogeneous collection of small parcels should
  always be avoided.
  
  Luggage may be sent in advance from England
  to places where it is intended to make a long
  stay by means of the Continental Daily Parcels'
  Express, who have their offices at 53 Grace-
  chiu-ch Street, London, E.C.. 72 Regent Street,
  London, W., and at Dover. Tliis company under-
  takes the forwarding of passengers' luggage to
  any part of the continent by " Grande Vitesse,"
  or mail service, at very moderate charges. A
  large number of tourists will find it a convenience
  to send their heavier luggage in advance in this
  way.
  
  Wlien the summer holiday is to be spent in
  such pastimes as mountaineering, walking tours,
  in countries like Switzerland, the tourist will
  have to rely upon the ever -useful knapsack for
  immediate requirements, sending on her luggage
  in advance to each place at which she is to find
  a pied-d-terre. Tlie needs of travellers in this
  respect are met in Switzerland by the system
  of posting unaccompanied luggage. Not more
  than 44 libs, can be sent, and the charge is 7d. per
  22 lbs. On the mountain routes the travelling
  is made by means of " diligences " (coaches).
  In connection with these, 33 lbs. of free luggage
  is allowed and 22 lbs. on the passes.
  
  In regard to bicycles a deposit of from five per
  cent, and upwards is in many cases levied upon
  cycles taken into a country, the deposit being
  
  
  50G
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  returnable when the passenger leaves. It is
  important, therefore, that she keep her receipt
  carefully, for she must produce tliis before the
  deposit is returned. In France a permit for
  three months must bo obtained. Tliis will cost
  three francs, but if a longer stay is made the
  cycle tax of six francs will have to be paid. On
  most railways throughout the continent cycles
  are charged as ordinary luggage.
  
  Packing a Trunk. - There is an art in packing
  a trunk which comparatively few women have
  meistored. This art may be defined as the
  ability to pack the largest number of articles
  without creasing or spoiling them in any way
  within the leeist possible compass. A good
  packer will manage to pack away in one trunk
  the same quantity of clothing that an indifferent
  packer would find it difficult to get into two.
  
  The first important thing to remember is
  that all heavy articles, such as boots, shoes,
  books, &c., should be placed at the bottom of
  the box. They should be packed quite tightly
  together, and any empty corners filled up with
  stockings and other small woollen articles.
  Sponge-bags and toilet accessories should be
  also placed in the bottom layer if there is no
  separate dressing-bag for these.
  
  When the bottom of the trunk has been packed
  quite neatly and tidily, forming as flat a layer as
  possible, the underlinen, neatly folded, should be
  placed over it to form the next layer. Over
  this should be placed coat -and -skirt costumesand
  dresses. They should be folded very carefully,
  with sheets of tissue paper between the folds, and
  rolls of tissue paper should also be inserted
  in the sleeves. At the top of the trunk should
  be placed the light silk dresses and blouses
  and evening gowns. These should be carefully
  folded and the sleeves stuffed with tissue paper.
  Hats should always be packed in a separate box
  if possible. It is impossible to pack millinery
  properly in an ordinary trunk, and indeed the
  headgear of the present-day faishionable dimen-
  sions can rarely be made to repose in safety on
  the upper tray of even a fair-sized dress-basket.
  One or two small or moderate -sized hats may,
  however, be placed on the top of the latter
  if needs must, but they should be carefully
  pinned with hat-pins to the canvas of the tray,
  and any bows or similar trimmings should be
  stuffed out with tissue paper to prevent them
  becoming crushed.
  
  Hand-niirrors will seldom get smashed if
  placed within the folds of woollen garments.
  The same applies to any breakable articles.
  Bottles containing liquid of any kind should bo
  avoided if possible when travelling, but if it is
  necessary that these be taken, they should be
  well rolled up in cotton wool and afterwards
  packed in neat little paper parcels. One or two
  
  
  extra waterproof sponge-bags into which they
  can be placed will also be found useful. These
  bottles should not be placed near any of the
  better articles of clothing in case of accident,
  although, if carefully packed, breakages seldom
  occur. Before packing care should be taken to
  see that all stoppers are firmly screwed down and
  that the bottles axe tightly corked, for should
  the cork or stopper come out, a certain amount
  of damage to clothing must inevitably result in
  spite of all precautions in the way of cotton-
  wool wrappings. It is always as well to place
  the bottles within the folds of an old dark
  dressing-gown, and as near the bottom of the
  box as possible.
  
  Veils, gloves, lace scarves, all should come upon
  the top tray of the trunk. Neat Uttle satin or
  silk sachets with the name of the contents em-
  broidered thereon are the handiest receptacles
  for these.
  
  When packed, the trunk should be well locked
  and strapped. Either hanging or adhesive
  labels should be used, and on them the address
  should be clearly written. Care should be taken
  to pull off all old labels, as when these are
  allowed to remain in any numbers they are
  liable to caiise confusion, especially when
  travelling on the continent. It is a good plan
  to have two labels. The porters have enonnous
  quantities of luggage to deal with in a given
  time, and the labels often suffer from rough
  handling.
  
  When packing for a trip on the continent it
  will be found necessary to include many small
  articles which would not be necessary when
  travelling at home. A spirit-lamp and kettle
  will be found most useful. In somo pensions
  a sufficient supply of hot water may not always
  be available for washing purposes, though of
  course this does not apply to the large hotels.
  Then, again, one often likes to indulge in the "cup
  that cheers " either en route on the train
  journeys between various places, or in the early
  morning. Care must be taken, however, not
  to take more than the small quantity allowed
  by the Customs Regulations of the different
  countries. Soap, candles, matches, tapes, but-
  tons, scissors, shoe-laces, ssifcty-pins, needles,
  and cotton all should be available - to say
  nothing of the ever -useful corkscrew. If one is
  accustomed to use special toilet preparations in
  the way of face powders, &c., a supply of these
  should also be included. It is a mistake, however,
  to take a number of articles if you are going to a
  place where they can easily be proctired, and at
  which you intend to make a more or less pro-
  longed stay. It is for the itinerary tour in
  particular that strict attention in regard to all
  the little accessories that make for comfort is
  needed.
  
  
  HOME PETS
  
  There is scarcely a British home, from the mansion of the rich to the cottage of the poor, wliich
  does not boast of some pet, if it be only the humble domestic cat. The care of pets is a problem,
  therefore, which must present itself sooner or later to the average housewife. Dumb animals are
  often sadly neglected, not always wilUngly it is true, but most often from sheer ignorance of the
  best way to treat them both in illness and in health. The following notes upon the characteristics
  of our household pets with directions in regard to their diet and general hygiene, together with hints
  as to the best methods of treating the common ailments to which they are subject, are intended to
  give practical guidance to the housewife in all the most important problems in regard to the care
  and mauagement of her pets with which from time to time she may be called upon to deal.
  
  
  DOGS
  
  The dog is the most companionable as well as
  the most faithful of our pets, and, properly
  trained, he may also become a most useful
  member of the household.
  
  In purchasing a dog it should be remembered
  that some breeds are eminently suited for a
  hardy outdoor life, and for tliis reason would
  not thrive as household dogs in a town ; on the
  other hand, others make admirable indoor pets,
  provided of course that they have a certain
  amount of good daily exercise out of doors.
  " Lap dogs " - a design .tion wliich include all
  the tiny breeds of dogs which form ladies' pots
  - do not require so much exercise, although they
  are all the better for it.
  
  Guard Dogs. - Some dogs are especially noted
  for their qualities as guardians of their master's
  house and property. Chief amongst these are
  the Mastiff, Bulldog, Great Dane, Retriever, New-
  foundland, and Airedale Terrier. The Mastiff,
  Great Dane, and Newfoundland are best kept
  out of doors on account of their size, and for
  this reason are more suitable for country than
  for town life. The Bulldog makes a very good
  indoor dog. Of the smaller dogs. Fox Terriers,
  Irish Terriers, Skye Terriers, and Bull Terriers
  make splendid guard dogs.
  
  Companionable Dogs. - The St. Bernard is a
  most faitMul companion and very gentle with
  children. By reason of his size this dog should
  also be kept out of doors. The Collie is most
  companionable and sagacious. To keep in
  "health it requires a very large amount of exercise,
  .tnd is therefore best kept in the country. The
  Newfoundland is also companionable and fond
  of children. Deerhounds, Bloodhounds, Setters,
  Sheep Dogs are also faitliful companions. They
  are best suited to an outdoor life.
  
  Dogs to keep Indoors in Town. - In choosing
  a house dog for town it should be remembered
  
  
  that the small short-haired varieties are best
  on account of the less trouble entailed in keeping
  them clean. Long-haired dogs bring in mud
  from the street on their coats, and will often roll
  on the carpets and furniture in their attempt
  to get rid of it. Few people will take the trouble
  to brush the dog as he comes in from liis walk,
  j^et this should always be done if he has been in
  muddy or dusty roads.
  
  The most useful dog for indoor town-life is
  undoubtedly the Fox Terrier. Sagacious, easily
  taught, faithfxil and companionable, he makes
  as a rule a good watch-dog, and liis short coat is
  easily kept clean. Tlie Irish Terrier is also a
  most useful dog for town, although he requires
  careful training on account of his fighting
  propensities. As has been said before, the Bull-
  dog makes a very good indoor dog and guardian
  of the house. Skye Terriers and Aberdeen
  Terriers make capital Uttle house dogs, only the
  coat of a Skyo Terrier is rather a drawback as it
  requires very careful attention in regard to brush-
  ing, combing, and grooming generally. The
  Basset Hounds and Dachshimda are also excel-
  lent little indoor doga. Spaniels are generally
  all-round useful dogs, and the Poodle is one of
  the most sagacious and teachable of our peta.
  
  Pet Dogs. - Pugs, Pekingese, Pomeranians,
  Griffins, Yorkshire Terriers, King Charles
  Spaniels, Italian Greyhounds, Maltese Terriers
  are the principal dogs which rank as ladies' pets.
  These as a rule are pampered httle individuals,
  accompanying their mistress in her drives and
  reclining on silken cushions in her boudoir and
  drawing-room, yet when properly trained and
  not allowed to become fractious and snappy
  (a result as a rule of over-feeding) they make
  charming little companions, with the most
  ingratiating ways.
  
  Management of Dogs. - It must be remembered
  that the good qualities of a dog are enhanced by
  careful training and liis faults cured in the same
  
  
  507
  
  
  508
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  way. It is always better for this reason to rear
  our peta from puppyhood if we would obtain the
  most satisfactory results.
  
  Strict cleanliness and judicious feeding are
  the two great essentials in the management of
  dogs. Dogs kppt in the house should be wsished
  once a fortnight if possible in summer, and once a
  month in winter. Outdoor dogs do not require
  such frequent washing. Plenty of warm water
  and good carbolic soap should be used when
  bathing a dog ; the animal should be well im-
  mersed and the soap well rubbed over his coat,
  thoroughly rinsed off, and, last but not least, he
  should be well dried. All dogs should be care-
  fully groomed daily. This is most essential with
  the long-haired varieties, such as Collies, Skye
  Terriers, &c. For these a strong broad-toothed
  dog-comb should be used as well as a brush.
  
  
  Dog-Comb.
  
  
  Dog- Brush.
  
  
  Regular and careful grooming often docs awaj'
  with the necessity of such frequent bathing as
  would otherwise be needed.
  
  Vermin. - If cleanliness in the way of washing
  and grooming is not strictly attended to, the
  anirnal will often be pestered with vermin as a
  result. Carbolic soap should be used in washing
  dogs which are afflicted in this manner. In very
  bad oases the dog should be rubbed all over with
  oil a few hours before the tub is given. This
  should be allowed to remain on until washed off
  in the tub.
  
  The Kennel. - When a dog is kept in a kennel,
  he should Ix^ given fresh straw every week, and
  this straw should be shaken and turned over
  
  
  Dog-Eennel.
  
  every day and all soiled straw removed. In
  summer a piece of matting can be used instead
  of straw. Do not keep him chained up for a
  long time at a stretch if it can possibly be avoided.
  A dog should always have plenty of exercise ;
  besides, the kennel will soon get foul if he is
  chained up all day.
  
  Needless to say, the kennel must be kept
  
  
  clean, being washed out at frequent intervals.
  A dog-kennel should always bo as roomy as
  possible, and it should never be allowed to rest
  right on the ground, on account of the danger
  of the dog catching cold from damp. The
  door of the kennel should, if possible, be at the
  side. Wlien it is in the front the animal cannot
  get away fi'om the rain and snow which in storm j'
  weather blows through the opening. With the
  door at the side he can ciu"l up in the corner
  away from the entrance, and so avoid it. For
  indoor dogs an old wine-case filled -with straw
  makes an excellent bed. The tiny pets should
  be provided with little dog -baskets.
  
  Feeding. - Many mistakes in regard to feeding
  are made by the average dog-owner ; it is either
  a case of " killing with kindness " or semi-
  starvation tlirough unsmtable food. The mis-
  take first mentioned is the one most often com-
  mitted, more especially in regard to the strictly
  house pets. Tit -bits of various kinds are given
  to them at all hours of the day, to say nothing of
  sugar, the excessive eating of which is most
  injurious. Pet dogs should never be allowed
  in the room at meal -time, particularly when they
  are versed in the art of " begging " or other
  similar blandishments, which make it ht.rd to
  refuse them the tit-bits they covet. A dog
  should not be fed between meals. Two good
  meals a day are ample for most of our canine pets.
  To lap dogs, however, three smaller meals should
  bo given daily. These may consist of meat, vege-
  tables, and Spratt's dog biscuits, with a regular
  supply of bones. The latter are very good for
  the dog's teeth. Only large bones should be
  given - never bones of poultry or game. These
  are apt to injure a dog's stomach, as they are
  often swallowed whole. Meat should only be
  given at the chief meal. Animals which have
  little exercise should not be given large quantities
  of meat ; it is a mistake, however, to exclude
  it altogether from a dog's diet. The biscuits
  can be given dry or soaked. They should
  always be broken up. The diet should be
  varied as much as possible - meat sc-aps from
  the table with vegetables make a good and
  suitable meal wliere one or two indoor dogs
  are kept, but the amount of meat should be
  regulated by the amount of exercise they get.
  Never allow food to bo left lying about in
  the vessels ; at meal times give only what is
  sufficient. Plenty of drinking water must
  always be at hand, and the drinking vessel must
  be kept scrupulously clean. Drinking-troughs
  should not be stood out in the sun in hot
  weather ; the water should be kept in as cool
  a place as possible.
  
  Above all things be guarded against the
  mistake of killing your pet with kindness, as
  is so often the case with strictly pet dogs,
  such as Pugs, Pomeranians, &c. Tlie poor
  little animals have to pay in the long run for
  the indiscriminate pampering they receive at
  
  
  HOME PETS
  
  
  509
  
  
  the hands of their mistresses. Their httle
  lives axe not only rendered miserable by ever-
  recurring disease, but in most oases they are
  materially shortened.
  
  Exercise. - Never forget to let your pets have
  suflScient exercise. To keep them indoors all
  day long falls Uttle short of actual cruelty. If
  you would have them keep strong and healthy,
  let them be your companions in your daily walks ;
  remember that exercise is almost as necessary
  to them as food. The dog should be trained
  early to follow well out of doors - ^this is all the
  more necessary in regard to dogs kept in towns -
  for the very real dangers of traffic are always
  present, and it is not safe to take a dog out in the
  crowded streets if he does not follow well or
  answer to his mistress's call.
  
  When qmte young a dog should always be
  taken out on a lead. All dogs when out of doors
  
  
  Collar for Long-haired Dog.
  
  must wesj collars with the name and address
  of their owner inscribed thereon. The collars
  of long-haired dogs should be rounded in order
  to preserve their fur. When sending puppies or
  small dogs away long distances by train they
  
  
  Dog's Travelling-Basket.
  
  should be placed in a basket with plenty of room
  for ventilation allowed. Special baskets are sold
  for the purpose at moderate prices.
  
  Puppies. - Puppies require very careful tending
  [ if that great ill of puppyhood, " distemper,"
  If is to bo avoided. A puppy of a few weeks old
  i when taken from the care of its mother should
  I be fed at least six times a day. The last meal
  \ should be given to it late at night ; after a late
  , meal he is more likely to rest and refrain from
  ( disturbing the slumbers of the household by his
  ;' yelping. Between six and eight weeks of age
  is the usual time for weaning puppies.
  
  Milk thickened with meal is the best food
  after weaning. Later Spratt's puppy cakes
  soaked in milk may be added. The meals
  should be decreased as the puppy gets older,
  and at five months three meals daily will be
  
  
  sufficient. When he is teething, bones and a very
  little meat should be added to his diet. Puppies
  at this time are apt to get destructive, tearing
  up whatever they come across. For this reason
  it is well to supply them with plenty of bones to
  gnaw at, and old boots, shoes, balls, anything
  which they can tear up and destroy at their
  wiU.
  
  Care of the Mother. - The period of gestation
  is between eight and nine weeks, and during this
  time the animal should be well fed, and a small
  dose of olive oil occasionally administered. When
  the time approaches for the puppies to be bom,
  a bed should be provided for her in some quiet,
  secluded place, which is warm, airy, and free
  from draught. Tlie bed should consist of a
  roomy box or basket into which plenty of clean
  straw has been placed. Beyond the preparation
  of the bed, the animal can in most cases be left
  quite alone until the puppies are born. It is
  as well, however, especially in the case of a
  valuable dog, to arrange for the attendance of
  a skilled veterinary surgeon in the event of
  complications arising. After the puppies are
  born, fresh straw should be placed in the bos,
  and the mother should be coaxed to take a little
  warm beef -tea. Then she should be left luidis-
  turbed as much as possible for a few hours. She
  should have three good meals a day while nursing,
  consisting of easily digestible food and a little
  raw meat at first.
  
  Training Dogs. - A puppy should be trained
  early in the ways of obedience and cleanliness.
  If he contracts bad habits in his early life and
  these are left unchecked, it will become increas-
  ingly difficult to cure him as he grows older. He
  should be kept clean and given frequent baths,
  care being always taken to thoroughh' dry him
  afterwards. He should be supplied with a nice
  warm bed and kept as free as possible from
  draughts. Violence and impatience ai'e quite
  out of place in the training of puppies. By
  patience, firmness, and perseverance on the part
  of the owner a puppy will soon get to know who is
  master ; only firmness and perseverance on the
  part of the master or mistress are essential in
  order to achieve the desired result. The Uttle
  creature must be first made to understand what
  is wanted and then made to do it. A too liberal
  use of the whip is inadvisable. A well-known
  authority on dogs has said that one good beating,
  if thoroughly deserved, will do good, inasmuch
  as it will not be forgotten by the little culprit,
  but to beat the dog on the smallest pro\'ocation
  will spoil his temper and often make him snappy
  and then ferocious in time. Such a method of
  training can only be productive of harm. UTiilst
  some dogs are very fond of going into the water
  after stones, &c., others are afraid to do so. In
  these circumstances they should never be thrown
  in, as this will only increase their fear in this
  direction. Very often a dog may be persuaded to
  take to the water by seeing other dogs go in,
  
  
  510
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  more especisdly if these dogs are his daily com-
  pjmions ; but be should never be forced to do so.
  
  Ailments. - A dog which is well housed, suitably
  fed, and well cared for hygienically should always
  keep healthy. There are, however, certain ail-
  ments to which our canine pets are subject
  which will sometimes make their appearance in
  the best -regulated kennels. Unless the ailment
  is of a strictly minor order it is always better to
  at once call in a quaUfied vet. We owe it to our
  faithful companions and pets that they should
  have the best attention in sickness. It is as
  well, however, to be able to recognise the
  symptoms of the various canine ailments, so
  that the sufferers may be properly treated in the
  way of housing, feeding, warmth, &c. We shall
  therefore describe the symptoms of the chief
  ailments to which dogs are liable, together with
  the particular management and attention re-
  quired to effect a speedy cure.
  
  Administering Medicine. - Small dogs can be
  taken on the knee of the person who is ad-
  ministering the dose ; very large dogs, such as
  Mastiffs, usually require a man to handle them.
  
  Sometimes the pills or medicine may be mixed
  with food. When giving a pill, see that it is
  placed well on the back of the animal's tongue,
  closing its mouth quickly until the pill is
  swallowed.
  
  Canlcer. - This appears in the form of acute
  inflammation of the ear. The dog will be seen
  to hold its head on one side as if in pain and to
  keep on scratching his ear. He must be pre-
  vented from doing this as much as possible, as
  the scratching will only increase the inflamma-
  tion. The ear should be regularly treated with
  a good antiseptic solution. If taken in time,
  this treatment will often be sufficient to ward
  off a bad attack. Severe cases require special
  treatment, and a veterinary surgeon should at
  once be consulted. Very often ear inflammation
  occurs through accumulation of dust and dirt
  inside the ears of the dog, which he endeavours
  to dislodge by scratching. Those who have
  the welfare of their pets at heart can prevent
  this state of affairs by gently wiping the
  inside of the ear of the animal with a piece of
  soft rag, thus freeing it from all dust and dirt,
  whenever it is seen to scratch its ear or to bo
  suffering from undue irritation.
  
  Distemper. - Some people think that it is
  necessary for all dogs to have distemper. Tliis
  is quite a fallacy. If a dog is well housed and
  kept free from all source of infection, it will
  seldom have it. Distemper is a most infectious
  disease and can be contracted from other animals
  or infected sources, such as bedding, &c.
  
  Symptoms. - It is some time before the
  symptoms make their appearance, all that is
  noticeable at first being the fact that the animal
  is not well. The symptoms are similar to those
  of a cold - the appetite is poor, a watery discharge
  comes from nose and eyes, there is a rapid rise
  
  
  of temperature, the discharge from the eyes
  increases to such an extent that the eyelids
  often become almost glued together. In all bad
  cases of distemper it is best to seek the advice
  of an experienced veterinary surgeon, as many
  severe complications often ensue.
  
  The patient should at once be isolated and
  kept in warm and comfortable surroundings.
  Very careful feeding upon light nourishing food
  is necessary : the diet should include plenty of
  milk and beef-tea. All the dog'c surroundings
  should be thoroughly disinfected. Too much
  emphasis cannot be laid upon tho necessity for
  cleanhness and warmth.
  
  Eczema. - Eczema is often found in over-fed
  pets, more especially in older dogs. The skin
  eruption appears most often under the thighs and
  about the ears and back of the animal. Intense
  irritation is set up which is accelerated by the
  continual scratching, and painful sores often
  result. Careful dieting and regular exercise are
  necessary. The sores should be treated with
  boracic ointment. The animal should be kept
  very clean, and a tonic should be prescribed
  by a veterinary surgeon to improve the general
  condition of its health.
  
  Fits. - These occur most frequently in puppies,
  and may be very slight, consisting merely of
  convulsive movements of the muscles, or else
  they may take the form of severe convulsions,
  with foaming at the mouth, rolling eyeballs, and
  all the other usual accompanying severe symp-
  toms. Nothing can be done while the attack
  lasts. Dogs subject to fits should be kept on
  a very light diet, and aperient medicine should
  be regularly administered. Sometimes after an
  attack a dog will rush away at a tremendous
  speed foaming at the mouth, having altogether
  the appearance of a mad dog. Ho will hide
  himself and not return till the attack has quite
  passed over. This after-effect of an epileptic
  seizure may easily be mistaken for rabies, so
  in order to avoid the disastrous consequences of
  such a mistaken impression on the part of a
  stranger it is as well to tie him up until he has
  altogether recovered.
  
  Hydrophobia. - As has been already pointed
  out, foaming at tho mouth must not be taken to
  indicate hydrophobia. This dread disetise has
  been stamped out in England, and it is very
  seldom that a case of hydrophobia is heard of.
  The surest indication of the disease is a com-
  plete change in the disposition of the animal.
  If, for instance, a good-tempered dog becomes
  suddenly snappy, ferocious or irritable, and it
  seems to frequently rub the sides of his mouth
  with his paw as if to dislodge something from it,
  it should be looked upon with suspicion, and
  kept tied up until it can be ascertained if there
  is any danger of its being attacked by this
  disease.
  
  Mange is a highly contagious skin disease
  caused by an animal parasite. Sometimes the
  
  
  HOME PETS
  
  
  511
  
  
  parasite takes up its abode on the surface of the
  skin. In this case a number of small red spots
  appear which form into sores, the hair falls off
  in quantities, and an unpleasant odour emanates
  from the skin. When the disease assumes this
  form it is known as sarcoptic mange. In
  follicular mange the parasite is to bo found in
  the hair folUcle. Though this form of mange
  is not so contagious as the sarcoptic form, it is
  more difficult to cure. Expert veterinary advice
  should at once be sought when either form of
  mange makes its appearance. The dog should
  be at once isolated. Give it a thorough bath and
  then apply the dressing prescribed to the entire
  surface of the animal's skin. This is usually
  composed of sulphur and slaked lime, or sulphur
  and train oil, the proportion of sulphur used
  being usually double that of the other ingredient.
  Allow the dressing to remain on for a few days,
  then wash it off. If necessary, the process
  should be repeated. In most cases of sarcoptic
  mange the destruction of the parasite will be
  effected after two or three applications of the
  dressing. The treatment for follicular mange
  is much more protracted, and the animal should
  always be sent away to the care of a veterinary
  surgeon until the cure is effected.
  
  Rheumatism most frequently occurs in old
  dogs. It is sometimes brought on by confinement
  in damp and draughty kennels or sleeping on
  damp bedding, but most often by exposure to
  wet and cold. Most often it takes a chronic
  form, and is manifested in extreme stiffness of
  the joints, the animal having difficulty in
  walking. There are intervals of great pain
  and considerable stiffness and lameness, whilst
  at other times the dog will appear to be quite
  well. Sometimes the attacks are exceptionally
  severe. The affected parts should be carefully
  massaged with some good liniment every day,
  the dog should be given a warm and com-
  fortable bed, and doses of iodide of potassium
  \vith salicylate of soda should be regularly
  administered.
  
  St. Vitus' Dance. - This disease takes a some-
  what similar form to that which it displays in
  human beings, its presence being indicated by
  the same twitching of the muscles. Warmth
  and careful dieting are essential. The patient
  should be prescribed for by a veterinary surgeon,
  and medicine regularly administered.
  
  Worms. - A large number of dogs suffer from
  these internal parasites, as they often pick vip
  the eggs of the various worms with their food
  and water Tape -worms are the most frequently
  prevalent, although they are also infested with
  round -worms in several cases.
  
  Treatment for Tape -Worms. - ^Tho infested
  
  dog should be starved for twenty-four hours,
  
  then a good vermicide should be administered.
  
  ^ This treatment should be followed by a dose
  
  [ of castor oil or some other aperient within two
  
  or three hours.
  
  
  Round-Worms most usually infect puppies,
  and fits may often be traced to their presence.
  Puppies should be kept without food for three
  hours before the vermicide is administered.
  No aperient is necessary unless the animal is
  an adult.
  
  CATS
  
  The Care of Cats. - Puss is one of the most
  common of our domestic pets, and perhaps it
  is for this reason that, with the exception of
  valuable animals which are bred for show pur-
  poses, she is often sadly neglected. Very few
  people think of feeding her regularly ; one or
  perhaps two saucers of milk will be allowed her
  daily, and the rest of her food she is supposed
  to make up with mice or anything else she can
  forage for herself.
  
  This is quite a wrong way of bringing up our
  feline pets : it is simply encouraging them to
  thieve whatever dainties they can get hold of.
  A cat who is left to hunt for her own food will
  not be too particular as to where she finds
  a meal, and the larder will suffer in conse-
  quence.
  
  Properly trained, a cat will become a most
  docile animal, and a respecter of its master's
  property, but first of all she must be fed. Milk
  is not the sum total of all her requirements ;
  she should have at least two good meals daily
  in addition to the milk allowance. The scraps
  from her master's table, including bits of meat,
  gravy, and plenty of green vegetables, will
  usually be sufficient ; but the meals must be
  given regularly. Bread and milk in the morning,
  scraps left from the mid-day meal of the house-
  hold, and another meal of scraps at night will be
  sufficient, whilst kittens require more frequent
  feeding. Cats should always have access to
  grass, wliich they eat with relish, as tliis is good
  for them medicinally. Drinking water should
  also always be within pussy's reach, as milk is
  not sufficient to quench her thirst. Cats are
  very fond of all kinds of fish, and their fancy in
  this direction should be indulged whenever
  possible.
  
  The cat, more especially the common short-
  haired cat, is really one of the hardiest of our
  domestic pets. Persian and other long-haired
  cats require more care, and are apt to be more
  delicate than the ordinary short-haired \aricties.
  A cat can easily be trained in habits of cleanli-
  ness, only the training must begin from kitten -
  hood. When a cat is kept in a house where
  there is no garden, it should always be pro-
  vided with a good-sized tin tray covered with
  earth ; needless to say, the earth should bo
  frequently changed. Cats are said to become
  very attached to tlie houses in which tliey are
  brought up, and they have often been known
  to run away and get lost after a household
  removal. An old-fsishioned plan to prevent
  
  
  512
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  this is still often followed. As soon as pussy
  arrives in the new house, butter is rubbed well
  over her feet and legs. She will at once begin
  to Hck off the butter, and by the time she has
  finished this engrossing occupation it is said
  that all idea of flight will have been abandoned.
  When a cat is expected to have kittens, a
  warmly-lined beisket should bo provided for her
  in a quiet place. In most cases it will be found
  necessary to get rid of some of the kittens, but
  one should always be left, as, apart from any
  questions of cruelty, it is bad for the mother
  to have all the young one^ taken from her.
  
  Different Kinds of Cats. - The most beautiful
  of our feline pets are undoubtedly the Persian
  and Angora varieties. Of these the blue
  Persians are perhaps the handsomest. Then
  there are black, white, and tabby Persians all
  with the beautiful long soft silky fur which is
  the chief characteristic of their breed. Persians
  require much more attention than our ordinary
  common cat, as they are more deUcate of con-
  stitution ; but they are such gentle and beautiful
  animals that any extra care expended upon
  them is abundantly repaid.
  
  Other varieties of cats are the Manx, the
  Siamese, and the Abyssinian. The Manx cat
  has no tail, and in the colouring of its coat it
  resembles tJie British cat. The Siamese cat has
  a light-coloured body and a dark face, tail,
  and legs.
  
  The ordinary cat keeps her own coat in good
  condition by cleaning it with her tongue. Long-
  haired cats, however, should be brushed and
  combed daily. During the moulting season this
  is more than ever necessary, for when long-
  haired cats moult, if they are not strictly attended
  to, they will often swallow quantities of hair
  which may accumulate in the stomach and kill
  them. The danger of this is obviated by regular
  and careful grooming.
  
  Common Ailments. - Our ordinary cat is as a
  rule very hardy ; nevertheless there are many
  ailments with which puss may be overtaken,
  and as it is said that some of the diseaises which
  attack cats, notably consumption, may be com-
  municated to human beings, the reason for the
  greatest care is all the more evident.
  
  Colds. - These should not bo neglected, as they
  may often develop into more serious ailments.
  They are usually indicated by fits of sneezing
  and catarrh. Keep the cat thoroughly warm
  and out of draughts, and give her warm milk to
  drink until the cold has run its course.
  
  Diarrhcea. - Give a tea-spoonful of castor oil,
  and keep the patient on a very light diet for a
  day or two.
  
  Distemper. - A veterinary surgeon should be
  consulted. In addition to administering the
  medicine he prescribes, pay great attention to
  diet, give plenty of fish and strengthening food.
  Isolate the animal, as the disease is infectious.
  
  Pu88 is generally ailing and out of sorts before
  
  
  the actual symptoms appear. Those usually
  manifest themselves in the form of sneezing and
  a watery discharge from the eyes and nose.
  
  Fits. - These occur mostfrequentlywith kittens,
  especially when teething. Nothing can be done
  while the fit lasts, but a dose of castor oil
  should bo administered when the convulsions
  are over. Be very careful how you lift up a cat
  in convulsions, always using a good thick cloth
  for the purpose. Place it at onco in its basket
  out of harm's way. Get veterinary advice as
  to the general health of the little animal.
  
  Other Diseases. - Cats are also liable to con-
  sumption, mange, canker of the ear, eczema, and
  other diseases. In all cases skilled advice should
  at once be sought.
  
  CAGE BIRDS
  
  No more cheery pet can be kept in a house-
  hold than a little feathered songster if it is well
  tended and its cage kept bright and clean. To
  keep a bird and yet be wholly ignorant of the
  right method of caring for it is not only folly,
  but in manj' cases this ignorance amounts to
  actual cruelty. The sum of the requirements
  of our pet birds is very small, but they should
  be rigidly attended to. Cage birds suffer more
  almost than any other pet from the conse-
  quences of neglect. Tlieir being kept in con-
  finement produces a certain delicacy which is
  certainly not one of their characteristics when
  enjojang the freedom of their natural state.
  
  Before keeping a canary or any other similar
  pet it must be borne in mind that no cage bird
  will thrive unless it has a roomy cage, plenty
  of good suitable food, and clean fresh water
  both for drinking and bathing purposes, and
  its cage and surroundings are kept thoroughly
  clean. Last but not least, the cage must be
  hung in a bright position, where the little songster
  may obtain plenty of bright light - not artificial
  light be it said ; there is nothing more unhealthy,
  for instance, than for a bird to bo placed near
  a gas-jet. Care must also be taken that the cage
  is well away from all draughts. Gi\on strict
  attention to these first essentials and also a
  knowledge of the more common ailments to
  which our feathered pets are subject, the little
  captives will thrive and gladden the household
  with their bright song. They will come to
  know the hand that tends them, and with a
  little patience on the part of their. keeper they
  may in time be tamed to almost as great a degree
  as any other household pet.
  
  Canaries. - There are many varieties of
  canaries, chief amongst which are the Yorkshire,
  the Norwich, the Border, the Lizard, the Crest,
  the Belgian, and the German. Of the English
  birds the Yorkshire Canary is the most graceful,
  whilst the best songsters undoubtedly come from
  the Harz Mountains in Germany. As a rule, the
  latter are inclined to be delicate when brought
  
  
  HOME PETS
  
  
  513
  
  
  over to England : where they are successfully
  reared, they undoubtedly make the best songsters.
  In regard to singing, amongst the English birds
  a mule is often a much better songster than a
  pure-bred canary, and m\ile birds are also
  usually fairly hardy.
  
  Choosing a Canary. - In choosing a canary,
  care should be taken to go to none but a reput-
  able bird-dealer. Many bird-dealers will send a
  bird to the customer's house on approval for a
  day or two in order that she may be able to
  judge its singing capacity. A reputable bird-
  dealer as n rule will be pleased to help the
  purchaser in every way in his power, and will
  give much valuable advice. In other cases it
  is always better for the purchaser to take some
  friend with her who thoroughly imderstands
  cage birds and their different points and
  qualities.
  
  The prices of canaries vary to a great extent.
  As a rule, however, a very good bird may be had
  for from 10s. 6d. and upwards, and often 7s. 6d.
  will purchase a hardy Uttle songster.
  
  The Cage. - The cage should be as large and
  roomy as possible and fiarnished with at least
  three perches, one at each side near the food and
  water-troughs, and one higher up in the cage.
  The bottom of the cage should be fitted with a
  sUding tray which can be
  tr.ken out, cleaned, and
  covered with fresh sand
  daily. A little vessel for
  water and another one for
  food are placed at each
  side of the cage ; in most
  cages a httle recess is built
  out on either side to hold
  these vessels with an open-
  ing in the cage bars through
  which the bird can reach
  its food. In others the food
  and water vessels are placed
  on stands inside the cage.
  A cage made of ordinary wood and wire is
  very suitable, and can be purchased for from
  6s. and upwards. Brass cages are naore
  expensive and more ornamental, but they
  become dangerous if the bars are not kept
  thoroughly dry, on accoimt of the verdigris
  which forms upon them. Enamelled cages may
  also be had at all prices. In addition to the
  food and water vessels, a larger vessel should
  also be placed inside the cage in which the bird
  can take his daily bath. All vessels must be
  kept scrupulously clean and should be washed
  out daily. It is always as well to keep two
  complete sets of perches, so that wliile one set
  is being scrubbed with soap and water, the
  other set can be placed in the cage. Perches
  should never be returned to the cage before
  they are thoroughly dry.
  
  Food and Water. - Canary seed is the chief
  food for canEurieii. The seed should be clean
  
  
  Canary Cage.
  
  
  and free from grit. The food vessel should
  always be cleaned before placing the seed
  into it in the morning. A Uttle fresh green
  food should also be given daily. Water-cress,
  groundsel, lettuce, or chickweed are all appre-
  ciated by our pets. In the winter, when green
  food is sctu-ce, a small piece of apple should
  always be placed between the bars of the cage
  for the bird to peck at. By way of a deUcacy
  a lump o£ sugar might also be placed between
  the ^zc"Z of the cage : this dainty is much
  appreciated and .serves to keep the bird's beak
  in good condition ; a piece of cuttle bone for the
  bird to peck at should also be placed between
  the bars.
  
  The bottom of the cage should always be
  covered with good rough sand or gravel put in
  fresh every morning, to aid the canary in
  grinding its food. Fresh water should be given
  every morning for drinking and for the bath.
  In summer fresh water should be given twice
  daily. The water vessels should be kept
  scrupulously clean. For the bath an ordinary
  saucer or a glass vessel such as is used some-
  times for packing potted meat would fulfil all
  requirements.
  
  Breeding. - Much interest may be derived
  from the home-breeding and rearing of canaries.
  Care should be taken to select a hardy pair for
  mating, and they should be paired about the
  middle of March. It TnM be necessary also to
  buy a breeding-cage. This may be procured
  
  
  BreediDK-Cage.
  
  for a few shillings, and is divided into two com-
  partments by a movable wire peirtition. The
  cock and the hen are put into separate com-
  partments, and £is soon as the cock is seen to
  feed the hen through the bars the partition is
  withdrawn and the cage thrown into one.
  
  The breeding-cage is fitted with a nest-box,
  and nest-building material should be placed
  between the bars. As soon as the first egg is
  laid it should be taken a\< ay and a little china
  egg substituted, and so on with each egg until
  three have been laid, when they are returned
  to the nest and the hen sits upon them. Hard-
  boiled egg mashed up with bread-crumbs should
  be given daily during the hatching time, in
  addition to the seed, and plenty of good green
  food. When the little birds are old enough to
  leave the nest they may be placed in a separate
  
  2k
  
  
  514
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  compartment, where they will be fed by the
  cock. In addition to the egg, they may now
  have a little crushed seed, wliich they will learn
  to pick up for themselves. ^Vhen they can
  feed themselves they may be placed in another
  cage.
  
  Taming Canaries. - A canary will thrive much
  better if it can be so thoroughly tamed that it
  can be allowed to fly about the room for a cer-
  tain time each day, and may be relied upon to
  return to its cage of its own accord. One
  person only should undertake the taming of
  the little captive in this respect, because it is
  necessary that the bird should get to Icnow and
  c"u-e for the hand that tends him if any headway
  is to be made in the taming process. A great
  amount of patience is required to accomplish
  this - ^the bird should be taught to perch on its
  owner's finger, to feed from her hand. Then
  the cage-door can be opened and the bird allowed
  its Uberty. At first it will require to be gently
  coaxed back to its cage by the display of some
  fresh green stuff or other dainty ; but gradually
  it will return to it of its own accord. Care, of
  course, must be taken that no cats or other pets
  liable to harm the little wanderer are allowed
  in the room. A cat, if taught very young, may
  be trained to become quite friendly with a
  canary or any other bird, and to refrain from any
  attempt to harm it. Much more antagonistic
  pets than cats and canaries have been known
  to live together in harmony as a result of careful
  early training.
  
  Birds in the Aviary. - Several birds of various
  kinds may be kept together in an aviary, and
  their rivalling notes will often make a most
  
  
  Aviary.
  
  delightful harmony. An aN-iaiy must on no
  account be overcrowded. If any of the inmates
  disagree, it is better to separate the offender
  from hia companions and place him in a cage by
  himself. Strict cleanliness must, of course, be
  the rule.
  
  Other Cage Birds. - Amongst other British
  birds which may be kept successfully as pets
  are the Bullfinch, Chaffinch, Goldfinch, and
  linnet. The Goldfinch is a very fine songster.
  
  
  and the Bullfinch may be trained to pipe tunes.
  The Chaffinch can also be trained as a soiigster,
  and the Linnet has a very pleasing note. All
  these birds are fed upon the same seeds as
  Canaries, and the general treatment is in most
  ways the same. The Goldfinch, however, needs
  plenty of hemp and maw-seed, and a Bullfinch
  needs a more varied diet than the other finches.
  In addition to a good seed mixture, he should be
  provided regularly with groundsel chickweed, a
  little egg occeisionally, and meal-worms and otl"er
  insects when they can be procured. Tlie Chaf-
  finch also requires insect food now and then.
  
  The Soft Bills. - It is not as a rule advisable
  to keep birds which belong to the class known
  as " Soft Bills," although as songsters they are
  unrivalled. But to enable them to thrive in
  captivity they require the utmost experience
  and care on the part of those who tend them.
  
  The Nightingale. - The Nightingale takes first
  place as a songster. It requires a large and
  roomy cage ; the top and back should be of wood
  and the bars of osier. Shredded raw meat,
  chopped eggs, meal-worms, beetles, ants' eggs
  comprise its diet, the principal aim being to
  make its food partake as much as possible of the
  nature of that which it enjoys in its natural
  state.
  
  The Skylark. - The Skylark, if properly tended,
  thrives well in captivity. Its cage should be a
  roomy one, and should always contain some
  green turf. Ants' eggs, meal-worms, meat, and
  one of the preparations sold as lark food should
  constitute its diet.
  
  The Blackcap is another good songster, and
  has to be fed and treated in a very similar manner
  to the Nightingale.
  
  The Thrush should have a very large roomy
  cage, which should be cleaned every morning.
  Its diet should consist of fig-dust moistened
  with milk and water to form a paste, shredded
  raw meat, worms, and snails. A stone should j
  be placed in the cage to enable it to break the t
  shells. )
  
  The Blackbird. - The Blackbu-d has a very
  soft clear note - the treatment of a blackbird
  in captivity is the same as that of a thrush.
  Starlings can also be managed in the same 1 1
  manner, as can Magpies, Jackdaws, and JayB. t
  Largo roomy cages are the first essentials for all/
  these birds. It is useless to expect them to'
  thrive in an unduly confined spaxje. Strict)
  cleanliness and attention to diet is also essential.!
  On the whole. Canaries and Finches are the mosti
  suitable birds for home pets ; and we would)
  advocate that no one undertakes the care ofj
  birds of the soft-billed variety without havingj
  first served an apprenticeship, as it were, in the
  successful rearing of Canaries and Finches.
  
  Parrots. - Of all the foreign birds which are im
  
  ported to our shores parrots are perhaps the most ^
  
  I popular as home pets. These birds possess the
  
  power of imitating human speech and afford
  
  
  HOME PETS
  
  
  515
  
  
  iParrot-Cage.
  
  
  an abundance of interest and amusement in
  this way. When purchebsing a paiTot, care
  should be taken that the bird is thoroughly
  acclimatised, as there is a great amount of
  mortality amongst them. Upon being brought
  over here it takes a person of the utmost experi-
  ence to tend them and train them in accordance
  with the necessary change of diet and conditions.
  For this reason never purchase a parrot from any
  other but a recognised bird-dealer who can
  guarantee that it has spent at least a season in
  this country.
  
  The Cage. - A parrot's cage should be large
  and roomy. In no case should it be less than
  eighteen inches in diameter.
  The cage should be furnished
  with a swing which must be
  of sufficient height for the
  bird to be able to staiid
  upon the perch without his
  head touching the swing.
  It is always advantageous
  to be able to allow a parrot
  to come out of his cage oc-
  casionally for exercise if he
  is sufficiently tame ; this can
  be done with safety if the
  flights of one wing are
  clipped. Tlie cage should be
  placed out of doors on fine simny days, and during
  summer it is good for parrots to be put out
  occasionally dvu-ing a shower, as many birds
  object to bathing themselves. In very dry hot
  weather a little water might also be sprayed
  upon them once or t\vlce a week, only care
  must be taken that they do not catch cold
  afterwards. A strong tinned wire cage may be
  had for from 12s. 6d.
  
  Feeding. - The chief food for parrots is grain
  such as hemp, wheat, oats, Indian corn, sun-
  flower seed, and canary seeds, and they also
  appreciate dainties such as fruit, green stuf?,
  carrot, &c. Banana they are especially fond of.
  It is a good plan to give them a small piece of
  banana or other similar dainty every day, only
  they should not be furnished indiscriminately
  with scraps from the table. Parrots are also
  very fond of sop food such as bread and
  milk, and where, as in some cases, they object
  to water the sop will form a good substitute.
  Messrs. Spratt sell a very good pai-rot-seed
  mixture.
  
  Water. - Parrots require very little water,
  but it is a mistake to think that water is harmful
  to them. The water-tin should not be left in
  the cage all day, but it should be filled with fresh
  water and ofl:ered to the bird at least twice daily.
  If a water-tin is left all day in the cage of a
  parrot who for some mistaken reason has been
  deprived of water for any length of time, he will
  drink too much of it and so become ill. To this
  fact may be ascribed the origin of the idea that
  water is harmful to parrots. A bath should be
  
  
  put ready for the parrot once a week. It should
  be taken away, however, if the bird shows no
  incUnation to bathe. In warm weather it is a
  good plan to stand the cage out in the rain for a
  little.
  
  Grit. - Grit of some kind is always necessary.
  Spratt's Parrot Grit Mixture is very good. A
  piece of cuttlefish bone should also be always
  put in the cage.
  
  Feather-Eating.- The objectionable habit of
  feather-eating indulged in by some parrots is
  caused, according to a well-known authority,
  by skin uritation set up by parasites, improper
  diet, or want of occupation, more commonly
  by the latter. A parrot should be given twigs
  to gnaw to keep it well occupied, and it should
  not be kept in a lit tie -frequented room, or the
  habit will certainly be brought on by ennui, as
  the parrot is a sociable bird and hkes plenty of
  company. An empty reel of cotton is a favourite
  toy with " Polly," and it will sometimes keep
  him amused for an hour at a stretch.
  
  Different Kinds of Parrots. - Amongst the chief
  varieties of parrots which
  are brought to oiu- shores
  are the Grey Parrot, the
  Rose - breasted Cockatoo,
  Blue-fronted Amazon, Ring-
  necked Parrakeet, and the
  Blue and Yellow Macaw : of
  these the Grey Parrot is the
  best talker, although the
  Blue -fronted Amazon can in
  many cases be made to rival
  it in this respect. The
  Macaws are usually kept
  chained, having a parrot-
  stand on which to perch, as
  they are too big to be kept
  in an ordinary cage.
  
  Ailments of Cage Birds. -
  If birds are thoroughly well cared for they will
  seldom cause much anxiety in regard to health.
  If strict attention is paid to their diet, cleanliness,
  and general hygiene, and, above all, if they are
  kept free from draughts, they will be found as a
  rule to keep well and to give very little trouble.
  It is as well, however, that every one should
  know how to treat the more common ailments
  with which our feathered pets are afflicted, and
  the following brief notes should be useful in this
  connection.
  
  Moulting cannot be exactly classed as an
  ailnient, as all birds moult - that is to say, cast
  their feathers once a year, generally late in
  summer or early in autumn, but it is important
  that great care should be taken of oiu- pets
  during the moulting season. They should be
  well fed and kept warm and free from draughts.
  A little maw-seed should be added to the usual
  food - a rusty nail or a little saffron placed in
  the drinking-water. Either will form an efficient
  tonic.
  
  
  Parrot-Stand.
  
  
  516
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  NlOk and Beak.- Birds' nails should not be
  allowed to grow too long or they may get caught
  in the wires of the cage, and oft^n |"3U"f^toJ:^"
  toes may bo caused in tliis way. Take the bird
  in vour hand and, holding it on its back, hftit up
  to the Ught, when you will be able to see the vems
  in the claws and thus avoid cutting as far as
  these Cut with a sharp pair of scissors. Take
  good care to hold the bird firmly, so that it cannot
  wriggle whilst the nail-cutting is proceeding
  
  Colds.- Colds are nearly always the result of
  draughts. They often bring about loss of voice
  for a time. Put the cage in a warmer room
  which is at the same time free from draughts,
  and add a little hemp to its diet - a few drops
  of glycerine and whisky may be added to the
  water with advantage.
  
  Asthma. - Where a cold results in asthma, the
  condition of the bird is most serious. The com-
  plaint is indicated by hea\'y breathing and
  wheezing. The bird should be kept in a warm,
  moist atmosphere and a cloth placed round its
  cage. Egg and bread-crumbs with maw-seed
  should form its diet. Asthma is one of the
  
  
  most fatal diseases that attack our pots - unless
  taken in time a cure is hopeless. It should be
  avoided by keeping the bird well out of draughts.
  Diarrhoea. - This is often caused by unsuit-
  able diet or too liberal a supply of green food.
  Give a tiny drop of castor oil in the beak. An
  egg diet consisting of the yoke of a hard-boiled
  egg mashed up with some biscuit is often
  effective, or scalded rape seed may be given
  instead.
  
  Constipation is often caused through an
  insufficient supply of green food. Often drops
  of glycerine added to the drinking-water will be
  found effective, and the cause should bo removed
  by at once increasing the supply of green food.
  A little apple should be given where no green
  food is available.
  
  Egg-bound. - When a hen bird after sitting for
  some days on a nest does not lay, but appears
  instead generally out of sorts, she will be found
  to be egg-bound. She should be held over a
  jug of hot water, and then the vent should he
  anointed with a Uttle olive oil. Two drops of
  olive or castor oil should also be given internally.
  
  
  POULTRY-KEEPING
  
  A LARQK amount of interest and pleasure may be had out of poultry-keeping, where there is sufiBcient
  space for a good run and the tending of fowls is thoroughly well understood.
  
  Poultry-keeping on a large scale for profit will not here be dealt with. Suffice it to say that it
  is a business which should not be too readily undertaken by any one but an expert on account of
  the anxiety and great risks entailed. Where, however, a householder, with a certain amount of
  spare ground at his command for the erection of a suitable hen-house and run, keeps a few fowls
  for the purpose of supplying the table with fresh, new-laid eggs daily, it is a different matter. Poultry
  kept in this way wU, if properly tended, more than pay for its keep - in fact, it will show a good
  margin of profit if the stock is judiciously kept up and renewed.
  
  
  The Hen-House. - A suitable house and run
  must, of course, be provided. Excellent houses
  are supplied by the manufacturers of poultry
  appliances at very moderate prices. Cheap
  poultry appliances are a mistake, and it is money
  thrown away to buy them - the cheap house is
  bound to be made of poor quality, unseasoned
  timber., which will swell in wet weather so that
  the doors and windows will not shut, and
  shrink in the summer until there is a creak
  letting in draught between every board. The
  difference between two apparently similar
  houses at a £1 and 40s. is in the wood, as a
  rule - and the purchase of the better one will
  pay in the long-run. If the timber is good to
  start with, atmospheric conditions will have no
  effect upon it, and the house can be stood in the
  sun with impunity. Furthermore, a coat of
  paint now and then will make the house look
  like new, and it will fetch a fair price if at any
  time it is necessary to sell it. The roof of a
  wooden poultry-house should be of weather-
  board well painted or creosoted. Felt covering
  to the sides and roof is not to be recommended,
  as it is generally put on cheap makes to cover
  deficiencies in the wood.
  
  A closed-up poviltry-house with the usual
  ridge ventilation requires to be not less than
  5 feet by 4 feet by 5 feet to be healthy accom-
  modation for six fowls. One side of the house
  should have as large a window as possible,
  covered only with wire netting, as it is essential
  that the house should be properly ventilated.
  
  As the dampness of our climate is one of the
  worst enemies of our poultry, a house well
  raised above the ground is to be preferred to a
  low pattern with no floor. The nests should be
  placed on a level with the floor. If the house
  is of a pattern which comes directly into contact
  with the ground, old railway sleepers placed
  under the woodwork will help *^o keep it in good
  condition.
  
  
  Cleanliness. - Cleanliness in the poultry-house
  and run is essential. All poultry-houses and
  their runs should be cleaned out daily. A
  sprinkling of sifted ashes, sawdust, or peat-moss
  dust should always be thrown under the perches.
  The perches should be regularly taken out and
  cleaned, and the inside of the house should be
  limewashed at least three times a year.
  
  Grit and Lime. - It is absolutely necessary that
  grit in some form should be supplied to fowls.
  This is indispensable in assisting them to digest
  their food. In every run a heap of gravel or
  broken stone, crockery or oyster-shell, must be
  placed, also some old mortar rubbish or similar
  substance. Laying fowls require a considerable
  quantity of lime to provide material for the egg
  shells, and this may be given in the shape of
  oyster -shells broken up, ground bones, or, best
  of all, mortar rubbish. The laying of a shell-
  less or soft-shelled egg is a sure sign that the
  birds are neglected in this respect.
  
  Nest-Boxes. - These are often made too small.
  Good nest-boxes for small varieties can be made
  out of orange -boxes, which cost only a few pence
  each. They are already divided into tliree nests,
  are very strong, and need only the addition of
  some strips of wood along the openings in the
  sides. Tlie advantage of such nests over more
  elaborate and costly ones is that they can be
  thrown away and replaced with new ones, if
  necessary, without compunction. The nests
  should be filled with straw, and each should
  contain a china egg.
  
  Perches. - All perches should be arranged at a
  uniform height, which should not be greater
  than 4 feet from the gi'ound. If they are placed
  at different heights, all the birds will endeavour
  to crowd on the highest perch, and will fight
  for possession of it. Perches should be round
  and small enough to be comfortably grasped by
  the toes of the fowls. They should be easily
  removable for cleaning purposes.
  
  
  517
  
  
  518
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Site.- With regai-d to a site, wherever possible,
  poultry-houses should be so situated that they
  get aU the sun in tlie winter, and yet are not
  too hot in the summer. A south-east or south-
  west aspect will meet the case, the choice to be
  decided by the prevailing wind of the district,
  away from which the houses should be turned.
  
  Poultry Runs.- In cases where the fowls have
  a run out over a paddock, very great care is
  needed not to overstock the ground. Twelve
  birds to the acre seems to be the greatest
  number which can live healthily for an indefinite
  period of vears. Ordinary hen runs should be
  enclosed vrith wire netting. They can be made
  by dri\'ing posts not less than 6 feet high into
  the ground at certain distances and attaching
  wire netting to them. Good portable hen runs
  
  
  Indian corn (or maize) are the best grains. For
  soft foods those grains are ground into flour.
  Wheat ground in this way is known as middlings,
  sharps, pollards, or tliirds, different names for
  the same thing given in different parts of tlio
  country. Oats treated in the same manner
  produce ground oats, barley meal, giound
  barley. Pea meal and bran are also good soft
  foods. .
  
  IMiddlings, bran, and pea meal nuxed with
  warm water make an excellent morning meal
  of soft food for the cold months of autumn
  and winter. A mixture of ground oats and
  middUngs is also good. The scraps of meat
  food should be given with this meal. The
  evening meal should be of grain and oats. For
  i laying birds nothing can be better than oats.
  
  
  Hen-House.
  
  
  may also bo bought at moderate prices. A run I
  10 feet long by 6 feet wide will hold six fowls. |
  The suburban poultry-keeper with very little
  space at his command will be well advised if he
  adds a roof to his run. His object will only be
  to produce a regular supply of new-laid eggs,
  and there is little doubt that he will attain his
  desire with greater certainty if he keeps his
  birds dry and well sheltered. Coal ashes should
  be spread over the floor of the run to keep it
  
  Food and Feeding. - To ensure the health of
  the denizens of the poultry-yard it is essential
  that they should have proper and suitable food.
  It must bo remembered that a food which may
  be very suitable and even necessary in wint  may be totally unsuitable in summer, and that
  birds penned will not thrive on a diet suitable
  for those enjoying a large range. Fowls to bo
  fattened for the table must also be fed in a
  special manner. In short, the food must be of
  the right description to serve the particular
  purpose required. Laying hens will eat more
  than idle ones, and in winter the fowls will eat
  more than in summer.
  
  Various kinds of grain, soft food (ground-up
  grain), vegetable and meat foods are necessary.
  
  Grata and Soft Food.- Oats, wheat, barley,
  
  
  whilst wheat is a good all-the-year-round food. ,
  Indian corn (or maize) is the best fattener, but
  is not to be recommended for any fowls except
  in very cold weather, because birds fed too
  exclusively on it are apt to acquire a soft, yellow,
  oily fat instead of the desirable firm, wnite
  flesh. For growing birds a judicious blending
  of oatmeal, Indian corn, wheat, and barley is
  
  desirable. , , j j *
  
  Meat Foods.- Grain and soft foods do not
  constitute the sum-total of the foods required
  by fowls. Quite as important and by no mea.is
  so easily secured in the average poultry-yard
  are insect and animal life. Fowls which are at
  liberty forage themselves for a great deal of
  their meat food. They eat with avidity all
  manner of grubs and caterpillars, earth-worms,
  shell-snails, and slugs.as well as ants' eggs, beetles,
  and flies, and there is no doubt that birds thrive
  best when they have the opportunity of search-
  ing, stalking, and scratching for these desirable
  tit-bits. It is absolutely necessary that fowls
  should have a daily supply of animal food in
  some form or other. Cereals alone are not
  sufficient to fulfil all the necessary functions,
  and if the birds are confined they must receive
  something in addition, even if it takes the shape
  of meat from the butcher. For the smaU
  
  
  POULTRY-KEEPING
  
  
  519
  
  
  poultry-yard the house scraps, in which bits of
  meat and bones are always to be found, will be
  suflficicnt. " Save the scraps for the cliickens "
  must therefore be the mandate to the powers
  that be in the kitchen. Cut green bone is very
  valuable as a meat food for fowls where meat
  and bone scraps from the table prove insuffi-
  cient ; also bullock's liver, tripe, or raw scraps
  may be had very cheaply from the butchers. A
  small allowance of meat food minced finely and
  mixed with the soft food should be given daily.
  It is better to do this than give a larger quantity
  once or twice a week. Meat acts as a stimulant
  with fowls, and is especially valuable as an in-
  centive to laying. It will be found to work
  wonders on backward pullets. If birds do not
  lay, it is very probably because they are low
  in health through their not having sufficient
  meat in their diet. A judicious meat diet will,
  in most cases, obviate all necessity of having the
  recourse to the spices and strong stimulants
  which are so much used for the purpose of
  bringing hens on to lay and increasing egg
  production.
  
  Table Scraps. - Care must be taken in sorting
  the table scraps given to the fowls that they do
  not consist too largely of fat and bread-crtists.
  These contain very little egg material, and only
  serve to fatten without stimulating. Apart from
  the meat scraps, potatoes and potato-parings
  mix well with the soft food.
  
  Green Food. - Fowls eat quite a lot of grass
  if they get the chance, and a daily supply of
  green food is as indispensable to birds in con-
  finement as is animal lood. The green stviff
  may take the form of a few handfuls of grass,
  a cabbage or lettuce hung up in the run at a
  height where it can be conveniently pecked at,
  or, in fact, almost any garden produce. Under
  this category we may include potatoes, carrots,
  and other roots, none of which come amiss if
  boiled till soft and mixed with the meal in small
  quantities. The cores of apples with the seeds
  (which will be eagerly devoured) and the peel
  can be given if everything else fails, but it is
  necessary to mention that too free vise of apples
  leads to a bad kind of diarrhoea in fowls. Birds
  which have free access to the apple heaps in
  autumn in the orchards of the West get in sad
  plight from this cause.
  
  Number of Meals. - Two meals a day - one
  early in the morning, the other in the evening -
  are ample for fowls which have a paddock or
  other space to roam about in, whilst bii'ds in
  confinement should have a third and lighter
  meal, mainly of green stuff at noon. The soft
  food should be given at the morning meal, mixed
  with any scraps, green bone, &c., to constitute
  the meat allowance. Tlie evening meal should
  consist of grain. For the morning feed just as
  much soft food should be given as the fowls will
  run after eagerly - this will be about 2 oz. to
  3 oz. per bird. For the evening meal 2 oz. of
  
  
  grain per head for the small breeds, 2| oz. to
  3 oz. for the large ones, will be sufficient.
  
  Birds in the fattening pen intended for the
  table should have not less than three square
  meals daily, and young chickens need feeding
  four to six times a day.
  
  Cost of Feeding Fowls. - Tliis depends, of
  course, partly upon whether the food is purchased
  in an advantageous market, also upon how
  much has to be bought. Presuming that all the
  food has to be purchased, and that this is done
  in the cheapest market, we may estimate as
  follows for six laying fowls, weekly : -
  
  6 Hens- 1 Week.
  Meal (2i oz. each daily*, say 6 lbs. barley
  
  meal, at Ss. 4d. per bushel of 48 lbs. . about 5d.
  Grain (2J oz. each daily), say 7 lbs., at
  
  3s. 9d. per bushel 5Jd.
  
  Meat, 14 oz. greaves at lis. per cwt. . . ,, Id.
  
  lljd.
  
  Green food and grit will have to be added to this
  sum, if not available in the form of scraps, and
  odds and ends of rubbish.
  
  Water. - All water-vessels should be rinsed out
  and refilled with pure water thrice daily. The
  water should never be allowed to stand in the
  sun, neither should snow water be given.
  
  Hints on Buying Fowls. - When starting a
  poultry run it is necessary of course to buy young
  birds. It is by no means easy for a notice to
  tell the age of a fowl - a fact of which an un-
  scrupvdous vendor will take advantage. It may
  be said that, broadly speaking, the legs of a
  young hen are smooth and dehcate, her comb
  and wattles soft, and her feathers close. Old
  hens often have hard, hori;y -looking legs with
  liard spurs, a stiff bill, and rough comb and
  wattles, wWle the feathers may be loose and
  inchned to droop behind. Anj' of these indica-
  tions may, however, be deceptive, so that the
  buyer must, unfortunately, be somewhat de-
  pendent on the word of the seller as to the exact
  age of his pullets. For this reason it may bo
  better to buy in the spring chickens fully fledged,
  when their age can be almost esactlj' arrived at,
  feed them well, and wait for the eggs.
  
  For Winter Laying. - As very few pullets com-
  mence to laj' before they are six months old,
  and the majority not until from one or two
  months older, to secure a supply of new-laid
  eggs in the winter it will be necessary to buy
  chickens hatched late in February or early in
  March. It is important that the pullets should
  have begun to lay before the first real frost sets
  in. Once they have commenced to lay, cold
  will seldom check them if they are sensibly fed,
  but they will often be deterred by cold from
  commencing egg production. ^\laen winter eggs
  are the chief concern, the majority of tlie pullets
  should be killed off after Christmas, aa they get
  broody or stop laying, and they will be found
  to make excellent roasting birds even though
  
  
  520
  
  
  •THE WOMAN'S BOOK:
  
  
  nettfly or quite a year old. Thoir places should
  be taken by chickens hatched from their eggs,
  thus ensuring a new generation of birds every
  year to provide the household \rith winter eggs.
  Hens, i.e. birds in thoir second winter and
  onwards, never lay in September, October, or
  November, because they are then moulting.
  It is known, however, that picked pullets, well
  forced from birth and hatched early, will not
  moult, but will lay instead.
  
  Varieties of Fowls. - In deciding upon what
  fowls to keep it will bo necessary to bear in
  mind for what special purpose they will be
  required. Certain breeds of fowls make the
  best layers, others are better for table pur-
  poses, whilst others in varying degrees are
  suitable for both. The following are very
  good fowls for laying purposes : Anconas,
  Andalusians, Slinorcas, Leghorns, and Ham-
  burgs. All of these are non-sitters, and lay
  white eggs. Aseels, Dorkings, Game, Indian
  Game, La Flfeche, Poland, and Sussex are good
  table fowls. These are non-sitters, and lay dark-
  coloured eggs. Orpingtons, Langhams, Bedcaps,
  Wyandottes, and Plymouth Rocks are sitters
  and good for both laying and table purposes.
  Houdans are non-sitters and good for laying
  as well as table purposes. Brahmas and Cochins
  are good layers of dark-coloured eggs, but are
  such inveterate sitters that they always show a
  marked inclination to become broody after having
  produced only a small number of eggs. The hens
  of both breeds make capital mothers.
  
  Fowls for Small Runs. - Orpingtons, Mnorcas,
  Leghorns, Cochins, Faverolles, Plymouth Rocks,
  and Wyandottes stand confinement well, and
  are therefore particularly suited for a small run
  in a kitchen garden or back yard.
  
  Where the space is very limited chicken-
  hatching should not be attempted, and it is
  better, in these circumstances, to keep a few
  hens of the non-sitting breeds, without a cock.
  However, even the small poultry-keeper who
  keeps hens merely for the eggs they provide for
  the table requires to renew his stock every year
  if the egg supply is to be good and continuous,
  and if the fowl run is not unduly small a brood
  can easily be raised once in the year for effecting
  this purpose.
  
  Making a Pen. - If the fowls have their liberty,
  a dozen hens of the heavier sitting breeds may be
  put with one cock. Of the non-sitting breeds,
  eight to ten hens is sufficient, if fully fertile
  eggs are expected. Eight or six hens respec-
  tively will be enough if the birds are confined.
  
  The best results come from running March-
  hatched pullets with a cock in his second season,
  or from running a cockerel with hens in their
  second season. It must be remembered that
  the better the stock the better the chickens will
  l>e. If none but the strongest and healthiest
  birds are selected for stock, the chickens will
  inherit the good qualities of the parent birds.
  
  
  It does not matter how nearly related the latter
  are, so long as they are strong and healthy. In-
  breeding, in fact, is absolutely necessary in
  some cases to fix definite characteristics, and as
  long as the strongest and healthiest are selected
  for stocks no harm will come from breeding
  them together.
  
  Selection of Eggs for Hatching. - Apart from
  the selection of eggs from particular hens, it is
  important that only eggs of fair average size,
  say, not less than 2 oz. in weight, of good shape,
  and with clean, smooth shells should be put on
  one side for hatching. None of the eggs should
  have been laid longer than three weeks at the
  outside, and the fresher they are the better.
  
  The Sitting Hen. - Care must be taken in
  arranging a suitable nest for the sitting hen.
  The nest should always be made, if possible, on
  damp ground. To make a good nest, throw
  down a heap of mould in a corner of the sitting-
  house, place some bricks around it to keep it
  together, scoop out the centre slightly and
  place therein some soft straw, and the nest is
  complete.
  
  If a number of hens are sitting together in the
  same house, it may be necessary to separate them
  with wire netting in some way, or to cover each
  over with a basket. Throe cheap sitting-boxes
  can be made out of an orange-box, the nests
  being prepared with mould and a little straw as
  above suggested.
  
  A heap or box of dry ashes should be within
  reach of every sitting hen for her to dust her-
  seK in.
  
  Tlie number of eggs to be placed under a hen
  varies from ten to fifteen, according to the time
  of year and the breed. In cold weather it is
  undesirable to give more than can be comfortably
  covered. If the outer eggs are merely covered
  by the feathers, and the season is inclement, a
  good hatch will not be secured.
  
  Suitable eggs for settings may be had for from
  5s. and upwards per setting (usually about
  fiifteen eggs) from most poultry-rearers. The
  price will of course vary in regard to the quality
  of the eggs.
  
  The period of incubation is twenty-one days.
  A hen should be allowed to get accustomed to
  her nest before the eggs are placed under her.
  This can be done by placing a couple of nest
  eggs in the nest and placing her on it at dusk.
  She should then be left for twenty-four hours,
  and when it is found she has quite settled down,
  the eggs for the sitting can bo placed imder her.
  
  Food for Sitting Hens. - The food given should
  be wheat, soft food being unsuitable. It is
  sometimes difficult to get a hen - particularly
  a broody turkey hen - to eat ; indeed, we have
  known one of the latter to die on the nest from
  this cause. In such a cewe they must be
  crammed daily with soft food, mixed as dry and
  crumbly as possible. We alway^ like to see a
  hen feed freely, walk about a little, and take
  
  
  POULTRY-KEEPING
  
  
  521
  
  
  a dust-bath before returning to the nest. No
  fear need be entertained that harm will come to
  the eggs from a thorough cooling. They may be
  allowed to get stone cold, and will still hatch
  satisfactorily, especially at the commencement of
  incubation, and the more air in reason they get
  the stronger will the chickens be.
  
  Broken Eggs. - If by chance an egg gets broken
  in the nest, all those in contact with it must be
  washed in warm water, and the nest renovated
  with clean earth and straw. A cracked egg may
  be repaired with a small piece of sticking-plaster
  or stamp-paper.
  
  Towards the end of the three weeks (twenty -
  one days) of incubation, the nest, if very dry,
  may with advantage be sprinkled with rain-
  water, with a watering-can with rose. Under
  natural conditions, the eggs would be more or
  less exposed to rain during the temporary
  absence of the hen, besides benefiting from wet
  which may fall on the ground around them,
  and there is no doubt that ample moisture is an
  important factor towards a successful hatch.
  
  Testing Eggs. - A simple and efficient instru-
  ment for testing the fertility of eggs is made by
  cutting a hole, the shape of but sHghtly smaller
  than an egg, in the centre of a piece of card-
  board. Tlie cardboard must be covered with
  black paper, or painted black. At night, if the
  egg is placed against the hole in the cardboard
  and held up to the light of a good lamp, the con-
  tents can be plainly seen on the seventh day.
  Infertile or " clear " eggs are almost transparent
  and similar to those new laid, and the novice
  can compare with a known unincubated egg if
  doubtful of the appearance they have. Those
  which contain chickens will appear quite dark
  and opaque, except at the larger end ; possibly,
  if the light is strong enough, small branching
  blood-vessels will be seen. Addled eggs look
  very dark and cloudy.
  
  Feeding and Rearing Chickens. - Chickens do
  not require any food for the first twenty-four
  hours of their existence. During this time both
  
  
  Poultry Coop.
  
  hen and choikens should be left alone. The
  first meal for the chicks should consist of a little
  baked custard, or hard-boiled eggs chopped fine,
  mixed with double the quantity of bread-crumbs
  and moistened with milk. The hen should be
  given a feed of Indian corn, then both hen and
  
  
  chicks should be taken to their coop, which should
  be placed on a piece of clean short grass. The
  coop will have to be placed on a board every
  night and imperviously closed if the presence of
  
  
  Poultry Coop and Run.
  
  rats is suspected. Coops are also sold with little
  rims attached. These are very useful when it is
  desired to keep the chicken within bounds.
  
  During the last few years a revolution has
  taken place in the methods of feeding chickens.
  In the past meal messes were considered to fulfil
  all requirements. In the present the rage is
  all for " di-y feeding," as it is called, and the
  loud praises of all poultry-keepers who have
  tried it testify to the benefit of the reform.
  
  Now, instead of feeding the chicks on ground
  meal, small seeds, such as canary, millet, dari,
  and small wheat, are given. These seeds should
  be of the best and should be given whole,
  not crushed. It will be found that the chicks
  can be reared entirely from the beginning on
  this natural dietary supplemented with animal
  food.
  
  Some authorities strongly recommend that a
  httle baked custard be given during the first day
  or two, in Meu of the old-fashioned hard-boiled
  egg, and it no doubt makes a valuable addition
  to the dry food. If the chickens have their
  liberty they will find for themselves all the
  necessary grit, animal life, and green food. If
  confined, these items must be added to their
  menu by their owner. Ants' eggs and maggots
  will be much appreciated. Chopped nettles
  suit them very well, and finely-chopped onions
  and leeks have a wonderfully stimulating and
  apparently tonic action, and should be given
  freely. Chickens require grit just as much as
  adult fowls.
  
  The chickens should be fed every two hours
  for the first three weeks. Tlie first meal should
  be as early in the morning, and the last as late
  in the evening as possible. The gi'ain should
  be thrown on the ground, the soft food placed
  in saucers, which together with the drinking-
  vessels should be kept clean.
  
  Many poultry -rearers believe in giving the
  chickens Spratt's Chicken Meal as soft food for
  the early morning meal, giving the mixture of
  the various small seeds at the other meals.
  
  Fattening Fowls for the Table.- Of the pure
  breeds, Dorkings, Game, Langshans, Wyandottes,
  Orpingtons, Plymoxith Rocks, and Sussex are the
  most useful table-fowls for family purposes. Tlie
  
  
  522
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  birds should bo penned up m a "*\"^' ^f'i'
  quiet place for fatt*^ning. Fowls will fatten
  very well if confined in any place where they
  get no exercise, and are out of sight and hearing
  of their comrades. .
  
  Feeding for Fattening Purposes.- Oatmeal is
  the best food, nmize having a tendency to pro-
  duce a yellow, oily fat. Throe meals dady,
  as far apart as possible, should be given, con-
  Sting of oatmeal mixed to a crvxmbly state
  wih (if possible) milk. "Scraps" from the
  house, particularly finely chopped fat trimmings
  may bi mixed in with advantage. A supply of
  water and some coarse sand or fine gravel should
  always stand before the birds. As much a^
  the fowls can eat should be given at each nieal,
  but no more. Food should never be left standing
  in front of them. Care must be taken that the
  troughs are kept clean and the food is not
  allowed to become sour.
  
  A bird will be at its best after three weeks
  penning. K left longer than this it will go
  Sff." and the food given be wasted. In view of
  this fact, it is important that fowls should be j
  penned up so as to be at their best exactly when ,
  
  "^^KiUing.- Dislocation of the neck, if properly
  done, is undoubtedly the most humane method
  of killing a fowl. The system of " wringing the
  neck " is not to be recommended, an easier and
  more certain mode being to hold the bird by the
  legs and give it a very sharp blow at the back
  of the neck with a small but heavy stick. For
  the average poultry hand, who does not under-
  stand correct dislocation, perhaps the best way
  of all to bring about a merciful and instantaneous
  death is to pierce the brain with a kmfe. ihe
  bird must be hung up by the legs, the mouth
  opened, and the blade of a penknife thrust firmly
  through the back part of the roof of the mouth.
  An incision should be made in the neck, and the
  bird should be loft hanging for a short time until
  the blood has drained out if great whiteness ot
  flesh is desired ; but bleeding is not absolutely
  necessary. ."
  
  A fowl plucks much more easily when stiu
  
  warm. , . . ., "
  
  The best time to kill is first thing in the
  morning before the early meal, as the intestines
  will then be free of food. A fast of not less
  than three hours is absolutely necessary, or the
  birds will not keep for long, and the flesh will
  \euck firmness.
  
  COMMON AILMENTS OF THE FOWL
  
  The majority of the complaints from which
  poultry suffer are brought on by lack of cleanli-
  ^3, cold or damp, or a faulty dietary. In the
  well-kept poultry-yard disease should be rare
  When a bird appears to be unwell it should
  at once be isolated from the others, as most of
  the ailments of the fowl are infectious.
  
  
  The following ere some of the most common
  ailments amongst poultry :-
  
  Qranip. Tliis is a frequent complaint with
  
  cliickens,' caused by exposure to cold and wet,
  or too close confinement on a boarded floor.
  The toes of the little birds become contracted,
  and they will often sit down to relieve the feet.
  
  Trealment.-The birds will usually recover
  if placed for a few houi-s in a hamper near the
  fire. Their legs may be rubbed with turpentine
  to hasten the cure.
  
  Diarrhoea.- This may be caused by exposure
  to wet and cold, sudden change of food, or un-
  
  suitable food. ■ i "of
  
  Treatment.- A case of simple diarrhoea is best
  treated first by starvation, a dose of castor oil
  being given if the bird is very bad. A drop or
  two of tincture of opium will also cure it. ihe
  most suitable food until the ailment is com-
  pletely past is boiled rice, and plenty of grit
  should be put witliin reach of the invahd. As
  diarrhoea in its initial stages is very d.ihcult to
  distinguish from the fatal fowl enteritis and
  enteric, or inflammation of some portion of the
  ! intestines, a disease which would cause the
  death of the whole stock in a short space of time,
  it is advisable that all symptoms of diarrhoea
  should be looked upon with the greatest suspicion,
  the invalid isolated, and the other fowls removed
  to fresh ground if possible. If the bn:d is un-
  doubtedly inflicted with inflammation of the
  intestines, it should be killed at once, and the
  body burnt, as a cure is almost hopeless and
  certainly not worth attempting.
  
  Effg-binding.- When a hen is unable to pass
  
  her egg she is said to be egg-bound. A hen who
  
  I is egg bound will be seen to go frequently to the
  
  ! nest and come out again without having laid.
  
  her wings and tail ^vill be drooping, and she wUl
  
  ' be evidently in pain. This will be caused by
  
  an unusually large egg which she is unable to
  
  
  Treatment.- Hold the hen over a vessel of hot
  water so that the steam can reach the vent, and
  apply a little olive oil to the vent ; a dose of
  cE oil may also be given with advantage.
  The hen should be kept as quiet as Pf "'"^f ;
  
  Gapes.- This causes a great deal of niortality
  amongst chickens, and is caused by small worms
  thich live in the windpipe. The .ficken gasps
  for breath, and needs to be speedily relieved of
  the worms, which choke it. Tliis disease never
  occurs amongst carefully housed chickens, and
  is in part due to neglect. ,
  
  Trealment.-U taken early, a niorsel of
  camphor the size of a grain of wheat g\ven daily,
  and a little camphor put in the drinking-water,
  combined with improvement in diet and housing
  may effect a cure. In bad cases it ^B^y b"
  nelsary to insert a feather, Btjippod to withm
  an inch of the point, and dipped in a weak solu-
  W of t^baccoUe'r, quickly into the wmdpi^e
  turning it round and drawing it out again
  
  
  POULTRY-KEEPING
  
  
  together with some of the parasites. Another
  remedy is to put the fowl in a box for a quarter
  of an hour at a time, placing a small piece of
  sponge soaked in eucalyptus oil in with it, the
  process to be repeated constantly throughout one
  or more days as found necessary. The breath -
  mg of air strongly impregnated witli eucalyptus
  will cause the death of the worms.
  
  Leg Weakness.- Cawae.- The body of the bird
  IS too hea^^ for the strength of its legs, conse-
  quently It constantly subsides into a sitting
  position. ў
  
  Treatnient-The constitution of the bird must
  be built up on nourishing food and meat. The
  food should be little in quantity, but of the best,
  to overcome this form of weakness.
  
  Difficulty in Moulting is due entu:ely to
  weakness and general debiUty.
  
  Treafmerd.- Birds should be kept in a warm
  house and fed Hberally on animal food. As
  much saccharated carbonate of iron as will
  cover a threepenny piece, given mixed with the
  soft food daily to each individual, wiU act as a
  tome, and help to build up the constitution.
  
  Roup.- Cause.- A very contagious disease of
  the respiratory organs, actually a species of
  catarrh symptomised by offensive discharge
  from the nostrils, &c., and caused by exposure
  to wet and very cold winds.
  
  Treatment.-.The affected bird should be im-
  mediately isolated and placed in a warm house.
  *eed on oatmeal mixed wth ale or stout, and
  give plenty of green food. Some iron tome,
  ^recommended in the previous paragraph.
  ^L,, beneficial. The head and eyes must b^
  
  to which a few drops of carbolic acid have been
  
  
  523
  
  
  [ added. The disease runs its course very rapidly
  I and may spread throughout the entire yard
  It m a week the bird is not almost weU. it is
  better to kill it and burn the carcase. In aU
  cases of contagious diseases the attendant should
  be careful that he does not throw food to healthy
  fowls with hands unwashed since he handled a
  sick bird.
  
  Scaly Legs.--Caw*e.- A very small insect
  which burrows under the scales and forms httle
  cells, temporarily disfiguring the legs, and
  causing considerable irritation.
  
  Treatmeni.~The best cure is to brush the legs
  twice daily with a hard tooth or nail brush
  dipped m paraffin oil. A fortnight's daily
  attention will usually get the legs right. The
  appearance of this ailment should suggest the
  advisabiHty of a thorough cleaning out, disin-
  fection, and lime-wasliing of aU poultry-houses.
  
  Vermin.- Cawse.- Neglect and uncleanUness,
  particularly absence of an efficient dust-bath.
  Fowls genoraUy have a few fleas in summer, but
  with proper attention vermin should not be
  sufficiently prevalent to cause annoyance to the
  bird.
  
  Treat?nent.~The addition of some flowers of
  sulphur to the dust-bath, and the dusting
  of the hen with insect powder, will alleviate
  these troubles. In very bad cases it may be
  necessary to dress the hen on head and beneath
  wrings and thighs with paraffin. These attentions
  wiU be of little avail, however, miless the
  poultry-house is thoroughly cleaned out and
  the walls and perches and all crevices lime-
  washed. Fleas breed in dust, consequently
  none should be allowed to accumulate untouched
  for more than a few days at a time.
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  INDOOR GAMES AND ENTERTAINMENT
  
  Every woman should include a knowledge of good indoor games and entertainments amongst
  her accomplishments. To be able to play well is almost as essential as to be able to do one's work
  thoroughly. The most popular people with children and the younger " grown-ups " are almost
  invariably those who are good organisers of games. We have all of us experienced the dullness
  of those long evenings that drag for want of something to do or for want of co-operation in amuse-
  ment. Let us take a typical case. One member of the family may have an interesting book -
  her evening will most probably bo spent to her satisfaction ; another may be engaged in writing
  letters. This is an agreeable task for some ; in any case it is a task which prevents time hanging
  on one's hands. Well, let us suppose that the one or two remaining members of the family have
  nothing to do. They cannot keep up a conversation for fear of disturbing the others. They
  literally have to sit gazing in the 6re yawning the time away until bed-time. Now dullness and
  want of occupation are especially bad for young people, and the wise head of a family will never
  allow such a state of affairs to prevail. She will make a point of seeing that all the evenings of her
  young people are spent pleasantly and well by encouraging them to co-operate in their amusements
  by having games in which all may join. Other young people may sometimes call in in the evenings,
  and the greater the number of players the miore fun there will be. In fact, friends will soon make
  a habit of dropping in on various evenings, knowing that they will always be amused. The wise
  mother will encoxirage these impromptu visits, as she will realise that the social spirit is as the breath
  of life to the young folk, and that if opportunity is afforded to her sons in particular to spend their
  evenings pleasantly at home, they will not be anxious to seek their amusement abroad. It may
  indeed be said that dull evenings have been the means of breaking up many an otherwise happy
  homo circle. The thoughtful house-mistress will therefore take this to heart and keep her young
  family together by entering with zest into their amusements and occupations, and making herself
  an aidept organiser of all kinds of home fun.
  
  
  Theatricals. - Amongst the favourite enter-
  tainments provided at children's parties thea-
  tricals may be said to take a foremost place.
  To begin with, the pleasure of preparation almost
  equals, if it does not excel, that of the actual
  performance. The word " rehearsal " has a
  mysterious yet potent charm for the young
  people. It is synonymous to them with many
  pleasant little gatherings which may be arranged
  in turn, at the houses of the various players
  and at which they go over their parts, arrange
  about the costumes and all the various other
  details which have to bo attended to.
  
  For home theatricals to be a success there must
  edways be some good organiser to take charge
  of the whole proceedings in regard to choice
  •jf play, choice of performers, costumes, and
  scenery. Without this chaos would inevntably
  result. The organiser must also act as stage
  manager, allotting to each player his or her
  part. In this respect her task will be somewhat
  difficult, for very seldom yet has a little com-
  pany of players been known to assemble
  without five or six of them at least wishing
  to play the principal rfile.
  
  
  524
  
  
  In this respect the stage manager's word must
  be law. Having once made her decision in
  regard to the allotting of the parts, she must
  be careful never to deviate from it, whatever
  pressure may bo brought to bear upon her,
  unless there should bo very good reason for
  her doing so, such as the utter incompetency
  or unsuitability of any particular player con-
  cerned. But the careful stage manager will
  think well before she gives out the parts, and
  thus avoid making mistakes which are often
  the moans of hurting the feelings of the person
  chiefly concerned, and which might well have
  been avoided.
  
  Home theatricals, if properly arranged, involve
  very little expense. Fancy costumes can be
  made of the cheapest materials, such as art
  muslin and sateens, whilst if the piece to be
  presented is a modern one the dressing
  is even yet more simplified. Friends and
  relations will willingly lend articles from their
  wardrobes in order to a-ssist in the suoceBS of
  the presentation.
  
  The size and shape of the room in which the
  theatricals are to be given are most important
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  
  
  525
  
  
  ^
  
  
  R
  
  
  considerations, A large drawing-room with a
  curtained alcove or folding-doors in the centre
  is the most suitable for the purpose. The stage
  will be on one side of the folding-doors or
  curtains, while the members of the audience
  are seated on the other side. Rows of chairs
  should be neatly arranged in the auditorium,
  and in a manner which will allow for as good
  a view as possible of the stage to be obtained.
  Of coiirse, where there is no raised platform the
  people seated in the back rows will not see
  so well as those in front, and for this reason
  the latter position should as far as posible be
  allotted to the tiniest of the juveniles with the
  grown-ups who are in charge of them.
  
  On the night of the performance complete
  order must reign behind the scenes. The players
  should be dressed and in their places at least
  ten minutes before the curtain goes up. They
  should be letter perfect in their parts but at
  the same time " stage fright " is a
  factor which must be reckoned with,
  and for this reason there should
  always be a " prompter " concealed
  from the audience who, keeping the
  MSS. of the play in front of her, will
  follow the dialogue carefully, giving
  assistance when necessary in a clear
  low voice. The words should never
  be whispered nor too loudly spoken :
  a happy medium is acquired with
  experience.
  
  The stage manager should always
  have a list of iny " properties " re-
  quired in the piece, such as walking
  sticks, flowers, or the inevitable letter
  upon which the plot of so many a
  play depends. It would be disastrous,
  for instance, if the heroine were sup-
  posed to discover an all -important
  letter upon her writing-table, and
  when the time came for her to find it the letter
  was not there. Few young amateurs would
  have the presence of mind to cope with such
  a difficulty. The stage manager should see
  therefore that everything is in its place before
  the curtain rises, or else appoint some one to
  do it for her.
  
  All the players must be well acquainted with
  their exits and entrances. It would not do
  for any one, for instance, to appear to go through
  a blank wall or a window instead of through
  the door, but this is a mistake which is very
  commonly made, to the amusement of the
  onlookers. In the ordinary drawing-room
  screens have to play an important part in the
  arrangement of the exits. Four screens, two
  on each side, can be requisitioned for the wings,
  and a small steady table placed in each recess
  (see illustration) for moderator lamps - prefer-
  ably of the self-extinguishing pattern, in case they
  should be upseL by an untoward accident - to
  make up for the deficiency of footlights, though
  
  
  these can be provided by the aid of a little
  ingenuity, e.g. candle reading - lamps with
  shades and reflectors, begged or borrowed from
  accommodating neighbours. Cocoa-tins cut in
  half and night-lights will serve the purpose
  equally well. Here, again, the inventive genius
  of the promoters of the enterprise will have to
  be called into play.
  
  By the judicious arrangement of the screens
  it will be possible for exits and entrances on
  both sides of the stage.
  
  Very little expense need be gone into in the
  way of scenery. If it is an indoor scene, as the
  room of a house, as long as the furniture on the
  stage is suitably arranged no scenery will be
  required. Simple outdoor scenes can also be
  very easily planned. I remember seeing a most
  admirable representation of the fairy scenes
  from " The ISIidsummer Night's Dream " given
  at a Christmas paxty by some very talented
  
  
  JLdimp
  
  
  L&i
  
  
  >^i^
  
  
  np
  
  
  .4^' "^
  
  
  • L^rmp
  
  
  Ld^rnp
  
  
  Audience
  
  
  Plan showing arrangement of Screens for Exits and Entrances.
  
  
  children. In this the background to the scene
  was hung with green art muslin, to which were
  tacked trailing boughs of ivy and other foliage.
  Stiff brown paper covered the floor, loose foliage
  being scattered here and there in realistic fashion,
  whilst green art muslin spread over footstools
  and cushions, and artistically decorated here
  and there with more leaves, did admirable duty
  as the green bank upon which Titania sleeps.
  Palms and other plants were judiciously ar-
  ranged along the sides of the stage near the
  wings.
  
  The dresses, wliich were correct in every
  detail, were all fashioned out of art muslin. As
  this material is procurable at 2d. a yard it can
  be imagined that they were not costly, although
  very graceful and pretty. AH these garments
  were cut and made at home from copies of the
  " Midsummer Night's Dream " pictures. The
  most costly item was the expenditure entailed
  by the hiring of a mechanical donkey's head at
  53. 6d. for the night.
  
  
  526
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  How to Make a Drop-Curtain. - An essential
  piece of stage furniture for amateur theatricals
  is the drop-curtain. It can be made from two
  equal widths of some serviceable material such
  as dark cretonne, supported by brass rings on
  a stout bamboo rod, to either end of which are
  att€w:hed large steel eyes (A A).
  
  The bamboo rod should be cut to such a
  length that when the eyes have been added, the
  whole can be fixed to steel hooks screwed into
  the picture rail on either side of the room.
  
  
  Back View of Drop-Curtain.
  
  Should any difficulty be experienced in pro-
  curing a rod of sufficient length, the diffi-
  culty may be overcome by the use of two
  shorter pieces joined at the middle by iron
  sockets.
  
  In the case where it is intended to give the
  performance in either a schoolroom or a small
  hall, a curtain of a much larger size and of
  stouter material would be required, and tliis
  latter can be supported on a length of strong
  gas barrelling held in position by brackets nailed
  to the wall at each end.
  
  The arrangement for raising or lowering the
  curtain is shown in the diagram, in which A A
  is the rod. A number of small brass rings is
  then sewn to the back of the curtain, as at A X
  and A E. Top rings, much larger, are also
  attached to the curtain and passed along the
  rod. Ck)rd is next run from X and E respec-
  tively through the rings at A, and allowed to
  hang loose as at D and B. The bottom of the
  curtain should be weighted with shot.
  
  The Choice of Plays. - The choice of plays
  will necessarily depend upon the age and talents
  of the performers. Simple one act comedies
  with three or four persons at most are the beet
  to attempt at first. Good dialogues are very
  amusing, and their production involves very
  little trouble and expense. For children the
  plays selected should be as simple and pretty
  as possible. For the very tiny tots nothing
  will be found more suitable than the simple
  fairy tales, such as " Little Red Riding Hood,"
  
  
  or tales from history, as " King Alfred and the
  Cakes." Some very pretty children's plays are
  included in the book " Little Plays," by
  Lena Dalkeith, which are published at Is. and
  Is. 6d., and may be obtained by ordering through
  any bookseller.
  
  Very often the " grown-up " organiser of
  j\ivenile theatricals will herself have a taste
  for dramatic wTiting. She will then be able
  to arrange any of the various fairy tales in
  accordance with her own idear>. The elder
  children will be found to be some-
  what more ambitious in regard to their
  histrionic efforts. They will &s a rule
  wish to emulate the " grown-ups " as
  far as possible in their selection of
  plays. Some of the simpler comedies
  and farces will be found very suitable,
  although a certain amount of dis-
  cretion must be exercised in their
  choice.
  
  Messrs. Samuel French & Co., of
  24 Southampton Street, Strand,
  London, publish a large selection of
  plays for amateurs, and their list
  includes the following simple little
  pieces : -
  
  "Aiint Jane," by G. H. Pugh, is
  a very suitable little play for school-
  girls. There are three characters ; the
  niiae-en-scine is of the simplest and such as
  can be arranged with the utmost ee&e in
  any ordinary room. The plot turns upon
  the expected arrival of an unknown aunt
  to take charge of her little nieces. There is
  much conjecture os to what she will be like.
  One of the nieces forms the idea of dressing
  up as Aunt Jane for the benefit of her
  sister, representing her as a very unpleasant
  person indeed. Finally the deception is dis-
  covered by means of a letter from Aunt Jane
  announcing that she is unable to arrive on that
  particular day. The tone of her letter indicates
  that she is a very nice aunt indeed, and the
  curtain goes down on two reaissured and happy
  little nieces. The dialogue is brisk and amusing,
  whilst it is at the same time simple and easily
  memorised.
  
  " Nursery Rhymeia " or " The Party," "' The
  Prince and the Pie," by Alfred Paxton (eight
  characters), "The Waxworks' Revels," by William
  Heighway (eleven characters), are suitable for a
  more ambitious performance by a large number
  of children at a Christmas party, for instance.
  
  Sometimes the performers will consist only
  of boys. In these circumstances preference
  should be given to plays in which only male
  characters are required, such as in Miss Keating's
  •' Plot of Potzcntausend."
  
  One great thing to be borne in mind in regard
  to home theatricals is to obviate as far as possible
  all danger of fire. Candles should not bo used
  as foothghts. It is better to do without foot-
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  
  
  527
  
  
  lights at all than run any risks in this direction.
  Where there are electric light pendants con-
  veniently placed, nothing will be found easier
  than to arrange these in such a manner that
  their full hght is reflected on the stage. These,
  with the safety-lamps in the wings, should be
  all sufficient for lighting purposes in an ordinary
  room.
  
  Apart from the necessary wigs and other
  paraphernalia, " make up " is not always
  necessary when the theatricals take place in a
  room of ordinary dimensions where there is no
  limelight. In large rooms and halls, however,
  make up will be necessary. In his book " Home
  Fun," Mr. Cecil H. Bullivant gives very minute
  and clear directions in the art of " making up."
  He also gives many valuable hints in regard
  to the making of home scenery, with the
  minimum of outlay. The amateur theatrical
  enthusiast cannot do better than purchase a
  copy of this book, which will tell her everything
  most useful to know in regard to these two very
  important essentials in dramatic representation.
  
  The Pastoral Play. - In the svmimer no more
  charming entertainment can be devised than
  a pastoral play rendered by children. Hostesses
  with suitable garden space would do well to
  keep this fact in mind. A pastoral play may
  also prove a most enjoyable finish to a garden
  party. The grounds should be prettily deco-
  rated with Japanese lanterns, &c. ; the perfor-
  mance should, if possible, be given on a raised
  portion of lawn or ground with a slope towards
  the audience.
  
  Mention has alread\ been made of the suita-
  bility of the fairy scenes from the " Midsummer
  Night's Dream " for juvenile performance. These
  are also admirably suited for open-air represen-
  tation. " Under the Greenwood Tree," by Major
  Philip Trevor, is a very pretty little play,
  especially suitable for performance out of doors.
  The scene is a woodland glade, where a number
  I of chOdren are taking part in a " costume "
  ' picnic, headed by little Molly, Marchioness of
  Storr, the child owner of the forest. Molly is
  dressed as Berengaria, Queen of Richard I. ; the
  others may wear any fancy dresses. In the
  course of their revels the children discover Robin
  Hood and Maid Marian in the trunk of a tree.
  They come to life for a s-pell, and Robin tells
  them about the days of King Richard. iMany
  bright songs are introduced, and a feature of the
  play is a pretty Maypole dance.
  
  Plays for " Grown-Ups."- The choice of plays
  for grown - up performei-s is practically un-
  limited. Light comedies in one act, such as "Time
  is Money " and " Compromising Martha," \vill bo
  generally found to bo most suitable for homo
  performance.
  
  It should be remembered that when a copy-
  right play is to be performed in public for
  charity or other pm-pooes, the authorised per-
  mission for the performance must be obtained
  
  
  and a fee (usually one gviinea) paid. Tliis does
  not apply, however, to performances given in
  private houses where no money is taken for
  the seats.
  
  TABLEAUX VIVANTS
  
  For tableaux vivants a good stage manager
  is above all essential. Upon her rests the
  responsibility of posing the actors and arranging
  the setting of the " living picture " in as ei^ec-
  tive a manner as possible. The subjects chosen
  for the tableaux should be those that can easily
  be recognised by the audience, such as charsicters
  and scenes from Shakespeare, historical scenes,
  favourite fairy tales, representations of famous
  pictures or tableaux from famous plays. " Three
  Little Maids from School," " Bubbles," " The Sign
  of the Cross," " Cinderella," " The Greisha " - all
  make pretty pictvires easy of representation. For
  the first-named picture three girls in Japanese
  costume should be grouped in attitudes typical
  of Yum- Yum's " Three Little Maids from School "
  song in the " Mikado." For " Bubbles " only one
  juvenile actor is necessary. He should have
  as far as possible the same cherubic type of
  countenance as that of his prototype in Jlillais'
  famous picttu-e. Costume and pose should also
  be very closely copied. A very simple tableau
  is the " Geisha." A girl dressed in a brightly
  coloui'ed kimono seated on the ground in oriental
  fashion, holding a Japanese sunshade over
  her head. " The Sign of the Cross " has long
  been a favourite tableau with amateurs. The
  poses of Mercia and JIarcus have become
  famiUarised to most of us by means of the
  many pictures pubUshed of the late Wilson
  Barrett's play. One tableau might represent
  Mercia holding the cross aloft and Slarcus
  bowing down in reverence before it, whilst
  another could be illustrative of the well-known
  picture, Mercia leading Marcus to the " Light
  Beyond." " Cinderella " is anever-popular subject
  for tableaux. She might appear in her tattered
  dress, seated on the floor gazing into the cinders
  with her hands clasped round her knees. There
  are many other fairy-tale tableaux dear to the
  heart of the little ones, such as *' The Prince
  Discovering the Sleeping Beauty," " Dick Whit-
  tington resting on his way to London," &c., &c.,
  judicious selections from which should present
  no difficulty to the stage manager with artistic
  ideas and a taste for grouping. When the
  pictures are historical, illustrated books on
  costume should be studied, such as " British
  Costume during Nineteen Centuries," by Sirs.
  Charles Ashdown.
  
  The stage manager must before all choose
  suitable exponents of the various characters to
  be depicted. No tableau should last longer
  than three or four minutes at most, and the
  various scenes should follow each other aa
  quickly as possible. Careful attention should
  
  
  528
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  be given to the lighting effects, and a drop-
  curtain should be arranged as for private
  theatricaJs, a person being stationed at either
  side for its prompt raising or lowering at a given
  signal.
  
  Tlie thoughts of each cheuracter must be
  concentrated on the part undertaken and the
  onlookers absolutely forgotten. As few as
  possible the swjtors should forget that there is
  a certain amount of strain in the immovable
  poise, otherwise limbs will twitch and the
  balance and pose be in peril. With sufficient
  practice it will not be difficult to remain in the
  attitude fixed upon for the few minutes after
  the curtain is Ufted. Impersonators should not
  be afraid to breathe regularly, for this prevents
  6irtificial rigidity.
  
  CHARADES
  
  One of the most popular indoor enterttdn-
  ments for winter evenings, or indoor parties,
  both with children and "grown-ups," is to be
  found in charades. Not only do they af?ord
  amusement to the audience, but the players
  themselves obtain a good deal of fun from their
  efforts to baffle those who are Ustening to them.
  
  Suppose, for instance, that a " party " is
  composed of some twenty people. About five
  or six of them are selected to go outside, choose
  a word, which can easilj' be split into syllables,
  each making a word in itself. When they have
  chosen their word they must go in and act
  it, gi^'ing a different scene for each syllable, and
  finally a scene for the whole word, which latter
  the audience are required to guess when the
  play is over.
  
  The players must not waste too much time
  in planning how best to act the words, or the
  audience will show signs of impatience. This
  can also be averted by the hostess arranging
  for a musical or other little " stop-gap " to fill
  up the time which must necessarily elapse
  between the moment when the players retire
  and their subsf^uent appearance.
  
  Having thought of a little sketch which will
  take in all the several parts of the word chosen,
  the players arrange impromptu scenery and
  start the first act, taking care to bring in the
  first syllable, and yet not giving it undue
  prominence. Tliis care must be observed all
  the way through the charade, as the fun is
  much grcattT when the listeners cannot guess
  the word too easily.
  
  If the word chosen is " Indignation," it is
  split into three syllables - In-dig-nation.
  
  These words having been acted, in the last
  scene the complete word is brought in, and as
  it is through this act the audirnce will listen
  most carefully for a clue, the players, if they
  wish to baffle them, should do their best to
  bring in a variety of words with the same
  number of syllables as those contained in the
  
  
  word they are acting, in order to mislead the
  listeners.
  
  If preferred the various scenes need have no
  connection at all with each other, a complete
  little play being acted for each syllable and for
  the complete word. This often proves the most
  enjoyable method, and one that renders the
  word much more difficult to giiess.
  
  The more impromptu the organisation of
  charades the more enjoyable they will prove.
  The players should always " dress up " if
  possible, table-cloths, bed-covers, shawls, and
  scarves may be requisitioned ; the homelier the
  materials to hand the more comical at times
  the effect will be. In all cases good fun should
  be aimed at, for charades are most successful
  when played in a broadly comical spirit. This
  applies in the main to impromptu charades,
  for when they are prepared for a long time
  beforehand as a feature of entertainment for
  a party, they should be prepared with as much
  care in regard to acting, staging, dress, and
  other important details as is entailed in the
  rehearsals and preparation of an ordinary play.
  
  A stage manager should always be appointed,
  preferably one who is quick to decide upon a
  word, and who is adept in the planning out
  of suitable scenes. The following words, being
  easily subdivided, are suitable for charades, and
  may serve as a guide to the selection of others :
  Brace-let, care-ful, care-less, can-did, car-pet,
  case-ment, dor-mouse, eye-glass, fire-work, grate-
  ful, kid-nap, mis-take, night-mare, out-fit, sun-
  shine, ac-ci-dent (axe-sea-dent), baron-et-oy
  (baron-ate-sea), con -flag-ration, high-way-man,
  in-spec-tor, night-in-gale.
  
  Thus from the word " grateful " a very pretty
  charade for children could be acted in this way : -
  
  Scene I. - Cinderella is seen dressed in her rags,
  gazing into the cinders in the grate. Presently
  the shrill voice of one of her sisters is heard
  calling " Cinderella, Cinderella ! " The sister
  then comes into the room angrily and scolds
  Cinderella, asking her why she is wasting her
  time gazing into the grate, when she ought to
  be helping her to dress for the ball. The sister
  should wear a loose dressing wrap, and her
  thin wisps of hair should be done up in curl
  papers in grotesque fashion. Presently the
  other sister comes in, also in grotesque deshabille,
  and joins in rating Cinderella. Then the two
  step-sisters begin to fight with each other (the
  dialogue here can be made very amusing) until,
  finally, Cinderella rises in disgust and follows
  them into their room to help them dress for the
  ball.
  
  Scene II. - Ante-room of the ball-room in the
  prince's house. Comical scene between Cinder-
  ella's sisters, who have been obliged to sit out
  most of the dances, and who cannot even get
  into supper because the room is jull. They
  discuss the mysterious princess who has arrived
  at the ball and har wonderful glass slipper.
  
  
  EECREATIONS
  
  
  Suddenly one of the sisters exclaims, " Why,
  what is the matter ? there is the princess alone
  running away from the palace as fast as her
  feet can carry her." The clock strikes twelve.
  
  Scene III. - Cinderella's household once more.
  The baron, his wife, Cinderella and her sisters
  are all upon the scene. They discuss the pro-
  clamation of the prince, declaring he shall marry
  the girl whose foot the mysterious glass sUpper
  will fit. Quarrelling takes place between the two
  sisters as to who has the smaller foot. Baron
  and liis wife join in the argument. Baron
  declares that neither of them has so small a
  foot as Cinderella. The proud sisters and their
  mother now turn roimd and abuse both Cinder-
  ella and the Baron. Herald's voice outside
  proclaiming, "' Oyez, Oyez, make way for his
  royal highness the prince." Prince enters
  with herald - shoe is tried on first one sister and
  then the o+her. They make comical endeavours
  to get it to fit, but to no purpose. Then the
  prince says, " Have you not another daughter ? "
  Sisters reply contemptuously, " Oh, she is
  only a little cinder slut ; it would be waste of
  time to try it on her." Cinderella advances,
  however, and asks for the shoe ; she sits down
  whilst the herald tries it on her. It slips on
  with the greatest ease. She stands up, throws
  off her rags, and appears in the light dress of the
  princess. Delight of the prince, who embraces
  her, exclaiming, " I shall always be grateftd to
  the little glass slipper."
  
  PARLOUR GAMES
  
  The parlour games here described are suitable
  either for children's parties, for impromptu Httle
  gatherings of young people, or for any quiet
  evening in the family circle. It will be found,
  as a rule, that amongst a number of young
  " grown-ups " the simpler and more cliildish
  the game the more the enjoyment to be derived
  from it. I have known a game of " hunt the
  slipper " keep a gathering of young people of
  ages vaiying from sixteen to twenty-three
  amused for over an hour. No game has
  therefore seemed too simple for inclusion under
  Ihe general heading of " Parloiu- Games."
  
  Dumb Crambo. - This game can be made even
  more amusing at times than charades, because
  ni this case the word must be acted in dumb
  'liow, and those who choose the word often
  , make a point of choosing one which will call
  Uipon all the ingenuity of the actors to repre-
  sent it correctly without speaking. HaK of the
  ji layers go out of the room whilst the remaining
  ' ;ilf think of a verb, such as weep, skip, fly, &c.
  \Vhen they have chosen their word, one of their
  number goes outside to the other players, giving
  them a word which rhymes with the word which
  they are to act ; thus, if the word chosen was
  " drop," she could say it was a word that rhymed
  with crop, and so on. With this clue the actors
  
  
  529
  
  
  must come in and act in dumb show the word
  they think to be the right one. If they are
  wrong, their audience hisses and they have to
  go out again. If they have guessed right they
  are clapped, and at once they take the place of
  the others who have to go out and act the word
  in their tm-n.
  
  Forfeits. - There are several games which
  entail the giving of forfeits, and as these are
  always a source of imparalleled dehght for the
  young people, the method of crying forfeits,
  together with some of the favourite tasks im-
  posed, will be described. Anything may be
  given by way of forfeit - a handkerchief, ring,
  bracelet, tie-pin, &c. The winner of the game,
  or the person who has escaped the forfeit penalty,
  takes charge of all the forfeits which have been
  collected. She then sits down with the players
  around her and chooses one of their number to
  impose the penalties. The latter has to kneel
  down with her face on the Imees of the guardian
  of the forfeits, who holds up each article in
  turn, saying, "Here's a pretty thing, and a
  very pretty thing, and what is the owner of this
  pretty thing to do ? "
  
  The person who has to impose the tasks must
  exercise her ingenuity in suggesting things which
  will promote the most fun. Above all, should
  she try to think out " catch " forfeits or tasks
  which, through some ingenious turning of words,
  will seem almost impossible at first sight to
  perform, but which, when correctly interpreted,
  will turn out to be quite simple. Some well-
  known forfeits are : -
  
  " To stand on one leg in one comer of the
  roorn, sing in another, dance in another, and
  cry in another."
  
  " To bite two inches from the poker." Tlus is
  a well-known " catch," and is done by snapping
  your teeth as for a bite two inches away from
  the poker. Many a player when set this task
  has stood for a long time in bewildered per-
  plexity to the hilarious enjoyment of the on-
  lookers.
  
  " Put two chairs together, take off your shoes
  and jump over them." Another " catch " : to
  do this put two chairs together, take off your
  shoes and jump over the sfioes, not the chairs.
  
  " Call your sweetheaxt's name up the chim-
  ney."
  
  " Place the poker against the floor so that
  you cannot jump over it." Also a well-known
  " catch " penalty : to do this place the poker
  next the wall.
  
  " Recite three verses, each one from a different
  poem without stopping."
  
  " Hop upon one foot tliree times round the
  room."
  
  " Put yourself out of the room through the
  keyhole." Write your name on a slip of paper
  and put it througli the keyhole.
  
  " Kiss a book inside and outside without
  opening it." Kiss the book first inside the
  
  2h
  
  
  530
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  room, then take it outside the room and kiss
  '' ^^anslata into French a sent^co given by
  each member of the company^ J^^Sy "^os^t
  productive of great fun, as nov j
  nonsensical sentences are given, but also sen
  ?en^ ^vWch are most difficult of translation,
  e^D^allv by the elementary French scholar
  eepeciau> u> " ^ -^ " the fire
  
  "Stand upon the tire. vvuvc
  nn a Diece of paper and stand upon it.
  
  "' iSi the person you love best in the room.
  This may be^ done by kissing your reflection
  
  ^"^^rS; of a donkey, a cow, a pig.
  
  * "^wSz^ round the room blindfolded."
  
  " Put out the fire in one minute. Write
  " thefii-e " on a piece of paper and put it out
  
  ^^^raW forfeits will give indications ^ to
  the kind of tasks that may be set Many
  ingenious tasks may be thought out in he
  home circle. The one chosen to ciy tne
  Kts " shovdd always be an adept m calhng
  them or else the fun will lag.
  
  Musical Chairs is a very favourite game
  f or clulchen's parties ; it is a game also which
  s entied upoJ with zest by most jo-g PeoP e
  upon any occasion when they ^^f themseKes
  gathered together in any ")^"^^f % ,,^* ^^!
  !ften been the means of turmng a duU even
  ing into an extremely merry one. First of all
  some one mvist be able to play the P-"- J^^J
  need not be too particular as to the quai ty
  of her playing, but the more at ease she is with
  the Piano keys the greater will be the enjoyment
  of the gamef for slS will rattle along when she
  U expected lo stop playing, and Btop when she
  :Seoted to pla'y.^o that the d^^gM -^0№-
  fusion of the game will be increased to a rema k
  able degree, whilst with a slower, besitatmg
  Pianist the un would be apt to lag. A row of
  E is arranged down the middle of the room
  
  alternate chaL facing di"- ^ ^^han TSe
  
  chairs must be one less in number than Uie
  
  people who are playing. As soon as the music
  
  starts the players must dance round and round
  
  ;?e^h^rs,\nd directly the music ceases each
  
  player mu'st seat herself. Of -^--"^"^ ^^7"
  
  is one chair short one of the players will be
  
  left out'and the fun begins with the scrimmage
  
  to obtain seats as soon as the music stops, lor
  
  Lh player who is left out a cha.r is taken away
  
  until there is only one chair l^^t. Of the f^o
  
  people who remain to contest this chair the
  
  ?ne wh^ is first seated when the music stops
  
  ;"L the game. Sometimes musical chairs ,
  
  played with forfeits, each player having to give
  
  a forfeit as she falls out of the game, the winner
  
  " callinc the forfeits " at the end.
  
  &veo?muchfun' To each player is given a
  
  
  pencil and a piece of paper, and the game is
  played as follows : -
  
  AU players are told to write down an adjective
  that can be appUed to a gentleman. Havmg
  done this they fold over the paper at the top
  to liide what they have written. Then each
  player hands her slip to the neighbour on her
  left so that each receives a different slip to
  write on. On this they nmst now write a
  gentleman's name, after which they must pass
  on the papers in the same manner as t>eforo
  and this must go on until they have finished
  all that is to be written. Consequences usually
  run in the following order :-
  
  Give an adjective applicable to a man.
  Give a man's name.
  
  Give an adjective descriptive of a woman.
  Give a woman's name.
  Say where they met.
  Say what he said to her.
  Say what she said to him.
  Say what he gave her.
  Say what she did with it.
  Say what she gave him.
  Say what he did with it.
  Say what the consequences were.
  Say what the world said.
  When all these questions have been answered
  the papers are opened and ^ead aloud, and it
  can be imagined that, owing to their chang ng
  hands so frequently and no single one of the
  p?ayers^ing\ware what the others have said,
  
  their contents are very funny. ^i"vprl
  
  Literary Consequences.-This game is played
  in a similar manner to Consequences, each
  player Sg provided with pencil and paper
  SnTin^ead of the name of a P-son .^^-^ №*
  a book is taken. It is played as follows -
  
  (1) Each player writes down the title ot a
  book.
  
  (2) The sub -title.
  
  (3) The author.
  
  (4) His collaborator.
  
  (5) Wliere pubUshed.
  
  (6) What the reviewers said about it.
  
  (7) The consequences.
  IS) Wliat the world said.
  
  It can be well imagined that the sequence is
  ant to be somewhat funny at times,
  ^composite Drawlng.-This is a game not
  unlike consequences, only drawing must take
  the place of writing. Each player is handed
  a'iet of paper and pencil. On t^- ^^^^ ^^ ^
  tho head of a man. wonrian. ^^^l^'.^'^.^^^^f 'j^^[.
  fish Wlien finished, the paper is folded ovei
  ctfuny to bide the drawing and^^en handed I
  
  on to the player on the 1^^^, ,Tbf";,,''№S
  is drawn, the paper is again ^^^d^^ "^^^^^^^'^
  passed on, and the legs and feet are drawn^
  VVhen the papers are opened out some very
  
  amusing resSus -->' ''^ ,^7'^" Vle^ of a
  head upon the body of a lady with the legs oi a
  
  horse.
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  
  
  General Post, - This is a most amusing game
  for a number of players. One of the party is
  blindfolded and called the postman. Another
  of the players directs the game, and is called
  the postmaster-general ; the others are seated
  round the room. The postmaster gives to each
  player the name of a town - needless to say, these
  names must be carefully remembered by all.
  
  Then the game begins. The postmaster calls
  out the names of various towns to which he
  wishes to post a letter. The players who bear
  the names of these towns must immediately
  exchange seats. For instance, if he says, " I
  wish to send a letter from London to Dublin,"
  the players who have been named after these
  towns must at once get up and change places
  whilst the postman tries to take one of the
  vacant chairs. If he is successful in this the
  player whose seat he has taken must become
  postman. When played with "zest this game
  soon becomes a most enjoyable romp, which
  can be entered into heartily by both young
  and old.
  
  Variations of Blind Man's Buff.- There are
  many variations of this simple and amusing
  game. As is generally known, the game which
  earned this name originally is played by blind-
  folding one of the players with a handkerchief
  or scarf. All the players dance round the blind
  man, running away from him when he gets
  too near. The blind man must not only catch
  one of them, but also be able to identify his
  captive. If he can do this the latter must
  take his turn at being blind man.
  
  Another way of pla-^ing the game is to give
  the blmd man two spoons. With these he must
  feel his captive in order to identify him instead
  of feeling with his hands. This, of course, makes
  the task much more difficult.
  
  In yet another version of the game the blind
  man is made to stand in the centre of the room ;
  he must have a stick in his hand. The players
  form a ring, and dance around him until he
  taps the gTound with his stick. Then he points
  his stick towards one of the players, who has to
  answer any question the blind man asks, and
  the latter to guess his identity by his voice.
  Needless to say, the players mast disgxiise their
  voices as far as possible in order to baffle their
  interlocutor. As soon as the latter has guessed
  the name of the person whom he has questioned,
  he can change places with the latter, who must
  be " blind man " in his turn.
  
  Musical Buff is yet another version of this
  game. A person is stationed in each corner
  of the apartment, then one of the party is
  bhndfolded and led into the centre of the room.
  The director of the game points to each of the
  four in succession, and each says in a separate
  clear tone the word " Come." Wlien the word
  has been said by each in turn, the blind man
  endeavom-s to find his way to.s-ards the person
  who spoke last.
  
  
  531
  
  
  Proverbs.- One of the party retires while the
  rest decide upon a well-known proverb. When
  he returns, he stands in the centre of a semi-
  cu-cle. Some one taps three times with a stick
  and at the third tap each player shouts one
  word of the proverb loudly and simultaneously.
  This IS repeated three times, and it is amazing
  how difficult it is to distinguish even the most
  well-known proverb in the uproar.
  
  Should one word give the key to the player
  not m the secret, the individual who speaks it
  takes his place. For instance, in the proverb
  All is not gold that glitters," it may happen
  that the word " glitters " provides the keynote,
  iherefore, he or she who speaks it takes the
  place of the one who guesses.
  
  The proverb must contain as many words as
  there are players, and each shouts only the one
  word allotted to him.
  
  Another way of playing the game is for the
  person who has to guess the proverb to ask each
  player m tuz-n a question. Each must introduce
  in her answer a word from the proverb
  
  The Game of Shadows.- A white sheet is
  stretched against the wall, with a lamp im-
  mediately before it. All other lights are ex-
  tinguished. One of the company sits on a
  chair or stool with eyes fixed on the sheet
  Behind him the company files noiselessly, the
  while he endeavours to identify them by means
  ot the shadows silhouetted on the screen.
  
  Simple disguises are allowable and increase
  the fun. For example, a boy may don a girl's
  hat, a girl a boy's ; or a skirt or shawl may be
  draped over an Eton suit, thus conceaHng the
  wearer's identity. The one whose shadow be-
  trays her takes the place of the player who
  identifies her.
  
  Gardeners.- Two rows, headed by a chosen
  captain, face each other. In turn they fire at
  each other the names of vegetables, flowers, or
  fruit beginning with the letter A, and using in
  tiu-n the other letters of the alphabet- asparagus
  artichokes, apples, &c. '
  
  The players on each side set their wits to work
  to aid their captain when he shows signs of
  faltering. They are not allowed to speak aloud,
  their promptings being given in whispers, and
  this IS where the fun comes in, for, when one
  IS excited and eager to give a word, it is very
  difficult to remember to whisper, especially when
  placed at the tail of the line.
  
  When a gardener and his side pause to re-
  member a word the opposite side counts twenty
  slowly ; if at the end of that time their opponents
  still fail, they forfeit a man. Tlio game goes
  on until one captain has secured his adversaries'
  followers. Should any one except the leaders
  speak aloud, ho or she is obliged to cross to the
  other party.
  
  When a captain surrenders he is obliged to go
  to the end of the line, and the next man takes
  his place and responsibilities.
  
  
  532
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Tidings. - Each player adopts some trade or
  profession. One member reads out the social
  gossip from a daily paper. \Vlien he pauses
  and points at one of the rest, that one must
  reply quickly some sentence regarding liis call-
  ing or the stock ho sells, for instance -
  
  Reader. - '-The ball that took place at the
  residence of the Hon. iMrs. Mortimer last evening
  was distinguished by the presence of His Majesty
  the I^ng.
  
  •" A number of d6butantes were present, the
  majority of whom were dressed in - " Here the
  reader glances at the Cfirpenter, who answers,
  " Shavings." ^^
  
  Reader - " Their headgear consisted of
  (glances at the fruiterer) -
  Fruiterer - " Pine-apples."
  Reader - " Their jewels were necklaces "
  (glances at the ironmonger) -
  Jrontnonger - " Of nails."
  Reader - " Tlie dancing took place in - "
  Tobacconist - " A cigar box."
  Reader - " The walls of which were richly
  decorated with - "
  
  Lawyer - " Red tape."
  
  Reader - " The band was composed of forty
  instruments all - "
  
  Doctor - " Medicine bottles."
  Repder - " His ^Majesty's first partner was - "
  Fishmonger - " A whiting."
  Reader - " \Vho was most becomingly clad
  in - "
  
  Chemist - " Silver scales."
  Reader - " Her bouquet was composed of - "
  Draper - " Reels of cotton."
  Reader - " And her tiny feet were cased in - "
  Mason - " Bricks."
  
  Reader - " Her dancing was as light as - "
  Plumber - " A gas escape."
  Reader - " And her charming smiles showed
  to view a perfect set of - "
  Bootmaker - " Black heels."
  It can be imagined from this example
  the merriment and laughter similar answers
  evoke.
  
  The Lawyer. - The party is divided into two
  rows, through which walks the lawyer. He asks
  a number of questions, and the answers may
  contain any words except " yes," " no,"
  " white," " black."
  
  The person to whom ho puts his query does
  not reply, but the one immediately opposite
  does.
  
  The lawyer exchanges places with the one
  who makes the first mistake.
  
  An Example
  
  Laioyer (pointing to Mary) - " Your hair is
  very long ; is it your own ? "
  
  Tom opposite bawls, " False."
  
  To Jessie - " Do these pretty boots pinch
  your feet ? "
  
  
  Jack - " Of course, they are two sizes too
  small."
  
  To John - " Did you use your razor this
  morning 1 "
  
  Jane - " He hasn't any hair to cut."
  To Timothy - " Is your nurse waiting to put
  you to bed ? "
  
  Elsie - " Naturally ; he goes to bed at seven."
  To Dick - " What would you like on your
  next birthday ? "
  Ethel - " A rattle."
  
  To James - " Wliat is your favourite pas-
  time ? "
  
  jilice - " Putting dolly to bed."
  To Freda - " What is the colour of your face ? "
  Andrew (afraid to say " white " for fear of
  forfeit) - " Green."
  
  The Lover's Coming. - All the members of the
  party save one are massed together at the end
  of the room. The leader walks close to them,
  and throws a light rubber ball towards any
  person she likes.
  
  The person must be prepared to catch the
  ball. As the leader throws it she accompanies
  the action with these words, " My lover comes
  thus " - the ball is tossed in a way to illustrate
  the manner of the supposed lover. The thrower
  terminates her sentence by a letter of the
  alphabet. The one to whom the ball is thrown
  has to provide an adjective beginning with the
  given letter as she catches the ball, thus : -
  Leader - " My lover comes g " (throws ball).
  Catcher - " Gaily " (tosses ball back).
  Leader - " My lover comes h."
  Catcher - " Hopping."
  Leader - " My lover comes o."
  Catcher - " One-eyed."
  Leader - " My lover comes s."
  Catcher - " Smirking."
  
  Excitement is caused by the difficulty in
  producing a word at a moment's notice an"l
  being ready to catch the ball at the same time.
  
  Telegrams. - Each player is provided with
  paper and pencil, upon which any twelve letters
  are written, with sufficient space lelt between
  for words.
  
  The leader gives a topic such as a wedding,
  accident, invitation, &c. A watch is placed on
  the table, and from ten to fifteen minutes given,
  during which each player concocts a telegram
  from the letters suppUed by his left-hand
  neighbour.
  
  At a signal the telegrams are thrust under a
  hat and read out in turn by the leader.
  
  Example 1. - Topic : a sensational robbery.
  
  S. B. O. B.
  
  H. M. J. P.
  
  K. I. P. H.
  
  From these letters may bo.devised the following
  telegram : - " Serious burglary ; one box hairpins
  missing. Jane prostrate ; kindly inform police
  - Henry."
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  
  
  533
  
  
  Example 2. - Topio : a catastrophe.
  
  
  C.
  P.
  B.
  
  
  A.
  B.
  Q.
  
  
  S.
  
  c.
  
  D.
  
  
  D.
  A.
  W.
  
  
  " Cat ate Sunday dinner. Please bring cheese
  and bread ; quite distracted - Wifie."
  
  The funnier the telegram, the greater the
  laughter when it is read out.
  
  The Fan Fight. - The players divide into two
  lines. A piece of tape is stretched across the
  room, and before every two plaj'^ers a feather
  is placed. Each player possesses a Japanese fan,
  and the object is to lift the feather and waft
  it on to a stretch of newspaper, which marks
  the opponents' den.
  
  The dens are guarded by goalkeepers, also
  armed with fans, and their business is a lively
  one.
  
  Feathers must not be blown or pushed with
  the hand, as happens sometimes when the
  excitement of the game makes one forgetful
  of all else but the threatening direction the
  feather is taking. Only the fan is to be used.
  
  The feathers should be of different colours.
  When one of a side succeeds in driving a feather
  into the opposite den, he and his adversary
  retire from the game, but naturally they share
  the prevailing excitement and watch every
  movement of their respective sides, cheering
  and encouraging them to win.
  
  When the feathers belonging to one side are
  all captured in a den, the other side is con-
  queror.
  
  Magic Hieroglyphics. - For this seemingly
  mysterious achievement a confederate is required.
  He must know that -
  
  A is shown by one tap beca'ose it is the first
  
  vowel.
  E is shown by two taps because it is the second
  
  vowel.
  I is shown by three taps because it is the third
  
  vowel.
  O is shown by four taps because it is the fourth
  
  vowel.
  U is shown by five taps because it is the fifth
  
  vowel.
  
  Consonants are revealed by means of sentences,
  which the wizard speaks in a natural and un-
  ostentatious manner.
  
  The confederate is banished from the room
  while the party decide upon the word he shall
  be called upon to guess. Monosyllables are
  preferable.
  
  When he returns the wizard is armed with
  a wand, by means of which he proceeds to make
  imaginary pictures on the carpet.
  
  Supposing the word to bo " orange." He begins
  with four taps, and the confederate, who is all
  attention, knows that Lhe word begins with
  the fourth vowel, O.
  
  
  The wizard, flourishing his wand, remarks with
  extreme innocence : -
  
  " Rather fatiguing work, as you perceive."
  
  The confederate says to himself R.
  
  One tap is the next sound for A.
  
  And some sentence such a.s -
  
  " No one can imagine the mental strain,"
  suppUes the letter N to his alert companion.
  
  The wizard's query, voiced in a mocking tone -
  
  " Getting near it ? " supplies the letter G.
  
  A few more imaginary pictures, and two taps,
  which represent the letter E, and the confede-
  rate with an air of profound relief wipes his
  brow and declares confidentially that the word
  is " orange."
  
  Result. - The company applaud loudly, and
  are thoroughly mystified.
  
  The Auction Game. - This is a most fascinating
  resource for a wet wintry afternoon, and its
  preparations are interesting enough to keep a
  whole houseful of young folk occupied and
  amused. A large piece of cardboard is cut into
  twenty-five squares, and on each is pasted a
  pictiu-e of some article taken from advertisements
  in old newspapers, magazines, or catalogues.
  The pictiu-es are numbered, and on the back a
  price in keeping with the article is written.
  
  The more variety there is among the stock
  for sale the better. It may contain anything
  from a thoroughbred Persian to a set of nine-
  pins, and the prices may be copied from tho
  catalogues, &c.
  
  Wlien this is done, a mint of paper or card-
  board money is manufactured. The range of
  coin corresponds to the prices of the articles.
  Should the most expensive of these be marked
  £100, the paper money must include that
  amount. Upon each disc of cardboard is
  written its value.
  
  Tlie guests ha\^ng arrived, the capital is
  divided among them in equal portions. If there
  has been no time to manufacture the coin,
  imitation money can be purchased quite cheaply,
  and this lends a greater reality to the game.
  
  The first thing is to secure an auctioneer
  amongst the party, who possesses a ready flow
  of language, and is not troubled by shyness.
  An amiable uncle or other grown-up relative
  u-ill do capitally.
  
  The auctioneer stands on a chair or stool
  and cries out the article before him, treating it
  as if it were real.
  
  He is provided with a hammer, and the com-
  pany begin an eager bidding for the tiling that
  takes their fancy.
  
  Tlie players, as may be expected, are as
  anxious as people in a real auction to obtain
  what they covet at the lowest price possible.
  
  Should a member offer more than he is able
  to pay, and succeed in being the last to name
  the highest price, he pays a forfeit of threepence
  to each of the other buyers, and the article is
  again placed on the auctioneer's table.
  
  
  534
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  The winner is the indi\-idual who has got
  tlie best value for lus money, and has the most
  capital in hand by the time the twenty-fivo
  articles are sold.
  
  It is a good plan to offer prizes- a good one
  for the discreet and careful buyer, and a
  " booby " for the poor foolish spendthrift, who
  has nothing to show at the end of the game.
  
  Excitement and eagerness are increased by
  the cry of the auctioneer, " Going, going, gone,"
  and the beat of lus hammer.
  
  If he is able to introduce funny narratives
  concerning the articles into his harangue, so
  much the better.
  
  For instance, a pair of boots, fashioned from
  the corpse of the King of Prussia's pet calf,
  and the black kid gloves which King Charles
  II. wore at the funeral of liis great-aunt ; the
  mouse-trap that once held prisoner a rodent
  of aristocratic lineage and purple blood; the
  ash-tray into which the biu-nt cigar of Peter
  the Great is supposed to have fallen - all should
  go at a lugh price.
  
  The Whistle, another excellent game, is
  played in the following manner : -
  
  One of the company is blindfolded, and a
  long ribbon, through which is threaded a whistle,
  is pinned to his back, and he is told that he
  musi catch the blower and discover the whistle.
  Of course he has no idea that it is on his own
  person.
  
  He is swung into the centre of the room, and
  his playmates make surreptitious dives at the
  whistle and raise it to their lips, taking care
  not to stretch the ribbon so that he will feel
  the tug.
  
  Perfect silence should bo maintained by those
  eddying round him ; they move on tip-toe,
  with bated breath, but now and then sounds of
  stifled laughter are heard.
  
  The " blind " man seeks liigh and low for
  the possessor of the whistle, his ears strained
  to catch the direction of the sound. He may
  succeed in embracing a youth or damsel, but his
  search round the neck, waist, or in her fingers
  for the missing whistle is futile.
  
  It will be long ere ho guesses the secret, if he
  ever does, and the delight of young and old
  at his expense is hilarious.
  
  The Poet's Comer. - Tliis is an excellent and
  ingenious pastime for young men and women
  who have out-grown the old-world games of
  " Hunt the Slipper " and " Hide and Sock."
  
  The " poets " are each given a slip of paper
  and pencil, at the head of which they write
  any question they like. Wlien this is written,
  the papers are folded, so that the sentence is
  concealed and passed on to the left-hand
  neighbour, who, without looking at the question,
  writes any word she likes beneath so long as it
  is a noim. This is again concealed and passed
  to a third party, who must compose a rh>-thm
  or stanza, which includes both question and
  
  
  noim. As these have no relation to each other,
  some ingenuity is needed to link the two in a
  verse.
  
  For example, suppose the question given is
  as follows : -
  
  Qxiestion - " What is the time ? "
  
  Noun - " Chair."
  
  Verse
  " What is the time ? " Grandfather asks.
  Tliis is one of the pleasant tasks
  He sets the cliildren from his chair.
  And round eyes at the timepiece stare.
  I/ittle Alice reads the time -
  The old clock helps her, and chimes out nine.
  
  Or-
  
  Question - " Wliat is your age ? "
  ISloun - " Cigar."
  
  Name Divinations.- This is a clever puzzle
  game, which seems to the beholder to be steeped
  fn magic and mystery. In order to discover
  the name or birthplace of a person, the following
  table of five columns is necessary : -
  
  
  (1)
  
  (2)
  
  (3)
  
  (4)
  
  (5)
  
  A
  
  B
  
  D
  
  H
  
  P
  
  C
  
  C
  
  E
  
  I
  
  Q
  
  E
  
  F
  
  F
  
  J
  
  R
  
  G
  
  G
  
  G
  
  K
  
  S
  
  I
  
  J
  
  L
  
  L
  
  T
  
  K
  
  K
  
  M
  
  M
  
  U
  
  M
  
  N
  
  N
  
  N
  
  V
  
  O
  
  O
  
  0
  
  O
  
  w
  
  Q
  
  R
  
  T
  
  X
  
  X
  
  s
  
  S
  
  U
  
  z
  
  Y
  
  u
  
  V
  
  V
  
  Y
  
  Z
  
  w
  
  w
  
  w
  
  Y
  
  z
  
  The manipulator shows the table to t'.a
  individual whose name he wishes to discover,
  asking him to point out the column ur columns
  that contain the initial letter. A glance at the
  table will show that if it is in only one colum!.
  it must be the top letter. Should it be found
  to be in more than one, it is discovered by
  adding the first letters of the columns in which
  it is stated to be, the sum supplying the alpha-
  betical position of the letter. For example,
  take the name " Elizabeth."
  
  Elizabeth glancf^s at the table and looks for
  the columns in which her initial letter occurs.
  It is obvious that she must be careful not to
  overlook this repetition. She informs you that
  it is to be found in columns I and 3. Now, the
  columns mentioned are topped by the letters
  A and D, which are the first and fourth letters
  of the alphabet. Add those together and you
  get 5. E is the fifth letter. In case you forget
  it, write it on a slip of paper. The next letter,
  Elizabeth informs you, occurs in columns 3 and
  4. These are headed by D and H = 4-j-8=12.
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  
  
  635
  
  
  Tlie twelfth letter is L. Columns 1 and 4 contain
  I, headed bj' A and H= 1 + 8 = 9. The ninth
  letter is I. Z is found in columns 2 and 4 and 5,
  headed by B, H and ? = 2 + 8+ 16 = 26. The
  twenty-sixth letter is Z. The next letter exists
  only in column No. 1, therefore it is A. The
  next letter exists only in column No. 1, therefore
  it is B. The next letter exists only in columns
  1 and 3. The top letters of these, A and D =
  1+4=5. The fifth letter is E.
  
  T is found in columns 3 and 5. Top letters
  D and P = 4+16 = 20. The twentieth letter is
  T.
  
  H occm's in column 4, thei'efore it is the top
  letter, H.
  
  Result - Elizabeth.
  
  Wizard Photography. - The wizard, who pos-
  sesses a confederate, is banished from the room.
  During his absence the latter produces a piece
  of paper, and declares his intention of taking a
  photograph of any individual among the com-
  pany upon it, in such a manner that it shall
  be visible to the wizard alone, who, upon
  examining it closely, will call out the name of
  the original.
  
  Naturally every one considers that this must
  be quite an impossible proceeding, and for that
  reason every one becomes very curious and
  watchful, making up his mind to discover the
  trick.
  
  The confederate fixes upon one of the company,
  poses her to his satisfaction, tells her not to
  look grave, &c., just as professional photographers
  do, and when she is quite ready and gazing
  at the sheet of paper, which is held out in the
  manipulator's left hand, he passes his right over
  it, snaps his fingers, and tells her that the wonder
  is accomplished.
  
  He hastens to wrap the " plate " in his
  handkercliief, and, calling in the wizard, hands
  it to him, retiring to a seat where the latter
  can observe him without appearing to do so.
  The wizard, looking very mysterious and wise,
  bids the company maintain an unbroken silence
  while he unwraps and examines the " plate."
  
  His confederate meanwhile imitates as nearly
  as possible the position of the original of the
  photograph.
  
  Should she cross her feet, toss back her hair,
  1 ost her chin on her hand, (jr perform anj' other
  trivial action, the confederate does the same,
  quite naturally so as not to aroiise any sus-
  picion or notice. All attention being con-
  (lontrated on the wizard, his actions will not be
  observed by any one save the manipulator,
  who is led by the position he assumes to guess
  the individual whose likeness on the " plate "
  is supposed to be visible to him alone.
  
  Few would realise until they try the game
  the wonder and admiration of the guests for the
  wizard who successfully achieves his purpose, and
  the means employed an seldom, if ever, dis-
  covered.
  
  
  The Missing Ring. - A plain cwtain ring is
  tlireaded through a piece of tape or ribbon,
  knotted at the ends. The guests form a circle
  round a central figure. The ring is passed
  swiftly along through hands gi'ipping the tape,
  wliile the master of ceremonies counts one, two.
  
  At three, all fists must be threaded by the
  tape and perfectly motionless, and the man in
  the centre, who is permitted to observe the
  circuit of the ring, is called upon to say which
  person h"is possession of it. Should he guess
  rightly, he changes places with the individual -
  
  Apples and Nuts. - Slix a number of hazel nuta
  and apples together on a table removed from
  the wall ; hand a tea-spoon and table knife to
  each of the guests. Bid them at a given signal
  move to the table, with the knife in the right
  hand, the spoon in the left, and scoop up one
  apple and one nut. This is no easy matter on
  a smooth surface, for the probabihty is that
  the fruit and nuts will roll to the floor.
  
  When they are secured, they must be conveyed
  to a dish at the other end of the room. He
  who performs this feat successfully the most
  times wins, and the apples and nuts are awarded
  him as a prize.
  
  Amiable Dog. - The party is divided into two
  lines. Tlie first player begins by saying, " Our
  Httle dog is amiable." The first player on the
  opposite side must answer quickly with another
  adjective beginning with the same letter thus,
  " Our httle dog is artful." Meanwhile, the first
  player counts ten. If in that time his opponent
  fails to respond, he is obliged to go over to the
  opposite rank. Other letters of the alphabet may
  be used. The side that gains all the " men "
  wins.
  
  Bouts Rim6s. - This is a very amusing writing
  game. The players are provided -vnth pencils and
  paper and each one is required to wTite down a
  line of poetry. After this is done the paper is
  folded down, but the last word of the hne is
  written under the fold, so that it can be seen
  by the next person who has the shp. The
  latter must make her line of poetry rhyme with
  this word. As can well be imagined, the verses
  when complete nearly always make most comical
  reading.
  
  Waxworks. - This is a game dearly loved by
  the little ones. The leader of the game must
  arrange all the others in various positions, giving
  them different characters or actions to represent.
  Thus one may be told to represent a Chinese
  mandarin. She will squat on the floor, her
  hands raised above her head. A couple of
  players will be placed in position for a waltz,
  others may be told off to represent marionettes,
  well-known advertisement pictm-es, cat ohtising
  a mouse, &c., &o. When the groups are all
  arranged, the director of the game goes to the
  piano and begins to play a lively air. As soon
  as the music starts the waxworks must move
  into action - the nodding mandarin begins to
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  53G
  
  nod, the dancers to dance, the marionettes to
  act, the oat to chase the mouse, &c., &c. Wlien
  the music stops they must at once relapse into
  immobiUty. No matter wliat their position at
  the time, the more difficult it is to at once
  become motionless, and the more ridiculous the
  attitudes of the various players when the music
  stops, the more fun the game will be. Those
  who do not stop at once with the music must
  pay a forfeit. Sometimes in playing tliis game
  the players are divided into two parties, one
  party of players helping to pose the others for
  their parts and keeping watch in regard to those
  who are subject to forfeits, and helping the
  leader in this way. When the players are very
  numerous this is decidedly the better method
  to adopt.
  
  Coflee-Pot.- One of the players goes out of the
  room whilst the remainder choose a word which
  has two meanings, such as " can," which can
  be used in the sense of " can " the verb and
  "• can " the noun. When they have chosen the
  word the player comes in and asks each of
  the company a nimaber of questions in his
  endeavour to guess the word. The word coffee-
  pot has to be vised in the answer instead of the
  word selected, thus if "can" were the word
  selected and the answer were " I cannot do
  BO," the player should reply, " I coffee-pot not
  
  do BO."
  
  CHRISTMAS PARTIES
  
  At Christmas parties, at which guests of all
  ages are found, it is sometimes a perplexing
  riddle to the hostess to know how to entertain
  them all. Musical items which may deUght
  the older members of the company may only
  serve to render younger folk restless and d\jll,
  and dancing is not always possible in rooms
  of limited size. iMoreover, there are still many
  young folk who are unable to set their feet
  nimbly to waltz or two-step, and would much
  prefer a romp to whirling round in time to a
  measure.
  
  Self-consciousness and shyness are usually
  very evident when the party enters the drawing-
  room, and this coating of ice, if not thawed
  quickly, will rapidly freeze into impenetrable
  restraint and gloom. At such times a good
  game, quickly organised, is invaluable. The
  rules B);ould be explained by the hostess in so
  simple a manner that the youngest person can
  follow them, and everything necessary should
  be arranged beforehand to avoid awkward delays
  and pauses.
  
  The hostess can make her selection of games
  from those detailed in the list of indoor amuse-
  ments. Let the revels be of the simplest.
  " Musical Chairs " and " Hunt the Slipper "
  are great favourites with the children - any
  game which entails the crying of forfeits are
  also liighly appreciated. A feature should
  
  
  always bo mswJe of a Christmas tree and the dis-
  tribution of toys. This may bo done in many
  ways. Either one of the grown-ups could dress
  up as Father Christmas in the trsKlitional red
  robe, a long wlute wig and beard, and hand the
  presents to the little guests, or else the gifts
  could be distributed by lottery. For this each
  article upon the tree should have a ticket pinned
  to it on which a number is written. Duplicates
  of these tickets should be placed into a bag,
  and each little guest should be asked to draw
  a nvunber, receiving the gift to which the ntimber
  he or she has drawn corresponds. Plenty of
  excitement attends this method of distributing
  Christmas presents. Then the presents may be
  obtained by means of "lucky dips" in the
  bran tub. For this a large tub is half filled
  with bran in which the various gifts are hidden,
  and each httle guest is allowed a " dip," becoming
  the proud possessor of whatever gift he or she
  withdraws.
  
  The Christmas Postman. - Another novel man-
  ner of distributing Christmas presents is the
  following : -
  
  Each gift is tied up in a neat brown-paper
  parcel upon which is written the name of the
  child to whom it is to be given. One of the
  elder children of the hostess is dressed up as
  a postman carrying a big sack containing the
  gifts over his shoulder. After tea, at the time
  arranged for the gift distribution, all the Uttle
  guests are assembled together. The child who
  is to enact the role of postman is taken outside
  and dressed up for the part. Presently there
  is a loud rat-tat at the door- a postman s
  knock. The hostess goes to answer the door
  and comes back saying, " The postman wishes
  to see I^Iiss X." The little guest bearmg the
  name mentioned is led outside and the door
  closed behind her. The postman then hands
  her the parcel containing her gift, and she comes
  back into the room again all excitement and
  curiosity until she reaches her place and other
  eager fingers help her to undo the string and
  find out what the parcel contains. Then comes
  another rat-tat and another little guest is asked
  for, and so on until all the presents are dis-
  tributed.
  
  Decorating the Christmas Tree is a labour ot
  love with the grown-ups. The tree should be
  as large a one as possible and firmly planted in
  a small wooden tub painted green. The space
  immediately round the tree should be kept
  clear by an impromptu partition consisting of
  four posts connected by a rope or chain. This
  will prevent the little ones getting too close to
  it when the candles are lighted, and obviate
  any risk of accident by fire. All risks in this
  direction should be minimised as far as possible.
  Many a children's party has ended in disaster
  through neglect of this all-important precaution.
  No romping of any kind should be allowed whilst
  the present distribution is taking place. Indeed
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  
  
  537
  
  
  it is better to make a rule that the little guests
  should be seated where they may obtain a good
  view of the tree, and forms should be arranged
  opposite, but not too near the tree for this
  purpose. There should always be a fairy queen
  doll in a white and gold or white and silver
  spangled dress at the top of the tree. With
  the little girls this proves to be the most coveted
  present - ^many a little heart beats high in
  anticipation of winning so pleasing a gift. The
  heavier gifts should not hang from the tree,
  but should be arranged neatly along the top of
  the tub in which the Christmas tree stands. The
  decoration of the tree itself should be as light
  and bright as possible. Plenty of golden and
  silver balls and other ornaments sold specially
  for the purpose should adorn its branches, such as
  Father Christmases filled with sweets, bon-bons,
  Christmas stockings, flags, &c., &c. Boxes of
  Christmas-tree ornaments may be obtained from
  most large stores and sweet shops from Is.
  each and upwards according to quality. Pieces
  of cotton wool resting lightly upon the branches
  give a very pretty " snow-flake " effect, but
  here again the utmost care must be taken that
  they are not placed anywhere near the candles,
  as cotton wool is most inflammable. A penny
  box of frosting should also be brought into
  requisition and sprinkled upon the branches of
  the tree. This will give a most pretty shining
  effect when the candles are Ughted. A Christmas
  tree is by no means an expensive item if the orna-
  ments and gifts are chosen with care and dis-
  cretion. Little things, however simple, please
  little people. It is the excitement of having
  gifts distributed in the manner characteristic
  of the Christmas season which appeals to them,
  and not the value of the gifts themselves.
  
  Some Novel Tea-Parties. - There are a ntunber
  of novel and enjoyable little functions that
  may be planned by those whose means are
  limited, yet who are obliged to make some
  return for hospitaUty received. " The Adver-
  tisement Tea " is one of the most entertaining
  of these, and its preparation does not entail
  much trouble. A large number of pictorial
  advertisements should be neatly cut from
  magazines and other periodicals. All letter-
  press of any kind which might serve as a clue
  to the name of the jidvortiser should be cut
  away from the pictures, wliich should be neatly
  pinned to the wall in a way that will not damage
  the wall-paper. Each advertisement should be
  numbered. After tea the guests should be
  taken into the room where the pictures are
  displayed, and seats should be arranged for
  the players in such a way that each one will
  be ablo to have a good view of them. Strict
  silence should be enjoined, and to each player
  must be handed a slip of paper and a pencil
  on which she must mark down the number of
  each picture, writing aftjr it the name of the
  advertisement which the pictm-e represents.
  
  
  Two prizes should be given - one for the lady
  and one for the gentleman who puts down the
  highest number of correct names.
  
  Book Teas. - These are always entertain-
  ing functions. Tlaey can be given in a variety
  of ways, one of the most amusing and the least
  expensive of which is the following method : -
  
  In each letter of invitation it should be
  explained that a book tea is to be given under
  the following conditions : -
  
  (1) Each guest must illustrate the name of
  a book by some accessory or ornament to his
  or lier dress.
  
  (2) No accessory must cost more than a
  shilling.
  
  (3) Two prizes to be given - one lady's prize
  and one gentleman's prize for the most original
  idea for illustrating a title.
  
  (4) Each guest must hand to the hostess a
  slip of paper upon which is written the name
  of the book she is supposed to represent.
  
  When all the guests have arrived, the hostess
  gives each a number to pin on the front of her
  dress. She then bids them all be seated, and,
  after enjoining strict silence, asks them to each
  wTite down upon a list the names of the books
  represented, after the number of each im-
  personator. This must be done in quarter of
  an hour, and the papers handed in to the
  hostess. After tea the different lists are corai-
  pared with the names upon the Ust of the
  hostess, and the guest who has made the greatest
  number of correct solutions wins the " guessing "
  prize, which is awarded at the same time as the
  prize for the most original idea.
  
  Upon arrival each guest must be shown
  into a dressing-room in order to dress for the
  part.
  
  The following are instances of some successful
  methods of title illustration adopted at one
  of these teas : -
  
  One guest represented " The Lilac Simbonnet,"
  by Crockett, by wearing a lilac sunbonnet.
  
  Another came as " Vanity Fair." She carried
  in one hand a looking-glass, her cheeks were
  rouged, and a powder piaff dangled from a
  chain round her neck.
  
  Another came as " The Scarlet Letter," by
  N. Hawthorne. An enormous " L " cut out in
  scarlet paper was pinned to the front of her
  bodice.
  
  Some hostesses make it a stipulation that
  only " new books " must be represented. Need-
  less to say, a good knowledge of books is one
  of the essentials to winning the " guessing "
  prize.
  
  Book teas can also be given for children. The
  titles should, of course, in this case be illustrative
  of children's books.
  
  General Knowledge. - Upon a table in one of
  the reception rooms arrange plates containing
  a sample of some household commodity, such
  as ground rice, starch, arrowroot, flour, &o.
  
  
  538
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  A ticket beanng a number should be placed upon
  each plate.
  
  After t  a piece of paix>r, and ask them to write down
  the correct name of each art iclo after the number
  of the plate whicli contains it. But they must
  on xio account taste the article ; they may only
  smell it. It is surprising how difficult it is to
  guess correctly by smell and touch only, and
  the game becomes a very interesting one indeed.
  A prize is awarded to the person who guesses
  the largest nvunber of the articles correctlj'.
  
  TELLING FORTUNES BY CARDS AND DICE
  
  There is no more amusing diversion for a
  frivolous half-hoiu-'s entertainment than that of
  fortune-telling by cards. Young or old enjoy
  it, and with a ready tongue the combinations
  presented may be so varied that quite sur-
  prisingly good predictions can be made.
  
  Surround the whole business with as much
  mystery as possible. Insist that all shuffling
  be done by the subject himself, and that cutting
  is always carried out with the left hand.
  
  Learn the meanings of the cards by heart.
  This is not difficult, and by doing so one is
  enabled to tell a fortune quickly - always a
  moie impressive proceeding than telUng it card
  by card.
  
  These are the generally accepted meanings
  of the cards : -
  
  Clubs. - Ace of Clubs, wealth and prosperity.
  King of Clubs, upright, affectionate. Queen of
  Clubs, deeply in love. Knave of Clubs, generous
  and sincere. Ten of Clubs, o fortune from an
  unexpected quarter. Nine of Clubs, obstinacy ;
  disputes with friends. Eight of Clubs, a love of
  money. Seven of Clubs, fortune and great happi-
  ness. Six of Clubs, a lucrative partnership. Five
  of Clubs, marriage with a wealthy person. Foixr
  of Clubs, inconstancy. Three of Clubs, a second
  or third marriage. Two of Clubs, opposition.
  
  Spades. - Ace of Spades, a love affair ; if
  reversed, a death. King of Spades, an ambitious
  person. Queen of Spades, o treacherous friend.
  Knave of Spades, indolent, but well-meaning.
  Ten of spades, an unlucky card. Nine of spades,
  the worst card in the pack ; sickness, or loss of
  fortune. Eight of Spades, opposition from
  friends. Seven of Spades, sorrow. Six of
  Spades, great fortune. Five of Spades, success ;
  a happy marriage. Four of Spades, illness ;
  small loss of money. Three of Spades, an un-
  fortunate marriage. Two of Spades, a death.
  
  Hearts. - Ace of Hearts, pleasure ; if with
  Spades, quarrelling ; if with Diamwids, news of
  an absent friend ; if tvith Clubs, merry-making.
  King of Hearts, nice, but hasty and passionate.
  Queen of hearts, fair, affectionate. Knave of
  Hearts, the subjecVs dearest friend. Ten of
  Hearts, the antidote of bad cards that lie near
  it, but confirming the good. Nine of Hearts,
  
  
  wealth ; this is also the wish card. Eight of
  Hearts, feasting and merry-making. Seven of
  Hearts, fickle. Six of Hearts, generous, easily
  imposed upon. Five of Hearts, wavcrer ; change-
  able. Four of Hearts, marriage late in life.
  Three of Hearts, imprudent ; hot-headed action,
  which has disastrous consequences. Two of
  Hearts, extraordinary success and good fortune.
  
  Diamonds. - Ace of Diamonds, o letter ; the
  card next to it will indicate its nature. King
  of Diamonds, hot-tempered. Queen of Diamonds,
  a coquette. Knave of Diamonds, a selfish person.
  Ten of Diamonds, money. Nine of Diamonds,
  o roving person. Eight of Diamonds, marriage
  late in life. Seven of Diamonds, a gambler.
  Six of Diamonds, early marriage. Five of
  Diamonds, friendship. Four of Diamonds, tin-
  happy marriage. Three of Diamonds, quarrels,
  law-suits, and disagreements. Two of Diamonds,
  a serious love affair.
  
  There are two effective ways of fortune-
  telling.
  
  For the first, ask yovu* subject to shuffle the
  cards very thoroughly and to wish all the time.
  Then cut them into tlu-ee piles with the left
  hand. Should the wish card (the Nine of
  Hearts) be one of those cut, it is a lucky
  omen.
  
  Notice two other cards and their possible
  bearing on the wish. Now, after lifting the
  cards and putting them together with the left
  hand, proceed to divide them into piles in this
  fashion -
  
  Tlie first pile is to yourself. TTie second, to the
  house. The third, to your wish. The fourth,
  what you do expect. The fifth, what you don't
  expect. The sixth, sure to come true. The
  seventh foretells the happenings of to-night.
  
  Arrange these piles, as you deal out the cards
  one by one, in a semicircle. Then proceed to
  read them off by their meanings.
  
  Another and rather more complicated method
  is to ask the person whose fortune in being told
  wliich Iving he will be (if it is a woman, one
  would naturally ask which Queen).
  
  After the wishing has been done as before,
  the fortune-teller lays out the cards in rows -
  seven in a row.
  
  To read the fortune the teller must start from
  the King or Queen chosen, counting seven from
  him or her in every case.
  
  The King or Queen of the same suit will always
  be the lover or sweetheart of the one whose
  fortune is being told, and the Knave being
  their thoughts, it is, of course, quite easy to
  discover their feelings.
  
  It is rather a good plan to write the meaning
  of the cards on an old pack. By using this a
  few times a rapid flow of ideas will much more
  rcacUly be induced. It might be mentioned that
  a too strict adherence to rule is by no means
  either necessary or desirable in fortune-telling.
  Tell what the combination of cards suggests
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  
  
  539
  
  
  to you - quite irrespective of the exact meaning
  of each - and you will be infinitely more amusing
  and obtain much greater fame as a v^dzard.
  
  A Throw of the Dice. - Although forecasting
  of the future from dice is one of the most ancient
  methods of prediction, it is curiously enough
  almost unknown in modern days. For tliis
  reason it is of special value to the home enter-
  tainer, and will prove infinitely simpler than
  the cards, the meanings being easier to learn
  as well as fewer in number.
  
  First chalk a magic circle on the table, then
  obtain a small cup or box to shake the dice in.
  
  Throe dice only should be used.
  
  The person whose future is at stake must
  shake and cast the dice in the circle. This,
  as in card fortune-telling, should be done with
  the left hand.
  
  Three tells you of an approaching accident ;
  four, a rise in your position ; five, that you
  will make the acquaintance of one who will
  be a friend ; six, predicts loss ; seven, a scandal ;
  eight, a reproach that is not undeserved ;
  nine, a wedding ; ten, a christening ; eleven,
  trouble for one you love ; twelve, an important
  letter ; thirteen, tears ; fourteen, beware of an
  enemy ; fifteen, good luck and happiness ;
  sixteen, a journey ; seventeen, a water journey ;
  three sixes, or eighteen points, is a very good
  sign. It means great profit in business, or
  something the person wishes for very much.
  
  
  FORTUNE-TELLING BY DOMINOES
  
  A fairly unique accomplishment is to reveal
  the future by the aid of dominoes, and there is
  something sufiiciently fascinating and mysterious
  about this mode of revelation to fill the un-
  initiated with awe at the powers of the exponent.
  
  Each small oblong has its secret meaning
  by which some happening vital to the subject
  is illustrated. It is a matter of little difficulty
  to commit these to memory ; and in this, as in
  other methods of divination, the fundamental
  principle is that of comparison and calculation.
  
  The dominoes used range from double-six to
  double-blank, and by these are symbolised the
  various vicissitudes of fate likely to befall man-
  kind. The exponent places his paraphernalia
  upon the table, and, having turned them with
  their black spots facing the surface, proceeds
  to shuffle them. When this is done, the subject
  is requested to draw three pieces, one at a time.
  Between the choice of each the dominoes are
  shuffled.
  
  The first supplies an impression ; should it
  be drawn a second time, the impression becomes
  a conviction. The third, however, may lessen
  or wholly contradict its degree of importance,
  and this is where calculation and comparison in
  blending the signs are < ssential to a successful
  justification and interpretation of these symbols.
  
  
  Double-six is an emblem of matrimonial
  happiness and financial prosperity.
  
  Six- five is almost equally fortunate. Perse-
  verance and concentration are rewarded by
  ultimate success.
  
  Six-jour implies a comfortable income, and
  secures happiness in marriage.
  
  Six-three demonstrates that fate smiles upon
  the love and marriage of the subject.
  
  Six-two. - Prudence, hard work, and a certain
  amount of good luck, or exposure and shame
  for any wrong -doing.
  
  Six-one promises two marriages to the yovmg
  subject, the first of which will not be as happy
  as the second. Should the subject be of middle
  age, this domino foretells the speedy arrival of
  good things, and the fact that he or she will
  never be loft lonely and uncared for.
  
  Six-blank is, alas, a sign of great trouble -
  sickness, death, or heavy money losses.
  
  Double-five presages that all achievements will
  be rewarded with a large amount of success,
  but inordinate wealth is not prophesied.
  
  Five-four is almost as unfortunate a draw as
  six-blank. Should a young girl lift it, it means
  that her future husband will be poor and
  leave her a widow. Further, he may be
  of extravagant disposition, in spite of his
  poverty.
  
  Five-three indicates a tranquil and contented
  existence. Sufficient money and matrimonial
  affection of moderate strength, the couple being
  incapable of passionate devotion.
  
  Five-two conveys a warning that love and
  marriage are destined to an unhappy termination.
  
  Five-one portends social popularity, but
  financial worries and losses.
  
  Five-blank is supposed to demonstrate ego-
  tistical and avariciovis characteristics, tendencies
  to swindling and intrigues, also a warning to
  remain unmarried.
  
  Double-four. - The man who earns his liveli-
  hood by manual labovu* may regard this domino
  as a sign of future security and prosperity, but
  to him whose profession needs mental acliieve-
  ment it is rather disastrous. Troubles and
  disappointments await liim.
  
  Four-three. - Matrimony and moderate income.
  
  Four-two proclaims an early marriage and
  moderate income.
  
  Four-one. - Wealth or many friends.
  
  Four-blank. - A sure warning that single life
  will be the best and happiest. It counsels that
  any secrets imparted to another will be indis-
  creetly revealed.
  
  Double-three. - Enormous riches.
  
  Three-two foretells prosperity in matrimony,
  travels, and speculations.
  
  Three-one. - Some danger and unliappiness.
  The necessity for acting with extreme caution
  in all matters.
  
  Three-blank. - Domestic unhappiness, such as
  a quarrel or incompatibility of temperament of
  
  
  540
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  husband and wife. The absence of harmony
  in the home.
  
  Double -tivo promises average happiness and
  income.
  
  Two-one. - Two marriages, if the individual
  be a woman ; financial failures to a commercial
  man.
  
  Two-blank. - The intrigues of unscrupulous
  persons will meet with temporary success. It
  also denotes poverty, and an indolent hus-
  band. The individual will return safely from
  all joumej's undertaken.
  
  Double-one. - An existence free from money
  worries ; peace and constancy in love and
  marriage.
  
  Double-blank seems to favour the deeds of
  unprincipled persons, and foretells want of
  integrity in lover and husband.
  
  
  DIVINATIONS BY TAROCS
  
  Tarocs differ from the numeral cards used
  for bridge, whist, &c., in several ways. A pack
  consists of seventy -eight cards, made up of
  twenty-two emblematic pictures and fifty-six
  ordinary.
  
  These latter are grouped into four suits of
  fourteen cards each : - four coat cards - king,
  queen, chevalier, and valet ; and ten fip cards,
  numbering from 1 to 10.
  
  The twenty-two emblematic cards are known
  as the Major Arcana, and are divided into three
  groups of seven, which equal twenty-one cards.
  The twenty-second stands for the highest point
  successful achievement may reach. The Major
  Arcana contaiHS : - -
  
  let Division
  
  1. The Juggler - emblematic of the male in-
  
  quirer.
  
  2. The High Priestess - emblematic of the
  
  woman inquirer.
  
  3. The Empress - emblematic of the action,
  
  initiative.
  
  4. The Emperor - emblematic of the will.
  
  5. The Pope - emblematic of the inspiration.
  
  6. Lovers - emblematic of the love.
  
  7. The Chariot - emblematic of the triumph,
  
  providential protection.
  
  2nd Division
  
  1. Justice - emblematic of justice.
  
  2. The Hermit - emblematic of prudence.
  
  3. The Wheel of Fortune- emblematic of
  
  destiny.
  
  4. Strength - emblematic of fortitude, courage.
  
  5. The Hanged Man - emblematic of trial and
  
  sacrifice.
  
  6. Death- emblematic of bereavement.
  
  7. Temperance - emblematic of temperance.
  
  
  3rd Division
  
  1. The Devil - emblematic of immense force or
  
  illness.
  
  2. The Struck Tower - emblematic of ruin and
  
  deception.
  
  3. The Stars - emblematic of hope.
  
  4. The Moon - emblematic of hidden dangers,
  
  enemies.
  
  5. The Sun - emblematic of material happiness,
  
  marriage.
  
  6. Judgment - emblematic of change of circum-
  
  stances.
  
  7. The Foolish Man - emblematic of incon-
  
  siderate actions.
  
  The remaining card. No. 22, which belongs
  to this division, is
  
  The universe, emblematic of success.
  
  The Minor Arcana, divided into two groups
  of four, corresponding to the suits of ordinary
  playing cards : -
  
  Sceptres relate to diamonds, interpreted as
  enterprise.
  
  Cups relate to hearts, interpreted as love.
  
  Swords relate to spades, interpreted as mis-
  fortune.
  
  Pentacles relate to clubs, interpreted as interest,
  
  The four coat cards stand for different con-
  ditions of existence : -
  
  King, emblematic of man. Divine world (spiri-
  tuality).
  
  Queen, emblematic of woman. Human wo .'Id
  (vitality).
  
  Chevalier, emblematic of youth. Material world
  (materiality).
  
  Valet, emblematic of childhood. Transition
  stage (life in growtli).
  
  The remaining cards of these smts (1 to 10)
  are important according to their relation to the
  coat cards and their numerical value. These are
    
  (1) 1, 2, 3 of each suit appertain to man -
  abstract qualities, creation, and enter-
  prise.
  
  (2) 4, 5, 6 of each suit represent woman -
  
  opposition, reflection, and negation.
  
  (3) 7, 8, 9 of each suit represent youth and
  
  materialism.
  
  (4) The four tens of each suit represent the
  
  stage of transition.
  
  In order to toll fortunes by means of tarocs,
  the manipulator must be perfectly conversant
  with the design, cltiss. and interpretation of
  each card.
  
  Process o( Divination. - The complete pack ia
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  
  
  541
  
  
  used. Shuffle and cut into three parts, each
  composed of twenty-six cards, thus : -
  
  26 26 26
  
  Take the central pack and place on the right.
  
  The inquirer shuffles the two remaining packs,
  which equal fifty-two. These are dealt out in
  a similar fashion - ^three groups of seventeen
  cards, thus : -
  
  17 17 17
  
  Again remove central pack to the right.
  Deal out the remaining packs, which equal
  thirty -four, in three groups of eleven, thus : -
  
  
  11
  
  
  11
  
  
  11
  
  
  It will be seen that seventy-eight cards divide
  equally in the first deal.
  
  In the second deal, however, only fifty-one
  cards are used, so that there is one over. This
  card is shuffled with the third deal.
  
  Two cards are now over, and these are placed
  as discards, until the central pack of the last
  deal of eleven is put on the riglit, when they are
  shuffled with the remaining twenty-two discards.
  The cards will now be as follows : -
  
  
  26
  
  
  17
  
  
  11
  
  
  Discards = twenty-four, making in all seventy-
  eight. They are next placed beneath each other
  in sequence, thus : -
  
  A. 26 - emblematic of the supernatural,
  
  spiritual.
  
  B. 1 7 - emblematic of the thoughts and calling
  
  of the individual.
  
  C. 11 - emblematic of the physical and
  
  material.
  
  The tarocs of pack A, B, and C are now lifted
  separately, and placed on the table from left
  to right in rows. Each taroc has its meaning,
  and from its relation to its fellows the manipu-
  lator is able to present a brief sketch of character,
  inclination, and futurity.
  
  Another simple method is to shuffle all the
  cards and request the inquirer to cut. The
  manipulator then proceeds to draw the first
  seventeen tarocs, uncovering only the eighteenth
  and last card of the pack. These two cards
  create what degree of sympathy is shared
  between himself and his client, the keynote
  being given by the symbolic meaning attached
  to the card. The seventeen cards are now
  revealed from left to right, their interpretation
  being given separately. In order to reach a
  proper signification, they are then compared
  as follows : -
  
  The first with the seventeenth.
  The second with the sixteenth.
  The third with the fifteenth,
  
  and so on, each process increasing or taking
  from the first manifestation.
  
  
  ORGANISING ENTERTAINMENTS FOR
  CHARITY
  
  Though the organisation of charity enter-
  tainments involves real hard work and a great
  deal of anxiety for the organisers, yet it may
  well be classed as a pastime owing to the large
  amount of pleasure afforded to all who take
  part in it when their efforts are successful.
  
  Charity entertainments are many and various,
  ranging from the simple penny reading, village
  concert or bazaar, to the more ambitious
  theatrical entertainment for which a theatre or
  hall has to be hired, or the concert or " fancy
  fair " given in one of the large town halls. The
  larger the scale upon which the entertainment
  is planned the greater the amount of work
  there will be. For large entertainments it is
  always as well to appoint a committee of organi-
  sation consisting of at least four members, each
  of which will be responsible for some particular
  part of preparation, to be allotted to them by
  the chief organiser who will superintend the
  whole.
  
  Small entertainments for local charities which
  do not involve so much preliminary outlay and
  for which a certain amount of profit is usually
  assured, may be organised by one person, but
  even in these circumstances she should be able
  to count upon the co-operation of a number
  of willing helpers, and she should always avail
  herself of their services to the full, and thus by
  sparing herself the necessity of worrying over
  the hundred and one minor details, will be
  able to devote all her energies to the carrjdng
  out of the more important part of the work.
  
  In the first place influential patronage must
  be secured. Persons of high social standing
  should be approached, more especially those
  who are interested in the special charity for
  which the entertainment is to be given. If the
  request is placed before them in a tactful manner
  they will in most cases give permission for their
  names to be included in the list of patrons.
  
  Then steps must be taken to give publicity
  to the event. If the lady or gentleman who
  is in charge of tliis important department has
  some journalistic associations, and might there-
  fore be able to influence press paragraphs, so
  much the better. It will be necessary also to
  commence advertising the event in the principal
  papers a few weeks beforehand, and it is better,
  if possible, to insert a small advertisement
  daily during the last week. Neatly-worded
  paragraphs describing the most striking featvires
  of the entertainment should be sent to the
  editors of all the papers in which the advertise-
  ment appears, together with a polite little note
  requesting the favour of a paragraph and point-
  ing out that the entertainment is advertised in
  his paper. Then, at least twelve days before-
  hand, tickets of admission to the entertainment
  should be sent to the editors, with printed
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  542
  
  progranune3 and any further particulars to
  which attention should bo drawn.
  
  Strict accounts should be kept of each item
  of expenditure involved. While nothing should
  le grudged which will help to ensure success,
  aU Ltrlvagance of outlay should be avoided
  How many so-called " charity " entertainments
  have been given, for instance, in which, atter
  paving all the incidental expenses, not a f artlung
  CbL left over for the charity. I" the case
  of theatricals each performer should be asked
  to provide or hire her own costume, make up, &c. ,
  as her contribution to the charity. If this
  course is not pursued, then the expenses will
  soon mount up. They should all go to the same
  costumier, if possible, and in most cases the
  latter wiU make a substantial reduction if
  mention is made of his name in the programmes.
  A reduction will also bo made in the charge foi
  hiring scenery for the same consideration, iho
  same may be said in regard to the printing,
  wliich in the case of small local chanties may
  often be obtained free of any charge whatever.
  A theatre is often lent for the performance
  free, with the exception of the cost of lighting,
  orchestra, and attendants' fees, aU of whicn
  WiU have to be met. Nearly always the use of
  a large hall may also be obtained free for
  the purposes of a concert or bazaar, it tactlui
  appUcation is made in the proper quarter.
  
  Bazaars should always be planned upon as
  original lines as possible to make them a success.
  A pretty idea is for all the stall-holders to bo
  in the costume of some historical Pf.^od; tor
  instance, it might be called an " Elizabethan
  Fair," and all the stall-holders would have to
  be dresed in Elizabethan costume. In the
  stalls themselves the illusion should also be
  kept up as far as possible. The refreshment
  room should be decorated in Elizabethan style
  with simple little tables and settles, and the
  waitresses dressed in the simple costume of the
  Elizabethan serving-wench. Tlie f ortune-telhng
  booth should by no moans be forgotten, as to
  have their fortunes told forms an ii-resistible
  attraction to the feminine members of the
  community at least. Fortunes might be told
  cither by palmistry or cards, both are largely
  appreciated. Part of the tent might be parti-
  tioned of=t for the purpose of teUing fortunes
  
  
  by the teacup. This would be a novelty, ns
  each consultant of the "wizard" would first
  bo obUged to partake of the " cup that cheers "
  before her future is foretold. The woman who
  has not enough articles to equip a stall should
  bethink herself of the possibilities of the bran
  tub. Presents of all kinds and varieties should
  bo hidden away in a tub half full of bran, and
  3d., 6d., or Is. charged for a dip, in accordance
  with the value of the articles therein. Then,
  again, if the sales are not brisk at any particular
  stall, the possibilities of the "raffle " must not
  be lost sight of. Very often articles will fetch
  a muoli higher price when raffled than if sold
  in the ordinary way. Tickets bearing different
  numbers should be made out in duphcate, one
  set being sold and the others placed in a bag or
  hat and well shaken up together. From these
  a person must be asked to draw a number.
  The person possessing the duplicate of the
  number drawn has won the prize. Baffling is
  looked upon by some people as one of the most
  enioyable features of a bazaar, and these will
  make a point of expending all the money they
  have to spare upon tickets for the various
  raffles. There are no end of pretty fancy
  articles for sale at bazaars that can be made
  by clever fingers.
  
  A RoUer-Skating Carnival always forms an
  irresistible attraction, and its successful results
  ere even more assured than those of a bazaar
  by reason of its novelty. A local skating rink
  Bhould be hired and tickets of admission sold
  under condition that all the skaters must be
  in fancy dress. Prizes should be given for the
  best and the most original costumes.
  
  Whist and Bridge Drives, for which tickets
  are sold, are often sources of great help to local
  charities. There must be a fairly large number
  of players, and the tickets should be charged
  at 2s. 6d. to 5s., there being &st and sr.ond
  prizes for the successful winners poesessmg 5s.
  tickets, and first and second prizes ot lower value
  for those with 28. 6d. tickets. . - 1
  
  There are, in fact, no end to the enjoyaule
  functions which may be organised m the cause
  of charity, and in each case it may be said
  that much of the success of the function wall
  depend upon th- capability for orgamsation
  displayed by its promoters.
  
  
  OUTDOOR GAMES
  
  
  LAWN TENNIS
  
  
  Lawn tennis is one of the favourite outdoor
  games ^vith young people of both sexes. I
  forms the raison d'Hre of many a pleasant
  garden party in the summer months ; it is a
  game in which both men and women can join,
  
  
  and from its purely social aspect, if for no other
  reason, it is well worth cultivating by the modern
  
  ^ Wo"are not all sufficiently fortunate to have
  enough lawn spaco at our disi,osal for tlie for-
  mation of a tennis court. The wise mother
  however, will see that her children are initiated
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  
  
  into the mysteries of the game when at school ;
  also as they get older she will arrange for them
  to join some good lawn tennis club, of which
  there are several in nearly every town or suburb.
  Moreover, she would do well to show her interest
  in the pursuits of her young people by joining
  the club with them, and by obtaining in this
  way a health -giving respite from the many and
  arduous duties which fall to the lot of the
  average house-mistress.
  
  The fees of membership vary in different
  
  
  543
  
  faciUties so offered are not always taken advan-
  tage of, for the very good reason that a large
  mmiber of people are not aware of their exist-
  ence. Before joining a tennis club, therefore,
  make inquiries in order to ascertain if there are
  any places in your district where tennis courts
  and nets are to be hired. If there are, then try
  to get a friend or friends who are good tennis
  players to go regularly with you until you have
  attained that proficiency which can only be
  achieved by practice.
  
  
  78 feel
  
  
  .21[eei.
  
  
  J
  
  
  Plan of Full-sized Tennis Court according to the Regulations of the
  Lawn Tennis Association.
  
  
  localities, although £1, Is. per season would
  represent the average. Girls who have to
  spend their days teaching or in an office,
  or at some other equally sedentary occupa-
  tion, cannot do better than become members
  of clubs of the kind and spend their summer
  evenings in playing tennis. The small sum
  expended will prove to be well invested, and
  the benefits to be derived from this healthful
  deviation from the ordinary routine are well
  
  ~ ~ 78 feet
  
  
  The Court. - The piece of lawn upon which
  the court is marked must be thoroughly smooth
  and level. It should never be on a slope. The
  lawn requires to be kept in good condition, and
  requires regular rolling and mowing. The lines
  indicating the court are marked in whitening by
  means of a " Lawn Tennis Marker." There are
  many different kinds of markers to be had,
  most of them consisting of a little tank upon
  wheels, the tank containing the whitening which
  
  
  Plan of Single-handed Tenuis Court according to the Regulations of the
  Luv/n Tennis Association.
  
  
  worth some small sacrifice. It often happens,
  however, that the members of some clubs are
  all "crack'' players, and the begirner would
  therefore shrink from exposing herself to adverse
  criticism of her play. In these circumstances
  she should remember that, in London and many
  other large towns, portions of large parks or
  pubhc grounds are set apart for the purpose of
  lawn tennis - and both tennis court and net may
  be hired at from Sd, to Is. an hour. The
  
  
  by a patent device is conveyed to the " marking
  wheel."
  
  In simple language the game of lawn tennis
  consists of hitting balls across a net by means
  of rackets. As is well kno\vn, lawn tennis may
  be played by two, tliree, or four players. For
  the single-handed game {i.e. two players) the
  court is slightly differently marked than for the
  other games. The difference is shown in the
  accompanying diagrams.
  
  
  544
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  For the single-handed game the court must
  be 27 ft. in width and 78 ft. in length- for the
  three and four-handed games it must be 36 ft.
  in width and 78 ft. in length. In both cases
  it is divided across the middle by a net, the
  ends of which are stretched to the tops of two
  posts which stand 3 ft. outside the court on
  each side. The height of the net is 3 ft. 6 m.
  at the posts, and 3 ft. at the centre. At each
  end of the court, parallel with the net, and at a
  distance of 39 ft. from it, are drawn the base
  lines, the extremities of which are connected
  by the "side lines." Halfway with the side
  lines and parallel with them is drawn the '' half-
  court " line, di\'iding the space on each side of
  the net into two equal parts, called the right and
  left courts. On each side of the net, at a dis-
  tance of 21 ft. from it, are drawn the service
  lines. The half-court line need not be drawn
  beyond the serAace Une. In the single-handed
  game (i.e. two players) the service Unes extend
  to the side lines, whilst for the tliree- or four-
  handed games, within the side lines at a distance
  of 4J ft. from them, and parallel with them, are
  drawn the service side lines.
  
  Rules of the Game. - As with every other game,
  lawn tennis has its recognised code of rules,
  wliich must be followed. The opponent players
  stand on opposite sides of the net. The player
  who begins the game by serving the ball over
  the net is called the "server," the one who
  returns the ball the "striker out." Players
  take it in turns to servo in alternate games.
  In the three-handed game the single player
  serves in every alternate game. In the four-
  handed game the service of the first game is
  given by one of the partners on either side, the
  second game by one of the partners on the
  opponent side, the third game by the partner
  of the one who served in the first game, and
  so on until the set is finished. The server must
  stand with both feet behind the base line and
  within the limits of the imaginary continuation
  of the centre service and the side lines. She
  must deliver the service from right to left courts
  alternately, beginning from the right.
  
  The ball served must drop within the service
  line, half court line, and side line of the court,
  which is diagonally opposite to that from which
  it was served, or upon any such line.
  
  A Fault. - If the service be delivered from the
  wrong court, or if the server is not standing
  as directed above, or if the ball does not go
  over the net, or goes beyond the service line, or
  if it drop out of' court or in the wrong service
  court, there is what is known as a " fault " m
  the service. If the server makes two consecu-
  tive faults, a stroke is won by the other side.
  
  A Let.- It is a " let " if the ball served touch
  the net provided the service be otherwise good,
  or if a service or fault be delivered when the
  striker out is not ready, or if a player is ob-
  structed by any accident not within her control.
  
  
  In case of a " let " the service or stroke counts
  for nothing and the server may serve again.
  
  The " striker out " must not return the
  ball before it touches the ground in her first
  return stroke. The server wins a stroke if the
  " striker out " volley the service, or fails to
  return the service or the ball in play (except
  in the case of a let), or return the service or
  ball in play so that it drop outside any of the
  lines which bound her opponent's court, or
  otherwise lose a stroke.
  
  The striker out wins a stroke if the server
  serves two consecutive faults or fails to return
  the ball in play (except in the case of a let), or
  returns the ball in play so that it drops outside
  any of the lines which bound her opponent's
  court.
  
  Scoring. - On either side winning the first
  stroke the winning side scores 15, for the second
  stroke 30 is scored, for the third stroke 40.
  If both sides win one stroke the score is 15 all,
  if both win two strokes the score is 30 all, if
  both win three strokes the score is " deuce " ;
  the next stroke after " deuce " won by either
  players is called advantage for that player. If
  the same player wins the next stroke she wins
  the game. If she loses the next stroke the
  score is again called deuce, and so on till either
  player wins the two strokes immediately follow-
  ing the score of deuce.
  
  Tennis Racket. - A great deal depends upon
  the quality of the racket. It should never be
  too heavy - 13 J oz. represents a good average
  weight for ladies' vise. It should be made of
  good strong gut not too tightly strung. Many
  now patents in rackets have lately been intro-
  duced. In one the racket has two centre strings
  of wire. Balls also should always be of good
  quaUty. To fulfil the requirements of the lawn
  tennis laws these should not be less than 2i in.
  nor more than 2^'^ in. in diameter, and not less j
  than 1| oz. nor more than 2 oz. in weight. I
  
  Net and Posts. - Nets should be of the best
  quality procurable. An inferior one will not I
  last. They sliould be well taken care of, never I
  being allowed to remain out in all weathers, }
  but removed from the posts and rolled up care- '
  fully when the game is over. The posts which ]
  possess a winding apparatus by means of which ^
  the net can be evenly stretched between them
  and fixed in place are the best to use.
  
  CRICKET
  
  Cricket has long been regarded as England's
  chief national sport, and it is a game in which ,
  most young people like to excel. Though essen- ,
  tially a boy's and man's game, girls are by no ,
  means debarred from entering into it, and many
  a cricket match is arranged and played at oiir
  large girls' schools, there being much competi-
  tion for membership in the school cricket eleven.
  
  A cricket match is played by two sides of
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  
  
  545
  
  
  eleven players each, each side being under the
  direction of its captain. The game consists of
  the defence of the wicket by the batsmen of
  the one side against the bowlers and fielders of
  the other, whose mission it is to endeavour to
  knock down the wicket with the ball. Cricket
  may be played with double or single wickets,
  the former method being the most universally
  adopted.
  
  For the double wicket game there must be a
  batsman at each side of the wickets. The play
  of the defending side is termed their "innings."
  When a batsman hits the ball far enough, the
  batsmen run across each to the other one's
  wicket, and keep on running backwards and
  forwards as long as there is no danger of the
  batsman being bowled out while away from the
  wicket. Each time they run to each other's
  wickets is counted a " run." The side which
  scores the gioater number of " runs " wins the
  game. As each batsman goes out his place is
  taken by another batsman, until ten have
  played. When the tenth is out the other side
  begin their innings.
  
  The wickets are pitched opposite and parallel
  to each other at a distance of 22 yds. Each
  wicket must be 8 in. in width, and consist of
  three stumps with two bails on the top. The
  wickets must not be changed during a match
  unless the ground between them becomes unfit
  for play. The ground at each wicket must be
  marked out according to the rules of the game
  with bowling crease, return crease, and popping
  crease - tlie bowler must keep within the limits
  of the bowling and retu.n crease, and the bats-
  man witliin those of the popping crease. In
  addition to bowlers and batsmen the fielders
  play an important part in the game of the
  attacking pa^tJ^ They each have their certain
  definite positions allotted to them ; it being their
  mission to stop the ball and throw it in. Chief
  amongst these may be mentioned the wicket-
  lieeper, who must stand behind the stumps. He
  must be on the alert to stump the batsmen who
  miss the ball and are over the crease, and run
  them out when the ball is returned from the
  fielders, to take " catches," and prevent " byes."
  
  Before the commencement of every match
  two umpires must bo appointed, one for each
  end. The umpires are the sole judges of fair
  or unfair play. They must pitch fair wickets,
  arrange boundaries where necessary, and the
  allowances to be made for them, and change
  ends after each has had one innings. The
  batsman is declared " out " -
  
  If the ball is caught by the bowler or a
  .^Ider before it touches the ground.
  
  WTien he is " bowled," i.e. if the wicket be
  bowled down, even if the ball first touch the
  triker's bat or person.
  
  If he is " stumped " out - ^that is to say, if
  in playing at the ball, pro\'ided it be not touched
  by the bat or hand, the striker is out of his
  
  
  ground and the wicket is put down by the
  wicket-keeper with the ball, or with hand or
  arm with ball in hand.
  
  If with any part of his person he stop the
  baU.
  
  If he " hit the wicket " with his bat or any
  part of his person or dress.
  
  When under pretence of running or otherwise
  either of the batsmen wilfully prevent a ball
  from being caught.
  
  If the ball bo struck by any part of liis person
  or he wilfully strike it again, except it be done
  for the purpose of guarding his wicket, which
  he may do with liis bat or any part of his
  person except his hands.
  
  If he is " run out " - ^if the wicket be knocked
  down by his opponents with the ball while he
  is making his runs : he is out if he has not
  grounded his bat inside the popping crease before
  the ball hits the wicket for which he is malcing.
  
  The bowler bowls an " over " or six successive
  balls from one end. Then a bowler at the other
  end also bowls an " over."
  
  It is " no ball " if the bowler does not have
  one foot behind the bowling crease when bowl-
  ing, but the batsman is entitled to run just the
  same. If the ball is lost, six runs are allowed to
  the striker.
  
  HOCKEY
  
  Hockey is a great deal played by girls and
  women, usually forming one of the sports taught
  at girls' schools. There are also a nvunber of
  ladies' hockey clubs throughout the country.
  The game is played with hockey sticks and an
  ordinary cricket ball painted white. There
  are twenty-two players, eleven on each side.
  Usually five of these eleven are " forwards," tliree
  " half backs," two " backs," and one the goal-
  keeper. To score a goal the ball must be driven
  between the goal posts. The ground must be
  marked in the shape of a rectangle, the long sides
  of which are called the " side lines " and the short
  sides the " goal lines." In the centre of each goal
  line are placed the goals, which consist of two
  upright posts placed foiu" yards apart connected
  by a cross-bar. Behind the goals at either side
  a net is placed. Fifteen yards in front of each
  goal a semi-circle is drawn with its sides ter-
  minating at the goal line. This is called the
  " striking circle," and in order for a goal to be
  scored the ball must be struck from a point
  witlain this circle.
  
  Tlie game is started by two of the players
  (one from each side) striking the ground in
  front of the ball three times with their sticks.
  This is known as a " bully," and the play must
  be restarted by a " bully " each time a gosd
  is scored. The side which scores the greater
  number of goals wins the game.
  
  The player must not hold, carrj', or send the
  ball in any direction except by means of her
  hockey stick, but she may stop the ball with
  
  2m
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  546
  
  her foot and catch it with her hand if she drops
  
  it immediately afterwards.
  
  Tlie rules for the game of hockey for women
  in England are drawn up by the All England
  Woman's Hockey Association, of which JIiss
  M. A. JuUus, 7 Onslow Avenue, Richmond, is
  the secretary.
  
  Dress- Loose blouses or jerseys and short
  serge skirts should be worn. Boots or shoes
  should have good, thick, strong soles, and boots
  as a rule are preferable to shoes, as they serve
  in a measure to protect the ankles from injury
  by knocks with the hockey sticks.
  
  ROUNDERS
  
  Rounders is a very popular game for the play-
  •^ound, and one in which any number of players
  may take part. Tlie game is played in an
  imaginary round or circle, on which four bases
  are marked by posts placed at equal distances
  from each other. In some cases trees are situ-
  ated in convenient parts of the ground to do
  duty as bases. The players are divided into
  two' sides. The members of the side who are
  " in " stand in a line at the post marking the
  home base and one member of the other side
  acts as bowler, the others taking up various
  positions on the ground as fielders. Each
  member of the " in " side takes it in turn to
  strike the baU sent by the bowler, generallj'
  with the open hand, though in some forms of
  the game a bat is used. When she has struck
  it she must at once run to the post or tree
  marking the first base, it being the object of the
  fielders to get her " out " by hitting her with
  the ball wliile she is running between the bases.
  No two players may stand together at any base
  but the homo oase, so that when a player is
  stationed at the first base from home, directly
  another player hits the ball and begins to run
  she must at once make for the next base. The
  great object of the game is to obtain as many
  rounders as possible, that is to say, that each
  player should endeavour to hit the ball far
  enough to enable her to run to all the posts
  And home again without stopping. The side
  which wins the greater number of rounders wins
  the game.
  
  If a ball Is caught before touching the ground
  by the bowler or any of the fielders, the side
  of the striker is out, and the others must take
  their turns as batsmen. Each player as she
  roaches homo takes her stand at the end of
  the line of players waiting for their turn to
  act as batsman, and she bats the ball in her
  turn again until she is out. When all the
  players on the innings side are out, the next
  side comes in.
  
  BASEBALL
  
  This may be called the American Rounders,
  and is a very favourite game in America. It
  
  
  is played by eighteen players, nine to a side.
  The field is diamond-shaped, the bases being
  stationed at the four corners. llie pitcher
  stands opposite to the home base six feet from
  it and bowls to the batsmen of the " in " side,
  whilst the other members of the " out " side
  are stationed as fielders in various positions
  over the ground, one taking up his position as
  " catcher " behind the home base. The bats-
  man when he has hit the ball must run to the
  first base. Each round of the four bases makes
  a " run," and the side which scores the greater
  number of rvins wins the game. Should a bats-
  man fail to hit the ball after it has been bowled
  to him three consecutive times he is out. When
  three of the batsmen have been bowled out the
  innings is over. If the batsman is hit by the
  fielder with the ball whilst running between the
  bases he is out. Each side is allowed nine
  innings.
  
  CROQUET
  
  Croquet is played with croquet mallets and
  balls on an oblong-shaped lawn upon which a
  number of hoops and arches are set in a definite
  order. Six hoops are used in the new standard
  settings. Each player has a mallet and a ball ;
  the balls are of difierent colours in order that
  they may be easily distinguished in play, and
  the mallets bear corresponding colours. Two
  or more players may take part in the game, four
  or eight being favourite numbers. The object
  of the player is to send her ball tlirough each
  hoop until the winning peg is reached, and to
  keep her opponent from making progress. This
  can be done by means of " Roquet," by which
  the player when she has passed through a hoop
  strikes with her ball that of her opponent.
  When she has done this the player must place
  her own ball against the ball which she has
  struck, and then hit the former with her mallet,
  the force of the stroke serving to move both
  balls. There is a great art in this stroke the
  knack of which is only gained by experience.
  For instance, one kind of stroke will send both
  balls in the same direction, whilst another kind
  of stroke will send them far apart. Tlie object
  of the player should be not only to send her
  opponent's ball as far away from its destination
  as possible, but also to place it in a position
  where it will be useful to her or to one of the
  other players on her side. The player is not
  now allowed to put her foot on her opponent's
  ball to keep it steady when making the stroke.
  Many people, however, still play croquet in
  the old-fashioned way.
  
  When a player has passed through a hoop,
  or taken "Roquet," she is allowed another
  turn. If she misses a hoop, sends a ball out
  of bounds, or fails to move her opponent's ball
  when playing it against her own after " Roquet,
  her turn is over. i
  
  The rules of croquet are drawn up by the
  
  
  RECREATIONS
  
  
  547
  
  
  Croquet Association. A copy of the rules, with
  diagrams of standard settings, price 4d., may
  be obtained from Horace Cos, Bream's Build-
  ings, London, E.C.
  
  BOWLS
  
  Bowls is a very popular lawn game. It is
  played with bowls which have a bias on one
  side, and a small ball called the jack. The
  play is begun by one of the players bowhng
  the jack across the lawn to give it its position.
  Then turns are taken alternately by members
  of each side. The object of each player is to
  bowl her ball as near as possible to the jack,
  and to knock away that of her opponent, if
  possible. In bowhng the side with the bieis
  should always be held towards the player.
  When all have had their turn the score is taken.
  The side which has the nearest bowl to the
  jack counts points in accordance with the number
  of bowls they have nearer the jack than the
  opposing side. The number of points that make
  the game can be settled beforehand by the
  players.
  
  BADMINTON
  
  Badminton is very like tennis, only it is played
  with special Badminton bats and shuttlecocks
  instead of balls. It has the advantage of being
  a game which can be played either in or out
  of doors, only in the latter case it cannot be
  played in a strong wind. It is mostly played
  in covered courts, and in these circumstances
  makes an admirable winter game. The shuttle-
  cock is sent over the net in the same manner
  as in tennis, only the game must necessarily be
  a volleyed one. Should a player fail to rettirn
  the shuttlecock which is served to her, a point
  is scored against her, also against the server
  who sends the shuttlecock into the wrong coiurt.
  The shuttlecock must not touch the net or
  
  
  posts or fall out of bounds. The game usually
  is fifteen, but when both sides have scored
  tliirteen, five extra points may be played for.
  
  A Badminton net stands higher than a tennis
  net, being 5 ft. in the middle and 5 ft. 1 in.
  at the sides.
  
  GOLF
  
  Golf is becoming a very favourite game for
  women, though the golfer is apt to find her
  hobby a somewhat expensive one at times.
  Besides the initial outlay on golf clubs, balls,
  and other accessories, tips to caddies have to
  be considered, whilst if the golfer is to have
  any chance of pursuing her favourite pastime
  she must of necessity belong to a good golfing
  club.
  
  The game is played with small balls and clubs
  of various shapes on uneven ground. The
  coiu-se has at intervals of 150 and 500 yards a
  number of smooth greens each with a hole in
  it, and the object of each player is to get her
  ball into each of these holes in turn and so
  round the course with the least number of
  strokes. The one who wins at the greater
  number of holes wins the round.
  
  For the first stroke the ball is placed on a
  small mound called a " tee." Sometimes two
  players on each side strike the same ball alter-
  nately. The match is then called a " four-
  some."
  
  Golf is essentiallj' a game wliich must be
  acquired by practice. Little help can be ob-
  tained by an amateur from books. Tlie rules
  of the game have been drawn up by the Golf
  Club of St. Andrews, and the beginner should
  obtain a copy of these. There are a number
  of ladies' golf clubs in country places, health
  resorts, and the suburbs, at which an entrance
  fee, which varies from one to three guineas, in
  addition to the year's subscription, must bo
  paid.
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  No woman, be she princess or peasant. ^Wd cor^ide, h^^^^^^^^
  
  knowledge of nursing, and a though to '^"^^ ^^^'^'^^^^^^^^'^^X by practSal expk'ience. or by
  that the necessary know edge m^^^^^^^^ ^hir^; '^ven i^C^t' pa^rt^ of the couLy by trained
  attending some of the exceUont ""^^ў^^Xi^^^^^ PerhaDS a knowledge of nursing is needed most
  
  Calmness in a crisis is the result of knowledge.
  
  
  THE SICK-ROOM
  
  Caioice of Room.- It often happens that a
  person is taken ill in a room which is qmte un-
  suitable for an invaUd, and he may have to re-
  main there cither because there is no other place
  available or because he is too Ul to be moved.
  In this case the room must be made as hke the
  ideal sick-room as possible. If you are able to
  choose a sick-room, select one at the back of the
  house, as it is quieter, and if it looks out on to a
  garden, so much the better. There is something
  very soothing in the sounds and scents from a
  garden, and most people like to listen to the
  Bongs of birds and to the rustling of leaves.
  The" room should be largo and lofty, and it is
  an advantage to have windows on opposite sides,
  so that when there is a strong wind blowing in
  one direction, a window on the other side can
  be opened. A room with a south-eastern
  aspect is best, as it will have plenty of sunshine,
  and sunshine, like fresh air, means life to the
  patient. The old plan of darkening a sick-room
  is a bad one. Unless the eyes are affected,
  or there is cerebral trouble, a patient should bo
  encouraged to tolerate the Ught. Of course,
  a patient's bed Can be moved, or the window
  curtain arranged so as to prevent "the sun
  getting in his eyes."
  
  Ventilation and Warmth.- Good ventilation is
  an absolute necessity in the sick-room, and to
  ensure this there should be an inlet for fresh
  air and an outlet for what is impure. This can
  be arranged by opening the window at the top.
  The warm foul air cscajjes at the top, and the
  fresh air enters between the sashes. The
  
  
  windows should be opened wide and not just a
  few inches. The idea that night air is injurious
  is a false one, as often the air is purer at night
  than in the day-time ; there are fewer fires arid
  consequently less smoke. If the room is small,
  keep the vvindow wide open. If the patient is m
  a draught, put up a screen, or if there is not one
  available it can be improvised by arranging a
  sheet over a clothes-horse. The sick-room thould
  always be fresh, even to an outsider commg in
  from the open air. It should at the same time
  be warm, but not over-heated. A temperature
  from 56" to 60№ Fahr. is usually high enough, but
  in some cases it may be necessary to hav^ it
  as high as 65№ Fahr. A thermometer should be
  hung in the room near the patient's bed and the
  temperature noted from time to time. There
  should also be a fireplace, as a fire in an open
  grate is an excellent ventilator. A complete
  set of fire-u-ons is not required. A small poker
  and tongs are all that are needed. Choose a
  time when the patient is awake to make up the
  fire, and if it must be made up while he is asleep,
  wear old gloves and take up the coal in the hands,
  or put a number of pieces of coal in a paper-
  bag beforehand and place this on the fire when
  necessary. When there is a fire in the room
  the grate will, of course, need to be " done up
  once a day, but afterwards it can be kept tidy
  with a brush or a duster kept for tho
  
  purpose. ^ ^, .
  
  Cleanliness and Arrangement.- Everything in
  a sick-room should be kept scrupulously clean.
  The floor should either be bare or covered witii
  oil-cloth. In this way it can bo kept clea,n by
  frequent dusting or wiping over daily with a
  648
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  549
  
  
  damp cloth, and then occasionally washed with
  soap and water. Small rugs or mats can be
  laid down, and they should be placed so as to
  deaden the sound of footsteps. These can
  easily be taken out of the room and
  shaken.
  
  The walls should be covered with a pretty
  light paper.
  
  It is better to avoid drapery as much as
  possible, and what there is shoxild be of wasliing
  material. There should be no unnecessary
  furniture in the room, and it should be of the
  kind that is easily kept clean. One or two
  easy-chairs are useful, also a sofa, but in the
  case of infectious diseases upholstered furniture
  should be banished as far as possible.
  
  On a table or chest of drawers place a tray, on
  which have a basin of water and a clean tea-cloth
  to wash the medicine glass or feeder. The
  medicine bottles and glass can be kept on tliis
  table, but all lotions, Unaments, or poisons
  should be kept on the washstand. Sometimes
  a lotion, intended for outward application only,
  is given in mistake for medicine. The risk of
  doing this is lessened if lotion and medicine
  bottles are kept apart. Have a small table
  close to the patient's bed. This should be
  covered with a dainty white cloth, and on it
  might be placed a small bunch of very fresh
  flowers in a vase that will not easily fall over ;
  also a table-napkin to place under the patient's
  cliin wliile he is being fed. It is nice to have
  a tiny tray on tliis table on which a clean
  spoon can be kept, or the medicine glass or
  feeding-cup put down if the patient has to
  be raised, or can only take his nourishment
  slowly. Later on, during convalescence, a drink
  or a little fruit can be placed on the table for
  the patient to take as he wishes, and when he
  is able to read a book this might also be placed
  within reach.
  
  There should be plenty of nice fresh flowers
  in the room, but avoid choosing those with a
  very strong scent, and never keep stale flowers
  in the vases. It is better to remove all plants
  and flowers at night.
  
  Bed and Bedding. - The bedstead should be, if
  possible, behind the door with the head to the
  wall and a space on either side.
  
  The window should be at the side of the bed.
  Never, if you can help it, have the head of the
  bed against the window, as the patient will bo
  sure to complaiia of the cbaught. If it happens
  to be in tliis position, and the room is too small
  to allow of its being moved, then tm-n the
  patient with his head to the foot of tho bed
  if possible.
  
  In winter, when the weather is cold and dull,
  liave the bedstead as near the fire as you con-
  ^■cniently can. It is nice when the firo is at tho
  .^ido of tho bed, so that the patient can have
  a good view oi it. Tliere iij something very
  cheering in a bright fire.
  
  
  A single iron bedstead with a wire spring is
  the best, as it will be easy for the nm-so to reach
  the patient. The only advantage in a full-
  sized bed is that the patient can be moved from
  one side to the other while the bed is being made.
  There should be a good, thick, soft mattress of
  hair or wool - hair for choice. Flock and
  feather beds are not good, as they get lumpy
  and full of hollows when they cannot be pro-
  perly shaken.
  
  The sheets should be large enough to be well
  tucked in under the mattress. A draw sheet
  is usually needed. This should be a yard wide
  and two j'ards long. An ordinary sheet doubled
  answers the purpose quite well.
  
  The number of pillows reqtiired by a patient
  difiers very much, but a bolster and two soft
  pillows or three pillows are usually needed.
  When the patient is lying quite flat, the second
  pillow may not be required, but it is often tiseful
  to put under his shoulders, or to support his
  back when lying on his side, or when one pillow
  gets very hot it is nice to be able to replace it by
  a fresh one.
  
  Have warm soft woollen blankets. Cheap
  blankets made of cotton mixture are quite out
  of place in the sick-room, as they are heavy and
  not warm.
  
  The same applies to heavy cotton quilts ;
  they are undesirable on all occasions, and are
  impossible for an invalid, as their weight is most
  trying and tiring. Very light, tliin bed-spreads
  should be used ; small plain ones m ithout frills
  are best, as they can be easily washed. A clean
  sheet makes a very good bed-spread.
  
  All bed-Unen should be of snowy whiteness.
  
  THE NURSE
  
  The woman who undertakes sick-nursing
  must learn to be observant ; slie must also
  be very accurate when making statements
  about her patients to the doctor and conscien-
  tious in cai-rying out his instructions. Often
  the nerves may be all " on edge " from tho
  strain of nui'sing, especially if the patient is a
  very dear relative, and for this reason it is the
  duty of the nurse to take care of her own health.
  For the patient's sake as well as her own she
  should always try to take her meals regularly,
  and, if possible, out of the sick-room. Sho
  should also get some hours' sleep in another
  room.
  
  Dress. - Tlie nurse's dross should be of wasliing
  material, and she should always wear an apron.
  The dress should be short enough to clear tho
  ground, and if the sleeves are short so much the
  better, as it is often necessary to wash the hands,
  and long sleeves are in tho way, unless they can
  easily be turned tip. Silk petticoats and rxistlmg
  garments of all kinds are quite out of place,
  neither should jingling bracelets nor long
  chains be worn, as they are not only noisy but
  
  
  550
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  daiigorous, being liable to catch on a table-
  cloth or quilt and cause an accident. The nurse
  should alwaj's wear quiet shoes with india-
  rubber heels if possible, or, if nursing at night,
  she might wear felt slippers. She should always
  walk softly but firmly, and never tip-too about
  the room.
  
  If the nurse has had some rest in the day,
  and comes on fresh for night duty, she can wear
  her day clothes, but if she has been with the
  patient all day and has to remain all night
  as well, she must undress, or at any rate take
  off all tight garments and put on a dressing-
  gown so that she can get some rest on a sofa,
  or in an easy-chair.
  
  Night-Duty. - If the patient's condition allows
  it, it is bettor to have a httle bed in the room
  and to go right into it, getting up about every
  two hours to give medicine or nourishment, or
  do what is necessary. Of course, this cannot
  be done in a serious case where a patient is
  delirious or requires constant watching. In an
  illness of tliis kind it is imperative for the one
  who is on charge at night to have some good
  sleep during the day in order to be very much
  awake and alert, as the patient is often at his
  worst at this time, and especially in the early
  hours of the morning when his vitality is very
  Ipw. Some light and nourishing food must also
  be taken during the night, as tliis will tend to
  counteract tlie bad effect that overstrain, want
  of sleep, and anxiety may have on the body.
  
  Relieving the Nurse. - It sometimes happens
  that a number of anxious relatives are desirous
  of staying with a person who is very ill in order
  to do what they can to help. Now this is a
  great mistake : for one reason they use up the
  fresh air so greatly needed by the patient, and
  for another they all become tired, and thus render
  themselves unfit to perform nursing duties
  properly. Where there are several friends to
  help, they should take it in turn to relieve each
  other in the sick-room. Except when help is
  needed in lifting the patient, or in rendering him
  some special service, it is better that only one
  person should bo in attendance at a time. When
  the one in charge of a patient leaves another to
  take her place - perhaps a friend who has offered
  to take night duty - she should leave some
  written instructions, such as the time when food
  and medicine are to be taken, &c.
  
  
  Example
  
  Food. Medicine. Stimulant.
  
  Milk, 2 A.M. 11 P.M. 12 A.M.
  
  Bovril or BeeMca, 4 A.M. 3 a.m. 4 A.M.
  
  Millt, C A.M. 7 A.M. 8 A.M,
  Eenger'fl, 8 A.M.
  
  I'oultice every four hours. Last poultice put on at 12 a.m.
  
  The friend should be instructed to tick off
  the vtu-ious items aa she gives them, and she
  
  
  in turn should leave a short written report suoh
  as the following : -
  
  Example
  
  
  12.30 A.M. .
  
  Patient restless.
  
  2 A.M.
  
  Slept an hour.
  
  2.30 A.M. .
  
  Patient sick.
  
  3 A.M. .
  
  Complained of pain
  
  4 A.M.
  
  Perspired profusely
  
  6 A.M. .
  
  Slept for two hours.
  
  From the above it is easily seen that patient
  had a bad night.
  
  The Professional Nurse. - As a rule the doctor
  will say when a trained nurse is needed, but it
  is alwaj^s as well to obtain the services of one
  in a very serious case where special orders are
  given, or where a patient requires attention night
  and day. A nurse must be treated with every
  consideration. Her meals should be served in
  the dining-room, and some one should relieve her
  while she takes them. It is the duty of the
  people who engage her to see that her food
  is regularly and properly served, as otherwise
  her health will suffer, and she will be unfit for
  her duties. When on night duty she should be
  asked what refreshment she would like to have.
  As a rule it is tea or coffee and some sandwiches,
  or something that she can take easily.
  
  When only one nurse is in attendance, it is
  usual for her to do the night duty. Before going
  off duty she attends to the patient's toilet and
  does what is necessary for him before she leaves.
  She is often busy during the greater part of the
  morning. If possible, she should go out for a
  walk each day. She generally goes to bed soon
  after lunch, and should not be disturbed for seven
  or eight hours.
  
  Some nurses take their own fees, but more
  often these are paid to the association for which
  they work. The fees vary from two to three
  guineas a week. Laundry and travelling e^.-
  pensos have also to bo paid.
  
  Sometimes a visiting nurse can be engaged.
  She goes in once or twice a day to attend to the
  patient generally, or to carry out any special
  order. She will have a tariff of charges, and her
  foes vary according to what she does, or the time
  she spends at a call. It is sometimes moi-e
  convenient to have a visiting nurse where the
  sleeping accommodation is limited.
  
  THE DOCTOR
  
  People do not often care to change their
  doctor. The family doctor is looked upon as
  a true and trusted friend. From him people
  expect not only professional attendance, but
  all round sympathy and advice, and as a rule
  they are not disappointed. Of him Louis
  Stevenson says : " He is the flower (such as it
  is) of our civilisation."
  
  Wlien it is necessary to choose a doctor, if
  possible choose one who lives fairly near, and
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  551
  
  
  before engaging him ask him what his fees are, so
  that there may be no misunderstanding on this
  point. Except among the poorer classes the
  doctor does not often receive payment at the
  time of his visit ; as a rule the bill is sent in
  quarterly or half-yearly, and sometimes only
  once a year. When the bill is sent in it should
  be promptly paid. A doctor has many bad
  debts - not among the poor, but among the
  upper and middle- classes. There is no more
  strenuous life than that of the doctor, and he
  should receive every consideration.
  
  Having chosen a doctor in whom you can
  place your confidence, be sure that you follow
  his instructions, as the treatment is useless
  unless carried out.
  
  A trained nurse is never expected to express
  an opinion as to diagnosis unasked. Of coiirse,
  a doctor would not expect such a strict ob-
  servance of etiquette on the part
  of relations or friends, but at the
  same time it is only polite to defer
  to the doctor in all matters con-
  cerning the patient. Do not tell
  the doctor that you believe the
  patient to be suffering from one
  thing when he has diagnosed some-
  thing quite different. Then do
  not worry the doctor by gi\'ing
  him the various opinions of your-
  self and friends, but instead
  report to him faithfully every
  symptom or change you have
  noticed since Ms previous visit.
  
  Consultations. - In tne case of
  serious illness or uncertain diag-
  nosis, it is only natural that the
  patient or his friends should wish
  for further advice, and no doctor
  ^vill object to a consultation if he
  is approached in a right manner.
  When it has been decided to have
  a second opinion, speak first to the doctor. The
  matter should then be arranged without the
  slightest friction. The doctor will probably
  have a fellow-practitioner with whom he would
  like to consult, or he may be willing to meet a
  doctor whom you suggest. If the case is very
  grave and urgent, and especially when it is a
  question of surgical int'jrference, the doctor
  himseK will bo the first to suggest sending for a
  specialist, and he will probably wish to call in
  some one from his own hospital. In this case
  the doctor - with the consent of the patient's
  friends - arranges the matter, and the specialist
  and doctor visit the patient together and consult
  as to what is best to be done. The specialist's
  fee must be paid at the time of the visit.
  It should be placed in an envelope beforehand
  and handed to the doctor, who gives it to the
  specialist. The amount is arranged between
  the two doctors, and usually varies according
  to the position of the patient.
  
  
  CARE OF THE PATIENT
  
  How to Make the Bed. - When a patient is too
  ill to be taken out of bed the bed must be made
  while he is in it. This can be done quite easily
  if one knows the way. If the under-sheet has
  to be changed, roll up the fresh one lengthwise to
  half its width and place it near the bed readj'
  for use. Then remove the bed-spread and top
  blanket, and draw out the top sheet from under
  the remaining blanket. Untuck all other bed-
  clothes. Turn the patient on his side by means
  of the draw-sheet. Wswh and rub his back, and
  then pull the night-dress down smoothly while
  he is in this position. Next roll the draw-sheet
  and then the under-sheet as close as possible to
  the patient. Put in a fresh under-sheet and
  draw-sheet with the rolled parts quite close to the
  patient and on a line with the sheets that are to
  
  
  Changing Sheets from the Side.
  
  be removed. Then gently roll the patient on to
  his other side. He will then bo lying on clean
  sheets. The soiled sheets are easily removed
  on the other side of the bed, and the fresh ones
  unrolled and tucked in under the mattress.
  When the sheets have to be put in in this fashion,
  care should be taken that the rollings are made
  as flat as possible so that the patient can be
  turned over them without discomfort. The
  rollings should always be uppermost, as it is
  easier to grasp and unroll the sheets from the
  other side of the bed. If a mackintosh is in
  use and there is only one, it should be drawn
  out carefully, washed and dried if necessary, and
  then rolled in with the draw -sheet when the
  bod is made. Of course, it is more convenient
  to have a second mackintosh. Always make sure
  that the under-blanket, under-sheet, mackintosh,
  and draw-sheet are quite smooth and free from
  wrinkles ; also that the blanket and sheets are
  firmly tucked in under the mattress. The
  
  
  552
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  patient shovild be covered with a blanket while
  his bed is being made.
  
  After the under-shoets have been changed,
  put the top sheet over the blanket already
  covering patient. With one hand hold the
  sheet in position, and with the other draw out
  the blanket and put it over the sheet. Next
  put on the rest of the bed-clothes.
  
  When it is not necessar j' to change the under-
  sheet, the bed is quickly and easily made when
  the patient is on a mattress. Ho is just rolled
  over from side to side and the draw -sheet either
  drawn through or changed. If it happens, as it
  sometimes does, that the patient is on a flock or
  feather bed and has to remain on it, he must be
  rolled as far as possible to one side, and the bed
  must be gently shaken, and the flocks or feathers
  pushed into the hollow in the middle. He is
  then rolled to the opposite side of the bed, and
  the second side is shaken in the same way. It is
  possible for one nurse to make the bed and roll
  in the sheets, but it can bo done better and
  more quickly by two people, and an amateur
  nurse should always have assistance.
  
  Sometimes a patient cannot be turned from
  side to side. In this case the clean under-
  
  
  Changing Sheets from the Top of the Bed.
  
  sheet can bo put in from the head of the bed.
  It should be rolled up widthwise. The patient's
  head and pillows are raised by one nurse, while
  her assistant pushes down the soiled sheets and
  rolls in the clean one. The head and pillows
  ore then lowered into position, the shoulders
  and then the other parts of the body are gently
  raised, the soiled sheet is pushed downwards to
  the feet, and the clean sheet is gradually un-
  rolled until it covers the bed. The draw-sheet
  would, of course, bo rolled out with the undor-
  sheet, and would have to be put in afterwards.
  One nurse would raise the lower part of the body
  while the other nurse rolled in the draw-sheet.
  
  
  If a patient is not very ill, he can often lift
  himself enough for his draw-sheet to be put
  into place. To raise the lower part of his body
  he should be instructed to press his head firmly
  on to his pillow and his heels into the bod.
  
  When a patient can only be raised a very little,
  the clean draw-sheet can be fastened to the
  edge of the soiled one ^^ith safety-pins. One
  nvu-se pins the two sheets together and gently
  raises patient's body, and a nurse on the other
  side of the bed draws the two sheets through
  quickly. Both nurses pull on to the shoot to-
  gether to ensure its being straight. It is then
  tucked firmly under the mattress on both sides
  of the bed.
  
  When a patient slips down towards the
  foot of the bed, he can be lifted back into
  position on the draw-sheet. It must be untucked
  and rolled up qviite close to the body on each
  side : a nurse on either side of the bed must
  grasp the sheet where it is rolled tip and near
  its upper and lower margin. In this way there
  is a better purchase than if the hands were close
  together. Both nurses must lift together, and
  the patient must be instructed to lift his head at
  the same moment. If he is unable to do this,
  a third person must pass her arm
  under the pillow and so support
  the head, while the othei-s lift.
  Of covirse, an injured limb would
  need to be supported. A patient
  can also be lifted by two persons
  - one on each side - joining hands
  under his shoulders and buttocks.
  Great care should be taken to
  arrange the pillows properly. It
  is quite easy to see when the
  pillows are comfortable. When
  a patient is propped in a sitting
  position cai-e should be taken that
  the back, neck, and head are pro-
  perly supported, otherwise there
  will be great discomfort. An in-
  jtirod limb has always to be
  siipported on a pillow. When a
  patient has his legs drav^m up, a
  pillow should be put under the
  knees.
  
  In some illhesses patients have
  to be kept between blankets. When this is
  the case put a warm soft blanket loosely over
  the patient. Put a sheet on the top, and let it
  come up a little higher than the blanket, as it
  is not pleasant to have the latter against the
  face. Bed-clothes should not be folded over the
  patient's chest - their weight is exhausting.
  The extra lengths can be folded over or tucked
  in at tho foot of the bed.
  
  Change of Bed. - An invalid can often be lifted
  on to another bed, or on to a sofa while his bed
  is made. He should be lifted in the under-sheot,
  which must be strong, and if tho patient Ls heavy
  the under-blanket must be used as well. Enough
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  553
  
  
  of the top bed-clothes should be left to keep
  the patient warm, and one small pillow can be
  placed under the head. The number of bearers
  needed in lifting will depend upon the weight of
  the patient. The under -sheet should be rolled
  up close to the body on both sides. The bearers
  grasp the rolled parts of the sheet and hft gently
  and together. It is better to have the bed or
  sofa on wliich the patient is to be lifted placed at
  the side of the bed.
  
  When a patient is well enough to sit up while
  his bed is made, a comfortable chair should be
  placed near and a large thick blanket spread
  over it. Another blanket should be wrapped
  round his body and legs as he is helped out of
  bed, and when he sits down he should be en-
  veloped in the blanket which was spread over
  the chair. If the weather is cold, he should
  have on a bed-jacket and warm socks before
  he steps out of bed.
  
  Water-Cushions and Beds. - In a long illness or
  where the patient is very thin or helpless, a water-
  cushion is necessary. It should be placed under
  the lower part of the body to keep pressure off the
  back and hips. A cushion twenty-eight inches
  by eighteen inches will usually answer the pur-
  pose very well. It should be filled with water at
  about 90№ Fahr. or less if the weather is very hot.
  The empty ctishion should be rolled under the
  patient in the same way as sheets are changed
  and then filled. A funnel should be used, and
  great care must be taken not to spill the water.
  Continue pouring in water until there is sufficient
  in it to prevent any nart of the patient's body
  I)ressing on the floor of the
  cushion ; it must not be
  too full or it will be hard.
  A ring water-cushion is
  often very useful.
  
  Air-cushions are also used,
  but they are apt to get
  very hot and are not so good
  as water ones.
  
  Sometimes a full-sized
  
  water-bed is necessary. In
  
  this case boards have to be
  
  placed across the bedstead
  
  from side to side, to support its weight and to
  
  keep it perfectly straight.
  
  The Patient's Toiiet.- The daily bath is
  needed in health and is even more necessary
  in a long illness. Before commencing to bath
  a patient see that the room is warm, and put
  eveiy thing that is likely to be required in readi-
  ness, i.e. basin of hot water, a face sponge, a
  flannel for washing the body, some good soap,
  a can of hot water, a pail for emptying water,
  methylated spirits, powder, &c. Have a night-
  dress airing at the fire ; there should always be
  two in use - one for day and one for night.
  A fresh draw-sheet should also bo in readiness
  in case it is needed. Tommence by remo\'ing
  the bed-spread and drawing out the top sheet ;
  
  
  Air-Cushion.
  
  
  then slip a largo bath-towel under the blanket.
  If the room is warm only one blanket is needed
  over the patient while he is being washed. If
  he is at all collapsed or likely to feel cold, put a
  hot bottle to his feet before you commence to
  wash him. A patient should never be hurried,
  but at the same time he should be washed as
  quickly and deftly as possible, as otherwise he
  will be tired before liis toilet is finished.
  
  First wash and dry the face, then the neck,
  hands, and arms. Next wash the lower limbs
  under the blanket, tucking a towel close up to
  the part that is being washed to avoid wetting
  the bed-clothes. Turn the patient towards you
  a little way to wash and rub the hip on the
  further side. Next draw the bath-towel from
  under the blanket, roll patient on his side, lay
  the bath-towel up close alongside him and
  wash the shoulders and back. The lower part
  of the back and the hips must receive special
  attention, and should be rubbed with methylated
  spirits and powdered after drying.
  
  When washing the feet, turn back the bed-
  clothes from the foot of the bed, let the patient
  draw up Ms knees, place a mackintosh and towel
  under the feet, and put the foot-bath on the
  bed. The feet can then be put right into the
  bath.
  
  When the washing is complete put on the
  patient's night-dress and replace the sheet and
  bed-spreaa. The night-dress should always be
  quite loose, so that it can be easily put on.
  In some cases it is necessary to have it opened
  up the back as far as the yoke or collar, which
  is just slipped over the head. Only one garment
  should be worn in bed, but a warm flannel bed-
  jacket should be at hand to put on if the patient
  sits up or has his arms out of bed. Long loose
  flannel jackets are the most useful, especially
  in rheumatic fever and pneumonia cases, where
  the slightest movement causes great pain.
  They should be qmte plain, the sleeves should
  be large and loose, and tied at the wrists with
  tapes.
  
  In a serious illness it is sometimes impossible
  to wash a patient properly, although the doctor
  may order frequent sponging to reduce the
  temperature. In this case a loose flannel
  jacket would be the most convenient garment to
  wear, as the removal of a tight night-sliirt would
  be too exhausting for the patient.
  
  Care of the Teeth. - In these days great atten-
  tion is being paid to the hygiene'of the mouth,
  and it is most important that a patient's teeth
  should be kept clean. With a Uttlo help he can
  often clean his own teeth, even when not able
  to sit up in bed. Place a towel under the chin,
  moisten the tooth-brush and dip it in the denti-
  frice, and hold the bottom of the soap-dish in
  position for rinsing the mouth.
  
  Wlien a patient is too iU to brush liis teeth,
  this must be done for him. A soft tooth-brush
  is the best tiling to use dipped in warm water
  
  
  554
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  witli a few drops of liquid dentifrice, a little car-
  bonate of soda, or weak Sanitas lotion. Clean
  not only the tooth and gums, but the tongue
  and roof of the mouth as well. This might
  be repeated two or three times a day.
  
  Care of the Hair. - Tliis must also have its
  duo share of attention. In a short illness the
  doily brushing and combing are generally
  suflicient, and it is easy to keep a man's head
  clean. A woman's hair should be plaited - one
  plait on each side, but if the hair is thin and
  short it is sometimes better to brush it up on to
  the top of the head. In a long illness the scalp
  should be rubbed frequently with some good
  and reliable hair-wash to keep it in good condi-
  tion. If there is much hair only half of it should
  be done at a time. A patient's hair -brush and
  comb must be kept scrupulously clean. When
  the hair itself has to be washed, spread a mackin-
  tosh and large bath -towel over the pillow.
  
  Consideration for the Invalid. - In a very
  serious case it is better to keep the patient as
  quiet as jiossible, and to allow no \dsitors, unless
  it is some one whom the patient particularly
  wishes to see. Even then the visitor should be
  warned that ho is to talk as little as possible and
  told not to speak of subjects Ukely to cause ex-
  citement. When the worst is past and during
  convalescence it often cheers a patient to see
  a few friends, but no visitor should be allowed
  to make a long stay, as even in convalescence
  a person is often so weak that over-excitement
  may mean loss of sleep - " Nature's sweet
  restorer " - which is so sorely needed after a
  serious illness.
  
  Never allow a visitor to sit on the bed. It
  shakes and irritates the patient and causes
  great discomfort, if not actual pain, and it
  makes the bed look untidy.
  
  Well-moaning people often cause trouble by
  calling to inquire after an invalid, and unless
  one can bo of real use to the patient or his friends
  it is kinder not to call until the worst is over.
  There is always extra work whore there is sick-
  ness and no one has time to talk to visitors.
  In tho case of a serious illness a daily bulletin
  might be put on the front door, and tliis will
  save not only the extra work entailed in answer-
  ing the door to callers, but, what is more im-
  portant, it will prevent the patient being dis-
  turbed by tho constant ringing of the bell. In
  fact, it is always bettor in the case of serious
  illness to put up a notice asking visitors not to
  ring, but to go round to tho back or side-door,
  where soft knocks can easily be heard by the
  servant. Of course, many small houses and
  flats have no side-door. In a case of this kind
  some plan must be thought out by tho friends
  to ensure quiet to the patient. Necessary
  noises can be borne more easily than unnecessary
  ones. Although a person may be very ill he has
  not lost all reasoning power, and he is naturally
  vexed and irritated if he thinks that people are
  
  
  not doing all that is possible to give him the
  necessary peace. Ringing of bells, banging of
  doors, and rattUng of fire-irons, crockery, or
  newspapers are unnecessary noises which should
  not be allowed. Tlie clicking of knitting-needles
  is another sound which might be annojdng to a
  patient. It is a rhytlimic sound like the ticking
  of a clock, and might even bo soothing in some
  instances, but an observant person can easily
  see what vexes and what pleases and should act
  accordingly.
  
  Then, again, do not read aloud to a patient
  unless you are quite sure he wishes it. Some
  people like being read to when they are ill ; to
  them it is soothing, while to others it is quite
  tho reverse. Of course, when a patient is very
  ill and tho temperature is high there should be
  no reading aloud, as it would cause undue ex-
  citement, and even when there is a change for
  the better it is important that the patient should
  get all the sleep he can to nuake up for past wake-
  fulness, and too much reading would serve to
  deprive him of a measure of this much-needed
  rest. Whispering is a bad habit which should
  never be permitted in the sick-room. The
  patient will wonder what is being said that he
  may not hear, and will probably come to the
  conclusion that he has some very serious
  symptoms.
  
  An Insensible Patient is like a child and is
  dependent on his nurse for everything. She
  must see that he is warm, and that his bed is
  dry. If hot bottles are necessary, they should
  be covered, as serious burns have often been
  caused through neglect in this respect.
  
  In a case of this kind the vitality is very lew,
  and persons easily get bed-sores unless the
  greatest care is taken. These can easily be
  prevented, but they are difficult to cure when
  once thoy develop. A water -pillow is valuable
  to keep the pressure off the back and hips. lu
  is also important to examine the patient about
  every two hours, and if tho draw-sheet is found
  to be wet it should bo changed, the back and hips
  washed, well dried, and rubbed with zinc oint-
  ment. The position of the patient should be
  changed frequently in order to relieve pressure
  on any particular spot. If he has been lying on
  his back for two hours he might be placed on his
  side for the next two hours, a pillow being placed
  along the back for support. This change of
  position also prevents the lungs from getting
  congested. A patient who is allowed to lie
  long on his back will often contract serious
  chest trouble. The friends at once conclude he
  has " caught a cold," and, in consequence, wish
  to close the windows, whereas tho trouble is
  due to his having been left too long in one
  position. An unconscious patient can often
  breathe better on his side, so if he can breathe
  equally well on either side he can bo turned from
  side to sido alternately and need not lie on his
  back at all.
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  555
  
  
  Nourishment must be given very slowly and
  carefully with a tea-spoon, very little being given
  at a time. The spoon should be kept in the
  mouth until the contents are gone, as it encour-
  ages the patient to swallow. Be quite sure that
  the drink is swallowed before giving more, and
  do not go on feeding if you find he cannot
  swallow, as what is given will only get into the
  air passages, and may cause suffocation. The
  head should always be turned a Uttle to one side
  for feeding, as the food is less likely to go the
  wTong way. It can be kept in position by a
  small pillow nicely adjusted, or with the nurse's
  arm passed under the pillow.
  
  Nursing an Infectious Case. - The patient must
  be isolated. A room at the top of the house
  should be prepared, and, if possible, the entire
  floor should be kept for the patient and his
  attendants. All carpets, drapery, and unneces-
  sarj"^ furniture should be taken out of the room
  before the patient is taken into it. The furni-
  ture which remains should be of the plainest
  description, and the few covers or curtains that
  are allowed should be of washing materials that
  can be well boiled. A sheet kept well saturated
  with carbolic (1 in 20) should be hung over the
  doorway outside the sick-room. The room must
  be kept scrupulously clean, and there must be
  good ventilation without draughts. Unless the
  weather is very hot there should be a fire. All
  crockery used by the patient must he kept for
  him, and should be washed in the room or in a
  room adjoining. The food should be brought
  up and placed CjI a table outside the sick-room,
  and any that is left should be burned.
  
  The patient must be washed every day, the
  greatest care being taken that he does not get
  a chill. It is important that the skin should
  act properly and so help to eUminate impurities,
  as otherwise too much work will be thrown on
  the kidneys. When the patient's linen - either
  bed or personal - is changed, the soiled articles
  must be put into a bath containing carbolic
  (1 in 20) or some Jeyes' fluid. They should
  afterwards be boiled for half-an-hour, and then
  dried in the open air.
  
  All discharges from the patient must be
  received in vessels containing a disinfectant.
  Japanese handkerchiefs, or pieces of rag which
  can be burnt should be use I in place of ordinary
  handkerchiefs.
  
  The person attending the patient should
  not mix with the other members of the family.
  She should wear a dross of washing material and
  be cai'oful to wash her hands frequently. She
  should keep her nails short and clean and should
  frequently wash her mouth with boracic lotion.
  If she goes out she should have a bath and change
  her clothes, and she ought not to enter a shop or
  any public conveyance.
  
  Before the patient joins the family he should
  have a number of hot batlis, and should be
  washed all over with carbolic (1 in 20). He
  
  
  must afterwards put on clean clothes. The
  nurse must be very thoroughly disinfected in
  the same manner. All her clothing worn in
  the sick-room must be boiled or stoved.
  
  The patient's nail-brush, tooth-brush, papers,
  &c., should all be burned. All crockery, forks,
  spoons, &c., used in the room should be well
  washed in strong disinfectant, and, if possible,
  boiled afterwards. The bedding and blankets,
  and any of the patient's garments that ceinnot be
  boiled, must be sent away to be stoved by the
  Sanitary Authorities. If carpets and woollen
  di-apery have been left in the room, they must
  bo treated in the same manner.
  
  The room must then be disinfected. All
  articles left in it should be spread out and
  well exposed - drawers and cupboards being
  left open. This disinfecting can be done by
  the Sanitary Authorities, who either fumigate
  with sulphur or spray with formalin. The room
  must remain shut up for twenty-four hours, and
  for a day or two afterwards the windows and door
  should be left wide open to allow the air to blow
  through. The room and its contents should after-
  wards be very thoroughly cleaned. All paint
  should be washed with soap and water, the ceiling
  white-washed, and the walls re-papered, the old
  paper being first stripped off and burned.
  
  To fumigate a room with sulphur the chimneys
  and windows must be closed, and all crevices
  covered with strips of brown paper. These are
  generally pasted on, but this is not necessary
  where there is varnish : the paper need only bo
  wetted and it will adhere quite well, and is
  more easily removed. Put about one pound of
  sulphur or more broken into small pieces, accord-
  ing to the size of the room, into an iron dish or
  pan. Stand this in a bath containing water,
  as a precaution against fire. Sprinkle with a
  few drops of methylated spirits and set it alight.
  Leave the room at once, close the door, and
  cover all cracks with strips of brown paper.
  
  Routine of a Day's Work. - Sometimes after
  a bad night a patient may sleep for some hours
  in the early morning. When he wakes he will
  need refreshment. If on soUd food and able
  to take ever so light a meal, he should have his
  hands and face sponged before being propped
  up to take his breakfast. If very ill he will of
  coxirse only be able to take liquid diet. The
  fireplace should be done up next and a supply
  of coals brought in for the day. While the
  servant is doing this, the nurse could take the
  opportunity of performing any duties that would
  take her out of the room. Tlie next thing
  should be the patient's toilet. After he has been
  washed, &c., the room should be put in order
  and made to look as cheerful and bright as
  possible. By this time the doctor will probably
  be due. Wlien a patient is taking solid food
  let him, if possible, have his dinner after the
  doctor has been. Tliis visit is generally an
  event which causes some excitement to thљ
  
  
  556
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  patient, and he is almost sure to hurry his dinner
  or not take it properly if he is expecting the
  doctor, and if the visit is paid in the middle of
  dinner the meal ^v^ll probably be spoiled. Tlie
  patient should be allowed to rest in the early
  afternoon, and at about foiu: he can have a cup
  of tea unless this is forbidden. In the early
  evening the temperature, &c., should be again
  taken, and the patient should have his hands
  and face sponged, and, if necessary, his back
  should be attended to. If he is allowed, he
  might sit up in a chair and have his bed made
  in the evening ; he might even be able to sit up
  for an hour or two.
  
  It is, of course, quite impossible to lay down
  any hard-and-fast rule as to what is to be done
  during the day, as so much depends upon a
  patient's condition and the special treatment
  that is ordered. In some cases one is constantly
  ha^^ng to perform special nursing duties for a
  patient, and many things may happen to make
  it impossible to do things at stated times, but
  as far as possible do everything regularly,
  whether it is giving nourishment - one of the
  most important duties in sickness - taking a
  temperature, washing the patient, or doing what-
  ever the doctor orders.
  
  . Convalescence. - Convalescence is often the
  most trying time for both patient and nurse.
  Do not think that when the worst is over there
  is no further danger. For some time afterwards
  the greatest care is needed if a patient is to re-
  gain his lost strength and not fall a victim to
  some other disease, such as phthisis, which often
  follows pneumonia, measles, typhoid, &c. The
  invalid's low condition makes him an easy
  victim to disease germs, which, like mean
  cowardly people, are always waiting to attack
  the weak. The patient will need the same care
  in feeding, and it may be necessary to take great
  pains to tempt his appetite, as he will require
  plenty of nourishment. On first getting up he
  should not be dressed, as he will be very weak
  and incUned to faint, but put on a warm dressing-
  gown and a pair of socks and wrap him well
  round in a blanket. At first he should only sit
  up for a quarter or half -an -hour, the time being
  gradually increased as ho gets stronger. Ho
  should always be in a well-ventilated room, and,
  if possible, should take rest on a balcony or in a
  garden.
  
  Friends must be admitted with caution and
  not allowed to stay too long, especially towards
  evening. Try to keep your patient cheerful
  und free from worry ; this is not always easy,
  as frequently he may be inclined to become
  irritable and very exacting. Do not, however,
  despise him for his capricious way, for his in-
  decision of character, but nurse him back to
  health with the same patience as was shown
  to him during his hours of pain.
  
  He should only be allowed to resume his
  ordinary duties gradually, and for a time should
  
  
  rest a little in the afternoon, take his breakfast
  in bed, and retire early.
  
  A change of air, to the sea or country, is
  needed after a long acute illness.
  
  FOOD
  
  There is nothing more important in an illness
  than diet, and much depends on a patient taking
  liis food properly. In this the doctor's orders
  must be strictly carried out. Many a person
  has died through improper food being given by
  foolish friends, as, for instance, solid food given to
  any one suffering from gastric trouble or typhoid
  fever.
  
  Liquid Diet. - When a patient is very ill ho is
  usually kept on a Hquid diet and milk is gener-
  ally ordered, as it contains all tho elements
  necessary to Ufe, and is easily assimilated.
  Sometimes as much as three pints of milk are
  ordered to be taken in twenty -four hours or a
  teacupful every two hours. It often happens,
  however, that a patient is unable to take as
  much as this, and when this is the case, it is
  better to let him take a smaller quantity and
  digest it rather than force him to take a larger
  quantity wliich will only cause sickness or in-
  digestion. When only a little milk can be taken
  at a time, the feeds should be more frequent.
  Four or five table spoonfuls might be given
  every hour, or even a smaller quantity every
  half-hour.
  
  Some people have a great dislike to milk and
  often cannot digest it unless diluted. This may
  be done by mixing it with soda-water, plain
  water, or thin barley-water. It is also well to
  vary a milk diet as much as possible. Sometimes
  the milk may be given hot, at other times cold,
  or it can be flavoured with a Uttle strong co3ee,
  cocoa, or else tea can be made with milk. Some-
  times for a change a patient may like Horlick's
  Malted Milk or The Allenbury Diet, or, again,
  the plain milk might be made into junket.
  
  When the digestion is very bad the doctor
  may order the milk to be peptonised. This can
  be done with Fairchild's peptonising powders,
  and the directions are found on the box con-
  taining the powders, or Benger's Food, which
  is also pre-digested, might be given for a change.
  This also must be prepared according to the
  directions given on the tin.
  
  When there is difficulty of digestion, the feeds
  should bo taken very slowly - merely sipped.
  
  In cases of extreme exhaustion more nourish-
  ment may be needed, and then eggs may be
  beaten up in the milk, or a little strong beef
  essence. Brand's essence or Panopeptin may
  bo given between the feeds.
  
  When brandy has been ordered give it in a
  little soda-water, plain water, or in a small
  quantity of milk. It should never bo put into
  a tumbierful of milk, as it will flavour the whole
  and may bo objectionable to the patient, aiid
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  557
  
  
  he would be unable to take such a large quantity.
  Brandy should not be poured out long before
  being taken, as it loses its stimulating properties
  and becomes useless.
  
  It should be remembered that beef-tea is not
  so much a food as a stimulant, and should be
  given alternately with other food. Milk can be
  given alternately with beef -tea, invalid bovril,
  veal or chicken broth, or the white of an egg
  can be lightly beaten up and given with soda-
  water or plain water.
  
  In cases where only a little is taken, give
  nourishment in a concentrated form, such as
  strong beef -essence, or Panopeptin, &c.
  
  In most cases it is a good thing to give the
  patient plenty of water, but it must not be given
  instead of nourishment. When there is great
  thirst, barley-water flavoured with lemon may
  be given
  
  Feeding a Helpless Patient. - In feeding a
  helpless patient put a table napkin under his
  chin and then place one arm under his pillow
  and gently raise liis head. Use a small teacup or
  glass for the feeds if possible, as a patient usually
  prefers this to a feeder. When the latter has
  to be used it must be most carefully washed and
  
  
  The "Ideal" Feeder.
  
  frequently scalded, as, unless great care is taken,
  some particles of food wall be left in the spout.
  The " Ideal " feeder is to be recommended, as
  it has no spout, which is an advantage.
  
  Regularity in Feeding. - When a patient is on
  fluid diet only, his feeds should be given at regular
  intervals by night as well as by day. It must
  also be remembered that his strength is at its
  lowest ebb in the early hours of the morning,
  and care should be taken that he has some
  nourishment at that time. If he is at all cold,
  give a -warm drink, and a stimulant if this has
  been prescribed. If a patient is having a good
  sleep he may sometimes be allowed to miss a
  feed, but if very exhausted he must never bo
  left too long without nourishment.
  
  Diet in Convalescence. - From fluids a patient
  goes on gradually to light solid foods. At first
  it may be that his milk or beef-tea is only
  tliickened with a Uttle arrowroot or cornflour,
  then he may have bread and milk, a lightly
  
  
  boiled or poached egg, or some milk jelly or
  pudding. After this would follow fish, either
  boiled or steamed, then chicken boiled, steamed,
  or roasted, and a little later a steamed or grilled
  chop. Always try to give the food which is most
  nutritious and most easily digested. When the
  diet is restricted prepare the foods allowed in
  the most varied ways possible.
  
  The most easily digested vegetables are
  cauliflower, chicory, spinach, boiled lettuce, sea-
  kale, and celery. Most vegetables should not
  be given at first.
  
  All fruit given should be fresh, and, as a rule,
  it is better stewed than raw. A little fresh
  cream may be given with the fruit, as this is
  a good way of supplying the invalid with fat.
  Stewed apples with cream or stewed prunes and
  cream are both very good dishes.
  
  On pp. 558-59 are given a few recipes,
  specially suited to invaUds, and many dishes
  suitable for the convalescent stage will be found
  in the "Guide to Cookery " (p. 116), while those
  who wish to study the subject more fully might
  consult a special book on invahd cookery,
  such as the " Art of Cooking for InvaUds,"
  by Florence B. Jack.
  
  As soon as solid food is allowed, the meals
  should be given regularly at the ordinary hours.
  A patient is sure to take liis food better when
  this is done. He will onty be able to take small
  meals at first, and must have good nourishing
  drinks in between. He must also be fed during
  the night. The quantity he needs will vary
  according to how much ho takes in the day, and
  whether he sleeps or not at night. If a break-
  fast-cup of milk, thin arrowroot or Benger's is
  given the last thing, and the patient sleeps well,
  he may not need feeding again until the early
  morning, but if he is wakeful and does not take
  food well, ho will need nourishment every two or
  three hours. It is most important that a patient
  should take his food well in the eeirly stages of
  convalescence.
  
  Preparation of the Meal. - Whatever food is
  given should be the best of its kind, and never
  stale or tainted in any way. It is also im-
  portant to have it well cooked, and all utensils
  used must be kept scrupulously clean. The
  cooking should not be done in the invalid's room,
  as the smell of the food would be sure to spoil
  his appetite.
  
  Never ask a patient what he would like, but
  find out what his tastes are in some other way
  and indulge them as fai" as possible, always
  providing that they do not incline toward&
  prohibited articles of diet.
  
  A bad appetite can often bo stimulated with
  a tasty little meal that comes as a surprise.
  The meal must also bo daintily served. Always
  have a perfectly clean and pretty tray-cloth,
  and use nice bright glass, china, silver and
  cutlery. If there is a garden from which a fresh
  supply of flowers may be had, a small bunch of
  
  
  558
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  freshly gathered flowers or even a single sweet-
  smelling bloom might be placed on the tray.
  Take care that a hot meal is really hot, and also
  have the plates properly warmed.
  
  Do not give a patient too much at a time ; a
  piled-up plateful might set him against the food,
  whilst a second helping can easily be given.
  
  \Vlien a meal is to be served, have the patient
  comfortably propped up beforehand, and see
  that he has on a warm bed-jacket or other wrap.
  A jacket is always better than a shawl.
  
  Keeping the Food. - Never keep food in the
  sick-room if you can help it, but, if possible, put
  it in a cool larder, only taking enough in tho
  room for immediate use. At night when it may
  not be possible to leave tho room, the nourish-
  ments might be placed on a little table outside
  the door on the landing and near an open
  •window if convenient. Only hght nourishment
  is given at night, and jugs of beef-tea or milk
  may be kept outside on the window-ledge if the
  weather allows. The jugs must then be covered
  with clean musKn - a large bead on each corner
  will generally serve to keep a piece of muslin
  in position, but if the wind is high or there is
  danger of dust and smuts, small plates or
  saucers will be better.
  
  Beef Juice
  
  Ingredients. - From 4 to 6 oz. lean juicy
  beef - salt.
  
  Method. - Clioose a piece of beef from the
  rump or upper part of the round and see that
  it is freshly cut. Remove all fat, broil the meat
  quickly on both sides for one or two minutes
  to set the juice free. Tlien cut it in strips and
  squeeze out the juice with a lemon-squeezer
  or vegetable -presser into a warm cup. Add
  salt if necessary, and serve at once, as it does not
  keep well.
  
  Beef-Tea
  
  Ingredients -
  
  } lb. lean, juicy Beef. I A pinch of Salt.
  
  I pint Cold Water. I
  
  Melhod. - Wipe the meat with a damp cloth
  to make sure of its being quite clean.
  
  Then place on a board, and with a sharp knife
  scrape or shred down as finely as possible, keep-
  ing back any pieces of fat and skin.
  
  Put it into a ba.sin with the salt and water,
  stir it well up, cover tho basin with a plate, and,
  if time permits, let it stand for half -an hour.
  
  Then pour all into a clean lined saucepan,
  place the pan over rather a slow fire, and, with
  two forks placed back to back, whisk it well
  until it almost reaches boiling point. Tlien
  draw the ]ian to the side of the fire, put on the
  lid, and allow the beef-tea to simmer as slowly
  as possible from ten to twelve minutes.
  
  Strain and remove the fat from the top with
  a piece of paper.
  
  
  Steamed Fish
  Ingredients -
  
  1 filleted Haddock, Whiting,
  
  or Sole.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  A pinch of White Pepper.
  
  A little Butter.
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  
  
  Method. - Cut the fish into neat pieces and
  place them on a greased plate.
  
  Sprinkle with a little salt and white pepper, if
  it is allowed, and squeeze over some lemon juioe,
  which helps to keep the fish firm and white, and
  also aids digestion. Cover the fish with a piece
  of greased white paper and then with a lid or
  basin. Place this over a pan half full of boiling
  water, and cook from twenty to thirty minutes,
  until the fish loses its clear, transparent appear-
  ance, and looks quite white. If the pieces are
  thick it will be better to turn them once dvu-ing
  cooking. The liquid that is on the plate when
  the fish is cooked is the juice from the fish, and
  should be served with it.
  
  This is the lightest and simplest mode of
  cooking fish for an invalid.
  
  Sometimes a white sauce is made (see p. 146)
  and poured over it. The liquid in this case
  should be added to the sauce.
  
  Stewed Fish
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 filleted Fish- Whiting,
  Haddock, Sole, or Plaice.
  1 table-sp. Bread-crumbs.
  i gill Cold Water.
  1 gill Milk.
  
  
  i oz. Butter.
  
  1 tea-spoonful
  
  Parsley.
  White Pepper
  Salt.
  
  
  chopped
  
  
  Method. - Wipe the fish with a damp cloth,
  and cut it into small, neat pieces. Take a clein
  lined saucepan, rinse it out with water to prevent
  the fish sticking to it, and place the pieces of fish
  at the foot. Sprinkle over them a little salt and
  white pepper, pour on the milk and water ; put
  the lid on the pan, and let the fish cook slowly
  by the side of the fire until it is ready, which
  will bo from ten to fifteen minutes. Lift out the
  pieces of fish on to tho plate on which they have
  to bo served, and keep them hot. Add the
  bread-crumbs and tho butter to the water and
  milk in tho pan ; stir over the fire for a few
  minutes until the bread-crumbs swell and thicken
  tho sauce. Sprinkle in the parsley, finely
  chopped, and then pour tliis sauce over the fish.
  
  Chicken or Veal Panada
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. breast of Chicken, or
  
  J lb. fillet of Veal.
  1 tea-spoonful Cold Water.
  
  Method. - Wipe tho meat, and cut it into small
  pieces, free from fat and skin. Put it into a cup
  or small basin, with a pinch of salt and the cold
  water ; tie over it a piece of greased white paper,
  and steam slowly from one to one and a half
  hours. Then lift out, and put the contents of
  
  
  1 or 2 table-sp. Cream.
  A pinch of Salt.
  
  
  HOME NURSING Al^D" FIRST AID"
  
  
  559
  
  
  the basin into a mortar ; pound well, and rub
  through a fine wire sieve. Put the sieved
  mixture into a pan, add the cream, and heat
  through. This may be served on a piece of
  toast, or even cold. If considered too rich, use
  a little more water in the cooking, and omit the
  cream.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  1 Pigeon.
  J oz. Butter.
  J pint Stock.
  
  
  Stewed Pigeon
  
  
  I tea-spoonful Flour.
  Pepper and Salt.
  A slice Toast.
  
  
  Method. - Prepare and truss the pigeon as for
  roasting, and coat it over with the flour. Melt
  the butter in a small stewpan and, when smoking
  hot, put in the pigeon, and brown it on all sides.
  Then lift it on to a plate, and pour away all the
  grease that is left in the pan. Pour in the stock,
  and, wheii warm, return the pigeon.
  
  Put the lid on the pan, and allow the bird to
  stew very gently from one to two hours, accord-
  ing to age and size. When quite tender lift it
  out on to a neat square of toast, and remove the
  trussing string from it.
  
  Reduce the gravy in the pan by allowing it to
  boil quickly without the lid, until there is just
  enough left for serving. Keep it well skimmed,
  that it may be quite free from grease, and then
  pour it round the pigeon.
  
  Garnish with a sprig of parsley or a little
  water-cress.
  
  Raw Beef Sandwiches
  
  Take two ounce of lean, juicy beef. Wipe it
  with a cloth, and with a sharp knife shred it
  down as finely as you would for beef -tea. Pound
  this in a mortar, with any seasoning that may
  be allowed, and rub through a fine wire sieve.
  Spread between thin slices of bread, with a Uttle
  butter on it, if it is allowed, and cut it into neat
  strips.
  
  Those sandwiches are generally ordered for
  special cases.
  
  A Cup of Arrowroot
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J oz. Arrowroot. I 1 tea-spoonful of Sugar,
  
  i pint of Cold Water. |
  
  Method. - Put the arrowroot into a small basin,
  add to it a table-spoonful of the cold water, and
  break it with a wooden spoon until qviite smooth.
  Then pour on the rest of the water, mix wcl',
  and pour into a small lined saucepan. Stir this
  over the fire until it boils and thickens, and then
  let it boil from seven to ton minutes longer, to
  thoroughly cook the arrowroot. Sweeten to
  tast", and serve in a cup or small basin.
  
  A little nutmeg may bo grated over the top of
  it, and wine or cream added a? wished.
  
  Note. - ^]\Iilk may bo used instead of water.
  
  
  Tapioca Pudding
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J oz. Tapioca. 1 tea-spoonful Sugar.
  
  J pint Cold Milk. Flavouring (if wished).
  
  lEgg.
  
  Method. - Put the tapioca into a basin, and
  pour the milk on to it. Cover the basin, and
  let the tapioca soak about an hour. Rinse out
  a small hned saucepan, turn the tapioca and milk
  into it, and stir over the fire until it comes to the
  boil. Then simmer slowly until it turns quite
  clear, stirring it every now and then. The time
  will vary from twenty to thirty minutes, accord-
  ing to the size of the tapioca used. If it becomes
  too thick whilst cooking, add a httle more milk.
  When ready, remove the pan from the fire, and
  sweeten and flavour to taste. After it has cooled
  a little, stir in the yolk of egg, and lastly the
  white, beaten to a stiff froth. Pour the mixture
  into a small greased pie-dish, wiping round the
  edges of the dish. Bake in a moderate oven
  until nicely browned. Sprinkle with sugar and
  serve at once.
  
  Note. - Sago pudding may be made in the
  same way.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  2 baked Apples.
  J gill of Double Cream.
  
  
  Apple Cream
  
  
  A squeeze of Lemon Juice.
  Sugar to taste.
  
  
  Method. - Remove the pulp from two baked
  apples, and rub it through a fine wire or hair
  sieve, scraping the sieve well underneath. Put
  the pulp into a basin, add to it the cream, a
  squeeze of lemon juice, and sweeten to taste
  with castor sugar. Beat this well for a few
  minutes and serve in a small glass dish.
  
  
  Egg Drink
  
  
  1 table-sp. Sherry.
  1 teacupful of Milk.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  
  lEgg.
  
  1 tea-spoonful Sugar.
  
  Method. - Break the egg and remove the speck.
  Add to it the wine and sugar, and beat together
  with a fork, but do not make them too frothy.
  Heat the milk in a small saucepan, and, when
  almost boiling, pour it on to the egg, &c., stirring
  all the time. Serve hot.
  
  Note. - The wine may be omitted. The yolk
  of egg only may be used, and soda-water instead
  of milk.
  
  Oatmeal Gruel
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 table- spoonful fine Oat- I J pint Cold Water,
  meal. I Salt or Sugar.
  
  Method. - Put the oatmeal into a clean basin
  and pour the water over it. Cover the basin
  and let it stand for at least half-an-hour, stirring
  occasionally. Tlien strain the liquid off into a
  small lined saucepan, and press the oatmeal as
  
  
  560
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  dry as possible. Stu- over the fire until boiling,
  and boil from five to seven minutes. The thick-
  ness of the gruel is very much a matter of taste ;
  if too thick, more water can be added ; or if too
  thin, use more oatmeal. Season to taste with
  salt or sug6ir. .
  
  A small piece of butter may be added and wine
  or brandy if required. Serve very hot. Milk
  may be used instead of water.
  
  SPECIAL APPLIANCES
  
  A Bed-Cradle.- When the weight of the bed-
  clothes has to be kept off the patient, a " cradle "
  is needed. This may be bought for 4s. or 53.,
  or, if only for temporary use, one may be easily
  improvised. When required
  to go over the body, it can
  be made from an ordinary
  wooden hoop of a con-
  venient size. Cut the hoop
  in two and place the two
  arches thus formed side by
  side about half a yard apart.
  Join them together at the
  top with a piece of wood
  across the centre and at the bottom with a piece
  •of wood on either side. Or another way is to
  make the two halves of the hoop cross each
  other, joining them in the middle with a nail.
  If the " cradle " is only needed to protect an in-
  jured limb, an ordinary kitchen-stool or a strong
  bandbox with the lid and bottom removed can
  be matle to answer the purpose. Whenever a
  ♦' cradle " is used, the part it protects must be
  covered (under the cradle) with a small Ught
  blanket or a piece of flannel.
  
  A Bed-Rest is a contrivance for supporting
  a patient's head and back when he is sitting
  
  
  Bed-Cradle.
  
  
  a chair on its side with the back towards the
  patient. Pillows must, of course, bo placed
  between the patient and the bed-rest.
  
  A Bed-Table. - This is convenient to put in
  front of a patient when he takes liis meals in
  
  
  Bed-Eest.
  
  up in bed. Thnre are several different kinds.
  Those with an iron frame painted white wth
  white canvas laced in are good, as they can bo
  easily washed and kept clean. Or a wooden one
  with a cane centre is comfortable and easily
  adjusted. A bed-rest can also be improvised
  if it is only required for a short time by placing
  
  
  Bed-Table.
  
  bed, and it is also useful for holding a book
  or writing materials during convalescence. TTie
  simplest kind is made hke a tray on four legs
  hollowed out a Uttle in front. Another but moro
  expensive table stands on the floor and has a
  
  
  Table with Revolving Top.
  
  revohang top which can be turned round in
  front of the patient when required.
  
  A Pulley is useful in helping a patient to raise
  himself. One can be made with a stout piece oi
  rope attached to a strong screw in the ceiling.
  To the lower end of the rope a bar of wood should
  be attached for the patient to grasp when he
  wishes to hft himself. A roller towel fastened
  to the foot of the bed can also bo made to do
  duty as a pulley. .
  
  Hot- water Bottles are frequently needed in
  illness. There are several different kiuds. The
  stone ones are cheapest, but india-rubber ones
  are much more comfortable, while those made
  of tin and copper will keep hot tho longest. An
  india-rubber bottle is useful in applying heat to
  almost any part of the body, and it can even be
  used instead of a poultice. If it is put over the
  patient, it must not be filled too full, or it will
  be too hcavv. When not in use, the india-
  rubber bottle' should be filled with air- it is leas
  hkely to perish when this is done. Great care
  should be taken that screws or corks are quite
  Eocuro, and all hot-water bottles should have
  flannel covers.
  
  Bed-pans.- These are used for patients who
  are unable to get out of bed. Tho most ordinary
  shapes are the round and the slipper, and they
  may be had either in enamelled tin or stone-
  ware. The round one is easily passed under the
  patient when the body is slightly raised, men
  the slipper is given, the patient's knees should bo
  
  
  HOME NURSIKG AND "FIKST AID"
  
  
  561
  
  
  drawn up, when the tliin end of the slipper can
  be gently passed under the back. Care should
  be taken to warm the bed-pan before administer-
  ing it, either with hot water or before the fire.
  If the patient is thin, a little pad of flannel or
  cotton wool should be put on the edge to prevent
  pressiu^e. In giving a bed-pan a nurse should
  pass her free hand under the patient's back to
  raise him. If the patient is very heavy and
  helpless, two people are needed - one to raise
  him and the other to pass the bed-pan. Never
  use a bed-pan on which the enamel is worn, nor
  one made of ware which is cracked, as both might
  cause serious injuries. The india-rubber bed-
  pan, which is also an air-cushion, is very viseful
  where there is incontinence. It is very com-
  fortable, and can be left under patient for any
  length of time. It must, of course, be emptied
  when necessary, care being taken not to spill
  the contents. The receiver part should be lined
  with a piece of soft, but strong, paper before it
  is put into position, as it is much more easily
  emptied when this is done.
  
  Enemata. - An enema is often ordered when
  there is constipation, or when it is necessary to
  empty the lower bowel. It is usuallj' given
  with a Higginson's syringe. This is a tube
  with a bulb in the middle
  which acts as a pump.
  At one end there is a bone
  no:5Zile wliich has to be
  passed into the rectum ;
  at the other end there is
  a piece of metal which
  acts as a valve. The metal
  end is put into the basin
  of fluid which is to bo
  injected ; the ball in the centre is squeezed,
  the water is drawn up and is passed into the
  bowel.
  
  Before inserting the nozzle be sure to expel
  all air from the syringe. To do this put both
  ends of the syringe into the fluid, and squeeze
  the bulb a number of times, until there are no
  bubbles in the water. If air is injected into the
  bowel, it will not only cause pain and discom-
  fort, but will probably cause the fluid to bo
  returned. When an enema has to be given, the
  patient should be placed on his left side with the
  knees drawn up. In case oi accidents it is well
  to put a mackintosh covered with a towel under
  the pelvis. Wliere a patient is in a very feeble
  condition, and there is likely to bo difficulty
  in retaining the injection, the pillow should be
  taken from under the head and placed under the
  thighs. Sometimes the patient cannot be turned,
  and the enema has to be given as he lies on his
  back. In a case of this kind, place the bed-pan
  in position before commencing to give the enema.
  A patient should always bo told to do his best
  to retain the enema while it is being given, and
  for a few minutc^s afterwards. Tlio nozzle must
  always be smeared with vaseline before use.
  
  
  Higginson's Syringe,
  
  
  It is not always easy to pass it into the rectum,
  but force should never be used. It should be
  passed slowly and gently. The fluid should be
  injected very slowly, as it is then much more
  likely to be retained. Sometimes there seems
  to be a resistance in the bowel, and the fluid
  cannot bo passed in ; in this case withdraw the
  nozzle, squeeze the bulb, and re-insert the nozzle.
  Always keep the metal end of the syringe under
  the water in the bowl. For this reason a little
  more fluid should be mixed than is required.
  If the metal end is uncovered, air will enter
  the syringe. If this should happen by accident,
  then the nozzle must be withdrawn, both ends
  of syringe must be put in the fluid, and the
  syringe refilled. The nozzle has again to be
  inserted and the remainder of the fluid injected.
  Of course, an enema should only be given when
  ordered by the doctor, and when an amateur nixrse
  is in attendance he would naturally give very
  minute instructions and be willing to give all the
  information desired.
  
  The most ordinary enema is soap and water.
  About a quart is usually given to a grown-up
  person ; children are given about one pint, and a
  small infant would only be given an ounce.
  To make a soap and water enema take a piece of
  soft soap about the size of a hazel nut, pour on
  boiling water and stir well until the soap has
  dissolved. Cold water must be added until
  the water is the right heat - 100№ Fahr. The best
  plain yellow soap may be used instead of soft
  soap.
  
  Turpentine Enema. - This is prepared by
  adding from half an ounce to an ounce (one or
  two table-spoonfuls) of turpentine to a pint of
  soap and water, barley-water, or thin gruel,
  according to the doctor's order. Turpentine
  mixes best with thin gruel, but whatever is used
  great care should be taken that the turpentine is
  well mixed.
  
  A Salt Enema is made by adding a table-spoon-
  fvil of salt to a pint of thin gruel or water ; the
  latter is generally used.
  
  Castor oil Enema. - Mix two table-spoonfuls of
  the oil with a pint of soap and water.
  
  Olive oil Enema may be mixed in the same
  way, or the oil may be injected first and followed
  up with soap and water. It is sometimes a good
  plan to inject the olive oil (about eight table-
  spoonfuls) at night, and if the patient lies on his
  right side it can bo retained without discomfort.
  The oil softens the fseccs, and w hen a soap enema
  is given in the mornmg there should bo a good
  result. Tlio olive oil can be warmed by standing
  tho vessel containing it in a larger one of hot
  water for a few minutes. It should be about
  blood heat. A small sjTingo might be used.
  
  Starch and Opium Enema. - A half to a tea-
  spoonful of laudanum is mixed with eight table-
  spoonfuls of thin starch. Tliis injection is in-
  tended to bo retained, and should be given
  cool. Sometimes raw starch is ordered. This
  
  2n
  
  
  o62
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  is frequently given with a ball syringe. To 611
  the ball sjTinge, squeeze the ball in the palm of
  the hand, put the point of the nozzle into the
  fluid, then gradually loosen tho ball. In this
  way the syringe is filled. Tlic nozzle is injected
  as far as it will go, and tho ball gradually com-
  pressed until it is empty. The ball must remain
  compressed until the nozzle has been withdrawn ;
  if it is loosened beforehand, some of the fluid
  will be drawn back into the s>Tinge.
  
  Glycerine Enema. - Pour from a tea-spoonful
  to a table-spoonful of glycerine into a sniall
  vessel and stand it in a larger one containing
  warm water for two or three minutes to
  take off the cliiU. There are special glycerine
  syringes, but a small ordinary glass one answers
  
  
  Glass Syringe.
  
  the purpose quite well. Fill the syringe with
  glycerine, and then expel the air by holding tho
  syringe with its point uppermost and gently
  pushing up the piston until tho glycerine reaches
  the point of the syringe. Sometimes a glycerine
  suppository is ordered. It is cone-shaped and
  , easily given.
  
  Natrient Enemata. - It is necessary in certam
  diseases of the stomach, or after an operation,
  or when there is vomiting and food cannot be
  taken by the mouth, to give nourishment by the
  rectum. The fluid given should be about the
  consistency of cream, and may be composed of
  strong beef -tea, milk, beaten-up eggs, Benger's
  Food, Horlick's Malted Milk, or whatever tho
  doctor orders. As the food will not pass tlirough
  the stomach, it should be artificially digested
  before being given, as it is then more easily
  absorbed. It can bo peptonisod or artificially
  digested with liq. pancreaticus (Benger's) or
  with Fairchild's peptonising powders. Failing
  these a pinch of salt should be used to each
  feed.
  
  For injecting food it is best to use tubing and
  . a glass funnel. Have two feet of soft india-
  rubber tubing and attach it at one end to a glass
  funnel. Tho other end is joined by means of a
  small glass tube to a soft india-rubber catheter
  
  
  Tube with Glass FunneL
  
  -  the purpose, but the longer length of tubing is
  more convenient. Have the nutriment ready
  in a cup or small jug and at a temperature of
  
  
  about 99№ Falir. Put the funnel, tubing, &0.,
  into a basin of warm water and bring all to tho
  bedside. Then remove the apf)liance from the
  water, smear the catheter with vaseline and
  insert slowly and gently into tho rectum about
  five inches. Pinch the tubing just below the
  funnel and pour in the nutrient, then gradually
  drop by drop let it escape into the tube. Not
  less than ten minutes should be allowed for
  giving the above quantity, and longer if more
  is ordered. A trained nurse would be able to
  give the enen\ata without assistance, but an
  amateur would be glad to have some one to
  povu' in the fluid for her. The patient must bo
  kept in the same position and quite still for
  some time after hav-ing a nutrient enema.
  It should be given about every four hours - not
  oftener.
  
  When a patient is being fed by the rectum he
  should be given a soap and water or plain water
  enema every morning. This is necessary to
  keep the lower bowel free from debris. The
  nutrient injection must not be given until a
  good half-hour after the enema. Tubings,
  nozzles, catheters, and funnels should always be
  boiled for a quarter of an ho\ir after use. A
  Higginson's syringe can be cleansed by syringing
  hot water through it. A very good one can be
  boiled, but an inferior one would probably spoil
  in the process. When not in use tho syringe
  should be oiled and hung up by a piece of string
  attached to the metal end.
  
  Saline Injection. - This is sometimes ordered
  in cases of collapse. Allow a tea-spoonful of
  salt to a pint of water - temperature 100№ Fahr.
  Tliis is best given with the funnel and tubing,
  but could bo given with a Higginson's syringe,
  when a glass funnel is not procurable. The out-
  side of an ordinary glass sj-ringe will answer the
  
  purpose, and the tubing of a
  
  iDabies' feeding-bottle can bo
  
  made to take the place of
  
  catheter and tubing.
  
  Inhalations. - Sometimes a
  
  doctor will order certain drugs
  
  to be inhaled. The inhaler,
  
  which can be piorchased at a
  
  chemist's, is filled with boiUng
  
  water and the drug added. A
  
  jug can also be made to answer
  
  the purpose. A towel should
  
  be wrapped round and made to
  
  cover all the top except the spout from which
  
  the stoam escapes.
  
  Applied Steam.- When it is necessary for the
  
  .vir to bo warm and moist a steam -kettle and tent
  
  may bo ordered. A tent can bo improvised with
  
  a clothes-horse and sheets. Tlie top and three
  
  sides of the bed should be covered in. When a
  
  clothes-horse is not at hand, a long broom-stick
  
  can be fixed to each corner of the bedstead to
  
  make a framework for the tent. Care should
  
  be taken that the air of the room is very fresh.
  
  
  Inhaler.
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  563
  
  
  as steam tents are apt to get " stuffy." The
  kettle should be placed just outside the tent
  and the steam directed towards the patient by
  means of a long spout, care being taken that the
  steam does not go too near the face. If the fire-
  place is conveniently near the tent, the kettle
  can be kept boiling on the fire ; if not, a spirit
  
  
  Steam-Eettle.
  
  or oil-stov"> must be used. Special steam -kettles
  can be bought, or a long spout to fix on to an
  ordinary kettle can be obtained for fourpence
  or sixpence. A long spout can also be im-
  provised with brown paper in an emergency,
  but this soon softens with the steam, and has
  to be frequently renewed.
  
  Spit-Cups. - ^Vhen there is expectoration a
  spit-cup is needed. Tliose
  with adjustable tops are the
  best. Some disinfectant should
  always be put into them, as
  this prevents the sputum from
  getting dry. If there is no
  disinfectant at hand or if the
  smell is objected to, strong
  soda-water can be used. Tlio
  cup must be kept scrupulously clean.
  
  
  Spit-Cup.
  
  
  THE TEMPERATURE, PULSE, AND
  RESPIRATION
  
  In illness it is most important to ascertain the
  temperature of the body. This is taken by a
  small glass clinical thermometer which is self-
  
  
  E
  
  
  1.V.I i.i..t...i ^-A..\...i'u...r
  
  
  Clinical Thermometer.
  
  registering. The mercury should always be
  shaken down before use. It registers quickest
  in the mouth and should be put under the
  tongue. If a patient is unconscious it can bo
  taken in the axilla, which must first be wiped
  dry, and the arm should be held close to the
  body, as otherwise the thermometer might slip
  out of position and fail to register properly.
  In children the temperature is best taken in the
  axilla or groin. It is lowest at about four in the
  morning and highest between six and eight in
  the evening. In some cases it is only necessary
  to take it twice a day - morning and evening.
  In very serious cases it should bo taken every
  four hoiu-s, and sometin es oftener. The normal
  temperatia-e is 98-4" F., and anything much above
  
  
  or below that indicates illness. In rheumatic
  fever, typhoid fever, and pneiimonia the tempera-
  ture will sometimes rise to 105№ F. and 106№ F.,
  and unless means are taken to reduce it, it may
  go up to 108№ F. or even 110№ F. In cases of
  this kind very prompt measures have to be
  taken. Always cleanse a thermom.eter -well
  after use. It should be washed in (1 to 20)
  carbolic if it is being used for more than one
  patient. A patient suffering from phthisis
  should always have a thermometer kept speci-
  ally for him.
  
  The normal pulse rate in an adult is from
  70 to 80 per minute. It is much quicker in
  cliildren. In illness it is often very quick, and
  in some cases goes up to 180. Always use a
  watch with a seconds hand when taking a
  pulse and count for a full minute. Note if it
  is feeble, irregular, or bounding. With a high
  temperature there is usually a quick pulse ;
  a very qmck pulse with a sub-normal tempera-
  ture is a bad symptom ; it means that the
  patient is becoming collapsed.
  
  The normal respiration is from 18 to 20 per
  nunute. In a long and serious illness it is a
  good plan to register the temperature, pulse, and
  respiration on a chart.
  
  MEDICINES
  
  Care aud Administration. - The medicines
  should be kept on a little tray and always away
  from liniment bottles. Keep them well corked.
  In giving medicine, shake the bottle and read
  the directions carefully, no matter how many
  times you have given the medicine. Pour it
  out from the side not labelled, as otherwise
  some drops maj' run down and make it im-
  possible to read the directions. As far as
  possible give the doses regularly and at the
  tiines stated. Measure in a proper medicine
  glass, and when drops are ordered use a minim
  glass. If medicine is ordered to be taken after
  
  
  [-60
  5- SO
  .♦o
  F-so
  - ae
  =- |0
  
  
  Medicine Glass.
  
  
  Minim Glass.
  
  
  food be sure you give it after, and if before food
  then give it before, otherwise it will not have
  the desired effect. If for any reason a dose has
  to be missed, do not give a double dose on the
  next occasion. Wash and dry the medicine
  glass after use.
  
  Castor oil can be given in a little hot coffee.
  Pour a little coffee in the medicine glass, then
  the castor oil, and then a little more coffee. It
  can bo given in the same way with orange or
  lemon juice or with brandy. If given in milk
  
  
  564
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  it should be well beaten up. Cod-liver oil can
  be taken in the same way. A little salt taken
  afterwards will help to get rid of the taste.
  Keep a separate glass or cup for giving oils, and
  wipe it afterwards with a bit of old linen. Then
  wash bv itself in a little very hot water.
  
  Salts', which must always be well mixed, are
  given in a small quantity of hot water before
  breakfast, one or two table-spoonfuls being the
  dose. Pills, if they cannot be swallowed, may
  be put inside bread or jam. Pills are generally
  given at night. Powders may be mixed with
  butter or jam, or put in a little milk. They are
  sometimes put inside little cachets of wafer
  paper.
  
  VVhen a sleeping draught is ordered, settle
  the patient for the night before giving it, and
  see that the house is quiet afterwards.
  
  
  Liquid Measure
  
  
  1 drop
  
  1 tea-spoonlul
  
  1 dessert-spoonful
  
  1 table-spoonful
  
  2 table-spoonfuls
  1 wineglassful
  
  1 teacupful
  
  1 breakfast-cupful
  
  
  1 Minim.
  
  1 Drachm.
  
  2 Drachms.
  
  4 Drachms or J oz.
  1 oz.
  
  About 2 oz.
  4 to 5 oz.
  About 8 oz.
  
  
  BATHS
  
  
  Special baths arc sometimes ordered in cases
  of illness, and they must be given with great
  exactitude.
  
  The following are the rules as regards tempera-
  ture : -
  
  Cold Bath should be 33№ to 65№ F.
  
  Cool Bath " 65' to 80№ F.
  
  Tepid Bath " 80№ to 90№ F.
  
  Warm Bath " 90№ to 100' F.
  
  Hot Bath " 100' to 112№ F.
  
  Before giving a bath see that the room is
  warm, and close the window for the time being.
  Have ready a bath thermometer, hot blankets,
  towels, and hot bottles or bricks. When a bath
  is ordered, it is easily given if the patient can
  step in with a little assistance ; if he is too ill
  to do this, the bath is generally given under the
  doctor's special direction or by a skilled nurse,
  m the lifting is a very difficult matter for the
  amateur. He should be well dried with a hot
  towel, and a warm flannel nightgown should bo
  slipped on as quickly as possible. He should
  then be wrapped in a warm blanket and put back
  to bed with hot bottles, placing them over the
  blanket which is covering him. Then give a
  hot drink. The u.ses of a hot bath are various ;
  it is given to relievo pain and to induce per-
  spiration. A patient should be carefully watched
  while in a hot bath, as he may become faint.
  Great care should be taken that he does not get
  a chill. Ho should remain in the bath about
  twenty minutes.
  
  
  Mustard Foot-Bath. - Use from one to two
  ounces of mustard to a gallon of hot water.
  Mix the mustard first in a little cold water and
  add it to the bath. Keep the feet in until the
  skin has reddened. A hot bottle should be put
  to the feet afterwards. This foot-bath can
  easilj' bo given in bed. (See " Patient's Toilet.")
  Soda Bath. - Dissolve from a quarter to half a
  poimd of soda in a full-sized bath.
  
  The Sulphur Bath. - Dissolve four ounces of
  sulphurate of potash in thirty gallons of water.
  It should be made weaker for children.
  
  Hot Air and Vapour Baths. - A special apparatus
  can be bought for giving a hot-air bath, or it can
  be given with an Allen's steam-kettle with the
  boiier removed. Have a blanket at the bottom
  of the bed. Take off the patient's nightgown,
  and wrap liim loosely in a small blanket. Put a
  mackintosh under him, then place a cradle over
  him, and put a mackintosh over the cradk
  Remove the ordinary bed-clothes and put hot
  blankets over the mackintosh. See that the
  patient is entirely covered except his face. The
  lamp is next Ughted and placed on a stool at the
  foot of the bed. The tube from the lamp is
  passed under the cradle, care being taken that it
  does not touch the patient, or he may be badly
  burned. Tlie blankets must bo tucked in well
  all round the bed, and must fit up closely to the
  tube so that the hot air does not escape or the
  cold au- enter. A thermometer should be hung
  up inside the cradle to measure tlie temperature,
  which should be from 110№ to ISO"" F. Give hot
  drinks, or, if the patient is very thirsty, he may
  have a cold drink of lemon water - either hot or
  cold drinks may help him to perspire. Tlie
  drinks must be given as ho lies in bed - ^he must
  not sit up or take his arms out of bed. At the
  end of twenty minutes remove the lamp and
  slip out the mackintoshes and cradle. Leave
  him wrapped in his blanket for about n.i
  hour. Then rub him down quickly with hot
  towels, remove the blanket in which he has been
  wrapped and the others if damp. Wrap him in
  a warm flannel gown and put a hot bottle to his
  feet. The ordinary bed-clothes can be put back,
  but the patient must have blankets next him.
  
  A Vapour Bath can be given in the same way
  as above, but in this case use a steam-kettle.
  Moist heat cannot bo borne over 100№ F. to 110№ F.
  These baths are usually given in cases of neph-
  ritis, inflammation of the kidney, and in rheu-
  matism. In both cases the patient should always
  wear flannel nightgowns and bo kept between
  blankets. When a patient can sit up, a hot-air
  or vapour bath can be given as ho sits in a cane-
  bottomed chair with blankets wrapped round
  him, a lamp being placed underneath the chair.
  Or a vapour bath can be given by putting a
  bucket of hot water under the chair.
  
  Hot Pack. - Tliis is ordered to induce perspira-
  tion. Place a small light blanket rolled up
  lenethwise in a bath, pour boiling water over it,
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  ObO
  
  
  and wring out as hot as possible. It is better
  for two people to do tho wringing. Have the
  patient on liis side, place the rolled part of the
  blanket close to his back. Roll him gently over
  and envelop him entirely in the blanket with
  the exception of the face and head. Cover with
  a hot dry blanket, on the outside of which
  place hot bottles. Put on more warm blankets
  and give warm drinks. At the end of twenty
  minutes remove the wet blanket, dry the patient
  with warm towels, change any blankets that are
  damp, putting in fresh warm ones, and then put
  the patient into a warm flannel night-dress. He
  should be left for a time rolled in a warm blanket
  under the bed-clothes, and fresh hot bottles
  should be put in.
  
  Cold Pack. - Proceed as for the hot pack, but
  instead of the hot blanket use a sheet wrung out
  of iced water. Spread another sheet over the
  patient and rub this down with pieces of ice
  to keep it cool. Take temperature frequently.
  The patient may remain in this about twenty
  minutes unless he shows signs of collapse. Ho
  should then be dried, and the wet sheets and
  mackintosh removed. Then wrap hin\ in a
  warm blanket and put a hot bottle to the feet
  if they are cold. The gi'eatest care must be
  taken, and the treatiuent must always be
  stopped if the patient shivers or becomes blue.
  The ice may be omitted.
  
  Cold or Tepid Sponging. - This is often ordered
  to reduce the temperatiire. Remove the night-
  gown and protect the bed with a bath-towel
  or blanket. Cover the patient with a blanket.
  Take a large sponge and sponge the whole body
  and limbs with long steady strokes from the top
  downwards. Turn the patient gently on his
  side for the back to be sponged. The sponging
  which is done under the blanket should be
  continued for about twenty minutes, when the
  temperature should be taken. If the patient
  perspires very freelj' afterwards, care must be
  taken to avoid a chill. It is a good plan to put
  hot bottles to the feet while sponging. Hot
  sponging will often reduce the temperature
  equally well, and is more comforting to the
  patient.
  
  POULTICES AND FOMENTATIONS, &c.
  
  A Linseed Poultice. - Have ready a piece of
  flannel the size required, and a basin and broad
  knife for mixing. Put the knife into the basin
  and pour over boiling water to heat them.
  Empty the water and pour in sufficient boiling
  water for the poultice. Add enough linseed to
  make the poultice of the right consistency, and
  
  '[ beat until it no longer adheres to the basin. If
  too wet it will scald, and if too dry it will not be
  sufficiently hot. Turn the mixture on to the
  flannel and spread quickly \n-ith the knife to
  about three-quarters of sn inch in thickness,
  
  ■ cover with musUn, and turn the edges of the
  
  
  flannel over to make the poultice neat. Cover
  with cotton wool and bandage if necessary to
  keep it in position. Brown paper or muslin may
  be used instead of flannel.
  
  A Jacket Poultice. - This is intended to go
  right round the patient's chest and back. For
  an adult it is better made in two parts, care
  being taken that it meets on both sides. It
  can be kept in position by a broad binder, which
  should be rolled under the patient as he lies on lus
  side. The poultice for the back is put on first
  and held in place while the patient is gently rolled
  on his back ; the other poultice is put on the
  chest. The binder is adjiisted and fastened
  with safety-pins. Instead of the binder a
  " pneumonia jacket " of brown wool made up
  
  
  Paeumonia Jacket.
  
  on muslin could be used to keep the poultices in
  position. Being left open down one side and
  on the shoulder it is easily made to fit closely,
  and can be fastened up firmly with safety-pins.
  This jacket should be changed for a fresh one
  when the poultices are left off. A jacket
  poultice for a cliild can be made all in one, and
  should be quite hght and thin. Poultices should
  be changed about everj-- three or four hours.
  Although continuous poulticing is not so common
  as it used to be, a doctor often orders a poultice
  to be put on for an hour night and morning,
  and during the rest of the time the patient is
  wrapped in a " pneumonia jacket."
  
  A Linseed and Mustard Poultice. - Add one
  part of mustard to seven or eight of linseed.
  Mix the mustard first in a little cold or tepid
  water, and add to the linseed while mixing with
  the boiling water.
  
  A Mustard Poultice. - ^Make with one part of
  mustard to two of flour. Mix flour and mustard
  together to form into a smooth paste with cold
  water ; spread on brown paper or old hnen.
  Lay a piece of muslin over poultice and hold to
  the fire to warm a little before applying. Some-
  times a doctor will order only mustard and
  water to be used. A plaster made in tliis way
  should only bo kept on for a quarter of an hour
  or twenty minutes.
  
  Mustard Leaves, which can be bought from
  the chemist, are sometimes ordered. Moisten a
  little in tepid water before applying. A mustard
  leaf must only be left on for about a quarter of
  an hoiu-, and, when used for a child, muslin must
  
  
  566
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  be laid over it before it is applied. Wlien a
  mustard leaf or plaster is applied, turn a corner
  of it up very soon afterwards to see that it is
  not blistering the skin - it is intended to redden
  but not to blister. Always rub off any mustard
  that may be left sticking to the skin after
  a mustard plaster is removed, and rub on
  vaseUne or cold cream. Mustard is often applied
  over the heart in cases of collapse.
  
  A Charcoal Poultice. - Make in the same way
  as a Unseed poultice, adding one part of charcoal
  to five parts of linseed. Spread on old Unen
  and cover with thin gauze.
  
  Bread Poultice. - Put some stale bread into a
  small clean saucepan with hot water and let it
  boil for a minute. Strain off the water and
  spread on old linen.
  
  Hot Fomentations. - These are used when it
  is necessary to apply moist heat to any part of
  the body. Place a strong towel over a large
  basin. Take a piece of flannel the required size
  (it should be large enough to be applied double),
  put it on the towel, and pour boiUng water from
  the kettle over it. Grasp the ends of the towel
  and wring the flannel as dry as possible. If the
  flannel is left too wet it may scald. Give it a
  quick shake out and lower it gradually on to the
  p"irt as hot as can be borne. Cover with jaco-
  nette or brown paper and a layer of cotton wool.
  If the fomentation has to be put on the chest
  or abdomen it can be kept in position with
  a broad binder. Fomentations are generally
  changed frequently, and must never remain on
  when cold. Cotton wool should always be put
  on when the fomentation is discontinued.
  
  Turpentine Fomentations. - Make in the same
  way as above, pouring over one or two table-
  spoonfuls of turpentine before wringing it.
  Sometimes the turpentine is sprinkled over the
  flannel after it has been wrung out, but this may
  cause blistering, and the other method is safer.
  
  Laudanum Fomentations. - Sprinkle some lau-
  danum over the hot flannel after it has been
  wrung out and just before applying it.
  
  Blisters. - Sometimes a blistering fluid is
  ordered and sometimes a plaster. Wash the
  skin well with soap and water, and if fluid is
  ordered paint it on with a camel's-hair brush and
  on the exact spot indicated by the doctor.
  Take care that the fluid does not trickle down,
  or other blisters may be formed. Cover with a
  piece of lint or old Unen and cotton wool, and, if
  necessary, bandage. Sometimes the blister forms
  quickly (in two or throe hours), but occasionally
  it takes twelve hours. If there is no blistering
  at the end of twelve hours apply a fomentation
  or poultice. When formed the blister must be
  clipped with a clean sharp pair of scissors.
  These should be boiled before and after use.
  Let the fluid escape into a vessel, or into
  cotton wool. Dress with ointment spread on
  the smooth side of lint. Change the dressing
  night and morning. If more blisters form they
  
  
  must be treated in the same way. A blistering
  plaster is sometimes ordered instead of the fluid.
  It must be cut the necessary size and covered
  with cotton wool. Should it not adhere to the
  skin, keep in place with adliesive plaster or a
  bandage.
  
  Ice Applications. - These are ordered to allay
  inflammation or to arrest h.aemorrhage. Tlio
  easiest way to apply ice is in an ice-bag, which
  can be bought from a cheniist, or a bullock's
  bladder maj' be washed and made to do duty.
  Break the ice into small pieces and half fill the
  bag, squeezing out the air before inserting the
  cork. Flannel or lint should always be placed
  between the skin and an ice application, and the
  bag should not be allowed to remain on after the
  ice has melted. The bag should be examined
  frequently to see that there is no leakage.
  
  Notes on Ice. - Ice should be kept wrapped in a
  clean piece of flannel and placed in a cullender
  put over a basin, so that the water can drain off
  as the ice melts.
  
  To break ice pierce it with an ordinary hat-
  pin or fine skewer.
  
  When ice is being given to a patient to suck,
  tie a clean piece of muslin over a glass or teacup
  and put small pieces of ice on the top. Give
  them to the patient in a small silver tea-spoon.
  Ice is given to stop sickness and when there is
  great thirst.
  
  AFTER DEATH
  
  When all is over remove one pillow and
  straighten the hmbs. Gently close the eyes,
  and, if necessary, put on little pads of wet
  wool or linen, which can be removed later.
  Place a small pad under the chin to keep the
  jaw from flropping. If this does not answer,
  a jaw bandage must be applied and allowed to
  remain for several hours until the jaw is fixed.
  Half-an-hour or an hoiu- should elapse before the
  " last offices " are performed. This time can be
  occupied in getting ready what is needed, and in
  making the room tidy. The washing should be
  done quickly, the body being sponged under the
  blanket in the same way as if the patient were
  li\'ing. All must be done with gentle reverence.
  Put on a clean night-dress and white stockings.
  Tie the legs at the ankles and knees and fold
  the hands over the chest. Tlie hair should be
  arranged neatly and to look as natural as
  possible. If there is a flock or feather-bed it
  should be removed - the mattress only remaining.
  If there is a mackintosh it should be washed
  and left under the sheet. Roll in a clean bottom
  sheet, and put a clean one over the top. Cover
  tlie face with a clean soft handkerchief. Remove
  all soiled linen from the room ; the medicine
  bottles should also be emptied and removed, and
  the patient's sponge, nail-brush, tooth-brusli, &c.,
  removed and burned. The room should then bo
  dusted, a clean cover put on tho dressing-table.
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  567
  
  
  and a few fresh flowers brought in. The
  window should be left open from the top and
  the blind may be drawn. If there are childi-en
  in the house it is better to lock the door, in case
  they should go into the room. Death is an
  alarming sight for little ones, and a sight from
  which they should be spared if possible.
  
  
  It is wise afterwards to get the bedding baked^ .
  even when the case has not been infectious, or
  to have it remade. It should always be done
  after cancer, or where there has been a foul
  wound, and, of course, after all forms of tuber-
  culosis. The sanitary authorities will ofteo
  disinfect bedding, &c., free of cost.
  
  
  "FIRST AID" IN SICKNESS AND ACCIDENTS
  
  It is certainly highly desirable, if not absolutely a matter of duty, that every woman should"
  be prepared to render efficient aid in the event of accident or sudden illness. A httle timely
  knowledge will enable her, if not to actually alleviate the pain of the sufierer, at least to-
  prevent further harm being done until the doctor comes. This knowledge is all the more
  essential owing to the fact that the immediate treatment of an injured person, or of some
  one taken suddenly ill, has a very important bearing on the after progress of the case.
  
  The information contained in the following paragraphs is intended to act as a guide in
  emergencies when a doctor is not immediately available, or in cases of simple ailments when
  his aid is not needed.
  
  
  " FIRST AID " IN SICKNESS AND TREATMENT
  OF COMMON AILMENTS
  
  Acidity. - This is a form of indigestion, which
  is due to an excessive formation of acid in the
  stomach. The symptoms are heartburn and a
  rising of wind and of bitter stomach contents
  into the mouth. Relief is obtained by taking
  a tea-spoonful of bicarbonate of soda in a tumbler
  of hot water or 30 drcns tincture of rhubarb
  tliree times a day after food, or ^ to 1 tea-
  spoonful of tincture of gentian taken in about
  1 table -spoonful of water before meals.
  
  Bed-Sores. - These can be prevented to a
  large extent by careful nursing (see p. 554), and
  in the niirsing profession they are generally re-
  garded as a disgrace. There are, however, a
  few cases where bed-sores will develop in spite
  of all one's efforts to avoid them, and they are
  by no means easy to cure. They ought to be
  washed with carbolic lotion about 1 in 40, with
  boracic lotion or a fairly strong solution of
  Condy's Fluid and water. The wound should
  then bo covered with a piece of lint spread
  with boracic ointment, and this may either be
  fixed on with narrow strapping or siniply laid
  on the place. Care must be taken to avoid
  pressure on the part by the use of a circular
  air-cushion, or by turning the patient on the
  other side if possible. Very superficial bed-
  sores will often heal when well dusted two or
  three times a day with equal parts of starch
  and zinc powder. No dressing need be applied,
  but clean linen should be next the wound.
  
  Blackheads. - This is the name of a skin dis-
  ease which is common in youth. The symptoms
  are pimples on the face and back which have
  black spots in the centre. Recent research
  
  
  shows " blackheads " to be due to a microbe ;,
  the black spots are not dirt as formerly sup-
  posed, but are caused by diffused pigment.
  The treatment consists in the free use of hot
  water and soap, followed by an application of
  the following lotion : Take 1 tea- spoonful each of
  precipitate of sulphur, tincture of camphor, and
  glycerine, and mix with 4 ounces (8 table-
  spoonfuls) rose-water.
  
  A sand soap should be used once a week -
  the ordinary " Monkey Brand " is excellent for
  the purpose. The general health requires atten-
  tion, and a doctor should be consulted.
  
  Bilious Attacic is a popular name for migraine..
  Migraine is not really dependent on disorder of
  the liver. The symptoms are headache, defec-
  tive vision, and vomiting of a few hours' duration,
  only. The causes are eye-strain combined with,
  excessive mental work and lack of exercise. In"
  reality it is a disturbed circulation in the brain-
  which causes the headache, defective vision, and
  vomiting. The treatment should be to go to
  bed in the dark and sip some hot tea, and after
  the vomiting is over to sleep. If attacks are
  frequent, the eyes should be tested and suitable
  spectacles worn if any defect is detected, plentj'^
  of fresh air, exercise, and plain diet should be
  secured, and reading in a bad light or in a
  railway train avoided. Nausea, headache, pale
  motions, and high-coloured urine are the chief
  symptoms. The treatment is a free purge and
  spare diet, followed by more exercise and fresh
  air. If of frequent occurrence a doctor should
  be consulted.
  
  Boils are abscesses in the skin. They contain
  a central core formed of a fragment of dead
  skin. The cause is debility combined with
  some local cause, such as the chafing of a coUeir..
  
  
  568
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Ichthyol and resorcin ointment applied at a
  very early stage will often check the mischief.
  Wlien once developed, a cold-water dressing
  made of pink boracic lint will help to relieve
  the peiin. They are best treated by lancing
  and touching the interior with pure carbolic,
  and not by the apphcation of a linseed poultice,
  as this is apt to induce a crop of boils in the
  surrounding area. Tho general health should
  also receive attention, especially in regard to
  diet, fresh air, and regularity of the bowels.
  
  Bronchitis may be acute or chronic, and
  either an independent aSection or due to some
  other disease, especially certain fevers. The
  disetise consists of inflammation of tho hning
  membrane of the bronchi, which are the tubes
  into which tho windpipe opens. The treatment
  should be confinement to bed in a room tlie
  "dr of which is moistened by a steam-kettle and
  kept at an even temperature of 60№ in winter
  and 65№ in summer. A few drops of terebene
  may be added to the water. Special care is
  required between two and four in the morning
  not to let the temperature of the room fall.
  The diet should be light, and plenty of barley
  water and lemon drinks allowed. Counter
  irritation over the upper part of the chest is at
  times useful. Tliis is effected by the applica-
  tion of mustard leaves or of turpentine limment.
  Medicine is required to make the skin act and
  to check the useless cough in the early stage,
  and the best for tliis purpose for an adult is
  probably ten grains of Dover's Powder at bed-
  time. Except in very mild cases the treatment
  should be in medical hands from the onset.
  
  Bunion is caused by the prolonged use of
  pointed-toed boots. By such boots the big toe
  is thrust towards the centre line of the foot and
  the base of the toe exposed to pressure unduly.
  The frequent repetition of pressure always ex-
  cites the growth of the part pressed on, and
  the swelling thus caused is known as a bunion.
  Hot fomentations may reheve tho pain or the
  joint may be painted with iodine if it is not
  inflamed. Relief may also be obtained by
  placing a pad of cotton wool between the big
  and second toe. This takes tho pressvire off
  the joint. In severe cases a surgical operation
  may be resorted to.
  
  Cold In the Head. - The symptoms are too
  famihar to need description. The prevention
  of colds may bo effected with some success by
  an open-air life, sleeping with the window open,
  cold baths in tho mornings, plain diet, and by
  suitable clothing and sound boots ; the stuffy
  room is tho place in which the cold is caught.
  Tho follo^ving will sometimes check a cold in
  the early stages : a hot lemon drink made
  with the juico of a large lemon, a pint of boiling
  water and sugar to taste - drink as hot as
  possible - menthol snuff, and camphor pillules
  to suck. An attack may also be treated by
  inhaling menthol or eucalyptus.
  
  
  Chilblain is due to the paralysis, by cold, of
  the blood-vessels in the affected part. Tho
  fingers, toes, ears and more rarely tho tip of
  tho nose are most often attacked, and certain
  people with a sluggish circulation are more
  prone to chilblains than others ; many cliildren
  grow out of them. In the first stage of a chil-
  blain the part is white and cold ; in the second
  stage, congested, hot, red and itcliing. Tlie
  treatment should be preventive ; in cold weather
  loose woollen gloves should be worn and tight
  boots avoided, exercise encouraged, and the
  skin kept clean and dry. When the first
  sj^mptoms appear rub tho affected part with
  the following mixture : one small cupful brown
  vinegar, one small cupful turpentine, one small
  cupful methylated spirits, one egg - shake all
  these together in a bottle and it will be found
  an excellent remedy. It is also good for bruises
  and pains in the muscles. An apphcation of
  tamus communis or ichthyol ointment is also
  very good. Relief from itching can be obtaiiied
  by soaking the parts in hot water.
  
  Constipation, or Costiveness, is present when
  the bowels are not reheved thoroughly once a
  day.
  
  The treatment of constipation may bo summed
  up in one word - prevention, whereas tho
  popular method is to allow violent purging to
  alternate with several days of constipation, or
  to produce chronic dilatation of the large bowel
  by frequent copious enemata.
  
  To have to resort to a pill is in itself a con-
  fession of failvire. First, then, acquire a I'egular
  habit of obtaining relief for the bowels at the
  same time each day. This should always bo
  after a meal, because the taking of a meal is a
  natural stimulus. The best time is after break-
  fast. Regular exorcise must be taken, and fresh
  air must bo obtained as much as possible, to
  improve the muscular tone. A cold bath in
  the morning and massage of the abdomen are
  often useful. The diet should contain sufl!icient
  laxative materials, such as honey, prunes, whole-
  meal bread, and fruits that contain seeds. In
  obstinate constipation, however, to continue the
  use of much fruit rich in seeds is a mistake,
  as it aggravates tho condition. It is when tho
  use of these avoids the necessity for medicine
  that they do good. When tho above methods
  fail, medicine will be required. This medicine
  must be as little irritating as possible ; castor
  oil, hquorice powder, senna and Apenta water
  are all good. Cascara in tabloid form is a little
  more irritating, but is good and widely used.
  As soon as the bowels are regular the medicine
  can bo discontinued, provided that it is re-
  sumed if the bowels do not act regularly
  without it. All strong aperients must be '
  avoided as much eis possible, and left off when
  the need for them no longer exists.
  
  Com is an overgrowth of the horny layer of
  the skin caused by repeated pressure, such as
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  that due to a tight boot worn daily. Between
  the toes, where perspiration is often copious,
  the soft variety develops. Soft corns can be
  quickly cured by the following treatment:-
  Powder well between the toes and put in a
  tiny piece of old soft Knen. Starch and zinc or
  starch and talc powders can be used. Powder
  and Unen should be renewed night and morning.
  When the corn is over a joint a felt plaster
  will give great relief, or the corn may be de-
  stroyed by painting it night and morning with
  a saturated solution of saUcylic acid in collodion,
  and by protecting it with the plaster. Many
  other remedies have been tried for corns, such
  as soaking the feet in hot water and cutting
  with razors, the use of a file, and the appHca-
  tion of galbanum plaster, but the salicylic col-
  lodion is preferable.
  
  Cough is a symptom of irritation which is
  generally situated in some part of the respira-
  tory tract, such as the throat, bronchi or lung
  substance, but may be due to irritation of some
  distant organ, e.g. the heart and stomach, or
  to disturbance of the brain, as in a hysterical
  cough. The folly of attempting to apply a
  cough cure for all coughs alike is thus apparent.
  In the old and young, suppressing a cough with
  some soothing sjTup containing opium is very
  easy and very dangerous ; a cough should not
  be suppressed, but treated by removal of its
  cause, and if there be some tenacious secretion
  in the bronclii, the secretion requires thinning
  by ipecacuanha wine, sweet spirits of nitre, and
  sahnes : the cough will then loosen and reUef
  be obtained. Half a tea -.poonful of oxymel of
  squills in a little water, or paregoric in small
  doses will also give rehef. A hot lemon drink
  might also be tried. If, on the other hand, the
  soiu-ce of irritation is in the throat, the use
  every three hours of astringent gargles, such as
  alum of a strength of half an ounce to the pint,
  followed by a dose of glycerine and lemon juice,
  may give rehef. Unless the cough shows signs
  of ceasing within a few days, medical advice is
  requisite.
  
  Cramp is a painful spasm of the voluntary
  muscles most commonly occurring in the calves.
  The condition may result from cold, as in
  bathing, or be due to irritation of the stomach
  or intestines, as in severe diarrhoea or arsenical
  poisoning. Cramp in the hand is generally due
  to strain of certain muscles overworked in the
  course of the daily work, as in writer's cramp
  and other forms of trade cramp. For simple
  cramp in the calves the best treatment is to
  push forward the heel and draw back the toes,
  or brisk friction with the hands or with com-
  pound camphor liniment also. Other forms
  of cramp require medical aid. So-called
  " Swimmer's Cramp " is a spasm of the arteries
  by which the circulation is seriously obstructed
  Ind heart failure induced. The treatment is
  rarmth and stimulants. Colic corresponds to
  
  
  569
  
  cramp, but attacks the involuntary muscles
  instead of the voluntary.
  
  Diarrhoea has many causes. These belong to
  one or other of the following groups : (1) irrita-
  tion of the bowel by its contents being abnormal ;
  (2) irritation of the nervous system ; (3) irrita-
  tion of the skin by a chill. Group (1) includes
  the causes of most importance to us : they are
  errors in diet, intestinal worms, hard faecal
  lumps due to previous constipation, and certain
  poisons. Group (2) includes fright or other pain-
  ful emotion. Group (3) explains itself. In
  addition to these, diarrhoea may result from
  disease of the bowel, e.g. cancer or tuberculosis
  in it, or from some general disease, like typhoid
  fever or blood-poisoning.
  
  The first thing to do in the treatment of diarrhcea
  is to take the temperature, and if this is either
  above or below normal, whatever the age of the
  sufferer, a doctor is required at once. Or if blood
  be present in the motions a doctor is required
  also. In cases of diarrhoea with a normal
  temperature, treatment for a few hours can be
  safely attempted. First consider the cause. Is
  there (I) an irritant to cause it, such as those
  given above ; or (2) has there been a fright ;
  or (3) a chill very recently ? If the answer is
  (1), the removal of the irritant is to be attempted ;
  nature is already doing so by diarrhcea; we
  must aid nature by a suitable purge. This
  must not be of an irritjating character, as there
  is some irritation already. The safest is castor
  oil. If vomiting is present, the best is grey
  powder for a claild, or half -grain doses of calomel
  given hourly for four to six hours for an adult.
  If there is much griping, in the case of adults
  it will be safe to add to the castor oil ten minims
  of laudanum. The apphcation of fomentations
  to the abdomen will also be grateful. An
  enema of half a pint of warm oHve oil may
  be tried. Collis Brown's Chlorodyne is also very
  good for simple diarrhoea.
  
  In later life the diet should be spare, e.g. soda-
  water, toast, arrowroot and jelly. It is wise to
  put the patient to bed. If diarrhoea is thought
  due to cause (2), if the patient be put to bed he
  will soon be well. If, on the other hand, cause
  (3) is regarded as responsible, the sufferer should
  go to bed with hot bottles, hot fomentations
  or bran poultices or turpentine stupes to the
  abdomen. He should have a spare diet and
  some brandy. If in the course of a few hours
  improvement in these cases is not occurring, a
  doctor is required. If he is not obtainable,
  two to four bismuth lozenges should be given
  every three hours, and also a starch enema if
  necessary.
  
  Ear-ache may bo due to a wisdom tooth, or
  to inflammation of the middle or outer ear.
  If examination of the teeth shows nothing
  wrong, a little warm glycerine may be dropped
  in, or one part carbolic to thirty of glycerine.
  An eighth part of laudanum could be used with
  
  
  570
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  warm glycerine. If relief is not soon obtained,
  or if though the pain ceases ear discliarge
  begins, medical aid is necessary. Chronic dis-
  charge from the ears always requires medical
  attention. If from one ear only, it may be
  duo to a foreign body in the ear that has been
  neglected. Ringing in the ears may bo due to
  some medicine wliich is acting on the auditory
  nerve, e.g. quinine and salicylates. If no medi-
  cine is being taken a doctor should be con-
  sulted.
  
  Gum-boll. - An abscess between the gum and
  tlie jaw due to a decayed tooth. A hot weak
  solution of permanganate of potash can be used.
  The boil should bo encouraged to burst internally
  by holding hot water in the mouth, and should
  be lanced as soon as matter has formed.
  
  Hay Fever is an affection of the nose, due to
  the irritation of the pollen of grasses. It attacks
  certain people only and runs in famihes. The
  sjTnptoms resemble a common cold, and asthma
  may be present as a complication. The treat-
  ment should be the avoidance of the hay -fields
  when the grass is ripe, and the use of tonics
  and soothing applications to the nose, such as
  Friar's balsam, a drachm to the pint of boiling
  water ; inliale the steam : or creosote, ten drops
  tp the pint of boiling water ; inhale the steam.
  Menthol snuff often gives relief, and the nose
  might be rubbed with a menthol cone.
  
  Headache may be due to one of various
  causes, some simple, others serious. Tablets
  containing phenacetin four grains and caffeine
  one grain give relief quickly. Eau de Cologne
  dabbed on the forehead, rubbing with a menthol
  cone, or a mustard leaf applied to the back of
  the neck and kept on until the skin is red, are
  all good. The patient should rest in a quiet,
  dimly-lighted room, and a cup of tea may be
  sipped slowly. If headaches are frequent a
  doctor should be consulted, as the trouble is
  often due to eye-strain, and spectacles may be
  needed.
  
  Heart-burn is a symptom due to acidity in the
  stomach and not to anything wrong with the
  hesui. itself. The treatment is a tea-spoonful of
  bicarbonate of soda in half a tumbler of water.
  This usually gives immediate relief for the
  time. The diet, however, requires regulating,
  new bread, farin£iceous and sweet food being
  the commonest causes of this disorder.
  
  Hiccough is caused by spasm of the diaphragm,
  due generally to irritation of the stomach.
  Sipping cold water and also holding the breath
  18 long as possible may relieve it. If these
  methods fail, a tea-spoonful of bicarbonate of
  soda in a half-tumbler of water should be taken.
  Obstinate hiccough in the course of a serious
  illness requires medical care.
  
  HoarseDess. - This may arise cither from over-
  use of the voice or from exposure to cold. A
  cold-water compress on the throat at night
  sometimes gives relief. Eucalj-ptus, menthol.
  
  
  and camphor pastilles are good, or the following
  simple remedy may be tried : beat up the
  white of an egg, add the juice of a lemon and
  about a teacupful of water, and sip slowly.
  
  Indigestion or Dyspepsia is readily induced by
  unsuitable food, irregular or hiuried meals, im-
  perfect mastication or mental worry, over-eating
  or over-drinking. Tlio symptoms vary in different
  eases, and include loss of appetite, nausea,
  vomiting, a feeling of weight sifter eating, and
  pain. Pain is felt in front in the lower part
  of the chest, or at the back in the left shoulder
  blade, and it is usually increased by food.
  There is often flatulence, and the food " repeats,"
  causing a bitter taste in the mouth, sore throat,
  and cough. Tlie mental effects of chronic dys-
  pepsia are even worse : the mind is gloomy
  and apt to concentrate attention on the bodily
  symptoms, thus aggravating the condition. The
  treatment should be mainly preventive. Let the
  food be simply cooked and well served, varied
  and palatable ; let the meals be eaten slowly
  and, if possible, amid pleasant companions.
  After the chief meal of the day rest amid
  pleasant surroundings is highly beneficial ;
  breakfast should be a substantial meal, and eaten
  slowly, even though it may be necessary to rise
  somewhat earlier ; luncheon for most busy people
  should be light. Between meals it is un\\iso
  to eat or drink, as the stomach requires rest
  like every other organ. The teeth must be seen
  to, regular exercise in the open air taken, worry
  avoided, the bowels kept regular. Tincture of
  gentian taken in doses from ^ to 1 tea-spoonful
  in about a table-spoonful of water before meals
  is a simple but excellent tonic. The sinking
  feeling that some people get at about eleven in
  the morning can be remedied by taking a cup
  of bovril and a biscuit or piece of toast.
  
  No fixed rules can be laid down in regard to
  the kind of food to be eaten. " One man's
  meat is another man's poison " ; experience is
  the best guide. The articles most commonly
  found indigestible are pastry, pork, new potatoes,
  new bread, sauces made of melted butter, very
  hot or very cold dishes or drinks, and malted
  liquors. An occasional attack of indigestion
  requires a purge, a spare diet for a few days,
  and comparative rest. If the attacks of indiges-
  tion are frequent, or if there is abdominal pain,
  a doctor should be consulted.
  
  Influenza is an infectious fever due to a germ
  - the bacillus influenzce. Infection is conveyed
  in the air, and also by direct contact between
  the sick and the healthy. The incubation
  period is two or three days. Tlio sym-ptoms
  begin suddenly with a rise of temperature to
  103№ or more, prostration, and pain in the back
  and head. After the onset the sjmiptoms differ
  in different epidemics. In some the chief
  symptoms are bronchitis, with running at the
  ej'es and nose, in others vomiting and diarrhoea,
  and in yet others severe headache, sleeplessness
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "' FIRST AID"
  
  
  571
  
  
  and delirium, and sometimes sore tliroat. The
  diiration of the attack is short unless complica-
  tions occur, of which pneumonia is the most
  serious. Owing to the severe prostration, con-
  valescence takes longer than in most fevers,
  and other diseases are apt to begin at this time,
  especially consumption. As to the treatment
  required : the patient should be isolated and
  put to bed. The diet, which should be nourish-
  ing and easily digestible, is best given every
  two hours by day and every four hours by
  night. Hot milk and bovril are good. If
  vomiting is severe, peptonised food may be
  necessary. Until the temperatiu-e is normal
  the patient should be confined to bed. This
  point is of more importance than is popularly
  thought, many of the serious after-effects of
  influenza being due to neglect of this simple
  precaution.
  
  In the early stages i to 1 teasp. of ammoniated
  tincture of quinine may be taken in a little
  water, or ten drops of Karswood creosote on a
  handkercliief and inhaled may prevent or help
  to cure influenza. A good seaside holiday before
  work is resumed is strongly recommended.
  
  Lice lay eggs or nits, that are attached to the
  hairs by a ring of cement, which makes them
  very difficult to remove. The affection is by
  no means confined to the children of the poor.
  The best treatment, short of removal of the
  hair, is the application of some lotion, which
  dissolves the cement, followed by the thorough
  use of a fine-toothed comb. In many hospitals
  a lotion of vinegar and methylated spirits in
  equal parts is used. The hair is thoroughly
  soaked in this lotion, and then rags steeped in
  it are placed on the hair, and the whole is
  enclosed in a mackintosh bathing-cap for the
  night. Carbolic lotion (of a strength of 1 in 20)
  is also used in the same way, but though effi-
  cacious, it has the drawback that the absorption
  of some of the carbolic causes the urine to be
  green next morning. This, however, is not
  serious, for once or twice, in a child otherwise
  healthy. Care should be taken to keep the
  lotion out of the eyes. " Izal," which is non-
  poisonous, is a good substitute for carbolic. If
  the odour can h6 tolerated, thoroughly soaking
  the hair in petroleum will destroy the lice and
  loosen the nits. Sores in the scalp should be
  treated with white precipitate ointment. In
  bad cases with numerous crusts, after cutting
  off the hair, a linseed poultice smeared with
  olive oil should be applied. This will remove
  the crusts, and white precipitate ointment may
  then be applied. Lice on clothing can be de-
  stroyed with sulphur fumes.
  
  Lumbago is an affection characterised by
  
  severe pain in the muscles of the loins. Tlie
  
  pain is of sudden onset, and sufficiently severe
  
  ' as a rule to confine the sufferer to bed. It is
  
  I recognised by an increase of pain on stooping.
  
  I The cause is usually chill. It is uncertain
  
  
  whether it is of rheumatic origin or not. Labour-
  ing men suffer most from it. A hot soda bath
  is beneficial. An appUcation of Chillie paste
  gives relief, also an ointment of wintergreen oil
  and menthol. This latter is applied to the
  affected part and covered with oil silk. A
  broad flannel bandage can be worn.
  
  Neuralgia, Uterally pain in a nerve. The
  nerves most commonly attacked are those of
  the face, the ribs, the loins, and the back of
  the thigh. The pain is of a most intense char-
  acter ; it comes and goes, often without ap-
  parent cause, affecting only one side at a time,
  and is not acconapanied by any rise of tem-
  perature.
  
  In facial neuralgia, the ear, the eyesight, the
  teeth, and, especially the wisdom tooth, require
  careful examination, though many cases have
  occurred in which tooth after tooth has been
  removed by a dentist without reUef having been
  obtained. It is therefore wise to consult a
  doctor before submitting to the removal of
  sound teeth. Exposure to cold and damp often
  determine an attack. Neuralgia is also conmion
  in the course of certain diseases.
  
  The treatment should be the improvement of
  the general health. Regular habits and a course
  of tonics, e.g. iron, arsenic, quinine and hypo-
  phosphites, all do good in certain cases. A
  country hoUday is still better ; the seaside,
  however, is not recommended. Tablets - Phena-
  cetin 4 grains and caffeine 1 grain, followed
  with a cup of hot bovril, will often give rehef.
  A full, nourishing diet is needed. Oil of winter -
  green and menthol ointment will also relieve
  the pain.
  
  Palpitation of the heart is present when the
  beating of the heart makes itself felt. The chief
  causes are sudden emotion and indigestion,
  especially acidity with flatulence. Tlie symp-
  toms are either attaclvs of frequent and irreguleu-
  action of the heart with a feeling of fluttering
  in the chest, or a more forcible action in which
  the whole chest may feel shaken. These symp-
  toms are accompanied by giddiness, anxietjv
  pain in the chest, and other sj'mptoms. They
  are apt to come on at night and awake the
  sufferer from his first sleep. The treat^nent
  during an attack should be a dose of bicarbonate
  of soda, one to two salt-spoonfuls taken in some
  hot peppermint water, or a tea -spoonful of sal
  volatile in half a tumbler of water. Between
  the attacks the causes of indigestion should be
  avoided, especially heavy and late suppers, tea,
  tobacco, rich and sweet food, constipation, &c.
  There is no ground for fearing the lieart is
  diseased ; it is the stomach that is out of order.
  
  Piles or Hsemorrhoids are varicose veins at the
  lower end of the lower bowel. They form small
  tumours projecting into the bowel, and may
  gradually pass through the anus and appesir on
  the exterior. The more important causes of
  these are constipation, congestion of the livefj.
  
  
  572
  
  
  THE WOI^IAN'S BOOK
  
  
  and the abuse of aperient medicines, especially
  such as contain aloes. If piles aie extruded,
  tliey must be washed and replaced by steady
  pressure apphed with the aid of a clean rag
  smeau-ed with vasehne on one side. When in-
  flammation occurs, it is better to rest in bed
  and have a hght diet. A dose of hquorico
  powder from ^ to 1 tea -spoonful, or 1 tea-spoonful
  of confection of sulphur, should be taken.
  
  Hazelino applied on a soft piece of rag should
  give rehef, or an ointment of hazeUne, menthol,
  and cocaine. Resinal ointment is also very
  good.
  
  The bowels should be encouraged to act leist
  tiling at night, as then the irritation caused by
  the action will pass off during the night.
  
  Sciatica. - This is neuralgia of the sciatic nerve,
  and the same treatment as that indicated for
  neuralgia may be adopted. Ointment of winter -
  green oil and menthol is an excellent remedy,
  also Chilhe paste. Sleissage is also good, and
  hot fomentations may be apphed to allay the
  pain.
  
  Shivering is due to irritation of the nervous
  system by many different causes, some of which
  are trivial, others serious.
  
  The duration of shivering varies fcom a few
  seionds to a couple of hours, and is often suc-
  ceeded by sweating and flushing. The tempera-
  ture of the body as a whole is usually rising
  during a shivering attack, although the patient
  feels cold, and it is falling during the flushed
  sweating stage, although the patient then feels
  hot. In children the more serious causes, which
  produce shivering in the adult, often cause con-
  VTilsions. The treatment during the shivering
  should be hot blankets, hot bottles, hot drinks,
  and during the subsequent hot stage, if the
  sweating is excessive, the patient may bo rubbed
  down with a soft towel. A rigor or shivering
  attack is generally the onset of an illness more
  or less serious, and the doctor should be sent
  for.
  
  Sleeplessness may arise from many causes
  that may be summarised thus : - (1) JPain and
  other sources of irritation ; (2) poisons in the
  blood which irritate the brain ; (3) mental
  disturbance by worry, excitement, or strange
  surroundings. The treatment is largely a
  matter of the detection and removal of the
  cause, though certain aids to sleep may often
  be adopted with benefit. Tliere are two chief
  varieties of sleeplessness, (a) difficulty in going
  to sleep at the beginning of the night's rest,
  (?) a habit of waking in the small hours, with
  difficulty in dropping off to sleep again.
  
  Sufferers from variety (a) should pay atten-
  tion to the following points : The hour of re-
  tiring should be the same each night. The
  mind and body should both he healthily tired,
  without being over -fatigued. Hence those en-
  gaged in sedentary occupations often sleep
  better for a short evening walk each night.
  
  
  Study pursued till bedtime or an exciting novel
  may cause a sleepless night. Heavy suppers or
  strong coffee late at night promote insomnia.
  Fruit late at night is also said to be a cause.
  Soothing apphcations to the skin are often of
  great service, e.g. friction with a flesh-brush
  or a warm bath. Warmth to the feet may be
  required in the form of extra covering or a hot
  bottle. The position of the head should be
  high in full-blooded people, in heart disease or
  asthma, and low in cliildhood and anaemia.
  Monotonous mental impressions promote sleep ;
  thus tliinking of a famihar rhyme over and
  over again, counting, reading a dull book, or,
  still better, having it read to one in a mono-
  tonous voice, picturing a flock of sheep coming
  through a gap in a wall one by one, are famihar
  examples that have their use.
  
  The use of alcohol as a nightcap before
  retiring to bed is a habit that cannot be recom-
  mended, but a cup of hot milk or bo\Til can
  be taken in bed the last tiling.
  
  Sufferers from variety of insomnia (6) who
  wake in the small hours should take a little
  food, preferably warmed, e.g. milk or beef-tea.
  A spirit-lamp or special burner in connection
  with the gas of the bedroom should be at hand
  for the purpose. Any tendency to flatulence or
  constipation should receive appropriate treat-
  ment. Drugs used to procure sleep are only
  safe when medically proscribed.
  
  Sore Throat, Quinsy, Tonsillitis are terms in
  popular use to denote many forms of throat
  affection. When the throat becomes sore it
  may be a symptom of the onset of some fever,
  which is most likely to be the case in childhood
  Hence a child with a sore throat shoifld be
  isolated in a bedroom at the top of the house.
  The throat should be examined in a good light,
  and if any white patches can be seen, no time
  must be lost in summoning the doctor. If no
  white patches are present, it will be less neces-
  sary to consult a doctor at once, but the appecir-
  ance of a rash next day should be looked for
  on the chest, as scarlet fever has to be thought
  of. Meantime a light diet and plenty of sooth-
  ing drinks should be given, and a mild aperient
  at night.
  
  In adults with bad teeth sore throats are
  very common. These take the form of either
  tonsillitis, known as ulcerated throat, or of
  quinsy, that is, an abscess in one tonsil. The
  tongue becomes coated, swallowing difficult, the
  temperature rises to 102№ F., the limbs and
  head ache. The attack lasts about a week ;
  if an abscess forms it may bvirst, but time and
  suffering is saved by having it lanced. The
  possibility of the attack being the onset of a
  fever has to be borne in mind. The same mode
  of isolation and dieting should be employed as
  that given above.
  
  A gargle of permanganate of potash and boraeic
  should bo used hot - 1 tea-spoonful of boraeic
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  573
  
  
  powder to 1 cupful of a fairly strong solution of
  permanganate of potash. Formamint lozenges
  can be sucked, or the throat may be painted with
  glycerine and tannin. Eucalyptus, menthol,
  and camphor pastilles are also good.
  
  Clergyman's Sore Throat is a chronic inflam-
  mation of the throat due ;to over -use of the
  voice. An astringent gargle, sueh as alum, five
  drachms to the pint, should be used, the voice
  rested, and the general health toned up. A cold
  compress will often relieve this form of sore
  tlaroat.
  
  Stiff Neck is commonly due to a chill. It
  should be treated by rubbing in oil of winter -
  green or camphor ointment and by wrapping
  up the neck in flannel. Hot fomentations will
  also give relief.
  
  A Stye. - This is a small abscess on the eyelid.
  Apply warm boracic fomentations - take a piece
  of soft linen and wring it out of a solution
  made of 1 cupful hot water and | tea-sp. boracic
  acid. A little boracic ointment may be put on
  the lid at night. When the stye is ready to be
  opened, pull out an eyelash from the centre.
  Take care the discharge does not get into the
  eye. Swab with boracic lotion, use a piece of
  clean rag and burn it afterwards.
  
  Toothache should as far as possible be pre-
  vented by taking care of the teeth. When
  present it may be treated in the following way.
  A mild aperient should be taken. Menthol
  rubbed on outside will often relieve the pain.
  When the teeth are aching and there are no
  hollow ones, relief may be obtained by rubbing
  tinctvire of pyrethri on the gums. All decayed
  teeth should receive attention ; if they are too
  bad to be stopped, they should be extracted.
  Bad teeth often cause various stomach troubles
  and rheumatism, and predispose to phthisis.
  
  Varicose Veins are veins which, having been
  unequal to bear the pressure of the blood within
  them, have become dilated and tortuous in
  consequence. The condition is most common
  in the legs, especially of tall people who have
  much standing. The symptoms produced are
  pain, numbness or stiffness in the affected part.
  The nutrition of the skin often suffers, and
  swelhng, eczema, or ulcer of the leg are then
  likely to develop. The treatment should take
  the form of some support ; either an elastic
  stocking or a bandage may be worn. Crepe
  bandages are excellent - they are light and
  easily washed. It is important that the pres-
  sure these exert should be greatest at the foot
  and least at the knee ; hence the stocking
  presents an advantage over the bandage. Cold
  applications are also good - they act as a tonic.
  
  Warts are outgrowths from the skin, due to a
  cause not yet kno^vn. They occur at all ages.
  They may occiir in crops or singly. The treat-
  ment should be attendance to cleanliness and to
  the general health. Thj warts, unless present
  on the face or in large numbers, should be
  
  
  destroyed by some caustic. Glacial acetic acid
  painted on every night till the wart is completely
  destroyed is an efficient remedy. The skin
  around the wart should first be protected with
  vaseline, and the acid should then be applied
  on the end of a wooden match. A sore is often
  left, which soon heals if it is protected from the
  air with a little boracic ointment spread on
  linen. A saturated solution of salicylic acid in
  collodion painted on every night is also a good
  remedy. A strong solution of ordinary washing
  soda will often soften and remove warts. What-
  ever chemical is used, the treatment must be
  thorough, or the wart will only be stimulated to
  grow. Warts on the face should not be touched
  except by medical orders.
  
  " FIRST AID " IN ACCIDENTS AND
  EMERGENCIES
  
  Apoplexy or Stroke is caused by a blood-
  vessel in the brain breaking and allowing the
  blood to escape into, and to destroy, the siu'-
  rounding brain substance. It is most common
  in middle-aged men who are gouty or intemper-
  ate, and in people who suficr from rheumatism
  and kidney disorders.
  
  The symptoms are a sudden loss of conscious-
  ness from wliich the patient cannot be roused ;
  the breathing is noisy ; the limbs may be con-
  vulsed down one side and are usually hmp on
  one side and stiff on the other.
  
  The treatment during the attack consists in
  loosening the clothing round the neck and placing
  a pillow under the head. Hot bottles may be
  applied to the feet, but they must be well pro-
  tected, as burns easily result. By turning the
  patient on his side the noisy breathing is often
  improved. A pillow placed along the back will
  keep him in position. Apply cold water to the
  head, and ensure a plentiful supply of fresh air.
  No stimulant must be given.
  
  Bruises. - Moisten or bathe the part with
  Pond's Extract or arnica lotion.
  
  Shutting Door or Drawer on a Finger. - This
  often causes very severe pain. The first treat-
  ment should be cold and pressure. Wrap a
  cold-water bandage round the finger and keep it
  raised, then later on place the finger in water
  as hot as can be borne. In severe cases the
  doctor should be sent for.
  
  Bites. - (1) Insect Bites should be treated by
  the application of dilute ammonia ; feiiling this,
  a strong solution of washing-soda or the blue-
  bag should be used.
  
  (2) Dog-bites require cauterising, and a doctor
  should be seen at the earliest opportunity.
  They can afterwards bo dressed with boracic
  ointment.
  
  (3) Snake-bites. - A ligature should be firmly
  tied around the limb between the bite and the
  heart, and close to the former. Tlie wound may
  be sucked, though with some risk, especially if
  
  
  574
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  the lips Bxe creicked ; the saliva must be spat
  out at once, and the mouth should then be well
  rinsed.
  
  The -wound should then be bathed with dilute
  ammonia or a fairly strong solution of perman-
  ganate of potash, and a clean handkercliief
  wrung out of the solution placed over it.
  Give stimulant froelj- - brandy, whisky, or sal
  volatile. Tlie sooner a doctor can be prociired
  the better, as the wound requires caxiterising.
  In England the viper is the only poisonous
  snake, £md its bite rarely kills. The faintness
  it often causes is frequently due not to poison,
  but to fright.
  
  Black Eye is due to rupture of the small blood-
  vessels of the eyeUds and to the escape of blood
  into the surrounding tissues. The escaped blood
  undergoes chemical changes which alter its
  colour, and in time it is absorbed. The process
  may be hastened by appljang hot fomentations.
  For the first few hours cold should be appUed
  to check the escape of more blood.
  
  Burns and Scalds. - Only when very slight
  should these be treated without a doctor. The
  depth to which a bum penetrates is of less im-
  portance than the area it involves. (1) Treat-
  ment when severe. Wrap the child in a blanket
  ahd put it to bed at once without removal of
  the burnt clothes. Apply hot bottles, wrapped
  in flannel, to the feet, and place one on each side
  of the child. Give it brandy and hot water, the
  right dose of which is a tea-spoonful of brandy
  if under two years of age and half a tea-spoonful
  more for each year that the child is over two, until
  a dose of three tea-spoonfuls has been reached.
  The brandy should be given in two table-spoon-
  fuls of hot water or hot milk. Any part of the
  burnt surface which is exposed to the air should
  be at once protected by clean rag or unstarched
  musUn, soaked in olive or carron oil, and, failing
  this, put it on dry or wrung out of boracic lotion
  made by dissolving about one table-spoonful
  boracic crystals or powder in one pint boiUng
  water. Nothing further should be attempted
  till the doctor comes. Plenty of hot water should
  be ready, aa it may bo decided to place the child
  in a hot bath in order to combat shock and soak
  off the burnt clothing. (2) Treatment when
  slight. Cover the part with a piece of clean rag
  or boracic lint soaked in carbolic, carron, or salad
  oil, and cover again with a bandage.
  
  Next day boracic ointment spread on clean
  linen should bo appUed. BUsters should never
  bo pricked without a doctor's permission, and
  when it is done the scissors or needle must bo
  boiled before use.
  
  Treatment of Scalds of the Mouth and
  Throat. - This accident results from children
  drinking from the kettle. The doctor should be
  sent for, and no attempt should be made to treat
  the burnt mouth until ho comes, but the child
  should bo wrapped in a shawl and nvu"sed by
  the fire. Have ready plenty of boiling water.
  
  
  as a steam-kettle may be needed. A little olive
  oil may be given.
  
  Choking. - In the milder forms of choking the
  best treatment, if any is required, is a smart
  slap between the shoulders. Fish-bones some-
  times become fixed in the throat. They are
  best dislodged by copious draughts of water or
  by eating some bread and butter.
  
  In the more serious cases of choking when a
  piece of food presses against the wall of the wind-
  pipe and causes siiifocation, medical aid must at
  once be summoned, while some one near should
  pass the forefinger to the back of the throat and
  try to dislodge the obstacle. The finger must be
  passed to the side of the throat, as on no account
  must the piece of food be forced downwards. A
  small child can be held by his feet - head down-
  wards and shaken and slapped on the back.
  This will sometimes dislodge the obstacle.
  
  Concussion of the Brain. - This is generally the
  result of a blow or a fall on the heeA. Wlien
  shght the effects will be very transitory - a
  feeling of dizziness or a loss of consciousness for
  a moment or two. In more severe cases tlie
  patient will lie in a completely unconscious state,
  similar to a faint. Any tight clothing should b<3
  removed or loosened ; the feet should be slightly
  raised and cool apphcations should be made to
  the head. Perfect rest and quiet must be
  assured, and the doctor ought to be summoned.
  No stimulants must be given, but some warm
  tea as soon as the patient can swallow will do
  good. Sometimes a person will recover con-
  sciousness quickly, and will walk away appar-
  ently quite well, but soon afterwards will become
  increasingly drowsy. This is a most serious
  symptom and points to cerebral haemorrhage.
  The doctor must be sent for at once.
  
  Dislocation is the displacement of one of the
  bones that forms a joint. Pain, deformity and
  impaired movement result and continue as a
  rule until the dislocation is reduced. The joints
  most liable to dislocation are the jaw, finger and
  shoulder. The jaw is often dislocated in yawn-
  ing too widely, when the sufferer finds he cannot
  close his mouth. Dislocation generally occurs
  on one side only. The treatment, after protect-
  ing the operator's thumbs by wrapping them up
  well in handkerchiefs, is to press on the back
  teeth of each side firmly with the thumbs whilst
  the fingers are placed outside the mouth, and
  below the jaw, and the chin pressed well upwards
  by them. The finger, when dislocated, may bo
  treated by a steady pull so made as to tend to
  straighten the finger.
  
  N.B. - Dislocation of the thimab, shoulder and
  other joints should not be treated beyond placing
  the affected limb in as comfortable a position
  as possible until the doctor comes. If the pain
  is severe, warm fomentations may be applied.
  
  Drowning may cause death after two minutes'
  submersion, but life is often saved by perse-
  vering treatment of the right kind. The Royal
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND '" FIRST AID"
  
  
  575
  
  
  Humane Society have issued most valuable in-
  structions which may be summed up by saying,
  first, clear the air passages ; secondly, perform
  artificial respiration ; thirdly, restore the warmth
  of the body wliilst medical aid, blankets and
  dry clothes are sent for.
  
  The air passages are best cleared by placing
  the patient on his face with a pad under the chest
  and applying pressure to the back over the lower
  ribs for three or four seconds. Then turn him
  on Ms side and apply pressure again to the ribs,
  and repeat these methods alternately until
  the water and froth no longer issue from the
  mouth.
  
  The patient should then be turned on his back,
  a rolled-up coat placed under his shoulders, and
  the tongue drawn well forward. The braces
  or stays are then loosened and artificial respira-
  tion begun. The method usually adopted is
  that of Sylvester -
  
  The operator stands at the head of his patient, grasps
  both arms just below the elbow and draws them up above
  the head, when he pulls on them, as this often stimulates
  inspiration. The arms are kept in this position while one,
  two are counted. Tlie arms are next grasped just below
  the elbow, and then carried down against the sides of the
  chest and firmly pressed together. The chest is thus com-
  pressed and the air expelled. One, two is again counted
  and air then drawn into the lungs, by drawing the arms
  up over the head as before.
  
  It may be necessary to continue this method
  without interruption for two hoiirs. Meanwhile,
  if assistance can be obtained, the circulation
  should be stimulated by briskly rubbing the legs.
  As soon as natural breathing begins it may be
  discontinued, and treatment then directed to
  promoting warmth. Hot blankets, dry clothes,
  and hot bottles are required ; hot coffee or brandy
  are given as soon as the patient can swallow.
  Later on injui-ies due to the patient having
  struck against piles or rocks may require atten-
  tion.
  
  Epilepsy is a disorder characterised by fits in
  which the sufferer is unconscious and may also
  be convulsed. In minor epilepsy there is a lapse
  of consciousness for a few minutes, in which un-
  conscious acts may be performed, but in which
  the sufferer does not usually fall. In major
  epilepsy the unconsciousness is accompanied by
  convulsions and by falling, hence the name,
  falling-sickness.
  
  A fit may bo divided into the onset, the rigid
  stage, the convulsive stage, and the stage of
  recovery. At the onset there is in many C8u=ies
  a warning sensation, but in other cases the
  patient is struck down unconscious without the
  least warning.
  
  The treatment during the fit is to prevent the
  convulsion injuring the patient. There is no
  fear at this stage of his injuring other people.
  The clothing should be loosened, the head, arms
  and legs pressed firmly against the ground, and
  a cork, tooth-brush handle, or other gag placed
  
  
  between the teeth to guard the tongue. When
  the convulsions have ceased, if the patient seems
  inclined to sleep let him do so. No attempt
  must be made to give anything by the mouth.
  
  Fainting is due to a deficient blood supply to
  the brain, usually caused by a temporary weak-
  ness of the heart's action. The sjTnptoms are
  too well known to need description. The dura-
  tion of the attack is usually short, but it may
  last longer, and in rare cases ends in death. The
  treatment for a faint should be loosening the
  clothing, giving fresh air, putting the head down
  very low (no pillow) and the feet up, and apply-
  ing smelling salts and wet handkerchiefs or eau
  de Cologne to the face. Brandy is rarely neces-
  sary, but thirty drops of sal volatile in a little
  water is a viseful stimulant.
  
  The practice of bending forward the head
  between the knees is one that is useful in pre-
  venting fainting, but it should not be resorted
  to after fainting has taken place.
  
  If the faint is prolonged, medical advice should
  at once be sent for ; meantime mustard to the
  heart and warmth to the feet should be apphed.
  
  Foreign Body in the Ear. - Should a bead or
  other such body be introduced, the head should
  be turned on one side with the affected ear down-
  wards and a smart tap given to the head on
  the opposite side. This treatment may shake it
  out, but will probably fail. Syringing should bo
  tried next, and if this fails nothing more must be
  done till the doctor comes, as any attempt to
  remove it by a hair-pin or other instrument will
  almost certainly drive it in against the drum and
  do much harm. When a seed hke a pea has been
  introduced, syringing must not be attempted
  because it makes the pea swell and great pain is
  thus caused. When an insect has entered the
  ear it cannot of course go further in than the
  membrane of the drum, but by kicking against
  this great pain is caused. As insects breathe air
  they are readily drowned, and the ear therefore
  should be filled with warm glycerine and lauda-
  num, and wool placed in the outlet. An hour
  later syringing should be practised to wash the
  dead insect out, and if this fails a doctor is
  required.
  
  Foreign Body in the Eye. - This is best dealt
  with by closing both eyes and rubbing the
  normal one ; a flow of tears is thus induced, which
  often dislodges the foreign body. If this fails,
  the lower lid should be drawn down, and if the
  body can be seen, it should bo dislodged with the
  tip of a clean handkerchief or clean camel's-hair
  brush. Eversion of the upper lid, that is, turning
  it up to expose the inner surface, requires practice
  and is best not attempted. Splinters of iron,
  grit, &c., embedded in the cornea, should not
  bo touched till a doctor is obtained, but a drop
  of castor oil should bo applied to the inside of
  the lower eyelid, and the eye should be bandaged
  up to prevent the sufferer doing damage by
  rubbing it. Lime in the eyo is best treated by
  
  
  576
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  dropping in castor oil or weak vinegar and water.
  Water alone is bad treatment.
  
  Foreign Body in the Nose.- Blow the nose with
  the nostril on the unaffected side firmly closed.
  If this fails, sneezing may be induced by tho
  application of snuff to the nostril of the un-
  affected side. Or, warm water containing a
  tea-spoonful of salt to the pint may be injected
  from a s>Tinge into tho nostril of the unaffected
  side, whilst tho mouth is held open. If this
  simple treatment is not successful, the child
  should at once be taken to a doctor, as serious
  miscliief might arise if not properly attended to.
  An instrument must on no account be used.
  
  Fractures may be simple or compound. In
  the former the bone only is broken ; in the latter
  case the skin is broken as well, so that gerrns
  can reach tho broken bone. The first aim in
  a simple fracture must be to prevent further
  damage from being done by keeping tho part
  that is broken in as natural a position as possible
  until the doctor comes. If the patient must be
  moved an effort should be made to get tho broken
  bone into position and then to secure it either
  with bandages or with both splints and bandages.
  These should be put on over the clothing if
  possible, as then no other padding will be required.
  Jf it is found necessary to remove the clothing,
  this must not be pulled, but rather cut off, if it
  cannot be done otherwise without causing pain.
  When the fracture is compound the wound must
  have the first attention (see Wounds).
  
  A splint may be very quickly improvised in a
  case of emergency - a piece of wood, a ruler,
  a broom-handle, a golf club, a piece of card-
  board, or even folded newspapers or brown paper
  will make excellent splints ; in fact, any firm
  substance wliich will keep the broken ends of
  the bone together in a fixed position. When a
  splint is not applied over the clothing it must
  always be padded.
  
  A bandage must never be applied over the
  fracture itself, unless the skin is broken at this
  spot.
  
  Frost-Bite. - Even though tho part appears
  lifelc-ss, recovery can often occur provided tho
  temperature bo raised very gradually. Tlio
  patient must not enter a warm room, and the
  affected part should be rubbed, preferably with
  snow. Wlien tho part comes to life, inflamma-
  tion may bo expected, which may be treated
  with fomentations or by wrapping up tho in-
  flamed organ in wool. The avoidance of alcohol
  or hot drinks in tlie early stage is also important.
  A Frozen Person. - There must bo no sudden
  application of heat. To bring tlio patient into a
  warm room in a benumbed condition or to place
  him in a warm bath is to cause death. Place
  him in a cold room, remove the clothing, wrap
  tho body in a blanket, and with gentle friction
  of ice-cold water, snow or tincture of camphor,
  endeavour to re-establish circulation. This
  ahould bo carried on some time, and some
  
  
  nourisliment and stimulant, such as cold beef-
  tea, milk, ordinary tea, weak wino and water,
  given if tho patient can swsJlow. Wlien life
  returns put him in a cold bod in a cold room ;
  as improvement shows itself heat may be
  established very gradually.
  
  Haemorrhage or Loss of Blood may be from
  an artery, a vein, or a capillary. In arteries tho
  blood escapes from a wound in a bright scarlet
  intermittent stream ; in veins it escapes in a
  dark continuous stream ; in capillaries as a
  steady oozing. Owing to these facts it is widely
  taught that arterial haemorrhage should bo
  arrested by compression of tho wounded eirtory
  at a spot nearer tho heart, whilst venous hae-
  morrhage should be treated by pressure over
  the vein further from the heart than the woxmd ;
  but so many amateur attempts at this method
  have ended in failure that it is safer to recom-
  mend direct pressure on the wound by the thumb
  and subsequently by a pad and bandage. A
  firm pad can always be improvised by placing
  a smooth pebble or cork in a clean handkerchief
  and folding it up. The Umb should always be
  raised and all tight clothing loosened. If pres-
  sure on the wound itself fails to arrest haemor-
  rhage, additional pressure may bo applied -
  nearer to the heart than the wound for arterial
  haemorrhage, and further from tho heart for
  venous haemorrhage.
  
  When the wound is too extensive to apply
  pressure to it, and arterial haemorrhage is present,
  a tourniquet improvised as follows should be
  applied higher up the limb. A pad is placed
  over tho main artery and secured in position by
  a handkerchief folded into a scarf and fimly
  tied. A stick is then inserted beneath the hand-
  kerchief on the opposite side to the pad, or it
  may be included in the knot of the bandage.
  By t\visting the stick round and round the
  bandage is steadily tightened until haemorrhajjO
  is arrested, when tho stick must be prevented
  from unwinding bj' a bandage at each end.
  
  A tourniquet or tight bandage must not bo
  kept on longer than is necessary ; the pressure
  should be gradually slackened as tho bleeding
  ceases.
  
  Slight pressure usually suffices to stop capil-
  laring haemorrhage. A pad of lint or clean linen
  soaked in hazeline or Friar's balsam can be
  applied, or, failing these, ice or a cold-water com-
  press. Water as hot as can bo borne will often
  check haemorrhage.
  
  If there are symptoms of collapse, keep tho
  patient on his back with tho head low - keep
  tlie limbs raised, and apply warmth. Give
  stimulants in very small quantities.
  
  Bleeding may occur from a site to which
  pressure cannot bo applied, e.g. tl^o nose, lungs,
  stomach, &c. Tlio treatment for these must bci
  considered separately.
  
  Nose Bleeding. - Tho patient should sit in a
  cliair with tho arms raised and tho head well
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  577
  
  
  bent back. The collar should be loosened, and
  cold may be applied to the back of the neck
  and cold water to the nose. In severe cases a
  doctor wnll be required.
  
  Blood-Spitting. - The treatment is complete
  rest in bed, talking in a whisper only, a Uttle
  ice to suck, and a sponge-bag containing ice may
  be placed over the chest. Coughing should be
  checked as much as possible. No stimulants
  should be given.
  
  Vomiting Blood may be due to blood that has
  come from the nose or the lungs and been
  swallowed, but if not, it is due to bleeding from the
  stomach and may be very severe. The patient
  should then be kept lying still, a little ice, but
  very little, should be given him to suck, and
  no medicine given by the mouth, as anything
  which may cause vomiting will increase the
  bleeding.
  
  Stomach; Rectum, &c. - In cases of bleeding
  from the stomach, rectum, bladder, or womb,
  the patient should be kept lying down until the
  doctor arrives.
  
  A Fit of Hysterics. - This is a nervous disease
  caused by excitement and weakness. It some-
  times resembles an attack of epilepsy, but there
  is never complete loss of consciousness, and it
  generally ends in the patient beginning to laugh
  or cry. The case must be dealt with firmly and
  gently, but there should be no show of sympathy.
  A dash of cold water on the face will generally
  put an end to the attack. The general health
  should have attention.
  
  Pins are often swallowed owing to the foolish
  habit of holding ihem in the mouth. A bowl
  of gruel should be taken, and an emetic avoided.
  In the vast majority of cases no harm results.
  
  Poisoning. - Poisons are divisible into two main
  groups : (1) those in which an emetic is on no
  account to be given ; (2) those in wMch an emetic
  should be given as soon as possible. Group (1)
  includes the corrosive poisons which, from their
  caustic action, eat into the stomach wall and
  may perforate it. In all other cases of poison-
  ing in which the poison has been swallowed
  an emetic should be given, unless the patient
  is unconscious.
  
  How to Act in a Case of Poisoning. - (1) Send
  at once for a doctor. (2) Preserve any poison
  bottle, medicine, food or vomit just as it is till
  the doctor arrives, otherwiso the most essential
  evidence will be destroyed. (3) If the nature
  of the poison is known, it is possible to apply
  treatment specially adapted to it. (4) If there
  is no clue to the nature of the poison, follow
  these directions : -
  
  (o) Note if the lips or clothing are burnt.
  If they are, the poison is a corrosive one, and an
  emetic must not be given. When the poison
  is known to be acetic acid, nitric acid, oxalic
  acid, or sulphuric acid, half an ovmce of chalk,
  whitening, or wall plaster may be given mixed
  in half a pint of water. In a great emer-
  
  
  gency the plaster may be scraped from the
  ceiling.
  
  (b) If the patient is unconscious, an emetic
  must not be given. The patient should be
  aroused either by speaking to him, shaking hino,
  or flicking him with a wet towel, but not by
  holding smelling salts to his nose, as these may
  do harm to the air passages before the patient is
  aroused by them. If he is unconscious and the
  breathingis weak, artificial respiration (see p. 575)
  should be resorted to at once.
  
  (c) Unless a corrosive poison has been taken,
  or the patient is unconscious, an emetic should be
  administered promptly, even though the exact
  nature of the poison is unknown. The best
  emetic is a table-spoonful of mustard in a tiunbler
  of tepid water, though copious draughts of tepid
  water or salt and water (two table-spoonfuls to
  half a pint tepid water) may be used if necessary.
  The action of the emetic should be aided by the
  introduction of the fingers or a feather well down
  into the throat.
  
  (d) In all cases of poisoning, if the patient can
  swallow, it is good treatment to give milk, or
  beaten-up eggs, or strong tea or coffee, salad or
  cod-liver oil. This may be done both before
  and after an emetic has acted. These remedies
  act as antidotes to many common poisons, and
  some of them also salve the irritated lining of
  the stomach.
  
  (e) Lastly, treat the shock, which many
  poisons cause, with warmth and stimulants, and
  do not let the patient go to sleep until the doctor
  has arrived.
  
  Ribs Broken. - This injury may result from a
  direct blow or a crush. Tlie symptoms caused
  are shallow breathing, with pain on drawing a
  deep breath. Rarely the broken rib punctures
  the lung ; bright red frothy blood is then coughed
  up. The treatment should be to tighten the
  clotliing so as to give the ribs support. This
  may be effected in a man by pinning up the back
  of the waistcoat. The arm of the affected side
  should then be placed in a sling and the patient
  sent to the doctor. If he is coughing up blood,
  the treatment must be different ; pressure will
  then aggravate the injury. Tlie patient should
  then he down till the doctor comes, or, if
  necessary, be carried to him on a stretcher or
  coster's barrow.
  
  Ring, Fixed. - To remove a ring which is firmly
  fixed on the finger, the latter must be made
  smaller by expelling the blood it contains. Tliis
  may be done first by shaking the hand above
  the head as high as can be reached, and then
  by bandaging the finger as tightly as possible
  from the nail downwards. By repeating this
  manoeuvre the ring can often be slipped off
  with a screw-like motion. If not, some stout
  packing tliread should be wound around the
  finger from the nail downwards until the ring
  is reached ; one end of the thread is then to
  be passed under the ring and brought out
  
  2o
  
  
  678
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  through it. The thread around the 6nger is
  now unwound by using the end that is through
  the ring ; by tliis action the ring should slip
  steadily towards the naU. Or the finger may
  be put into cold water and weU soaped. If
  these methods fail, the file is the only resort.
  
  Splinters.- If on the surface, they may be
  removed with a needle; if embedded m the
  skin, apply a hot fomentation for a few hours,
  then remoVe the splinter with a needle, if a pair
  of splinter forceps are not obtamable.
  
  Sprains are the ill effects presented by tendons
  and Ugaments which have undergone a stram.
  There is gencraUv severe pain m the part
  accompanied by swelhng. The sprained part
  should be kept raised, and hot fomentations
  should be appUed to reUeve the pain. A bad
  sprain is often worse than a broken bone, and
  a doctor should always be caUed in, or the after
  effects may be serious.
  
  Strangulation.- In all cases of strangulation
  from whatever cause death is usually very rapid.
  Promptitude of action is the great point. Im-
  mediately a person is found hanging he should
  be cut down, one hand severing the cord while
  the other supports the body and prevents it
  being injured by the fall. Then any rope or
  handkerchief round the neck must be removed,
  ' and if the body is warm, steps should be taken to
  restore animation. Loosen any articles of dress
  and at once go on with Sylvester's method (see
  p. 575). Should there be assistance at hand, cold
  water may be dashed on the chest and the body
  briskly dried.
  
  Suffocation by Gas.- Remove the sufferer at
  once from the deadly atmosphere into pure air
  and commence artificial respiration (see p. 575).
  Friction and warmth to the body should also be
  appUed, and all tight clothing removed.
  
  To rescue a person from a room filled with
  poisonous gas involves some difficulty, and should
  only bo done after taking a deep respiration
  and covering the mouth and nose with a cloth
  soaked in vinegar and water. A rush should
  then be made for the window and a pane broken
  and the face put to the aperture, and then
  a second window broken if possible to create
  
  a draught. /i\ tt f
  
  Sunstroke exists in two forms: (1) Ђieat
  Exhaustion; (2) Thermic Fever. Heat exhaus-
  tion may result from exposure to heat of any
  kind. The symptoms are collapse, pallor,
  sweating, rapid feeble pulse, hurried breathing,
  and subnormal temperature. Death may occur
  from heart failure, though complete recovery
  is the rule. Tlie treaitrwnt should be plenty of
  fresh air, and if there is much depression a stimu-
  lant may be given sparingly.
  
  Thermic fever rarely occurs except from ex-
  posure to the direct rays of the sun. The
  symptoms are loss of consciousness, which may
  become very deep. This loss of consciousness
  may be the first symptom, the victim falling as
  
  
  though struck down, but usually dizziness and
  nausea occur for a short time previously. The
  case may soon terminate in death, or recovery
  may occur, the onset of which is indicated by a
  return of consciousness and a fall of the tempera-
  ture. Tlie treatment should be the loosening of
  all tight clothing and the apphcation of cold to
  the whole body. This may be applied by spong-
  ing every few minutes with well water, or
  better by the application of ice. A sponge-
  bag full of ice should be placed against the
  head. A wet pack is sometimes beneficial, or
  a mustard leaf applied to the nape of the
  
  Wounds.^-It must be remembered that the
  first application to a wound will materially affect
  its future progress. The amateur must there-
  fore attend to the following rules :-(!) Arrest
  bleeding ; (2) cleanse the wound ; (3) bring the
  cut edges together when this can be done with
  safety ; (4) provide for the escape of discharges ;
  (5) keep the injured part at rest.
  
  The first of these rules is discussed under
  Haemorrhage (see p. 576). The cleansing men-
  tioned in the second rule is necessary, because
  germs are the cliief cause of wounds not
  
  healing. ■, , ^
  
  Wash the hands with soap and hot water
  before dressing a wound, then use boiled water
  cooled, or water to which a little Condy's fluid
  or a few borio ci*ystal8 have been added
  along with clean linen or boracic lint for
  the dressings.
  
  With respect to the third rule, the question
  whether to bring the cut edges together or not
  is often difficult to answer. When in doubt it
  is better to leave the wound open, as in some
  wounds closing up is the worst treatment pos-
  sible. In clean cuts, however, the edges should
  be brought together, preferably by the stitches
  of the surgeon, but failing a surgeon, resort
  must be made to strapping. A dry dressing
  just vnde enough to cover the cut should
  bo applied first, and over these strips of
  strapping should be applied in pairs, each
  pair making a cross, the centre of which is
  over the wound. The lowest corner of the
  wound should not be covered by strapping,
  so as to enable any discharge that may forni to
  escape. Over the strapping a pad of wool is
  placed, which is secured by a bandage, and the
  dressing is then complete.
  
  When it is decided not to bring the edges of
  the wound together, a dry dressing should be
  applied, unless there is a large raw surface, as in
  the case of many burns, when boracic or eucalyp-
  tus ointment spread on Unt or clean linen is
  preferable. The dry dressing should be im-
  pregnated with antiseptics; boric lint or cyanide
  gauze are two of the best preparations, but when
  these are not obtainable, clean linen rag may be
  used and the antiseptic provided by dusting the
  wound with boric powder. A pad of stenhsed
  
  
  HOME NURSING AND "FIRST AID"
  
  
  579
  
  
  absorbent wool should be placed over the dry
  dressing, and the whole enclosed with a bandage.
  Rest must then be secured for the injured part
  by the tise of splints, slings, or by confinement
  to bed.
  
  The After-Treatment. - Clean cuts should be
  left alone after the first dressing until the wound
  has healed. Wounds, the edges of wMch have
  not been brought together, should be dressed
  daily ; the wound should be syringed or bathed
  v/ith a mild antiseptic at blood heat, and then
  bandaged up as before. The bandage and wool,
  if not soiled, may be used again, but the dressing
  in contact with the wound should be renewed
  daily. The great point to be borne in mind in
  the dressing of wounds is the necessity for
  absolute cleanliness.
  
  
  THE fa:viily medicine chest
  
  SUGGESTED CONTENTS
  
  
  Boracic Powder or Crystals.
  
  Menthol Cone.
  
  Old linen that has been
  
  boiled.
  Pink lint and Cotton Wool
  
  (absorbent).
  Glycerine.
  Tincture of Iodine.
  Friar's Balsam.
  Sal Volatile.
  
  Senna Pods or Confection.
  Smelling Salts.
  Castor Oil.
  Olive OIL
  Vaseline.
  
  
  Boracic Ointment.
  Linseed Meal.
  Permanganate of Potash
  
  Crystals.
  Court Plaster.
  Carbonate of Soda.
  Essence of Peppermint.
  Clinical Thermometer.
  Medicine and Minim Glass.
  Clean pair of Scissors- kept
  
  wrapped up.
  Rubber adhesive Plaster
  
  (1 spool i in. wide).
  Jeyes' Fluid or Sanitas.
  Carbolic Oil.
  
  
  PERIODS OF QUARANTINE
  
  The quarantine period is the time dui-ing which one exposed
  to infection must be isolated before he can be said to be free of
  all risk of having the disease. For convenience of reference we
  append a table of these times : -
  
  
  Chicken-pox .
  Diphtheria .
  
  Influenza , .
  Measles
  
  German Jleasles
  Miimp. . .
  Small-pox
  Scarlet Fever
  
  
  Typhoid or Enteric
  
  Fever ....
  
  Whooping Cough .
  
  
  Age most likely
  to catch it.
  
  
  Childhood
  2-15 years
  
  AU ages
  Childhood
  Youth
  ChUdhood
  All ages.
  5-10 years
  
  Young adults
  
  Childhood
  
  
  Incubation
  Period.
  
  
  12-19 days
  
  1-7 days, usii-
  ally 2
  
  2-6 days
  
  10-14 days
  
  11-18 days
  
  14-23 days
  
  12 days
  
  1-7 days, usu-
  ally 3
  
  5-21 days
  
  5-18 days
  
  
  Quarantine
  Period.
  
  
  20 days
  
  
  HOME GARDENING
  
  
  GAKPKKXXO is not only an interesting hobby, but it is also a health-giving occupation which many
  
  women could take up ^"ith ^^^^^^^g^; .^. " • "ardemng, or to have a great deal of spare time in
  
  It is not necessary to undergo a traimng in ff ^^^'"S' ""^^ fairly well-directed effort to grow
  
  order to make a smaU garden attracuve^^^^^^^^ ^^^ ^"^,,, but in
  
  plants, and the obviously beneficial ^^^^j^^ №\j;^^"'^№ho make gardening a hobby, are in the liighest
  Lpro^-ing the health, spiri^ and ch^^^^^^^ ^, ^ Lburban garden in all its
  
  Ss^Snr^efX consi^^^^^^^^ the culture of flowers ha. been dealt with m a simple
  
  Sa^er wSch should prove useful, especially to the amateur.
  
  
  A SUBURBAN GARDEN
  
  The most common cause of failure in suburban
  gardening is the cramming in of many lands of
  pLt.. ^respective of their habit and their
  suitabihty for the conditions under which they
  have to grow. ,
  
  Another mistake made by those who have only
  a smaU garden of, say. from tliree to six square
  rods is of trying to grow flowers, fjuit. and
  vegetables together. In view of the fact that
  constant supplies of vegetables are brought to
  the door of suburbanists daily, it is seldom wise
  to give up the precious space of a very small
  suburban garden to them. There is certain y
  great value in vegetables, but they should only
  be grown where the conditions are favourable.
  
  So far as fruit is concerned, it is equally open
  to doubt whether it is worth the while of subur-
  banists %vith a very small garden to attempt it.
  The most that should be done is to try a few
  cordon trees on the party fence. Larger trees
  will take up more room than can bo spared.
  On the whole it is better to restrict a sma 1
  suburban garden to ornamental plants, with
  which may bo included grass.
  
  Vegetables and fruits may, however, be
  planted in larger gardens, especially if they arc
  big enough to bo divided into two or more
  
  sections. . r i.i,"
  
  Planning the Garden.- Tlicro is room for the
  display of a considerable amount of taste and
  ingenuity in laying out a small garden. The
  beginner should not go along the line of least
  resistance, which generally leads to a border
  round the sides, a grass plot in the middle, and
  nothing more ; in most cases a little more can
  
  Suppose the garden to be a rectangle, a little
  longer than it is broad, at the back of a row of
  terrace houses with a low waU or fence on both
  sides. A piece of painted or creosoted wooden
  
  
  trellis, about two feet high, might first be
  attached to the wall to secure greater height for
  creeping plants and also greater privacy. A
  foot-deep band of galvanised \vire attached to
  the trellis, but not so securely as to be quite firm,
  will serve to discourage the invasion of cats.
  The trelUs and the wire together will cost very
  
  ' A^ walk at one side only of the garden ^U
  suffice, and it will of course follow the Une of the
  border If six inches of brick-bats and clinkers
  are first rammed in and then surfaced with two
  inches of gravel, the walk will do admirably.
  It should be a little higher in the centre tht-n at
  the sides, so that rain will run off. The border
  ought to be four feet ^.-ide and the path three
  feet, then the width can be completed with a
  grass plot and another four feet border. ^
  
  Borders, path, and grass plots need not ^
  carried uninterruptedly to the other end of the
  garden, but might be stopped a few feet away m
  order to form a garden " cosy corner. This
  might be screened by a trellis five or six fee o
  high, with a narrow border at its foot m winch
  to put plants for covering the trellis, ihis
  trellis must not go completely across the garden;
  an opening the ^ddth of the path must be left
  in order to make an entrance, and here an arch
  should be set. ,
  
  In one angle of this enclosure a summer-house
  might bo set. or a pretty rustic bench with
  shrubs, or one or two selected trees such as
  Laburnum or Lilac, and this will develop into a
  shady and secluded spot, delightful on the even,
  ing of hot days. It adds greatly to the attrac-
  tion of a suburban home to have some suc^
  quiet place as this. A few seeds of Mignonette
  and Night-scented Stock should be sprinkled m
  patches near the summer-house, as the perfume
  \vi\\ be highly agreeable on summer days and
  
  "' If^there is to be a greenhouse it might stand
  580
  
  
  HOME GARDENING
  
  
  581
  
  
  at the opposite side of the enclosiu'e to the
  summer-house, or a small rockery might be
  formed.
  
  If a Rose is particularly wanted for the arch,
  the glossy -leaved Dorothy Perkins is to be
  recommended. Whether it succeeds or not
  depends on the purity of the air. A charming
  arch plant that nearly always succeeds is the
  small, white -flowered Clematis Montana. Care
  should be taken to deepen the soil and to manure
  it well for whatever climber is planted. A
  thorough drenching of water or liquid manure
  twice a week in hot weather will be a great help
  to the plant.
  
  As regards shrubs for the summer-house
  corner, the Aucuba is one of the most suitable,
  as it will grow under conditions that wovdd be
  unfavourable to most shrubs.
  
  Grass Plots. - If a grass plot is to be formed,
  the simplest way is to get an estimate for laying
  turfs from a local florist. The total cost, in-
  cluding labour, ought not to exceed £1 per square
  rod ; less for a quantity. Or, the grass plot may
  be sown from seed. Two things are absolutely
  essential to success : first, a level fine bed of soil ;
  the second, pure seed of a specially prepared
  mixture. The ground should be dug over in
  winter and the soil thrown up in lumps and
  allowed to remain thus for a few weeks ; then
  in favoxirable weather, towards the end of March
  or beginning of April, it will crimible down
  beautifully into fine particles, and can be raked
  perfectly smooth and level. It should be made
  firm during the levelling process, or it may sink
  in parts later on and give an uneven sward.
  
  The seed should be bought from one of the
  large seedsmen, and the soil and district should
  be described when the order is given. One
  pound of seed per square rod will be sufficient.
  Choose a still day in April for sowing, or Sep-
  tember is another suitable month. Rake the
  soil lightly over after sowing, and finish with
  rolhng if possible. The soil should neither be
  too dry nor saturated with moisture. Birds
  must be thought of and circumvented. Cover-
  ing with fish netting, or stringing black threads
  a few inches apart on short sticks, will suffice
  for protection. Whatever is used can be re-
  moved when the grass is an inch high all over.
  Then roll the plot. This will crush down the
  young grass, but will do no harm, and by
  pressing the soil round the roots it will encom-age
  the emission of new fibres. When the grass is
  from three to four inches high, the tops should be
  clipped off, preferably with shears or a scythe,
  as this will encourage a further break of grass
  from the base. Tlie lawn is now secure, and
  regular rolling and mowing will steadily improve
  it. Rolling is best done after rain, and is most
  effective in the spring, when the ground is com-
  paratively soft. Mowing is best done when the
  grass is dry or nearly so. In the case of yoimg
  grass the cutter should be set rather high, so
  
  
  that the grass is not sheared off quite low down.
  This might bare the roots, and they would suffer
  in hot weather. It is not a bad plan to let the
  grass fall and he on j'oung lawns ; it causes a
  brown appearance as the cut grass dies, but, on
  the other hand, the roots are mulched and
  shaded.
  
  A neat, straight edge is a nice finish to a grass
  plot, and care should be taken to prevent the
  encroachment of the grass on the path and
  border.
  
  Herbaceous Plants for Suburban Gardens. - The
  selection of plants for the borders will give food
  for much consideration. In these days hardy
  herbaceous plants hold the sway in large gardens,
  and there is no reason why suburban amateurs
  should not grow a few representatives of this
  large, popular, and beautiful class. A border
  four feet wide will not, of course, give the scope
  for fine colour effects which are procurable by a
  judicious use of fine perennials. There is not
  room for large groups. But handsome clumps
  of some good plants can be grown if the soil is
  well dug and manured. Let us summarise a
  few of the best. Double and single PjTethrums
  tlirive, and there are few plants more beautifixl.
  They are suitable for small borders, because
  their habit is neat and compact. Tlie foliage
  is graceful without being far-spreading. The
  flowers are thrown up well on long stems. They
  are useful for cutting on this account. On the
  whole, we certainly commend Pyrethrums to
  suburban amateurs. Columbines are delightful
  plants, the habit being neat and the flowers
  elegant, as well as charming in colour. Snap-
  dragons are admirable in every way. They
  grow freely almost anj^where, bloom profusely,
  and are brilliant in colour. If the ordinary
  kinds are considered too large, recourse may be
  had to the smaller sections, which are equally
  as beautiful as the larger. Pentstemons are
  very graceful, and the flowers are as charming
  as those of any hardy plant in existence. These
  splendid plants eire growing in favour every
  year, and suburbanists should make a point of
  becoining acquainted with them. Many of the
  IMichaelmas Daisies are too large for small
  borders, but others are not. Clirysanthemums
  will do yeoman's service. They are compact
  in habit, and produce charming flowers.
  
  Montbretias are graceful and free-blooming
  plants, with slender spikes of brilliant flowers
  rising from a mass of narrow leaves. Tlie
  perennials already named, if supplemented by a
  few bulbs and clumps of Annuals, would suffice
  for the majority of small suburban borders, and
  they are but a few of the many splendid plants
  available.
  
  Annuals for Suburban Gardens. - Such popular
  hardy Annuals as Clarkias, Godetias, Linums
  (Flax), Nasturtiums, Sweet Peeis, Nemophilas,
  Saponarias, Silenes, Poppies, Candytufts, Con-
  volvuluses, Eschscholtzias, Bartonia, Corn-
  
  
  582
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  flower. Sweet Sultans, Portulacas, Leptosiphons,
  Linarias, Love-in-a-mist, Larlcspurs, Mignon-
  ette, Phacelia, Virginian Stocks, and Night-
  scented Stock ; also snch beautiful half-hardy
  kinds as Ast^^rs, Ten-week Stocks, Mangolds,
  Phlox Drummondii, Nemesias, Scabiouses, Sal-
  piglossis, and Zinnias are excellent for suburban
  gardens. (For Hints on Culture, &c., see
  
  P- 584.)
  
  Bulbs for Suburban Gardens.- Bulbs play a
  prominent part among spring flowers ; it is
  difficult to say what we should do without
  Daffodils, Tulips, and Hyacinths. Tliese beau-
  tiful bulbs come into a bedding scheme which
  consists of two annual plantings- one in autumn,
  the other in late spring. Tlie beds are cleared
  of the summer flowers in October, and planted
  with bulbs, which make way in their turn m
  May for a fresh lot of siunmer plants. Amateurs
  may put clumps of bulbs in their mixed borders
  for the sake of a spring display, which wiU be at
  its best when the herbaceous plants are only
  just starting to grow. And they may also plant
  bulbs in beds, interspersed, if desu-ed, with
  Arabises, Aubrietias, and Forget-me-nots, all
  of which can be cleared away in May to make
  .room for half-hardy Annuals or orthodox bedding
  plants, such as Begonias, Carnations, Geramums,
  Pansies, &c. For the culture of bulbs, as well
  as hints on choice of varieties, see p. 587.
  
  Roses for Suburban Gardens.- Roses cannot be
  recommended unreservedly as plants for subur-
  ban gardens. Their beauty of form, their
  glorious colours, their fragrance render these
  magnificent flowers supreme. Unfortunately
  the plants do not care for town life. Impure
  air has a marked effect upon them. The leaves
  get coated with smuts, and the buds refuse to
  open. The plants may flower fairly well once
  or twice, but they steadily dechno. \Vhether
  success can be achieved in suburban gardens or
  not depends more on the atmosphere than on
  anything else.
  
  Something turns upon culture, however. If
  the soil is well prepared, and strong plants of
  vigorous sorts are put in, the prospects of success
  are brighter than in a poor soil and with weak
  varieties. , .
  
  It is wise to make the most of the limited
  energies of the plants by restricting them to a
  few shoots and flowers. Half-a-dozen branches
  will be better than twice that ntimber. The
  clusters of flower -buds may bo thinned down to
  one in each case, except in certain bunch-flowered
  varieties.
  
  Suburbanists who are in doubt as to whether
  Roses might be expected to succeed in their
  gardens should try a few vigorous varieties first
  of all, and if the results are satisfactory they
  could increase the collection.
  
  Carnations in Suburban Gardens.- The Carna-
  tion is a genuine town crarden plant. Some of
  the most famous of Carnation growers have
  
  
  cultivated their favourites in or near a town.
  The fact is the Carnation has none of that
  susceptibility to the influences of impure air
  wliich makes the Rose so tantalising. Many
  amateur gardeners love to take up one particular
  flower and concentrate attention upon it. They
  find that they get more satisfaction from this
  than from spreading their energies over a large
  number of kinds. To those of this class who
  garden near towns the Carnation may be warmly
  recommended. The collection may be grown
  either in the garden or under glass, or partly
  under both conditions. (For Cultural Hints,
  see p. 591.)
  
  Auriculas in Suburban Gardens.- As in the case
  of the Carnation, so in that of the Auricula, some
  of the most successful growers and exhibitors
  have been town or submban gardeners.
  
  It is a tiny plant, retiring and modest. But
  it has a charm, a winsomeness, which appeal
  powerfully to lovers of refined flowers. It is o
  dainty little floral gem, pretty in form, pleasing
  in colour, and dehghtful in perfume.
  
  LARGER GARDENS
  
  We have spoken hitherto of quite small sub-
  urban gardens at the back of terrace houses.
  More may, of course, be done in the larger
  gardens belonging to semi-detached and wholly
  detached villas further out. When these are
  situated in pvirely residential districts, even Roses
  can bo grown successfully.
  
  There may be a somewhat more elaborate
  plan, and in some cases fruit and vegetables may
  be introduced. Flowers, however, should be
  given the pride of the place. Vegetables are
  excellent in their way, but they do not add one
  iota of the pleasure and interest to a home that
  flowers are capable of yielding.
  
  Herbaceous Borders in larger Gardens.- One
  advantage which the large garden ^vill enjoy
  over its smaller neighbour is the capacity for
  providing a good border. This will permit of
  introducing large clumps of such plants as
  Paeonies, Delphiniums, Hollyhocks, Ox-eye
  Daisies, Phloxes, and other richly coloured
  plants. The border will not only bo beautiful
  and interesting as a whole ; it will yield large and
  constant suppUes of flowers for carrying into the
  house. .
  
  Shrubs.- The subxirbanist with a fair amount
  of room can also add to the interest of his garden
  by planting more shrubs. He can add flowering
  shrubs, as many of the best will thrive in gardens
  where the air is fairiy pure. A great deal depends
  on the preparation of the soil, which should be
  trenched and manured so as to get a depth ol
  about two feet. The majority of the flowering
  shrubs bloom in Spring, but some excellent
  kinds can be got which will blossom at other
  seasons ; indeed it is possible to have beauty
  almost tlu-oughout the year, as a few actually
  
  
  HOME GARDENING
  
  
  583
  
  
  flower in winter. We must not expect much
  bloom in winter, but there are a few kinds which
  will flower in that quarter.
  
  One of these is the Glastonbvuy Thorn, which
  flowers in late autumn or Christmas - there is
  also the Japanese Quince, which flowers generally
  in late winter. The winter Jasmine, too, is a
  pronounced winter bloomer. Daphine Mezereum
  is a deUghtful winter and early spring shrub. It
  has small pinkish, very sweet flowers, and does
  not take up much room. It does well in Subur-
  ban Gardens. Some of the Magnolias are early
  bloomers, and among them the beautiful species
  SteUata ranks very high.
  
  Forsythia suspensa is a very early bloomer,
  and in mild winters is out before the spring
  quarter begins. It produces long, slender
  flowers and grows almost anywhere. It is one
  of the best of early -flowering shrubs.
  
  The flowering Currant is another valuable
  plant to the amateur ; it grows freely and
  blooms profusely. The Rhododendron is, of
  course, the queen of spring flowering shrubs, but
  it must have space, suitable surroundings, and
  is scarcely suitable for an enclosed garden.
  
  One of the most beautiful of the Spiraeas,
  namely, arguta, is an early bloomer, and should
  
  
  Pruning Shrubs after flowering, removing bloomed wood.
  A shows the bloomed wood to be removed ; B, B show
  young shoots that must not be cut off.
  
  find a place in all collections of good flowering
  slirubs.
  
  The majority of flowering shrubs are at their
  best in spring, but there are, too, several good
  shrubs that are distinctly summer blooming.
  The Spirseas are among the finest of summer
  flowering shrubs ; some of the species are true
  shrubs. Of such are Douglasii, which has rose-
  coloured flowers ; Bullata, which has pink flowers;
  Artchisoni with pale yellow flowers.
  
  We do not get much autumn bloom among
  the shrubs, but we get abundance of berries,
  and they are bright and rheerial. We get them
  on the Aucubas, on the Dogwoods, on the Spinder
  
  
  Tree, on the Pemettya, on the Snowberry and
  the Japanese Rose.
  
  Soil for Shrubs. - If any shrub-lover is import-
  ing soil in order to improve the natural medium
  of his garden, he cannot do better than arrange
  that the greater part of it be decayed turi.
  Practically everything will grow in it. Some
  leaf mould is helpful, but it need not consist of
  more than a quarter. In the absence of leaf
  mould, road sweepings could be added to the
  loam with advantage.
  
  Pruning Shrubs. - Those that flower on the
  wood made the previous year should be pruned
  after flowering, the wood that has bloomed
  
  
  Pruning Shrubs in spring lor those that flower on current
  year's growths. A, A, A shoots to be cut out ; B, B, B
  shoots to be retained ; C, C, C show how to disbud to
  avoid undue crowding of young wood.
  
  being cut away to make room for new. But
  those which flower on the young wood of the
  current year may be pruned in spring.
  
  Trees. - The suburbanist who has a fairly
  large garden may perhaps Uke to have a selection
  of ornamental trees not too large in growth.
  The Almonds are useful because of their early
  bloom. Tlie double scarlet Tliorn, the Scotch
  Laburnum, various Hollies, the Lilac, the
  Mountain Ash with its sprays of bright berries,
  and Prunus Pissardii (for its purple leaves) are
  all worth considering.
  
  Tliese trees never attain to very large dimen-
  sions ; at the same time they have beauty of
  flower, berry, or foUage to recommend them, and
  are suited to owners of small gardens.
  
  Lovers of the class of trees called Conifers
  (because they bear cones) may hke to include
  a few, and thoy are certainly very useful.
  Some are deciduous, others evergreen. A well-
  known example of the former class is the Spruce,
  and of the latter the Cypress.
  
  One of the most useful of the Conifers for a
  small garden is Cupressas Lawsoniana, a grace-
  
  
  584
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  fill, hardy, and inexpensive, if somewhat sombre
  tree, of which there are many varieties differing
  in habit from the tj-pe. The Douglas Fir,
  WelUngtonia giganU^a, the Maidenhair Tree and
  the Cedeir are a few popular Conifers.
  
  ANNUALS
  
  That large class of plants wliich botanists
  distinguish as " Annuals " comprises some of
  the most popular of garden flowers. It em-
  braces the Sweet Pea, China Aster, the fragrant
  Ten-week Stock, the briUiant Poppy, the per-
  fumed ilignonette, the dear little blue Corn-
  flower, the bright Candytuft, the Chrysanthemvun,
  the Convohnilus, the Night-scented Stock, &c.
  
  Annuals may be dealt with in three groups : -
  hardy, half-hardy, and tender. A hardy Annual
  is one that passes the whole of its career in the
  open air ; a half-hardy Annual, one that is
  raised under glass and afterwards planted out ;
  a tender Annual, one that Uves out its life under
  glass.
  
  Hardy and half-hardy Annuals may be used
  for bulb beds, mixed borders and banks. Per-
  haps they prove the most useful as clumps near
  the fronts of mixed borders, but a few selected
  Vinds may be utilised to make up beds of them-
  selves ; and if the hints on culture which are
  given here are followed they wUl probably vie
  with any other beds in the garden.
  
  There is another use to which many beautiful
  AnnuaLs can be put, and that is to cover porches,
  arches, and fences, or to droop from window-
  boxes. The Canary Creeper, the half-climbing
  forms of Tropaeolum, and the Convolvuluses
  are all popular.
  
  Having indicated some of the uses to which
  Armuals may be put, we may now pause to
  consider a few important cultural points, and
  then give selections of the best kinds and
  varieties.
  
  Cultural Points. - Dealing first with the soil,
  we may say that it presents a very simple
  problem. Annuals do not require the deep,
  rich soil which Roses and herbaceous plants
  demand ; indeed, it is a positive disadvantage
  in the case of many, notably Nasturtiums,
  because it causes growth so luxuriant that the
  plants flower poorly. There are few classes of
  garden plants for which we would prefer a light
  shallow soil to a heavy, deep one, but the
  Annuals certainly constitute one. Wo sec, then,
  that as far as Annuals are concerned we may
  easily be too' kind. We may waste labour and
  manure. Wo may make the plants grow too
  well - or, rather, too strongly. There is no need
  whatever for digging more than a spado deep,
  and the amount of manure used should not
  exceed the very modest quantity of one barrow-
  load per square rod.
  
  An ounce of bone flour or sulphate of potash
  to the square yard, spread on whenever the
  
  
  ground is dug, but preferably in February or
  ^larch, will, however, be beneficial, leading to the
  production of abundance of flowers and to the
  eiu-iclunont of their colours.
  
  It is an excellent plan to rough-dig the ground
  in winter, leaving the surface quite lumpy, and
  then to spread on some wood ashes and soot.
  Towards the end of March, or in the early part
  of April, the surface may be raked down, and the
  soil will probably fall at once into a fine tilth,
  admirably suited for the small seeds.
  
  If the Annuals are to be grown in beds by
  themselves, consideration should be devoted to
  finisliing the soil off neatly. Have the sides
  raised above the surrounding grass and clear of
  the verge, so that a neat edge can be kept with
  the shears. A border of some dwarf plant, such
  as Thrift, or Pinks, or an Annual like the Sweet
  Alyssum will be an appropriate finish to the
  bed.
  
  Arrangement in Beds. - Coming to the arrange-
  ment of the plants in beds, they could either bo
  put in lines or clumps. Tlie latter look more
  graceful and informal. If, however, the grower
  
  
  Annuals- Sowing Seeds. A shows how to sow seeds In
  drills ; B shows how to sow them in patches or clumps ;
  and C shows the seeds scattered thinly on the prepared
  soil.
  
  prefers to sow in lines, it will be found con-
  venient to get a board about ten inches wide,
  and use it for getting straight rows. A drill can
  be formed by turning the rake on end, teeth
  outward, along the edge of the plank, then the
  latter can be simply turned over and another
  drill drawn. This is quicker than constantly
  resetting a garden line.
  
  With respect to clumps, the grower can do
  one of two things - form a shallow saucer b}' a
  quick rotary motion with the palm of his hand,
  or make a circle by pressing the rim of an
  inverted flower-pot into the soil. The clumps
  must not be made too close together. The rings
  
  
  HOME GARDENING
  
  
  385
  
  
  or patches should be at the least a foot apart
  for small things, and two feet for large ones.
  
  There is room for the exercise of considerable
  taste in associating the different plants in a bod
  of mixed Annuals. The colours may be con-
  trasted, for one thing. Then, diiferent height
  and habit may be considered. It is not wise to
  put tall tilings in the centre and arrange the
  others in regular tiers to the edge, as that may
  look stiff. Certainly we would not so far depart
  from this - the common - plan as to have short
  things in the centre and tall ones at the edges ;
  but a tall, loose-growing plant may be used here
  and there to impart Ughtness to a group of short,
  compact plants.
  
  The seed should be sown very thinly. If
  small, it may be covered half an inch deep ; if
  large, an inch at least.
  
  Annual? must be regarded as real objects of
  interest from the first, and regularly attended to,
  and not treated as though they differed from
  every other class of plant and required no atten-
  tion after sowing. If a period is chosen for
  sowing when the weather is mild and genial,
  from the end of March to mid-April, and the soil
  is moist and crumbly, seedUngs should be visible
  in about ten days. If they do not appear witliin
  a fortnight, the grower should want to know the
  reason why. Sometimes slugs attack the seeds,
  so that the plants never show through the ground
  at all, and often in such cases suspicion fastens
  on the seedsman.
  
  Other Important Points. - If the seed has been
  sown thinly, the task r>f thinning the seedhngs
  will not be a very irksome one. It may be done
  twice - the first time when they are about an inch
  liigh, and the second when they begin to crowd
  each other after being thinned to a couple of
  inches apart. Few people are bold enough in
  thinning seedlings. Very few Annuals should be
  nearer than nine inches to each other when they
  come into flower.
  
  Hoeing among the plants is splendid practice.
  It cleans and aerates the soil, and promotes
  rapid growth. Staldng will not be required in
  the majority of cases. If needed at aU one
  bamboo or other stake attached to the main stem
  will generally suffice.
  
  If there is one practice which conduces more
  than another to continuous flowering, it is the
  picking off of faded flowers before they have
  time to ripen seed. The logical conclusion from
  this, of course, is that if flowers must bo regularly
  cut it 's just as well to take them while they arc
  fresh.
  
  Watering will also be advantageous in dry
  weather. Watering entails considerable time
  and labour ; besides being a source of expense,
  the necessity of it should be reduced as much as
  possible. Hoeing and mulching with a few
  inches of cocoa-nut fibre refuse, decayed manure,
  or lawn mowings, both tond to reduce the neces-
  sity for watering.
  
  
  The following are a few of the most useful
  and valuable of the Annuals : -
  
  Candytufts. - These are particularly useful,
  because they come early into bloom, and will
  grow almost anywhere. A good strain of
  carmine is one of the brightest and most useful
  Annuals we have. They grow to about twelve
  inches in height and can be had in crimson,
  purple, white, &c.
  
  Chrysanthemums. - The varieties of annual
  Chrysanthemum called Morning Star and Even-
  ing Star, which are different shades of yellow,
  are very desirable. The amateur should also
  grow Chrysanthemum Burridgeanmn, wluch will
  give some darker shades.
  
  Clarkias. - The elegans rosea variety ought to
  be included whatever else is left out.
  
  It is a very graceful plant, one of the earUest
  to come into bloom, and one of the last to go
  out. It grows from eighteen to twenty-four
  inches in height and can be had in rose, purple,
  &c.
  
  The Eschscholtzias are very bright, and will
  grow anywhere. Cahfornica and Mandarin are
  orange. Rose Cardinal rose. These plants have
  very finely-cut fohage. Height about twelve
  inches.
  
  Godetias. - These should be regarded as indis-
  pensable. They are not very early bloomers,
  but they last a long time. They will stand
  drought better than most plants if they £ire
  raised sturdily. Height frora twelve to eighteen
  inches in crimson, rose, white, &c.
  
  Love-in-a-Mist. - There is a splendid veiriety
  of this, called Miss Gertrude Jekyll, wliich ought
  to be got. It is worth trouble to procure, being
  double the size of the old one, and a lovely shade
  of pale blue. The plant blooms incessantlj' for
  three or four months, and does not mind dry
  soil. Height from twelve to eighteen inches.
  
  The Rose Mallows are splendid plants for dry
  soils, blooming profusely and long where most
  other plants would fade quickly. Height about
  thirty inches - crimson in colour.
  
  Mignonette is a general favourite. There are
  various kinds, red, white, and yellow, and it
  grows to about nine inches in height.
  
  Nasturtiums. - There is now a large number
  of these. The Tom Thumb veirieties, such as
  Empress of India, are very vivid. The variegated
  leaf variety is interesting and attractive. It
  rambles freely, and is well worth growing.
  Sunhght is a yellow of medium height, but self-
  supporting. The Ivy-leaved Nasturtiums are
  also good things.
  
  Night-scented Stock. - This should be sown in
  patches near the windows of the house, so that
  tho delicious odour wliich it exhales may enter
  the windows. It is a somewhat straggly grower,
  and the colom- is not bright, but it is very
  persistent, lasting quite into the autumn. The
  colour is lilac, and it grows to about twelve inches
  in height.
  
  
  586
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Shirley Poppies. - There are beautiful singles
  that one can buy in mixture. They are brilliant
  but ephemeral, and some of tlie giant doubles,
  which can be had in scarlet, wliite, striped, pink,
  and otlier colours, should bo grown. They are
  splendid plants in bods, for theii* leaves are hand-
  some, and when the liiige flowers are thrown up
  well above the foliage on tall, strong stems,
  there are few garden plants to excel them.
  Height twelve to thirty inches.
  
  The Sweet Pea. - The greatest of all Annuals
  is the Sweet Pea. It is not surprising that the
  plant should enjoy great favour ; it is a vigorous
  grower, is hardy, thrives on most soils, remains
  long in beauty, has beautiful flowers with a
  wide range of colours, exhahng a delicious
  perfume. It will yield far more blossoms than
  any other plant which can be grown in the open
  gardens of this country.
  
  The seeds should be sewn in shallow trenches
  or drills. The depth will vary shghtly according
  to the texttu-e of the soil - the stronger it is the
  shallower the cutting sliould be. In any case
  the trenches must not exceed four inches and
  never be less than two inches. Another im-
  portant point is the distance at which the seed
  should be placed. It is exceedingly diflficult
  to lay down a hard-and-fast rule, but if the
  distance varies from one to two inches it is almost
  impossible that the grower can go far astray.
  The plants can be grown either in single or
  double rows, but the former method is to be
  preferred.
  
  It is imperative that the plants be given early
  support. Sticks should bo placed to the seedlings
  before they attain the height of four inches, and
  to these preliminary sticks the young plants
  should be carefully attached with bass. Before
  the plants reach the top of the twiggy sticks
  the permanent ones must be put in position,
  or ordinary large meshed, galvanised wire, or a
  specially-made wire framework.
  
  If the soil is good it is not likely that the
  plants will require any water until they are
  showing buds ; in any event it is wise to defer
  watering until it becomes imperative. When
  watering is done it should be such a soaking
  that the ground will be moistened to a depth of
  about three feet. This done, the grower should
  not make the slightest attempt to water a second
  time until the soil is again quite dry. When the
  plants are in full bud and bloom, waterings with
  liquid manure will be essential.
  
  HALF HARDY AND TENDER ANNUALS
  
  These are raised in a frame or greenhouse in
  early spring, and planted in the garden when
  the weather is warm enough - say, in May or the
  early part of June. If the amateur has no glass
  the seedlings must either be bought or sowr;
  out of doors, but not before the beginning of
  May.
  
  
  Those to be started under glass are best sown
  in boxes, and if a special compost can be prepared
  it should consist of equal parts of loam and leaf
  mould, with an eightli of coarse sand. It should
  be pressed Grmly into boxes three or four inches
  deep, which can be bought from a grocer or oil
  and colour merchant, as a rule, at a very cheap
  rate. Sow in drills about half an inch deep,
  with the soil in a moist but not sodden state,
  and cover the boxes with squares of glass if
  possible, but, with or without glass, with sheets
  of newspaper, which may be removed when
  germination has taken place.
  
  The remarks as to soil and planting made
  about hardy Annuals apply to the half-hardy.
  A deep, rich soil is not necessary for the majority.
  
  Soot, wood ashes, bone flour, superphosphate,
  and sulphate of potash impart fertility as well as
  yard mamu-e. Of course, the ground should
  be well worked and pulverised. The other
  general remarks made under hardy Annuals
  apply.
  
  Among the best half-hardy Annuals are the
  following : -
  
  Asters. - These rank very high, and ^e well
  worth cultivating. There are several tj'pes, and
  all can be bought in mixtures or in assortments
  of from six to twelve separate colours. The
  Dwarf Bouquet, Pseony flowered. Quilled, Vic-
  toria, Comet and Ostrich Plume will be found
  particularly valuable for garden decoration,
  owing to their graceful habit, and large, fleecy,
  richly-coloured flowers.
  
  Marigolds are old favourites, and Nemesia
  Strumosa Suttoni a new one.
  
  The Phloxes rival Verbenas, and the Salpi-
  glossis lias a grace of habit and a diversity of
  coloration of its own. Its large bell-shaped
  flowers are quaintly beautiful.
  
  Stocks are quite indispensable. They can be
  bought either in mixed colours or in assortments
  of several distinct hues. The Dwarf Gerr.an is
  shorter than the Giant Perfection, but the latter
  produces the finest spikes of bloom.
  
  Zinnias are very brilliant. Tliey like a little
  bottom heat to start in. Although slow beginners
  without warmth, they grow rapidly when once
  in swing, and are splendid garden plants.
  
  Tobacco Flowers. - These are sometimes bien-
  nial or perennial in duration, but are generally
  grown as Annuals, and the same remarks apply
  to Petunias. Both plants should be grown,
  the former for perfume and evening bloom,
  the latter for their large, richly -coloured
  flowers.
  
  The Tender Annuals, which are used for green-
  house decoration in pots, are not numerous.
  The Balsam, of which the Camellia flowered
  is one of the best types, is one of the most
  familiar examples. Petunias are much in de-
  mand for pot culture. Asters and Mignonette
  are both suitable for winter blooming, also
  the Rhodanthos and Ten-wook Stock.
  
  
  HOME GARDENING
  
  
  587
  
  
  BULBS
  
  In present-day gardening bulbs hold a position
  of their own among the flowers of spring, and if it
  were not for their charming colours and sweet
  fragrance our gardens would lose much of their
  chai'm. Much has been done by cultivation
  witliin recent years, and some of the lovely forms
  which are now the commonplaces of the garden
  were undreamed of fifty years ago.
  
  Very little need be said about the functions of
  the bulb and the leaves. In practice the main
  things to know or remember are : - (1) That the
  green leaves are the food manufactories of the
  plant, and that if they are removed before their
  work is completed, there will be so much less
  food in the storehouse, which is the bulb. There
  are bulb-growers who think they may cut off
  the leaves directly, or very soon after, the flower
  has faded. It may be done once with compara-
  tive impunity, the only result being rather
  weaker growth the next season and a poorer
  flower, but the treatment must not be repeated.
  
  (2) That the bulb is the cupboard of the plant
  where the food is kept. After a bulb has been a
  certain time out of the ground it will begin to
  show signs of growth, and the ends of leaves will
  appear from the top. This means that the plant
  has had to draw on its food supplies, and, if
  the supplies are not replenished, it wiU become
  weaker and weaker and ultimately die. This
  is the reason it is important to put the bulb in
  the ground in good time, so that it can make
  roots before it makes a:y top growth.
  
  Another point to be remembered is that light
  seems to unduly stimulate the growth of the
  leaves ; therefore a bulb when it is potted should
  be first of all placed under a covering of ashes
  or fibre, or sand outside, or else in a dark, well-
  ventilated cellar.
  
  Cultivation. - Like any other plant, the bulb
  responds to care and attention, so we can all
  do something to improve it. But there wiU be
  exceptions, for there are particular varieties
  which in practice fail to respond to our efforts,
  and we have the sad experience of seeing them
  gradually fade and die away. Those which fail
  are not the same in every garden. Tlaese likes
  and dishkes of certain kinds every one must find
  out for herself, just as in matters of food we can
  never tell what will agree or what will disagree
  with us until we try it.
  
  Bulbs may be utilised in many different ways ;
  they may be planted in a border of mixed planta
  or in a bed by themselves ; they may be grown in
  grass or under trees in an orchard, and also in
  window-boxes and pots, or in bowls and glasses
  in the house.
  
  Bulbs in Borders and Special Beds. - When bulbs
  are planted in clumps in mixed bordei-s, all tliat
  can be done is to dig out as large a space as
  is possible, to the depth of a foot or eighteen
  inches, and mix a little bone meal in the soil below
  
  
  the bulbs. If the soil is stiff and clayey, some
  lighter soil or something that wall help to keep
  it porous must be added, as no bulb hkes stag-
  nant moisture about its roots. If, however, it
  is very hght and the drainage good, a layer of
  old cow manure placed at six inches below the
  base of the bulb is advantageous, and Rainit in
  addition to the bone meal should be added to
  the soil.
  
  When the planting is done in special beds
  these should be from three to four feet wide
  and as long as convenient, and in such a position
  that they will be protected from cold winds.
  The ground should be " double dug," and lime
  and bone meal added. The bulbs in these beds
  must be planted in rows about nine or ten inches
  apart to allow a hoe to be worked between them
  from time to time during their growth. In
  January, if the weather is very severe, place a
  covering of some kind over the beds. Heather
  is good. Do not remove it until the hardest
  frosts are past and there is an inch or two of
  green leaves above the gi-ound.
  
  Keep the surface of the beds clean and hoe
  them frequently. Tlie hoe should be run be-
  tween the beds about once a month, and do not
  leave oS until the hoe will spoil ihe blooms.
  
  Bulbs in Grass. - ^Tliere are two ways of
  planting : -
  
  (1) By flajnng large, irregular patches, and
  then loosening and enriching the soil with bone
  meal, or, when it is poor, with a very httle super-
  phosphate as well, then placing the bulbs in
  this prepared ground so that they will hold them-
  selves up and not tumble over when the soil is
  replaced.
  
  (2) By using such a tool as Barr's Special
  Bulb -Planter, which is most effective. First
  make a hole with the planter and put a Little
  
  
  Planting Bulbs in Grass. A, bulbs ; B, opening through
  turf. Bulbs six incites apart.
  
  good, light, prepared soil at the bottom of the
  hole for the bulb to root in, then place tho bulb
  itself on this, and put back the little circular
  bit of turf that is released from the cup (of the
  planter) when a second hole is made. After the
  first shower of rain it ^vill be impossible to tell
  that the ground has been disturbed. It is
  always better to plant one sort by itself. A
  mass of almost any flower is effective. Try to
  avoid stiffness in planting. The more irregular
  
  
  588
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  the individual patches are the better, and so
  arrange that a few stray bulbs are placed singly
  here and there near the outside of the clumps.
  They must not bo planted too far apsirt or the
  effect \\nll look thin.
  
  Time for Planting. - All bulbs should be planted
  before the end of October if the best results are
  to be got from them. Of course, they may be
  planted in November and even earlyin December,
  but they will not be so strong or so large as if
  they were put in the ground earlier. Those that
  are wanted for forcing and early blooming may
  be planted as soon as the montla of August.
  Planting in grass should not be attempted until
  the ground is softened by autumn rains. Atten-
  tion to this detail is very necessary.
  
  Method of Planting. - A safe rule to go by is to
  plant large bulbs six inches deep and small ones
  four inches, but in hght soil these depths may
  be exceeded slightly.
  
  A question which has reference to planting
  is the length of time that the bulbs ought to be
  
  
  Depth at which to Plant different Bulbs. A, Snowdrops,
  Crocuses, or Scillas ; B Jonquils, Tulips, Ac. ; C,
  Hyacinths ; D, Narcissi, Gladiola, &c. ; E, Liliums.
  
  allowed to remain without lifting. Except in
  the case of poor " doers," it is best to leave them
  alone for two years without disturbance ; the
  blooms are finer and earlier the second season.
  
  Lifting and Storing. - April is the flowering
  month, and in May when tho blooms are over
  the leaves should be tied up, but do not cut them
  off until they turn yellow. As soon as the leaves
  assume a yellow hue and begin to lie flat upon
  tho ground, the time has come to lift these bulbs
  which require remo\'ing from the ground. Too
  late lifting must be avoided - far bftt  little too soon. After tho bulbs are hftcd they
  must be thinly spread out in a cool, airy place,
  either in trays or on plates, \mtil they are thor-
  oughly dry. If the getting-up season has been
  wet they must bo looked at every second or
  third day and turned. When quite dry they
  may be stored in trays or open bags until they
  are wanted to be planted. In the case of valu-
  able varieties the bulb is sometimes split up
  
  
  when it is dried, and the offsets are planted
  separately. It is best only to take off those
  offsets which come off naturally by themselves,
  or wliich can be separated by a very slight out-
  ward pressure or pulling away.
  
  Offsets should be planted as soon as possible ;
  the smaller they are the greater is the necessity.
  Except in the case of expensive bulbs, the grow-
  ing of small offsets is scarcely worth the wliile
  of any amatetu-. At any rate, offsots should be
  planted by themselves in beds in the kitchen
  garden or in some vacant space in August.
  
  If by any chance the cultivator is late in taking
  up Ills bulb and they have begun to make now
  roots, they must be planted at once without
  being dried off. In the case of offsets this is
  of even more importance than for the parent
  bulb. The best adAaee, therefore, with regard to
  offsets is to plant early.
  
  Tlie following are a few of the most suitable
  bulbs for growing out of doors : -
  
  Crocuses. - ^Very hardy, very cheerful, very
  easy to manage is the little Crocus. There are
  yellow, purple, wliite and striped Crocuses. Tlie
  golden yellow is particularly bright, and it has
  comparatively large flowers. They are charm-
  ing in Unes to beds and borders, also in grass
  and under trees. They aro so cheap that they
  can be planted in any quantities.
  
  Daffodils and Narcissi. - These are easily-grown
  plants. They will thrive in most soils, but
  luxuriate in a deep, cool, substantial medium.
  They may be used in beds, borders, woodland
  and gi-ass with equal effect. The variety of
  these bulbs is so enormous that the task of mak-
  ing a selection from mere names is a very difficult
  one ; the amateur should consult a good bulb-
  dealer before making his choice. Some of the
  cheapest are among the best.
  
  Two Uttlc practical details are worth noting.
  It must be remembered that all the beautiful
  red cups and red edges burn very soon if exposed
  to hot sunsliine, and if such varieties are used
  they should be put in position where thoy will
  have a little shade. Secondly, attention must
  be given to the time tho different kinds bloom,
  either to ensure a sequence of bloom or to have
  a big simultaneous display, as may be desired.
  
  Glory of the Snow. - This ranks with the
  smaller bulbs, such as Scillas and Snowdrops.
  Tliere are several species and varieties, all blue,
  blue and white, or white. The first of these is
  the true Glory of tho Snow. It has delightful
  blue flowers with a white centre, grows to about
  the same height as the Snowdrop, and is in
  bloom at the same time. It is a hardy, attrac-
  tive, inexpensive, and accommodating little
  bulb, and may be represented in gardens where
  such little gems are loved.
  
  Hyacinths are loved by everybody. In pots,
  in glasses, in tho soil of tho open gardens, the
  Hyacinth is equally at home. Any cool, moist
  soil will grow Hyacintlis well. Water is the Ufo-
  
  
  HOME GARDENING
  
  
  589
  
  
  blood of these plants ; they must never be
  stinted for moisture, whether indoors or out.
  It is wasteful to dot odd bulbs about the garden,
  because they produce no particular effect.
  Clumps should be formed, and if they are thought
  to be a little stiff they may be associated with
  Chalice Daffodils, which are generally in bloom
  at the same time.
  
  Scillas are very modest flowers, but they
  have their uses. Sibirica, the blue Squill, is a
  pretty and serviceable little plant. It blooms,
  together with its white variety, in February.
  Bifolia is a charming httle plant which flowers
  in March. There are several varieties of it,
  including a wliite (alba) and a pink (Pink
  Beauty). The wild " Bluebell," or Wood
  Hyacinth, is a Scilla, and its specific scientific
  name is; variously given as nutans and festalis.
  Tliere are pink and white varieties of this also.
  It is an April bloomer. The Spanish Squill
  {Scilla hispanica), blue, and its varieties bloom
  in March. There are several different shades
  of blue, likewise red, rose, and white.
  
  Snowflakes. - These are great favourites and
  they are easy to grow. The summer Snowflake
  grows about eighteen inches high, and has large
  wliite flowers. The spiing Snowflake flowers a
  few weeks earUer, and also has white flowers
  tipped with green. Another variety has yellow
  tipped flowers.
  
  Tulips. - ^Hardy, brilliant, easy to grow, the
  Tulip is one of otu" most valuable bulbs. It will
  give us a \dvid blaze of colour if we grow some
  of the bright varieties j'a masses, but it will also
  give us many delicate and dainty little pictm-es
  if we choose the softer-hued sorts and grow them
  in selected positions.
  
  By making a suitable selection we can have
  Tulip blooms for fully three months.
  
  We might classify the sections as follows for
  outdoor flowering : March blootn. Van Thols ;
  April, Early Dutch ; May, Darwin and Cottage.
  The Van Thols are pretty enough, and make
  nice little patches of colour among SciUas, but
  they only grow a few inches high, and have small
  flowers. The Darwin and Cottage sections have
  flower stems two feet long, surmounted by
  immense blooms.
  
  BULBS IN BOWLS AND GLASSES
  
  This form of growing bulbs has become very
  popular within recent years. It is very simple
  and has proved to be entirely successful. Any
  earthenware receptacle that holds water may
  be used, and any of the fibrous mixtiu-es sold by
  bulb merchants, such as cocoa-nut fibre or moss
  fibre, may be employed for the root medium.
  Tlie medium does not matter much so long as
  the after-treatment is right. A few small pieces
  of charcoal should be mixed with the fibre to
  keep it sweet.
  
  Pot firmly and just cover the bulb with what-
  
  
  ever medivmi is used, taking care that it is neither
  too wet nor too dry. A good test is the old one
  of taking a handful and closing the hand upon
  it and then opening it ; if the lump just holds
  together, but falls asunder directly it is touched,
  then all is well and potting can proceed.
  
  The number of bulbs to bo placed is best left
  to the taste of the individual ; but they should
  neither be overcrowded nor look meagre. Care
  should be taken to avoid filling the vases quite
  full of fibre, as if that were done particles would
  be constantly falling over and making a mess.
  If this is guarded against, vases will be found
  perfectly clean.
  
  The next stage is to put them in an airy cellar
  or room until the roots are formed and from one
  and a half to two inches of top growth is made.
  It is desirable that the store be frost-proof, but
  the bulbs will endure a Uttle hardship.
  
  Never bring bulbs directly from the cold to a,
  warm greenhouse or room - always try to arrange
  for an intermediate step. Tlien bring them into
  heat or a warm sitting-room as required.
  
  For tliis method to be successful the bulbs
  will require constant care to see that they are
  neither too dry nor too wet. Always stake or
  tie up the leaves of bowl plants in good time.
  Thin green sticks and green bast are the most
  suitable, or special wire supports may be used for
  heavy flowers, such as hyacinths. Care must be
  taken not to spoil the natural appearance of the
  flowers when fixing the support.
  
  Bulbs may also be grown successfully in bowls
  filled with clean pebbles or shell gravel and water.
  They must be treated in the same way as
  Hyacinths in glasses - that is, put in a dark
  cupboard for sis or eight weeks, and then placed
  in the window. Narcissi, Tulips, Hyacinths can
  all be grown in this way, also the smaller bulbs,
  such as Crocus, Snowdrop and Scilla, but these
  are not quite so effective. Some of the larger
  Lilies, such as the Joss Lily or Sacred Lily, can
  be grown very successfully in gravel.
  
  Hyacinths can also be grown in glasses,
  although this mode of culture is not so populeur
  as it used to be. Care should be taken to choose
  smooth, symmetrical bulbs, which will fit the
  necks of the receptacles. The water may come
  close to the base without touching it. One or
  two pieces of charcoal will help to keep it pure ;
  sliould it become thick and smelly it will be wise
  to pour it away and substitute fresh, but tlus
  should be done very carefully, so as to avoid
  injuring or drying the roots. The glasses
  should be kept in a dark cupboard until the
  roots reach the bottom of the receptacle. A
  wire support, looped at the base to clasp the
  neck of the bottle, will be necessary to keep the
  plants from toppling over.
  
  HARDY HERBACEOUS PLANTS
  
  The old style of flower gardening, with itq
  
  
  590
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  ribbon borders and tender plants put out in
  beds lato in May, is supposed to have passed
  away for ever. The tendency in flower gar-
  dening nowadays is to have an expanse of
  well-kept turf, and to surround the grass with
  borders filled with chosen hardy flowers.
  
  Forming a Border. - In the first place it is
  wise to make borders as wide as possible. When
  the different kinds are bunched, none show to
  advantage. Their individual beauties are lost.
  Secondly, the ground for a herbaceous border
  should be thoroughly prepared ; that is to say,
  it should be dug to double the depth of a large-
  sized spade, and have a hberal dressing of
  manure incorporated. It should be dug in
  autumn or winter if possible, so that it may
  have time to settle down before planting time
  comes in JIarch and April. Thirdly, and not
  least important, careful consideration should be
  devoted to the selection and arrangement of the
  plants.
  
  Three cardinal points may be urged on makers
  of herbaceous borders: (1) To avoid putting
  in any plants without considering the propor-
  tions and colours of its neighbours ; (2) to allow
  sufficient room for every plant to display its
  individual characteristics ; and (3) to arrange
  tho plants in groups which are beautiful in
  themselves, and Ukewise make a haxmonious
  whole.
  
  Forethought is very necessary. It is hard
  for the amateur to realise that the Uttie plants
  which she puts in in spring will, at the end of
  three months, have extended several feet.
  
  The leading idea should not be to cover every
  square inch of surface at the earliest possible
  moment. That inevitably leads to ultimate
  overcrowding. Bare earth in spring and early
  summer is not in tho least offensive so long as
  it is not weedy. With clear spaces between the
  different groups tho hoe can be plied freely and
  conveniently when the ground dries after every
  shower, to the swift destruction of weeds, and
  the immense benefit of the proper occupants of
  the border.
  
  Later in the year confusion is often caused
  by the falling about of the growths of tall plants
  in windy weather. This should be corrected at
  once by staking and tying. In this connection
  the amateur may be advised to remember that
  tight " bunching-up " is undesirable, and that
  a tie near the bottom of a plant, and another
  near the top, will generally hold it more evenly
  and securely than one in the middle. Plants
  wit'i flower stems which droop gracefully should
  not be held as straight and stiff as soldiers on
  parade.
  
  It has been mentioned that spring is a good
  time for planting herbaceous borders, but it may
  be done in autumn or winter (except when the
  ground is hard with frost), if more convenient.
  
  The amateur should not allow herself to bo
  tied down by definitions. " Herbaceous plants "
  
  
  has come to signify perennial plants, but there
  is no reason whatever why beautiful annuals
  should not be included.
  
  It is sometimes difficult to ensure a fine and
  continuous effect in a small border without
  making two plantings, but the httle trouble
  involved in this is so amply compensated by
  the results obtained that it should never be
  grudged. As an instance it is not easy to get
  spring beauty in border groups without intro-
  ducing bulbs, such as Tulips. Now these
  brilliant flowers become unsightly when tho
  bloom is gone, because of the fading of the
  foliage. If they are left in the border, they
  mar its beauty ; if they are taken up and the
  ground left bare, the gaps are noticeable. The
  proper course here is undoubtedly to form a
  reserve of good Asters and Stocks, which may
  be planted out when the Tulips fade. There is
  no need to wait until the latter have lost their
  foliage. They can be transplanted to a reserve
  bed directly tho bloom is over, which, in tho case
  of the late-flowering sections now so popular,
  may be the end of May or the early half of June.
  
  The Ivy-leaved Geranium is another plant
  which comes in useful as a successional plan,
  and the first half of June is an excellent time to
  plant it out. A very pretty effect is produced
  if low stumps, over which the plants may ramble,
  are put in the border.
  
  Even more valuable, because of the ease with
  which it can bo raised in quantity from seed in
  winter or spring, and its long period of blooming,
  is the Snapdragon. It can be planted out at
  almost any period of the summer, flourishes in
  nearly all soils, and is very brilliant in colour.
  
  One last suggestion for maintaining the beauty
  of borders may be made, and that pertains to
  the autumn. It is to grow a selection of Chry-
  santhemums in a spare plot throughout the
  summer, and when some of the larger of the
  herbaceous (that is, stem -losing) plants fade
  and become unsightly, to cut them down, and
  plant tho Chrysanthemums near them. Her-
  baceous borders are often ugly and untidy after
  August, simply because the summer-flowering
  plants are past their best, and there is nothing
  to carry on the display. The provision of
  autumn-blooming plants, such as Michaelmas
  Daisies and Golden Rod, when the border is
  first formed, will do something to prevent this,
  but the introduction of the Chrysanthemums
  can still be effected with advantage.
  
  Anemones. - !Many of the Anemones are dwarf
  plants, more suitable for the rockery than the
  herbaceous border, but there are two notable
  exceptions, the Crown and tho Japanese Ane-
  mones. TTio former bloom in spring and
  summer, and tho latter in late summer and early
  autumn. One can buy roo^s of these, or seeds.
  Tliey grow about a foot high, and make tho
  most beautiful beds and border clumps imagin-
  able. The Japanese Anemone grows about
  
  
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  591
  
  
  three feet high, and the best varieties have
  single white, pink, or rose flowers about two
  inches across. It is very graceful and beautiful,
  and, as it thrives in most kinds of soil, and
  spreads freely, it ought to be specially marked.
  
  Campanulas. - The fact that the Canterbury
  Bell is a Campanula can hardly fail to prepossess
  amateurs in favour of this genus. When they
  have studied it a Uttle they will find that it
  contains plants very little less valuable than the
  old favourite named. Some are quite dwarf ;
  others are of medium height ; while still others
  are nearly as tall as Hollyhocks. The Cam-
  panuleis are mostly either blue or wliite. Some
  are annuals, others biennials, and yet others
  perennials. The first are best raised from seed
  sown in spring, the second and third from seed
  sown in early June.
  
  Canterbury Bells. - The rise of some modern
  flowers has not caused old favourites like the
  Canterbury Bell to decline, nor is it likely to
  do so, considering how powerful its claims are.
  Its compact habit, great profusion of bloom,
  brilliant colours, duration and cheapness com-
  bine to render it indispensable. There are blue,
  rose, and white varieties, and there is a duplex-
  flowered form which is commonly called the
  cup-and-saucer Campanula.
  
  No flower gardener of limited means can afford
  to ignore the Canterbury Bell. It will give
  striking beauty to the beds at the cost of a few
  pence. As fast as the flowers fade they can be
  picked off, and fresh buds will form in abundance.
  
  The Carnation. - The Carnation is a prime
  favourite with almost every lover of flowers.
  We may include the Pink and Picotee with it
  in a general sense, and when we do so we widen
  its appeal.
  
  It is of attractive form and colour with de-
  licious perfume, and there are few gardens
  worthy of the name in which the Carnation is
  not represented.
  
  The Selfs and Fancies are the two most suit-
  able classes for garden culture. The former are
  one coloured, the latter are yellow or white
  flowers irregularly marked with another colour.
  The Picotees have a clearly defined line of
  colour round the edges of the petals. Carna-
  tions are beautiful both for beds and borders.
  Strong plants make very attractive objects with
  their tufts of greyish green foliage, large flowers
  and brilliant colours.
  
  They can be grown from seed by sowing out
  of doors in early summer, but the flowers will
  not possess any marked quality. It is better
  to get young plants, and put them into the bods
  or borders from the end of March to Juno. If
  the soil is poor it ought to be dug two spades
  deep and manured.
  
  The plants may be put eighteen inches apart
  and dressed firmly into the ground. The flower
  stems will need support, and special stakes,
  which axe not expensive, should be bought.
  
  
  Pinks are propagated by means of young
  shoots pulled out of their sockets.
  
  The Carnation is hardy, but damp often kills
  plants out of doors, especially in wet heavy soils.
  
  Pinks are not so particular as to soil as Carna-
  tions, and plants, if allowed to remain even
  three years in the ground, will flower well each
  season. They are very hardy and capable of
  resisting the severest weather. They are among
  the most desirable plants to grow in any garden.
  
  The Chrysanthemum. - The Clirysanthemum is
  the Golden Flower, the national floral emblem,
  of Japan. This fact must have its interest
  second only to the Rose as a popular flower in
  Great Britain.
  
  The fact that this magnificent plant is at its
  best at a period when every other great flower
  is practically over is one of the utmost im-
  portance. That the Chrysanthemum is really
  a hardy plant is conclusively proved by the
  evidence of thousands of plants wlxich have
  lived for years out of doors, passing luiscathed
  through severe winters. The truth is that the
  Chrysanthemum is hardy or not according to
  the conditions under which it is grown. It is
  always well worth while to grow a collection in
  the garden for late as well as for early blooming.
  Severe early frosts sometimes mar the flowers,
  but in most years no harm is done. The plant
  is easily grown and tractable, and with modifica-
  tions in ouv system of culture we can get con-
  siderable variation in growth. Tlie initial step
  will be the purchase of a few plants from a
  nurseryman, and this is likely to become an
  annual occurrence, for we shall want to add
  more varieties to our collection ; besides, new
  ones are always coming out.
  
  It is well to order Chrysanthemums in the
  autumn or winter, even if they are not wanted
  until the spring, especially if novelties are being
  bought. The reason is that certain varieties,
  and particularly new ones, are in great demand,
  consequently there is a risk of not getting the
  sorts that are wanted unless they are ordered
  early.
  
  Cuttings cost less than rooted plants, and axe
  procurable in autumn ; but those who buy in
  November have the care of the plants all through
  the winter.
  
  Amatetu's who are in this position will be well
  advised to buy plants early for spring deliverj-.
  They will be quite safe in the hands of a respect-
  able nurseryman. If the plants are received
  in March, they will be sturdy little specimens,
  established in small pots, and well supphed with
  roots.
  
  Chrysanthemums are so beautiful for garden
  decoration that we find it difficult to understand
  why they are not used more. In part it is doubt-
  less due to the fact that they are generally re-
  garded as indoor plants, and not hardy.
  
  No small advantage connected with the
  plant is that it may be transplanted from one
  
  
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  place to another even when in bud, so long as
  the precaution is taken of well watering the soil
  first, and taking the plant up with a good deal
  of earth. The work is best done in showery
  weatlier. Plants so shifted soon re-establish
  themselves, and in a few days are growing freely.
  In due season they bloom well. Tlie importance
  of this lies in the fact that a succession of flowers
  can bo arranged in a border without over-
  crowding. Instead of cramming the Chry-
  santhemiuns into the border, there to half
  smother themselves while they are waiting to
  take the place of earlier flowers when the latter
  shall have faded, the Chrysanthemums can bo
  planted in good soil in some spare plot, with
  plenty of room to grow into healthy and \'igorous
  specimens. Earlier things can be cut down
  when they are over, and the Chrysanthemums
  planted near them. This greatly extends the
  beauty of a border. Similarly, beds may be
  planted with Chrysanthemums after summer
  flowers have faded.
  
  Although Chrysanthemums are often allowed
  to look after themselves year after year, no
  trouble being taken to divide them, or to give
  fresh soil, outdoor plants benefit by atten-
  tion. The clumps may be spUt up, and when
  th^y start growing in spring, planted in fresh,
  manured soil. But probably the best plants ere
  got by raising a few fresh ones from cuttings
  every spring. This does not , involve much
  trouble, and it ensures young, vigorous plants
  which will produce abundance of large, brilliant
  flowers. Soakings of water in dry weather,
  and occasional doses of hquid manure will of
  course benefit the plants.
  
  The Pompon and Single varieties are the most
  generally useful for outdoor cultiire, owing to
  their branching yet neat habit and abundance
  of bright flowers. They can be cut from freely,
  and will prove quite capable of yielding a
  great deal of material for room decoration,
  as well as making a brilliant display in the
  garden.
  
  The Dahlia. - This is a plant of very free
  growth. Provided it is raised sturdily and
  given free soil, it grows with refreshing vigour,
  and soon shows a great array of bright and
  cheerful flowers. Tliey show a variety in colour
  - brilliant carmine, rich crimson, pure white,
  clear yellow, a delicate blush, a bright rose,
  maroon. Some are bicolours, and there is a
  section with flaked flowers.
  
  There are many different kinds of Dahlias,
  but the amateur ^vill get his best effects from the
  Cactus, Pompon, Single and Paeony flowered
  sections. There are, however, some large
  double Dahlias, which are good from the garden
  point of view.
  
  It is useless to grow Dahlias in poor shallow
  soil - if the best results are expected. One
  must have deep, richly cultivated land. Tlio
  Dahlia loves plenty of good food, and it loves
  
  
  moisture. A heavy soil will suit it better than
  a light one.
  
  In mild districts Dahlias may be planted
  early in May. Plenty of room should be allowed.
  Six feet from plant to plant will not be too much.
  At the same time as they are put in a support in
  the form of a stout stake standing four feet out
  
  
  Planting Dahlias. How to plant old tubers and
  fix stakes before replacing the soil.
  
  of the ground should be inserted. These look
  rather obtrusive at first, but cannot well be put
  in at a later stage without injuring the roots.
  The soil should be slightly basined around the
  stem, not mounded.
  
  Dahlias In Autumn. - In a cool, mild, moist
  autumn the Dahlias may remain in beauty until
  November, but the first sharp frost that catcher*
  them %vill blacken the foliage and etop the
  growth. When this happens it is useless to
  retain them ; the sooner they are cut down the
  better, as they will never recover, but will die
  quite away. The stem may be severed just
  above the ground, and the top growth cleared
  away. Some growers let the roots lie in the
  ground throughout the winter. No harm will
  follow if the soil is warm and friable, but m cold,
  damp soils the tubers may decay. It is decidedly
  safer to lift them, and after letting them stand
  upside down on their stumps for a day or two,
  in order to facilitate the escape of moisture, to
  store them. Tliey pass the winter best in a dry,
  frost-proof place. If increase is not desired
  and notliing but garden decoration is thought
  of, the stools may be replanted intact in spring,
  and with a certain amount of growth-thinning
  they will give fairly satisfactory results ; more-
  over, they will flower early, if that is considered
  an advantage.
  
  Delphiniums. - Plants with stems four or five
  feet high, the lower part furnished with broad,
  much-cut leaves, and the upper position with
  bright blue flowers. Tliey are not difficult to
  grow and are beautiful for borders. They
  require careful stalking. There are several
  
  
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  593
  
  
  varieties, and can be had in all shades from
  palest lavender to deepest indigo.
  
  Evening Primroses. - These are characterised
  by great profusion of bloom, and are bright
  border plants. The principal drawback is a
  tendency to straggle, but this is not so marked
  in one or two of the modern varieties. The
  most compact Evening Primroses are the species
  Fruticosa and its variety Youngi, both yellow
  flowered. The latter is perhaps the most useful
  that we can have, as in addition to its closeness
  of growth it has the merit of producing a great
  mass of brilliant flowers.
  
  Pansies. - Considering that it is a lowly plant,
  incapable of yielding those bold masses of colovu",
  which the modern flower gardener loves so much,
  the pansy remains a decided favourite, especially
  in Scotland where the humid cUmate seems to
  suit its growth. But it will succeed with very
  little coaxiiig in moist, clay soils, even in the
  extreme south of England.
  
  The work of the cultivator is easier if he plants
  fairly early, say by the end of March. At that
  period the nights, if not the days, are always
  cool ; moreover, heavy showers may be expected.
  A liberal rainfall and cool nights between them
  are a great help in getting Pansies well estab-
  lished. If planting is not done until May or
  June far more attention is needed to get the
  plants into free growth. Pansies bloom for a
  long time and increase very rapidly. Tlie hardy
  kinds will take no harm by being left out of
  doors all winter.
  
  Phloxes. - A most beautiful and valuable class
  of garden flowers. Th^y bear their flowers in
  bunches at the summit of slender stems clothed
  with narrow, lance-shaped leaves. The colours
  are very beautiful, soft and refined. Some
  flower early and others late in summer.
  
  Primroses and Polyanthuses. - These are hardly
  herbaceous plants in the ordinary acceptation
  of the term, because they are not leafless through-
  out the winter. On the contrary, they grow
  in mild spells, and are at their best in spring,
  when the majority of true herbaceous plants are
  just awakening from their winter sleep. Prim-
  roses and Polyanthuses may be introduced into
  herbaceous borders with great advantage, as
  well as into ordinary flower-beds ; they can be
  shifted into beds and borders in autumn, when
  the herbaceous and annual plants are fading,
  and moved out again in the spring, when other
  plants are coming on.
  
  Pyre thrums. - These are valuable in more
  ways than one. They are among the earliest
  of the border plants to bloom, and they
  bloom very profusely. Tlie foliage is distinctly
  handsome, and the colours are brilliant and
  varied. They are easily grown and are very
  hardy.
  
  Gladioli. - One of the most beautiful of late
  summer flowers. A neat, somewhat close
  grower, with sword-shaped leaves and arching
  
  
  flower stems closely studded with funnel-shaped
  flowers.
  
  Irises. - These stand forth as among the
  most valuable of border plants. The Flag
  section are particularly vigorous in growth,
  and have large brilliant flowers. They will grow
  almost anywhere. Others require a very moist
  situation.
  
  Michaelmas Daisies. - Very useful in borders,
  as they bloom when other flowers are beginning
  to fade. They have vigour of growth, free
  blooming and bright, varied colours.
  
  Ox-eye Daisies. - A species of Chrysanthemums.
  There is not much variety about these flowers,
  but they are useful in borders. They flower
  well and are easily grown.
  
  Paeonles. - These are among the finest of our
  hardy plants. The niimber of varieties has
  grown rapidly within the last few years, and they
  can now be had in many shades of pink and red
  as well as white. They require abundance of
  room to look well.
  
  Violas. - Sometimes called the tufted pansy,
  and the name is not inapt, inasmuch as the
  growth is tufty and the plants are at least as
  much Pansies as Violas.
  
  The plants are distinguished by dense, com-
  pact growth, relatively large flowers, rich and
  diversified colours, and great profusion and
  persistency in flowering. Violas are admirably
  adapted for forming a groundwork for other
  plants. They can be utilised for this purpose
  in herbaceous borders and in rose-beds. If
  planted in autumn along with bulbs, many charm-
  ing effects can be made. They can also be used
  for forming edgings to beds and borders.
  
  It is desirable to avoid planting in straight
  Unes. Wlien Violas are employed for an edging
  to wide borders, an irregular hne in the inside
  should be followed, so that the occupants of
  the border may extend forward amongst the
  Violas at different points. If one will have a
  ribbon border of Violas, let notliing else be
  associated with them, and let the varieties be
  most carefully selected for the purpose.
  
  To get the best out of Violas, plants should
  be bought in spring, and planted in deeply-dug,
  well-manured soil. The earlier this is done the
  better, because when planted early they have
  a good chance of getting well estabhshed before
  the hot weather comes. The plants enjoy depth,
  coolness, moisture, and fertilits^ They may be
  planted about nine inches apart.
  
  Constant cuttings should be practised through-
  out the summer. The flowers will be found
  useful in the house, and, apart from that, the
  regular picking will prevent seed-pods forming,
  and so keep the plants growing.
  
  ROSES
  
  There is a charm about a beautiful Rose garden
  which appeals irresistibly to every lover of
  
  2p
  
  
  594
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  flowers. It is not necessary to win a prize at a
  Rose show to enjoy Roses when they axe used
  in free, informal, natural ways. People who love
  Roses must not allow themselves to be unduly
  influenced by what they see and hear at shows.
  They must learn about beautiful garden Roses -
  what they are, and how to manage them in order
  to get lovely garden scenes, together with abund-
  ance of flowers for bowls and vases.
  
  Tliere should be notliing stiff, stilted, and
  formal about Roses, whether in the growing of
  them or the utilisation of them. We should look
  upon them as cheerful, delightful, affectionate
  companions. To put the trees in stiff rows,
  grow them on a level, and prune them back to
  mere stumps, Uke a blackthorn hedge, is to rob
  them of all chance of showing whether they
  possess natiual beauty. Tlie Rose of our love
  is not the Rose of the show tent, but of the flower-
  bed, arch and pillar. It is the Rose that swings
  golden, and pink, and crimson clusters Ughtly
  in the summer breezes.
  
  There are many different types of Roses : -
  
  We read of Perpetual Roses, Tea Roses, Hybrid
  Tea Roses, Damask Roses, China Roses, Moss
  Roses, and Monthly Roses. But even these are
  not all, for we find a reference to the Austrian
  Brier, the Japanese Rose, the Province Rose, the
  Ayrshire Rose, and many more with more or
  less forbidding botanical names. The average
  flower gardener would be ill-advised to trace the
  great classes back to their source ; this is the duty
  of the botanist, and those who love Roses for their
  garden beauty will rather content themselves
  with considering how they can best utiUse the
  beautiful material which awaits their attention.
  
  Roses can be used in a variety of ways. They
  may be planted in a border with other flowers,
  in a special bed by themselves, or in small plots
  in the grass. They can also be used for climbing
  up walls, or covering arches, pillars and fences.
  Ready-made arches, both of rustic timber and
  metal, can be purchased at moderate prices,
  and these will be admirable in suitable places,
  such SIS over divisions of garden walks. Rose
  pillars are very beautiful, and they are quite
  inexpensive. Let the reader imagine a stiff
  ribbon border, with the plants all on a level,
  and then imagine a Vjorder of various kinds of
  plants, informal and irregular, with Rose
  pillars rising here and there. How much more
  graceful and pleasing is the latter than the
  former.
  
  If possible we must find room for a bed of
  Roses. This must not be filled with stiff,
  straight standards or with hard-pruned dwarfs,
  but with bush Roses of vigorous growth and free-
  flowering character. The stronger sorts must
  be selected, which will form real bushes without
  much cutting and still bear handsome flowers.
  There are many good varieties suitable for this.
  
  Whether we grow Roses on or in arches, fences,
  , walls (for we must not forget the dwelling-house),
  
  
  or beds, we must give them abundance of good
  food if they are to produce those generous masses
  of bloom which we want. Starvation will not
  do, half-measures will not do. We must have
  strong, healthy plants, growing in rich soil.
  
  The beginner in gardening should buy the
  plants and not attempt budding or striking from
  cuttings, both of which require experience. The
  plants should be procured in the autumn, and
  directly the order has been sent cff the groimd
  must be prepared. The best time to plant is
  about the beginning of November.
  
  Soil and Planting. - Roses hke what is called
  " holding " soil, such as strong loam or clay.
  Light, sandy, gravelly or chalky land is not so
  good.
  
  The ground ought to be treated in this way :
  (1) Mark a strip two feet wide right across one
  end of the bed ; (2) take out the soil to a foot
  deep and wheel it to the other end of the bed ;
  (3) spread a coat of manure in the trench and
  dig it into the subsoil ; (4) fill up the trench with
  the topsoil from another two-feet strip ; (5) so
  proceed until the end of the bed is reached ;
  and finally (6) fill up the end trench with the
  loose soil that came from the first strip. This
  greatly enriches and deepens the ground. Road
  scrapings are good, and this material is generally
  procurable in the suburbs of a town. Allow the
  soil a week or two to settle down, and then plant
  the Roses, not deeply, but work the soil very
  firmly about the roots. Give generous doses
  of hquid manixre throughout the summer and
  soap-suds at all times when available. Hoeing
  the soil among the roses is also good practice.
  Any trouble that is taken with the soil will be
  amply rewarded.
  
  Pruning. - As regards newly planted dwarf or
  standard Roses, it is generally agreed that the
  branches are best pruned back to three or four
  buds about the end of March : fresh shoots soon
  break from the short stumps left. Experts differ
  as to whether climbing Roses should be Jut back
  in the same way. Some advocate that the long
  canes should be cut back to the ground, while
  others declare that this is not necessary. If the
  Roses are planted in rich, deep soil, shortening
  is not so necessary. As regards general pruning
  - that is, when the plants are well established -
  growers may proceed on the following hues : -
  
  (1) Dwarfs. - Prune varieties which form
  summer shoots of about the thickness of lead
  pencils, back to within six buds of the base every
  spring - but allow varieties which form shoots as
  thick as the finger to extend two or three feet -
  and merely trim the tips and the weak breast-
  wood which forms on the main stems.
  
  (2) Standards. - The great majority of the
  Roses which are grown as standards form summer
  shoots of about the thickness of a lead-pencil,
  and may be cut back to four buds about the end
  of March each yoar.
  
  (3) cumbers with long Canes.- Climbers which
  
  
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  595
  
  
  form long, strong, upright canes, such as Crimson
  Rambler and Carmine Pillar, do not need much
  pruning. When, however, considerable numbers
  of canes have formed, and are getting thick and
  tangled, the old ones may be cut right out to
  give more room for the young ones which have
  pushed from the base.
  
  (4) Climbers with much Side-wood. - There
  are several valuable climbing Roses, which throw
  many Nagorous young side-canes from their main
  rods ; and these are particularly valuable for
  walls, because they cover a considerable sm-face
  in a short time. They do not need cutting back
  when established, but will be the better for an
  annual trimming, thinning out tangled shoots.
  
  A golden rule in pruning is to prune strong
  growers hghtly and weak growers severely.
  
  Different Kinds of Roses. - In the catalogues
  Roses are generally divided into the following
  different classes : (1) Hybrid Perpetuals, H.P.,
  (2) Tea Roses, T., and (3) Hybrid Tea, H.T.
  
  The H.P.'s form a considerable class and com-
  prise the largest flowered and most brilUantly
  coloured of aU roses. They have two well-
  marked flowering periods, the first being the end
  of June or the early part of July, and the second
  the first half of September, They are not
  continuous bloomers Uke the Teas. There are,
  however, one or two varieties, notably the lovely
  pink Mrs. John Laing, which bloom over a
  much longer period than the majority. The
  H.P.'s are of mixed parentage, the Monthly,
  Bom-bon, and Damask Roses having all been
  used as parents for tl-Dm. They are mostly
  green stemmed with five rough leaflets. As a
  class they are very strongly scented, although
  all are not equally fragrant.
  
  Tea-scented Roses differ very considerably
  from the H.P.'s. The young shoots of the Teas
  are red or brown, and they are beautiful from the
  time they have made their first few inches of
  growth. They are more continuous in blooming
  than the H.P.'s.
  
  Almost every bit of new wood on a vigorous,
  healthy Tea will bloom, and as such wood keeps
  coming for several successive months, it follows
  that flowering is practically incessant. They
  have neat flowers and long stems, and are deUght-
  ful button-hole flowers. They possess a piquant,
  refreshing, agreeable, but not powerful perfume.
  While they differ in degrees of vigour, the
  majority are extremely vigorous, and the more
  they are cut the hotter they will bloom. The
  amateur will be well advised to give the Tea
  Roses the lion's share of his ground.
  
  Hybrid Teas. - This is the variety which has
  shown the greatest development within recent
  years. They are the most valuable of dwarf
  trees. As a class the H.T.'s are distinguished
  by strong growth with a fair amount of young
  spring colour (al+hough not quite so nuicli as
  the Teas), profuse blooming, large flowers, and
  bright, cleax colours. They are not, as a whole.
  
  
  quite so neat in the bud as the Tests, nor are the
  expanded flowers so full and brilliant as the
  H.P.'s, but they have a beauty and character
  of their own. Their long flower stems make
  them particularly valuable for cutting. Like
  tlie Teas, they are continuous growers and
  bloomers ; indeed, one or two, notably the rich
  and fragrant Griiss an Tephtz, are rarely without
  flowers.
  
  Noisettes. - ^This section is not important in
  point of numbers, but it includes two or three
  chmbing varieties of considerable value. They
  bear flowers in clusters.
  
  Climbing Roses other than Noisettes. - There
  are several beautiful chmbing Roses which do
  not come into the Noisette class, such as the
  Sweet Briers, Polyanthas, Singles, and Banksian.
  
  Special Selections. - Tlie following are a few
  selections of varieties for various purposes.
  These are carefully chosen to unite vigour of
  growth with bright colours. Many, too, are
  perfumed, but the grower will not find such
  fragrance in all the pillar Roses 6is in the old
  Cabbage Rose.
  
  SELECT ROSES FOR ARCHES AND PILLARS
  
  Ards Rover, crimson.
  Carmine Pillar, carmine.
  Critnsor. Rambler, crimson.
  Dorothy Perkins, pink.
  Felicite Perpitue, white.
  Euphrosyne, pink.
  Leuchstern, carmine.
  Mrs. F. W. Flight, pink.
  Penzance Brier Lucy Bertram, red.
  
  SELECT ROSES FOR WALLS
  
  Alister Stella Gray, yellow.
  Gloire de Dijon, yellow.
  Longworth Rambler, crimson.
  Madame Alfred Carri^re, white.
  Reine Marie Henriette, red.
  Wm. Allen Richardson, copper.
  
  SELECT ROSES FOR BEDS
  
  Anna Olivier, white or buff.
  
  Anioine Rivoire, cream.
  
  Caroline Testout, pink.
  
  Frau Karl Druschki, white.
  
  Griiss an Teplitz, crimson.
  
  Gustave Nabonnand, flesh.
  
  La France, peach.
  
  Liberty, crimson.
  
  Madame Abel ChcUenay, rose.
  
  Marie van Houtte, lemon, tinted pink.
  
  Mrs. John Laing, rose.
  
  Mrs. R. G. Sharman Crawford, rose pink.
  The above lists will meet the requirements of
  those who only want a small collection of Roses.
  
  
  596
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  TENDER BUDDING PLANTS
  
  These are plants which can only be grown out
  of doors in the summer, and unless the amateur
  is the possessor of a frame or greenliouse they
  are not such a useful section, as in most cases
  it would mean bujang the special plants each
  season. A few of them may, however, be men-
  tioned, as thoy are general favourites.
  
  The Geranium. - In the days of the ribbon
  border, wliicli consisted of a row of scarlet
  geraniums, a row of yellow calceolarias, and a
  row of lobelias, tliis was considered the queen of
  flowers, and florists vied with each other as to who
  would produce the finest specimens. Although
  this is now a thing of the past, the geranium
  still holds its own ; it is a plant which can never
  drop out of our garden ; it is too persistent in
  blooming, too bright and varied in colour ever
  to go out entirely. It is useful in greenhouses,
  in window-boxes, tubs and vases. A few clumps
  of, say, a dozen plants might very well be
  arranged in mixed borders.
  
  Zonal Geraniums are generally planted in
  spring, and at that period they are undeniably
  tender, although it takes more than a slight
  frost to kill them in autumn, when the stems
  have grown thick and woody. The spring
  plants have been made tender by being grown
  under glass.
  
  There are many varieties of Geranium, some
  attractive by reason of their foliage, and others
  that are admired for their flowers. In mild
  districts they may be planted outside in the
  middle of May, but in cold locahties the planting
  should be deferred until the end of the month.
  Old plants may be preserved through the
  winter by lifting them from their beds in autumn
  before the frost has touched them. Tlien prune
  off both branches and roots, leaving no more
  than short stumps, and hang up the plants in a
  cellar or attic where they will be safe from frost.
  Provided that the plants can be kept sound, the
  plan is excellent, as fresh growth starts in spring
  and nice plants soon develop.
  
  Geraniums will thrive in almost any kind of
  soil. They grow the most rapidly in rich soil,
  naturally, but there is such a thing as over-
  luxuriance. Very free growth means large,
  succulent plants, which do not flower very well,
  especially in a wet season. Geraniums with
  beautiful foUage rarely have really fine blooms,
  but they can bo associated with other plants
  which are attractive by reason of their flowers.
  
  Ivy-leaved Pelargoniums. - Tliis section of the
  geranium still enjoys great favour. It is grown
  in the garden, in the conservatory, in vases,
  and in window-boxes. Its habit is loose and
  flowing. It droops flower-laden streamers from
  the summit of pillars and from window ledges.
  Its flowers are large and abundant, and they
  come in a long succession throughout the summer.
  The leaves have not the brilliant markings of
  
  
  the ordinary or Zonal Geranium, but the ivy
  shape is attractive. They may be given a some-
  what better soil than the Zonals without fear
  of their maldng such exuberant growth as to
  flower badly. The Ivy -leaved Pelargoniums can
  be bought with single or double flowers, but the
  latter are much the more largely used. As they
  are tender, like the Zonals, they ought not to
  be planted before mid-May.
  
  Calceolarias. - The Calceolaria is another com-
  ponent of the old-time ribbon border. The
  bedding type retains its stems after flowering,
  instead of dying down, and is therefore termed
  shrubby. It is indeed an evergreen, and
  although not quite hardy, it is by no means a
  tender plant. There is no great range of colours
  among the shrubby garden Calceolarias, al-
  though they are not all yellow. There are white,
  orange, red, and violet species in addition to the
  yellow. The Golden Glory is one of the finest.
  It is a splendid plant with large trusses, and the
  colour is bright yellow. Clumps of Calceolarias
  may be placed in selected positions in beds and
  borders, and they may be used in window-
  boxes also. They are so bright and cheerful
  that they merit attention for these purposes,
  and if used with discretion they do not over-
  weight the garden.
  
  Young Calceolarias are much more hardy than
  young Geraniums, and consequently they may
  be planted out a month earlier, without much
  risk of injury from frost. If planted early in
  good moist soil they have a chance of getting
  well rooted before the hot weather comes on.
  The plants may be set a foot apart. They will
  soon begin to flower, and will retain their beauty
  all the summer.
  
  Lantanas. - These charming plants are very
  useful to bedders, and any amateur can grow
  them with ease. In foliage they resemble
  Heliotrope, and the flowers are borne in close
  heads. The colours are bi'illiant and varied.
  Inasmuch as the plants bloom freely and con-
  tinuously and will grow in ordinary "oil, they
  are undeniably useful. They have the defect
  of a straggly habit of growth, but this can be cor-
  rected by pinching in the early stages.
  
  The Lantanas are useful for window-boxes,
  tubs, and large vases, as well as for beds.
  
  Lobelias. - The blue Lobelia is a lowly plant,
  growing only a few inches high, of dense habit,
  and blooming so profusely as to cover itself
  with flowers. It is useful for putting round the
  edges of beds and for window-boxes. It can bo
  sown from seed, but it is better to buy cuttings.
  May is a good time for planting. They are best
  planted in tufts about two inches thick, the
  clumps about three inches apart ; they will then
  fill out and make a continuous line of colour.
  They wall not spread, however, in a poor, dry
  soil. The ground should be moist and fertile.
  Given good land, the plants will remain in bloom
  until autumn.
  
  
  HOME GARDENING
  
  
  597
  
  
  Begonias. - Nothing in the way of dwarf
  plants can well be more beautiful than Tuberovis
  Begonias. The foliage is handsome, the flowers
  are glorious, the form is beautiful, while the
  colours are as lovely as they are varied. Pure,
  snow-wliite, lemon and deep yellow, blush,
  soft pink and dainty rose, salmon, orange and
  brilliant scarlet - all these are present.
  
  If the plants are healthy and growing, they will
  keep on flowering tiiroughout the summer,
  and as long in autumn as the frost will keep
  away.
  
  Amateurs who want to have a thoroughly
  successful bed of Tuberous Begonias ought to
  procure tubers in early March, bury them in a
  box of moist cocoa-nut fibre refuse or leaf -mould,
  and put them in a house. The heat and
  moisture will start them into growth quickly.
  If the material is moist, roots wiU push into it
  freely.
  
  If the plants are six to eight inches liigh at
  the end of May, with a good mat of fibres, they
  will be in perfect condition for planting. The
  roots should not be shaken clear of the fibre
  when they are removed from the box ; on the
  contrary, as much as clings to them must be
  allowed to remain.
  
  The plants may be put eighteen inches apart
  in heavy, rich, moist soil, but somewhat closer in
  lighter, drier ground. They may be settled in
  with a good watering, and if the weather should
  keep dry after planting it will be well to give
  further waterings until they have got nicely into
  growth.
  
  Regular hoeing will suffice to maintain steady
  progress. Flowers will come, and will keep on
  coming - in fact, there will be a steady stream
  of lovely blossoms. But the culminating dis-
  play will be in the cool days of September, and
  (if frost permits) early October. The plants
  will be laden with briUiant blossoms, and the
  bed will be one of the sights of the garden.
  Fading flowers should' be picked off regularly
  throughout the season.
  
  The problem of wintering the plants is a
  simple one, as they will lose their leaves and
  stems by a process of natural decay. The
  tubers can be hfted, dried, and stored in any diy
  frost-proof place until spring.
  
  Fuchsias. - The hardier of the Fuchsias, such
  as CoralUna and Riccartoni, are sometimes in-
  troduced into beds and flower borders, but one
  can hardly speak of them as bedding plants in
  the ordinary sense. When they are used in the
  garden they are generally planted permanently,
  and cut to the ground every autumn. In cold
  districts it is well to cover the root-stocks with
  litter in November. This should not bo removed,
  nor should the dead branches be cut off until
  the Fuchsias begin to grow in the spring. The
  garden Fuchsias are particularly graceful plants.
  
  Heliotrope. - There is no reason why lovers
  of the fragrant " Cherry Pie " should not inti'o-
  
  
  duce it into their flower-beds. The richer hues,
  such as purphsh blue and violet, wiU be foiind
  the most effective in beds.
  
  HeUotropes are tender plants, and ought not
  to be put into the garden before the end of May.
  While they are not really particular as to soil,
  they do not grow to perfection in a close,
  retentive medium. On this account the soil
  ought to be thoroughly broken up, and if it is
  of a stiff, holding character it will be well to
  lighten and disintegrate it with biirnt refuse,
  leaf -mould, road sweepings, or thoroughly de-
  cayed manure. The plants will reqtiire pegging
  down as they grow, and to allow room for tliis
  they should be planted eighteen inches apart.
  
  WALLS AND FENCES
  
  In small gardens the fence or wall area is very
  valuable, and it is most important to make use
  of every inch of space. This appUes particularly
  to town gardens, and yet where plants are
  wanted the most they are often vised the least.
  Beautiful flowers can never have a greater
  influence than when relieving the desolating
  and depressing bareness of terrace houses in
  towns and subm-bs ; moreover, the garden
  ground is almost invariably limited in such
  districts.
  
  Probably the most common cause of house
  fronts being bare is that the people who occupy
  the dwelUngs have not acquired a love for
  gardening and an interest in plants. We must
  just hope that as time passes more and more
  will come to think of the exterior as well as the
  interior of their homes - will want pretty plants
  on the outside as well as attractive wall-papers
  within, and enjoy the pleasure of throwing open
  a bedroom window in the morning to look down
  on a pretty and fragrant display of flowers.
  
  Tliere is no good reason why the walls of town
  and subiu'ban houses should not be covered.
  It is true that some beautiful plants that we
  should dearly like to recommend, such as the
  magnificent Crimson Rambler Rose, will not
  thrive, even vath the most skilful and assiduous
  attention. But, as we shall see, there are other
  plants which will succeed.
  
  Before considering the best plants for walls,
  however, let us take into accomit tho principal
  things that make for failure and success.
  
  The first practical point is improvement of
  the soil. The soil-area under a wall is often onh'
  a few inches wide and deep ; the " soil " itself
  is half stones. Deepen the area to at least two
  feet, increase it if possible to a square yard for
  each plant, put in half-a-dozen good heaped
  spadefuls of turfy loam and manure, and tho
  whole prospect is changed. With the increased
  body of soil there will at once be more moisture
  and more food available, but it will be ad\'isable
  to give occasional soakings of water (and they
  should be real soaldngs, not driblets) in summer.
  
  
  598
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  together vrith weekly applications of liquid
  manure.
  
  Our next important point is the period of
  planting. Failures often follow because the
  plants are put out in lato spring, when the sun
  has become powerful.
  
  Those who want to succeed with climbers and
  creepers should be encouraged to begin their
  
  
  Planting Roses against a Wall. A, centre of plant kept
  open ; B, the roots spread out in a wide shallovv basin
  > before covering in.
  
  operations earlier. The plants ought to be put
  in by the end of March (except in the case of
  tender annuals) ; then they will be nicely rooted
  by the time the hot weather comes, and will not
  merely be able to stand the heat, but will grow
  the better for it.
  
  A third point is pruning.
  
  Broadly speaking, an amateur can never do
  harm by cutting back a newly-planted climber,
  but may see the plants do badly if this is not
  practised. Cutting down is not generally done,
  because a person objects to buying a plant and
  then throwing away seven-eighths of it ; he thinks
  it wasteful. It is the reverse. If a plant is
  cut back to within a few buds of the ground,
  the vigour of the roots will be concentrated on
  those buds, and strong shoots will result ; more-
  over, shoots will come freely from the under-
  ground buds.
  
  Given deep, fertile, moist (but not sodden)
  soil, early planting, and bold cutting back, wall
  plants will thrive in most plax"s.
  
  Among the many plants which can be used
  for this purpose, the following few might be
  mentioned : -
  
  Roses. - For special varieties for growing on
  walls, see p. 595.
  
  Clematises are very beautiful. There are
  different types of this flower, and some require
  more drastic treatment than others in respect
  of pruning. The Jackmanii, deep blue, the
  Madame Edouard Andr^, red, and snow-white
  Jackmanii are three of the most useful, and they
  never do so well as when they are hard pruned
  
  
  every yetur. The flowering shoots of one year
  may be cut close back to their base in the spring
  of the following season, soon after they have
  started growing ; and the plants will then push
  strong new shoots, which will produce far
  better flowers tlian would be borne on the weak
  shoots that would spring from the old flowering
  growths. With Fair Rosamond, Miss Bateman,
  and The Queen hard pruning must be avoided ;
  all that is needed is thinning and trimming when
  the plants get crowded and tangled. The white
  Montana is also a useful, though small, Clematis.
  
  Jasmine. - The yellow, winter- blooming Jas-
  mine, nudiflorum, is a thorough subiu-ban plant,
  and it is really attractive. It bears its small
  yellow flowers during mild spells throughout the
  whole winter, blooming in advance of the leaves.
  It is quite suitable for training against a low
  fence.
  
  There is also a large form of the common,
  white, summer-flowering Jasmine, and there is
  a variety with golden leaves.
  
  Honeysuckles. - Perhaps the best of these is
  the variegated Japanese, which has prettily
  veined leaves. Flexuosa is one of the best of
  the Honeysuckles that are grown principally for
  their flowers, and is very sweet. Then there is
  the winter-flowering Honeysuckle, which pro-
  duces its sweet white flowers in February or
  jMarch.
  
  Dutchman's Pipe. - This quaint flower always
  interests people.
  
  Ceanothus is a very attractive wall shrub.
  There are several species and varieties, mostly
  with pale blue or lavender -coloured flowers.
  They bloom profusely in summer, and may ue
  grown successfully on south and west walls.
  The variety Gloire de Versailles is one of the best.
  
  The Japanese Quince. - This will thrive in the
  suburbs and is one of the most valuable of wall
  shrubs. It blooms abundantly in winter and
  early spring. The typical species is bright red,
  but there are several varieties.
  
  Veitch's Virginian Creeper. - This is too vigorous
  for the dividing wall, but may be planted to
  cover the walls of the house. It is of neat habit
  and will cling naturally to brick or stone walls
  by means of its own suckers, clothes the walls in
  a pleasing mantle of green in summer,and changes
  to warm red in autumn.
  
  Variegated Ivy. - This is very suitable for the
  higher part of the party wall, and the kind
  called Hedera Helix rhombea is to be recom-
  mended. It is more vigorous in growth than
  most of the variegated sorts, and the leaves are
  prettily margined. To get the utmost vigour
  in Ivy, one must get the Irish, but that is green-
  leaved.
  
  Kerrya Japonica. - The double variety of this
  plant must not be overlooked when the claims
  of comparatively dwarf plants are being con-
  sidered, as they will be for certain positions.
  This is the plant which bears double yellow i
  
  
  HOME GARDENING
  
  
  599
  
  
  flowers nearly as large as Gardenias. It is very
  bright and cheerful, and it is easily grown-
  
  Annual Ramblers. - Much can be done to
  beautify walls and fences in summer with annual
  flowers, notably Convolvuluses, Everlasting
  Peas, and Tropseolums (including Nasturtiums),
  and of those best raised under glass and planted
  out in May may be named Canary Creeper,
  Ornamental Gourds, and Maurandya.
  
  Other handsome wall plants are procurable.
  Some amateurs may like to try the old Wistaria
  sinensis, the large-leaved Vines, or the Passion
  Flower, which, although not quite hardy, may be
  tised.
  
  WINDOW AND ROOM PLANTS
  
  The cultivation of beautiful flowers in windows
  and rooms is one of those delightful pursuits
  which appeal to all classes.
  
  Success in the cultivation of room plants turns
  partly on the choice of material and partly upon
  care in ventilating and watering. A great many
  plants wiU remain in health for months and even
  years in a light, airy room, but would become
  unhealthy in a week in a dark, stuffy one. There
  are one or two plants, notably the Aspidistra,
  which will stand almost anything, but the
  majority will not. Most plants do badly in
  rooms lit by open gas-burners if the window
  is not kept open at night. Ventilation is good
  for plants as well as for human beings.
  
  It is not wise to choose very tender plants,
  because rooms, however warm during the day,
  are often cold at night. It is not prudent to
  rely on ferns, unless they be grown in a case,
  because the air is likely to be too dry for them.
  
  If a tender plant is grown it should be removed
  from the neighbourhood of the window when
  the family retires to rest, and in cold weather
  covered with several thicknesses of newspaper.
  Should it happen to get touched by frost, it
  should not be stood near the fire, but placed in a
  cool shady place and sprinkled with cold water.
  This wiU save it if anything will.
  
  The following are a few of the plants which
  will thrive in rooms with proper care and
  attention : -
  
  Foliage Plants. - Palms. - These may be main-
  tained in health for years in living rooms, even
  if gas is burned, with ordinary care and attention.
  They should be kept in or near the window in
  order that they may get plenty of light, being
  turned occasionally to bring a different side near
  the light. A compost of three parts fibrous
  loam, one part each of leaf mould and decayed
  maniire, and a tenth of coarse washed sand will
  suit them. They should be watered when the
  pot rings hollow under the knuckles and at no
  other time. During mild showers they miglit
  be stood out of doors for an hour or two, as the
  rain will cleanse and freshen them. An occa-
  sional sponging with soft, tepid water will also
  
  
  do them good. This attention to the foliage is
  of great benefit to palms. Re -potting once a
  year will be ample, and this may be done in
  spring. When they have got to the largest
  convenient size of pot, top dressing may be
  substituted. The plant may be turned out of
  the pot, the outer casing of soil crumbled away,
  the drainage re-arranged, and the plant replaced
  in the pot, fresh earth being rammed down the
  sides and packed on the top. The pot should
  not be filled quite full ; an inch of space must be
  left for water - two inches in the case of a large
  pot. It is also essential that the pots should
  be stood in saucers of water, in order to prevent
  the mess that would be made by water escap-
  ing through the drainage at every watering, but
  the water should not be allowed to rest in the
  saucers all day, except in summer ; and even
  then periodical emptyings will have to be re-
  sorted to, so as to avoid an overflow.
  
  An ounce of superphosphate to the gallon of
  water, applied once a week or so, or a pinch of
  one of the advertised fertilisers spread on the
  surface and watered in, will do good.
  
  Ferns. - ^Every grower of room plants likes to
  have a few ferns.
  
  The Crested Ribbon Fern and the Maidenhair
  are two that will thrive with care. The Maiden-
  hair is not an easy plant to manage in a room,
  as it does not like changes of temperatvire ; at
  the same 'ame it has been known to remain
  in excellent condition for several j'ears. Great
  care in watering is necessary, and the plants
  must not be allowed to get frozen. The Ribbon
  Fern does very well with care. It is charming
  in a small state for the table. The Sea Spleen-
  wort, the Lady Fern, the Male Fern, the Sliield
  Fern, and the Hart's Tongue may also be tried.
  The best time for repotting ferns is the spring,
  when the new fronds are seen to be moving. The
  compost recommended for palms may be altered
  to the extent of reducing the quantity of loam
  by one half and substituting peat.
  
  If a Maidenhair should fall into ill-health it
  is advisable to cut it hard back, and let it break
  again.
  
  The Aspidistra. - The Parlour Palm, as it is
  often called, is not a true palm. It is one of
  the most valuable of house plants, because it
  •wiW thrive under most conditions and does not
  succumb quickly to unfavourable circumstances.
  
  Most people prefer the variegated Aspidistra
  to the plain green, and are generally disconsolate
  when a variegated plant loses its silvery patclics.
  They should learn that this is generally due to
  providing too rich a soil. The more luxuriant
  the growth the greater the likelihood of a pre-
  ponderance of green. Plain loam and sand will
  suffice ; manure and leaf-mould should both be
  avoided.
  
  The transference to the open air during
  showers, the sponging of the leaves, and careful
  watering are all beneficial.
  
  
  600
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  The India-rubber Plant. - This is not quite so
  successful in a room, as draughts and changes
  of temperature cause the lower leaves to fall.
  But with care success is possible. It should
  have the same treatment as palms.
  
  The Parlour Fig. - This plant has broad,
  deeply-cut fohage, \vith very tliick loaf-stalks.
  It will keep healthy in a room for a long time
  if carefully watered. It will not endure draughts
  like an Aspidistra.
  
  Berried Plants. - There are two berry -bearing
  plants admirably adapted for room decoration,
  namely, Ardisia crenata and the Winter Cherry.
  The former, although little kno^vn, is the better
  of the two, so far as endurance is concerned at
  all events. Its berries are much smaller than
  those of the Winter Cherry, and are darker in
  colour. They hang on the plants for many
  raontlis, and a plant %rill retain its beauty in a
  room for more than half a year if it is properly
  watered and the room ventilated. The Ardisia
  will tlorive in the palm compost.
  
  Flowering Plants. - The number of flowering
  plants available for rooms turns on whether
  there is a gleiss-house or not. The owner of a
  greenhouse will be constantly bringing nice
  plants that are just beginning to bloom into the
  looms. They may bo plants that would not
  thrive in a dwelling-house all the year round, but
  are quite suitable for embcUishing it for a few
  weel^.
  
  Bulbs will be valuable in the winter. They
  may be grown in water, in pots of earth, or in
  vases of peat-moss litter, as directed on p. 689.
  White Roman Hyacinths must be particularly
  borne in mind, because they are so beautiful
  both for the dinner-table and the window.
  
  The beautiful white Arum Lily, too, must not
  be overlooked. If it is kept in a pot throughout
  the year care should be taken to give it abundance
  of water, £is it is a semi-aquatic plant, and soon
  suffers from drought. There is no need to keep
  it in the house all the summer through. It may
  be stood out of doors when it ceases flowering.
  That it is a grand room plant is proved by the
  sight of splendid old plants which bloom freely
  every year. The Godfrey is a splendid variety.
  
  Early Tulips, and Daffodils of the Trumpet
  and Chalice sections, sire very useful for rooms.
  The Due Van Thol Tulips will give very early
  flowers ; and of the Narcissi, obvallaris (Tenby
  Daffodil), Golden Spur, and Henry Irving will
  be among the first in flower.
  
  The Zonal Geranium is one of the most suc-
  c ssful of window plants. It is so gay and so
  accommodating and a profuse bloomer. There
  are many beautiful varieties. There are also
  the ivy-leaved and scented-leaved Geraniums,
  which are both pretty and sweet. They are
  quite summer plants.
  
  Marguerites are stock favourites for windows,
  both inside and out. Tlieir strong points are
  their free and persistent blooming and their
  
  
  attractive foliage. They are easy to keep
  healthy so long as the leaf -mining maggot can bo
  kept at bay.
  
  WINDOW-BOXES
  
  For those wlio have very small gardens or
  perhaps no garden at all, flowers in window-
  boxes form a special attraction, and if well
  attended to they certainly help to make the
  outside of a house bright and attractive.
  
  An effort should be made to keep the boxes
  filled with suitable flowers all the year round, and
  even in the winter the flowering plants can be
  replaced by pretty evergreens, such as the Golden
  Privet, Winter Cherry, and Dwarf Holly Bushes,
  &c.
  
  If boxes are used they must be made to fit
  the sill, but there is no objection to their over-
  hanging a little in front, provided that there
  is no fear of over-balancing. There must be a
  strip at each end, thickened in front, to keep the
  box clear of the sill, and level. A number of
  holes should be bored or burnt in the bottom of
  the box to permit of water escaping. These
  holes may be covered with pieces of broken
  flower-pot.
  
  The boxes can then be filled up with good soil.
  
  Some people prefer to have plants in pots on
  their %vindow-sills, because of the facility for
  making changes. There is no real objection to
  tliis, but the grower must remember two things :
  the first, that blocks or a strip of wood must be
  placed along sloping sills to raise the front of
  the pots and bring them level, otherwise the
  plants cannot be properly watered ; the second,
  that a support will be required to prevent their
  being blown off. A framework to fit the window
  can easily be made, and if it is faced with virgin
  cork the pots will be hidden.
  
  For spring decoration of window-boxes there
  is nothing prettier than bulbs (see p. 687), and
  those can very well be buried between the plants
  already there. Hyacinths, Tulips, Snowdrops,
  Crocuses, or Daffodils will all give pleasure.
  
  Wiien bulbs are used in window-boxes it is a
  good plan to associate coloured Primroses with
  them, as the latter bloom later than most bulbs,
  and maintain the display. They are beautiful
  flowers, and will be at their best from the middle
  of April to the middle of May.
  
  All the popular, free-flowering plants, such
  as Geraniums and Ivy-leaved Pelargoniums,
  Fuchsias, Marguerites, Begonieis, China Asters,
  Chrysanthemums, Campanula isophylla, and
  Creeping Jenny will be available for summer
  and autumn bloom.
  
  It is a mistake to crowd too many different
  kinds of plants into the boxes ; they only spoil
  each other ; the groat point is to choose what will
  bloom best in the particular aspect, and to try
  to got a nice succession of flowera.
  
  Another important point in window gajdening
  
  
  HOME GARDENING
  
  
  601
  
  
  is to keep the plants well watered and never to
  allow the soil to become too dry. Even although
  rain may fall, it very often happens that the
  boxes do not get much natural watering. The
  watering ought to be thorough ; a mere stu'face
  watering of the soil does more harm than good,
  as it only attracts the roots upwards. A Uttle
  liquid manure or a sprinkling of Clay's fertihser
  from time to time will help to improve the soil
  and keep the plants flourishing.
  
  INSECTS AND OTHER ENEMIES
  
  The best of plant cultivators are troubled by
  insect enemies, although perhaps less severely
  than the worst Careful cultivation combined
  with tidiness and cleanliness are great pre-
  ventives. There should be no heaps of rubbish
  near the flower-bed, such as an accumulation of
  weeds, heaps of stones, prunings of plants, &c.,
  as these will just be hot -beds for insects to
  breed. Insect-eating birds, such as starlings,
  blackbirds, and tits, should be encouraged, and,
  finally, when insects do appear prompt action
  should be taken in all cases.
  
  The following are some of the preparations
  used for the destruction of insects, slugs, &c.
  
  Lime. - This can be applied either dry or in a
  liquid state. It is perhaps best appUed in the
  form of dry freshly-slaked quick-lime. Lime-
  water may be made by putting a lump of Ume
  of the size of a cocoa-nut in a pail of water in
  the morning, and straining off the Uquid when it
  is clear.
  
  Paraffin Oil and Soap Emulsion. - Boil one
  pint of soft soap in two pints of water, and
  stir in, after removal from the fire and while
  still boiling hot, half a pint of parafl6ba oil ; the
  working in of the oil when the soap is boiling
  will go far to ensure amalgamation. Dilute
  with five gallons of water. The mixture must be
  thoroughly worked up by filling a syringe from,
  and emptying it into, the vessel repeatedly. It
  is best sprayed hghtly on the plants towards
  evening with a fine syringe.
  
  Soap-suds. - Make in the same way as above,
  omitting the paraffin. Lifebuoy soap may be
  used in some cases instead of soft soap.
  
  Quassia Water. - Take half a pound of quassia
  chips and soak them in half a gallon of cold
  water for two or three hours. Then boil slowly
  eight or ton hours. Strain and add water to
  make five gallons. Melted soap is sometimes
  added as well.
  
  Tobacco Water. - Steep one ounce of strong
  
  shag tobacco in one quart of water and strain
  
  when the water is well coloured. Some soft soap
  
  may be added. Tobacco is also used in the form
  
  •, of snuff dusted on infested plants.
  
  I Sulpliur. - ^This may be used in the form of the
  
  ^ yellow powder known as flnwei-s of sulphur, or
  
  as sulphide of potassium. The latter is very
  
  cheap and may be applied conveniently in solu-
  
  
  tion. Dissolve one ounce of the chemical and
  two ounces of soft soap in five gallons of water,
  and spray the mixture on the plants in as fine a
  state as possible.
  
  Special Preparations. - In recent years the
  most common means of keeping insects down
  is by vaporising preparations of nicotine, which
  is the poisonous principle of tobacco. l"he
  substance, and a small appHance for vaporising
  and distributing it, are sold together in handy
  packets, varying in size according to the number
  of plants to be treated. The packets can be
  bought from all seedsmen and florists, and they
  are not expensive. One that is extremely well
  known is the " XL ALL." Another is West's.
  These preparations must always be used strictly
  in accordance with the instruction given.
  
  The following are some of the most common
  garden pests with simple remedies for their
  destruction.
  
  Greenfly. - This attacks all kinds of plants
  and will work more havoc on a weak specimen
  than on a strong one. It increases at a tre-
  mendous rate. Syringe the plants well with
  soap-suds or paraffin oil and soap emulsion.
  Tobacco water and quassia water are also good.
  When the points of shoots are affected they
  should be dipped into quassia water. Flowers
  in pots may be dusted with Keating's powder.
  
  Red Spider. - This is a tiny mite which forms
  colonies on the under leaves of many plants
  and spins webs. Sulphur solution syringed on
  the plants will sometimes check it. FaiHng this
  try tobacco water or soap and paraffin emulsion.
  Tlie leaves must be sprayed on the under as well
  as the upper side. The red spider is almost
  invisible to the naked eye, but the effect of its
  operations is only too plain in the loss of sub-
  stance and green in the leaves, and in the appear-
  ance of red or bronze patches or the foUage
  tin-ning yeUow. Another excellent remedy is to
  spray the plants with common salt diluted in
  water at the strength of one ounce of salt to
  two gallons of water. If this is done in the cool
  of the evening once a week, and the plants
  syringed next day with clean water, it will have
  the effect of keeping them clean.
  
  Thrips. - Tliese little black insects do con-
  siderable damage to the tips of flower stems,
  young foliage and flower buds, very often
  rendering the first opening flowers useless.
  Treat in the same way as greenfly.
  
  Earwigs attack and eat young fohage, but are
  more destructive to flowers, conceaHng them-
  selves at the base of the petals vipon which they
  feed. An excellent trap consists of a hollow
  bamboo thi'ust into the soil beside the plant;
  the earwigs will secrete themselves in this at
  night, where they can be captured and killed
  by means of a wire pushed down the hollow of
  the bamboo. Tlie old-fashioned flower-pot trap,
  filled with dry hay or moss, is also a simple and
  good way of catcliing them.
  
  
  602
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Fungoid Enemies. - ^There are several fungi
  wliich attack plants, but mildew is the most
  conunon. This coats the leaves of indoor plants
  with a grey powder, and they lose their substance
  and fall. These fungi, and particularly mildew,
  are commonly the result of faulty ventilation
  and if the plants are in a draught. They also
  come when the air is close and heavy. A spray-
  ing of sulphur is the best remedy. It is best to
  carry the plants outside for the purpose, as the
  solution will stain paint. The fimgoid disease
  of chrysanthemums, known as " rust," may be
  attacked by the same means.
  
  Caterpillars. - Syringe the plants or bushes
  with soap-suds or with parafiSn and soap emul-
  sion.
  
  Slugs. - Lime is a valuable deterrent and slugs
  detest it in all forms. It is best appUed at
  night when the slugs are Ukely to be feeding.
  Two applications should be made at intervals
  of about twenty minutes, because the slug can
  slough his skin and so get rid of one dose of
  the hot powder ; but the second catches him at
  a hopeless disadvantage and finishes him off.
  Lime and water poured on the beds after
  dark will thin the slugs down. Soot spread
  thickly on the soil round the plants and then
  worked in is also good. It must not be used in
  a fresh state or it will destroy as many plants
  as slugs.
  
  Worms in Pots. - Lime-water will generally
  bring them to the surface, when they can bo
  removed.
  
  Mice. - In gardens where mice are numerous
  all seeds should be thoroughly coated with red
  lead prior to sowing, as the mice do not like this.
  Several traps ought also to be set in and near
  their haunts.
  
  Leaf-mining Grubs. - These are hatched from
  eggs deposited by flies between the upper and
  lower skins of the leaf. Cinerarias and Mar-
  guerites are specially prone to their attack.
  Spray the plants with tobacco water or a special
  insecticide.
  
  Mealy-Bug. - This is a very offensive insect, as
  it clothes the stems and foliage of plants with a
  filthy white mass, making them disagreeable to
  handle as well as unhealthy. It does not spread
  as fast as greenfly, but it is more difficult to
  destroy. Treat in the same way as greenfly.
  
  Wire worm is one of the most dreaded of
  pests. Wliile some soils are quite free, others
  are badly infested with it, and until they are re-
  moved no plant is safe. The ordinary remedies
  do little good, but trapping may bo tried.
  Slices of carrot, turnip, or potato should be
  buried about an inch below the surface and left
  over-night. If a small wooden skewer is put
  in each they will easily bo found and examined
  the next morning. When the ground is very
  much infested it should bo treated with gas-
  lime. When the soil is worked in the autumn
  the gas-lime may be sprinkled on it after digging
  
  
  in the proportion of at least half a pound to a
  square yard. The winter rains will wash it in
  and kill wireworm and other larvae. As this is
  injurious to plant life, notlaing must be planted
  for nine months after the application.
  
  GARDEN TOOLS
  
  Tlie amateur gardener will require little
  beyond the following : -
  
  Hoe. - One from six to seven inches wide
  will be the most suitable for general purposes.
  Price about 2s.
  
  
  Rake, Fork, Hoe and Spade.
  
  Rake. - Choose one about twelve inches wide.
  Price 2s. 6d.
  
  Spade. - ^No. 3 is a very convenient size for
  general use. Price 3s. to 5s.
  
  Fork. - A large fork will be required for turning
  the soil of borders. Price about 3s. - also a
  small one for weeding, Is.
  
  
  Shears, Trowel, Weeding Fork and Pruning Enlfe
  
  TroweL - For planting purposes - Is. to Is. 6d.
  
  Shears. - For cutting edges and trimming
  hedges - 3s. to 4s.
  
  Watering- Can. - One of galvanised sheet iron
  with a movable rose will be the most useful -
  2s. 6d.
  
  Knife. - For pruning - 28.
  
  Hammer and Nails. - For nailing plants to
  wall. Hammer Is. 6d., and nails 3d. per lb.
  
  A pair of strong gloves and pair of scissors.
  
  If there is a lawn to keep in order a mowing-
  machine will also be required. They may be
  
  
  HOME GARDENING
  
  
  603
  
  
  pxirchased from 25s. upwards, but an effort
  should be made to buy one of first-rate quality
  as it will give much more satisfaction.
  
  A basket for holding the smaller tools, one or
  
  
  Garden Basket.
  
  two open baskets for carrying purposes, a reel
  of wire, a syringe, a foot-rule, and a broom will
  also be foond useful.
  
  Garden tools should always have a place for
  themselves where they can be kept in a dry and
  clean condition. Many of them can be hung
  up, and they will require little space.
  
  Water-cans should be tvirned upside down
  when not in use ; and if any tools are not likely
  to be used for a while, they should be rubbed
  with grease to prevent them rusting.
  
  To Send Flowers by Post. - When cutting
  
  
  flowers for travelling one must be guided some-
  what by weather conditions, but, generally
  speaking, they should be cut and placed in
  water five or six hours before being packed.
  If they are cut in the evening it must be before
  the dew begins to fall. Place the flowers in
  water and stand them in a dry place. If the
  weather is wet, place them in vases or jars in
  the house where there is just a trifle of heat.
  They will be foimd to dry quickly if treated in
  this manner. The packing must be done care-
  fully. A flat hamper is the best for the purpose,
  as it is light, and moisture does not accvunidate
  as it does in boxes. Failing this, a hght wooden
  or strong cardboard box can be used. If the
  weather is very hot and dry, line the basket
  with waxed paper, as this prevents too much
  evaporation. If the weather is very damp,
  then use very soft tissue paper, and this will
  absorb a fair amount of moisture. Do not pack
  the blooms too tightly ; on the other hand, if
  the basket is not full, it must be padded with
  tissue paper to prevent the flowers shaking.
  Never use damp cotton wool in packing. The
  packet must be marked, " Flowers with care."
  Immediately on arrival the flowers should be
  unpacked and placed in tepid water slightly
  salted.
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD REPAIRS AND UPHOLSTERY
  
  It is a sovirce of great economy in a household when one of its members shows an aptitude for execut-
  ing simple home repairs, and can also t\im her hand to upholstery work and carpentry. Not only
  can the money, which would otherwise have to be expended in hiring workmen to do the various
  odd jobs, be saved, but the home upholsterer can add to the beauty of her surroundings by making
  pretty curtains and hangings, and fashioning dainty little articles of furniture at a comparatively
  small cost. !Many useful hints in regard to home upholstery and repairs are given in this article,
  and the various methods of painting, papering, and distempering walls are fully described.
  
  
  The Household Tool Chest. - It is always
  useful to have a certain number of simple tools
  ready at hand for doing the various odd jobs
  which are required from time to time in every
  home. Although small chests ready fitted with
  tools can be bought, this is not a plan to be
  recommended unless one is prepared to pay a
  High price, and even then it will be found that
  many of the tools supplied are never required.
  
  
  feiUlUJlJiVK'n
  
  
  dr>cc^^
  
  
  1. Claw nammiT.
  
  2. Upholstery Uammer.
  
  3. Screw -driver.
  
  4. Brog or Bradawl.
  6. Glue-pot.
  
  6. Gimlet.
  
  
  7. rile.
  
  8. Pincers.
  
  9. Foot-rule.
  
  10. Chisel.
  
  11. Tack-lifter.
  
  12. Saw.
  
  
  It is much better to buy the few necessary tools
  of a first-class quality, and with care they will
  last for years.
  
  The following will in most ca-ses bo found
  useful : -
  
  
  2 Hammers - one strong and heavy and the
  other small and light for upholstery or light
  carpentry.
  
  1 Screw-driver. 1 Gimlet.
  
  1 Saw. 1 Bradawl or Brog.
  
  1 Pair pincers. 1 Glue-pot.
  
  1 Tack-lifter. 1 File.
  
  1 Foot-rule. A strong knife.
  
  ] Chisel.
  
  Also an assortment of tacks, nails, screws,
  hooks, &c., suitable for the purpose in hand,
  which can be bought as occasion arises, A
  nail-box should have different divisions in which
  the various kinds of nails can be kept separately.
  
  Tools must be kept carefully or they will bj
  unfit for good work. They must be protected
  from rust, and if they are not likely to be used
  for some time they should be rubbed over with
  a little grease.
  
  To Prepare Glue. - Break some glue into
  small pieces and put it into the inner part of
  the glue-pot x^nth cold water to cover it. Allow
  this to soak some time and then pour of? any
  superfluous water. Then half fill the outer
  vessel \i'ith water, place the double pot at the
  side of the fire, and allow the glue to melt gradu-
  ally, stirring occasionally with a stick. The
  glue must be appUod with a brush or with a
  small pad made by tying a piece of flannel on
  to the end of a stick.
  
  TO PAPER A ROOM
  
  This is not a very difficult matter unless the
  room is a very lofty one. Like all other work
  it requires practice before it can be done very skil-
  fully, and the amateur would bo wise to try her
  'prentice hand on an attic or small room before
  she attempts to paper one of more importance.
  
  Now wall-paper must never be put on the top
  of old, as this is most unhygienic. So the first
  step to take is to strip the wall of its old covering.
  Take a pail of hot water and a largo white-wash
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD REPAIRS AND UPHOLSTERY
  
  
  605
  
  
  brush and go over the wall with this, soaking the
  paper well. Allow the damp to soak in, and then
  scrape the paper off with an old knife or a piece
  of slate. If there are any holes in the plaster,
  fill these up with plaster of Paris made into
  a paste with water or size, or paste a piece
  of white paper over them. Next wash the
  wall over with a coating of weak size, and
  when this is dry the wall will be ready for
  papering.
  
  Size is a jelly-like substance (8d. per lb.),
  generally used in the proportion of one pound
  to one gallon of water. This must be melted
  slowly over the fire and kept warm while
  in use.
  
  Wall-papers are usually twenty-one inches
  wide, and are sold in lengths of twelve yards, so
  it will not be difficult to calculate the quantity
  required. If a patterned paper is chosen, an
  extra allowance must be made for matching
  the pattern on the vai'ious strips, but the amateur
  should choose either a plain or a striped paper
  in order to avoid this extra trouble of match-
  ing the pieces. Cheap wall-papers can be bought
  from 6d. to Is. per piece, and, of course, there are
  many at a much higher price.
  
  In addition to the paper, the following will be
  required : a pair of large scissors, a pail for
  paste, a paste brush, one or two soft dusters, or
  another diy brush for smoothing on the paper,
  and some good paste.
  
  To make the paste : -
  
  Take one pound of flour and mix it to a smooth
  paste with cold wat'^>' ; then add more water
  until the mixture is of a creamy consistency.
  Boil this over the fire in a saucepan and add
  a little size or glue which will make the paste
  more tenacious. It is a good plan also to add a
  little alum (one and a half ounces), as this will
  prevent the paste from turning sour. The
  paste should be of the consistency of gruel when
  ready.
  
  The paper must be cut in lengths according
  to the different parts of the room it has to cover,
  making it two inches longer than the actual
  measurements in every case. Then trim off the
  margins close to the pattern on one side and
  leave half aii inch on the other. The pasting
  must either be done on a kitchen-table, or on
  newspapers spread on the floor. Paste one piece
  at a time, putting weights on one end of the
  paper if it is inclined to roll up. Be careful to
  paste all smoothly, and pay particular attention
  to the edges. Thin paper may bo hung at once ;
  a thicker make should lie for two or three minutes
  to soften it, as it will then be less Ukely to tear
  in the lifting. When carrying the paper to the
  wall loop up the lower end of the paper with the
  two pasted sides together to prevent it from
  catching on anything. Then place one end
  to the top of the moulding or ceiling, and the
  left-hand edge to the corner line, cutting of? any
  unevenness if necessary. When these two edges
  
  
  are well in position press the surface to the wall
  in every part with a duster or clean dry brush,
  first down the middle and then outwards to the
  sides. Avoid any rubbing which might spoil the
  colour of the paper. Unfold the lower part of
  the paper, and continue it right down to the top
  of the skirting-board length, where any surplus
  must be cut off. A few wrinkles and bhsters
  may appear at first, but these will disappear
  when the paper dries and contracts. Place the
  next strip of paper so that its trimmed edge
  covers the margin of the first strip. It is always
  best to make two cut edges meet at the corners.
  Short pieces above doors and windows must be
  neatly fitted, and if there are any irregular parts
  to be covered use plenty of paste, as this will
  soften the paper and enable it to be moulded
  into any shape.
  
  DISTEMPERING
  
  This is painting with whitening and size mixed
  to a paste with water, and some coloiu-ing matter
  added. It is generally applied to plaster.
  When used in a natural wliite colour it is called
  white -washi ng.
  
  To Prepare White- wash. - Take six pounds of
  whitening (cost about 3d.), put it into a clean
  pail, cover it with water ; let it stand twenty-
  four hours and pour the water off. This may be
  repeated several times if the wash is desired very
  white, but for ordinary purposes once is suffi-
  cient. Then add half a pound size dissolved in
  half a gallon of hot water and mix all to a creamy
  consistency. Add also one table-spoonful of
  powdered alum and enough washing blue to
  make it a natural white colour. Strain the wash
  and use when cold : it should be almost hke a
  jelly and sUghtly sticky. It must be kept well
  mixed when in use. The above quantities will
  be sufficient to white-wash a small room or a
  good-sized ceiling.
  
  Coloured Distemper is made by adding some
  colouring pigment to the above white-wash, such
  as yellow ochre for a cream tint, yellow oclire
  and black for stone colour, vermihon or Venetian
  red for pink, indigo for blue, and so on. These
  colours can be bought at any colour shop, and
  must be mixed smoothly with a little water
  before adding them to the wash. Add a very
  small quantity at a time, and then test the colour
  on a piece of paper. It must bo remembered
  that the colour will look very much deeper in
  the pail than it will when dry on the wall.
  
  Patent preparations can now be bought which
  will save the amateur the trouble of mixing the
  distemper, and these are quite inexpensive and
  easy to use. Full directions aie given with
  each.
  
  If the distemper is not to be used at once, a
  little Water should be poured on tlie top to
  prevent a skin forming. It must always be well
  stirred up before use.
  
  
  606
  
  
  THE WOMAls^'S BOOK
  
  
  To Distemper a Wall. - ^The dust miist first be
  brushed ofE and the wall then washed over with
  clean warm water and a briish. The water
  must be changed as soon as it becomes dirty.
  Then give the walls a coating of tliin size and
  let them dry. If there are any cracks or holes,
  they must be filled up with plaster of Paris and
  whitening made into a paste with water and
  size, using one part pleister of Paris to three
  parts wliitoning.
  
  For applying the wash use a good distemper
  brush, which will cost about 63. Commence at
  the top of the wall and work downwards with
  even strokes backwards and forwards. Too
  much wash must not be taken up at one time or
  there will be splashing, and the work must be
  done as quickly and expeditiously as possible.
  The brush ought only to be put into the dis-
  temper half-way up its bristles, and then the
  svuplus should be pressed out before applying
  
  
  Distemper Brush.
  
  the brush to the wall. Doors and windows
  should be kept shut while this work is being
  done to prevent the wash drying too quickly
  and looking patchy. When finished, a ciirrent
  of air may be allowed to pass through the room.
  To White-wash a Celling. - This can only be
  done after considerable practice, and unless the
  ceiling is small and low the work should scaxcely
  be attempted by a woman, as it means too much
  climbing about on steps and stretching of the
  arms and body. The ceihng must be prepared
  first, in the same way as a wall, by washing and
  then applying a coat of thin size. The white-
  wash should be put on in very even strokes along
  the length of the ceiling, the brush being worked
  evenly backwards and forwards. White-wash
  dries so quickly that unless it is applied quickly
  the work will have a patchy appearance.
  
  PAINTING AND ENAMELLING WOOD
  
  This work is very much simplified nowadays,
  as all colours can bo bought ready prepared,
  and it is much better for the amateur not to
  attempt mixing the colours herself. Oil and
  colour men will supply any colour from about
  6d. per pound, and sometimes they will lend a
  brush as well, only if painting is done to any
  great extent it is much better to possess one's
  own brushes. Brushes are expensive articles,
  
  
  but good work cannot be done without them,
  and there is no economy in buying cheap ones.
  Fibre brushes, for instance, are sold at a much
  lower price than those made of bristles, but
  after they have been used a few times the fibres
  begin to drop out.
  
  In order to obtain satisfactory results in
  painting, the article to be painted must be
  thoroughly clean and the surface smooth.
  Remove all dust, and wash the surface thor-
  oughly with soap and water ; then allow the
  wood to dry, and fill up any holes with putty or
  cement. If there is any roughness this should
  be smoothed down with sand-paper. The
  professional painter will very often remove an
  old coating of paint before putting on another,
  especially if the former is blistered or broken in
  any way. This is done by the application of
  heat or some stripping fluid. It is Mork that
  can scarcely be undertaken by the homo worker,
  and in many cases it is not necessary. When
  painting new wood a first coat of weak size will
  be necessary to prevent the paint soaking into
  the wood. The paint must be well stirred with
  a piece of stick before commencing and then
  appUed with a brush with smooth, steady
  strokes. It must not be laid on too thickly,
  but well brushed in with the grain of the wood
  until no brush mark is visible. Two brushes
  are usually required, a small one for the intricate
  parts and a larger one for the wider surfaces.
  These brushes are called sash tools. The tips
  of the brushes only should be put into the paint.
  If two coats of paint are required the first must
  be allowed to become quite dry before the second
  is appHed. New wood requires at least two
  coats, and sometimes a coat of varnish is put on
  the top.
  
  Enamel Paints which are prepared with varnish
  are much used nowadays. They have a very
  smooth and glossy appearance when dry. They
  are used in the same way as other paints, and are
  especially useful in renovating plain wood furni-
  ture, water-cans, light wooden articles, &,c.
  
  When paint is not in use it should have a little
  water poiu'ed over the surface. This will keep
  it liquid and in good condition for future use.
  
  CARE OF PAINT AND VARNISH BRUSHES
  
  Before using a new brush it should be soaked
  in water for some hours. This swells the bristles
  and renders them less likely to fall out. Paint
  brushes that are in constant use should bo kept
  in a tin with water or sufficient turpentine to
  cover the bristles. When they are finished with
  squeeze the paint well out on the edge of the
  paint pot, wipe the brushes -with a rag, clean in
  turpentine, and then wash with plain soap and
  water and put aside to dry. Varnish brushes
  should be kept in the varnish while in use and
  then cleaned in the same way as paint brushes.
  
  Old paint brushes can be cleaned by soaking
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD REPAIRS AND UPHOLSTERY
  
  
  607
  
  
  them over-night in strong soda-water and then
  washing them out thoroughly. The bridles of
  the brushes, whether of cord or metal, should not
  be allowed to soak in the water.
  
  TO STAIN FLOORS
  
  If it is a border round a room that requires
  staining, measure the distance from the wall
  all round and make a mark with chalk or a
  large-coloured pencil, always remembering to
  allow for an inch or two of staining to come
  under the carpet on all sides. Then knock
  down any nail heads with a hammer and fill
  up holes and crevices with a little putty, making
  the floor quite even. Sweep the floor over just
  before putting on the first coating of stain.
  
  For a simple stain take two ounces of per-
  mangaixate of potash in crystals and dissolve
  it in one pint of boiling water. Apply this with
  a soft pad on the end of a stick, putting it on
  the way of the grain. Be careful not to soil the
  hands. Allow the first coating to dry, and then
  apply a second in the same way until the floor
  is dark enough. A floor that is stained for the
  first time will require more stain than one that
  is just being renewed. Leave the floor to dry,
  and then rub over with a flannel dipped in Unseed
  oil. Leave again for a day and polish with bees' -
  wax and turpentine (see p. 65).
  
  The above is a very simple and inexpensive
  staining, but it wiU be found satisfactory.
  
  Ready-prepared stains of various kinds can
  also be bought from any colour merchants.
  They can be had in difierent shades, but walnut
  stain is perhaps the most suitable for a sitting-
  room. Some of these stains contain varnish,
  others reqmre a coat of varnish put on the top.
  The former are on the whole the best to use.
  When putting on the stain apply it to one or
  two boards only at a time, as it dries very
  quickly and is apt to have a marked appearance,
  unless each small piece is finished before another
  is started. Be careful not to splash the skirting-
  board, and if an accident should occur wipe off
  the stain at once and wash the board. It is
  always better to use two brushes when appljdng
  the stain, a small one for painting near the
  skirting-board and a larger one for the other
  parts. After the staining is finished the floor
  should not be walked on for a day or two, and it
  should be kept as free from dust as possible.
  A plank supported on two footstools may be
  placed across the doorway.
  
  TO ENAMEL A BATH
  
  First thoroughly wash the bath with hot
  water, soap, and soda to get rid of all grease,
  and let it become quite dry. If there are any
  rough surfaces, rub them down with fine sand
  or glass-paper and brush away any dust this
  may make. Then take some good bath enamel
  
  
  and give the bath its first coating. White,
  cream, eau-de-nil, or flesh-coloured enamel may
  be used. Allow the enamel to become quite dry,
  and smooth it over again with the sand-paper
  if necessary. A second coating of the enamel
  must then be apphed and allowed to dry as
  before. Two coatings are generally sufficient,
  but in some cases three may be necessary. It
  is very important to let one coating dry before
  putting on another, or the work will not be
  successful. Some enamel may take one or two
  days to dry. When finished fill the bath with
  cold water and allow it to remain two days.
  This will harden the paint and take away the
  smell.
  
  TO MEND CHINA
  
  Broken cliina that is to be used for liquids
  or to be frequently washed requires to be
  mended with rivets, and this can only be done
  by an expert. The rivets will cost 2d. each.
  
  In the case of ornaments the pieces may often
  be united with cement, and with care will hold
  together for years. The cement may either be
  bought ready prepared or can be made at home.
  The following are two different methods of
  making it : -
  
  (1) Take a little plaster of Paris and mix it to
  a creamy paste with beaten white of egg just
  before use.
  
  (2) Take half an ounce gima acacia, dissolve
  it in water and strain. Add enough plaster of
  Paris to make a creamy paste just before use.
  
  Both these cements must only be mixed in
  very small quantities as required.
  
  China should be mended as soon as possible
  after it is broken ; if allowed to lie about the
  fine points or edges get rubbed or broken, and
  in consequence the joining will not be so close
  and will show more. Wash the broken pieces
  very carefully and then make them thoroughly
  dry and as warm as the hand can hear by
  putting them in the oven or near the fire. Use
  as, little cement tis possible - just enough to coat
  the two surfaces to be joined, and apply it with a
  match or fine piece of stick. Any surplus cement
  must be squeezed out and rubbed off at once.
  After pressing the two pieces together try to
  place the china in such a position that the weight
  of the pieces will tend to keep them together.
  If it is a plate, for instance, it might be propped
  up between two piles of books. Sometimes a
  binder is necessary, and an india-rubber band can
  be used with good effect. One piece must always
  be allowed to dry on before joining another, so
  if there axe a number of fragments they might
  be joined in pairs one day and the next day
  two pairs put together, and so on until all is in
  shape.
  
  BURST PIPES OR BOILER
  
  Accidents of tliis kind usually occur sifter
  a frost if the water in the pipes heis been
  
  
  608
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  allowed to freeza Tlio expanding of the water
  in freezing breaks the pipe, but it is only when
  the thaw comes that the water runs out.
  
  When a leak occurs anj'where the stop-cock
  should at once be shut off so as to prevent more
  water from k^a\-ing the cistern. It is important,
  therefore, to know where the stop-cock is and
  also to see that it is kept in a turnable condition.
  Every second that is wasted may mean serious
  damsige, and on no account must this special
  tap become so stiff that it cannot be moved.
  
  Another plan is to flatten the pipe just at the
  break and thus check the flow of water. To do
  this shp a piece of wood or other resisting sub-
  stance between the pipe and the wall and hammer
  the pipe sharply on to it. By tliis means the
  plaster of the wall need not be injured.
  
  The accident of a burst pipe can generally be
  avoided by keeping the house warm enough.
  Wliere pipes are exposed to a very cold atmos-
  phere it is a good plan to keep a gas jet or a
  small lamp burning on frosty nights.
  
  An empty house, where there are no fires,
  is the one most Hkely to suffer. In tlus case it
  is safer to turn off the water-supply at the main
  and to empty the water out of the pipes if
  frosty weather is feared.
  
  ' A more serious accident still is the bursting
  of a kitchen boiler. This is due to the boiler
  having run dry and the fire being kept on. If,
  on account of frost or any other reason, the hot
  water ceases to run, the kitchen fire should at
  once be put out.
  
  GAS ESCAPES
  
  An escape of gas may be caused by a break
  in the pipe - perhaps the result of a nail having
  been driven into it - by a badly-made joint
  having broken or given way, or because a screw-
  joint has become loose. The usual method of
  applying a lighted match or taper in order to
  find out the place of escape is a very risky one,
  and it is safer to avoid it altogether unless the
  escape is a very small one. If it is a big escape
  the safest plan is to turn off the gas at the
  meter and to allow a good current of air to pass
  through the room where the smell occurs. Then
  turn on the gas again for a few minutxjs, and you
  will no doubt be able to trace the hole quite
  readily by the smell or perhaps hear where it
  filters through the pipe.
  
  A small hole can always bo mended tempo-
  rarily by patching it up \\'ith a good layer of
  soap or lard. Another way of stopping the
  escape is to flatten the pipe close to the faulty
  spot, but this may have the disadvantage of
  shutting off the gas from other parts of the
  house. If a pipe breaks in any part it may be
  temporarily mended by slipping in a piece of
  india-rubber tubing over the two ends and
  fastening it on with string.
  
  The above are only temporary makeshifts.
  
  
  and the damaged pipe should be properly
  attended to at the earliest possible opportunity.
  
  TO RE-MAKE A WOOL MATTRESS
  
  When a wool mattress becomes slumpy it
  should be re-made ; in fact, from a hygienic
  point of view this should be done every year.
  
  Take the mattress into an unused room (one
  without a carpet is best) and spread it on a sheet
  on the floor. Take off the rounds of leather on
  the mattress, open one end and empty the wool
  on to the sheet. Then have the cover washed,
  starched and ironed. Pick the wool apart with
  the fingers or with a machine for the purpose.
  It is rather a tedious business to do it with the
  fingers, and sometimes it is possible to hire
  a machine from an upholsterer. The French
  housewife generally does this piece of work in
  her garden. When ready replace the wool in
  the case, keeping the mattress very even, and
  sew up as before. For sewing on the rounds
  of leather a long needle tlxreaded with twine will
  be required.
  
  TO RE-MAKE FEATHER PILLOWS
  
  This should be done periodically when the
  covers become soiled. The simplest and tidiest
  method is to prepare the new or clean tick first
  by rubbing the inside over with bees' -wax or
  yellow soap, as this will prevent the points of
  the feathers from working through. Then make
  an opening in the old pillow the same size as
  that in the now tick and sew both openings
  together. Shake the feathers from one to the
  other, pin the seam before undoing the stitches,
  and the old case can be removed and the seam
  sewn up without any feathers flying about the
  room. Some people turn the feathers into a
  bath and wash and dry them before re-
  making the pillow, but this is rather a laborious
  and unpleasant operation. If the feathers re-
  quire special cleaning it is better to send the
  pillows to a bedding manufacturer to have them
  properly re-made.
  
  TO MAKE BLINDS
  
  The simple blind on a roller is very easily
  made by the homo worker. For material there
  is considerable choice in self-coloured or printed
  linens and hollands. If the blinds are being
  made for the front of the house, it is better
  to have them all alike, while for back or side-
  windows this is not so necessary.
  
  When taking measurements take the length
  of the blind and six inches over to allow for
  a hem and a piece to go round the roller at tho
  top. For the width measure the size of the roller
  less half an inch, so that tho blind will be quarter
  of an inch narrower than the roller on both
  sides. Very often it is possible to buy the
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD REPAIRS AND UPHOLSTERY
  
  
  material the exact width required, as the rollers
  are generally made in regulation sizes, but, if not,
  allowance must be made for a one and three-
  quarter inch hem on each side.
  
  It is very important to have a blind cut evenly ;
  if badly cut it will pull up and down badly.
  Both top and bottom must be cut by the thread,
  and all hems must be measured exactly with a
  foot-rule or inch-tape, and a small pencil or chalk
  mark made where the hem has to come. The
  side hems must only be turned over once and
  then tacked down ■with herring-bone stitch
  (see p. 397). For the bottom hem mark a half-
  inch turning and a one and three-quarter inch
  hem. The latter will be wide enough to allow
  of a lath being slipped in, into winch one end
  of the cord is fixed by making a hole through
  material and wood.
  
  To fix the blind to the roller put a tack at
  each end on the raw edge of the material, turn
  the roller round until it is covered with the
  material, and then sew on with a needle and
  strong cotton. By tliis means the roller is quite
  covered and there is little danger of the blind
  teaming away.
  
  It is not often that a blind is left perfectly
  plain as above ; it is more usual to trim the edge
  with a piece of fringe or with some strong
  applique lace. When ornamentation of this
  kind is added, the blind itself must be cut shorter
  to allow for the width of the trimming. Some-
  times a piece of lace insertion is let in as well
  just above the lath, or fancy-shaped medallions
  of the appUqu^ lace.
  
  A MANTELPIECE DRAPERY
  
  Perhaps the simplest way of hiding an ugly
  mantelpiece is the somewhat old-fasliioned one
  of covering it with a cloth drapery of some sort.
  A plain board must first be made to fit on the
  top of the mantel-shelf, and this should extend
  
  
  Drapery for Sitting-room Mantelpiece.
  
  
  an inch or two beyond the edges all round.
  Underneath this shelf should run a thin iron
  rod fitted into eyes, and on this rod, curtains are
  
  
  609
  
  run by means of rings. There is very consider-
  able choice of materials for covering, such as serge,
  tapestry, silk, or velvet, but care must bo taken
  to have it in keeping with the colour scheme of
  the room. A border of the material must first
  be made wide enough to cover the shelf and to
  hang down about a foot on the front and ends.
  If the material is light in texture it should be
  lined with sateen of the same colour to enable
  it to hang properly. A pretty fringe or gimp
  will be required to finish oQ the edge. It is
  always best to have this border separate from
  the board, as it can then be taken off and shaken
  when the room is cleaned. If made wide enough
  to tuck in between the shelf and the mantelpiece,
  there will be no danger of its slipping off. Under-
  neath this border should hang curtains made of
  the same material and lined if necessary. These
  also should be edged with the same gimp or
  frmge along the foot and up the front edges.
  The curtains must be made vdde enough to cover
  the entire fireplace, and if they are fixed to the
  rod by means of small rings they can be drawn
  backwards and forwards at pleasure. A more
  handsome effect can be produced by having the
  top border and edges of the curtains prettily
  embroidered.
  
  Another Method of Draping a Mantelpiece.-
  A board must first be made as above with a
  one-inch strip of wood fastened underneath the
  front and sides. Cover this tightly with serge,
  sateen, or cloth of a colour to match the drapery
  and tack it underneath. The covering must be
  laid on very smoothly, the straight of the
  material running straight across the board.
  Commence tacking at the centre and work
  graduaUy towards the ends. If any wrinkles
  should appear they can generally be removed
  by damping the place and pressing with a hot
  iron. A valance is put on beneath this and
  fixed to the under-strip of wood. This can be
  of an ornamental character ; a piece of pretty
  silk or wool tapestry, or some hand embroidery
  is the most suitable. A piece of buckram
  stiffening should first be put on ; take the
  measurements carefully and make it two inches
  less in depth than the outer valance. Cover
  the buckram on both sides with tliin sateen
  and tack it on to the strip of wood beneath the
  mantel-board. The top valance must also be
  hned with silk or sateen and finished along the
  edge with cord or fringe ; fasten this on the top
  of the buckram background, and finish all neatly
  with an edging of gimp and studs or fancv nails.
  If curtains are required they can be fitted up
  in the same way as for the other mantelpiece
  border (see above).
  
  When a bedroom mantelpiece requires cover-
  ing, it is a good plan to make the drapery of
  some cotton material wliich can easily be washed,
  such as printed linen or cotton. The board'
  might be tightly covered as above with a
  dark-coloured sateen and a buckram stiffening
  
  2q
  
  
  610
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  for the valance of the eamo colour below.
  The valance might then consLst of a box-
  pleated flounce of the material about twelve
  inches in depth, and then curtains, if they are
  
  
  Mantelpiece Drapery for a Bedroom-board covered with
  
  dark satin ; drapery made of chintz or printed linen
  
  with box-pleated valance ; cm-tains edged with a narrow
  
  gimp.
  
  required, should be simply hemmed or finished
  
  with a narrow gimp which can be easily washed.
  
  HOW TO LAY LINOLEUM
  
  
  Except in the case of a large room it is not
  a very difficult matter to lay a floor with
  linoleum. If the room is very large and the
  linoleum thick, it will be better to have the
  work done by expert workmen ; in fact, m most
  cases when the linoleum is bought new the
  laving will be done free of charge. StiU a few
  liints for the Ughter pieces of work may be
  found useful.
  
  First place the linole\im on the floor close to
  one of the skirting -boards. If it does not fit
  perfectly close any unevenness mtist be trimmed
  off with a knife. A very sharp hook-knife is
  the best for the purpose, as it will not shp out
  of position so easily as an ordinary knife. Fasten
  the linoleum in position with a few half-inch
  brads. If more than one width of material is
  required for covering, another strip must be
  joined to the first one, and if a patterned
  linoleum is being used care must be taken to
  match the pattern before cutting. When the
  edges are not exactly even, overlap one a little
  and trim off the surplus material with a knife. If
  the knife is held with the blade slanting towards
  the edge of the linoleum, this will give a sUghtly
  rounded edge which will fit all the more closely.
  Unless the edges of the joins are made to meet
  very exactly, water will soak tlirough when
  washing is being done and cause the Unoleum
  to shrink and rot. At the same time the two
  edges of a join must not bo so tight that they
  require forcing down, as this would cause blisters.
  Fix the edcee of the join with brads, driving
  
  
  them in as close to the edge as possible without
  tearing the linoleum, and put them in pair.s, one
  facing the other. If there is any likelihood of
  the floor being damp, tarred paper should be
  laid beneath the linoleum.
  
  A BOOT CUPBOARD
  
  A very neat and easily -made boot cupboard
  can be manufactured out of an empty orange-
  box, which can generally be procured from a
  grocer without any trouble. By setting the case
  on end the division in it will form the shelves.
  
  First tighten all the joins by driving in a few
  small nails or strong tacks, and cover over the
  heads of these with a little putty. Then take
  a very hard brush and brush the wood well in
  order to remove all sawdust and splinters. Line
  the inside with some stout wall-paper, leather
  paper, or ordinary brown paper fixed on with
  strong paste or glue. Allow this to dry, and
  then cover the outside with some pretty chintz
  or self-coloured sateen, fixing it in position with
  small tacks or brads. Or, the wood on the out-
  side may be smoothed over with glass paper
  and painted with two coats of Aspinal's enamel.
  A ciu-tain must then be made to cover the
  front. This may either be of chintz to match
  the outside or a self-coloured serge to match
  the paint or sateen with which the outside is
  covered. About a yard of material 50 inches
  wide will be required, and 2^ yards of baU
  fringe or other edging. Make a deep hem at
  the foot and sew the trimming all round with
  the exception of the top. Turn in the top to
  the required length, and fix it to the top of the
  cupboard with smaU brass-headed nails, arrang-
  ing the material in box-pleats. Or, make a
  casing, draw up the curtain to the correct width
  with strong string or cord, and then fix it in
  position.
  
  
  THE MAKING OF CURTAINS
  
  The question of material for curtains in the
  various rooms has already been discussed under
  House Furnishing, the first section of this book,
  but a few hints for making may be useful for
  the novice who would Uke to make her own
  draperies.
  
  Serge or Tapestry Curtains.- When measuring
  for a pair of curtains take the length from the
  curtain pole to the floor of the room plus six
  inches to allow for turnings, top heading, and a
  small amount for resting on the floor or looping
  up When measuring for the fringe or other
  trimming take the length round the curtain
  with the exception of the top, plus half a yard
  to allow for turnings and easing on when sewing.
  Select material of from one and a half to two
  yards wide so as to avoid having a seam down
  the length of the curtains. , , ,^ t
  
  Commence by cutting the top and bottom ot
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD REPAIRS AND UPHOLSTERY
  
  
  611
  
  
  the material perfectly even, because unless this
  is done the curtains will not hang well. Then
  lay a half-inch turning on the right side and
  along the bottom and two sides of the curtains.
  Tack or baste the fringe on to this turning,
  easing it on very slightly to prevent any dragging
  of the material, and stitch on with the machine.
  Two rows of stitching will likely be required to
  make the heading of the fringe lie flat, one
  along the outer and another along the inner
  edge. Some fringes have a double heading, be-
  tween which the edges of the curtain can be
  slipped. In this case a turning on the material
  would not be required. If a fancy border or
  braiding is used instead of fringe this would be
  put on in the same way, easing it on very sHghtly
  
  
  Via. 1.- Serge or Tapestry Curtains- with fancy border
  stitched on, two rows of drawings at top with small
  heading, hoolied on to curtain pole.
  
  and then stitching it along the two edges. The
  trimming should be put an inch from the edge
  at the sides and from two to three inches from
  the edge at the foot, the turning on the material
  being made the necessary width. Care must be
  taken to turn ths corners very neatly. Tack-
  ing before sewing is very important. When eco-
  nomy has to be studied one side only of the
  curtains need be trimmed, the side next the
  wall being left plain with its selvedge edge.
  
  To finish the top of the curtains, turn over
  two inches of the material on the wrong side
  and make two rows of Hrawlugs a Uttle way
  from the top and about half an inch apart.
  
  
  Run a cord or piece of strong string through
  this and draw up the curtain to the width
  required. Tack a piece of upholstery tape over
  the drawings, arranging the fulness evenly,
  and then stitch along both edges with the
  machine. Finish off neatly with a needle
  and cotton and be careful to secure the ends
  of the drawing string. The upholstery tape
  should be the same colour as the curtains if
  possible, also the sewing cotton with which it
  is stitched.
  
  Iron those parts of the curtain which require
  pressing, such as the edges and heading, and
  then sew curtain hooks on to the upholstery
  tape at intervals of about three inches apart or
  according to the number of rings on the curtain
  poles (fig. 1).
  
  Curtains are sometimes hned if the material
  of which they are made is very thin or a specially
  heavy ciirtain is required. SeK-coloured sateen
  to match the curtains or a special hriing cash-
  mere is very good for the purpose. The lining
  should be tacked on all round, leaving it a Uttle
  full to prevent dragging, and then stitched in
  position at the same time as the fringe.
  
  Linen or Cotton Curtains. - These are suitable
  for a bedroom, as they can so easily be washed.
  They can be made in a variety of ways. The
  simplest is to finish them off with a hem all
  round, a three or four -inch hem at the foot,
  and a one or one and a half inch hem at the
  sides. Or they may be trimmed with a cotton
  fringe or fancy edging in the same way as serge
  curtains.
  
  If a fancy cretonne or printed linen is being
  used, a nice finish is a border or plain sateen
  in a pretty contrasting colour, or if the curtains
  are hned with sateen this might be brought
  
  
  FlO. 2.- Plain Curtain with top tunuHl over.
  
  over to the right side to form a border. This
  would require to be carefully arranged and well
  tacked before any stitching is done.
  
  
  612
  
  The top of cotton curtains may bo finished in
  the same way as those made of serge, or when
  thev are light in weight, rings which can be
  slipped over a narrow brass rod might be used
  instead of hooks. If the curtains are made of
  some Ught-coloured material which reqmres
  frequent washing, they should be finished at
  the top in the same way as muslin or lace cur-
  tains, as they will iron more easily if the drawmgs
  
  can be undone. . j. c -^u +;,"
  
  A valance is sometimes used to finish the
  curtains at the top. The simplest way of
  making this is to allow an extra twelve inches
  when cutting the length of the curtains and to
  turn this piece over at the top before putting
  in the runnings. A fancy border stitched along
  this a few inches from the edge wiU make an
  appropriate finish (fig. 2). Another method of
  putting on the valance is to cut a separate piece
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  with ball fringe and a pretty gimp or other
  trimming to match the curtains.
  
  Very careful measurements must be taken
  when cutting the buckram shape in order to
  get a straight edge, as any unovenness would bo
  very noticeable. Instead of the straight pelmet,
  a shaped piece, as shown in fig. 4, might be made.
  
  
  no. 3._Chintz Curtains-edged all round with hall fringe
  Drawn valance stretching across window, also edgea
  with ball fringe.
  
  and to arrange it right across the window (fig. 3).
  This may either be drawn or box-pleated. If
  drawn, allow half as much again as the width
  of the window for the length of the valance ; it
  box-pleated, twice the width of the window will
  be required. A valance is usually made from
  twelve to fourteen inches deep and is fimshed
  along the foot with a ball fringe or trunming
  to match the curtain. .
  
  Instead of a valance a stiffly-shaped piece,
  called a pelmet, is sometimes used to cover the
  top of the curtains. This is a little more diffi-
  cult to make, but still, unless the wnndow is a
  very large one, it is within the scope of the
  home worker. A piece of stiff buckram, from
  eight to ten inches deep and the length of the
  width of the vdndow, must first be cut, then
  covered very smoothly with a piece of the cur-
  tain material and lined at the back with self-
  coloured sateen. The edge may be fimshed
  
  
  Fio. 4.- Top of Curtains covered with a shaped Pelmet.
  
  
  but this is a Httle more troublesome to make
  and should only be attempted by an experienced
  
  worker. z? • i, j
  
  Lace and Muslin Curtains should be fimshed
  on the top by turning them down about two
  and a half inches and stitching a broad tape
  along the line. A narrow tape should then be
  run through this casing and secured at one
  end. This can then be di-awn up to the width
  required, and will be easily undone when the cur-
  tains require washing. Safety-pins with h joks
  attached should be used for fixing the curtains
  to the rings on the curtain pole.
  
  Madras or plain muslin curtains should be
  made very full, as they will hang more grace-
  fully. They must also be cut consideraoiy
  longer than stuff curtains to allow for shrinkage
  in the washing. The edge can be finished with
  baU fringe, or sometimes a frill of the material
  is preferred. It is possible to buy the friUed
  material by the yard, or the frill can be made
  and sewn on to the curtain musUn. When
  cutting the frill allow double the length of the
  curtain to be trimmed for length and niake the
  strips from four to five inches wide. Join the
  required number of strips together and make a
  narrow hem along one side. Turn down the
  other edge, draw it up with a strong cotton
  and sew it to the edge of the curtain, arranging
  the fulness evenly.
  
  Casement Curtains.- In many of the modern
  houses ca.sement curtains take the place of blinds.
  They should be made very simply of one of the
  special cloths sold for the purpose. Casement
  cloth is to be had in cotton, hnen. silk, and
  woollen materials, and in a variety of colours
  and patterns. Cream colour is perhaps the most
  suitable. They may either be gathered into i^
  
  
  HOUSEHOLD REPAIRS AND UPHOLSTERY
  
  
  613
  
  
  heading and rings attached for running on a
  brass rod, or the rod may be passed through a
  casing at the top and the rings cUspensed vrith.
  The former method is, however, better if the
  curtains are to be drawn backwards and for-
  wards. These casement curtains are arranged
  in different ways and made different lengths
  according to the style of window under treat-
  ment. When the window is divided with a
  cross frame two pairs of curtains are used, one
  to cover the upper and the other the lower sash
  of the window. Or, again, they can be made the
  full length of the window, two or three pairs
  perhaps being required for a casement-shaped
  window. Some windows, again, have long case-
  ment curtains at the side and short ones as well
  to cover the windows. If the window-sill is
  broad the curtains should just touch it, but if
  narrow they might be brought a few inches
  below. The curtains can either be finished
  round the edges with a plain one and a half inch
  hem or with a hem-stitched border. They should
  always hang straight and never be looped up.
  
  The woman who is clever with her needle can
  also make them look more artistic with some
  pretty embroiderj'-, an open-work embroidery
  being particularly suitable for art-linen cur-
  tains. A Httle work of this kind will add very
  much to the charm of the curtains. Another
  pretty method of decorating casement curtains
  is by means of a stencil design. Tliis
  is particularly suitable for Utile tussore or
  shantung silk curtains which are so much in
  fashion at present. I* must be borne in mind,
  however, that stencil work will not wash well, and
  that it wiU mean dry cleaning each time the
  curtains require renewing, if the colours are to be
  preserved.
  
  Stencil plates can be bought made of thin
  iron or zinc, and these can, of course, be used over
  
  
  Small Casement Curtain with Stencil Design.
  
  and over again, or a suitable design can first
  be drawn and then cut out of thin card-board
  or stiff manilla or wax paper. Various transfer
  designs can be used for the purpose : a con-
  
  
  ventional pattern generally looks best. Spread
  a sheet of clean blotting-paper on a drawing-
  board, place the silk over this and the paper
  design on the top, and fix all very evenly in
  position with drawing-pins. Care must be
  taken to fix the stencil qmte firmly. Stencil
  paint is then applied with a small brush,
  the choice of colours being a matter of taste.
  Allow the paint to dry, and then carefully remove
  the design. The pattern is sometimes outlined
  with a fine embroidery stitch to give it a more
  finished appearance. Stencil paints or dyes are
  sold in small tubes and must be diluted with
  water ; the ordinary paints are not suitable for
  the work.
  
  TO RE-UPHOLSTER A CHAIR
  
  Small chairs sire not very difficult to re-
  upholster, and an amateur might quite weU
  attempt one that is simple in form.
  
  Verj' often the cover of a chair becomes dirty
  or worn, and it has to be hidden out of sight
  for this reason and because it means consider-
  able expense to have it sent away to be re-made.
  Loose covers are not much used nowadays, and,
  at the best, they soon get out of order and
  become shabby looking. JIany pretty materials
  can, however, be bought for covering the seats
  of chairs. An oddment of good tapestry can
  often be picked up very cheaply at a sale, and
  notliing wears better or, what is better still,
  some very good art linen or serge worked with
  a pretty design can be used. The clever em-
  broiderer will very soon transform an ugly set
  of chairs - chairs in a bedroom, for instance -
  and make them match the colour scheme of
  the room and look quite artistic.
  
  The old cover must first be taken off the cheiir
  that is to be covered, as it is never a good plan
  to put a cover over anything that is dirty, a
  pair of pincers or a small tack-lifter being used
  to take out the small nails that fasten the
  cover. At the same time attention should be
  paid to the manner in wliich the covering has
  been fixed, as this will be a guide for attaching
  the fresh one. The old cover can then be used
  as a pattern for cutting out the fresh material.
  Wlien using a patterned material be careful to
  centre the pattern when cutting the cover,
  otherwise it will look one-sided. If the stuffing
  of the chair has become flattened tlirough long
  use, remove the under cover, which is generally
  made of linen or cotton, tease out the hair, and
  put a layer of fresh hair on the top in order
  to raise any hollow places. A layer of sheet
  wadding might also bo put over the hair ; it will
  make the top of the seat fuller and softer.
  Then cover this with a piece of fresh linen or
  caUco. Next place the new cover on the top,
  centre the back and front, and fix them tempo-
  rarily with small tacks. Do the same at the
  sides, and then tighten gradually all the way
  
  
  614
  
  round, fixing the material in position with very
  small headless tacks. Always work from the
  centre of each side towards the corners. Trim
  off any superfluo\as material, and then cover the
  edges with a narrow gimp fastened on with
  brass-headed nails or coloured studs.
  
  When the webbing supports of a chair give
  way, it will be necessary to take out the entire
  seat and to fix new webbing. This must be
  bought from an upholsterer's, and the best and
  strongest quality obtained. First remove the
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  old webbing, fix on one end of the new on
  the old marks with small clout nails or strong
  tacks, then stretch well and nail down tho
  second end before cutting. Nail on the other
  pieces in the same way, and when putting in
  the cross-way pieces, interlace them, as tins will
  crive greater strength and elasticity. A piece of
  new Hessian sacking should come next to cover
  the webbing, and then the hair for the seat
  should be teased out and replaced and the
  covers fixed on as above.
  
  
  CAREERS FOR WOMEN
  
  In olden times the careers open to women were few ; nowadays the professions which have not
  opened their gates to the woman worker are fewer still. The natural result of this extension of the
  field of work for women is that in all careers in which a woman may take part a high standard of
  proficiency is exacted. There is no room for the untrained worker. This is only just, for if women
  are to work side by side with men in fields of labour which at one time were open to men only, it
  stands to reason that they should be as fully equipped as the men workers.
  
  This is essentially an age of specialisation, and sensible parents are beginning to realise the fact
  that girls nowadays as well as boys require to have their capabilities tested at the age when they
  begin to show in what direction their taleiits he, and to have their careers marked out for them, for
  whether a girl marries or not it is highly desirable that she should be able to take her place in the
  ranks of women workers should there ever arise the need for her to do so.
  
  In the following articles an attempt has been made to put before parents, in as clear and concise
  a manner as possible, the many vocations for which, by careful training, a girl may be fitted, together
  with details in regard to cost of training, necessary qualifications, and, last but not least, the prospects
  offered in each career.
  
  
  THE TEACHING PROFESSION
  
  
  With the rapid strides made in education
  within recent years a much higher degree of
  efficiency is exacted from those who adopt the
  teaching profession. Nowadays there is no
  room for the inefficient and the ill-equipped
  teacher ; indeed, in many cases the supply of
  trained and experienced teachers exceeds the
  demand, and there are many branches of the
  profession that are perilously near to being over-
  crowded. The fact remains, however, that
  there is always room for really gifted teachers.
  There are many women who, in spit" of all their
  knowledge, lack the power of being able to im-
  part this knowledge to others. It should be
  remembered that there are a number of attri-
  butes beyond mere learning which ai'e essential
  to a successful teacher. Tlie gift of imparting
  knowledge, the ability to win the sympathy and
  respect of pupils, the power of maintaining
  discipline, and, last but not least, a strict sense
  of justice - all are necessary for the teacher who
  would follow her profession with success, what-
  ever branch of teaching she may choose to adopt.
  
  PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHING
  
  Tliis, as applied to women teachers, may be
  divided into two branches : -
  
  (1) Teaching in the Elementary and Secondary
  Schools under Local Authorities.
  
  (2) Teaching in the High Schools.
  Elementary School Teaching. - For women
  
  elementary school teaching offers good prospects.
  
  
  and has this particular advantage that the
  training is very cheap, and under the new regula-
  tions is such that will fit students for many
  pursuits other than teaching if they find this
  unsuitable or distasteful to them. In all cases
  special training, generally extending over two
  years, must be taken at a recognised training
  college, but before entering a college the Pre-
  liminary Examination of the Board of Education,
  or its equivalent, must be passed. It will thus
  be seen that a certain amount of preliminary
  training is necessary. This may be taken in
  several ways. A girl whose parents are in good
  circumstances may follow her education in the
  ordinary way at a school or college where she
  may be prepared for the examination. The
  daughter of parents of limited means, however,
  will be wise to avail herself of the manj^ facilities
  for cheap training put within her reach by the
  Board of Education.
  
  For the girl so situated, the first step to be
  taken after attaining the age of sixteen is to get
  an appointment as bursar, or an engagement as
  pupil teacher, or recognition as student teacher.
  The candidate in each of these cases must be
  suitable in respect of character, health, and
  freedom from personal defects, such as lameness
  or deafness.
  
  Bursars. - A bursar is a girl attending full time
  at an efficient training school who intends to
  become a teacher in an elementary school, and
  who receives from the School Authority, aided
  by the Board of Education, such financial help
  
  
  615
  
  
  616
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  as will enable her to continue her education for
  a year, aftor reacliing the age of sixteen or
  seventeen, at the same school where slie lias been
  receiving continuous instriiction for the three
  years immediately before her application for a
  bursarship. The buisar must receive continu-
  ous and suitable instruction throughout the year
  of her bursarship, and within two years of her
  appointment as bursar must enter for the
  " Preliminary Examination for the Certificate."
  The bursar must subsequently either enter a
  training college or serve for a year as student
  teacher in a pubUc elementary school.
  
  Pupil Teachers receive training in teaching
  as pupil teachers in elementary schools, together
  with instruct ion approved by the Board. Except
  in rural districts, no girl may be a pupil teacher
  before the age of sixteen, and as a rule must serve
  two years. In rural districts girls may, with the
  consent of the Board of Education, be engaged
  for three years from the age of fifteen. To
  enable girls who wish to qualify for elemen-
  tary school teaching to become pupil teachers,
  provision heis been made for their education and
  partial maintenance by most of the Education
  Committees of our large towns. The scholar-
  ships they offer give free education for two years
  either in special classes, or, more often, in secon-
  dary schools, and a maintenance grant of from
  £10 to £20.
  
  Candidates must be suitable in respect of
  character, health, and freedom from personal
  defects. Tliose candidates who hold one of the
  certificates above mentioned, or feel thej' could
  pass the special and perhaps easier examination
  of the Board, should send in their names to the
  authorities of the elementary school in which
  they wish to serve early in June, as the usual
  date for admission is August, and the names of
  candidates must be submitted not later than
  July 1st. Those who hold training scholarships
  will have all the necessary arrangements made
  for thom.
  
  Student Teachers. - A student teacher is one
  who is employed in a public elementary school
  during not more than eight meetings in any one
  week for the purpose of gaining practical ex-
  perience in the art of teaching, together with such
  further general education which may be avail-
  able. To obtain recognition as a student teacher
  on the staff of a school the candidate must,
  immediately before her application for such
  recognition, have been a bursar, or have been
  in attendance for not less than three years at an
  efficient secondary school. If she has not been a
  bursar, she must be over seventeen years of age
  and have passed the Preliminary Examination
  for the certificate, or some other examination
  accepted by the Board of Education as a qualifi-
  cation for admission to a training college.
  
  The above-mentioned methods of preparatory
  training for elementary teachers before they take
  the preliminary examination which renders them
  
  
  eligible to enter a training college will commend
  themselves especially to those of Umited income,
  as grants are made by the Board of Education
  in respect of each recognised pupil teacher to
  the elementary school at whicli they are trained.
  Pupil teachers also receive small salaries varying
  in accordance with the arrangements made by
  the different authorities. Tlie pupils, however,
  whose parents are in better circumstances and
  who have prepared for the Prchminary Examina-
  tion as ordinary scholars at an ordinary school,
  will find it a great advantage to engage in ele-
  mentary school teaching for a few months before
  taking up their training at a college, as valuable
  experience is always gained in this way.
  
  Preliminary Examination. - This examination
  is open to pupil teachers and bursars who have
  completed their apprenticeship or entered on the
  last year, and to all others who have not taken
  preliminary training as pupil teachers or bursars
  who are over eighteen years of age. Candidates
  who pass this examination are now eligible to
  enter a training college where they will be pre-
  pared for the final teachers' examination ; or if
  they do not intend to work for the teacher's
  certificate, they will be eligible for employment
  in elementary schools as uncertificated teachers.
  Training Colleges are of two kinds - Residential
  and Day. Tliere are thirty-four Residential
  Colleges for women in England and Wales, and
  twelve Day Training Colleges. There are also
  fifteen Day Colleges where both men and women
  may receive their training. The course in a
  training college usually extends over two years,
  but those who wish to work for a degree must
  take a three years' course. A student who holds
  a degree or who has passed some other examina-
  tion recognised by the Board of Education may
  enter a students' training college for one year.
  At those day colleges, which are closely attached
  to a university, the course lasts three years, and
  is so arranged that at the end of it students
  may become graduates of the university. This,
  however, entails very heavy work, as the student
  has not only to prepare for her degree, but
  must at the same time receive her professional
  training.
  
  Fees. - The fees paid at training colleges are
  small, the fee at a residential college for a two
  years' course being as a rule £20 to £30. This
  covers both tuition, board, lodging, washing, and
  medical attendance. Books cost £5 or £6, and
  there are usually small charges made for sports,
  papers, magazines, &c. In Roman Catholic
  colleges the fees are lower. At a day college
  the usual tuition fee is £10 a year. Day students
  receive a maintenance grant from the Govern-
  ment of £20 a year. A course of training for
  day students is also provided at many of the
  University Colleges, £10 a year being the average
  fee.
  
  A graduate in arts or science of any university
  in the British Empire may be recognised as a
  
  
  CAREERS FOR WOMEN
  
  
  617
  
  
  certificated teacher, provided she holds a certifi-
  cate of proficiency in the theory and practice of
  teaching.
  
  Prospects. - Students who have obtained their
  certificates at the end of their training are
  quaUfied teachers, and are eligible for posts in
  elementary schools, training colleges, and pupil
  teacher centres. Salaries vary considerably
  with the locality. One of the highest scales
  of salary in the country is as follows : -
  
  
  Trained Assistant IMistress
  Untrained but Certificated
  Head IMistress ....
  
  
  £85 to £125
  
  75 to 125
  
  120 to 265
  
  
  Head Assistants get fron £10 to £15 more than
  ordinary assistants. The salary of the Head
  Mistress depends upon her length of service and
  the size of the school.
  
  Secondary Schools. - In order to qualify a.s
  teacher in a secondary school, a candidate
  must have a degree or its equivalent, and after
  graduation must go tlu-ough a course of special
  professional training in accordance with the
  regulations of the Board. The special training
  must extend over a j'ear at least.
  
  The following qualifications are accepted as
  equivalent to a degree : A Tripos Certificate of
  the University of Cambridge, provided that the
  examination is the one that would, if taken by
  a man, entitle him to a degree under the usual
  conditions without further conditions, or an
  Oxford diploma, which is one, if taken by a man,
  that would entitlp him to a degree ; also a certifi-
  cate showing that she had passed the second Pubhc
  Examination of the University of Oxford, or
  that she has obtained in the Examination in
  Modern Languages an honours certificate of the
  Oxford or Cambridge Higher Locals, provided
  they include the subjects required by the Board.
  Diplomas or certificates in the theory and
  practice of teaching in secondary schools are
  now granted by the following Universities :
  Oxford, Cambridge, London, Durham, Liverpool,
  Leeds, Wales, Edinburgh, St. Andrews, Aberdeen,
  Glasgow, Dublin, and by the College of Pre-
  ceptors and the National Froebel Union.
  
  Training. - Grants of £100 are now made by
  the Board of Education under certain conditions
  to training colleges in rcsuect of every group
  of five recognised students who have completed
  a course of training during each year ending
  31st of July. Courses of training for the teachers
  of secondary schools are provided at many
  universities or institutions, including the follow-
  ing : University of Oxford, Cambridge Training
  College for Women, at the Universities of
  Birmingham, Dui'ham, Manchester, Liverpool,
  Leeds ; at the University Colleges of Bangor,
  Cardiff, Aberystwyth ; at the following in-
  stitutions in London : Bedford College, Baker
  Street ; Maria Gray College, Brondesbury ;
  Mary Datchelor College, Camberwell ; Catholic
  Training College, Cavendish Square ; London
  
  
  Day Training College ; Clapham High School ;
  Froebel Institution; Cheltenham College, Chelten-
  ham, and also at St. George's Training College,
  Edinburgh.
  
  Prospects. - The commencing salary of a
  teacher in a secondary school in London is
  usually £120, rising in some cases to £250 ;
  head mistresses receive from £300 to £600.
  Salaries vary according to locaUty and size of
  school. Lower salaries are as a rule given in
  the provinces.
  
  High School Teaching. - The branch of pubhc
  school teaching which doubtless appeals the
  most to gentlewomen is that of teaching in the
  high schools. The candidate for a post of the
  kind should remember that a high standard
  of proficiency is exacted. A certain specified
  course of training must be followed which is
  necessarily expensive, and even then, unless she
  has great ability as a teacher, competition for
  a high school post is so keen that, however high
  her attainments, she will be superseded by others
  who excel in the actual art of teaching.
  
  The intending high school teacher will find
  that skill in sports and outdoor games will be
  counted not the least among her acquirements.
  Games are nowadays a typical feature of the
  curriculum of all our girls' schools, and in the
  choice of the younger form mistresses especially,
  preference -s often given to the candidate who is
  a good organiser, or an expert player of the most
  popular games in which girls may participate.
  
  Not the least pleasant side of the life of the
  high schosl teacher is to be found in the friend-
  ships which she will form among her pupils and
  their parents. Although the scholars will be
  drawn from many social grades, they will be
  mostly of a class with which a gentlewoman may
  mix socially, and for this reason the life of a
  high school teacher will have a greater appeal
  for the woman of refinement than the hfe of a
  teacher in a pubhc elementary or secondtiry
  school.
  
  Prospects. - Tlie initial salary for assistant
  mistresses varies in manj' locaUties. The
  average commencing salary is £100, in London
  £120, rising at the rate of £10 to £220 and
  sometimes to £250. The salaries of head
  mistresses of the larger schools range from £180
  to £300 and upwards in accordance with the
  locaUty and the size of the school.
  
  Training. - Tliis will extend over at least four
  years, as a high school mistress must have a
  degree or its equivalent ; three of the four years
  will be taken up in preparation for the degree.
  ^Vllen this has been obtained she must take a
  year's training in the art of teaching and work
  for her teacher's diploma. The cost of training
  will average about £100 a year for a resident
  student. If the student hves near one of the
  training colleges, however, the cost will be
  materially reduced, and only the tuition and
  examination fees vsill have to be peud. Then
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  618
  
  will follow the coat of tlio year's training for tho
  teacher's diploma. Tliis may be taken at the
  colleges already mentioned in connection with
  secondary schools. The cost of training for an
  out student will average from £20 to £25 a year.
  Teachers in Scotland- In Scotland the training
  of elementary and secondary school teachers
  is directed by the Provincial Committees of
  Edinburgh. Glasgow, Aberdeen, and St. Andrews,
  and there are good training colleges in all these
  towns. The regulations are very sunilar to
  those in force in England and Wales, and will
  be found in the " Regulations for the PreUmi-
  nary Education, Training and Certification
  of Teachers," issued by the Scotch Education
  Department. Candidates for elementary school
  teacherships must not be under sixteen or over
  eighteen years of age when they are juiiior
  students. At eighteen the Preliminary Examina-
  tion for the Teacher's Certificate must be passed.
  For those who intend to become secondary
  school teachers the training necessary for pre-
  paration for a degree is less costly than in
  England. Those with degrees must take one
  year's special training in teaching in order to
  become secondary teachers. Bursaries m pre-
  paration for elementary school teacherships
  are granted at the discretion of the traimng
  authorities. Salaries are on a lower scale than
  in England- £83 for an assistant mistress, and
  £100 for a head mistress being considered a
  fair rate of pay. In a few of the high schools
  salaries are paid at a higher rate, some of them
  averaging the scale prevaUing in English schoo^.
  Kindergarten and Lower Form Teaching.- At
  one time it was a general idea that any girl or
  woman with a smattering of education, however
  superficial, was competent to teach young
  children. Happily nowadays tho fallacy of this
  idea is recognised. The kindergarten system of
  teaching has become perfected, and is gener-
  ally adopted as the best method of teaching
  little ones.
  
  A very thorough training must be undergone
  by the would-be kindergarten teacher before
  she becomes eligible for a post. This traimng
  must have a good general education as a primary
  foundation. A candidate should also have passed
  some pubUc examination such aa the Oxford or
  Cambridge Senior or Higher Local, or the London
  Matriculation. The course of training m kinder-
  garten work as a preparation for tho certificates
  %i the National Froebel Union must next be
  taken. There are two certificates, the elementary
  and the higher. Both are recognised by the
  Board of Education, and one of them must
  be taken before a post as kindergarten or lower
  form mistress can bo obtained. All those who
  wish to obtain the better posts in kindergarten
  work, such as the management of a kindergarten,
  should study for the higher certificate. The
  elementary certificate is sufficient for assistant
  kindergarten mistresses. There are several train-
  
  
  ing colleges in the United Kingdom where
  students are prepared for the Froebel exami-
  nations. Tlie full course of training extends over
  two years and a term, the first year being taken
  up in preparation for the elementary certificate.
  All information in regard to the Froebel exami-
  nations, names of training colleges, &c., may
  bo had on application to the Secretary, the
  National Froebel Union, Norwich House, South-
  ampton Street, Bloomsbury, London, W.C.
  
  Prospects. - There are numerous posts obtain-
  able in kindergartens connected with high
  schools, kindergartens, private schools, and
  the lower forms of secondary schools, ele-
  mentary schools, &c. The commencing sala^^
  for an assistant mistress averages from £60
  
  to £70.
  
  Teachers ol Foreign Languages.- There are
  good prospects for the teacher who has thoroughly
  mastered some foreign language. This should
  have been acquired in the first instance by a
  term of residence in the country, as fluency ot
  conversation, with purity of accent, are aa in-
  dispensable as the mere learning.
  
  Holiday courses in France for English teachers
  are arranged every August, and particulars of
  them can be obtained by applying for the
  " Table of Holiday Courses on the Continent,
  prepared by the special inquiries office of the
  Board of Education, Whitehall, S.W.
  
  If desirous of teaching in schools, the language
  which the teacher is to make her speciality
  should be included in the syllabus of her ex-
  aminations for her degree. A diploma gained
  at an examination taken in the country itseit
  is more than valuable. The prospects for the
  teacher of languages are very good, but a high
  degree of proficiency is exacted. Posts may be
  obtained on the staffs of high schools, colleges,
  and private schools, and it is also possible ^-j
  establish a connection as visiting teacher m
  schools and private families.
  
  Teaching the Deaf.- This opens up a promising
  field for women and should especially appea
  to those with large sympathies as being a real
  philanthropic work, the results of which are such
  a boon to those who are so sadly afflicted. The
  deaf are taught either by the "oral" or the
  " silent " system. Children who have been deal
  from infancy are also dumb for the reason that
  they have never heard others speak, and there-
  fore cannot imitate their speech as in the case ot
  children who can hear. By the oral system they
  are actually taught speech by watehing the lips
  of others as they speak. This training naturally
  takes a Uttle time, but when the pupils have
  thoroughly mastered the language of the hps
  they can be educated in the same way as children
  who can hear. •, j v.
  
  By the silent method the deaf and dumb are
  taught to communicate with others by means of
  signs and the finger alphabet.
  
  Needless to say, a girl must have very special
  
  
  CAREERS FOR WOMEN
  
  
  619
  
  
  qualities if she has to undertake tliis difficult
  branch of teaching with success. She must also
  be endowed with an abundant fund of patience
  and sympathy, both of which quaUties are
  necessary in teaching normal pupils, but how
  much more so in the case of those who are so
  sadly afilicted. She should have had a thor-
  oughly good education and a training that woiild
  have enabled her to teach in ordinary schools
  before speciaUsing in this particular work. The
  special training, which should extend over a year
  at least, should be taken at one of the training
  colleges where the students are prepared for the
  certificate of the Joint Board Examination for
  Teachers of the Deaf. Training may be had at
  the Training College for Teachers of the Deaf,
  11 Fitzroy Square, London, W., and at Eaton
  Rise, Ealing. The London County Council
  awards scholarships tenable at the special train-
  ing colleges for those who intend to become
  teachers in the County Council special schools.
  Many posts are to be had in Institutions for the
  Deaf and Dumb in England and abroad, and
  also in the schools under Coimty Coimcils. To
  obtain a post in the latter, the student must
  have obtained her elementary teacher's certifi-
  cate. For this purpose she can train at a train-
  ing college for the elementary certificate in the
  ordinary way and afterwards may take a third
  year of training specially designed to prepare
  for the work of teaching the deaf at a training
  college or other institution approved by the
  Board of Education, or she may be admitted in
  the first instance to a two years' coiirse which
  is specially designed on its professional side to
  prepare for teaching in a school for the deaf.
  She must take the Board's Final Examination
  with certain modifications, taking, instead of
  certain other subjects, the syllabus adapted to
  her special course of training.
  
  The same rules apply to those who wish to
  quaUfy as teachers of the blind or the mentally
  defective. Teachers of the blind may be trained
  at the Smith Training College, Upper Norwood,
  for a fee of £65.
  
  Women as Lecturers. - Tliis is another branch
  of the teaching profession which is open to
  women who have taken their degrees. The
  posts in connection with lecturing are many and
  varied. Perhaps the most coveted are those
  obtainable in universities and the principal
  ladies' colleges, whilst in high schools and other
  public schools good posts are also to be had.
  
  The lecturer must be first and foremost a
  specialist in her particular subject, be it in
  Science, Classics, History, or Modem Languages.
  In regard to the first named, she will have to
  be a demonstrator as well. To obtain a post
  in a university or a college connected with a
  university the would-be lectiu-er should have
  graduated with honours Tins would involve
  four years' training at a university. For an
  arts lecturesliip the B.A.,and for a science lecture-
  
  
  ship the B.Sc, degree should be taken. In con-
  nection with university extension lecturing there
  are also many posts available to women. This
  work is most varied and interesting and has a
  somewhat wider aspect than college lectxiring,
  although from the very nature of the work it is
  more Ukely to be irregular and intermittent.
  
  The salaries paid to lecturers in colleges are
  good, varying, of course, with the standing of the
  college. £200 a year is a fair average figure.
  The earnings of the university extension lecturer
  will depend upon the work with which she
  is entrusted. Some lectixrers may hold two or
  tliree courses in different districts in a term,
  whilst others may only be called upon to give
  one course, consisting of a lecture once every
  week. The fees are good, amounting in many
  instances to £25 for a course of ten lectures.
  
  PRIVATE TEACHING
  
  Private Schools. - Nowadays a high standard
  of proficiency on the part of teachers is exacted
  in the best private schools, and although there
  are some schools which still pursue old-fashioned
  methods, employing unqualified teachers at
  sometimes nominal salaries ; yet, thanks to the
  progress made in education within recent years,
  these are now decidedly in the minority. A good
  many of the larger private schools are modelled
  upon the principles of the great pubHc schools for
  girls, and in these establishments the teachers
  must necessarily be highly efficient, degrees and
  diplomas being always a sine qud non now of
  their engagement.
  
  Training. - The same training as that taken
  for teacherships in public schools wiU be neces-
  sary for those seeking employment in the best
  private schools. For lower form teachers an
  Oxford or Cambridge Senior or Higher Local
  Certificate will be sufficient. In some of the
  lower grade schools these certificates will be
  deemed sufficient for the higher form mistresses.
  By degrees, however, most of the best private
  schools are recognising the fact that it is highly
  desirable that teachers should have a certain
  definite training in teaching in addition to the
  usual university certificates. As a rule, how-
  ever, those who have gone through their full
  course of training as teachers will prefer a post
  in a pubhc school to one in a private establish-
  ment, as, with the exception of a few cases, the
  salaries and prospects are so much better in the
  former than in the latter.
  
  The salaries in large private schools vary to
  a great extent. In some of the best establish-
  ments they reach the standard of salaries paid
  in large public schools, but in the majority of
  cases they are considerably lower.
  
  The Governess. - At one time every girl who
  wished to earn her hvang would seek a post as a
  governess, for although salaries wore very often
  small, yet the standard of proficiency exacted
  
  
  620
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  by parents was correspondingly low. As long
  as the governess had a fair amount of general
  knowledge, was acquainted superficially with
  one foreign language, covdd teach elementary
  music, and dabble in painting or drawing as
  a mere beginner, she was deemed competent
  to undertake the education of children. Small
  wonder, therefore, that the ranks of governesses
  were swelled by the uneducated and the inefficient,
  whilst salaries depreciated to an almost negligible
  quantity.
  
  It must be confessed, however, that in many
  cases parents went to the other extreme, ex-
  pecting their governesses to be able to teach
  their children almost everything in the way of
  languages and accomplishments in addition to
  the ordinary routine of lessons. Sensible parents
  realise the fact that a good teacher must be
  thoroughly proficient in the subjects which she
  teaches, and that it is impossible to specialise
  in every branch of education and in all accom-
  plishments as well. Yet in spite of this, one often
  sees even now in the papers advertisements for
  such a prodigy at a salary of £20 a year !
  
  With the present-day progress of education,
  the majority of parents recognise that a governess
  to be a good teacher should have had a definite
  training upon lines wliich will fit her for the
  work in view. They also appreciate the fact
  that well-qualified women are entitled to at
  least a living wage, and that it is impossible for
  any woman to have a thorough knowledge of
  the whole gamut of arts, languages, and sciences.
  
  In the best famiUes a governess is employed
  for ordinary subjects, with the addition of
  perhaps one or two accomplishments, wliilst
  visiting masters or mistresses are engaged to
  teach other accomplishments.
  
  There are many qualities beyond the mere
  abiUty to teach whicb it is essential that a
  governess should possess if she is to be happy
  in the position she occupies. Chief amongst
  these must be classed tact and common-sense.
  Very often a girl who has been brought up in
  refined and cultured surroundings will imagine
  that she is being subjected to all sorts of
  slights and snubs ; she will resent the fact, for
  instance, that she is not asked downstairs to
  dinner at night, but is expected to take her
  meal in the schoolroom. Surely this is un-
  reasonable. She should remember that she is
  not one of the family, and that her employers
  are entitled to spend at least a certain portion of
  the day in privacy and free from the presence of
  a stranger. The sensible girl or woman, instead
  of being ashamed of her position, should take
  pride in the work with which she is entrusted,
  and should endeavour to wn the affection as
  well as the respect of her employers. Tact
  should be exercised upon all occasions. She
  should know when to be at hand and when to
  make herself scarce. Her position is one of
  dependence, it is true, but by her own common-
  
  
  sense she will be able to lessan many of its
  disadvantages. In refined families every con-
  sideration is shown to the feelings of a de-
  pendent. In the houses of unrefined people,
  however, the life of even the most tactful girl
  can be made unliappy by the want of considera-
  tion and tact displayed by her employers. The
  timid gentlo-natured girl should never take a
  position of this kind. It may be said that girla
  of excessively timid dispositions seldom make
  good teachers. They are not disciplinarians as
  a rule, and are seldom able to hold their own.
  Gentleness is indeed a very necessary quality on
  the part of the governess in dealing with her
  charges, but the gentleness must be coupled with
  firmness and never allowed to sink to vacillation
  or timidity if any sort of discipline is to be
  maintained.
  
  Training. - One or two accomplishments and
  conversational knowledge of at least one lan-
  guage will prove a most valuable part of the
  equipment of a governess. In the case of the
  younger cliildren a knowledge of Swedish drill
  will also be useful. The girl who wishes to be
  trained as a teacher of the younger children
  cannot do better than take a course of training
  in the Froebel method (see p. 618). She should
  also have the Oxford or Cambridge Senior Local
  Certificate. For these examinations she can be
  prepared at almost any good school, as prepara-
  tion for the University Locals generally forms
  part of the curriculum of most of our best schools
  nowadays.
  
  Tlie governess who will have entire charge
  of little children should be well acquainted with
  the care and hygiene of little ones, symptoms of
  ailments, &c. She should also be able to give
  her Uttle pupils a thorough grounding in drawing
  and music.
  
  For teaching girls of twelve and upwards a
  Higher Local Certificate is very desirable, al-
  though an Oxford or Cambridge Senior Local
  will often be sufficient. If possible, a training
  in the actual work of teaching should also be
  taken. There are some colleges where a
  speciality is made of training girls as governesses
  in private families. At the Cheltenham Ladies'
  College a full course of training is given to those
  who wish to be governesses to either young or
  older children. For the latter the training
  extends over two years and a term ; for the
  former there is a one year covirse. Full particu-
  lars may be had upon application to the college.
  
  Prospects. - It might bo said that these in
  many cases will depend upon the governess her-
  self. So long as there are highly educated girls
  who are so ill-advised as to take merely nominal
  salaries, so long will salaries in many cases be
  maintained at a low level. A girl should re-
  member that the expensive education which shf)
  has had to take to qualify herself for teaching
  demands something more than a mere nominal
  fee. Governesses who have taken a special
  
  
  CAREERS FOR WOMEN
  
  
  621
  
  
  course of training and possess certificates of
  efficiency may always command good salaries,
  and, as a rtile, it will be found that these will not
  be grudged. Salaries vary to a great extent.
  Sometimes £200 a year is paid to resident
  finishing governesses, but such salaries are
  usually paid by members of the higher classes to
  ladies who are required to train their daughters
  to take their proper place in society. A gover-
  ness of this class must be au fait in all the usages
  of society - should be able to instruct her charges
  in the art of conversation, whilst the teaching
  of accomplishments would form an important
  feature of her regime.
  
  The certificated governess for elder cliildren
  in an ordinary family should at least earn £40
  a year, whilst the well-trained governess for
  younger children who has taken her Froebel
  Certificate should receive a salary of £30.
  
  Owing to the various standards taken by
  different families, salaries are bound to fluctuate
  to a certain extent, but all who take up this pro-
  fession should see to it that a certain definite
  minimum salary is secured.
  
  TEACHERS OF GYMNASTICS, DRILL
  AND GAMES
  
  For girls with good constitutions and the
  necessary training and capabilities, the teach-
  ing of gymnastics, driU and games proves an
  eminently suitable and remunerative profession.
  It is healthy in as much as teachers of gymnas-
  tics, from the nature of their occupation, have
  abundant health-giving exercise, and so escape
  from that sedentary life which teaching as a rule
  involves. The work has the additional charm
  of variety, and a thoroughly efficient gymnastic
  and drill mistress may command very good fees.
  
  A most careful and comprehensive training is
  required before a girl can fit herself for the posi-
  tion of gymnastic teacher ; in addition, the girl
  who wishes to take up physical training in order
  to put it to practical use should be one who
  is likely to be a good teacher when the training
  is completed. That cheerful yet respect-com-
  pelling personality, which is so powerful in in-
  fluencing pupils for good when possessed by the
  ordinary teacher, is more than ever valuable in
  the case of the gymnastic and games mistress.
  
  Training. - The course of study to be followed
  by a girl who wishes to become a teacher of
  gymnastics covers a wide field of knowledge both
  theoretical and practical ; it includes : -
  
  Physical exercises and drill with and without
  dumb-bells, Indian clubs, &c., including
  Swedish and German drill, breathing exercises,
  military drill and sword drill ; gymnastics
  proper - ^that is to say, exercises on gymnastic
  apparatus, such as parallel bars, horizontal
  bars, trapeze, vaulting hor??, ladders, giant's
  stride, &c.
  
  Medical gymnastics, i.e. gymnastics with
  
  
  remedial apparatus for correcting and curing
  physical weakness and deformities - ^massage,
  fencing, swimming, out-door games, dancing,
  voice production.
  
  The theory of gymnastics has also to be
  studied, the course comprising anatomy,
  physiology, hygiene, and in some cases niirsing
  and ambulance work.
  
  The best age for a girl to begin her training is
  seventeen. She should not begin younger than
  this, but the sooner she begins after the age of
  seventeen has been reached the more successful
  as a rule will her training be. A woman should
  not go in for training as a gymnastic teacher
  after the age of twenty-eight, when she has lost
  some of the suppleness of her first youth. A good
  constitution is of course essential, and a medical
  man should be consulted before a girl decides to
  take up gymnastics and physical culture as a
  career.
  
  The best all-round training can be had at those
  colleges at which both the German and Swedish
  systems of gymnastics are taught. To thor-
  oughly qualify herself for the position of teacher
  the student should go in for the examinations of
  one of the following bodies who grant certificates
  of membership to successful candidates : -
  
  The British College of Physical Education
  (Mem. Brit. Coll. Phys. Ed.) ; Gymnastic
  Teachers' Institute (M.G.T.I.) ; National Society
  of Physical Education (N.S.P.E.).
  
  Most of the Physical Training Colleges prepare
  their students for these examinations. When
  successful students are enabled to write the
  magic letters of membership of one or other of
  these institutions after their names, they may be
  said to be fairly equipped for their teaching
  careers.
  
  There are many good Physical Training
  Colleges in England and Scotland at wliich a
  student can go through the necessary course
  to qualify as a teacher of gymnastics. The
  Liverpool Gymnasium Training College, 171
  Bedford Street, South, Liverpool, is particularly
  notable for the success achieved by pupils, a
  number of whom have secui-ed posts as gym-
  nastic teachers in County Council and Board
  Schools, also public appointments as inspectors
  or trainers of physical education. The college
  is residential, but a few day students are received.
  The course of training is two years. The
  subjects included are : -
  
  Anatomy, Physiology, Pathology, Orthopedics,
  Massage, Ambulance, Sick Nursing, Hygiene,
  Tlieory of Gymnastics, Theory of Games, Edu-
  cational Gymnastics (Swedish and Anglo-
  German systems). Remedial Gjnnnastics (Swedish
  system), Fencing (French), Dancing, Swimming,
  Rowing, Hockey, Cricket, Tennis, Lacrosse,
  Rounders, Vigoro. Badminton, Net-ball, Basket-
  ball, Children's Games, Elocution, Needlework
  and Cutting-out.
  
  The fees for resident students per term is
  
  
  622
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  twenty-five guinetis, for non-resident twelve
  guineas.
  
  Good training may also bo had at Madame
  Bergman Osterberg's Physical Training College,
  Dartford Heath, Kent ; the Southport Physical
  Training College, Southport ; St. Bride's Physi-
  cal Training College, Bride Lane, London, E.C. ;
  Physical Training College for Women, South
  Western Polytcclinic, Chelsea, London, S.W. ;
  Manchester Physical Training College, Husholme,
  Manchester.
  
  Prospects. - ^The openings are good for the
  fully-trained teacher who can be personally
  recommended. The growing importance at-
  tached to physical culture as a factor in pre-
  serving health has created a demand for well-
  qualified teachers. Every year more schools
  engage a resident gymnastic and games mistress.
  Only ladies who will make good teachers and
  disciplinarians should enter for the gymnastic
  
  
  teaching profession, which reqtiires much tact,
  good common-sense, and good authority. So
  many people take up this profession who are
  quite unsuitable for it, that it would appear
  on the surface to be becoming overcrowded ; it
  is these incompetents who will in time swell
  the ranks of the unemployed. There are not
  too many really capable teachers, and these
  will always find their value.
  
  The salaries vary, the minimum being £40
  for a resident instructress, or £90 for a non-
  resident instructress, but some salaries run into
  hundreds a year. A visiting teacher in schools
  can also make a very good income if she succeeds
  in establishing a good connection, and a thor-
  oughly well-trained teacher with good business
  ability and organising powers may found a
  school of her own in a town where one is needed.
  
  Note. - For Teachers of Domestic Subjects,
  Art, Music, &c., see under separate sections.
  
  
  LITERARY AND SECRETARIAL WORK
  
  
  JOURNALISM
  
  The profession of journalism has an irresistible
  fascination for most women who are at all pro-
  ficient with the pen ; it is a profession, however,
  which is not so easily accessible as other caUings.
  Tliere is an element of uncertainty about it also
  which should be well considered before deciding
  to adopt journalism as a career. In the news-
  paper world this uncertainty is particularly
  evident. Papers change hands, new proprietors
  bring in new editors, new editors engage new
  staffs, and the members of the old staff,
  however efficient and conscientious they may
  be in their work, are thrown out of employ-
  ment.
  
  The reallyclever journalistand wTiter,however,
  can always find a demand for her work ; but
  in all professions the mediocre worker of only
  average ability preponderates. It is to the
  mediocre worker that this warning is given. If
  she manages by good fortune or influence to
  acquire a position in a newspaper office she
  may jog along comfortably enough until one
  day a staff upheaval comes, in the way of a
  change of editorship or some other similar
  contingency. Once she is thrown out of em-
  ployment in this manner she wiU find it difficult
  to get another position of a similar nature, and
  a journalist somehow always finds it very
  difficult to settle down to less interesting work,
  so strong is the fascination of " Fleet Street "
  for those who have once been witliin its precincts.
  
  Many women journalists, however, have
  followed this profession with brilliant success.
  Tliey have set the stamp of individuality upon
  their work. They have specialised upon certain
  subjects and become known as authorities upon
  those subjects. For the v.ork of these women
  there is always a demand, and the large income
  made by those favoured few is enough to hold
  out dazzling prospects to the beginner who is
  anxious t> follow in their footsteps.
  
  There are many things to consider before
  finally deciding to adopt journalism as a career.
  First and foremost it is important to realise
  the fact that a good writer does not necessarily
  make a good journalist. Other things are re-
  quired in journalism besides fluency with tho
  pen. The joui'nalist must possess what is
  rightlj'^ known as the 'journalistic instinct"
  if she is to pursue her career with any measure
  
  
  of success. She must have a keen sense of
  " news " and " news " subjects. For instance,
  she must have the power of realising the news
  value of the different subjects dealt with in her
  morning paper, with the faculty of being able
  in her mind to quickly summarise and analyse
  their comparative possibilities from the point
  of view of public interest. The efficient journa-
  Ust can tell to a nicety what news is worth
  " following up," what subjects the public would
  Hke to hear more about. She appreciates the
  fact that good news stories and subjects for
  interesting articles lurk in most unexpected
  corners - a chance sentence in the speech of a
  well-known pubUc man, a remark uttered by
  a weU-known judge, a declaration by a well-
  known scientist, all may be rich in news possi-
  bilities, and to miss them might be to miss the
  opportunity of a good article or a good news
  story.
  
  A journalist must keep in touch with current
  events. She should also keep watch on future
  happenings. The " Futiu-e Arrangements "
  column, describing important public engage-
  ments for the near future, winch appears every
  week in most of o^xc daily papers, should be
  carefully studied, and the contents cut out and
  pasted in a diary for reference. A woman
  journaHst should be well informed upon all tho
  principal subjects of the day. She should know
  also how to store up information for future
  reference. It has been said with truth that the
  scissors and the past"-pot are almost as formid-
  able weapons in the armoury of a journalist £is
  the pen ; well, tliis is how the woman who wishes
  to become a journaUst should make use of them
  in order to derive the utmost value from her
  reading. Every day as she goes over her
  morning paper she should carefully mark in
  pencil aU the subjects of special interest therein.
  During the day she should cut out all tho para-
  graplis she has marked, writing upon them the
  name of the paper from which they are taken
  and the date of their appearance. Tlie very
  small cuttings sliould be pasted upon pieces of
  white paper, with tho date carefully inscribed
  on the paper. All these cuttings should be
  carefully filed alphabetically so that they can
  be referred to at any moment, and a list of the
  cuttings should be kept in an alphabetical index-
  book. A very simple way to file cuttings is 6^
  follows : - Procure from a law stationer's a
  
  
  623
  
  
  624
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  number of foolscap envelopes with the flap
  ooening across their entire length instead of at
  the top. Those sold by general stationers
  usually have half of the pocket portion un-
  cummed, so that they require pasting down
  bSore using. On the left-hand corner of each
  envelope ^^-rite distinctly the subject of the
  ^ttin^ to be inserted. Thus an envelope
  mirked" Aeronautics" would include cuttings
  on baUoon, airship, and aeroplane flights and
  records. These envelopes with theu- contents
  should be filed by placing them upright in
  the drawer or drawers of a desk, arranging
  them alphabetically. The ..-riting on the left
  hand of the envelopes can be easily seen at a
  glance when opening the drawer.
  
  FaiUng a desk, they could be stored upright
  in an ordinary box of a size into which they
  would just fit, neither too large nor too small,
  or an ordinary ABC concertina file might be
  made to answer the purpose. Proper fihng
  cabinets may be had at very moderate prices,
  but, faiUng everything else, the cuttings may be
  filed in an ordinary- cardboard box as akeady
  described. .
  
  No woman who has not tried to keep a cutting
  > file in this way can realise what an enormous
  aid it proves to her work. H she cuts her
  papers judiciously and weU- it requires the
  journaUstic instinct to do this, be it said- it
  is surprising what a largo amount of valuable
  information on important subjects she will have
  ready to hand for purposes of reference. Most
  successful journaUsts have proved the value ot a
  systematically kept up " cutting file." In it they
  have found material and suggestions for articles
  which have helped to bring " grist to the xnill.
  The woman who wishes to be a journaUst, there-
  fore, cannot do better than begin to practise the
  systematic fiUng of all sorts of Uterary matters
  which are hkely to prove of future use. It wi
  benefit her in more ways than one, for it will
  serve to give her an insight into the kind ot
  news and Uterary fare the public wants. She
  wiU recognise the varying style of articles prmted
  in the different papers and periodicals, and it it
  is her aim to be an outside contributor she will
  not waste her time in sending editors articles
  wholly unsuitable for their pubhcations.
  
  A woman journalist should therefore be well
  informed in regard to current events and topics
  of interest. She should not only know how to
  read but also how to turn her reading to the
  best 'advantage. In addition to her "cutting
  file " she should have as many reference books
  at hand as possible. '" Whitaker's Almanack,"
  " Wlio's Who," " Hazell's Annual," Jack's
  " Reference Book," and a good Encyclopsedia
  should, if possible, find a place on her book -shelf.
  She should bo well acquainted with the names of
  famous authorities on various scientific subjects
  and the leading questions of the day. In a
  word, she should not only be well informed,
  
  
  but she should also be an adept at putting her
  knowledge to good account.
  
  Journalistic Positions lor Women.- There are
  many positions upon the staflis of newspapers
  or periodicals wliich may be filled by women.
  A woman may be either on the indoor or the
  outdoor staff of a paper or on both. On the
  indoor staff such positions as editor of the
  ladies' column or page, exchange editor,
  assistant to the editor, news editor, or literary
  editor may be filled.
  
  On the outdoor staff a lady may be engaged
  solely in attending fashionable social functions,
  or she may be a lady reporter. Without being
  on the staff of a paper a woman may make a
  name for herself as a writer on " Special Subjects."
  There is always a market for the articles of the
  woman speciaUst, whether her subject be Dress,
  Household Pets, Sport, or Woman's Suffrage. ^
  Editing a Woman's Page.- A good all rouna
  knowledge of special subjects of interest to
  women, such as "Dress," "The Home
  " Society," is essential, a facile pen, and the
  abiUty to sub-edit, arrange, and " make up a
  page." The woman's page of a paper is usually
  of the utmost value on account of the advertis-
  ing revenue it brings. For this reason there
  is scarcely a daily paper nowadays that does
  not possess its woman's page or column. It
  will be seen, therefore, that the editress of
  a woman's page should not only be able
  to write fluently on subjects of interest to
  women, but she must also possess a keen eye
  towards the advertising interest. Whilst avoid-
  ing the crudeness of what is known journal-
  istically as the " pufE paragraph," she should
  be able to give graceful and interesting de-
  scriptions of even the most uninteresting of
  advertisers' specialities, which caU for editorial
  notice. In addition to being a good journalist,
  she should also be a good business woman.
  The combined qualities will make her invaluable
  both to the advertisement as well as to the
  editorial department, and to secme the co-
  operation of the latter in addition to that of
  the former is to make her position doubly sure.
  Salaries for this particular work vary in
  accordance with the position of the paper. On
  the smaU provincial journals £2 a week would
  be considered a fair rate of pay, whilst on the
  large London daihes the editor of the "Woman s
  page may earn an income of from £5 to £10 a
  week and upwards.
  
  There are very seldom vacancies to be touna
  on the principal ladies' weekly papers, all of
  which have well-known women writers on their
  staffs, but on the smaller weeklies and on the
  staffs of magazines openings may often be
  found In these instances, however, the scale
  of pay is considerably less than in the case
  of the daiUes and larger periodicals.
  
  Training.- The best training for this kind ot
  work is that received by practical experience
  
  
  LITERARY AND SECRETARIAL WORK
  
  
  625
  
  
  as secretary and assistant to a fashion editress.
  Girls have risen to the position of editress in this
  way, but they have always been girls with
  brains who knew how to make the most of their
  opportunities.
  
  Society Editor and Social Reporting. - A certain
  acquaintance with the manners and usages of
  good society is necessary for this particular
  work, with a good memory for faces, quickness
  of observation, and a facile graphic pen. The
  journalist who deals with society functions is
  sometimes known as the " Society Editor." She
  should dress well, and cultivate a pleasing,
  tactfvd manner. Self-possession and savoir jaire
  axe very important attributes in work of this
  kind, where a woman will have to mix at times
  in the highest social circles. A good social
  connection will be a great recommendation in
  obtaining a post as " Society Editor." The
  position is a very well-paid one, particularly in
  London with its unending round of social
  functions, but the expenses in the way of dress,
  &c., are very great. During the season the
  work of reporting also is apt to become most
  arduotis. The very special quahties reqiiired
  for the suitable filling of the post of society
  editor are possessed by comparatively few
  women, and for this reason this branch of
  journalism is not so overcrowded as others. A
  woman who possesses all these quahties is a
  most valuable member of a newspaper staff.
  
  Exchange Editor. - The position of " Exchange
  Editor " on a daily paper may be successfully
  filled by a woman. It is a position, however,
  which is as a rule only obtainable by a girl
  who has gained a certain amount of experience
  of the inside of a newspaper office. The in-
  teUigent girl who has filled the post of secretarial
  assistant to the editor or the news editor is the
  one most Ukely to be promoted to a position of
  this kind, as it is essentially one which can only
  be filled by a woman with a certain amount of
  joui'nalistic training. First and foremost it is
  essential that the exchange editor should have
  the " news instinct." She must be able to
  tell to a nicety what news is worth following
  up, and also be able to make suggestions for
  good articles and new stories.
  
  Every day she has to carefully read all the
  chief morning and evening papers published in
  Great Britain and Ireland, together with certain
  of the foreign papers, if these are not dealt with
  in the foreign editor's department - also the chief
  technical i apers and other weekUes on the duys
  on which they are issued. On these papers
  she must mark for cutting all news that has to
  be followed up, all paragraphs which might
  suggest a news story of any Icind, and in some
  cases write down her suggestions for the benefit
  of the news editor or any other editor whom
  they may concern.
  
  She will also have to out out all references
  to and dates of future engagements for the
  
  
  use of the news editor. The responsibility of
  the position lies in the fact that the " Exchange
  Editor " must not miss either a subject which
  requires following up, or a subject which holds
  out any possible suggestion.
  
  The exact routine of the work varies in dif-
  ferent offices, but its principles remain the same.
  In some newspaper offices there will be two
  exchange editors. One will be on duty in the
  early morning until about 3 P.M., and the other
  from 3 P.M. and during the evening ; the work
  in this way wiU be well divided. In many offices
  the foreign papers are dealt with in the foreign
  editor's room, and the exchange work for the
  news editor is done by one of the news editor's
  assistants. Everything wiU depend of course
  upon the size of the staff. Salary for work of
  this kind varies to a great extent ; and as the
  post is one which depends a great deal upon
  promotion in the office, no set figure can be
  given. As it is a position of some responsibihty
  £4 a week should be the minimum figure,
  rising to £6 or more. A woman will have
  to show remarkable sharpness and aptitude
  before she is entrusted with this work, and, as
  has been said before, it is a post that can only
  be obtained by a woman with experience of
  the inner side of the newspaper office.
  
  Secretary to Editor. - This is a position of
  some importance and trust. A girl may be
  secretary to the editor-in-chief or to any of his
  subordinate editors - the news editor, literary
  editor, &c., &c. The scope of an editorial
  secretary's duties are very large. When she is
  secretary to the editor-in-chief her work will
  not only consist in deahng with his correspond-
  ence ; often she will have to do " Exchange
  Work " on his behalf, read and give her opinion
  upon articles submitted, arrange the editor's
  appointments, interview people for him ; in fact,
  there is no limit to the extent and variety of her
  duties. If she is secretary to the news editor
  she may also, besides dealing with liis corres-
  pondence, have to watch the newspapers and
  the news tape machines on his behalf, drawing
  his attention to any news of importance coming
  over the machines. In her charge will be all
  invitations and tickets of admission to social
  functions. These she will have to acknowledge
  or refuse as the case may be, keeping the invita-
  tions ready to hand filed under their respective
  dates.
  
  The extent of responsible work with which
  an editorial secretary is entrusted will depend
  to a great extent upon the capability she displays.
  She may never rise beyond the level of a short-
  hand typist, but if she is tactful, clever, and
  makes the most of her opportunities, she will
  become invaluable to her chief and be in all
  probability promoted to the position of editor's
  or news editor's assistant, where the scope of
  lier duties will be considerably enlarged.
  
  Two pounds a week is a good commencing
  
  2r
  
  
  626
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  ealarj^ for an editor's secretary. Tins may be
  incr?ased to as much as £4 and upwards whore
  promotion to the duties of "" assistant. s obtained^
  Habits of system and order and a knowledge of
  the various'filing systems are invaluable in a post
  of tlS kind, vdie^e so max.y manuscripts have
  
  to be deeJt with. , , , j.
  
  Women Reporters.-Reporting holds out
  many prospects for women m the world of
  Surnalism, but at the same tmie a woman
  reporter to succeed must have special talents
  and capabilities. Some women never rise above
  the level of junior reporters, earning from
  £1 10s to £2, 2s. a week. Tliese show no special
  talent in their work beyond taking a good
  shorthand note if needs be, and being able to
  take an accurate report of lectures and meetings ;
  but the really clever woman reporter is mvaluable
  upon a newspaper staff. _ - ^ ir +
  
  The successful woman reporter is mteUigent,
  energetic, and tactful, with abundant powers of
  description and a facile pen. She is prepared to
  Uve a strenuous existence, and her day is one
  of endless activity. Her work is of a nature
  which cannot be Umited to regular set hours.
  The successful woman reporter has ideas ; she
  can suggest a good news story and follow it
  out to its conclusion, wliilst her enthusiasm
  in her work is miflagging, and in tins way she
  often compares to advantage with a man. tier
  powers of intuition and her tact are so much
  CTcater than that found in the average man
  reporter that she is at times entrusted with
  very special duties, success in the achievement
  of which have often brought her into prominence
  and served to secure her a much liighcr position.
  As an interviewer in particular does a woman s
  tact stand her in good stead. A good woman
  reporter must be able to report upon anything
  and everything from a Royal wedding to a
  riotous suffrage demonstration. She m^ist be
  ready to work at all hours should she be caUed
  upon to do so. She must be prepared to endure
  discomforts and even rebuffs at times. A woman
  reporter should have no false pride. She must
  know her way about and be well informed
  generally. The very special qualities necessary
  to make women good reporters are not often
  found, but women possessing them have achieved
  brilliant success in this calling.
  
  In London the rate of pay for a woman re-
  porter varies from £4 to £6, 63. a week. This
  rate is sometimes exceeded, the salary varying
  to a large extent according to the capabihties
  of the worker. As an instance, one very clever
  lady reporter, who is only twenty-five years of
  age, is to my knowledge earning £8, 8s a week
  on the staff of one of our large London daihes.
  
  Good salaries may also be earned on the
  leading newspapers in Edinburgh, Glasgow, and
  Birmingham. On the smaller provincial dailies
  the rate of pay is very much less. Broadly
  speaking, there are comparatively few opemngs
  
  
  in the pro\nnces at present. London is essenti-
  ally the Mecca of the Woman Journalist.
  
  Outside Contributions.- The incursions of many
  women into journalism are limited to what are
  termed in journalistic circles " outside contri-
  butions " ; that is to say, they submit articles,
  short stories, &c., to editors for their approval.
  The great thing in work of this kind is to watch
  carefully the style of articles pubUshed by the
  different papers and only submit articles of a
  similar style. A woman who makes a point ot
  studying her papers and magazines thoroughly
  will soon get an idea of the kind of matter used
  by the various pubUcations. She should re-
  member that brightly written articles waih a
  certain topical interest stand a much better
  chance of acceptance than articles upon general
  subjects with no particular bearing upon
  questions of the moment. One guinea per thou-
  sand words is an average rate of payment for the
  work of an unknown writer, the scale of payment
  rising to £3, 3s. a thousand, whilst £5 a thousand
  represents a fair payment for very special work.
  A woman T^Triter should always endeavour to take
  up a special subject and write upon it until
  she becomes gradually kno^^-n to editors as an
  authority on this particular subject. If she
  achieves this result she will have no difficulty
  in finding a market for her Kterary wares
  
  Short Stories represent a promising held tor
  the would-be journaUst who has a gift in this
  direction. At the present day the popularity
  of the " short story " for magazines is on the
  increase, and editors are always wilhng to
  pubhsh really good work. The art of short
  story-writing is, however, only possessed by few.
  Those fortunate ones who are able to write a
  really readable short story should make a study
  of the literary fare which appeals to the pubho
  taste if they wish to see their MSS accepted,
  for in journalism it must be remembered tuat
  it is not what the wTiter likes but what the
  pubhc likes that finds a ready market.
  
  Sending MSS. for Consideration.- All MSS.
  sent up for editorial consideration should be
  written on one side of the paper. It should be
  typed if possible; some editors announce that
  they wiU only read typed manuscripts. Whether
  this rule prevails or not the chances are that
  all neatly typed MSS. will be examined first.
  If it is impossible to have it t>^)e^^Tltten,
  then let the writing be as clear and as le^ble
  as possible. All pages should be numbered in
  their proper sequence, and the name and address
  of the author should be inscribed on the top
  left-hand corner of the first page, or at the end
  of the MSS. A stamped and addressed envelope
  should always be enclosed ^^ ^^^^f ^"^." №J ''^^
  MSS. is desired. Do not make the nustake of
  writing long verbose letters to the editor dis-
  cussing the merits of your contribution or your
  ambitions towards a literary career. Hundreds
  of young girls make the mistake of imagimng
  
  
  LITERARY AND SECRETARIAL WORK
  
  
  627
  
  
  that effusions of the kind may induce the editor
  to look more favourably upon their contribution.
  Never was there a greater mistake. An editor
  is a man of business, not a man of sentiment.
  It is his business to supply the public with the
  hterature they require, and not to go out of his
  way to give enterprising young lady journalists
  their first chance.
  
  Sub-editing. - Posts as sub-editors on magazines
  or other periodicals may be successfully fiUed
  by women. A good knowledge of grammar and
  composition is essential together with an apti-
  tude for extracting the essence of copy which
  has to be cut down to facts only, owing to the
  exigency of space. Aptitude for this work comes
  with practice only. No amount of teaching
  can impart the skill which is the result of
  experience. A sub-editor should be able to
  work quickly in times of stress. There is always
  a certain " rush " of work incidental to getting
  a pubMcation ready for press ; through this she
  must keep a cool head, or many vexing mistakes
  may result from her not being able to do so.
  The sub-editor must know how to prepare copy
  for the printers and to read and correct proofs.
  She should also be acquainted with printers'
  technical terms, the styles and sizes of type,
  paper. &c. She must know how to measure
  drawings for illustration blocks, and also know
  how to make up not only pages, but the entire
  publication if required.
  
  A sub-editor should also understand the laws
  of libel, and so be able to recognise any statement
  which might be const ued into libel and cost
  her paper a great deal in damages if allowed to
  appear. Sub-editorships on the larger periodi-
  cals or on daily papers are seldom filled by
  women. On the smaller weeklies, woman's
  magazines, on general magazines, and the smaller
  periodicals such positions may be obtained,
  but chiefly by the intelligent girl or woman
  who is first engaged to fill the position of secre-
  tary to the editor and afterwards drifts in to
  the more responsible position. Let it be said,
  however, that it is only the girls and women
  with brains and initiative who can got on in
  this way. The girl upon whcm the editor can
  rely to act for him in his absence, settling im-
  portant and unforeseen dotails on his behalf,
  renders herself invaluable to liim, and her pro-
  gress is assured ; whilst the woman who is
  merely content to do what she is told, displaying
  no power of initiative when occasion for its use
  arises, will just as surely remain where she is,
  never rising cut of the rut of her own particular
  routine work.
  
  The rate of salary varies according to the
  paper. As compared with the responsibility of
  their work, women sub-editors are not as a rule
  well paid. On some periodicals with limited
  circulation, ladi.'-s have filled the post of sub-
  editor for as small a salary as £1 weekly. As a
  rule, however, work at this rate of payment has
  
  
  been undertaken only with a view to the valuable
  experience afforded, the worker seizing the first
  opportunity to obtain a more remunerative
  post. £2 to £4 a week may be taken as average
  salaries to be earned by a woman sub-editor,
  except in exceptional cases. £3 to £4 a week
  would be considered a fair rate of payment
  in London.
  
  The " Special Writer " and " The Free Lance."
  - By far the most lucrative journalistic employ-
  ment for the woman who is not actually a
  member of the staff of any newspaper or periodi-
  cal is that of writing upon " special subjects."
  To do this, it is of course necessary to have an
  expert knowledge of the subject in question, so
  much so as to be looked upon as an authority
  upon it. A woman special writer may be a
  " free lance " or she may receive a retaining
  fee from as many as half-a-dozen papers for a
  weekly, fortnightly, or even a monthly contribu-
  tion, and she can conunand £2, 2s. to £3, 3s. per
  column for her work.
  
  The term '* free lance " is used to indicate a
  journalist who is not attached to any particular
  paper, but is a fairly regvilar contributor to
  many. A great deal of hard work and perse-
  verance is necessary before a woman can achieve
  any success as a " free lance." First she must
  make her work known to the different editors.
  She should try and think out some really good
  ideas for an article or series of articles in the
  first instance. When she has her plan well
  thought out she should write the first article
  of the series and call upon the editor to make her
  suggestion. Good ideas are always considered,
  and the writer stands a far better chance of
  having her work accepted if she can put forward
  some good well-thought-out scheme suitable
  for the paper to wloich she takes it. She should
  be careful, of course, to take her idea or scheme
  to the right person. Amongst amateur journa-
  hsts, as a rule, there is a very vague idea of the
  personnel of a daily newspaper staff. Many
  women think that the editorial department of
  our large dailies is run by an editor, a sub-
  editor, and one or two reporters. It would be
  difficult indeed to get a newspaper published
  at all with such a small staff. The average
  editorial staff' of a London daily is made up
  as follows : -
  
  Editor-in-Cliief.
  
  News Editor.
  
  Literary Editor.
  
  Foreign Editor.
  
  Sports Editor.
  
  Night Editor.
  
  Chief Sub-Editor.
  
  Editor of Ladies' Page.
  
  " Leader " Writers and " Special "
  Writers.
  
  Dramatic Critic.
  
  Musical Critic.
  
  Reporters and Sub-Editors.
  
  
  628
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  It will be seen, therefore, that whilst most ideas
  should bo taken to the editor-in-chief, news
  items should be submitted to the news editor,
  litersu-y items to the literary editor, feishion
  items to the fasliion editress, and so on.
  
  News contributions £ire paid by Uneage,
  three-halfpence a line being the average price
  for ordinary news, and threepence a line for
  special and exclusive news.
  
  Training for Journalism. - Although many
  quaUfications are necessary to make a journalist,
  a facile pen and good powers of description are
  indispensable, and it is useless for a woman
  who has not the gift of writing to embark upon
  this career. JournaUsm is the profession of all
  others for which proper training can only be
  obtained bj' practical experience.
  
  There are several schools of journaUsm at
  which valuable knowledge may be gained, but
  no amount of training will ever be equal to one
  yeeir's experience of the inside of a newspaper
  office.
  
  The very best training for the girl who wishes
  to take up newspaper work would be for her
  to obtain a position as typist or secretary in the
  editorial department of a newspaper office. A
  clever girl will make the most of her opportunities
  by careful observation of what goes on around
  her. She will seize eagerly upon any chance
  of filling reporting engagements in times of
  great stress when help is needed. If she does
  her work well and is tactful and obliging her
  chance will come one day. Many a girl from
  humble beginnings has risen to quite an im-
  portant position in this way. But it is only
  the girls who do their work conscientiously and
  well, who are always tactful and obliging, to
  whom the chances come. Many a clover and
  even brilliant worker has been passed by in
  promotion owing to her disobliging disposition
  and want of tact. Journalism is a profession
  of ups and downs, quick promotions and rapid
  changes. It is a profession which presents
  brilliant prospects and heart-breaking disap-
  pointments, and it is only the woman with
  real capability, who is not afraid of hard work,
  who can count upon any measure of success.
  
  ADVERTISEMENT WRITING
  
  Tlie art of advertising has made great strides
  within recent years, and with this progress has
  come an increased demand for really good
  advertisement writers. It is not often that a
  woman turns her attention to advertisement
  writing as a means of income - a woman who
  can use her pen with any small measure of
  success has literary aspirations, as a rule. Well,
  she need not altogether give up those literary
  aspirations, but while she is hankering after
  the unattainable, the money to " keep the
  pot boiling " is slow to come, and one must Uve.
  If she would turn some of her literary talent
  
  
  to account by quahfying as an advertisement
  writer, she would find plenty wherewith to keep
  the " pot boiUng " if she only set about her
  work in the right way.
  
  Writing advertisements is not such an easy
  matter as one would imagine. It requires a
  peculiar knack of constructing forcible and
  sales-compelling phrases. It requires the
  faculty for concentrating upon the essence
  of an argument and giving only the details
  that tell. An advertisement writer should be
  an adept at writing good headhnes, and at the
  display and arrangement of type. She should
  have a thorough technical knowledge in addition
  to her Uterary aptitude, and also understand the
  relative values of display and illustration, being
  able to adapt her copy to suit the class of readers
  to whom it is intended to appeal.
  
  Little has yet been written or said in regard
  to the prospects for women in the field of
  advertisement writing. Too many are apt to
  confuse advertisement writing with advertise-
  ment canvassing, with the result that few give
  a second thought to the possibilities held out
  for the good advertisement writer. The business
  of the advertisement canvasser is to get adver-
  tisement orders for the paper she represents,
  and although the ability to suggest a good
  advertising idea to a client will stand her in
  good stead, inasmuch as it increases the scope
  of her usefulness to her employers, it is not
  indispensable, the essential qualification being of
  course the ability to obtain orders.
  
  Advertisement canvassing does not enter at
  all into the curriculum of the woman who takes
  up the career of an advertisement writer and
  specialist pure and simple. It is true that if
  she obtains a position as special advertisement
  writer on a newspaper the style of her copy
  will most certainly tend to affect advertisement
  orders, as an unwilling advertiser is often brought
  to book by a really good advertising suggestion,
  but here her responsibiUty ends.
  
  The truth is being rapidly brought home to
  large advertisers that certain phases of adver-
  tising are better dealt with by women. Many
  costumiers, milliners, and di-apers have their
  advertisements designed by women, because they
  have realised the fact that it requires a woman
  writer to bring out the best selling points in
  advertising all those things so dear to the heart
  of womanliind in general. Who indeed is more
  capable of expounding to advantage upon the
  special qualities of furs, silks, hats, gowns, and
  woman's wear in general than one of the feminine
  sex who has an intimate knowledge of the
  subject and understands just the kind of argu-
  ments which will most likely appeal to women
  like herself ? To the gradual recognition of the
  qualification of a clever woman writer for work
  of this kind is duo the fact that a good deal
  of the booklet and special catalogue designing,
  as well as the advertisement writing, for large
  
  
  LITERARY AND SECRETARIAL WORK
  
  
  629
  
  
  drapery and millinery firms ia gradually being
  entrusted to women.
  
  A woman may be either a " free lance " in
  advertising or she may obtain a good staff
  appointment ; several large firms employ lady
  advertisement writers on their staffs. The
  advertisement writing for many of our chief
  publishing companies is also in the charge of
  ladies, whilst many newspapers, magazines, and
  periodicals employ lady advertisement writers.
  
  The salaries for those filling staff appointments
  vary from 30s. to £4 or £5 a week, the first-
  named salary being essentially that of a be-
  ginner, £3 to £4 being the most usual figure
  for the tried and trusted worker. Of course,
  these figures admit of a great deal of expansion
  in certain exceptional cases. The advertising
  genius who, besides supplying the matter for
  advertisements, is capable of planning out an
  entire advertising campaign, from the ordinary
  form letters to full -page advertisements in
  the leading dailies, being able to handle facts,
  figiu'es, and the business as well as the literary
  side of the campaign, bringing the whole to
  a successful conclusion, can practically demand
  her own terms, but such advertising geniuses are
  rare amongst women, who as a rule are apt
  to under -value rather than over -value their
  capabilities, and through over-conscientiousness
  in this matter are loth to undertake large re-
  sponsibilities. It may be said that it is this
  lack of initiative which debars most women,
  in whatever profession of business they are
  engaged, from rising to the heights which they
  might otherwise have attained.
  
  A woman who wishes to take up advertisement
  writing as a career must possess some power
  of initiative from the very beginning. Take
  the " free lance," for instance. Commissions
  from advertisers will not come to those who sit
  down quietly waiting for the " plums " to fall
  into their lap. An advertisement inserted in
  the " Want " columns of a suitable paper
  might sometimes be productive and result in
  perhaps one or two single commissions, but a
  living is not to be made by chance work of tliis
  kind. When a lady is thoroughly well qualified
  as an advertisement writer, possessing a certi-
  ficate or other similar proof of efficiency from
  the institution at which she pursued her studies,
  she should set about getting work by watching
  carefully the advertising of the large firms in
  her nei(?hbourhood - not only their paper and
  magazine advertising, but also their booklets,
  catalogues, or other printed matter. She should
  study well the various kinds and degrees of
  their merchandise, and think out good ideas
  for a striking advertisement, a good booklet
  or other literary matter. Tlie ideas must, of
  course, be novel ones. Then she should write to
  the firm in question enclosing her suggestions,
  and asking them for an appointment. She
  should do this in the case of several of the chief
  
  
  firms of her neighbourhood, and if she receives
  only two replies from firms who wish to adopt
  her suggestions her trouble will be amply repaid.
  
  Booklet designing and writing is very re-
  munerative work. One guinea, as a rule, is the
  price paid to a beginner, whilst a more experi-
  enced writer could command a fee of £5, 5s. for
  designing and supplying copy for one Uttle
  booklet. A woman who wishes to estabUsh a
  connection must be unfailing in her energy and
  a hard worker. She must never be discoxiraged,
  but keep on plodding until her end is obtained.
  Then she wiU be able to lead a Ufe of com-
  parative ease, for the expert advertisement
  writer can turn out copy with very little trouble,
  added to which the work of advertisement
  writing is full of interest and variety. New
  ideas are constantly suggesting themselves, and
  there is a certain fascination in working them
  out to their conclusion.
  
  As has been said before, the number of staff
  appointments as " advertisement writers " for
  women is increasing daily, and for those who
  prefer steady and regular work at a fixed salary,
  however small, a position on the staff of some
  firm or newspaper is preferable. Such posi-
  tions are mostly obtained by recommendation,
  although a staff appointment may often result
  from introductions received while '" free lancing."
  The Daily News is the best advertising medium
  for a position of the kind.
  
  Training. - It has been seen that to succeed
  as an advertisement writer a woman requires
  the qualities of energy, initiative, patience, and
  perseverance, besides the necessary technical
  training in her work. The girl or woman who
  requires to be guided in every step she takes
  had better give up the idea of embarking upon
  a career of the kind, for her time will be wasted.
  A certain technical training is necessary also.
  The Americans have long ago realised the truth
  of this, and they have innumerable institutes
  and schools devoted solely to training in adver-
  tisement writing and business methods. In
  London a thorough training in advertising may
  be had at the " Dixon Institute," 193 New
  Oxford Street. This is a Correspondence School,
  so that the training is accessible to any one
  residing in the United Kingdom or abroad. The
  course is a most comprehensive one, covering
  the entire ground from the A.B.C. of advertise-
  ment writing to the planning and carrying out
  of an advertising campaign. The beginner is
  instructed in the technicalities regarding the
  various styles and sizes of types and display
  types, proof correcting, different kinds of borders,
  blocks for illustrations, and the various illus-
  trating processes. Step by step the students
  are taken through every phase of advertising.
  The lessons are very carefully graduated, and
  the tuition may be said to be in every sense
  personal to each pupil, every effort being made
  to study their individual idiosyncrasies, and
  
  
  630
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  direct tlieir training in the most profitable
  manner. The fee for the whole Advertising
  Course is £6, 6s. ; wliilst £9, 93. is the fee for a
  combined course on advertising and business
  methods.
  
  It is ad\'i6able to take a course of this kind
  before embarking upon the career of an adver-
  tisement TUTiter and specialist. Of course, some
  girls and women Eire so fortunately placed as
  to be brought up in the atmosphere of adver-
  tisement writing, as it were ; the secreteiry to
  an advertisement manager, for instance, if she
  is intelligent and observant, can pick up many
  liints and go through a training of actual
  experience. Now and then she may suggest
  an idea for an advertisement which will prove
  so good and effective that her capabihties in
  that direction will become recognised ; gradually
  more and more copy will be entrusted to her,
  until she imperceptibly sHps into the place of
  " special advertisement writer," her- duties being
  restricted to writing advertisements. But these
  are only special cases ; the average woman is not
  so fortunate, and for her a thorough coiirse of
  study is essential if she is to make any headway.
  Natural talent is valuable, but where it is
  combined with the knowledge which a thorough
  training alone can impart, its value is increased
  by almost cent, per cent.
  
  SECRETARIAL WORK
  
  The post of " private secretary " is one
  particularly suited to a clever, tactful girl or
  woman, and there is always a certain demand
  for competent secretaries, which the stress and
  bustle of present-day life tends steadily to
  increase. All the leading professional men, such
  aa consulting physicians, speeiaUsts, dentists,
  barristers, authors, and dramatists - also our
  great philanthropists and merchant princes
  employ secretswies, sometimes one, sometimes
  more, and they rely a great deal upon the
  intelligence and capability of the persons they
  employ in this capacity. These posts are in
  many cases filled by women.
  
  The growth of women's institutions, clubs,
  political societies, &c., has also created an in-
  creasing demand for the lady secretary.
  
  Secretarial posts in charitable and philanthropic
  institutions are also fiUed by women. There are
  great opportunities in secretarial work for really
  competent workers, but for competent workers
  only. The army of incompetents who do more
  than anything else to lower the standard of
  women's earnings will find that in the domain
  of the private secretary at leetst they cannot
  encroach. There are some instances, perhaps,
  when a good secretarial position has been
  obtained by influence - and the long-suffering
  chief has put up with the delinquencies of his
  factotum through goodness of heart or dislike
  of change - but such instances are rare. A
  
  
  secretarial position entfiils too much responsi-
  bility for it to be placed in inexperienced or
  inefficient hands.
  
  Qualifications and Training. - First of all the
  girl who aspires to a secretarial jDost must have
  had a thoroughly good general education, supple-
  mented by the special training which is required
  to adequately equip her for her career. This
  latter should include a thorough and practical
  knowledge of shorthand and typewriting. No
  mere smattering of shorthand will answer the
  purpose. It is not sufficient to be able to take
  down a quick shorthand note if one cannot
  read one's notes afterwards. The competent
  secretary should also have a good knowledge of
  precis-writing and research work ; she should
  be conversant with at least two languages, and
  know how to keep accounts. Book and docu-
  ment indexing should also be included in her
  secretarial training ; she should also know how
  to read and correct proofs if she is to make an
  efficient secretary for a literary man. System
  and order are invaluable quaUties for a private
  secretary. She should know where to lay hands
  at once upon any document required, and for
  this purpose should be acquainted with one or
  two of the best filing systems and be able to
  put them to practical use.
  
  The time taken in special training will depend
  a great deal upon individual circumstances. A
  brilliantly clever girl, for instance, would learn
  her work mucli more quickly than a girl of only
  average capability. A year at least should be
  given to the study of shorthand. In this
  constant and daily practice is required. Orce
  the elements of shorthand are mastered, the
  student should make a point of attending speed
  classes every day. At Pitman's MetropoUtan
  School, Southampton Row, London, a feature
  is made of these speed classes. In these classes
  the student has to take down from dictation
  at certain fixed speeds, the speed of dictation
  varying from the ordinary speed of writing from
  dictation in longhand to the highest speeds
  attainable in shorthand, and, what is of the
  utmost importance, students are required to
  carefully transcribe their notes. At Pitman's
  school a regular secretarial course may be taken,
  the fees varying in accordance with the amount
  of subjects included in the course. A very good
  training may also be had at the Woman's
  Institute, 92 Victoria Street, London, S.W.
  This includes all the subjects with which either
  a private or an organising secretary should be
  acquainted, the fee being £35 for a course of
  three terms. This course will in most cases
  prove sufficient training for an intelligent girl,
  who should, however, supplement it with regu-
  lar shorthand speed practice. At the end of
  her course the student will receive a certificate of
  efficiency in all the subjects of general secre-
  tarial work.
  
  The Society of Arts and London Chambers
  
  
  LITERARY AND SECRETARIAL WORK
  
  
  631
  
  
  of Commerce also hold examinations for which
  the chief commercial and secretarial schools
  prepare their pupils. Certificates from either
  of these examining bodies will prove most useful
  in obtaining a post. The cost of training in
  secretarial work averages from £25 to £50, and
  more if very special and thorough training is
  undergone. Principals of Colleges as a rule do
  all in their power to secvire posts for well-
  quaUfied pupils. In addition to Pitman's School
  and the Woman's Institute, good secretarial
  training may be had at Clark's College, Chancery
  Lane, London, and Kensington College, Ken-
  sington, London, W.
  
  Salaries. - An efficient private secretary may
  command a salary of from £100 to £200 per
  annum ; the salary of a residential secretary
  would range from £50 to £150, or even more in
  special circumstances ; good organising secre-
  taries of societies are also well paid. Needless
  to say, these salaries can only be obtained by
  thoroughly efficient workers.
  
  LIBRARY WORK AND INDEXING
  
  The field for women Ubrarians is at present
  somewhat restricted, though there is every
  indication of future development in this direc-
  tion. Library work is work for which well-read
  and well-educated women should be particularly
  well fitted. It is work, however, which requires
  very special training. The Ubrarian should pos-
  sess a good men-.ory for facts and figures ; she
  should have had a thoroughly good education,
  and must, in addition, be well versed in bibUo-
  graphy, cataloguing, classification, and indexing.
  A thorough training is indispensable ; there are
  no openings for untrained workers. In regard
  to pubUc libraries, women chiefly at present
  occupy positions as assistant Ubrarians, though
  in some instances the post of head librarian is
  filled by a woman. The librarians of all the
  women's colleges are women, former students
  being usually selected to fill the post. In the
  Board of Education library there are assistant
  lady librarians. A lady is at the head of the
  Times Book Club Library, with a number of
  women assistants under her control. Most of
  the large newspaper offices employ lady Ubrarians
  and assistant librarians, and posts of this kind
  are usually very well paid.
  
  The Ubrary work of a newspaper office in-
  volves special work in the filing and indexing
  of newspaper cuttings. Experience of this
  work is best gained by obtaining a position as
  assistant in a newspaper library when the
  ordinary training as Ubrarian has been con-
  cluded. To fill a position as head librarian in
  a newspaper office, or indeed in any kind of
  Ubrary, a woman requires great powers of
  initiative and organisation in addition to a
  thorough knowledge of her work.
  
  Training. - There are not many institutions at
  
  
  present where good training in Ubrary work may
  be had. Classes in general Ubrsiry work are
  held at the London School of Economics, Clare
  Market, W.C. Students are prepared for the
  examinations of the " Library Association."
  The full certificate of the Library Association,
  however, can only be gained by those who have
  had practical experience in a Ubrary, although
  the classes of the school are open to all. The
  fees amount to £10, 10s. a session for admission
  to all the classes. Any of the subjects may,
  however, be taken separately at separate fees.
  The University of London grants a yearly
  studentship of £25 for girls who have matricu-
  lated or hold the certificate of the Joint Board
  tenable for three years at the Library of the
  School of Economics.
  
  A good way of training is to give one's services
  as assistant in some library for little or no
  remuneration, thus serving an apprenticeship,
  and at the same time quaUfying for the examina-
  tion of the Library Association and fulfilUng
  the condition in regard to actual experience
  of Ubrary work.
  
  Tlie salaries for Ubrarians range from £50 a
  year for an assistant to £150 a year for a head
  Ubrarian. In one or two large London news-
  paper offices the figiu-e of £200 to £250 is reached
  by head librarians, whilst assistants begin at
  from £65 ; £78 to £156 in some cases being paid
  to an experienced assistant. Tliese posts, how-
  ever, are not as a rule easily accessible, prefer-
  ence in fiUing vacancies being usuaUy accorded
  to members of the staff.
  
  Indexing. - Indexing, wliich should be thor-
  oughly understood by the competent private
  secretary and Ubrarian, may also be taken up as
  a separate profession. Only women endowed
  with an abundance of patience and perseverance
  should take up work of this kind, which from
  its nature is apt to become monotonous and
  brain -fagging to those of a highly strung ner-
  vous or impatient temperament. Accuracy and
  power of concentration are essential attributes
  for the indexer. A good technical training in
  the actual work is necessary. A woman re-
  quires to be an expert at the work if she is to
  make a living as an indexer.
  
  Indexing is fairly remunerative work. It is
  not, however, always easy to obtain, but if a
  woman has once obtained a staS position or
  established a connection as a " piecework "
  indexer, she will in all probability keep it, for
  the essential qualities of accuracy and precision
  so necessary in indexing work are compara-
  tively rare ; so much so that an employer
  will be loth to part with a really good reUable
  worker in any circumstances. Perhaps tliis
  forms one of the resisons for the comparatively
  small number of vacancies to be found. A year's
  training in indexing is usually necessary, although
  in some few cases six months will prove suffi-
  cient. For technical and complicated indexing
  
  
  632
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  eighteen months to two years training wovild
  be required.
  
  For indexing alone the openings are not very
  numerous at present, and the opportunities for
  good training are comparatively limited. In
  London a thorough training may be had from
  Miss Petherbridge, 52b Conduit Street, W., for
  an inclusive fee of £25 for a year's course.
  
  The indexing of all our Parliamentary papers
  is in charge of a lady, and some of the Govern-
  ment offices and County Councils employ lady
  indexers. Lady indexers are also employed
  in connection with the Ubraries of newspaper
  offices. At present indexing is most useful
  when allied with secretarial or library work ;
  
  
  but though the openings for indexing employ-
  ment alone are not numerous at the moment,
  they are likely to increase, and with the increased
  demand the facilities for training will doubtless
  become more numerous. £52 to £104 a year
  is an average rate to pay for the indexer who
  holds a staff appointment. Indexing, however,
  is most commonly paid for as " piecework."
  Two sliillings a printed page is paid for the index-
  ing of Government Blue Books. In books and
  other general pubUcations the rates of payment
  vary. To make " piecework " indexing re-
  munerative, a woman would require to establish
  a large connection. A reputation for accuracy
  and neat work will help her best to do this.
  
  
  MEDICINE AND NURSING
  
  
  At one time it seemed that the difficulties which baired the progress of women who wished to qualify
  as medical practitioners were insurmountable, but gradually one by one these obstacles have been
  overcome, and nowadays the path of the woman who wishes to quaUfy for the medical profession is
  a comparatively clear one.
  
  Women are now admitted to the medical examinations of all the Universities of Great Britain
  with the exception of Oxford and Cambridge ; also to the examinations of the Royal College of
  Physicians, London, and the Royal College of Surgeons, England, the Society of Apothecaries of
  London, and the Conjoint Colleges of Scotland and Ireland. This article gives full information in
  regard to time and cost of training for the professions of medicine and nursing, as well as a careful
  survey of the prospects afforded to women in both careers.
  
  
  Some Important Considerations. - Before a girl
  decides to train for the medical profession, there
  are several things which she must carefully
  consider. In the first place five years is the
  minimum time which can be spent upon train-
  ing, six years as a rule being required. During
  this time she must be sure of £130 a year at
  the least to cover her medical training, board,
  and clothing expenses, including examination
  fees, books, instrvmients, &c. £130 a year would
  indeed leave very littl^ margin, and the girl
  who is not an adept at making small economies
  would find it somewhat difficult to make ends
  meet even on that sum. £150 to £200 would
  really be a more satisfactory allowance ; but
  £130 represents the minimum. Of course, if a
  girl is living at home she will only need the
  necessary sum for college fees, examination fees,
  books and instrunaents. Also if she succeeds
  in gaining one of the scholarships attached to
  nearly every medical school, the cost of her
  training will be materially reduced. The train-
  ing for the medical profession is longer and
  more expensive than that requijed in preparing
  for any other career, and the time at which a
  start may be made in putting it to a practical
  use upon an income-earning basis is therefore
  considerably deferred. Again, the girl who
  wishes to make a success of the career of medicine
  must possess certain indispensable qualities. In
  the first place she must have a thoroughly
  healthy constitution to enable her to stand the
  stress of both training and " practice," when
  the training has been completed. In addition,
  she must have a thoroughly healthy and well-
  balanced mind, and be free from that tendency
  to nerves and hysteria which characterise so
  many members of her sex. A good education
  is, of course, indispensable, as a preliminary
  examination in general subjects must be passed
  
  
  before a girl can even enter upon her career as
  a medical student. And last, but not least,
  she must be endowed with an abundant fund
  of good common -sense.
  
  Savoir faire and a knowledge of social life will
  also stand the medical woman in good stead ;
  for this reai^on it is as well for a girl not to
  take up her medical studies directly she leaves
  school, but to spend a year going out into society,
  travelling, and altogether enlarging her social
  aspect. She should do her best to gain an
  insight into character and to study the idiosyn-
  crasies of the men and women with whom she
  comes into contact. When she has started
  practice much of her success will depend upon
  her tact in dealing with the fads and foibles of
  her patients ; in these circumstances keenness of
  perception in diagnosing the character of the
  patient will be as useful as keenness in diagnosing
  the disease from which he or she is suffering.
  
  It must be remembered that during her five
  years of studentship her time will be occupied
  by hard work and study ; she will not be able
  to gq to too many social gatherings if her work
  has not to be interfered with in any way, so
  that she must make the most of her opportunities,
  in the year allowed between the interval of
  leaving school and taking up her studies, to
  glean what knowledge she can gain of social
  life in its different phases.
  
  Choice of a Qualification. - Before a woman
  can practise as a doctor her name must be
  placed on the Medical Register of the General
  Medical Council, and no one can be placed
  thereon who has not one or more degrees or
  diploma of one of the examining bodies already
  mentioned after having completed the five
  years' course of study required by the General
  Medical Council. University degrees, more
  especially those of the London University, are
  
  
  633
  
  
  634
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  held in the highest repute, and a student should
  work for these wherever possible. If, however,
  she has any doubts as to her powers in this
  direction, she should content herself x^-ith working
  for a diploma of one of the other bodies, as it
  is considered that the attainment of a diploma
  is of greater certainty than that of a degree,
  so it is as well to make certain of the former,
  especially as the latter can always be tried tor
  afterwards. . . .
  
  As the regulations of the various examimng
  bodies differ to a great extent, it will be necessary
  for a student to decide before beginmng her
  course of study wliich degree or diploma she
  
  wishes to obtain. , . v i j
  
  Regulations- Every medical student should
  be registered at the office of the General Medical
  Council, 299 Oxford Street, London, W., withm
  fifteen days after the commencement ot her
  professional studies. In accordance with the
  requirements of the General Medical Council
  a preUminary examination in general subjects
  must be passed previous to registration.
  
  The following examinations are accepted by
  the General Medical Council when the certifi-
  cates include the required subjects -.-Oxford
  and Cambridge Junior and Semor Locals.
  Higher Local Examinations, Responsions, Mode-
  rations, Previous and General Examinations,
  Matriculation Examinations of the British and
  most of the foreign and colonial Umversities ;
  the College of Preceptors. First-Class Certificate
  (the required subjects to be passed at not more
  than two examinations) the College of Pre-
  ceptors' Preliminary Examinations for Medical
  Students- the required subjects to be passed
  at one time. . ...
  
  Any of these preliminary examinations will
  fulfil the requirements of all the examimng
  bodies with the exception of the Umversities.
  In order to prepare for the degree of the London
  University it will be necessary to pass the
  Matriculation Examination of the University of
  London, or any examination accepted by the
  University in lieu of Matriculation. In enter-
  ing for the degree of the Irish University the
  student must pass the Matriculation Examina-
  tion of the University of Ireland. The University
  of Durham allows any registered medical student
  to take the first and second professional examina-
  tions, but before entering for the final exaniina-
  tion a further examination in arts is required,
  unless the student has already passed the
  Entrance Examination of some University.
  
  
  Chief Medical Degrees Open to Women
  
  ~ University of London- M.B., B.S., M.D., M.S.
  University of Durham- M.B., B.S.
  University of Ireland-M.B., C.H., M.D M^S.
  Scottish University Degrees- M.B., Ch.B.,
  M.D.
  
  
  Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons-
  
  L.R.C.P., M.R.C.S.
  Society of Apothecaries - L.S.A.
  Conjoint Colleges of Scotland - L.R.C.P.
  
  The following quaUfications are also open
  to women : -
  
  M.A.O. and B.A.O.- Master and Bachelor of
  
  Obstetrics (R.U.I.)
  University of Cambridge- Diploma of PubUc
  
  Health- D.P.H.
  Royal College of Physicians, Diploma of
  
  Membersliip, London - ^M.R.C.P.
  Royal College of Surgeons, England- Diploma
  
  of Fellowsliip- F.R.C.S.
  Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons
  
  Ireland- F.R.C.P.S.
  
  Training. - The course of study for the London
  University degrees of M.B., B.S. extends over
  five and a half years. Three different examina-
  tions have to be passed. The first examination
  after one year's study, the second eighteen
  months later, and the third three years later.
  
  Courses for the Scotch University degrees,
  M.B. and Ch.B., the Irish and Durham degree,
  the Diplomas of the Royal Colleges of England,
  the Triple Qualification of the Conjoint Colleges
  of Scotland, and the QuaUfication of the Society
  of Apothecaries, London, extend over five
  years.
  
  Chief amongst the medical colleges for women
  are those at London, Edinburgh, and Glasgow,
  which are exclusively for women students.
  There are several other medical schools in the
  provinces connected with provincial universi-
  ties, but none for women only, the women
  being admitted as follow students with the
  
  men. ,
  
  Women are admitted to the medical class-JS
  on the same terms as men at the following
  Universities : - .
  
  Universities of Dublin, Manchester, University
  College of South Wales and Monmouthshire,
  Cardiff (University of Wales), Leeds School of
  Medicine (%vith the exception of the Infirmary,
  which is not open to Women), University ot
  Birmingham, College of Medicine, Newcastle-
  on-Tyne, and the Universities of Bristol, Shet-
  field, Liverpool, Aberdeen, St. Andrews, Dundee,
  Dublin, Belfast, Cork, and Galway.
  
  M D. Degrees.- The London M.D. Examina-
  tion'is only open to students who have passed
  the M.B., B.S. of the University of L.on^on,
  two years previous to entering for the M.D.
  Examination.
  
  There are no special courses arranged tor tue
  M D Examination in London, as candidates have
  generally spent most of the interval in obtaining
  experience in Medicine, and in reading up the
  special subject for which they intend to enter
  for the examination.
  
  The London M.S. (Master of Surgery) may
  
  
  MEDICINE AND NURSING
  
  
  635
  
  
  also be taken in no less than two years after
  the London M.B., B.S. Examination. Ex-
  perience in the practice of surgery is the chief
  training required for the examination. The
  M.B., B.S. degrees of the University of London
  are the qualifications in both Medicine and
  Surgery.
  
  Candidates for the Scotch M.D. degree must
  have passed the M.B._. Ch.B. Examinations of
  one of the Scotch Universities, and be of the
  age of twenty -four or upwards. They must
  pass an examination subsequent to one year
  after receiving the degrees of Bachelor of Surgery,
  and must have been engaged at least one year
  in attendance in the medical wards of a hospital,
  or in scientific work bearing directly on her
  profession, and at least two years' practice.
  Each candidate must submit for approval of
  the Faculty of Medicine a thesis on any branch
  of knowledge comprised in the second, third,
  or fourth examination for the degrees of
  Bachelor of Medicine and of Surgery which he
  may have made a subject of study after having
  received these degrees.
  
  London. - " The London (Royal Free Hospital)
  School of Medicine for Women " is the great
  medical training centre for London, and was
  the first women's medical school in the king-
  dom. It is under the presidency of Mrs. Garret
  Anderson, M.D., and the opportunities for
  practical experience afiEorded to students, both
  at the Royal Free Hospital, the practice of
  which is reserved Tor the students of the school,
  and at the New Hospital for Women, are un-
  rivalled. The whole course of medical study
  for the University of London, the Royal College
  of Physicians and Surgeons, the Society of
  Apothecaries, London, and the Conjoint Colleges
  of Scotland and of Ireland can be completed at
  this school. The greater part of the course for
  the Durham University and the University of
  Glasgow can also be taken. The Universities
  of Calcutta, Madras, and the Punjab also accept
  the certificates of the School as qualifying for
  their examinations.
  
  Cost of Training. - The fees for the entire
  course for the M.B., B.S. degrees of the University
  of London, including Laboratory and Library
  fees, come to about £170 if paid down, and
  about £10 more if paid in annual instalments.
  To this must be added the cost of books and
  instruments, which comes to about £30. Then
  a two months' course of Practical Midwifery
  must be taken in the External Department of
  the Royal Free Hospital. Students must reside
  during the two months required for the course
  at the special house in connection with tlie
  hospital maintained for the purpose. The
  charge for Board and Residence is 25s. a week.
  Students are also required to attend the practice
  of one of the Fever Hospitals of the Metropolitan
  Asylums Board, for which a separate fee must
  be paid, and they must also receive special
  
  
  instruction in Lunacy at the Bethlehem Royal
  Hospital.
  
  The entire cost of training would therefore
  amount to about £250 for the whole course,
  inclusive of extras.
  
  There are many scholarships oSered for com-
  petition which serve to give material help to
  the winners in defraying the cost of training.
  Chief amongst these are The School Scholarship,
  value £50, which is ofiered annually, and is open
  to candidates who have passed the London
  Matriculation Examination or a Preliminary
  Examination in arts recognised by the General
  Medical Cotmcil and axe not holding any other
  scholarship.
  
  St. Dunstan's Medical Exhibition. - The
  Governors of the St. Dunstan's Educational
  Foundation offer annually an Exhibition of £60
  a year for three years, extendable for a further
  period of two years. Candidates must not be
  more than twenty years of age and mvist
  have passed the London Matriculation Exa-
  mination.
  
  The Bostock Scholarship for Women, value
  £60 a year, awarded by the Reid Trustees every
  fourth year, tenable in the first instance for two
  years, subject to extension for a further period of
  two years.
  
  The John Bryan Bursary, value £20 a year.
  
  The Faniy Butler Scholarship, value £40 -
  £10 a year for four years, open only to candidates
  willing to practise in connection with the Church
  of England Zenana Missionary Society, 27
  Chancery Lane, W.C.
  
  The Helen Prideaux Prize of £40.
  
  The Mabel Wehb Research Scholarship in
  Pathology, Physiology, or Chemistry, value £30
  for one year, and extendable for two or three
  years.
  
  Several other minor prizes are awarded.
  
  Several of the chief Missionary Societies are
  also willing to make grants towai-ds the medical
  education of ladies who wish to take up medical
  missionary work when qualified. (See tmder
  Medical ]\Iissionaries.)
  
  A reduction in fees is made for students enter-
  ing the school with grants in aid of training from
  Missionary Societies.
  
  Edinburgh. - The Edinburgh School of Medi-
  cine for Women, Surgeons' Hall, Edinburgh,
  prepares students for the Edinburgh University
  degrees, M.B., Ch.B., and also for the examina-
  tions wliich are held conjointly by the Royal
  College of Physicians and Surgeons, Edinburgh,
  and by the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons,
  Glasgow. Tliese examinations admit to the
  Scottish " Triple QuaUfication." Tlie classes are
  also recognised by other universities and
  colleges.
  
  Tlie minimum cost of education and exa-
  minations for the Edinburgh University degrees
  (M.B., Ch.B.) is about £150; for the Triple
  Qualification, £115. Tliere are several bvirsariea
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  636
  
  available to students, and the Carnegie Trust
  Fund is also open to them as well as to students
  of the other universities of Scotland.
  
  Tlie students receive their Clinical Instruction
  in the wards set apart for the purpose in the
  Roval Infirmary, also in the Royal Hospital
  for'Sick Children, the City Hospital for Infectious
  Diseases, and at Bangour Asylum for the Insane.
  Training in Glasgow.- The Queen Margaret
  College is the Women's Department of the
  University of Glasgow. Here women may
  prepare for the degrees in art, science, and
  medicine. For the medical degrees of M.B. and
  Ch.B. not less than five years' study is reqmred.
  Students entering on a course of medical study
  must have pre%'iou8ly passed the necessary
  prehminary examinations, and be registered in
  the books of the General Medical Council as
  medical students.
  
  Students are prepared for the M.B., Ch.ts.
  degrees of Glasgow University, the Scottish
  " Triple Qualification," and the London and Irish
  University degrees. The fees for the five years
  amount to about £125, exclusive of examination
  fees, books and instruments, and in addition
  a matriculation fee of £1, is. must be paid every
  year. The benefits of the Carnegie Trust Fund
  and a number of bursaries and scholarships are
  available to students.
  
  Prospects.- The prospects for the quahfied
  woman practitioner are becoming gradually ex-
  tended now that a great deal of the old-fashioned
  prejudice against the " woman doctor " has been
  removed. In the first place, there is none of
  that " under-cutting of fees " which has to be
  adopted by women in most other professions.
  The Medical Council has decreed that emolu-
  ments for women doctors must be on the same
  basis as those for men, and this rule is always
  kept. The great object of the newly qualified
  woman doctor should be to get experience.
  This can be obtained nowhere better than in
  hospital work, and before setting up in practice
  for herself a woman would do well to take a
  staff appointment in a hospital for at least a
  year. A number of hospitals have opened their
  'oors to resident women physicians. The
  sa.. nes vary from £30 to £150 a year, and board
  and lodging is given.
  
  The New Hospital for Women, 144 Euston
  Road, W., has a complete staff of women
  physicians and surgeons. There are also posts
  for medical women in London at the Clapham
  Maternity Hospital and School of Midwifery, the
  Chelsea Hospital for Women, St. John's Hos-
  pital for Diseases of the Skin, the Bolgravia
  Children's Hospital.
  
  In Edinburgh women physicians and surgeons
  are on the staff of the Hospital for Women and
  Children, Whitehouso Loan, Bruntsfield, and
  Dispensary for Women and Children ; in
  Glasgow women medical officers are employed
  at the Victoria Infirmary Dispensary and the
  
  
  Samaritan Hospital for Women. Posts are also
  held by medical women at hospitals in Birming-
  ham, Brighton, Bristol, Hull, Leeds, Liverpool,
  Manchester, Nottingham, Reading, and in many
  other places throughout the country. Various
  sanatoria and asylums have also recognised the
  claims of the woman doctor, and appointments
  in these are as a rule well paid. Private institu-
  tions are also appointing women doctors, and
  there are posts in connection with the Post
  Office, Factories, Girls' Schools, &c. ; these ap-
  pointments are as a rule remunerative, and many
  women prefer to take permanent posts of the
  kind to setting up in practice for themselves,
  more especially those who do not possess the
  necessary capital to tide them over the period
  of waiting which starting in practice always
  involves.
  
  Private Practice. - ^No woman who has not
  sufficient capital to tide her over two or three
  years should tliink of starting in practice for
  herself. To start a practice means a period of
  waiting for the man practitioner ; this period is
  more hkely to be prolonged than decreased in
  the case of a woman. But a woman can do a
  great deal towards forming a clientele besides
  putting up a brass plate on her door and waiting
  quietly for the arrival of her first patient.
  
  To begin with, she should not start in a neigh-
  bourhood without having first received some
  very good introductions to some of the most influ-
  ential people in the place. Then she must take
  the trouble to make herself known socially : she
  should dress well, go about everywhere ; in fact,
  make as many friends as she can. It is doubtful
  whether in these circumstances the woman with
  an abundant fund of tact and savoir faire, who
  creates for herself a social status, has not the
  advantage over the average young man starting
  in practice for himself, who is usually remp-x-
  ably lacking in the necessary " push," and takes
  little trouble to cultivate the acquaintance of
  men and women unless they come aa patients to
  his door.
  
  There are several women doctors who nave
  settled in practice for themselves with great
  success and are now making incomes of from
  £800 to £1000 a year, but these are only now
  reaping the reward of years of waiting and hard
  work. As a rule, when a woman has managed
  to estabUsh herself as a practitioner, she may
  count upon making £150 a year as a beginning,
  once the inevitable waiting period has passed.
  
  The extent to which the initial income will
  increase will depend chiefly upon herself and
  upon the wisdom she has employed in the selec-
  tion of a suitable neighbourhood for her purpose.
  In London and the larger provincial towns lady
  doctors have done well, and there are still good
  openings for well-qualified women physicians.
  In the smaller provincial towns the prospects
  are not so good, as there is still an overwhelm-
  ing amount of prejudice to overcome. In the
  
  
  MEDICINE AND NUKSING
  
  
  637
  
  
  larger towns in Scotland the prospects for women
  doctors are also good. Perhaps the best open-
  ings to be found at present ai'e in the Colonies,
  South Africa, Canada, New Zealand and
  Australia presenting an especially promising
  field.
  
  Assistant Doctors. - Medical practitioners with
  very large practices often employ assistant
  doctors, and in this particular field there are
  abundant prospects for the qualified medical
  woman. Women assistants are employed by
  medical men as well as by medical women ; the
  fees are good, varying with the quality and
  extent of the practice, and an abundance of
  experience is to be had in this way. To begin
  as an assistant doctor is a good preparation in
  all ways to starting in practice for oneself.
  
  Medical Missionaries. - There are also good
  openings for women in India, China, the East,
  as medical missionaries in connection with the
  various missionary societies. The commencing
  salary as a rule averages about £120 a year.
  
  The Society for Promoting Christian Know-
  ledge is prepared to give assistance, at a rate not
  exceeding £75 a year, for a period not exceeding
  four years, for a complete course of Medical and
  Surgical Training to ladies who are communicant
  members of the Church of England, offering
  themselves for work as Medical Missionaries in
  connection with some Missionary Society of the
  Church, or under the direction of a Bishop of the
  Church, among Heathen or Mohammedan Races.
  For further information address the Secretaries,
  S.P.C.K., Northumber!-'nd Avenue, London,
  W.C.
  
  The London Missionary Society occasionally
  has vacancies for ladies possessing medical
  qualifications for work in India and China.
  Apply to the Rev. A. N. Johnson, 16 New Bridge
  Street, E.C.
  
  The Zenana Bible and Medical Mission, King's
  Chambers, Portugal Street, Kingsway, W.C,
  assists ladies who wish to go to India as Mis-
  sionaries.
  
  The Church of England Zenana Missionary
  Society desires to obtain the ser\n[ces of ladies
  possessing medical qualifications for work in
  India and China. Apply to the Secretary of the
  Candidates' Committee, C.E.Z.M.S., 27 Chancery
  Lane, W.C.
  
  The Church Missionary Society is prepared to
  help towards the cost of training ladies for Mis-
  sionary work on special conditions. Apply to the
  Rev.R.ElUot,M.A.,L.R.C.S.I.,Secretary,Medical
  Committee, C.M.S., Salisbury Square, E.C.
  
  The Society for the Propagation of the Gospel
  sends out qualified medical women for medical
  work among the women of India, China, and
  Borneo. Women are accepted as medical pro-
  bationers previous to their training. Applica-
  tion should be made to the Candidates' Secretary,
  S.P.G. House, Tufton Street, Westminster, S.W.
  
  Women doctors are also appointed in con-
  
  
  nection with the Lady Dufierin Fund. A small,
  but at the same time a comfortable, income
  may be derived from posts of the kind, and
  the work, though hard, is varied and full of
  interest.
  
  Medical School Inspectors. - Under the Educa-
  tion Act of 1907 the local education authorities
  are obhged to provide for the medical inspection
  of children before or as soon as possible after
  their admission to a pubUc elementary school,
  and on such other occasions as the Board of
  Education may direct. These appointments
  present good openings for the medical woman.
  The salary begins at from £200-£250, rising to
  £300 or more a year. The Diploma in Public
  Health will qualify a woman for a position of
  this kind, and will render her eligible also for
  the post of Assistant Medical Officer of Health
  or an Inspector of Midwives under the Midwives
  Act (see p. 654).
  
  Quarantine Officers. - Women are now being
  appointed as quarantine officers at Suez.
  
  HEALTH VISITORS AND SANITARY
  INSPECTORS
  
  Many Local Authorities have in recent years
  appointed women as Health Visitors. Tho
  special duty of a Health Visitor is to visit the
  houses in the poorer districts, and there to give
  adNdce upon the feeding and care of children,
  and to assist in improving sanitary conditions
  generally. The checking of the unnecessarily
  large amount of infant mortality among the
  poorer classes may be said to be the chief
  raison d'Bre for the appointments of the health
  visitor. Her mission is essentially that of an
  adviser, and therefore to be successful in her
  work she requires an abundance of tact, good
  judgment, discrimination, and perseverance, for,
  unlike the Sanitary Inspector, she has no power
  to enforce the observance of the health laws.
  
  Training. - The Council of the Royal Sanitary
  Institute have established an examination for
  Health Visitors. The syllabus includes general
  structure of the body, personal hj'giene, air,
  water, food, clothing, the dwelling, elements of
  home-nursing, care of infants and young children,
  prevention of communicable disease, first aid,
  treatment of injuries, ailments and accidents. Tlie
  fee for the examination is £2, 2s. A course of
  lectures to prepare students for the examination
  is given at the Institute. Training may also bo
  had at the National Health Society, 52 Berners
  Street, Oxford Street, London, W., and in Edin-
  burgh and Glasgow at the Nurses' Training
  Colleges.
  
  The training is not a costly one, seldom in-
  volving an expenditure of more than ten guineas.
  The commencing salary is usually about £50,
  rising to £100 or £150 in certain cases. Those
  who wish to qualify £is Health Visitors would do
  well to write for information to the Secretfiry
  
  
  638
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  of the National Health Society, 63 Berners
  Street, London, W., and to the Secretary of the
  Royal Sanitary Institute, Parkes Museum,
  Slargarot Street, London.
  
  Women Sanitary Inspectors are also appointed
  by local authorities, and although their number
  is at present comparatively small, yet there is
  no doubt that the openings in tliis direction will
  be gradually extended. There is no doubt that
  workshops and factories where girls and women
  are employed are much better inspected by
  women, and the recognition of this fact is due
  to the admission of women into the ranks of
  sanitary inspectors. The sanitary inspector is
  under the authority of the Jledical Officer of
  Health. The details of her work will vary in
  accordance with the methods of the Medical
  Officer under whose direction she may be, but
  it is her chief duty to see that the provisions
  of the Public Health and the Factory and
  Workshops Acts are carried out. She will be
  required to inspect all the factories and work-
  shops, laundries, &c., where female and cliild
  labour is employed, seeing that the provisions
  of the Acts in regard to cleanUness, ventilation,
  drainage, overtime, &c., are complied yith.
  She must see that there is proper sanitary
  accommodation and that there is no overcrowd-
  ing. The inspection of tenement houses will
  also in many cases fall within the scope of her
  duties.
  
  The work is of a most responsible nature,
  involving as it does the enforcing of compliance
  with the law, and the woman who iindertakes
  it must count tact as one of her quaUfications.
  Her general education must have been good and
  supplemented by the special training necessary.
  She will require to have the certificate of the
  Sanitary Inspectors' Examination Board of
  London in England and of the Sanitary Associa-
  tion of Scotland.
  
  The candidate must also bo able to produce
  evidence of training by either having previously
  held office as sanitary inspector or Certificate
  of Instruction from an institution recognised
  by the Board.
  
  The examination for the certificate of the
  Sanitary Association in London consists of two
  parts. Preliminary and Technical. The Pre-
  liminary Examination, which is both writing and
  oral, is upon the follo'W'ing subjects : -
  
  English (including writing, spelling, com-
  position and dictation) and arithmetic.
  
  The technical examination is upon the follow-
  ing subjects : -
  
  1. Elementary Physics and Chemistry m rela-
  tion to Water, Soil, Air and Ventilation.
  
  2. Elementary Statistical Methods.
  
  3. Municipal Hygiene or Hygiene of Com-
  munities, including Prevention and Abatement
  of Nuisances, Sanitary Defects in and about
  Buildings and their Remedies, Water Supplies,
  Sanitary Appliances, Drainage, Refuse Removal
  
  
  and Disposal, Offensive Trades, Disinfection,
  Food Inspection.
  
  4. Statutes, and the Orders, Memoranda, and
  Iklodel By-Laws of the Local Government Board,
  and the By-Laws in force in the Administrative
  County of London.
  
  Every candidate must forward to the Secretary
  of the Board, not later than fourteen days before
  the commencement of the Examination, notice of
  her intention to present herself for examination,
  and half the appointed fee. The remaining half
  of the fee must be paid not later than seven days
  before the date of the examination.
  
  Candidates for the technical examination
  must pass the preliminary examination, unless
  they shall have passed an examination recog-
  nised by the Board in substitution for it ; and
  must forward to the Secretary of the Board not
  later than fourteen days before the commence-
  ment of the examination : -
  
  Evidence of having attained the age of twenty-
  one years, a recent testimonial as to personal
  character ; if possible, from a Clergyman,
  Jledical Officer of Health, or other person holding
  an official position. Evidence of haying passed
  a recognised alternative examination, in the
  case of candidates who claim exemption from
  the preliminary examination.
  
  The examinations are held twice a year, the
  fee for the preliminary examination is £1, Is.,
  and for the technical examination £2, 2s.
  
  The necessary training may be had at the
  Royal Sanitary Institute, Parkes Museum, 90
  Buckingham Palace Road, London, S.W. ; the
  National Health Society, 53 Berners Street,
  Oxford Street, London, W. ; the Bedford College
  for Women, Baker Street, London, W. ; the
  Heriot Watt College, Edinburgh; the Univer-
  sity College of South Wales and Monmouthshire,
  Cardiff; the Alexandra College, Dublin, an"^
  many other provincial centres, a Ust of which
  may be had from the Secretary of the Royal
  Sanitary Institute upon application.
  
  The work, though arduous at times, is not
  excessive, the hours averaging about eight daily,
  with the exception of Saturdays, which are half
  holidays, Sundays, the usual bank holidays,
  and the summer vacation (about a fortnight
  to three weeks). The commencing salary is £80
  per annum, rising in some cases to £185. Those
  who wish to train as sanitary inspectors cannot
  do better than write to the Secretary of the
  Public Health Society, London, the Sanitary
  Institute, London, or any other of the bodies
  mentioned for detailed particulars.
  
  SURGEONS
  
  It requires very special qualities to make a
  successful surgeon, and the number of women
  surgeons is very limited. The prospects for
  women in this branch of the medical profession
  are necessarily restricted, and the woman surgeon
  
  
  MEDICINE AND NURSING
  
  
  639
  
  
  will have to work hard for a number of years
  before she can look for any return. The practice
  of surgery entails a large measure of responsi-
  bility, and pubUc opinion is slow to acknowledge
  a woman's capability to undertake work in the
  execution of which so much nerve, coolness,
  and skill are necessary. If a woman elects to
  practise as a surgeon at home, therefore, pre-
  judice will prove one of the most formidable
  opponents she will have to encounter.
  
  The outlook abroad, however, is much more
  favourable, especially in regard to those coun-
  tries in which the women may only receive
  medical or surgical aid from members of their
  own sex. In India women are in charge of
  the surgical work in some of the chief hospitals,
  but the competition for these posts is necessarily
  keen.
  
  Training. - After completing her general medi-
  cal education, which will take not less than five
  years (see article on medical training), the stu-
  dent must prepare for one of the examinations
  for a degree or Fellowsliip in surgery. It will
  require at least two years to prepare for this.
  It will be advantageous to obtain a post as
  assistant svirgeon in a hospital, as valuable
  experience may be obtained in tliis way. Quali-
  fied women doctors may enter for the higher
  examinations in surgery of the English and
  Scotch Universities at which they have gradu-
  ated. Women may also enter for the Fellowship
  of the College of Surgeons, Glasgow, and for
  the Fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons,
  Ireland.
  
  The training is on the whole a costly one,
  seldom averaging less than £250. Unless a
  woman has good private means, it will be
  almost useless for her to set up in practice for
  herself, as it will be a nvmiber of years before
  she can even hope to earn sufficient professionally
  to pay her way.
  
  PHARMACY AND DISPENSING
  
  Pharmacy is rapidly developing as a field for
  the woman worker ; but it is a profession which
  demands very special qualifications if it is to
  be taken up with any measure of success.
  
  Needless to say, a good all round general
  education is an important preliminary to the
  special training necessary This should bo
  supplemented by the indispensable qualities of
  thoroughness and perseverance, to say nothing
  of a high standard of intelligence, a special
  taste for the subjects bearing upon pharmacy,
  and a love of and enthusiasm for the work.
  In the study of pharmacy thoroughness above
  all is essential; no mere superficial knowledge
  will carry a girl through her qualifying examina-
  tions, and those who show an incapacity for
  going to the root of things had better pause and
  think before they take up the work for wliich
  a thoroughly practical training is above all
  essential.
  
  
  Training - The period of special training
  must extend over at least three years. During
  three years the law exacts that the student
  must be apprenticed to a quaUfied chemist.
  In England and Scotland both training and
  quahfications are identical, as students must
  prepare for the examinations of the Pharma-
  ceutical Society. In Ireland the training extends
  over four years, and the certificate of the
  Pharmaceutical Society of Ireland must be
  obtained. There is, however, very Uttle scope
  for the lady chemist in Ireland. Prejudice is
  still somewhat deeply rooted there, and many
  Irish girls make a point of coming to London
  to take the English quaUfication, and embark
  upon their careers either in England or in
  Scotland.
  
  A preliminary examination in general subjects
  must be passed before or during the appren-
  ticesliip. Many qualified women chemists take
  pupils and apprentices, and a list of these ladies,
  together with a copy of the regulations for
  training and examinations, may be obtained
  upon application to the Secretary of the Phar-
  maceutical Society, Bloomsbury Square, London.
  W.C.
  
  After her tlxree years' apprenticeship has
  been ^ completed, the student may enter for
  the " Minor " or qualifying examination of the
  Pharmaceutical Society. She should prepare
  herself for this by taking a course in laboratory
  practice and various other special subjects at
  a good College of Pharmacy at the end of the
  third year of her apprenticeship. If she
  passes this examination, she will be entitled to
  describe herself as " Chemist and Druggist,"
  and will be licensed to dispense and sell poisons.
  The title of " Pharmaceutical Chemist " is
  obtained by passing the " Major " examination
  of the Pharmaceutical Society, wliich can be
  taken after a further six months' preparation.
  
  The cost of the training will amount to about
  £100, and this, of course, is exclusive of board
  and lodging if the student has to leave home in
  order to pursue her studies. In addition, in
  most cases there must necessarilj^ ensue a period
  of waiting before the lady chemist is able to
  make use of her talents upon a money-making
  basis. It will be seen, therefore, that a girl must
  possess a certain amount of capital to enable her
  to embark upon this profession. Every lady
  pharmacist should belong to the Women Phar-
  macists' Association, pai-ticulars of the member-
  ship of which may be obtained from Jiliss
  Margaret Buchanan, Pharmaceutical Chemist,
  Gordon Hall, Gordon Square, W.C. In con-
  nection with this association, a very efficient
  employment and information bureau" has been
  established, where useful ad^^ce upon all subjects
  bearing upon this profession may be obtained,
  and through the medium of wliich employers
  are put into touch with emploj-ees. Regular
  meetings are held at wliich lectures by well-
  
  
  640
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  known pharmacists aro given. Everything is
  done by the society to encourage co-operation
  amongst its members, and, by arrangement with
  one of our best-known insurance compames,
  insurance in respect of annuities upon super-
  annuation is obtainable by members upon the
  most favourable terms.
  
  Prospects.- By far the greater number of lady
  pharmacists are employed as dispensers m
  hospitals, infirmaries, or other institutions. Some
  have started a business for themselves, taking
  pupils and apprentices, or are employed as
  assistants by chemists. A certain number are
  employed as dispensers to medical men or
  women, whilst some large wholesale houses now
  employ qualified lady chemists.
  
  In certain cases a good business with medical
  women may be secured. £118 per annum (out-
  door), £70 per annum (indoor) would represent
  the average salary obtainable in hospitals and
  other institutions, where only one lady pharma-
  cist is employed, for eight or nine hours' work per
  day. In many cases the dispenser only works
  five days a week. Where two or more dispensers
  are employed the head one would probably
  receive from £10 to £20 more, and the others
  from £10 to £20 less. An annual holiday of two
  or tliree weeks is allowed. Hospital hours are
  usually from 9.30 a.m. to 5 or 6 p.m.
  
  The salary of assistants to chemists averages
  from £50 to £80 a year. The position of dis-
  penser to a medical man does not, as a rule, offer
  very many opportunities for the qualified lady
  chemist, for the reason that the qualification of
  the " Society of Apothecaries " is often deemed
  sufficient for a post of the kind. This is obtained
  by passing what is known as the "assistants
  examination " of the above-named society. The
  examination fee is £5, 5s., and at least six months'
  training in chemistry and dispensing is necessary.
  Needless to say, women with this lesser quali-
  fication can only command very small salaries,
  the sphere of work being necessarily limited.
  Parents very often decide upon their daughters
  taking this examination upon account of the
  small expenditure involved ; but it is a wholly
  mistaken policy, for if pharmacy is to be taken
  up at all, it should be taken up thoroughly.
  TTiere are so many women now qualified and
  legally registered as pharmacists that it is becom-
  ing daily more difficult for women only partially
  equipped to earn a living wage.
  
  DENTISTRY
  
  Comparatively few women have as yet taken
  up this profession. There is no doubt that the
  woman dentist ia as yet something of a novelty,
  and, as in the case of surgery, there is a certain
  amount of prejudice to be overcome before
  dentistry takes a firm place as a recognised
  profession for women.
  
  At present no woman should start practice
  
  
  as a dentist unless she has a fair amount of
  capital to tide her over those years of uncer-
  tainty which must elapse before she establishes
  a good connection. The training also is costly
  and somewhat lengthy.
  
  Women are admitted to the Examination in
  Dentistry of the Board of the Royal College of
  Physicians and Surgeons, the London Society of
  Apothecaries, and of the Royal College of
  Surgeons of Edinburgh, Glasgow, and Ireland.
  Dental students must register their names at
  one of the offices of the General Medical Council
  in the same way as medical students. A
  preliminary examination must be passed.
  After registration a dental student must pass
  at least four years in the acquirement of pro-
  fessional knowledge, but it is usual for students
  to spend five or six years in preparation for their
  last examination instead of the regular four.
  Not only dental surgery, but mechanical den-
  tistry must be studied.
  
  Training is taken at a Dental Hospital and
  may be had at the National Dental Hospital,
  London, and at the Dental Schools of Edinburgh
  and Glasgow. Tlie average cost of training in
  both the mechanical and surgical branches
  amounts to about £210, exclusive of books and
  instruments.
  
  The woman who wishes to take up dentistry
  as a profession should apply to one of the Royal
  Colleges of Surgeons for a copy of their Regula-
  tions for the Licence in Dentistry.
  
  NURSING
  
  Amongst what are known as the essentially
  womanly professions, that of nursing must needs
  take the foremost place. Many girls, however,
  decide to embark upon a career of the kind from
  purely sentimental reasons, losing sight alto-
  gether of practical facts. They have read of che
  deeds of Florence Nightingale and others, and
  are fired with the desire of following the example
  of their heroines in their own humble way.
  
  This desire is very laudable and much to be
  commended, and where a girl has a special aptj-
  tude for nursing such high and generous motives
  cannot fail to make her career in every way a
  success- but she must have that special aptitude.
  No girl should dream of embarking upon the
  niu'sing profassion without it, and she must, in
  addition, have a thoroughly sound constitution
  and a healthy, cheerful mind. She must be
  tactful, energetic and persevering, not afraid of
  work, and always ready to accord that sympathy
  to her patients which is looked upon by them as
  one of a nurse's greatest attributes. It must be
  remembered that the training involves much
  hard work, whilst the income which may be
  commanded by a fully qualified nurse is com-
  paratively small in proportion to the amount of
  responsibility entailed.
  
  On the other hand, it is a profession fuU of
  
  
  MEDICINE AND NURSING
  
  
  641
  
  
  interest and variety, and the possibilities of doing
  good by ministering to the sick and alleviating
  and helping them to bear their suffering are
  practically unlimited.
  
  To a girl who has had no experience of what
  discipline and hard work means, her first year as
  a probationer will prove a most trying ordeal.
  She should endeavour, therefore, to prepare her-
  self for life as a probationer by accustoming
  herself while at home to a useful daily routine,
  spent in the performance of such domestic
  duties as she may be afterwards called upon to
  undertake. A thorough practical knowledge of
  domestic science is invaluable to the probationer.
  If upon entering the hospital she is well versed
  in the art of bed-making, cleaning out rooms,
  cooking, &c., &c., she will not be at a loss when
  called upon to perform duties of the kind, more
  especially if she has been sensible enough to put
  herself into thorough training in this respect by
  going through the practice of the regular and
  systematic performance of these duties in her
  own home as a preparation for her career in the
  hospital.
  
  Probationers are seldom admitted into a
  hospital under the age of twenty-three, so that
  between the time of leaAdng school and entering
  into hospital training, a girl has ample oppor-
  tunities for preparing herself in this way. The
  value of a good general education cannot be too
  highly emphasised, in addition to which hygiene,
  anatomy, and other branches of knowledge
  bearing upon her future profession should be
  most carefully studied. Habits of method and
  good organisation should be cultivated, as these
  will be found invaluable. Above all, the girl
  who wishes to become a nurse should take care
  of her general health, rising early, taking regular
  and sufficient exercise, and accustoming herseK,
  in fact, to a certain daily system of routine,
  which will do as much as anything else to pre-
  pare her for those habits of punctuality, method,
  and discipline which form the chief characteristics
  of hospital life.
  
  There are several branches of the nursing
  profession wliich a woman may take up - hos-
  pital nursing, including nursing in the military
  and naval serAaces, private nursing, district
  muring, midwifery, mental nursing, and massage.
  Many gentlewomen are no^ also training as
  children's nurses, and there are also very good
  appointments as nurses to be had in the Ele-
  mentary Schools.
  
  
  HOSPITAL NURSING
  
  Training. - To obtain tliis, application must be
  made for admission as probationer to a hospital.
  The rules for the admission of probationers into
  these institutions vary to a considerable dogi-ee,
  and it is as well therefore co make inquiries as
  to the conditions of admission prevailing at
  
  
  several hospitals before selecting the one at
  which to make the application.
  
  In several hospitals a preliminary course of
  training has to be undergone in a training school
  in connection with the hospital before the
  probationers are admitted into the hospital
  itself. This course extends over a short period
  of a few weeks, after which an examination is
  held, and those who pass this examination are
  admitted as probationers into the hospital itself.
  The usual age limit for admission of probationers
  is from twenty-three to thirty-five years.
  
  Tlie training, with the addition of service
  exacted by most hospitals, extends over a period
  of from three to four years. During the first
  year the probationer will be engaged in the
  heavier routine work of seeing to the cleanliness
  of the wards, sweeping, dusting, poUshing, bed-
  making, &c. In most hospitals from the first a
  small yearly salary of about £8 is given, and this
  is often raised to £20 during the third year. Most
  hospitals bind their probationers down to a term
  of three or four years' service. Some girls, how-
  ever, who do not wish to bind themselves in
  any way until they have found out if the pro-
  fession is likely to suit them, enter hospitals as
  pajang probationers ; that is to say, they pay a
  weekly fee for the pri\'ilege of being admitted into
  the hospital for a certain short period, at the end
  of which they can leave if they wish or enter as
  probationers in the ordinary way.
  
  Application for Admission as Probationer. -
  When a girl has selected a hospital which she is
  desu-oiis of entering as probationer, it will be
  necessary for her to send in an application for
  the pvu-pose to the matron of the institution.
  She will receive in return an application form
  on which are printed several questions which she
  will be required to answer. Tliis form will have
  to be fiUed in, and a doctor's certificate as to the
  soimdness of the applicant's health ; also her
  birth certificate will require to be sent with the
  application form. In many cases a medical
  examination ^vill have to be tmdergone laefore
  admission into the hospital.
  
  If it is decided to receive the applicant as a
  probationer she will be required as a rule to
  enter at first for a short period " on trial."
  After this period has elapsed and she has proved
  herself fitted for the work, she has to sign an
  agreement with the hospital for two or three -
  sometimes four years - according to the method
  of training prevailing at the different institutions.
  Much of the scientific side of the training is to
  be had during the first year. The probationer
  must attend and take note of the lectures given
  by physicians and surgeons of the hospital -
  and by the sisters and teachers. At several
  hospitals an examination is held at the end of
  each course of loctm-es. With each succeeding
  year of her probation she will be given more
  responsible work, and wlien the probationary
  period is over and she has been granted her
  
  2s
  
  
  -642
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  cerUficate, she wiU bo quaUfied to remain in the
  hospital L a staff nurse. Her commencing
  ^^y would be about £25, over and above her
  Wd and lodging, rising to £40 when she is
  p^otad to the position of staff nurse or ward
  
  "^hHalaries of matrons of hospitals average
  from £180 to £250 in accordance with the position
  which the hospital holds In some of the larger
  hospitals the salary reaches the figure of £300.
  Needless to say, before the position of matron
  is attained a large amount of experience and
  capacity for organisation is exacted (lor
  Hospital Almoner, see under Social Work )
  
  General Hints.-A large hospital should always
  be selected for training, at any rate a hospital
  with over one hundred beds, as the best and
  Tost varied experience is to be had at the larger
  institutions. In many cases it wiU be found
  that there are no vacancies at the first hospital
  appUed to. Tliis should not deter a girl from
  trxdng at other institutions until she finds one
  to which she may be admitted as probationer
  The chief hospitals in the large provincial
  centres offer training as good in every way as
  that which is to be had in London. A girl
  should always be careful to study the regaatums
  of the hospitals to wliich she apphes. Hohdays
  time off duty, and attention to the comfort of
  the nurses in the way of housing, separ^^e bed-
  rooms, are all unportant matters, and it will be
  found that it is at the largest and most important
  institutions generally that a nurse wi^ receive
  the most consideration m this respect. There is
  no room in a work of this kind to give a lengthy
  list of hospital training schools with Pf ticulars
  as to regulations, &c. ; we have merely dealt with
  a few of the larger and better-known institutions
  If more detailed information is needed, the
  would-be hospital nurse ^^•ill And it m a httle
  book edited by Sir Henry Burdett, K.C B.,
  K C.V.O., entitled " How to Become a Nurse
  and pubUshed at 23. by the Scientific Press, Ltd.,
  London, wliich is one of the most handy gmdes
  to the nursing profession wliich may be obtainea
  The following is a list of some of the cmei
  London hospitals, with particulars m regard to
  age of admission, time of training, and number
  of bods : - , ^ A V
  
  The London Hospital, Whitechapel Road, E.,
  contains over 900 bods, and the nursing start,
  including private nurses, numbers over 7UU.
  Candidates desirous of becoming probationers
  must receive a preliminary course of training
  for seven weeks at Tredegar House, 29 Bow
  Road, E. ,
  
  The full terra of training is two years, and
  two years of service are required after two years
  of training, the engagement with the hospit^al
  thus extending over four years, dating from the
  day a probationer enters the hospital.
  
  Ordinary probationers must not be under
  iwentythree or over thirty-three years of age.
  
  
  \ number of paymg probationers are admitted
  for training if they are not under twenty -two
  nor over forty years of age. Probationers
  receive a salary of £12 the first year, and £20
  the second year. Staff nurses receive salaries
  of from £24 to £27 per annum, sisters £30 to £40
  per annum, private nurses £30 to £45.
  
  Guy's Hospital, London.- Over 600 beds.
  Time of training tlirce years, after six weeks
  instruction at the Hospital's Preliminary Nursing
  School (fee £6, Gs.). Salary £8 for the first year,
  £12 for the second year, £18 for the third year.
  A staff nurse receives a salary of £25 for tho
  fourth year, £28 for the fifth year, and £30 for
  for the sixth and subsequent years.
  
  St. Bartholomew's Hospital.- Number of beds
  680 Time of training four years (three years
  training and one year's service), after a pre-
  Uminary trial of a month. Apphcants must be
  between twenty -three and thirty -five years of
  age. A preUminary examination must be passed.
  At the end of the first year they have to pass
  another examination, and if they do this satis-
  factorily they are admitted as staff proba-
  tioners" for the rest of the term. Salary £8
  the first year, £12 the second year, £20 the
  tliird year, and £30 the fourth year Staff
  nurses, £35-£50. Paying probationers between
  twenty-one and forty years of age are taken^
  
  Great Northern Central Hospital, HoUoway
  Road, N.- Over 160 beds. Time of training,
  three years after two months' trial. Age ot
  admission, twenty-three to thirty-five years.
  Salary first year £8, second year £12, third
  year £18, fourth year £28. , ^ ^ , ...
  King's CoUege Hospital, Portugal Street,
  London.-Over 200 beds. Time of training
  tliree years ; age of admission, twenty-three to
  tliirty. Salary first year none second year
  £15, tliird year £20, increasing to £30 in the
  sixth year. Sisters' salaries rise to £50.
  
  The above are only a few of the many institu-
  tions offering excellent training to probationers.
  There are also Children's Hospitals in connection
  with which probationers may enter into trainmg
  much younger than in the case of the ordinr.ry
  hospitals. This is also the case with many of
  tho general and other hospitals in the provinces
  In Scotland, also, there are a number of good
  hospitals at which training may be had. At
  he^E^nburgh Royal Infirmary there are nea^ y
  
  900 beds. The training ^f ^'^^^^"! J^.
  
  years, and probationers must be fr^ twenty^
  
  three to thirty-five years of age. bisters
  
  Sng at the a'ge of fifty-five receive a pension
  
  At the Glasgow Royal ^^^'"^'^ '^;ilZ\7ai
  500 beds ; the training extends over three years
  after the preliminary course. Candidates n^ust
  be between twenty-one and thirty Y^^- "//f;;
  At the Stobhill Hospital, Glasgow ^^^h^^^.J^^
  nearly 2000 beds. Course of training, three
  years Age limit, twenty-two to thirty-two.
  There are many considerations by which the
  
  
  MEDICINE AND NUKSING
  
  
  would-be probationer should be guided in her
  choice of a hospital. For instance, if she wishes
  to speciaUse in the nursing of any particular
  disease she must train at a place devoted to
  the treatment of the disease before or after
  taking a course of general training. Niorsing
  of infectious diseases must be learned at one of
  the Fever Hospitals. At the Greenwich Hospital
  probationers may specialise in foreign diseases.
  Other hospitals devote special attention to
  midwifery, whilst Children's Hospitals are best
  for the training of those who wish to specialise
  in children's illnesses.
  
  Poor Law Infirmaries.- There are now very
  good posts to be obtained as nurses in the Poor
  Law Infirmaries. Thorough training may be had
  at the large infirmaries in London and the larger
  provincial towns, which will fit a nurse not only
  for tliis special work but for any other branch
  of nursing. The age limit for admission of
  probationers is usually twenty-one to tliirty-
  two years. As in general hospitals, an agreement
  of service for from three to four years must
  be signed if the probationer has satisfactorily
  executed her duties during her two or three
  months' trial. Pensions under the Poor Law
  Superannuation Act are granted in several cases.
  Army and Navy.- A nurse who has completed
  her full course of training at a recognised
  hospital is eligible for an appointment in either
  the miHtary or the naval nursing services.
  Candidates for a nursing appointment in Queen
  Alexandra's Imperial MiUtary Nursing Service
  must be nurses possessing certificates of not less
  than three years' training and service in medical
  and sm-gical nursing in a civil hospital havin<^
  not less than 100 beds. They must be between
  twenty-five and thirty-five years of age, of
  British parentage, or naturalised British subjects.
  The matron-in-chief wiU be required to satisfy
  the Nursing Board that, as regards education,
  character, and social status, the candidate is a
  ht person to be admitted to Queen Alexandra's
  Imperial IMilitary Nursing Service. The candi-
  date will bo required to fill in the form of
  appUcation wliich will be forwarded to her,
  and to produce her certificate of registration of
  birth ; or, if this is not obtainable, a declaration
  made before a magistrate by c-ne of her parents
  or former guardians, giving the date 'of her
  birth, certificates of training (in the original),
  medical certificate, and dental certificate.
  
  Good powers of organisation and administra-
  tion are called for on the part of the army
  nurse. Tlie system of organisation and the
  regulations are quite different from those in
  lorce at an ordinary hospital.
  
  AU army nurses must give a period of service
  abroad, tliis period varj-ing from three to five
  years, according to the climatic conditions.
  Women who wish to be rrmy nurses should
  apply to the matron -in -chief, Q.A I M N S
  Wai Office, Whitehall, S.W. ' ' "'
  
  
  643
  
  
  I The rates of pay of Queen Alexandra's Imperial
  
  Nursing Service are as follows :
  
  Staff Nurse.- MO per annum, rising by annual
  increments of £2, 10s. to £45.
  
  Sister.- £50, rising by annual increments of
  £5 to £65.
  
  Matron.- £75, rising by annual increments of
  £.10 to £150.
  
  Principal Matron.- £175, rising by annual
  increments of £10 to £205.
  
  Matron-in-Ckief.- £305, rising by annual in-
  crements of £15 to £350.
  
  Allowances are also made in respect of board,
  washing, uniform, lodging.
  
  The allowances made in respect of board,
  washing, uniform, lodging (when quarters are
  not provided), and fuel and light are as
  follows : -
  
  Board and Washing Allowance. - £39 per
  annum at home and £54, 12s. abroad for all
  members.
  
  Lodging Allowance.- £il. Is. 3d. for staff
  nurses, sisters and matrons ; £54, 15s. for prin-
  cipal matrons ; and £73 for matron-in-chief
  
  Fuel and Light.- £11, 3s. for staff nurees
  sisters and matrons ; £16, 4s. 3d. for principal
  matron ; and £22, 5s. lOd., for matron-in-cliief.
  An allowance for uniform of £8 per annum at
  home and £9 per annum abroad is made to all
  members excepting the matron -in -chief. An
  outfit allowance of £8, 8s. is made when pro-
  ceeding on active service. Where the necessary
  estabUshment of servants is not provided, a
  servant allowance is also made.
  
  Charge pay is granted to a matron or sister
  at the rate of £30 per annum when in charge of
  300 beds or over, £25 per annum when in charge
  of 200 to 299 beds, £15 per annum when in
  chai-ge of 100 to 199 beds.
  
  Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing
  Service Reserve.- Posts may also be obtained
  in Queen Alexandra's Imperial IMilitary Nursing
  Service Reserve, which has been organised for
  the purpose of keeping a reserve of nurses for
  the Imperial IMilitary Nursing Ser\-ice in case
  of war. Candidates must be certificated nurses
  between twenty-six and forty -five years of age,
  having trained for not less than three years "^in
  a hospital. They receive the small retaining
  fee of £2 per annum, and must be prepared when
  called upon to enter service either at home or
  abroad, and when on active service work under
  the same conditions that govern the Military
  Nursing Ser\ice.
  
  Territorial Force Nursing Service.- Certified
  nm-ses may also become enrolled as members
  of the Territorial Force Nursing Ser^^ce, pro-
  vided that if engaged in a hospital they obtain
  the consent of the matron. Candidates must
  not be under twenty -three years of age. Un-
  hke the Army Reserve Nurses, they will not be
  called upon to serve abroad, but will be required
  to serve in the territorial hospitals in the event
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  644
  
  of the calling out of the Torritorial Force. Tlie
  commencing rate of pay upon mobiUsation
  would bo £40 per annum for a nurse, £50 for a
  sister, and £75 for a matron. Allowances are
  made for board, lodging, washing, Hght, and
  uniform.
  
  Queen Alexandra's Royal Naval Nursing Service.
  
  Candidates for appointment as nursing sisters
  
  must produce certificates of training for at least
  three years at a large cival hospital in the United
  Kingdom, in which adult male patients are
  recetved for medical and surgical treatment,
  such hospital being also provided with a matron
  and staff of nursing sisters. Candidates must
  be of British parentage or natiu-aUsed British
  subjects. The limits of age for appointment
  are not under twenty-five and not over thirty-
  five. .
  
  Head sisters will, as a rule, be appomted by
  selection from the list of nursing sisters. All
  nursing sisters will be required to undergo twelve
  months' probation before they are confirmed in
  their appointments. Head sisters and nursing
  sisters are eligible for pension.
  
  The salaries and allowances will be as follows: -
  Head Sisters.- At Haslar, Plj-roouth and
  Chatham, £125 to £160 by annual increments
  of £5. At JIalta, Gibraltar and Hong Kong,
  none borne, but an allowance of £10 a year
  will be made to the sister acting as head sister
  for the time being.
  
  Nursing Sisters.- £^1, 10s to £50, by armual
  increments of £2, 10s. Each head sister and
  nursing sister will be allowed in addition, in lieu
  of board, &c., at home from 15s. to 19s. a week,
  and abroad from 21s. to 35s. a week.
  
  Furnished apartments, fuel and lights will be
  provided for the staff.
  
  Each head sister and nursing sister will be
  pro\'ided with uniform.
  
  A head sister may bo granted leave for forty-
  two days in the year, and a nursing sister for
  thirty-five days.
  
  Those who wish to become nurses in the Naval
  Service should write for full information to the
  Director-General, Medical Department of the
  Navy, Admiralty, 18 Victoria Street, S.W.
  
  Mental Nursing. - For mental nursing very
  special qualifications of character are necessary.
  She whose vocation it is to " minister to the
  mind diseased " must be able to control her
  temper upon all occasions, however sorely it
  may be tried ; she must be a good disciplinarian,
  firm yet gentle, cheerful and svmpathetic. By
  the brightness of her own disposition she should
  endeavour to dispel as far as possible the gloom
  that settles over many of the clouded minds
  with which in the course of her work she must
  daily come into contact. No small measure
  of responsibility falls to the share of the mental
  nurse, and she'^must have sufficient presence of
  mind to be able to successfully cope with any
  emergency that may arise. In addition she
  
  
  must have a good sound constitution and a fair
  amount of physical strength.
  
  The training of a mental nurse extends gener-
  ally over three years. As a rule three months'
  preliminary trial is exacted. Examinations are
  held at the end of the training period. Where
  a mental nurse has already undergone training
  in a general hospital, she Avill not bo required
  to undergo the full three years' training, and
  qualified nurses are often admitted at once as
  sisters in the mental hospitals. The age limit
  varies with the different institutions. Training
  is not to be had at all the asyhuns, although the
  system described is almost universally adopted.
  Before applying for admission, therefore, the
  would-be mental nurse should be careful to
  select an institution at which the full terna of
  training, concluding with the necessary examina-
  tions, may be had.
  
  The rate of pajTnent of probationers is from
  £17 to £18 for the first year, increasing to £28 to
  £30. Pensions are granted in most cases.
  
  MIDWIFERY
  
  This branch of nursing presents openings for
  many women, and has this advantage that the
  training can be taken up later in Mfe than in the
  case with the training of the ordinary nrn'se
  probationer. Midwifery therefore constitutes a
  good opening for women of middle age who are
  debarred from entering a hospital in the ordinary
  way on account of the age hmit. Amongst the
  poorer classes midwives attend cases of child-
  birth independently of the doctor. Midwives
  employed among the higher classes take mater-
  nity cases as " monthly nurses " under the
  superintendence of a medical man.
  
  It is not advisable for a girl to take up mid-
  wifery too young. Twenty-five is a good ac^
  at which to enter for the examination, and no
  student under the age of twenty -one it accepted
  for registration. AH the qualities so necessary
  for a nurse are even more necessary for the
  midwife. Her work is highly responsible. It
  will bo her lot to act in many emergencies, there-
  fore she must have plenty of nerve and presence
  of mind. Good health is also essential, as the
  work is apt to be most arduous, often entailing
  long night vigils, when but little sleep can be
  taken. .
  
  Training. - The proper training of midwives
  has become compulsory since the passing of the
  Midwives Act, which came into force in April
  1910. Much preventable mortality had occurred
  in former times owing to the ignorance of the
  women who were deemed competent to take
  charge of maternity cases. Happily this state
  of things has how been altered, and the com-
  pulsory training and registration of those who
  take up the work of midwifery has conferred
  an inappreciable boon upon the community at
  large. The training extends for from three to
  
  
  MEDICINE AND NURSING
  
  
  six months, and the cost seldom averages more
  than from £10 to £28 or £30. The regulations
  for training are di'awn up by the Central Mid-
  wives Board, Caxton House, Westminster,
  London, S.W., from whom all particulars may
  be obtained. It is better, as a rule, to give six
  months to the training. Actual attendance at a
  number of lying-in cases is necessary. The
  training may be taken at a lying-in hospital or
  traimng institution recognised by the Board, or
  from a certificated midwife. Examinations are
  held by the Central Midwives Board every few
  montlis at London and some of the provincial
  centres. There are a number of training
  schools for midwives at which training mav
  be had. ^ ^
  
  The following are some of the lying-in hosnitals
  at which pupils are taken for midwifery and
  monthly nursing : -
  
  City of London Lying-in Hospital, City Koad,
  ii..C. The course for midwives is four months,
  and for monthly nurses two months. The fee
  for midwifery training (including board) for
  those who wish to become registered midwives
  IS £29, 8s.
  
  Clapliam Maternity Hospital (36 beds). Fees
  eleven guineas for three months' traimng, and
  less for trained nurses.
  
  General Lying-in Hospital, Lambeth, S.E.
  i^ees, twenty-five guineas for a three months'
  course.
  
  Queen Charlotte's Lying-in Hospital, Jlaryb-
  bone Road, KW. Fees, £35 for five montlis'
  traimng. For monthly nurses the fees are £24
  for sixteen weeks.
  
  Edinburgh Royal Maternity Hospital, Edin-
  burgh. A tliree months' course for the monthly
  nursing certificate may be had for £13, 13s. (in-
  cluding board, &c.). For the midwifery certi-
  ficate there is a six months' course at a fee
  of about £22, and a shorter course for trained
  nurses for fifteen guineas.
  
  Glasgow Maternity and Women's Hospital.-
  Courses of throe, four, or six months may be
  taken. Fees, £13, 13s., £15, 15s., and £21
  
  National Lying-in Hospital, Dublin.- Training
  SIX months. Fees, £18, 18s. There is a shorter
  course for certificated nurses.
  
  At the Midwives' Institute. 12 Buckingham
  Street, Strand, London, W.C, classes are hold
  to prepare pupils for the examinations. There
  are certain societies which offer free training or
  traimng at reduced terms for those who wish to
  work amongst the poor. Such societies are the
  Rural Midwives' Association, the Midwives'
  Institute, 12 Buckingham Street, Strand, and
  the Association for Promoting the Training and
  Supply of Jlidwives.
  
  Prospects. - ^Jlidwives practising in rural dis-
  tricts independently of a doctor receive from
  5s. to 20s. for each case. Good salaried appoint-
  ments may also be had under the Poor Law and
  m connection with many of the district nursing
  
  
  645
  
  associations. The midwife working under the
  Queen Victoria Jubilee Nurses' Association will
  receive a salary of from £70 to £100 a year.
  There are also good openings as teachers of mid-
  wifery m several training schools for midx^-ives
  hospitals and institutions. The woman who
  wishes to practise as a monthly nurse amongst
  the middle and liigher classes must have a good
  connection amongst medical men. Salaries are
  very good, ranging in most cases from £8, 8s. for
  the month, and the nurse is often asked to re-
  main m attendance on a case longer than this
  unless, of course, she has another case to attend.
  If she is asked to take up her residence in the
  house of her patient before she is actually re-
  qmred, it is usual to give her half fees.
  
  Tlie Jlid^-ives Act is also responsible for
  another appointment for wliich trained mid-
  wives are eligible, i.e. Inspectors of Midwives
  under local authorities. The salaries of midwife
  inspectors are good, ranging from £100 to £300.
  
  PRIVATE NURSING
  
  Private nursing may be undertaken either
  m connection with a private nursing institution
  or hospital, in co-operation with other nurses,
  or by a nurse alone.
  
  In institution work the nm-se joins the insti-
  tution for a cf>rtain period, and she is sent out
  to attend private cases by the superintendent or
  matron, who receives the fees for her services
  granting her a yearly salary of about £30. In
  private nursing in connection with a hospital,
  the nurse is retained on the staff of the hospital
  being sent out to attend private cases. Her
  board, lodging, and uniform are pro\-ided, in
  addition to salary. They are not always pro-
  vided m the case of a private nursing home,
  bhe may also join a Nurses' Co-operation, in which
  case she wiU be able to draw her own earnings,
  less a percentage of 7* per cent, to be paid to the
  superintendent. It requires a great amount cf
  energy and hard work to succeed as a private
  nm-se - apart from any nursing institution. A
  niu-se must have a very good connection amongst
  medical men with large practices.
  
  Although tliis work is remunerative there are
  several disadvantages to be faced when nursing
  IS undertaken by a woman single-handed. Tliere
  may, for instance, be seasons wlien little or no
  mu-sing is to be had, followed by a period of
  exceptional acti\dty. The nurse mil have to
  fall back upon her savings (if she have any)
  during the fii-st period, and, however willing and
  energetic she may be, she will be unable to attend
  every case for which her ser\-ices mav be sought
  in the second period. The nm-sing problem is,
  therefore, apart from cases of regular patients
  amongst chronic invalids, a very difficult one to
  tackle alone, and for tliis reason it is always
  better in the long run to join a good nvirsing
  home or Nurses' Co-operation.
  
  
  THE W03>IAN'S BOOK
  
  
  646
  
  District Nursing.- Perhaps tliis constitutes one
  of the most laudable branches of the nursing
  profession, as the district nurse undertakes the
  nursing of the poor in their own homes. The
  best work is obtainable in connection with the
  societies founded for the organisation of district
  nursing, cliief amongst wliich is the Queen
  Victoria JubUee Institute for Nurses, 58 Victoria
  Street, London, S.W. There is also a branch in
  Edinburgh at 29 Castle Terrace. Three years
  training in a general hospital is necessary, with
  sis montlis' extra training in district ^ork.
  After tliis an examination must be passed, and
  the successful candidate is appointed at a com-
  mencing salary of £70 a year, or £30 a year with
  board and lodging and uniform, in towns where
  there are several nurses working and a house is
  pro\-ided for them. In these circumstances the
  nurses are under the direction of a superintendent,
  who has a higher salary than the ordinary nurses.
  There are many other district nursing societies,
  including the Ranyard Nurses (see also under
  London Biblewomen and Nurses' Mission) and
  those of the Church Army. Salaries vary
  according to the different associations.
  
  Village Nurses.- Tliis may be called a branch
  of district nursing, as it also comprises the nursing
  of the poor in their own homes. Village nurses
  are employed in the more remote %-iUage dis-
  tricts. Only a short course of training in general
  nursing and midwifery is necessary.
  
  Educated women would do well to go m for
  " district " in preference to " \-illage " nursing, as
  the ranks of the village nurses are largely filled
  by women of the cottage class who have taken
  a course of training and work in connection with
  an institution, such as the Ockley Nursing
  Association, which has been organised for the
  nursing of the poor in their own homes by
  members of their own class.
  
  Massage and Electricity.- Women may spccial-
  iso with advantage in this branch of nursing.
  
  
  To married women or widows, or those who
  through some reason are debarred from com-
  pleting a full course of hospital training, it should
  especially appeal as a means of livelihood, as
  the cost of training is small, averaging from
  £10, 10s. and upwards, the course usually extend-
  ing over three months.
  
  Those who wish to take up massage must have
  that special aptitude for the work which char-
  acterises the successful masseuse. They must
  also possess good health, as the constant practice
  of massage means a certain tax upon the strength.
  The most successful masseuses are mostly
  those who have trained as nurses and specialised
  in massage at the completion of their training.
  In any case a good knowledge of nursing is a
  great help. I^Iassage may be learned at one of
  the many physical training colleges, from medical
  men, or from trained masseuses. Much valuable
  experience may be gained in a hospital for
  paralysis and nervous diseases where massage
  and electric treatment are largely practised.
  
  Examinations in massage are held and certifi-
  cates awarded to successful candidates by the
  Incorporated Society of Trained Masseuses,
  12 Buckingham Street, Strand, London, from
  whom all particulars may be received.
  
  The masseuse who sets up in practice for her-
  self will need to have a good comiection amongst
  medical men, for nowadays few people wiJ
  employ a masseuse who has not been recom-
  mended by their doctor. (For Face Massage,
  
  see p. 450.) • u *.>
  
  Nurses in the Colonies.- Those who wish to
  obtain work as nurses in the colonies should
  apply to the Secretary-, Colonial Nursing Associa-
  tion, Imperial Institute, London, S.W., tor a
  form of application. There are good prospects
  in the colonies for trained nurses who have also
  taken the midwifery certificate. Salaries range
  in most cases from £60 per annum, incluomg
  board and lodging.
  
  
  WOMEN IN HORTICULTURE AND IN AGRICULTURE
  
  Not? the least striking f eatiire of the general progress made by women in employments which were at
  one time deemed man's sole prerogative is to be seen in the realms of horticulture and agriculture.
  Women now take up with success all branches of farming and gardening. Special colleges are
  devoted to the training of women in these outdoor pursuits, and it is a significant fact that the
  horticultural college at Swanley, which was first accessible to both men and women students, now
  opens its doors to women only.
  
  The vvoman who is fond of an outdoor life need not now be debarred from following the bent
  of her inchnation by pursuing a remunerative and congenial outdoor occupation. Everything is
  at hand to facilitate her progress. Training is within easy reach. Old-time tradition has been set at
  naught by the success of many women pioneers, and the reaction which has set in during the last
  few years in favour of healthy outdoor sports and the benefits of an athletic training for women and
  girls in general, has resulted in an universal recognition of the fact that women may engage in most
  horticultural and agricultural pursuits without incurring that stigma of " unwomanliness " so often
  hurled in former times at the unfortunate woman who had an idea beyond her needlework, her
  cooking, and the management of her household.
  
  
  LADY GARDENERS
  
  Amongst the many outdoor occupations avail-
  able to the woman worker, that of gardening
  must take a prominent place. There is at
  present a great demand for really capable
  gardeners and garden designers, a demand which
  is no doubt due to the general revival of the art
  of gardening, or rather should it be said of " art
  in gardening," which has taken place aU over
  the country within recent years. Public gardens
  are planned and laid out with care and taste,
  large private gardens are designed with the
  utmost attention to beauty and artistic arrange-
  ment ; even the little suburban garden is con-
  spicuous by its perfectly kept piece of green
  lawn and the tasteful arrangement of the borders
  and shrubberies. Schools of gardening are being
  opened in aU parts of the couiitry for training
  gardeners, and, what is most important from
  the point of view of the voman worker, the
  demand for good women gardeners in particular
  is steadily growing, difficulty being found to
  fill a number of the posts available.
  
  Needless to say, a woman must be well
  trained if she wishes to succeed as a gardener.
  Gardening is not to be learned in a year. For
  ordinary purposes at least two years' training in
  a good gardening college should be taken, and
  this should be followed up by a year's practi-
  cal experience as assistant to a head gardener
  or market gardener. If possible, three years
  should be given to the training. By the
  third year a woman should have formed some
  "lefinite idea as to the particular branch of
  
  
  gardening she wishes to take up, so that during
  the last year of training her studj^ can be cen-
  tralised upon the particular branch selected.
  
  A well-trained woman may succeed either
  as a garden designer, an expert adviser upoa
  gardening, a head gardener, a jobbing gardener,
  a market gardener, or a practical teacher of
  gardening. She must, of course, be guided in
  her selection according to her individual circum-
  stances.
  
  Schools of Horticulture. - There are many good
  horticultural colleges and schools all over the
  country at which women may be trained £is
  gardeners. At Swanley Horticultural College,
  Kent, training may be had in everj^ branch of
  horticulture. The college, which was formerly
  open to both men and women, is now restricted
  to women students only. Tlie full course ex-
  tends over tliree yeajs, and instruction in the
  practical as well as in the scientific side of garden-
  ing is given. The fees, including board and lodg-
  ing, are from £80 a year. Students are prepart d
  for the examinations of the Royal Horticultural
  Society and of the Board of Education.
  
  At Studley Castle, Warwickshire, a complete
  training may be had in every branch of horti-
  culture and agriculture. Tlie college is situated
  about 2J miles from Studley station, Midland
  Railway, on a branch line between Birmingham
  and Evesham. It is the aim of this institution
  (1) To provide a training for girls in practical
  market gardening, including buj'ing, growing, .
  packing, and selling, so that they may be able
  to conduct a business of their own on sound
  financial lines.
  
  
  647
  
  
  648
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  (2) To train women who will bo landowners
  to take a practical and intelligent interest in
  their estate and gardens.
  
  (3) To train women to tako posts both as
  forewomen and head gardeners.
  
  Instruction is given in every branch of
  practical gardening, inclucUng French gardemng,
  dairy work, poultry and bee-keeping, fruit
  bottling and preserving, cai-pentering, and a
  special course is also given in domestic economy.
  
  Pupils are prepared for the Royal Horti-
  <:ultural Society's examinations, the National
  Dairy Diploma, and the examinations of the
  British Dairy Farmers' Association.
  
  Pees. - Full training with board and residence
  at the college : -
  
  
  Horticulture.
  Dairy Work and
  Poultry.
  Domestic Economy.
  
  
  1 Cubicle, £60 to £S0 a year.
  I Study Bedroom, £100, £120,
  j and £150 a year.
  
  
  Bee-keeping is optional and may be combined with
  either of the above courses, at an additional charge of
  £5, 5s. a year.
  
  I Cubicle from £20
  
  [ Study Bedroom, £30 to £40
  
  f Cubicle from £12
  
  I Study Bedroom, £18 to £24
  
  
  Short Courses of Ten Weeks i ,
  
  
  Short Courses of Six Weeks/ ,
  
  
  Fruit Bottling and Preserving :-
  
  Two weeks' Course, including Board and
  
  Lodgings £5 5 0
  
  To Resident Students 0 10 6
  
  Carpentering :-
  
  £3, 3s. a year or £1, 10s. a term.
  
  Use of Microscopes 5s. a year.
  
  " Gardening Tools 5s. a year.
  
  " Carpentering Tools . . . • 5s. a year.
  
  Laundry (exclusive of Silk and Muslin Blouses and Skirts),
  £2, 23. a term.
  
  Glynde School of Gardening. - A thorough
  training in practical gardening may be had at
  the Hon. Frances Wolsey's School for Lady
  Gswdeners at Glynde, near Lowes, Sussex. For
  the woman who means to take up gardening
  as a Uvolihood no bettor or more complete
  training could bo desired than that to be had
  at this school, which possesses the additional
  advantage of a minimum of expense in fees.
  These amount to £10 per annum for practical
  instruction, with £2 extra for attendance at
  lectures. Elementary science courses and pre-
  paration for the Royal Horticultural Examina-
  tion may be arranged for slightly higher expenses.
  Lodgings conveniently near the Gardens, whore
  several studonts board together, can be secured
  at 1 7s. a week for board and residence.
  
  The chief characteristic of the school is the
  feature made of practical teaching. It is
  worked on the basis of a private garden, and not
  a school. Attention is given to the routine of
  garden work, including the care of grans, paths,
  and beds; mowing, sweeping, and general
  
  
  tidiness ; digging, trenching, and other ground
  operations ; raising plants from seeds and
  cuttings, their subsequent treatment ; the
  cultm-e of herbaceous alpine plants and roses,
  forcing violets, Dutch bulbs, &c. ; watering,
  ventilation, and other points of glass-house
  management. Students are also taught fruit-
  growing and how to pack flowers and vegetables
  for market. Only a small number of students
  are taken, and these are required to furnish the
  highest references before obtaining admission to
  the school.
  
  Royal Botanic Society's School. - At the
  Royal Botanic Society's School of Gardening,
  Botanic Gardens, Regent's Park, instruction is
  given in every branch of gaxden work. Tlie
  cotirse, which lasts three years, includes both
  the practical and the scientific side of horticul-
  ture. The Royal Botanical Society's diploma
  is awarded to students who successfully pass
  their examination. The course extends over
  three years. The fees for the first year are
  £20 ; for the second year £15 ; and for the third
  year £10.
  
  Edinburgh School of Gardening, Corstoi-phine,
  Edinburgh. - At this school, which is situated
  about two miles from Edinburgh, instruction is
  given in all the branches of practical and theo-
  retical gardening. Students are prepared for
  the Royal Horticultvxral Society's Examination.
  Students are non-resident. They can, however,
  obtain rooms in the village at very moderate
  charges, or go backwards and forwards from
  Edinburgh every day. The fees arc £15 a year.
  Courses in horticulture, botany, chemistry
  are 5s. extra per term. Students take part in
  every detail of practical work - hoeing, digging,
  and preparing the ground, planting out, pruning,
  potting, care of glass houses, &c., &c. The
  course extends over two years.
  
  The Head Gardener.- At a meeting on the
  subject of " Women in Horticulture) " held in
  connection with the " Women's Congress " at
  the Japanese Exhibition, Shepheru's Bush, i.i
  July 1910, Miss Jessie Smith, a well-known
  authority upon horticulture, laid stress upon
  the fact that to succeed in gardening a woman
  nmst rise above the level of the labouring
  gardener. There is not a living to be made in
  mere manual gardening only. A woman will
  never be able to earn enough by manual gardening
  to keep herself in any comfort. Her only chance
  is to be a head gardener with working men under
  her, or to specialise in one of the other branches
  already enumerated. To achieve this end a
  power of organisation and initiative must form
  part of her qualifications, and her training must
  bo a thoroughly practical one. When she has
  completed her college training she should have
  at least a year's practical experience, even if
  she has to pay fees to a head gardener or a
  market gardener for the privilege of obtaining
  tliis experience by practical work under his or
  
  
  WOMEN IN HORTICULTURE AND IN AGRICULTURE
  
  
  649
  
  
  her direction, or if she has to make an arrange-
  ment to give hor work " on mutual terms."
  
  The head gardener mu^ possess the power
  of controlling the men (or women) under her,
  making them work well and willingly for her.
  Above all, she must be familiar with every
  branch of the work, and know how it is to be
  done, before she can take it upon herself to direct
  others. The importance of a period of practical
  work after completing her college training
  cannot be too gi'eatly emphasised. Six months
  or more spent in travelhng in order to study the
  gardening methods of other countries will also
  be found of the utmost value. The commencing
  salary of a head gardener (resident) averages
  £30 a 5'ear, increasing to £100. The head
  gardener on a large estate is usually given a
  cottage, rent free, and a right to a portion of
  the garden jjroduce.
  
  Garden Designing or Landscape Gardening. -
  Garden designing, or, as it is sometimes called,
  " landscape gardening," may be said to be one
  of the highest branches of the art of gardening.
  It is a branch, however, which requires very
  thorough training and an amount of patience,
  perseverance, and hard work on the part of
  the woman who wishes to qualify as a garden
  designer. She must be prepared also for her
  training to be extended over a longer period than
  that necessary for other branches of gardening.
  To thoroughly quaUfy herself she should first
  take a course of at least two years at a good
  horticultural col^^ge, during which time she
  should acquire a good knowledge of land survey-
  ing. After this course she should devote at least
  two years to the study of architectural design and
  building construction. It must be remembered
  that the garden designer has to deal with vast
  stretches of ground, not with miniature little
  plots. Large public gardens, and the gardens
  belonging to the large private lando'mier, have
  all to be designed and planned in keeping with
  a certain architectural system ; the grounds of
  a house have to be in keeping with the archi-
  tecture of the house they surround. Summer
  houses and other structures have to bo built.
  More than a passing knowledge of ai'cliitecture
  is therefore of considerable importance. Six
  montlis of a year spent in travelling upon the
  Continent, studying the various styles of gardens
  in the different countries, will form a beneficial
  finish to the training of the garden designer.
  
  Prospects. - No woman should attempt to go
  in for garden designing, or, as it is often called,
  " landscape gardening," unless she has a certain
  amount of capital to tide her over the inevitable
  period of waiting involved before hor work
  becomes known. Women landscape gardeners
  are employed by many of the municipal autho-
  rities, and once a woman has obtained a post
  of the kind she .rill probably keep it, and for
  this reason there are not many openings in this
  direction. Wlien starting on her own account
  
  
  a woman should advertise for work in the
  gardening and other papers. Sometimes it will
  be a long time before her first order comes, but
  when it does come it will be in most cases the
  forerunner of others.
  
  It is, of course, much easier for a woman with
  a large social connection and influential friends
  to get on in tliis direction ; apart from the
  chances of work from municipal authorities,
  which are few, the unknown woman with few
  friends will find it a very hard struggle. No
  woman similarly situated should begin -nith
  landscape gardening alone. She should start
  nurseries, or if she have sufficient capital, a
  market garden, and gradually develop the
  garden designing in connection with her other
  business. WTien once a garden designer has
  established a connection the work is remunera-
  tive. Fees from £1 to 4 or 5 guineas are given
  at consultation, and a lump sum when the work
  has been carried out, varying ^  extent of the garden scheme. Garden designing
  brings bigger fees than any other branch of
  gardening, and where the work is regular a
  good income may be made. Work of the kind
  is apt to be uncertain, however, excepting in
  the case of municipal and other large appoint-
  ments, and some initial capital is absolutely
  necessary. A woman's prospects will depend
  entirely upon her capabilities. The field of
  labour is Umited, but up to the present there
  has been very little competition, and therefore
  a clever woman should be able to make a good
  income if she is prepared to spend at least four
  or five years upon training.
  
  The training, if it extends over foiu* to five
  years, will be faii-ly costly. £80 to £100 a year
  represents the average charge for board, lodging,
  and training at the big horticultural colleges ;
  to this wiU have to be added fees for special
  architectural courses. Needless to say, a woman
  should not train as a garden designer unless
  she has that sense of the artistic and taste for
  art generally which must characterise tliis as
  well as any other form of designing.
  
  Miss Lorrie G Dunnington, of Belgra\-ia
  Cliambers, 72 Victoria Street, S.W., an expert
  garden designer, takes a limited number of pupils
  for training. It is essential that the pupils
  should have had a prc%-iou6 training in prac-
  tical horticulture. The course, wliich extends
  over tliree years, includes garden design,
  plan drawing, surveying, architectural design,
  building construction, and general office routine.
  The fees are £80 per annum, for no less than
  three years, or £100 for one year's training.
  Two years at a good horticultural college, and
  three years' training under an expert designer
  like Miss Dunnington, who can give the neces-
  sary instruction on surveying, architectm-al
  design, building construction, should constitute
  an admirable training for the woman garden
  designer.
  
  
  650
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  The Expert Adviser.- There are many people
  who cannot afford to employ a garden architect,
  but who are at the same time glad to have
  expert ad\-ice on various problems which may
  crop up in regard to their garden- where to
  plant new shubberies, plan out artistic borders,
  lay down a now lawn, make provision for a
  tennis court, and how to make certain necessary
  alterations without interfering with the general
  garden scheme. In these circiunstances they
  are glad to be able to consult an expert, and
  a woman who establishes a good connection
  as such will find the employment a lucrative
  one. She must be able both to advise on matters
  upon which she is consulted, and, if her advice is
  adopted, to see that the work is properly carried
  out in accordance with her ideas. A good
  connection socially is an advantage for women
  who %^-ish to make a livelihood in this way.
  
  Jobbing Gardening. - This is the branch of the
  gajdoning profession which pro\'ides most scope
  for the good all round woman worker whatever
  her social status. It is, in fact, the branch
  which is most accessible to all. It is particularly
  suitable for the girl or woman whose circum-
  stances require that she should live at home, going
  out by the day to do the work. The best scope
  for the jobbing gardener is to be found in the
  suburbs in the neighbourhood of large towns.
  She should begin by sending carefully worded
  personal letters to the owners of houses with
  gardens, offering her services ; also she should
  insert an advertisement in the local paper. She
  can begin by herself charging 5s. a day for her
  work. As her clientele increases she will be
  able to employ a boy for the rougher work,
  and she can gradually raise her charges to
  7s. 6d. and then 10s. 6d. a day. As her work
  increases she will require to employ men or
  women gardeners; the latter coiild in many
  ceises be pupils, sending them to different houses
  under her supervision when her employers
  become too numerous for her to give each one
  her personal attendance every day. Quite a
  reasonable income may be made in this way.
  A good business woman and a good organiser
  will soon find that she has as much work as she
  can do with. She will be entrusted with the
  buying of plants on her employer's behalf, and
  in many cases will bo able to start a small nursery
  garden in connection with the business. On
  the whole jobbing gardening presents the most
  satisfactory branch of gardening work open
  to the average woman, and it has this advan-
  tage that the initial outlay upon the business is
  small, and work may soon bo had by those who
  set about getting it in the right way. A girl
  will require at least two years' training at a good
  gardening school and a further year's practical
  experience with a head gardener before she
  should undertake work of this kind. It is work
  in the course of which she will be constantly
  learning something new, and aa her connection
  
  
  grows it will be work which will require organ-
  ising power before everytlung else, and will
  give her experience which will stand her in
  good stead in any other higher branch of garden-
  ing which she may afterwards undertake. The
  outlay on training will not be great. Her
  training is best taken at gardening schools like
  Glynde College, Sussex, where a feature is made
  of practical work, and the fees do not amount
  to more than £10 in the year.
  
  Market Gardening. - Unless a woman has
  capital it will be practically useless for her to
  start as a market gardener, as this is a business
  which requires a large amount of initial out-
  lay before any returns can be expected. The
  capital to be expended should be supplemented
  also by a small income upon which a woman
  can live until her business gets beyond the
  " making expenses stage." She should have
  enough to keep herself for at least four years,
  or else it will be quite useless for her to hope to
  earn her hvelihood in this way. Only a woman
  who is prepared to work early and late, at all
  hours and in all weathers, with little inter-
  mission in the way of holidays, and who has
  had a thorough training at a good horticultural
  college and at least two years' experience of
  practical work under a market gardener, can
  hope to make market gardening a success. In
  addition to this she must have good business
  ability, a knowledge of the best markets for
  her goods, and an abundance of patience and
  perseverance, without which her enterprise must
  needs spell failure.
  
  An analysis of the initial outlay she will have
  to make will cause many a woman to think
  before she makes up her mind to embark upon
  this career. To begin with, land is dear. She
  will require at least two acres. Then she will
  require sheds for packing and potting ; also
  houses will have to be built and equipped with
  heating apparatus ; money will have to be
  expended upon stock. Anything from £800 to
  £1000 will represent the sum to be expended.
  
  The woman who has a small sum to invest
  and who possesses a thorough knowledge of her
  work, combined with business abiUty, will be able
  to make not a fortune, but quite a satisfactory
  income out of market gardening. She miist, of
  course, be guided by several important considera-
  tions in the selection of locality. Her market
  garden must be properly situated in a thriving
  locality close to a railway station to decrease
  costs and facilitate transit, and near a good
  market for her goods. None but a good business
  woman can hope to make market gardening pay
  and the woman who has not received a thorough
  training in gardening, and who does not possess
  good business ability, cannot hope to succeed,
  and she should give up any idea of entering
  upon a business which requires the utmost skiU
  and care in management before it can be brought
  to a profit-earning basis.
  
  
  WOMEN IN HORTICULTURE AND IN AGRICULTURE
  
  
  651
  
  
  French Gardening. - This is a branch of garden-
  ing which has come into prominence of late,
  though in England as yet the art is practically
  in its infancy. Once the system in this country
  is well developed, it promises to become the
  most paying form of market gardening, and a
  few women have already taken it up with
  success.
  
  It must be remembered, however, that if
  capital is necessary for the ordinary market
  gardening, it is doubly so for French gardening,
  wliich involves a much greater initial outlay
  upon glass, straw, matting, manure, &c., &c.
  
  Hard unceasing work will also be involved,
  and the cost of laboiir will have to be reckoned
  with. A woman wishing to start a business of
  the kind should begin in a very small way, and
  extend her business as opportunity offers. No
  more thaii a quarter of an acre of glass should
  be attempted in the first instance, and she will
  require the help of at least two men.
  
  The position of the garden is of the utmost
  importance. If the venture is to be a successful
  one, the commercial aspect of the case, such as
  proximity to favourable markets and to the
  railway station, must not be lost sight of. A
  good water-supply is all -essential, to say nothing
  of an abundance of manure.
  
  In conclusion let it be said that, apart from all
  question of capital, the woman who has not had
  a thorough training in this branch of horti-
  culture, and who has not sound business capa-
  bilities, shoxild not embark upon an enterprise
  of the kind.
  
  Training may be had at most of the horti-
  cultural colleges, a special feature being made
  of it at Studley Castle, Warwickshire, and at the
  Royal Botanic Society's School of Gardening,
  Regent's Park.
  
  Teachers of Gardening and Nature Study. - A
  rapidly growing field for the woman horticul-
  turist may be found in the realms of teaching.
  A great reaction has taken place in favoiir of the
  teaching of nature study in our schools. It has
  been realised that to make a child take an
  interest in the animal, bird, and plant Ufe
  around her, inculcating at the same time in the
  little mind a love of nature, nature study is
  of all forms of teaching the most suitable for the
  little ones, and the most likely to be productive
  of good results. With the reahsation of this
  fact has come a corresponding demand for
  teachers of gardening and of nature study,
  and it ib a demand which at present exceeds
  the supply. So great is the demand for nature
  study teaching that ordinary teachers now
  often find it necessary to take a course of
  instruction in nature study in order that they
  may impart at least the elements of it to their
  pupils. There is also a steady increasing
  demand in secondary schools for " Gardening
  Mistresses," who, in addition to practical outdoor
  work, are competent to impart a knowledge
  
  
  of the scientific side of gardening. The woman
  who has taken her fuU horticultural cotirso at
  one of the best horticultural colleges is most likely
  to obtain a post as teacher of geirdening and
  nature study, as when vacancies occur applica-
  tions for teachers to fill them are usually sent
  to the chief colleges. For school teachers who
  wish to extend their knowledge of nature study
  for the purpose of tuition, the Swanley Horti-
  cultural College, Kent, have instituted a special
  nature study course. The lessons are given out
  of doors in the months of July and August, and
  students are taken on occasions into the country
  so that they may study birds, pond life, insects,
  wild fiowers, trees and grasses in their different
  environment. The fee for a fortnight's course is
  £5, 5s., inclusive of tuition, bo£ird and lodging,
  and expenses of excursions.
  
  In addition to employing gardening and nature
  study teachers, several large schools are gi\'ing
  over their gardens to the care of women gardeners.
  For a resident woman head gardener in a school
  £30 or £35 a year is considered a good initial
  salary.
  
  FLORISTS
  
  A florist's business is one admirably suitable
  for women of taste and refinement, but at the
  same time it is by no means the simple under-
  taking usually imagined. It is essentially what
  is known as a " season " business ; that is to
  say, there is every year a period of very great
  activity, and during this time the florist has
  to toil from early in the morning until late at
  night ; there is no restricting the work to a
  set period of hours per day. No woman should
  embark upon this business, therefore, who is
  not prepared for hard and strenuous work. To
  make a successful florist a woman must not
  only possess the art of arranging flowers to the
  best advantage ; she must also be proficient in
  all the mechanical parts of the work. A thorough
  training is absolutely necessary, and this can
  be obtained in no better way than by practical
  work at a florist's, where all the details, such
  as wiring, making up, packing, can be learned.
  A thorough knowledge of bujdng, keeping
  accounts, drawing out estimates is essential, and
  business abihty is not the least attribute of a
  woman who wants to start for herself in this
  trade. She should be able to keep a keen eye
  upon costs, reducing them to a minimum,
  thereby increasing her profits. She must also
  show great discrimination in the choice of a
  locality for her business, seeing that there is no
  undue competition in her immediate neighbour-
  hood.
  
  As a general rule, a woman should only train
  to become a florist if she wishes to set up in
  business for herself. The earnings of florists'
  employees are uncertain, as often they are only
  employed during the busy season, and then their
  
  
  652
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  pay seldom averages more than 35s. to £2 a
  week.
  
  A florist's business can bo made to include
  many profitable side issues. For instance, a
  florist may undertake the care of the conserva-
  tories, window -boxes, and even the small gardens
  of the locality. For this, of course, a practical
  horticultural training is necessary in addition
  to the training in ordinary florist's work.
  
  Training. - Training may be had at the
  Women's London Gardening Association, 62
  Lower Sloane Street, S.W., where the instruction
  is practical in every way. The fees are £25
  for the full course. Many florists will take
  lady pupils upon payment of a satisfactory
  premium - £20 to £30 is a very usual sum.
  
  WOMEN AS FARMERS
  
  By K. M. Courtauld, Principal of Colne Engaine
  Farm, Earls Colne, Essex
  
  In writing about farming as an occupation
  for women, I am faced with a difficultj^ at the
  outset. I have myself been farming for over
  twenty-one years, and I have found the free,open-
  air life so enjoyable and the work so intensely
  interesting, each day and each season bringing
  an endless variety of occupations, that I should
  Uke to recommend the life to every woman
  who is fond of the country.
  
  But, on the other hand, I have known of so
  many failures ! Not only of women, but also of
  men who have taken small farms with high hopes
  which have been doomed to disappointment.
  I have seen debts and difficulties accumulating,
  the land deteriorating, the place getting more
  and more out at elbows, the tenant more and
  more depressed and embarrassed, and at last
  the struggle is given up and he leaves the farm
  thorouglily out of heart and having lost liis
  money.
  
  In the face of such examples I feel the responsi-
  bility of advising any woman to take up farming
  without serious consideration.
  
  It seems to me there are three essentials
  without which it is hopeless to think of farming
  successfully : -
  
  First. - A thorough practical knowledge and
  experience of the business.
  
  Second. - Sufficient capital.
  
  Third. - The capacity for hard and persevering
  work and country tastes.
  
  I believe that, given these qualifications, a
  woman is more fitted to take a large farm than
  a small one. I am not, of course, speaking of
  small holdings worked as market gardens,
  poultry or fruit farms, but of ordinaiy farming ;
  these are busine.sses in themselves. The only
  persons likely to make a small farm pay are men
  who have begun life as a^i cultural labourers,
  who have worked on the land since they left
  school. I know several such men who have
  got together a little money and taken a small
  
  
  farm. They work harder and longer hours than
  they did when they were working for wages,
  and they are probably no better off, if as well.
  Their standard of hving is that of the labourers
  in the district, but they like to feel that they
  are their own masters, and they struggle on,
  working ten or twelve hours a day in summer
  and as long as it is light in winter, living on
  twelve or foui-teen shillings a week. And if a
  stroke of bad luck comes to thorn, they have no
  reserve fund to draw upon ; so unless they take
  the hat round amongst their neighbours for
  help, they are reduced to great straits.
  
  Now this is not a Mfe I could recommend to
  any woman, or, indeed, to any man, who had
  not been used to field work from cliildhood.
  I can see no reason why a woman should not
  manage a large farm - where brains are more
  important than muscles, whore the actual manual
  laboiu- is done by farm hands, and where her
  province is to direct and overlook others, to
  plan out the cropping and working of the land,
  to see that the stock are properlj' cai'ed for, to
  buy and sell to the best advantage, in short,
  to do the work of a yeoman or gentleman farmer.
  In this she would find plenty of scope for all
  her energies. Much depends on attention to
  detailj on strict economy both of money and
  labom*.
  
  There is an old saying that " the foot of the
  master is the best fertilise)- for the land " -
  certainly the more personal supervision the
  master can give the greater will be the chances
  of success.
  
  I have said that one of the first essentials to
  success in farming is a thorough practical
  knowledge of the business, and I shall bo pro-
  bably asked how this is to be obtained. Now
  I am quite a believer in scientific fanning, but
  science will not take the place of practice,!
  experience, although it will bo most useful in
  supplementing it. I have heard of students
  who have learnt all about the manuring of roots
  and who could tell you the exact proportions of
  the various artificial manures which gave the
  best results, and yet who did not know a swede
  from a marigold. That sort of knowledge is
  useless. At least two years spent on a farm
  would be required to get an idea of the general
  routine of farm work. You want to learn by
  experience when a field has been properly
  ploughed, when it is in a fit condition to sow,
  and, if it is too rough or too foul, what to do
  to bring it round. You want to know what is
  amiss when a crop is not gi-owing as it should
  do ; is it suffering because the soil is poor or
  wants draining, or because the field has not
  been properly ploughed and harrowed before-
  hand, or has the corn been attacked by \Tireworm
  or some such pest ?
  
  You want to make yourself a judge of stock
  - go to market week after week, and as each
  animal comes into the ring, make a guess what
  
  
  WOMEN IN HORTICULTURE AND IN AGRICULTURE
  
  
  653
  
  
  it will fetch, and see how near you are to the
  price at which the auctioneer knocks it down.
  
  Go to the Corn Exchange and see the various
  samples offered for sale and hear what the buyer
  has to say. Notice how one sample is not
  clean, i.e. has weed seeds and inferior grains
  and rubbish mixed with the good corn ; another
  is slightly " clung " or damp ; another is too
  soft or a little fusty in smell ; or, in the case of
  barley, how it has been spoilt by the grains
  being cracked by bad thrashing.
  
  By all means attend classes on farming
  subjects, read books and agricultural papers.
  I think a course of veterinary instruction would
  be most valuable, and pick up as much informa-
  tion as you can, but do not leave out the practical
  work, which is the most important.
  
  If you can learn how to do the work yourself
  so much the better. If you can plough or milk
  yourseK, you are in a better position to find
  fault with your man if he does Ms work badly,
  in the same way that a lady who can cook is
  better able to tell her cook where she has made
  a mistake.
  
  It always appears to me that the girls who
  would be most likely to succeed as farmers,
  and for whom it would be easiest to obtain
  the necessary experience, are the daughters of
  farmers or squires, or landowners living on their
  own property. These girls are already used
  to a coiintry Ufe ; they must have picked up a
  good deal of knowledge of farming subjects, and
  they might even be able to start in a compara-
  tively small way wliile dtiU living at home under
  the guidance of their fathers or brothers.
  
  Perhaps I may say a few words as to how I
  started farming. I remember when I was still
  at school telling my father I would like to be
  a farmer, and he took the suggestion about as
  seriously as if I had said I sho\ald like to go
  into the army. However, some years later
  he had the farm where I am now living thrown
  upon his hands through the tenant leaving, and
  he engaged a neighbouring farmer whom we
  had all .known well for many years to act as his
  bailiff. As my father bad no time to give to
  farming, he agreed that I should go over to the
  farm frequentl}' and see how things were prosper-
  ing, and this I used to do two or three times a
  week for some years. This is how 1 first got
  an insight into the business of farming. Some
  time later when I was able to leave home he
  handed Ihe property over to me, rent free, and
  made me a present of the stock to make what
  I could of it, and I have been living there and
  farming the land ever since.
  
  For the first three or four years I still had
  some help from our old bailiff, who was managing
  other land for mj' father ; later on I engaged a
  working bailiff on my own account. I cannot
  say that I have made money out of farming,
  but I have found that it has provided me not
  only with congenial work and interest, but with
  
  
  many advantages. For instance, I have my
  house and garden rent free ; I get com and hay
  for my horses, milk, butter, eggs, poultry, fruit,
  and vegetables at cost price. Then there are
  excellent opportunities for sport : I have the
  shooting over the land and plenty of room for
  summering hunters. I have also done much to
  improve the property. Amongst other things
  I have planted a great deal of fruit which bids
  fair to be the most paying crop I grow.
  
  The question of capital is an important one.
  A very fair allowance is £10 per acre, and this
  should be allowed for the farm alone. No
  woman shoiild start farming unless she has
  enough to live on economically for a year or
  two, and that in addition to the amount in-
  vested in the farm, as there is nothing more
  disadvantageous to successful farming than
  being cramped for money. To be unable to
  engage extra labour when it is particularly
  needed, to be obliged to seU produce at a poor
  price because one cannot afford to hold it, is
  courting failure.
  
  I have said that one essential to success is
  a capacity for work and country tastes. I
  think many women who have lived a great
  part of their lives in town, and who think with
  delight of beautiful summer days spent in the
  country, imagine that they would enjoy life on
  a farm witliout reaUy grtisping what it means.
  Ail of us enjoy going out into the fields on a
  beautiful spring or summer morning, but it is
  a different thing to spend daj' after day working
  in sodden yards trjdng to make your stock as
  warm and comfortable as possible, or walking
  over the heavy fields with several pounds of
  clay on each boot, coming in wet through
  perhaps twice in one day. It is no use for a
  woman who does not like getting up early, who
  cannot stand the sun without a sunshade, and
  who will not wear thick boots, taking to farming ;
  and at the best one must be prepared for many
  reverses and discouragements. Depending as
  he does upon the weather, the farmer too often
  sees his most carefully laid plans brought to
  nought. If you cannot get on with the work
  you most want to do, you must look out for
  some other job. If the weather prevents your
  sowing one sort of crop, you must have patience
  and hope to get in something else later on.
  Tliere is no business that requires greater fore-
  sight, adaptability.and patient care than farming,
  and yet it often seems as if every outsider
  thinks he can teach the farmer his business, if
  you judge from the extraordinary suggestions
  and criticisms you sometimes read in the papers.
  One verj' amusing reference to women as farmers
  in England was made in the newspai>ers not
  long ago. Tlie writer had been speaking of
  Miss Binnie-Clark's farm in Canada, and goes
  on to say, " Women of education at any rate
  cannot compete with men agriculturalists in.
  England, because they cannot (according to
  
  
  654
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  convention) go and pinch fat botists at markets
  and bargain for them over pints of beer in
  smoky inn tap -rooms. But in Canada there is
  no necessity for them to do business in that
  way."
  
  Well, I can assure the writer that there is
  certainly no more necessity in England than in
  Canada. Wliether tliis was the way English
  farmers did their business fifty or sixty years
  ago I cannot say, but it would now be quite as
  true to say that the country gentleman of the
  present day dines at four o'clock and then sits
  and drinks port wine until he falls imder
  the table !
  
  Tlie idea that a woman cannot attend market
  or go to sales and buy on her own account is
  quite erroneous. I may say that I have done
  so for many years and have never met with
  anything but the greatest courtesy and con-
  sideration from my brother farmers, and if I
  have asked for help or advice it has never been
  refused me.
  
  Another objection that has been raised to
  women farming is that they will not be able to
  manage farm labourers. This also is quite
  untrue. You would probably find that the
  same woman who would make a good mistress
  to her indoor servants would bo equally able
  to manage farm men. Be careful to be abso-
  lutely fair and just to all alike ; never show
  favouritism. If you have to find fault speak
  out strongly, the more forcibly the better, but
  do not nag or worry about trifles. Agricultural
  labourers have some odd prejudices and super-
  stitions, and are generally reserved with strangers.
  Every one outside their own coimty is a " fvir-
  riner," and at first is looked at with a certain
  amount of suspicion, but after hving amongst
  them for a time you get to understand them.
  
  With regard to wages, hours of work, &c., it
  is best to follow the custom of the neighbourhood,
  as the men are apt to resent innovations, even
  when they appear to you to be to their advantage.
  In conclusion I should hke to advise any
  woman who intends to start farming to make
  up her mind beforehand exactly what branch
  she would prefer. Perhaps the most paying at
  the present time is a dairy farm having a good
  milk round ; it is more profitable and far less
  troublesome to soil milk direct than to make
  cheese or butter, although sometimes the surplus
  milk in summer may be profitably turned into
  cheese or butter.
  
  Some farms are particularly suitable for
  fattening bullocks or rearing young stock ;
  others are noted as good sheep farms. I myself
  think an arable farm, where all kinds of com
  can be grown and a few stock of all sorts kept,
  is the most interesting. Where one is not
  dependent on one special branch there is the
  chance that if one thing does badly another
  may do well. If wheat is down, hay may be
  -dear, and if mutton is cheap, beef or pork may
  
  
  be selling well, or it is " Up horn, down corn,"
  as the old adage says.
  
  DAIRY WORK
  
  Dairy work is not much taken up by educated
  women apart from its connection with general
  farming. There is one sphere, however, in
  which tliis work offers fair opportunities, and
  that is in regaxd to teacliing. County Councils
  pay women teachers and travelling lecturers
  a fair rate of salary ranging from £80 to £150
  a yesj. Posts as dairymaids may also be
  taken by gentlewomen in model dairies on large
  country estates. These posts are, as a rule,
  fairly well paid, salaries ranging from £30 a
  year with lodging, fuel, and dairy produce.
  
  Tliere are also good prospects in the colonies
  for women well versed in dairy work, more
  particularly when they have also had a good
  training in domestic science generally.
  
  Training. - Six months to one year's training
  should be taken at a good college, where the
  pupils are prepared for the examinations of the
  Royal Agricultural Society, the British Dairy
  Farmers' Association, the British Dairy Insti-
  tute, and other recognised bodies. The cost of
  training will not amount to more than £36 for
  a year, and haU that sum for six months. Ex-
  cellent training is given at the Midland Agri-
  cultural and Dairy College, Nottinghamshire,
  and at the British Dairy Institute, Reading.
  
  BEE-KEEPING
  
  By Bertha La Mothe
  
  Bee-keeping is an occupation which may be
  taken up by women of all classes and all ages.
  It is also an occupation partictilarly suitable f^r
  those women who, from force of circumstances,
  are debarred from going out into tho world to
  earn their hving, and yet must bring their share
  of grist, however small, to the family mill. It
  has all the advantages of healthy outdoor work
  without any of its disadvantages. No heavy
  work such as forms a feature of most agricultural
  occupation is entailed ; neither is work out of
  doors in bad weather involved, for in winter
  bees may bo left quite to themselves.
  
  Besides being a profitable occupation, bee-
  keeping forms a most interesting hobby, but
  many people are debarred from embarking upon
  it owing to the fact that bees have stings. This
  is a disadvantage which is a great deal magnified.
  It is true that inexperienced people should not
  handle hives unless under the guidance of an
  ox-pert, but when once a woman has learned
  to manipulate a hive of bees the danger of stings
  is very small. Tlic beginner should always wear
  a veil and gloves at first. She %rill very soon
  discard the latter, but it is better always to wear
  a veil, as bees sometimes get caught in the hair
  
  
  WOMEN IN HORTICULTURE AND IN AGRICULTURE
  
  
  and axe liable to sting if they cannot disentangle
  themselves.
  
  At certain seasons bees are easier to mani-
  pulate than at others ; in spring, when they
  have few stores to guard, this is especially the
  case, but towards autumn, when their honey
  has been taken away from them, they are not
  so good-tempered. For about five months in
  the year during the winter the bee-keeper has
  no need to worry at all with her hives. During
  this time, therefore, some other occupation may
  be taken up.
  
  To make a success of bee-keeping a woman
  must necessarily have some business capacity.
  April is the best month to start an apiary. Care
  should be taken in selecting a good district
  where there are plenty of orchards and such
  crops as clover and sainfoin. Lime-trees are
  also very good. In districts with few orchards
  and unsiiitable crops the returns are not so
  good. In suitable locaUties profits should be
  made at the rate of from £1 to £1, 10s. per hive.
  No very large outlay is necessary. A new hive
  and stock of bees can be bought for from £2
  to £3, and a second-hand hive for much less.
  Profits are not only made by selling the honey
  itself, but also by selling queens and swarms,
  stock en frames, &c. A ready market is found
  for honey in most localities at prices ranging
  from 8d. to Is. per lb.
  
  Training and Prospects. - Training may be had
  at Studley Horticultural College, Warwickshire,
  and many lady boe experts receive pupils. A
  short course on " Bee-. seeping " may also bo
  had at Swanley Horticulttu-al College, Kent,
  for £3, 3s., non-resident. Certificates are awarded
  by the British Bee-keepers' Association. A first-
  class certificate-holder is quaUfied to take pupils,
  and this forms another remunerative branch of
  the bee-keeper's occupation. County Covmcils'
  Schools often employ lecturers on bee-keeping
  as part of their winter courses in Nature Study.
  For these fees of from 10s. to £2, 2s. per head
  may be had. The bee expert who can secure
  some lectming in winter and can obtain pupils
  to share her practical work in summer stands
  to show a very fair rate of profit for the year.
  She mxost, of course, be prepared for hard work
  during the season, as there are periods of intense
  activity, but it is work amply rewarded by the
  interest it brings apart from all questions of
  monetary return.
  
  POULTRY-KEEPING
  
  By N. Edwards,
  President of the Ladies' Poultry Clvb
  
  After having seen something of poultry-keeping
  in the United States, Canada, France, Belgium,
  Holland, Switzerland, and Germany, I have found
  that in the United Kingdom we Iiave the greatest
  advantages in regard to our cUmate and soil.
  Tn parts of North America fowls have to be
  
  
  655
  
  kept imder cover from three to six montlis of
  the year, when snow is deep upon the ground,
  and in summer the great heat is very trying
  to growing chicks. It is impossible for certain
  insects to hve in the sandy soil found in parts
  of France, Germany, and Belgium, which in
  England form a large part of the nutritive food
  of the fowls. However, if accommodation be
  provided suitable to the climate fowls may be
  kept in a healthy condition in almost every part
  of the world ; where snow Ues deep for many
  months good houses and large scratching sheds
  must be provided ; where the heat is intense, as
  in India, large well-ventilated houses painted
  white are necessary. On sandy soils meat must
  be given to supply the want of insect life, and
  so on ; whatever is lacking naturally must be
  supplied artificially.
  
  For egg production all the year round we
  should be able to compete weU with any countrj',
  as we suffer from no great extremes of climatic
  change ; but in spite of our huge advantages we
  imported in 1909 eggs worth nearly seven and a
  quarter millions of money, the value of which
  came in the following order : the greatest from
  Russia, then Denmark, Austria-Hungary, France,
  Italy, Germany, and Canada. The value of
  table poultry imported in the same year was
  about £920,000. The National Poultry Organisa-
  tion Society has done a great work in starting
  egg-coUecting dep6ts, which no doubt will in
  time be established in every county. With
  greater co-operation in and between our villages
  and diminished railway rates, we should have
  a most flourisliing industry which would gain
  for us the position we hold in regEird to liigh-
  class birds for stock and exhibition for which
  we stand pre-eminent.
  
  Improvements are going on all over the world
  in the quality of pure-bred birds, and the simis
  paid aimually to British fanciers and stock
  breeders reach very high figures. The demand
  comes from every quarter of the globe to this
  country, where we have the finest types and
  best-grown birds and a climate well suited to
  rearing.
  
  By slow degrees the daughters of farmers in
  the United Kingdom are becoming more alive
  to the fact of their great advantages. With
  plenty of land on wliich to work, and no rent
  to pay for the keeping of poultry upon that
  land, with food at lower rates than others can
  obtain, tlioy stand out as haxnng the widest and
  best opportunities of all tlio different classes of
  women poultry -keepers. Many ladies who have
  a small piece of ground are able to supply the
  home table profitably with eggs, and where suffi-
  cient land is available enough chickens for the
  year's supply can be raised if a little time daily
  is given to the birds. It is a curious fact that
  almost every country house of any size has a
  garden kept so well that there is always a good
  supply of fruit and vegetables for the home
  
  
  C56
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  tabic, wliile the poultry and eggs have all to bo
  bought. By a little good management on the
  part of the lady of the house tliis need not be,
  and the table would be as well supphod by the
  products of the poultry yard as it is by the
  garden produce.
  
  Poultry-keeping as a business for men and
  women is sometimes regarded from a very
  curious point of view ; magical results without
  labour, time, or capital are expected. A girl
  once ordered a brooding hen and sitting of ducks'
  eggs which she was sending to a cottager for the
  work of hatching and rearing to be done, and
  on the proceeds she expected to take a trip to
  Switzerland. The magic hen was to convert
  an outlay of about ten shillings into at least
  ten guineas.
  
  Fifteen years ago I started in a very small
  way, with only twenty fowls and half an acre
  of land, intending to make a biisiness of one of
  the many branches of poultry-keeping, and as
  the best returns appeared to be obtained from
  pure-bred fowls, the sale was taken up of
  sittings and eggs, newly-hatched chicks, and
  birds for stock, exhibition, and export. My
  capital was very limited ; however, before this
  was exhausted the poultry had begun to pay,
  and each season the plant was enlarged from
  profits, and now twenty-eight acres of land
  are in use and thousands of chicks and eggs,
  and about one thousand stock birds are sold
  annually. The work at first, single-handed, was
  very hard, but a determination to succeed
  overcame all difficulties, and I have never
  regretted the day I embaxked in poultry-
  keeping.
  
  Whatever is required in starting any other
  commercial concern is indispensable in this, and
  for the girl who expects to make a large business
  of poultry-keeping a thorough training is neces-
  sary. She should liave a certain amount of
  bvisiness capability and plenty of enterprisow I
  have found amongst workers that women excel
  in that part where extra care in detail isnecessary;
  and in the running of incubators containing over
  three thousand eggs at work throughout the
  hatching season, also in rearing one thousand
  chicks annually, women have done better work
  on my farm than men, i.e. in rearing and
  management of incubators. It is becoming
  much more general to have women for the
  management of poultry than it was formerly,
  as they are found particularly well adapted to
  the lighter part of the work, and on exhibition
  farms do extremely well. Many are successful
  as lecturers at homo and in our colonies, several
  are noted fanciers who have won challenge cups
  at our largest shows, and each year the cata-
  logues show a great increase in the number of
  women exhibitors.
  
  It will now bo readily seen that poultry-
  keeping offers opportunities to women of all
  classes, and when properly managed gives greater
  
  
  profits than from any other stock kept upon a
  farm.
  
  Prospects, - The opportunities for women in
  poultry breeding are : -
  
  (1) It is the work for the woman at home.
  
  (2) It offers openings in both public and
  private appointments.
  
  (3) It affords advantages as a business in
  table poultry and egg production to the daughters
  of farmers and of clergymen, or others who
  have land at their disposal.
  
  (4) It can be made a successful financial
  business for those who take it up solely for the
  work of fancy and utility breeding.
  
  In regard to poultry -keeping for profit the
  daughters of farmers have the greatest advan-
  tages ; with plenty of land on wliich to work
  and no rent to pay for the keeping of poultry
  upon that land, with food at lower rates than
  others can obtain, they stand out as having the
  widest and best opportunities of all the different
  classes of women poultry -keepers. Apart from
  starting a poultry farm, there are openings for
  women poultry-keepers as instructors in Agri-
  cultural Schools, County Council Lecturers,
  private tuition, &c., &c.
  
  It is best in poultry-keeping to start in a
  small way. Those who are taking up poultry
  breeding on a scale which requires a substantial
  capital to cover expenses of rent of house, land,
  stock, &c., will require to aim higher than at
  merely providing the market with fresh eggs,
  chickens, and ducks for the table. They should
  go in for breeding of utihty and fancy poultry,
  selling them for stock and exhibition purposes,
  and when the scope of the business is sufficiently
  large they will be able to inaugurate a good
  export trade. Good profits may be made from
  the sale of newly -hatched chicks and sittings
  of eggs. After the close of the hatching season
  fresh eggs can be sold when prices are high, and
  when low perserved in water glass and sold
  in ^^anter at a good profit, but, of course, at lower
  rates than fresh eggs.
  
  The initial capital required is from £50 to £500
  in accordance with the scale upon which the
  business is started ; the quantity of land
  from two to twelve acres. A capable business
  woman will often succeed in paying expenses
  in the second year of her enterprise, and from
  thence onwards carry on the business at a
  profit.
  
  Training. - The woman who wishes to make
  money out of poultry-keeping mush necessarilj'
  have a good training, otherwise her chances of
  success are very remote indeed. Most of the
  Agricultural Colleges include poultry-keeping in
  their cvuriculum, but this should always be
  supplemented by practical work on a poultry
  farm. Most lady poultry farmers take pupils
  for varying fees. At Coaley Poultry Farm,
  Gloucestershire, courses of instruction in prac-
  tical poultry-keeping varjing in lengths from
  
  
  WOMEN IN HOETIOULTURE AND IN AGRICULTURE
  
  
  three to twelve weeks may be had.
  including board, are : -
  
  
  Fees,
  
  
  For the three weeks' course
  For the twelve weeks' course
  
  
  £10 10 0
  £31 10 0
  
  
  This course may be divided into three different
  seasons of the year.
  
  An examination is held at the end of a twelve
  weeks' course, and certiBcates are now awarded.
  The examiner for the utility, practical, and
  theoretical work is the agricultural expert for
  the counties of Monmouthshire and Gloucester-
  shire.
  
  Practical Dally Work (according to the seasons).
  - Preparing food, feeding adult stock, hatching
  with incubators, hatching with hens, testing eggs,
  
  
  657
  
  preserving eggs for eating, rearing chickens in
  brooders, rearing chickens with hens, fatten-
  ing fowls, kiUing fowls, plucking fowls, shaping
  fowls, dressing fowls, trussing fowls, cramming
  fowls, preparing birds for exhibition, packing
  sittings of eggs, packing newly -hatched chickens,
  varieties studied with club standards.
  
  Pupils learn how to start poultry-keeping on
  the most modern and practical lines, with the
  best and latest appliances. Each person has
  an incubator to work, chickens to rear in a
  brooder, fowls to kiU, truss, and dress.
  
  Excellent advice upon poultry-keeping may
  also be obtained from the Secretary of the
  National Poultry Organisation Society, 12
  Hanover Square, London, W.
  
  
  2t
  
  
  DOMESTIC SCIENCE
  
  
  Within the last few years educational experts have awakened to the value of domestic science in
  the training of girls, whether it is to qualify thom for one of the many posts which a thorough
  knowledge of the domestic arts will place witliin their reach, or whether it is to fit them to
  undertake the duties of housewives when they are called upon to rule over homes of their own.
  Special training schools in domestic subjects are now to be found in almost every large town in the
  United Kingdom, where girls may receive a thorough training to prepare them to earn a livelihood
  in any of the branches of domestic science, or where they may take short courses in order to
  put their learning to practical use in their own homes. It is also significant of the trend of
  opinion in regard to this important branch of a girl's education that a special course in domestic
  science has been included in the Women's Department of King's College, London University.
  Domestic science subjects include cookery, sewing, home dressmaking and millinery, laundry
  work and housewifery. There are good posts to be had for women who have had a thorough
  training, and also for those who have specialised in any one of the chief domestic arts. Needless
  to say, before taking up the study of domestic science a girl should have had a good secondary
  education, more especially if she wishes to qualify as a teacher.
  
  
  HIGHER EDUCATION OF WOMEN IN
  HOME SCIENCE
  
  The special domestic science course now in-
  cluded in the Women's Department of Iving's
  College, London University, is well worthy
  of special notice, more especially in regard to
  those who wish to earn their Hvelihoods in the
  higher posts, such as head teachers, Government
  inspectors, &c. The training is one that assures
  a high standard of merit in all who have taken
  the King's College Course, and in the annual
  report of the college for 1909 it is said : -
  
  " Outside the strict undergraduate course the
  most noticeable addition is that of the students
  in the new Home Science Department. These,
  as so often with pioneer students, are an interest-
  ing and varied group of thoughtful women.
  After a year's trial it is possible to say that the
  movement is proving its value and importance
  as a new development in the higher education of
  women. A distinct advance can bo observed in
  the attention given to it by leading educational
  authorities, and in the interest shown by those
  concerned in the education of girls, as, for
  instance, head mistrrsses. There is already a
  demand for women trained in this way to teach
  in schools greater than the College has been able
  to meet. From the College point of \'iew the
  introduction of this course has strengthened
  the staff and furnished an appeal to the interest
  of a new set of students."
  
  
  The syllabus for the Higher Education of
  Women in Home Science and Economics com-
  prises two courses : -
  
  (1) A one year's course for students of
  graduate standing.
  
  (2) A three years' course for students whose
  general education has reached the standard
  requisite for entry on university courses of the
  usual undergraduate typo.
  
  The fees for the first is thirty guineas, and for
  the second course thirty guineas p"r annum.
  There are one or two scholarships in connection
  with the coiirse, full particulars of which may
  bo had upon application to the Vice-Principal
  of King's College (Women's Department). A
  reduction is made in favour of teachers. A
  diploma is awarded by the College to students
  who take a complete course and pass an ex-
  amination to the satisfaction of the council.
  The tuition includes instruction in applied
  chemistry, the practical domestic arts, sanitary
  science and applied hygiene, economics, &c.
  The main object of these courses is to provide
  a thoroughly scientific education in the principles
  underlying the whole organisation of home life,
  the conduct of institutions, and other spheres of
  civic and social work in wliich these principles
  are applicable.
  
  Either course will bo useful for women who
  wish to qualify as teachers or lecturers in domestic
  subjects, or who wish to fit themselves for the
  post of matron in a largo institution, or who
  
  
  658
  
  
  DOMESTIC SCIENCE
  
  
  659
  
  
  are anxioiis to find work in the colonies. There
  is a special course for inspectorships or other
  Government appointments.
  
  TEACHERS OF DOMESTIC SUBJECTS
  
  Training and Prospects. - There are many
  posts available for teachers of domestic subjects,
  more especially in cookery, laundry work and
  housewifery in elementary and secondary
  schools, technical institutes and evening
  schools. Teachers of domestic subjects in
  elementary schools must have first-class teach-
  ing diplomas in housewifery, cookery, and
  laundry work or dressmaking, gained at a
  training school recognised by the Board of
  Education, and this is essential even if they are
  only required to teach one subject. The train-
  ing extends over two years, and the fees are
  usually about £50 for the entire course. The
  charges of the National Society's Training
  School for Teachers of Domestic Subjects,
  Hampstead, represent the average, and are as
  follows : -
  
  Cookery, £30 - course of forty-two weeks ;
  Laimdry work, £10, 10s. - course of twenty-six
  weeks ; Housewifery, £8, 8s. - course of thirteen
  weeks.
  
  Those who wish to enter a special training
  college to be trained as teachers of domestic
  subjects must not be less than eighteen years of
  age. They must have had a good English
  education and have a,n aptitude for teacliing.
  They are usually required to take an examination
  in general knowledge imless they possess a
  certificate from a public examining body. In
  colleges especially devoted to the training of
  teachers for public elementary schools, the
  Board of Education require each student to
  make a declaration that she enters the train-
  ing college with the intention of eventually
  becoming a teacher of domestic subjects,
  either in a pubHc elementary school or in
  some other school approved by the Board for
  the purpose.
  
  The training in needlework, dressmaking, and
  millinery is less expensive.
  
  These subjects are largely taught in secondary
  schools, and good posts in this connection may
  be had. Needlework forms a part of the ciirri-
  culum in almost every girls' school, whether
  public or private ; dressmaking is now also
  largely taught in private as well as in pubhc
  schools, so that in tliis respect there are many
  openings for teachers of needlework and dress-
  making. Classes for needlework, cutting-out,
  and dressmaking can also be formed, and, if
  properly managed, will prove remunerative.
  There are many ways in which a thorough
  practical knowledge of needlework may be
  turned to advantage on a money-making basis.
  The training in plain needlework, dressmaking,
  and millinery is very moderate. At the National
  
  
  Training School for Teachers the fees are as
  follows : -
  
  Plain Needlework, £7, 7s. - course of twenty
  weeks ; Dressmaking, £7, 7s. - course of twenty
  weeks ; Advanced Dressmaking, £8, 8s. - course
  of twenty weeks.
  
  Posts as teachers are also available in day
  schools for domestic economy. In these the
  pupils have mostly won scholarships granted by
  the local education authorities and have entered
  the school to train for domestic service. Cookery,
  laimdry work, needlework, and dressmaking are
  the principal subjects taught. Domestic science
  teachers and lecturers are also employed at
  evening technical classes under local authori-
  ties, especially in covmtry districts.
  
  In order to obtain the higher posts in domestic
  work, such as teachers and head teachers in
  training colleges, a three years' training in as
  many subjects as possible should be taken.
  There are Government inspectorships of domestic
  science schools that can also be filled, but these
  positions are necessarily few, as the number of
  appointments is hmited. As is the case with
  most other Government inspectorships, two years'
  probation must be imdergone before a definite
  appointment is secured.
  
  Salaries vary to a great extent in accordance
  with the locaUty and the school. £70 a year
  would represent a fair average figure for ordi-
  nary teachers' posts in elementary or secondary
  schools.
  
  Salaries of teachers in day schools for domestic
  economy average from £90 to £140. Those of
  lecturers and teachers in technical classes vary
  according to the particular districts.
  
  Head mistresses of schools of domestic
  economy receive salaries of from £100 a year
  and upwards, whilst the salary of a Government
  inspector in domestic science averages £200 a
  year.
  
  Cookery. - Though to obtain a post as teacher
  of cookery in an elementary school under a
  local authority it is necessary to take training
  in housewifery and laundry work as well as in
  cookery, there are posts available for the
  student who has taken her first -class cookery
  diploma alone. In many large institutions
  there are posts to be had as head cook and
  head of the Idtchen staff which can only be
  filled by one well versed in organisation as
  well as in the culinary art, and posts of this kind
  are largely filled by women. In coimection
  with many schools of domestic science, as well
  as with private schools, posts as cookery
  teachers, lecturers, and demonstrators may be
  obtained. The principal gas and electric light
  companies also employ lady demonstrators of
  cooking in connection with their various exhibi-
  tions and show-rooms.
  
  Private cookery classes have also been
  organised with success in a few cases, but as
  a rule it is inadvisable to start upon a private
  
  
  660
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  vcuturc, as cookery lectures and demonstrations
  organised under the auspices of the County
  Councils aio now held in almost every populous
  district, and the charges artj so low tlmt it
  would bo impossible for any pri\-ate enterprise
  to compete with them in tliis respect. In some
  country districts, however, cookery classes have
  been successfully organised by a committee of
  ladies, but in these cases a certain minimum
  attendance has been guaranteed.
  
  Private cookery schools can also be started
  with advantage if a suitable locality is selected.
  Preference should bo given to a loigh-class
  residential district where there is no competition
  in the shape of other schools to be encountered.
  In these circumstances a good connection may
  be formed amongst married ladies who wish to
  add to their knowledge of cookery, or to learn
  new dishes to teach their cooks. Special classes
  could be given for cooks to teach them some
  new or special dish. For this reason the princi-
  pals of the school should make a point of being
  ail fait in every innovation, being careful to keep
  their cookery up-to-date. Their advertising
  literature and catalogue should be well designed.
  They might, for instance, advertise various
  courses of lessons, i.e. lessons for housewives,
  lessons for cooks, lessons for prospective
  brides, &c.
  
  In the afternoons demonstrations of cookery
  might be held, when Is. to Is. 6d. admission
  could be charged. Novelty should be the key-
  note of these demonstrations. The teacher
  should alwaj's endeavour to display some novel
  dish - some novel method of cooking or novel
  and useful cooking apphanccs. A very re-
  munerative side-hno may be eflected in the sale
  of cooking appliances, and in this connection
  a good addition to the income may bo made
  by using the appliances of firms who are anxious
  to place their wares before the public, and who
  are willing to pay well for an advertisement of
  the kind. Only really useful and really efficient
  utensils, however, should bo used - appliances
  that can bo safely recommended.
  
  Dress of Cookery Teachers. - This must always
  be plain, neat, and clean. No more fitting
  costume could bo had than a short skirt and
  bodice (or Vjlouso) of washing material. Over
  this a plain white linen apron long enough to
  cover the dress, with a " bib " fa.stoned by
  means of straps crossing over the shoulders
  should bo worn. A very dainty effect is also
  achieved by means of clean white hnen over
  sleeves. A regulation cap is usually worn.
  The cookery teacher sliould be very particular
  in regard to the care she bestows upon her hands.
  Her hair should also be kept particularly neat
  and tidy.
  
  Domestic science training may bo had at tho
  following colleges in addition to tho National
  Society's Training College, alreatly mentioned : -
  
  In London. - The National Training School
  
  
  of Cookery, 72 to 78 Buckingham Palaco Road,
  S.W. Tlie Polytechnic, Battersea, S.W.
  
  Edinburgh. - Edinburgh School of Cookery and
  Domestic Economy, 3 to G AthoU Crescent.
  
  Glasgow. - Glasgow and West of Scotland
  College of Domestic Science, 86 Bath Street,
  Glasgow.
  
  Dublin. - Irish Training School of Domestic
  Economy, St. Kevin's Park, Kilmacud, Still-
  organ.
  
  Leeds. - ^Training School of Cookery and
  Domestic Economy.
  
  Liverpool. - Training School of Cookery, 23
  Colquitt Street.
  
  Manchester. - ^Municipal School of Domestic
  Economy.
  
  Newcastle-on-Tyne. - ^Northern Counties Train-
  ing School of Cookery and Household Economy.
  
  A full Hst of training colleges and schools of
  domestic science is published in the English-
  woman's Year Book.
  
  
  HOUSEWIFERY
  
  Training in housewifery may bo had at all
  tho above-mentioned institutions and also at
  other estabhshments which differ from those
  above-mentioned, inasmuch as their main object
  is to train students for the ordinary domestic
  duties of home hfe. The work of the cook,
  housemaid, parlourmaid, and housekeeper aro
  all taught by actual practice, so that a woman
  so trained, when worried with the servant
  question, need never be very much put about,
  as she can set to and do the work herself. The
  training, moreover, will enable a mistress to
  manage her servants well and superintend their
  woTk in a proper manner. Women who wish
  to earn their Uving as lady servants may obtain
  all the training necessary at estabhshments A
  this kind.
  
  Such training may be obtained at the Fegeme
  School of Household Management, Temple
  Ewell, near Dover. Here all the work of the
  establishment is done by pupils. Fees aro 258.
  a week, including board and lodging.
  
  St. [Martha's College of Housecraft, 4 Chi-
  chester Street, St. George's Square, London,
  S.W., is a homo school run upon the same lines,
  and has been established to help Catholic
  gentlewoman and others who require a short
  practical and inexpensive training in domestic
  work as a profession, or for use in their own
  homes. The course of training is six months,
  and tho inclusive fee for board, residence, and
  tuiti^jn is thirty guineas.
  
  The Guild of Dames of the Household, Chelten-
  ham, is an association wliich affords good training
  for lady servants. Fees, fifteen shillings weekly,
  including board.
  
  Lady Servants. - Tliero is no doubt that
  domestic service as a livelihood is declining in
  popularity amongst all classes of workers ; it is
  
  
  DOMESTIC SCIENCE
  
  
  661
  
  
  not to be wondered at, therefore, that educated
  ladies do not take to it too readily as a career,
  yet under favourable circumstances it should
  appeal to many gentlewomen who are versed
  in practical domestic science, for it presents
  many opportunities for the capable and willing
  worker. The servant question nowadays is
  one of great difficulty. Girls and women of the
  original servant class are now filling our factories
  and our shops. Service to them is synonymous
  with bondage. They prefer to have their even-
  ings free, and are content to work under much
  less favourable conditions than they wovdd if in
  service, so long as their work is limited to
  certain set hours.
  
  It may be said that the long working hours
  form in every case the disadvantage of domestic
  service. Life has often to be spent in a base-
  ment. Some i-pistresses are none too thoughtful
  for their servants' comfort, and even the one
  evening out a week is given grudgingly as a great
  concession. The best class of mistress, however,
  is always distinguished by her consideration for
  those working vmder her, and it is with this
  class of mistress that work can be done under the
  most favourable conditions. As a rule, where
  lady servants are concerned, employers are only
  too willing to afford them consideration, realising
  that they are qualified ladies who have under-
  gone a thorough course of training and are
  therefore highly efficient. They are therefore
  only too anxious to keep them and study their
  comfort in every way. The success or non-
  success of the lady servai t will depend to a
  great extent upon her powers of adaptability to
  her work. The woman who considers domestic
  service beneath her and does her work with
  an injiared air, having always an " I am as
  good as you " expression upon her face when
  addressed by her mistress, will never attain
  :: access. Her life will seem to her one long
  hardship, and she will always be labouring
  under an undefined sense of grievance. On the
  other hand, a menial position in a household
  is unsuited to a woman, unless, as in the case of
  a head cook or housekeeper in a large establish-
  ment, she is at the head of all the other servants,
  having her own sitting-room in which to take
  her meals, or unless if she is an ordinary servant,
  her fellow-workers are ladies also. Finally, a
  great deal will depend upon the disposition of
  the worker. If she is one who is always willing
  to make the best of tilings and is able to adapt
  herself with a good will to varying circumstances,
  she will find happiness and independence in
  whatever domestic position she may take up.
  
  The present unsatisfactory state of the
  servant question has created a demand for
  lady cooks in many instances. More especially
  is thJs the case in very large private houses,
  ladies' clubs and colleges. In these circum-
  stances the position of the lady cook is at
  its best ; she usually has her own suite of
  
  
  rooms in which she can take her meals and
  spend her spare time by herself. To satis-
  factorily fill a position of this kind, besides
  being an expert cook, a woman must also be
  a good organiser. She will have control of all
  the kitchen staff ; often she will require to do
  some of the housekeeping as well. Such posts
  at present are few and far between ; but there
  is no reason why the openings in this direction
  should not be increased, and why the lady chef
  should not take the place of a man chef in
  many cases. She should be able to earn an
  income of from £40 to £80 and sometimes
  £100 a year.
  
  In small households lady cooks are sometimes
  employed, but as in this case the kitchen
  hfe will be that of ordinary servants in most
  middle-class homes, a position of this kind
  is only suitable where other lady servants
  are employed. Wages are paid on the scale
  of ordinary servants' wages.
  
  Amongst givers of dinner-parties there is also
  a demand for the visiting cook, who will take
  upon herself the responsibility of preparing a
  whole dinner, with the help of a kitchen-maid
  to do the rough work. In the first instance she
  will be asked to draw up a menu with list of
  cooking requirements for approval. Tlien when
  the menu has been approved or various altera-
  tions have been suggested, she must superintend
  the whole cooking of the dinner, seeing that each
  cush is served promptly in its tuin, and remain-
  ing until the entire meal has been served. Good
  fees may be commanded by the experienced
  cook. These average from 15s. to £1, Is. per
  dinner, the latter fee being given to those with the
  highest qualifications and credentials.
  
  To cook a dinner and see that it is served
  without a hitch is no mean achievement. It re-
  qviires great experience and powers of organisa-
  tion to do this properly, and it should never be
  attempted by the girl fresh from her training
  school until she has had good practice in cooldng
  dinners of many com-ses. She must cultivate
  calmness of temperament, presence of mind in
  emergencies, power of maintaining discipline
  amongst those who work under her, and, above
  all, order, method, and punctuality, without
  which qualities any scheme of organisation must
  necessarily fail.
  
  Children's Nurse. - Tliis career opens out many
  opportunities for ladies. Parents are beginning
  to realise the urgent need of havnng persons of
  refinement to care for their children, and, in
  addition, persons who have had a certain
  definite training and are therefore competent
  for the work. Tliere is necessity for specialisa-
  tion in this as well as in other careers. The
  would-be nurse must go to a recognised school or
  training home, and gain her certificate of merit ;
  it is useless for the untrained worker to expect
  to gain her livelihood in this profession.
  
  The girl who would become a nurse must in
  
  
  662
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  the first instance be fond of cliildrcn. She must
  possess an abundant fund of patience and perse-
  verance, and, in fact, have a vocation for tho
  work. Before undertaking it a girl should well
  realise what it means. She will have to take
  entire charge of the little ones, make most of
  their clothes, do all the mending, and care for
  them in sickness ; she should be able to recog-
  nise and treat the various childish ailments,
  and should have a thorough knowledge of child
  hygiene. In some cases she will have to give
  the little ones their first lessons, and in these
  circumstances a knowledge of kindergarten
  methods will be most useful. There are colleges
  over the kingdom where training may be had.
  This generally takes one year, although in some
  colleges there is a six months' covu-se. The cost
  of training averages from £60 to £80 a year.
  Tlie training is not only useful for those who
  wish to become cluldren's niirses, but it is also
  valuable for girls who are to marry, and who in
  all probability will have cloildren of their own
  to care for. The course of instruction usually
  includes the care and feeding of babies from a
  few days old and upwards ; the management
  and routine of a nursery, mu^ery cookerj', the
  cutting-out and making of children's garments,
  mending, ntirsery laundry work, nursery hygiene,
  and kindergarten methods of teaching.
  
  The following are some of the best-known
  institutions where training may be had : -
  
  Tho Norland Institute, 10 Pembridge Square,
  London, W. (The course includes three months'
  training in a children's hospital.) Sesame House,
  Acacia Road, St. John's Wood, London ; The
  Hampstead Niu-sery College, Hampstead,
  London, W. (Roman Catholic) - Principal, !Mrs.
  Bernard Mole ; Princess Christian College for
  Training Ladies as Niu-ses, 19 Wilmslow Road,
  Willington, ^Manchester. Full particulars as to
  terms, course of training, &c., may bo had upon
  application to any of these institutions.
  
  Prospects. - The commencing salary of a lady
  nurse should not bo less than £25 a year. An
  experienced head nurse can earn from £40 to £70
  in many cases.
  
  Hoasekeepers and Matrons. - A good training
  in housewifery and domestic science is necessary
  for the housekeeper of the present day. A short
  course of cookery should also be taken. There
  are very few positions available nowadays in
  the ordinary middle-class household ; but in
  houses where a largo staff of servants is kept
  tho housekeeper still holds sway. Experience
  and a thorough knowledge of the domestic arts,
  as well as good organising capacities, are always
  necessary to successfully fill a position of this
  kind. The same may be said of housekeepers
  and matrons in large schools and public insti-
  tutions. Tlie housekeeper is usually required
  to superintend the cooking and catering and
  keep the accounts in regard to both. She will
  also have charge of the plate and linen, seeing
  
  
  to tho necessary mending of the latter, or, if
  there is a sewing-maid, seeing that the mending
  is promptly and efficiently executed. In short,
  it will be realised that no inefficient untrained
  person can fill a post of tliis kind. Those who
  have had experience in the management of
  their own households must not tliink that the
  knowledge so gained is sufficient to enable them
  to take an important post. Though the practi-
  cal experience they have gained is very useful,
  they should supplement this by short courses
  in housewifery and cookery at one of tho
  domestic science schools.
  
  LAUNDRY MANAGERESS
  
  The best way to obtain a post of this kind is
  to take a course of practical training for tliree
  months in a laiindry. Most large laundries
  take pupils for three months' training at an
  average fee of £10, 10s. ; to this must be added
  the cost of board and lodging during the training
  period. Tlie success of the student will depend a
  great deal upon how she uses her powers of ob-
  servation, and whether she makes the most of all
  the facilities afforded her and studies the work
  to the most minute detail. When a student
  shows decided aptitude for the work, she will
  often be allowed to stay on after she has com-
  pleted her course of instruction, and if the
  proprietor desires to retain her services, he
  will pay her a small salary and give her in all
  probability the charge of a department. It is
  always advisable to stay a year at the laundry
  after tho training has been completed in order
  to get experience. After this a woman will
  be able to take a post as assistant manageress
  in a laundry or institution, and then aim at
  the post of manageress in due course. Training
  should always be taken at a largo laundry, for
  in these the most varied experience may be
  had.
  
  The following laundries take pupils, and are
  typical of the kind of institution at which
  training should be taken : -
  
  The Wimbledon Laundry Co., Cranbrook
  Road, Wimbledon, London; The Anglo-America'i
  Laundry, Tooting, London ; The Craigmillar
  Laundry, Edinburgh.
  
  There are many qualities necessary to assure
  the success of a laundry manageress ; of these
  business oapacity and good powers of organisa-
  tion are essential. Each department must be
  run with regularity of clockwork, books must
  be kept in order, and expenses checked. Tact
  in dealing with the complaints of difficult cus-
  tomers is also very necessary, and, above all,
  the power of maintaining discipline and gaining
  the respect of the large number of workers
  employed.
  
  The salary of a laundry manageress usually
  commences at £2, 10s. a week, rising to £5. It
  is work, therefore, which is well paid, and in this
  
  
  DOMESTIC SCIENCE
  
  
  663
  
  
  respect compaxes very favourably with all other
  branches of biisiness open to women. The hours
  of work in a laundry are long, usually from ten
  to twelve hours daily, but the work is fuU of
  interest and there are many compensations.
  Good posts may also be obtained in various
  institutions where they pay fair salaries -
  usually £50 a year with board and lodging.
  In ladies' colleges also there are posts available,
  where the rate of pay is on much the same
  scale.
  
  Another recommendation which a post of
  this kind should have to the woman worker is
  the fact that the working years are more than
  in the csise with most other employments for
  women. In fact, in selecting a manageress
  preference is in many cases given to the middle-
  aged woman who is experienced at the work.
  A girl should not take up laundry work too
  young - twenty-one years of age should be
  the limit - and she should have had a good
  general education and a knowledge of book-
  keeping and commercial arithmetic.
  
  WOMEN'S WORK IN THE COLONIES
  
  There are many openings in the colonies for
  educated women, more especially in Canada
  and South Africa. Emigration, however, is a
  serious step to take, and no woman should
  decide upon it before taking the advice of one
  of the best emigration associations. From these
  full information as to the kind of work which is
  best for the colonies, together with particulars
  as to the best way of getting employment, &c.,
  may be had. Many societies advance passage
  money to girls, or make a grant towards it.
  
  Intending emigrants to Canada should apply
  for information to the British Women's Emigra-
  tion Society, Imperial Institute, London, S.W.,
  and those who wish to go to South Africa should
  write for particulars to the South African
  Colonisation Society, IIS Victoria Street,
  London, S.W.
  
  The best openings for women workers in our
  colonies undoubtedly present themselves to those
  who are well skilled in domestic science. In
  many of the country districts of Canada ser-
  vants are scarce, so that the .services of women
  helps are generally at a premium. The woman
  help in Canada will be required to know every
  branch of domestic work, including cooking,
  laundry work, mending, dressmaking, &c. Her
  position is infinitely better than that of th.e
  " lady help " at homo, for she is always treated
  as one of the family, sharing in the pleasure as
  well as the work of her employers. Canadian
  life is homely and free in every sense, and little
  store is set upon social distinction of class ;
  educated women workers £ire always treated as
  equals.
  
  Some horticultural and agricultural know-
  ledge on the part of the emigrant to Canada
  
  
  will stand her in good stead. Work in the
  gardens as in the fields may well become her
  province. In fact, there is scarcely a thing ta
  which she should not be able to put her hand.
  Apart from the favourable prospects for home
  workers, capable girls very soon get married in
  our colonies and thus have hoiises of their own
  to direct. Tliere are many establishments that
  give training to girls who intend to emigrate.
  
  At the Horticultural College, Swanley, intend-
  ing colonists may have a very good training
  in both indoor and outdoor work. Fees, £70 a
  year ; shorter courses may be taken.
  
  The Stoke Prior Colonial Training College,
  Bromsgrove, also oSers training in all domestic
  subjects, including dairy work and poultry
  rearing. The training lasts from three to six
  months according to the course chosen, and the
  fees for board and tuition are from 17s. 6d. for
  a single room, and from 12s. 6d. if the room is
  shared, per week.
  
  Then there is the Arlesley Training College..
  near Hitcliin, Herts, which oSers a very thorough
  training to ladies in all branches of Colonial
  housework. It is under the patronage of Lady
  Francis Balfour and Lady Buxton and other
  ladies who are much interested in the scheme.
  Besides the ordinary domestic subjects, the
  management of a garden, farm, or poultry -yard,
  bee-keeping, pig rearing, riding, dri\-ing, car-
  pentry, a knowledge of ambulance and home
  nursing, &c., are all taught. The age Hmit for
  entrance in the college is from eighteen to thirty.
  The fees are £50 for a six months' course, or £80
  for a year's coiu^e, including residence. A full
  course lasts two years. For fuller particulars
  apply to the Principal of the College.
  
  Ordinary domestic training may be had at any
  school of domestic science, but training in
  poultry-keeping, dairy work, gardening, &c.,
  are all essential in many cases for the " home
  help." If a girl takes good training in all these
  branches she is almost certain of obtaining pro-
  fitable appointments. Girls who go out to the
  colonies to be married should also have some
  sort of training of the kind, as tliis will be
  necessary for the proper management of homes
  of their own.
  
  Domestic helps earn good salaries, according
  to their capabiUties ; the thoroughly trained girl
  would earn as much as between £52 to £60 a
  year ; the less experienced worker beginning at
  from £24 to £30. First-class head cooks in large
  town establishments, hotels, &c., earn very high
  wages, ranging from £60 per annimi, and often
  rising to £120 in the case of hotels and
  restaurants.
  
  School teachers and governesses are well paid
  in both Canada and South Africa, there being
  more openings in the former than m the latter
  co\intry. A thorough teacher's training mxist
  be taken and the necessary certificates g"iiiied
  to obtain a post of the Idnd. (See Teaching
  
  
  664
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Profession.) Many posts are to bo had in tho
  state schools of Canada and in tho high schools
  of Cape Colony axid Natal. Assistant mistresses
  in elementary schools receive salaries of from
  £144 to £170 a year, and head mistresses from
  £200 to £300. It must be remembered, however,
  that the cost of Uving is higher than it is in the
  mother country. In South Africa salai-ies are
  lower, and the cost of hving very much greater
  than in Caneida ; teachers therefore should take
  none but resident posts, for in these circvun-
  stances they will not have to pay for board and
  lodging, wliich are always exceedingly high items
  of expenditure. In many cases the passages
  of teachers from England to South Africa are
  paid by the schools. Posts as governesses
  and nursery governesses are well paid in both
  colonies.
  
  \Vlien a girl goes out to Canada or one of the
  other colonies and has no fixed place to go to,
  she ought to arrange, if possible, to board at one
  of the branches of the G.F.S. or Y.W.C.A., as
  many of the cheaper hotels and boarding-houses
  are not desirable. Particulars of the different
  ^hostels in the colonies can be obtained by apply-
  ing to llrs. H. R. Slill, Honorary Secretary,
  Y.W.C.A. Emigration Department, The Hollies,
  Mill Hill, London, or to the Honorary Secretary,
  ilrs. Joyce, G.F.S. Emigration Department, St.
  John's Croft, Winchester.
  
  Women have started and are running farms
  in Canada with success, but to do this requires
  very exceptional qualifications and a thorough
  agricultural training. In regard to clerical and
  other oflSco posts these offer few prospects for
  the English girl, as the colonics themselves pro-
  vide a sufficient number of this class of worker.
  The restaurant and hotel businesses pay well,
  and the woman with capital might turn her
  attention to an enterprise of the kind. Smart
  milliners and dressmakers are also in request,
  and girls who are versed in either dressmaking
  or millinery may obtain very good positions with
  large firms in tho principal towiis, or, if they
  have capital combined with skill and business
  abiUty, they can start a business of their own
  with good prospects of success. This, how-
  ever, should not be done until one has a good
  knowledge of the country and especially of the
  local requirements.
  
  Hints on a Colonial Outfit. - When choosing
  an outfit for abroad the kind of climate one
  is going to must be taken into consideration
  and also the life one expects to lead. In most
  cases it is a mistake to buy a great many clothes,
  unless one is quite sure of what is required and
  also the special rates of transit, as the expense
  of carriage is as a rule very heavy, and especially
  so if tho journey happens to He across country.
  In most places, too, it is possible to buy what is
  wanted and of a kind best suited to the needs of
  that special locaUty.
  
  
  The woman who goes out to tho colonies
  should provide herself with a reasonable amount
  of plain sensible clothing.
  
  A good supply of underclothing is always
  advisable, and six of everything should be tho
  smallest number provided. Woollen garments
  are indispensable, and these ought to be very
  warm if a winter in Canada is anticipated,
  while a specially thin make will bo required for
  summer wear and for warm climates. All under-
  clothing ought to be plain and neat rather than
  of a flimsy character, as the trouble of wasliing
  must be taken into consideration, and the
  woman colonist must, as a rule, be prepared
  either to do her own or else be able to afford a
  big washing bill.
  
  Two neat costumes should form part of the
  outfit - one of which might be made of navy
  blue serge of rather a Ught make for spring and
  autumn wear, and the other might be made of
  some warm grey material or a tweed mixture for
  colder weather. Both of these would be found
  useful when travelling.
  
  A good supply of neat weU-fitting shirts or
  blouses should be provided for wearing with
  these costumes.
  
  Two good traveUing coats will also be necessary
  - one light in weight, which will serve as a pro-
  tection from d'ost or a Hght shower of rain, and
  the other a warm storm coat, which will be a
  \vrap in the coldest weather; a Islanket coat
  would be veiy suitable for the purpose, as it is
  both light and warm.
  
  A girl who is going to do domestic work will
  also require some strong working dresses made
  either of cotton or linen, wliich can easily be
  washed. A supply of large working aprons or
  overalls should also be taken.
  
  The amount of finer clothes taken will depend
  entirely upon the life that is about to be led.
  If this is uncertain it is wiser just to take one
  simple evening dress, and perhaps a thin cloth
  dress along with two or three dressy blouses, and
  perhaps one or two lengtlis of pretty material
  which can be made up when necessary. A
  tussore silk dress ia always useful ; it is easily
  washed and looks fresh and new every time.
  
  Suitable hats can generally bo bought on the
  spot, and as they are difficult to carry, a large
  number should not be thought of. One or two
  hats and a close-fitting travelling-cap will be
  all that are required. Sun-hats can generally
  bo bought locally for a few shillings.
  
  There should also bo a fair supply of boots,
  shoes and house slippers of a comfortable make
  and not too thin.
  
  Such etceteras as gloves, stockings, riblDons,
  ties, handkerchiefs, belts, collars should be
  provided pretty Uberally, but flimsy finery of all
  kinds should be avoided ; it is quite spoilt after
  being packed up for some time, and in a simple
  Colonial life is out of plfice.
  
  
  WOMEN IN BUSINESS
  
  Years ago the woman in biisiness was an unknown, quantity ; to-day she is an accepted
  fact. There is scarcely a business career nowadays which cannot be entered by a clever woman
  and from the typist at £1 a week to the manageress or the proprietress of large commercial
  enterprises we find women working side by side with men, in many cases with equal advantages.
  There is still, however, a deplorable tendency to make women work longer and at lesser salaries
  than men in the mere clerical positions. For this many girls have themselves been responsible,
  a nimiber of them working for pocket-money only. Happily women are beginning to realise the
  evils of undercutting in salaries, and it only needs a co-operation among all women workers to
  assure their being paid at least a living wage. In tliis article some of the principal branches of
  business open to women are considered.
  
  
  LADY CLERKS
  
  Shorthand Typist. - The gii-1 who wishes to
  become a shorthand typist should first of all
  have had a good general education. Then she
  must have spent a year or two years in special
  training for her work. Too much stress cannot
  be laid upon the fact that a thorough education
  is essential in all cases as a basis upon wliich
  to build up the special work which is to follow.
  There seems to be a kin.l of idea that a girl
  can take a post as shorthand typist after very
  little training, and a post in an oCace is often
  thought to be the one refuge for the half -edu-
  cated girl. Never was there a greater fallacy.
  It has been said that the ranks of typists have
  become overcrowded, and salaries have been
  correspondingly lowered. This is only in re-
  gard to the inefficient workers. There are a
  number of girls who can perhaps take down a
  letter correctly if not dictated at a high speed,
  and transcribe it without serious mistake, but
  beyond this they have not an idea. If they
  were asked to compose a letter on their own
  account or had to show initiative in any way,
  they would be hopelessly at a loss. Workers of
  this kind can never hope to earn good salaries,
  for the very reason that there are hundreds of
  others who would be ablo to step into their
  shoes at a minute's notice.
  
  This is not the case with the intelligent worker
  who has thoroughly mastered her work in all
  its branches, who is not only an expert short-
  hand note -taker and transcriber, but who can
  save her employer a great deal of his time by
  being able to compose good business letters
  from a few words of instruction. A girl of this
  kind will always ha"e some power of initiative -
  she will not have to be told again and again what
  to do, and slie may bo trusted to deal tactfully
  
  665
  
  
  with any emergency that may arise. She will
  always be business-hke, neat in her work, and
  conscientious in carrying out her instructions.
  
  Typists who show capabilities of this kind,
  and whose work is valuable in every way, can
  always command a good salary, wliilst those
  who are content to be mere machines will always
  be badly paid.
  
  Training should be taken at one of the many
  business colleges with which all oiir large cities
  abound. Shorthand is now taught at many
  schools as an extra subject, but it is seldom
  that one can get speed practice to the same
  extent as in a business school. Proficiency in
  stenography can seldom be acquired in less than
  a year at least, but even to learn it in this time
  constant speed practice is necessary. Intelli-
  gent students have been known to teach them-
  selves shorthand, but the process is necessarily
  a slow and a difficult one. Every opportunity
  should be taken to read shorthand, and it is a
  good plan also when reading newspapers and
  magazines to trace the outlines of the words in
  shorthand under the printed lines as j-ou go on.
  All opportvmities for practice, such as taking
  down sermons, lectures, and speeches, should bo
  taken when they present themselves. In the
  business training course at a college the student
  will learn how to write business letters, &c., &c.
  She ■n^ll, in short, be given just that training
  which will be most useful to her in an office.
  
  Besides shorthand and typewriting, training
  should also bo taken in book-keeping, and the
  principal methods of filing should be learned.
  Tliorough knowledge of commercial French or
  German will prove an invaluable asset, for a
  much liigher salary will be received by the girl
  who can correspond in a foreign language.
  
  A typist's duties will consist of taking down
  letters in shorthand and transcribing them on
  
  
  666
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  the typewriter. Often she wiU be required to
  write short letters herself from a brief word of
  instruction. She will have to file letters syste-
  maticaUy, being able to produce them at once
  when required. She ^^-ill also be expected to
  answer toleplione calls for her employer in most
  cases, and this is a fact worth remembering by
  those who are not accustomed to the use of the
  telephone. Often she will be required to keep
  note of her employer's appointments, and some-
  times some of the book-keeping will fall to her
  share. The duties will vary in different offices.
  In large offices the stamping of letters, posting
  up of letter-book, &c., are performed by boys
  or junior clerks, whereas in the smaller offices
  some of these duties would fall upon the typist.
  Prospects. - An expert shorthand typist who
  can correspond in a foreign language can nearly
  always earn £2 a week and upwards; 30s.
  to 35s. a week is the usual salary of the thor-
  oughly efficient shorthand typist who is not
  proficient in languages. For a girl with ordi-
  nary quaUfications, £1 to £1, 5s. per week would
  represent the average salary, a junior typist
  receiving about 15s. weekly. A girl's salary will
  increase according to how useful she makes
  herself to her employers. In many cases a
  typist's salary has been known to reach £4 a
  week, but the recipient has always had excep-
  tional quaUfications and been entrusted with
  responsible work.
  
  Book-keepers.- The same principles laid down
  for the observance of shorthand typists must be
  taken to heart by the girl who wishes to become
  a book-keeper. Book-keeping by itself, how-
  ever, does not present such a wide scope as when
  it is allied with shorthand and typewriting.
  Needless to say, the girl who wishes to be a
  book-keeper must be strictly accurate and have
  a special talent for figures. She should also be
  a very neat writer, as all entries in the books
  must be neat and legible. Training in book-
  keeping can be had at any commercial school,
  or at evening classes at technical institutes.
  
  Thirty shillings a week is considered a good
  salary for a woman book-keeper, but the be-
  ginner would necessarily get less.
  
  Some Hints In regard to answering Advertise-
  ments and Business Interviews.- The applicant
  for a post should remember that employers can
  often form a judgment as to the quaUfications
  of a clerk by her letter of application. Great
  care should be taken, therefore, to pen a neat,
  legible, and weU-worded letter, confining it
  strictly to the business point at issue. An
  employer does not want to know how difficult
  you find it to get work, or if you are an orphan,
  or if your mother is an invalid. He does want
  to kno%v, however, what business experience you
  have had, what is your speed in shorthand and
  typewriting - if you can keep books and are used
  to any particular filing system, and if you can
  correspond in French or any other language.
  
  
  Make your letter brief, business-like, and to tho
  point. Detail carefuUy aU your qualifications,
  mention how long you were with your last
  employer, give references if desired, and ask for
  the favour of a personal interview. If a business
  interview is arranged, be at tho office punctuaUy
  at the appointed time ; take great care to present
  a neat, weU-groomed appearance, for this wiU
  count a great deal in your favour. If you aro
  asked to take down notes in shorthand and
  transcribe them as a test, do so quietly and
  without flurry. Make up your mind to do your
  very best undeterred by the nervousness which
  is invariably felt upon these occasions. Let the
  answers to any questions you may be asked be
  always courteous and to the point. Employers
  are quick to appreciateabusiness-Ukedemeanour,
  and this fact should always be borne in mind by
  appUcants for a business post.
  
  ACCOUNTANTS
  
  Accountancy is another profession to which
  educated women might well turn their atten-
  tion, only its practice necessitates the possession
  of several qualities which are not inherent in
  the average woman. The accountant requires
  a clear, deductive mind and great taste for
  mathematics, sound business capabilities, and
  a thorough training. She should have had a
  thoroughly good general education, foUoWed by
  at least three years' special study of accountancy
  
  work. , , . t
  
  Women are admitted to the membership oi
  the London Association of Accountants and can
  obtain the quaUfying distinctions of F.L.A.A.
  or A.L.A.A. given by this Association. The
  member's certificates of this Association are
  recognised by the Board of Trade.
  
  To prepare for the examination the student
  should become articled for a period of fr^m
  three to five years to a certified accountant who
  is a member of tho Association. The premium
  will probably amount to 25 guineas.
  
  Women can also prepare for a provincial
  Bachelor of Commerce degree at the Victoria
  University, Manchester, and the Universities of
  Birmingham, Leeds, and Liverpool. The study,
  if day classes are taken, will last three years, or
  five years if evening classes only are taken.
  The fees will probably amount to about £20 for
  each year. ,
  
  For the girl of slender means preparation for
  the Accountancy Certificate of the London
  Chamber of Commerce may be had by attending
  the classes of the London County Councils
  Evening Commercial Centres. The cost for
  these classes is practically nil, seldom amount-
  ing to more than 2s. 6d. for the session.
  
  BANK MANAGERESS, CASHIER
  
  Within tho last year a new profession has
  opened its gates to women, the profession of
  
  
  WOMEN IN BUSINESS
  
  
  667
  
  
  bank manageress. On March 14, 1910, IHr.
  Thomas Farrow founded the first bank for
  women in the United Kingdom at 29 New
  Bridge Street, Ludgate Circus, London, and in
  this bank the staff and advisory committee are
  composed wholly of women, and only women
  customers are accepted. It may be taken that
  this may lead to other similar ventures, so that
  the woman who has had a good commercial
  training may put it to account in this way. A
  bank manageress must necessarily be a woman
  of great capabilities and tact, and with sound
  business knowledge and training.
  
  In a bank managed only by women it will be
  seen that not only the post of manageress, but
  also those of clerks and cashiers, are available.
  The woman's banking movement is well worth
  watching by capable women workers ; if it de-
  velops to any great extent we may see women's
  banks tliroughout the kingdom, and further
  openings for women workers will thus present
  themselves.
  
  The payment to the staff employed in the
  first bank for women has been fixed on a Uberal
  scale.
  
  HOUSE AGENT
  
  The Jiouse agency business is eminently suit-
  able for women, yet few have so far taken it
  up, owing no doubt to the long and thorough
  training involved.
  
  It is absolutely useless for any girl to enter
  the ranks of house agents if she is not in the
  first place a good busim^s woman and has not
  a thorough knowledge of every branch of her
  work. In addition a knowledge of the law is
  very essential for the house agent, for witho\it
  it she might often land her cUents into serious
  difficulties. A knowledge of survejdng and
  valuation is also necessary.
  
  Tliere is a good future in the house agency
  business for clever women with the requisite
  training. A girl who wishes to start as a house
  agent must be in earnest and not do things by
  halves. She must have plenty of tact. The
  woman house agent, in fact, should be a lady
  in every sense of the word, with a good educa-
  tion and good manners ; she should also be able
  to mix in good social circles. It is much easier
  for a lady of good social connections to start
  upon work of this kind, for friends will entrust
  their business to her, and her work will increase
  as her success in dealing with the business
  becomes known. Mrs. Arthur Holland, the well-
  known lady house agent, once remarked, " Very
  often I have talked over and secured an im-
  portant contract in a drawing-room over the
  tea-cups with much more ease than I could
  have done in the office.'" Another argument in
  favour of the lady house agent is the fact that
  it is the lady of the family who takes or lets a
  house - the husband seldom bothers with these
  matters. Is it not fitting, therefore, that busi-
  
  
  ness should be discussed with another lady ?
  Indeed, more often than not a lady has the
  advantage over a man in this respect, for she
  has considerable grasp of detail, and she may
  often obtain in this way concessions for her
  client which a man might well overlook.
  
  The girl who is to be a house agent should
  also take instruction in house decoration, struc-
  tural alterations and costs, for with this know-
  ledge any one can gauge the possibilities of a
  house, and can advise the owner that at such
  and such an outlay a house can be made more
  attractive and command in many instances
  higher rent. Besides advising owners how to
  deal with their property, tlie girl who knows
  something of decoration and alterations can
  suggest improvements to the intending tenant.
  A house agent should have a thorough train-
  ing in every branch of her business, from the
  taking of an inventory to the drawing out of a
  lease. In England there are as yet difficulties
  in the way of training. Tlae best way to train,
  however, is to become an articled pupil for
  three years to a house agent. Tliis will cost, as
  a rule, 100 guineas. In addition, careful coach-
  ing should be taken in all points of law bearing
  upon the business.
  
  It is essential to have some capital before
  starting a house agency business, but no capital
  will be of any use unless you have the reqmsite
  training and sound business capacity. Apart
  from women starting in business as house agents
  right away, it will soon be recognised that there
  is a great deal of work connected with house
  and estate agency for which they are eminently
  adapted. Take the checking of inventories, for
  instance ; this can be quite weU done by ladies,
  and already a nvmiber of house agents employ
  ladies to do this particular work.
  
  Prospects. - House agency is a business which
  should open up very good prospects for clever
  women, for the reason that it is not overcrowded
  by women workers. It presents no sort of
  opening, however, for those with mediocre
  talents, but only for those with a thorough
  training and first-class capabilities.
  
  HOUSE DECORATION
  
  Women with the artistic sense cannot do
  better than tiuTi their attention to house decora-
  tion as a means of livelihood, either with the
  view of obtaining a post with a firm of house
  decorators, or starting a business of the kind
  for themselves. Tlaere are certain qualifications
  which exe, however, indispensable. In the first
  place a keen sense of form and colour and an
  eye for detail and arrangement are absolutely
  necessary. The house decorator must be able
  to originate effective schemes of decoration for
  clients, and to carry out schemes de\ised by
  them. In addition she must have a thorough
  Icnowledge of the business side of her work, the
  
  
  668
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  comparative cost of various decorative schemes,
  different styles of furiiiture, fittings, "&c. She
  must bo able to draw up estimates and keep
  accounts, also to direct and supervise the
  work of workmen. The house decorator must
  have a knowledge of the typical furniture of
  VEmous periods, and what style of decoration
  will go best with each. She must recognise
  the various kinds of clotlis and brocades, the
  difference between the many varieties of carpets,
  and the properties of each in regard to dura-
  bility, &c. Slie must also have a knowledge of
  antiques, both in regard to furniture and orna-
  ments.
  
  Training. - It will be seen that tliis knowledge
  cannot possibly be acquired without the neces-
  sary training. The only way of obtaining this
  is by serving an apprenticesliip with a good
  firm of decorators, preferably with a lady de-
  corator. Mrs. Keighley, the well-known lady
  decorator of Cliurch Street, Kensington, London,
  takes pupils at a fee of 300 guineas for a three
  years' course of training. A shorter course of
  twelve months may also be taken, and the charge
  for this is 50 guineas. Students may do much
  in the way of acquiring knowledge by visiting
  the various museums, such as the South Kensing-
  ton, and the Victoria and Albert, to study
  specimens of old furniture. A knowledge of
  architecture and design will be especially xiseful.
  
  Prospects. - To start a biisiness, capital will
  be necessary and also a certain social connection.
  As in the case of the house agency business, the
  lady who belongs to a good social circle and has
  a number of friends will stand the best chance.
  If a girl has no capital or good social connection
  she should strive to obtain first a position in a
  firm of decorators and gradually work her way
  up until she is able to set out for herself as an
  " adviser," or, if she can raise the capital, in a
  business of her own. She would probably begin
  at a salary of £1, 10s. a week, rising to £2 a week
  as her experience increases.
  
  The woman who starts in business for herself
  must, of course, have that business aptitude
  which is so indispensable for the successful con-
  ducting of any kind of trade,
  
  DRESSMAKING
  
  This is a profession in which women always
  stand a good chanco of success. A clever dress-
  maker is practically certain of a good clientele.
  Smart clothes are a necessity for the feminine
  world, and the demand for them always exists,
  so that no business can be started under more
  favourable auspices than that of dressmaking.
  
  Wliether a woman wishes merely to be an
  assistant in a dressmaking firm, or wishes to
  start a business of her own, her training should
  be a thoroughly prawjtical one - she must learn
  the work from the beginning. She may take a
  course of lessons at a dressmaking school, but
  
  
  she should always supplement tliis by going
  into the workroom of a good dressmaking firm
  in order to get the necessary experience.
  
  The conditions of apprenticeship vary. To
  enter many firms of high standing premiums of
  £50 to £100 must be paid. With ordinary ap-
  prenticeships, however, no fees are taken, and
  after six months a small weekly sum is paid to
  the apprentice. Every branch of the business
  is taught - from sewing on buttons to fitting a
  dress.
  
  For the girl who wishes to be an assistant the
  post of fitter should be aimed at if her talent
  Ues in this direction. Fitting is the most im-
  portant branch of the business, an experienced
  fitter being able to earn £5 a week and upwards,
  whilst the salaries of first bodice and skirt
  hands seldom rise above £150 a year, though in
  some cases £200 a year is earned.
  
  The woman who wishes to start in business
  for herseK should be naturally gifted for the
  work. She should have a keen sense of beautiful
  lines in fitting and of the art of drapery ; she
  should also recognise the principles which govern
  a good cut. Tliis knowledge is absolutely neces-
  sary if she has to direct fitters and workers.
  
  Prospects. - Many women commence by
  making frocks for their friends. If they are
  really good workers their clientele increases, and
  after some time they are able to secure trained
  assistance. Cash payments should be made a
  rule, and certain modifications in regard to
  price may be held out as an inducement to
  customers, for expenses are lessened when money
  comes in regularly.
  
  By degi-ecs the dressmaker beginning on these
  lines will find her business grow until she has
  quite a large connection. To start a West End
  business a faii'ly large capital is necessary -
  members of the wealthier classes are notoriouslv
  neglectful in regard to the prompt settlement
  of accounts, and, as a rule, a certain period of
  credit must be allowed. Business ability is a
  necessity for the dressmaker, who must also
  be alive to the possibilities of good advertising
  and other matters bearing upon her trade. No
  woman should enter the dressmaking business
  unless she is prepared for very hard work. The
  beginner with few assistants will often be obliged
  to sit up far into the night in order to finish
  the work entrusted to her, as it is fatal for the
  beginner to break promises made to her customer.
  A clever woman, by beginning in a small way and
  extending her busmess as opportunity presents
  itself, will by degrees build up quite a prosperous
  business yielding her a good annvial income.
  
  MILLINERY
  
  As with dressmaking so with millinery - ap-
  prenticeship is the surest way of learning the
  business. To be apprenticed to a good milUner
  a girl would have to pay a premium of about
  
  
  WOMEN IN BUSINESS
  
  
  669
  
  
  twenty guineas or less, but rarely more than
  tliis sum. The period of training is not so
  lengthy as that required for dressmaking, a
  millinery apprenticeship lasting, as a rule, for
  from six to nine months. It is always wise
  after the apprenticeship is over to stay on a
  little longer in the shop in order to gain ex-
  perience ; during this time the worker would
  earn a small salary, beginning at 10s. a week
  and rising to 30s. a week. If she does not wish
  to open a business of her own she could try
  and obtain a post as head milliner in either a
  millinery shop or a large drapery establishment
  with a millinery department. In this position
  she will be required to direct the work of the
  millinery workers and apprentices, supervising
  the whole working department. Head milliners
  often receive a salary of £3 a week.
  
  The woman who wishes to start a business of
  her own must have business capacity in addi-
  tion to her knowledge of the actual work. It
  is business capacity that counts the most in all
  businesses - the power of organisation, of direct-
  ing others, and checking expenditure and pre-
  venting waste. Tlie good business woman
  knows that it requires more than mere know-
  ledge of millinery to obtain success as a miUiner,
  that there are many details, such as choice of
  locaUty, &c., which determine the fate of such
  a business enterprise, and it is generally to the
  neglect of one of these important questions that
  the unsuccessful milliner may ascribe her failure.
  
  BEAUTY SPECIALISTS
  
  This is a business wliich promises the most
  interesting developments, and is full of interest
  and variety. There are now many women who
  are drawing large incomes from businesses of
  the kind, and who, by their enterprise, have en-
  couraged many others to follow in their wake.
  
  A business of tliis kind is only successful in
  large towns where the wealtliier classes are well
  represented. In smaller towns the clientele
  would not be extensive enough to make it pay.
  It is necessary also to start in a fashionable
  district where house rent and other expenses
  would be high, therefore a capital of at least
  £500 would in most cases be necessary.
  
  Those who go in for this business must neces-
  sarily be women of refinement, A dainty, lady-
  like appearance, well-kept hands, a soft, gentle
  voice are invaluable assets for she who would
  obtain a post as assistant in a business of the
  kind. Beauty culture appeals especiall3' to
  women of the leisured classes. An air of ex-
  clusiveness and refinement must necessarily
  pervade the establishment of the beauty spe-
  cialist if she wishes to appeal to these classes
  especially.
  
  The chief treatments applied at these estab-
  lishments are face and neck massage and com-
  nlcxion treatment generally, including removal
  
  
  of blackheads, electrolysis, manicure, and some-
  times hair and scalp treatment. A thorough
  knowledge of aU these branches is necessary for
  the girl who wishes to qualify as an assistant.
  There are some girls who will never make good
  masseuses, as they lack that light and dehcate
  touch which is so necessary, and no beauty
  specialist wiU accept a girl as a pupil who does
  not promise to be an adept at the work.
  
  Training. - Training can only be obtained at
  the estabhshment of a beauty specialist. Terms
  of training vary ; sometimes they are very mode-
  rate indeed, as girls of refinement with the neces-
  sary qualifications are difiicult to find. It is
  the rule also with most establisliments that no
  pupils are accepted unless they bind themselves
  to become assistants of the firm for a certain
  period, generally three years. In these cir-
  cumstances the terms are usually very favour-
  able, one firm ha%ang been known to take an
  especially promising pupil for a small fee of
  £5, and give her a salary after three months'
  training. From three to six months is generally
  the period of pupilage, after which a salary is
  given. Students must also sign an agreement
  to the effect that when they leave the estab-
  hshment they will not start a business of their
  own witliin a given distance of the place where
  they have trained.
  
  Salaries are very good, commencing as a rule at
  £1, Is. to £1, 10s. per week and rising as the use-
  fulness of the assistant increases. Head assistants
  and manageresses receive higher salaries ; the
  amount varies in the different establishments.
  The girl who wishes to become a pupil cannot
  dobetterthan write to a firm of beauty specialists,
  such as Mme. Pomeroy in Bond Street, London,
  asking if there is a vacancy for a pupil and
  upon what terms training may be had.
  
  HAIRDRESSING
  
  More women might turn their attention to
  the business of hairdressing with advantage. It
  is essentially feminine work, yet work which has
  for a long time been to a certain extent mono-
  polised by men. Within recent years, however,
  ladies have set up as hair specialists with success.
  They have studied not only the art of hair-
  dressing, but also the hygiene of the head, and
  the value of various preparations in curing scalp
  troubles. With hairdressing nowadays are also
  often associated the various methods of com-
  plexion treatment and massage, manicure and
  chiropody.
  
  To make a good hairdresser a girl must in
  the first place have an innate gift for hair
  arrangement and the facility to distinguish the
  styles best suited to the various tj7)os of faces.
  The best way of learning the business is to take
  a course of instruction at a hairdresser's. The
  terms vary with the different estabUshments.
  In some the apprenticeships last a yeax, in
  
  
  670
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  others longer, whilst short courses, varying from
  three to sis months in duration, may be taken.
  The last named are useful for ladies who wish
  to set up a private connection by beginning to
  do hairdressing for their friends, and also for
  those who wish to be ladies' maids. The fees
  for a two years' course would probably amount
  to from £25 to £30, shorter courses being natur-
  ally much cheaper. The pupil is instructed in
  every branch of the work, from brushing and
  combing, cutting, chpping, and shampooing the
  hair to the carrjing out of the fashionable
  coifTure ; making and dressing of wigs, and all
  kinds of false hair work. The study of the
  hygiene of the head and the properties of the
  various hair washes and hair dyes must by no
  means be neglected by the woman who wishes
  to start a hairdressing business of her own.
  
  Prospects. - The posts of assistants are not
  highlj' paid, the pay rarely exceeding £2 a week,
  whilst 10s. to 15s. a week represents a com-
  mencing salary. Besides posts in ordinary
  establishments, there are hairdressing depart-
  ments in most of our large drapery and
  general stores, which are often managed by
  ladies. A woman may also form a good private
  xasiting connection for hairdressing at fees of 5s.
  a visit. There are no end of ways in which the
  art can be put to practical accoiint by the good
  business woman.
  
  OPENING A TEA-ROOM
  
  Many ladies who have opened tea-rooms are
  carrying on quite a profitable business, whilst
  others have lost all their little capital in the
  endeavour to start an enterprise of the kind. The
  reason is that ladies of limited means who
  could cook a Uttle and make sweets and cakes
  have rushed headlong into the business, fondly
  imagining that the little knowledge they pos-
  sessed was sufficient for success. Never was
  there a greater fallacy. The first thing neces-
  sary to make a tea-room pay is sound business
  capacity. Servants can bo engaged to do the
  cooking and see to the other details, and the
  success or failure of a tea-room will depend not
  only upon the cooking, though this is of course
  important, but chiefly upon the way it is
  managed. Choice of locality is an important
  consideration - choice should bo made of a spot
  where there is little competition from neigh-
  bouring establishments, and where a certain
  proportion of customers may bo assured. City
  tea and luncheon rooms, for instance, should
  not be opened in a main street, but in a side
  thoroughfare which is well frequented, near im-
  portant business houses from which it is easily
  accessible.
  
  The outlay on furniture need not be great,
  and every inch of space should be utilised to the
  best advantage. A long seat can be made to
  run the length of the wall, consisting of a large
  
  
  plank of wood fitted up by a carpenter and
  daintily covered with dark green art serge or
  cretonne of a pretty pattern. Tables can bo
  of the cheapest, as dainty cloths can always be
  kept over them to hide their surface. They
  should be of various sizes to hold two, four, &c.
  
  The cliief thing in starting a business of the
  kind is to establish a distinctive note about the
  place which will answer well for the purpose of
  advertisement. It is a good plan, for instance,
  to call the rooms after the name of a flower
  and to carry out the scheme of decoration in
  accordance with the floral idea. Thus in
  " Daffodil " Tea-rooms the decorative scheme
  would be one of green and yellow. Should
  there be a shop frontage to the rooms a few
  dainty boxes of sweets, or ornaments if sweets
  are not sold, should be tastefully displayed upon
  billows of yellow art mushn. Vases containing
  daffodils might be arranged hero and there -
  in the spring the natvual flowers and at other
  seasons artificial ones could be used. At the
  back the window cordd be partitioned off from
  the interior by dainty little yellow curtains
  hanging from brass rods. Inside the room wall-
  paper and tables should be green, and a bunch
  of daffodils in a green vase might be placed
  upon each table.
  
  In regard to the cooking a feature should be
  made of home-made rolls and cakes, and the
  service should be characterised by daintiness
  and refinement.
  
  This is only a rough idea of what could be
  done by a woman with taste for arrangement.
  Menu cards might also have a daffodil painted
  upon the cover. Neat little cards enclosing a
  typical tariff might be sent round to the various
  residents, or offices (if in the city). Tea-rooms
  at pleasure resorts should be advertised in the
  local paper, and the advertisement should b<*
  well and carefully drawn up.
  
  All these details require organisation, manage-
  ment, and careful covmting of costs. Book-
  keeping will have to be most carefully done, and
  the duplicate check -system should be adopted
  for the making out of bills. In a tea-room
  managed by ladies, ladies are usually engaged
  as assistants. No assistants will be necessary
  where three or four sisters or friends are en-
  gaged in the business. If the cooking is not
  done by one of their number, a cook will have to
  be engaged, and in any case a servant for the
  rough work. Lady assistants in tea-rooms re-
  ceive salaries of from about 15s. to £1 a week.
  
  The amount of capital required will depend
  to a great extent upon the business capabilities
  of the organiser. £200 should be sufficient for
  most purposes, and clever women have been
  known to found a successful business with half
  tliat sum. In most tea-rooms some sort of
  lunches, if even only of cold meats, should be
  provided. In the city lunch is a necessity, and
  hot dishes must always figure on the menu.
  
  
  WOMEN IN BUSINESS
  
  
  671
  
  
  The principal business of city tea-rooms is done
  in luncheons - but these need not be expen-
  sive. One joint and two made dishes should
  figure daily on the menu. This will be iisually
  found sufficient with the choice of two sweets,
  cakes, &c. In the strawberry season straw-
  berries and cream might be provided.
  
  A woman with sound business instinct wiU
  rarely make a failure of a venture of this kind,
  because before starting out she will have counted
  the various ways and means, and will not rush
  rashly into any enterprise unless it can be
  started imder the most favourable auspices.
  
  SWEET-MAKING
  
  This makes a very pleasant and profitable
  home occupation for the woman who is well
  acquainted with the method of turning out
  dainty and toothsome confectionery, and who
  has had a good business traim'ng enabUng her
  to cut down expenses to a minimimi, and be
  able to calculate to a nicety the sweets that can
  be sold at a profit and those which would not
  pay for the making.
  
  It is a well-known fact that the ingredients
  used in sweet-making come very expensive when
  only small quantities are made, and in many
  cases the ready-made sweets can be bought for
  a lower price than that represented by the cost
  of making them. The object of the sweet-
  maker mvist therefore be to obtain a large
  clientele. This of conrse she will not be able to do
  at first, as the quahty of h^v wares must become
  known before there can be any large demand for
  them ; so she must feel her way gently, com-
  mencing with the less expensive sweets, such as
  toffees, candies, &c., which do not cost much to
  make, and can always be sold at a profit.
  
  And now comes a question of utmost im-
  portance, and upon which a great measure of the
  success of the business will depend - ^the packing
  of the sweets. Few women realise how tasteful
  packing of confectionery appeals to almost all
  classes of shoppers. For a long time English
  sweet-sellers lagged behind in this direction, until
  the firm of Fullers gave them an object lesson
  in the best way of appealing to the public taste.
  Every one is now familiar with the style of
  packing which has proved in itself one of the
  most successful advertising appeals of the firm
  to the public - plain fancy white boxes, stamped
  with the logend " Fuller " in neat lettering,
  carefully wrapped in white paper stamped with
  the same legend, and finally tied round with
  ribbon of a tasteful shade, the whole giving an
  air of taste and refinement which proves irresis-
  tible. It may be hazarded that many a box of
  sweets intended as a present has been sold by
  yirt,ue of the tasteful ribbon bow by wloich
  it was decked. L^-t the womaa sweet-maker
  therefore take these principles to heart. Her
  b'^xes need not cost much. She can get them
  
  
  wholesale from a box manufactiirer (a list of
  names can be found in a directory). The
  plainer and simpler they are the better, but
  let them at any rate be distinctive in style.
  Perfectly plain white boxes with nairow gold or
  silver rims are always effective. In these the
  better kinds of sweets should be packed in neat
  little frilled paper sweet-cases, whilst candies
  and tablets should be neatly done up in wax-
  paper. The result of this arrangement will be
  twofold, for it will not only add to the dainty
  appearance of the sweets, but it will make for
  economy, inasmuch that less sweets will be
  required to fill each box.
  
  The sweet-maker must have some small
  capital with which to lay in a supply of sweet
  moulds, cases, boxes, and other necessary im-
  plements. For a large business she will have to
  lay out at least £10 on these, but one must look
  before one leaps, and when beginning in a small
  way the following will usually be found sufficient,
  as they can be added to as the business increases.
  A good sugar thermometer is one of the first
  things to be bought, and this will cost from
  4s. 6d. to 5s. 6d. Success in sweet -making
  depends very largely upon boiling the sugar to
  the right degree, and it is only with the ther-
  mometer that this can be determined with exact-
  ness and little trouble. The amatevu- method of
  testing the boiling sugar by dropping small
  portions into cold water may succeed ; but very
  often it does not, and waste of good material
  is very often the result. A small marble or
  slate slab is another very useful accessory ; but
  sometimes the top of a marble washstand can
  be utihsed until funds will allow of the correct
  article being invested in. One or two strong
  enamelled saucepans, a wooden spatula, weights
  and scales or a small balance, a wire fork and
  ring for Hfting the sweets, some grease-jwoof and
  wax-paper, along with the necessary boxes and
  paper cases, will complete the prehminary outfit.
  Then by degrees special moulds, cutters and other
  apparatus may be added to suit the requirements
  of the special recipes that may be learnt.
  
  It is, of course, necessary for the sweet-maker
  to be thoroughly well vereed in this particular
  branch of the culinary art. The woman who
  has a decided gift in this direction will learn all
  that is necessary by taking a sweet-making
  course at a good training school. The fees for
  tuition vary in different schools, but as a rxile
  they average about 10s. 6d. per lesson, two or
  tlu'ee recipes being learned at each. Careful
  and constant practice of the recipes is very
  important. Cake-making usually forms part
  of the coiu^e, and the business might also be
  extended to comprise this branch of confectionery
  if feasible.
  
  Once she is thoroughly proficient in the art,
  the sweet-maker must set about making her
  wares known. She can begin by selling to
  friends and acquaintances, as already advised ;
  
  
  672
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  but it will bo necessary for her to secure a wider
  public if the business is to bo made to pay. A
  neatly-worded advertisement distinguished by
  some characteristic illustration or design should
  appeeir once or twice a week in the principal
  local paper. All the advertising literature should
  bo characterised by refinement as well as good
  selling arguments. Neat little price lists should
  be prepared giving full particulars of the wares
  sold, and on the cover of this should also appear
  the same pretty design that is used in the
  advertisement.
  
  Prospects. - ^There are good prospects of
  success principallj' for the good business woman
  who is gifted with taste and has good social
  connections. Quite recently in a large theatre
  under the management of a lady, the whole of
  the sweets sold in the theatre were made by a
  lady sweet-maker li\'ing in a country vicarage.
  Such an order, it will be seen, forms almost a
  livelihood in itself, and the lady sweet-maker
  should always aim at obtaining orders of the
  kind which will enable her to cater for large
  communities. Above all she must make good
  sweets of many different varieties.
  
  Some Sweet Recipes. - The following recipes
  will be found \iseful by those who wish to take
  up tlus business, and might serve as a basis upon
  wliich to build up a more extensive list which
  will become necessary as the clientele increases.
  
  American Candy
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Loaf Sugar. 3 oz. Butter.
  
  1 gill Water. Flavouring.
  
  J lb. Glucose.
  
  Metliod. - Put the sugar, water, and glucose
  into a saucepan, and melt them slowly over the
  fire. Then boil with the thermometer to 290№
  Fahr. Add the butter broken in pieces, and boil
  again to 305№. Pour the mixture out on a
  greased slab ; add flavouring to taste. Fold over
  and over with a wooden spoon or spatula, and
  when sufficiently cooled work well with the hands,
  and pull out into a long roll until it begins to
  stiffen. Then cut in pieces with a pair of scissors
  and wrap in waxed paper.
  
  Note. - A little colouring may bo added to the
  candy if desired.
  
  Aprlcotines
  
  Ingredients. - Equul quantities of apricot pulp
  and castor sugar ; and some crystallised sugar.
  
  Method. - Take some good tinned apricots,
  lift thorn from the syrup and drain them on a
  sieve for half-an-hour. Then rub thom through
  a hair sieve and weigh tho pulp. Put this pulp
  into a lined saucepan with an equal quantity of
  castor sugar. Bring to the boil, and boil until
  fairly thick, when tho mixture will begin to draw
  away from the sides of tho saucepan. It must
  be stirred all tho time, and must not cook too
  
  
  quickly. Drop small pieces about tho size of a
  half -penny on a wetted tin, and sprinkle with
  crystallised sugar before they harden. When
  firm put two together, the flat sides agEunst
  each other ; roll in sugar, and put them in little
  crimped paper sweetmeat cases. Small sweet
  mioulds may be used for shaping the sweets ;
  these should be wet with cold water and sprinkled
  inside with granulated sugar before the fruit
  pulp is poured into them.
  
  Note. - Other fruit pulp can bo used in tho
  same way, but it must be one with a substance,
  such as apples, plums, peaches, &c. Currants,
  strawberries, and the like are too juicy.
  
  Quince pulp lends itself very well to this pur-
  pose, and makes a delicious sweet. The fruit
  must be stewed to a pulp with as little water
  as possible.
  
  Caramel Walnuts
  
  Ingredients -
  
  J lb. shelled Walnuts. 1 lb. Loaf Sugar.
  
  } lb. ground Almonds. 1 gill of Water.
  
  i lb. Castor Sugar. Lemon Juice.
  
  1 Egg or two yolks. Small Paper Cases.
  
  Flavouring. ColouriDg.
  
  Method. - Put the walnuts on a tin, and toast
  them in the oven for about ten minutes. Then
  make some almond paste. Sieve the sugar, and
  put it into a basin with the ground almonds, a
  squeeze of lemon juice, and one egg or two yolks.
  Work all into a smooth paste with the hands,
  and turn out on a sugared board. Add a few
  drops of vanilla or any other flavouring that is
  preferred and work again until well mixed. Then
  divide this paste into small pieces the size of a
  hazel nut, and roll them into balls. Put a half
  walnut on each side of these balls, and press them
  well in. Proceed thus until all are finished.
  
  Various Colours. - A nice variety is made by
  dividing the almond paste into three portions
  before the flavouring is added and mrking them
  up in different colours ; keep one portion its
  natural colour and flavour with vanilla, colour
  a second portion pink by adding a few drops of
  carmine or cochineal, and flavour with essence
  of strawberry, and make tho third green by using
  a little spinach green, and flavour with essence of
  almonds or ratafia.
  
  The colouring and flavouring must be worked
  well into each separate portion. Tho flavouring
  may, of course, be varied according to teiste. A
  few drops of liqueur may be used instead of a
  flavouring essence.
  
  To Make the Caramel. - Put tho loaf sugar,
  lemon juice, and water into an iron saucepan or
  sugar boiler, and boil quickly without stirring
  until a golden brown colour. Then remove the
  saucepan quickly from tho fire, and dip the
  bottom of it into cold water, to prevent the
  caramel burning. Dip the walnuts into this
  one at a time ; lift them out with two forks or
  with a wire fork or ring, and place them on an
  
  
  WOMEN IN BUSINESS
  
  
  673
  
  
  oiled slab or dish. This must be done very
  quickly, as the caramel soon hardens. It is
  better if two people can be engaged with it -
  one to drop the walnuts into the caramel, and
  one to lift them out. Everything must be ready
  too before beginning. When all are done,
  remove the walnuts from the dish, break off any
  superfluous caramel, and place the sweets in
  small paper cases.
  
  Caramel Dates and French Plums
  
  These may be prepared in the same way as
  caramel walnuts, and make a nice variety. Very
  good soft fruit must be chosen, because, if dry,
  the caramels will be hard and tasteless. Remove
  the stonesfrom the dates or plums without cutting
  the fruit in two or breaking it in any way. Then
  fill the centres with an almond-shaped piece of
  almond paste, and roll slightly with the hands to
  form a neat shape. Allow these to dry for a few
  hours, and then coat with caramel and finish as
  above. A green or pink filMng looks particu-
  larly pretty with this kind of sweet.
  
  Chocolate Caramels
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Loaf Sugar. J lb. Chocolate,
  
  1 gill Water or Milk. 6 oz. Glucose.
  
  1 gill Cream. Vanilla.
  
  } lb. Butter.
  
  Method. - Put the sugar, milk and glucose into
  a saucepan, melt slowly and then boil to 245№ F.
  Cut the chocolate into small pieces, and melt it
  in another saucepan without any water. TTiis
  is best done in an earthenware saucepan in the
  oven, or by placing the saucepan inside another
  containing hot water. Add the butter to the
  chocolate, and when quite melted add these to
  the sugar, &c., and boil aU together to 245№ or
  250№. The mixture must not be stirred after
  the chocolate is added, but must be boiled very
  carefully to prevent it burning. Flavour with
  vanilla and pour out in a shallow oiled tin. Mark
  in squares with the back of a knife or with a
  ceiramel cutter, and when nearly cold cut the
  mixture right through. Wrap the caramels in
  wax-paper.
  
  Coffee Caramels
  
  Make in the same way as chocolate cai'amels,
  using sufficient essence of coffee to flavour
  instead of the chocolate, and three ounces of
  butter instead of a quarter of a pound. The
  coffee and butter must not be added until the
  syrup has boiled to 245№, and after that the
  mixture must not be stirred.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  1 lb. Loaf Sugar.
  i lb. Glucose.
  
  
  Cocoa-nut Drops
  
  
  1 gill of Water.
  
  6 oz. Dessicated Cocoa-nut.
  
  
  Method. - Put the sugar, water and glucose
  into a lined saucepan, bring to the boil and
  
  
  skim. Put the lid on the pan and boil rapidly
  for five minutes. Then remove the bd and boil
  to 240№ F. Take the saucepan off the fire, and
  add the cocoa-nut and a little flavouring if
  wished. Arrange in small rocky heaps on a
  papered tray and leave them to dry.
  
  Note. - If Hked, the mixture may be divided in
  two portions and one part coloured pink.
  
  
  Ingredients -
  2 lbs. Loaf Sugar.
  5 gills Water.
  2 oz. Gelatine.
  
  
  French Jellies
  
  
  Colouring.
  Flavouring.
  Granulated Sugar.
  
  
  Method. - Soak the gelatine in the water for
  half-an-hour, then put it into a saucepan with
  the sugar, bring to the boil, and boil for twenty
  minutes, stirring all the time. Divide into two
  portions, and colour and flavour according to
  taste. For instance, coloiir one half pink with
  a little carmine or cocliineal and flavour with
  raspberry or strawberry essence, and coloiu: the
  other half a pale yellow and flavour with lemon,
  or colour green and flavour with peppermint.
  Turn each portion into a wetted soup plate or
  pie-dish, sprinkle with granulated sugar, and
  leave until the next day. Then turn out, cut
  in neat square or oblong-shaped pieces, and
  roll them in granulated sugar. Leave spread
  out until dry and crisp on the outside.
  
  
  Ingredients-
  
  2 lbs. Demerara Sugar.
  
  2 gills Cold Water.
  
  
  Guiger Tablet
  
  
  1 oz. Ground Ginger.
  
  
  Method. - Put the sugar and water into a lined
  or copper saucepan and stir till they come to the
  boil. Remove any scum, and then boil till a
  little dropped in water will form a " soft ball,"
  about 245№ F. Take the saucepan off the fixe,
  add the ginger, and keep stirring until the
  mixture begins to turn thick. Have a flat oven
  tin lined with greased paper, pour the mixture
  into this and let it remain until cold. Cut or
  saw into neat pieces of equal size. A better
  way of shaping the tablet is to lay four iron rods,
  which are sold for the purpose, on a marble or
  stone slab so as to form a square and to pour
  the tablet in the centre of this. By tlus means
  the edges will be kept even and the pieces will
  be more regular in shape.
  
  Note. - Lemon and rose tablet can be made in
  the same way, substituting wliite loaf for brown
  sugar, and essence for the ground seasoning.
  
  Fruit Marzipan
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Loaf Sugar. h lb. Ground Almonds.
  
  1 table-spoonful Fruit Pulp. A pinch of Cream of Tartar.
  
  i gill Water. Glacd Icing.
  
  Method.^-Pwt the sugar, cream of tarteir and
  water into a saucepan and boil to 250№. Then
  add the almonds and the fruit pulp. This
  
  2u
  
  
  674
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  latter must bo sicvcni and of a very thick con-
  sistency- apricot pulp is very suitable for the
  purpose. Tlion stir over a slow fire until the
  mixture is thick and draws away from the sides
  of the pan. Turn out on a slab, and when cool
  roll out to quarter of an inch in tluckness. The
  mixture may be coloured if wished and flavovu--
  ing may be added. Coat the top with some thin
  glac6 icing (see p. 225), sprinkle with finely
  chopped pistachio nuts, and cut into fancy shapes
  with a very sharp knife.
  
  
  Marzipan Potatoes
  Ingredients -
  Almond Pa"te.
  Crystalliaed Cherries.
  
  
  Orange-Flower Water.
  Grated Chocolate.
  
  
  Method. - Prepare some almond paste the
  same as for caramel walnuts or for fruit mar2dpan,
  and flavour it with orange-flower water or any
  other flavouring preferred. Remove any hard
  sugar from the cherries by placing them in hot
  water for a minute ; then form the paste into
  shapes resembling very small new potatoes, and
  place a cherry in the centre of each. They
  must not be too large. Roll them in finely
  powdered chocolate and mark a few eyes in each.
  Small pieces of other preserved fruits may bo
  used instead of the cherries, but there must, of
  course, be no stone in the fniit, and it must not
  bo hard nor too much crystalUsed.
  
  Opera Creams
  
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Loaf Sugar. Cream.
  
  1 gUl Water. Icinj,' .Sugar.
  
  2 oz. Glucose. Flavouring.
  
  Method. - Put tho sugar, water and glucose
  into a saucepan and melt slowly over the fire,
  Btirrring all the time until tho sugar is melted.
  Skim well and wash any scum off the sides
  of tho saucepan with a small brush. Then boil
  with tho thermometer to 245№. Pour on a slab
  and work until white, first with a wooden
  spoon or spatula and then with the hands.
  Then put this fondant back into tho saucepan,
  add a little cream and enough icing sugar to
  bring it back to tho right consistency for shaping.
  Flavour to taste and put out again on tho slab.
  Form into a square, using a little icing sugar to
  prevent it sticking to tho hands. Then roll out
  to one inch in thickness, making tho mixture as
  smooth and oven as possible. Leave until cold
  and set, and then cut in squares with a very
  sharp knife.
  
  These creams aro great favourites, and they
  may bo mado in a variety of colours and flavours.
  
  
  Ingredifnts -
  1 lb. Icing Sugar.
  1 A\'hite of Egg.
  
  
  Peppermint Creams
  
  
  Oil of ■Peppermint.
  
  1 table-spoonful Water.
  
  
  and moisten with tho white of egg and water.
  Work with tho hands into a smooth, soft paste,
  flavouring with a few drops of oil of peppermint.
  When the paste is pUable and free from cracks,
  roU it out to one-eighth of an inch in thickness
  on a board that has been sprinkled with sieved
  icing sugar. Cut out into rounds with a small
  cutter and place aside on a sheet of white paper
  sprinkled with castor sugar, and let them remain
  until dry. The cutter should be dipped into
  castor sugar to prevent it sticking to the paste.
  The scraps ought to be pressed together and
  rolled out again until all are used.
  
  
  A few drops Oil of Pepper-
  mint.
  
  
  Another Method
  Ingredients -
  
  1 lb. Icing Sugar.
  J tea-sp. Cream of Tartar
  
  2 or 3 table-sp. of Cream. I
  
  Method. - Sieve the sugar into a basin, add
  the cream of tartar, and when thoroughly mixed
  add enough cream to form a stiff paste. Turn
  out on a sugared board and knead with the hand
  until smooth and pliable, working in the pepper-
  mint flavouring. Tlien cover the paste over and
  let it rest for an hour. Finish off as above.
  
  Chocolate Peppermints
  
  Make some peppermint creams as above,
  then dissolve a quarter of a pound sweet choco-
  late in an earthenware saucepan. This must
  be done very slowly and stirred all the time ; no
  water is required, and it must not be allowed to
  become too hot. Dip the peppermint creams
  into this, and hf t them out with a wire fork and
  place them on paper to drain. This must bo
  done as quickly as possible.
  
  
  Method. - Sieve the icing sugar into a basin
  
  
  I ngredicnts-
  1 lb. Loaf Sugar.
  1 gill of Water.
  
  
  Peppermint Cushions
  
  
  Essence of Peppermint.
  
  A pinch of Cream of Tartar.
  
  
  Method. - Put tho sugar, water and cream of
  tartar into a lined saucepan and boil to 270№ F.,
  removing any scum that may rise. Pour this
  out on a marblo slab and sprinkle over it a few
  drops of peppermint. Great care must be taken
  not to flavour too strongly.
  
  Fold over and over with a wooden spatula,
  and when cool enough pull out with the hands
  until quito white and firm and in the shape of
  a long roll. Cut in pieces with a strong pair of
  scissors.
  
  
  Russian Toffee
  
  
  Ingredients -
  1 lb. Brown Sugar.
  } lb. WTiitc Sugar.
  I lb. Butter.
  
  
  1 gill Cream.
  
  1 table-sp. Golden Syrup.
  
  Vanilla flavouring.
  
  
  Method. - First dissolve the butter in a lined
  saucepan or sugar boiler, then a(ld the other
  
  
  WOMEN IN BUSINESS
  
  
  675
  
  
  2 oz. Shelled and Chopped
  
  Walnuts.
  1 oz. Butter.
  
  
  ingredients and flavour nicely with vanilla.
  Boil all together until the toffee feels crisp when
  tested in a little cold water. It must be stirred
  all the time, and when ready it wiU draw away
  from the sides of the pan. Pour the toffee into
  a well-greased shallow tin. Mark it across in
  squares, and when nearly cold cut in pieces with
  a very sharp knife. Wrap the pieces in waxed
  paper.
  
  Walnut Molasses
  Ingredients -
  1 lb. Brown Sugar.
  1 gill Water.
  A pinch of Cream of Tartar,
  
  Method. - Toast the walnuts in the oven for
  a few minutes and then chop them somewhat
  roughly.
  
  Put the wat"r, sugar and cream of tartar into
  a lined saucepan and boil with the thermometer
  to 280№ F., adding the butter just before it
  reaches this point. Pour out on a marble slab
  into a long shape, sprinkle with the walnuts, and
  fold over with a wooden spoon or spatula. When
  slightly cool roll with the hands and pull out
  vmtil about the tliickness of a thin walking-
  stick. Then cut quickly in pieces with a pair
  of strong scissors, allow the pieces to cool, and
  twist them into small pieces of waxed paper.
  If this sweetmeat is left exposed to the air,
  especially in damp weather, it becomes sticky.
  
  Note. - Chopped hazel nuts may be used
  instead of walnuts.
  
  OPENING A TYPEWRITING OFFICE
  
  There are many typewriting offices in London
  and other large towns which are doing very good
  business, whilst others have proved unmistak-
  able failiu-es.
  
  It is true that, as comparedwith the conditions
  prevailing some seven or eight years ago, there
  is a great deal of competition in this particular
  business, and as is the case with every other
  calling, it is the pioneers who have reaped the
  most benefit from it ; but there is no reason
  why a new typewriting office should not be
  estabhshed successfully by the woman who has
  had a thorough training in typewriting, short-
  hand, and general business methods, and who
  has good experience of all kinds of copying work.
  
  Training. - To leam the ins and outs of every
  branch of the business it is always better to
  spend a few months in a first-class typewrit-
  ing office after the regular business training has
  been completed. Be careful, however, to select
  a really good office doing brisk business with
  an extensive and varied clientele. There are
  usually vacancies to be found in most copying
  offices for those who are willing to work at a
  moderate salary - or to give their services in
  return for the experience affcrded.
  
  The learner should take special pains to get
  pr-.ctice in reading badly-written MSS. Cali-
  
  
  graphy of all kinds has to be deciphered in a
  typewriting office, and it would go ill with the
  office where such writing could not be copied
  from without serious mistake. Training in all
  the various kinds of copying work is also
  necessary ; specifications, scientific work, legal
  work, verse, authors' MSS., plays, parts of the
  characters in plays - all have to be copied in a
  distinctive style, whilst special paper has to be
  used and special ruling made in many cases.
  Then the various processes of stencil duplicating
  win have to be mastered. Speed, accuracy, and
  neat work are the great objects to be aimed
  at. Good work always proves the best adver-
  tisement in this as well as in every other line
  of business. A good practical knowledge of
  languages is also necessary, for translation is
  another important branch of a typewriting
  business. Those who are able to add research
  work and indexing to the ordinary typewriting
  office routine work will find that these are two
  useful and remimerative additions to the
  business.
  
  Prospects. - It is always better for two friends,
  or sisters, to start a business of the kind, be-
  ginning in a small way, for this will save the cost
  of paid assistance. They should have enough
  capital to ensure at least the first year's rent
  and working expenses, light, telephone, &c., in
  addition to paj ing for the furniture and fittings.
  The amount of the capital necessary will
  depend upon the locality selected, as rents are
  much higher in some places than in others. It
  will be necessary to start in a central district,
  and upon the district chosen will depend to
  a large extent the kind of work taken to the
  offices. In some places, such as in the neigh-
  bourhood of the Strand and near Bedford Street
  and its environs, theatrical work wiU predomi-
  nate. In busy city districts business typing
  and letters will be the cliief work ; in legal and
  parliamentary environs law work will predomi-
  nate. An office should always be chosen in
  some such centre of activity where, to begin
  with at any rate, some crumbs of work may fall
  to the share of the new typewriting office, even
  if the whole loaf or at least a good half of it
  cannot be had at first. It is worse than useless
  to start an office far from any centre of activity.
  Those who start vmder the most favourable
  auspices are womc^n who have managed to es-
  tablish a small connection for type-copying work
  pt home before launching out into business.
  At first all the work can be undertaken by the
  principals. Then as the business increases it
  will become necessary to add to the staff. A
  very remunerative branch of the work consists
  of taking in and training pupils - but a word of
  warning^ in this respect. Never entrust respon-
  sible work to a mere beginner, even in times of
  stress. The work sent out by some typewriting
  offices is notoriously bad, because to save ex-
  pense it is nearly all entrusted to young girls
  
  
  676
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  who are learning the business. This is a very
  false method of economy - a method which will
  do more than anything else to bring the business
  into disrepute, and which has been the cause
  of the failure of many offices which might have
  been flourishing to-day if more honourable
  business methods had been adopted. It does
  not follow, however, that pupils should not be
  made to prove themselves useful - especially as
  the best method of learning from their point of
  view is by practical experience - but let their
  capabilities be well tested before they are en-
  trusted with important work.
  
  All the work should be vmder the personal
  supervision of the principal, who should see that
  nothing but good work leaves the office. In tliis
  way alone can success be attained.
  
  It is always better to have a ground floor or a
  firstfloor for offices,at anyrate until one is known,
  but this will depend a great deal upon circum-
  stances and according to where the offices are
  situated. It is advisable to begin with two
  rooms at least.
  
  Neat little price-lists should be made out for
  the use of chents, and should be distributed
  amongst business firms and other possible
  clients. It is a good idea to print on the back
  of these price-lists any testimonials received in
  regard to efficiency and accuracy of work.
  Terms should be strictly cash.
  
  The following is a guide to the prices charged
  for various kinds of typewriting : -
  
  
  Legal and general copying, per folio
  (72 words)
  
  Verse and scientific copying, per folio
  
  Authors' MSS. under 3000 words, per
  1000
  
  Authors' MSS., in quantities of 3000
  words and over, per 1000 words .
  
  Authors' MSS., if over 10,000 words,
  per 1000
  
  Plays, per Act of 18 pp. (4to. typed)
  
  Plays, after 18 pp., per page . .
  
  Actors' parts, per page (size of page,
  half foolscap)
  
  Typing from French, German, Span-
  ish, Itahan, per foUo . . .
  
  Typing plays from above languages,
  per Act, 18 pages ....
  
  Addreasing envelopes, per 1000 .
  
  Each Carbon Copy half price.
  
  Dictation
  
  
  n
  
  
  1 3
  
  1 0
  
  10
  5 0
  
  n
  
  2i
  
  8 0
  7 6
  
  
  3 C
  
  
  Typing from dictation, per hour . .
  
  (Carbon copies half price.)
  Hire of typewriter and operator, per
  
  hour 3 6
  
  Hire of typewriter and operator, per
  
  day irom 12 0
  
  Hire of typewriter and operator, per
  
  week by arrangement.
  
  
  Stencil Duplicating
  
  Letters, Circulars, Specifications, Balance
  
  Sheets, Abstracts of Titles, Drafts, d;c.
  
  £ a. d.
  
  Per 25 pages. Quarto size ... 26
  
  " 50 ,. " " . . . 3 6
  
  ., 100 " " " . . . 4 6
  
  " 500 " "" ... 18 0
  
  " 25 pages. Foolscap size ... 30
  
  " 50 " " " . . . 4 6
  
  " 100 " " " . . . 6 0
  " 500 ., " ,,...110
  
  ,, 25 pages. Draft size .... 40
  
  " 50 " "".... 69
  
  " 100 " "".... 86
  
  ,, 25 pages. Brief size .... 50
  
  " 50 " "".... 69
  
  " 100 " "".... 86
  
  Shorthand
  
  Attendance for letters, &c., per hour . 3 6
  
  Transcribing notes, per folio ... 2
  
  
  Translations
  
  French, German, Spanish, ItaUan
  into English, per folio ....
  
  EngUsh into French, German, Spanish,
  ItaUan, per folio
  
  
  1 0
  1 6
  
  
  A weU-managed office opened in a suitable
  locality should be miade to pay expenses by the
  end of the first year. A type-copying business is
  essentially one where periods of great activity,
  followed by intervals of slackness of work, occiu".
  The proprietor of the office should regulate her
  expenditure accordingly, and make provision
  for those periods when work is scarce.
  
  CANVASSERS
  
  Women canvassers are largely employed by
  firms who wish to introduce their work to the
  public, also by advertisement managers and
  agents and by publishers.
  
  The calling is not one which wiU appeal to
  the majority of educated women, although the
  clover canva.sser can make a very good income
  indeed. Tact and persuasive power are the two
  most important assets of the canvtisser. She
  must have a good amount of the quality called
  " push," being slow to take a rebioJS ; above all
  she must not be sensitive. The unduly sensi-
  tive woman is totally unfit for a position of the
  kind.
  
  Canvassers may be required to travel - their
  travelling expenses being paid, of course - or to
  work in their own town. They are paid in two
  ways. Most often they are paid by commi&sion
  only ; in this case the commission being a large
  one, from 20 to 25 per cent. In other cafiea
  
  
  WOMEN IN BUSINESS
  
  
  677
  
  
  they receive a small salary of from £1, 10s. to
  £2 a week, with a small commission ranging
  from 6 to 10 per cent.
  
  The experienced canvasser prefers the large
  commission and no salary basis, as this repre-
  sents to her a greater income, and although
  business is often dull for even the best of can-
  vassers, she can save out of her earnings when
  business is brisk to tide her over the dull
  times. Many women, however, prefer a sure
  and steady income, however small, and the
  woman canvasser who has not had much ex-
  perience would do well to try and obtain work
  on the salary and small commission basis.
  
  Boarding-House Proprietress. - A boarding-
  house may turn out a very profitable investment
  for the business woman who manages to get
  together a good connection. Sufficient capital
  to pay the first year's expenses wiU be necessary,
  the amount depending a great deal upon locaHty,
  size of the house, and rental. The most paying
  investment is to be found in the large boarding-
  house where things are done on a generous
  scale. It is a mistake to fiirnish a house poorly,
  and give indifferent food with a low tariff.
  These methods will never attract the right sort
  of people. Everything in a boarding-house
  should be well done, the rooms shoiild be taste-
  fully furnished, the cooking good, and the service
  above reproach. The tariff also should be kept
  at a figure that wiU allow for good catering. In
  London the terms should never be less than
  two guineas a week for full board, and £1, 10s.
  a week for partial board. At the seaside two and
  a half guineas a week should be the minimum
  charge dvu-ing the season, a charge of £1, 10s.
  being made during the slack time at places
  where visitors are only attracted in large
  numbers dtu-ing one or tWo months of the year.
  Extra is always charged for meals served in bed-
  rooms, and also for fires in bedrooms.
  
  The best advertisement for a boarding-house
  is essentially that obtained by good cooking and
  strict attention to the comfort of the guests.
  It is important also that meals should be served
  with strict punctuality. In the dining-room
  should be a number of little tables, as the different
  family parties, as a rule, will prefer to have a
  table to themselves. Table linen should be
  fresh and clean, and silver brightly polished.
  
  
  Some flowers should be arranged in vases on
  each little table. For dinner one or two menu
  cards should be placed on each table. The
  waiting should be quickly and quietly done, and
  there should be at least three maids waiting
  where there are thirty guests.
  
  Good wages should be paid to the servants.
  As a rule, servants prefer Ufe in a boarding-house,
  owing to the addition to their wages in the way
  of gratuities, and they will got through an
  amount of hard work quite cheerfuUy in these
  circumstances. A considerate mistress, there-
  fore, should be able to keep her servants with
  httle difficulty, for nothing tends to upset the
  ordinary routine than constant changes in the
  staff.
  
  It is essential that a boarding-house keeper
  be a good housewife. She should herself attend
  to all the ordering of provisions. Special terms
  are granted to boarding-house keepers as far
  as these are concerned. Care must be taken,
  however, to see that all the provisions are of the
  best, and custom should be at once withdrawn
  when satisfaction is not given in this respect.
  
  At the seaside and other pleasure resorts the
  boarding-house keeper should also be able to
  organise amusements for her guests. One or
  two dances might be given during the season, for
  which a small subscription of from 7s. 6d. to
  10s. each from aU who wish to be present should
  be asked. Picnics to places of interest in the
  neighbourhood should also be arranged. The
  seaside boarding-house keeper should be able
  to count on the return year after year of some
  of her visitors, at least, and by strict attention
  in every way to their amusement as well as to
  their comfort she can count upon keeping
  together a regular clientele.
  
  Several quahties besides mere business ability
  will be foimd to contribvite to the success of the
  proprietress of a boarding establishment. The
  lady of accomphshments and refinement, who
  has an abundance of tact to enable her to deal
  successfully with the many different types of
  character with whicli she must necessarily m
  such a business come into contact, vnll prove
  more successful than the hard-working common-
  place woman who does all the cooking herself,
  and is notliing more than a mere domestic
  drudge.
  
  
  CIVIL SERVICE AND PUBLIC WORK
  
  
  There are openings for women in many departments of the Civil Service, the Post OflSce in particular
  affording good opportunities, and giving employment to many thousands of girls and women tlirough-
  out the kingdom. The principal appointments in the Post Office are open to public competition,
  whilst appointments in other branches of pubhc work are subject to nomination or are open to limited
  competition only. This is a fact to be borne in mind by women who aim at an Inspectorship
  or some other similarly liigh Government post. In this article the various branches of Civil Service
  and pubhc work are described and full information given in regard to the prospects ofiered in each
  individual branch.
  
  
  THE POST OFFICE
  
  As a career for girls and women the Post
  Office presents many advantages - chief amongst
  which are regular employment and a pension
  after a long period of service. Girls and women
  in the employ of the Post Office may be either : -
  
  Clerks
  
  Telegraphists
  
  Counter Clerks and Telegraphists
  
  Sorters
  
  Telephonists
  
  Postmistresses
  
  Learners.
  There is a great deal of misunderstanding in
  regard to the scope and character of the employ-
  ment offered by the Post Office to women, and
  for this reason a largo number of girls are
  deterred from entering upon a career which has
  the double advantage of security with a pension
  to come at the end of a long term of service.
  The prevaihng notion is that to be in the service
  of the Post Office entails seUing stamps or
  taking telegrams behind the counter of any
  branch office. This is quite a fallacy. Learners
  and counter-women have to do this, it is true,
  but the Post Office employees falling under the
  general designation of the word " clerk " never
  come into contact with the public at all. They
  are employed in the Accountant-General's De-
  partment, the Money Order Department, the
  Savings Bank Department, or the Telephone
  Exchange.
  
  Post Office clerks are much better off in every
  way than clerks in business houses. The hours
  are short, not numbering more than seven daily
  - a yearly hoUday of one month is allowed,
  also all the public holidays. Not only are
  pensions granted to those who retire after a
  long term of service, but all female clerks who
  have been in the bervicљ of the Post Office for a
  
  
  678
  
  
  term of six years receive a dowry when they
  resign their positions upon marriage.
  
  The training of girls for clerkships in the
  Civil Service should begin quite early, as they
  are not eligible for any of the entrance examina-
  tions after the age of twenty. No girl under
  sixteen or over eighteen is ehgible for the
  examination for " girl clerkships," and no girl
  under eighteen or over twenty is eligible for the
  examinations for women clerkships, whilst candi-
  dates for learnersliips and sorterships must be
  between the age of fifteen and eighteen years.
  Competitive examinations for these positions are
  held every six months or every year. There are
  certain conditions relative to the employment
  of women in the Civil Service which must be
  complied with. All clerks and other Post Office
  employees are required to pass a medical exe'^^-
  nation, and to be re-vaccinated if it is thought
  necessary. They must have good references as
  to character, and reside with their parents or
  guardians or with any relatives or friends ap-
  proved of by their parents or guardians. They
  must also be natural born or naturalised British
  subjects and at least five feet in height. Post
  Office female employees must also be single, and
  with the exception of post-mistresses are re-
  quired to resign their appointments upon
  marriage.
  
  Women Clerkships. - There are abundant
  prospects in the Civil Service for tlie clever
  girl who is a good worker and who has made up
  her mind to get on. Women clerkships are
  divided into two classes. In the second class
  the salary is £65, rising at the rate of £5 a year
  to £110. In the first cIeiss the salaries begin at
  £115 and rise to £140. But the chances of pro-
  motion do not end here. A first-class clerk
  may be promoted to the position of principal
  clerk, with a salary of £150, rising by annual
  increments of £10 to £200. Then she may rise
  
  
  CIVIL SERVICE AND PUBLIC WORK
  
  
  679
  
  
  to be an assistant superintendent, with a salary
  of £210 to £260. Deputy superintendents re-
  ceive salaries of from £270 to £330, and super-
  intendents, £280 to £500. There are not so many
  vacancies in the higher positions, and as the
  competition for them is very keen, only women
  of great intelligence and ability will succeed in
  working their way up to posts of this kind.
  
  Girl Clerks. - Girl clerks must be between
  sixteen and eighteen years of age. The com-
  mencing salary is £42, rising at the rate of £3
  per annum to £48. At the end of the two years
  competent girl clerks are promoted to women
  clerkships as soon as the necessary vacancies
  occur - or if they are not deemed sufficiently
  competent for the promotion they may be
  transferred to the class of " sorters."
  
  Examinations for Girl and Women Clerkships.
  - Those who enter for the CivU Service examina-
  tions for girl clerkships must be between the
  ages of sixteen and eighteen, and those who enter
  for the exaniinations for women clerkships be-
  tween the ages of eighteen and twenty. Candi-
  dates must send in their names to the examiners
  as wishing to enter for the examination within
  the time specified by the CivU Service Commis-
  sioners. Examinations are, as a rule, held every
  six months, and the exanaination fee is 10s.
  Candidates for both clerkships will require to
  satisfy tlie examiners in the following subjects : -
  
  Enghsh Composition.
  
  Arithmetic (general).
  
  Geography (general).
  
  -p , I Only two of these subjects may
  
  f~. I be taken.
  
  German J
  
  •"* lu i.- I Only two of these subjects
  
  Mathematics V , . ,
  
  Shorthand J ^^y be taken.
  
  Girl and women Post Office clerks are not
  employed in the provinces. Clerkships are only
  to be had at the large central offices in London,
  Dublin, and Edinburgh.
  
  Other Advantages of Post Office Clerkships. -
  Girl and women clerks at the General Post
  Office are treated with the utmost considera-
  tion. To begin with the hours are short and
  regular, every provision is made for their com-
  fort, and as employees are not allowed out in
  office hours meals are supplied upon the pre-
  mises at the most moderate charges, a good
  luncheon being obtainable for a few pence.
  Though the authorities are very strict in regard
  to the vulos for the medical examination upon
  entry, insisting upon a perfect bill of health, if
  by chance an employee should fall ill every
  consideration is shown to her. In the case of
  a long illness full pay is granted up to six months,
  if there is a reasonable chance of the patient's
  recovery to good health.
  
  In most occup"tions open to both men and
  women there is a certain element of uncer-
  tainty- changes constantly occm- in the manage-
  
  
  ment of offices, which entail changes in the staff,
  so that an employee, except in rare instances,
  cannot feel absolutely safe. In regeird to the
  Post Office, the position of a girl or woman of
  average capabihty who does her work well is
  secure, whilst the chances of promotion are
  many. Should a woman wish to retire after
  ten years' service, she is eligible for a pension ;
  and the marriage dowry after six years' service,
  consisting of one month's salary for each year
  she has served, are gifts not by any means to
  be despised.
  
  Taking all things into consideration, there are
  few careers for women which present better all-
  round prospects than that offered by the Post
  Office.
  
  Sorters. - ^Though the commencing salary of
  a girl sorter is small, a good chance of pro-
  motion to a clerkship is to be had, inasmuch as
  candidates who are successful in the sorters'
  examination secure an extension of the age-
  limit of entry for the woman clerkship examina-
  tions to twenty-five. The duties of female
  sorters consist principally in sorting and
  arranging official papers relating to Savings
  Bank, Money or Postal Order business, and
  they are mostly employed in the Sa\'ings Bank
  Department and in the Money Order Depart-
  ment. The age limits are fifteen to eighteen.
  The hours of attendance are eight daily between
  6 A.M. and 6 p.m. The salary commences at 14s.
  a week rising to 22s., and an annual holiday of
  three weeks is given. Candidates require to
  satisfy the examiners in -
  
  Reading and copying MS
  
  Handwriting
  
  Spelling
  
  Aritlimetic (first four rules simple and
  
  compound)
  Geography of the United Kingdom.
  
  Female Learners, Telegraphists, and Counter
  Clerks. - These positions involve coming into
  contact ^vith the pubUc at any Post Office.
  Candidates for learnerships must be between
  fifteen and eighteen years of age, and pass an
  examination in Enghsh composition, arithmetic,
  and geography. The examination fee is 4s.
  The commencing salary for learners is 7s. on
  entry, 10s. 6d. a week when proficiency in instru-
  ment duty is reached, and 14s. a week after one
  year's service at 10s. 6d. if still under the age
  of eighteen. In the provinces 5s. a week is the
  initial salary, rising to 13s. 6d. Tlie proba-
  tionary period of learnership is usually about a
  year, at the end of which competent learners
  are given appointments as telegraphists, or
  counter clerks and telegrapliists, as soon as the
  requisite vacancies occur. In London, tele-
  graphists and counter clerks receive a com-
  mencing salary of 16s. a week, rising to 30s.
  and 40s. In the provinces the rate of pay is
  from 12s. or 13s. to 36s. The working hours
  
  
  680
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  are eight daily. Employees 8tre paid for over-
  time work.
  
  Typists in the Civil Service. - Appointments
  in the Civil Service as female typists are not
  open to public competition. Candidates must
  be nominated by the head љf the office in which
  they are to serve ; they must not be younger
  than eighteen yefirs of age or older than thirty,
  and are required to pass an examination in
  writing, spelling, composition, copying, firith-
  metic, typewriting, and shorthand, if required.
  A limited competition may in some cases be
  held. The salary of a woman typist in the
  Civil Service begins at £1 a week, rising at the
  rate of 2s. a week yearly to £1, 6s. a week.
  Superintendents receive salaries of 35s. to £2
  a week. Typists retiring upon superannuation
  are eligible for a pension, and a dowry is granted
  upon marriage after six years' service. Female
  typists are employed in the Post Office, the
  offices of the Board of Education, the Scottish
  Education Department, the Colonial Office, the
  Board of Agriculture and Fisheries, Customs,
  Foreign Office, Local Government Board, the
  War Office, the Public Works Office, and in all
  the principal Government offices.
  
  Training. - Emphasis has already been laid
  upon the necessity of beginning to train early
  for the Civil Service examinations. The ordi-
  nary school training is not sufficient ; a special
  course of study is necessary, varying in extent
  from six months to one year, and sometimes
  longer, in accordance with the capabilities of the
  pupil. In some exceptional cases three months'
  preparation have been found sufficient, but
  successful students in these circumstances
  possessed talents greatly above the average.
  As a rule, it will be found advisable to extend
  the training over the year, though ra&ny suc-
  cesses have been achieved after six months'
  special study.
  
  Whatever the extent of the training may
  be, too much stress cannot be laid upon the
  importance that it should be a special one for
  the Civil Service, and taken under the guidance
  of some person or persons who make preparation
  for the Civil Service examinations a special
  feature of their curriculum. Private coaching
  may be taken, or a course undergone at one of
  the business and Civil Service training colleges,
  such as Clark's College, London. The cost of
  training for girl and women clerks averages
  £7, 16s. for six months, and £14 for one year.
  For evening classes only, £3 for six months and
  £5, 10s. for a year's training.
  
  PUBLIC WORK
  
  Women now occupy salaried positions in
  many departments of public work. The nximber
  of these appointments, however, is necessarily
  limited, although there is every indication that
  the opportunities in this direction will bo ex-
  
  
  tended. The chief Government appointments
  are mostly filled by nomination, and to obtain
  them some influence is therefore necessary.
  
  Factory Inspectors under the Home Office. -
  There are now seventeen women factory in-
  spectors under the Home Office, and in London,
  Glasgow, Manchester, Birmingham, and Belfast
  a senior woman inspector is stationed at the
  head of an office and staff. Candidates for
  these inspectorships must be nominated by the
  Secretary of State before they can enter for the
  examination to the Civil Service Commissioners
  which they are required to pass. All the neces-
  sary information may be obtained from the
  Secretary of State, the Home Office, S.W.
  
  Tlie work of these inspectors is of the utmost
  importance in securing the weKare of the many
  thousands of girl and women factory workers.
  The work includes the inspection of the places
  where dangerous macliinery or dangerous pro-
  cesses of manufacture are used, caring for the
  health of the workers and seeing to the general
  sanitary conditions, investigating accidents, en-
  forcing the education of children employed in
  factories and workshops, and supervising hours
  of employment, conducting prosecutions where
  necessary, &c. The inspectors work under the
  general supervision of the chief lady inspector
  at the Home Office.
  
  After passing the preliminary examination
  two years' probation must be undergone, at the
  end of which a final qualifjdng examination
  has to be passed in the law relating to factories
  and workshops and sanitary science as applied
  to factories and workshops. The age hmit is
  twenty-five to forty.
  
  The conunencing salary is £200 a year ; senior
  inspectors earn from £300 to £400, whilst the
  salary of the cliief inspector at the Home Office
  begins at £400, rising to £550.
  
  Poor Law Inspectors (under the Local Govern-
  ment Board). This is quite a new fie'd for the
  woman worker, there being now only six in-
  spectors under the direction of the lady super-
  intendent, and three of these (all trained nurses)
  were appointed as recently as 1910. There is
  every prospect, however, that as the usefulness
  of the work of these ladies is demonstrated the
  nvunber of appointments will be increased.
  
  An amount of evidence collected by the
  Woman's Local Government Society from
  Boards of Guardians throughout the country,
  bearing upon the necessity of appointing women
  inspectors, has been put before the Royal Com-
  mission on the Poor Laws, and it is to be trusted
  that this may result in the appointment of a
  large number of inspectors.
  
  The work includes the inspection of work-
  houses, especially in regard to women and chil-
  dren, infirmaries, schools and certified homes,
  lying-in wards, the inspection of boarded-nut
  children, &c. There is as yet no complete
  organisation of the work, nor any definite rules
  
  
  CIVIL SERVICE AND PUBLIC WORK
  
  
  681
  
  
  for appointment. Candidates, however, should
  be trained hospital nurses, and have had some
  experience in administrative posts. The com-
  mencing salary is £200 a year. All the necessary
  information in regard to these appointments
  may be obtained from the Secretary, Local
  Government Board, Whitehall, London, S.W.
  
  School Inspectors. - Women school inspectors
  are appointed by the Board of Education. The
  appointments are by nomination, and there are
  no set rules in regard to qualifications, although
  itispectors should be women of good education
  and show the necessary aptitude for the work.
  The inspector of schools should have a good
  knowledge and understanding of educational
  work, be a good critic of teaching, and able to
  recognise the methods most fitting for the end
  in view, and, above all, they should have experi-
  ence in the actual educational work of schools
  wliich are to come under their notice.
  
  Women inspectors are appointed to inspect
  elementary, secondary, and training schools,
  technical schools including schools of domestic
  science under the Board, and training colleges
  for preliminary and secondary teachers. There
  is also a needlework directress and an assistant
  directress of needlework.
  
  Prospects. - The salaries of women inspectors
  are at the rate of from £200 to £400 per annum,
  the chief woman inspector receiving from £400
  to £500 a year. The needlework directress
  receives a salary of £300, and the assistant
  directress a salary of from £80 to £150 per
  annum.
  
  School Attendance Officers. - There are also
  openings for women school attendance officers
  under a number of County Councils. A pre-
  
  
  liminary examination must be passed, and
  successful candidates must undergo a medical
  examination before they are finally approved.
  The work consists in seeing that all the children
  in the district attend the pubHc elementary
  schools unless their education is being well cared
  for in another way. The attendance officer
  has to report all cases of absence from school,
  and if these are not due to illness or other
  sufficient cause it is her duty to prosecute the
  parents at the police court where necessary.
  
  The school attendance officer should have
  an intimate knowledge of the prevailing local
  conditions of the district in which she works,
  and she should have a good fund of tact to
  enable her to deal satisfactorily with the people
  with whom she must come into contact.
  
  Prospects. - Salaries vary according to the
  different local authorities. In London the
  salaries range from £80 to £156 per annum. The
  age limit is from twenty-five to thirty -five.
  
  Other Salaried Public Appointments. - There
  are several other paid pubUc appointments
  available to women which, though at present
  limited in number, promise to increase in the
  future. In connection with the Labour Ex-
  changes Act women officials are appointed upon
  the various labour exchanges at salaries com-
  mencing at £130 a year. There are also women
  registrars in England, Ireland, and Scotland.
  Medical officers and sanitary inspectors are also
  appointed by local authorities (see under Medi-
  cine). At present there are six women relieving
  officers in London and eleven in the provinces.
  In London the salary commences at £80 per
  anniun. (See also Sanitary Inspectors and
  Health Visitors.)
  
  
  ARTS AND CRAFTS
  
  
  In this article the various branches of art and music which ofEer opportunities to talented women
  are carefully considered, together with those minor arts and crafts which ofler a fair means of liveli-
  hood to the painstaking worker.
  
  Emphasis must be laid upon the fact that in the higher ranks of the artistic professions only
  those who have great talents, combined with an abundance of energy and capacity for hard work,
  can hope to attain success.
  
  
  MUSICAL PROFESSION
  
  Performers. - ^Exceptional talents and capa-
  bilities are required by the girl who wishes to
  take up any branch of the musical profession as
  performer with any measure of success, and the
  girl of average capabilities had better pause
  before she embarks upon a career in which even
  genius has a hard struggle before it attains
  recognition. Many girls rush headlong into the
  profession, either as pianists, violinists, or voca-
  hsts, only to find that there is no room for those
  with mediocre gifts, and that the vast army of
  moderately capable artists who have by some
  means obtained a footing find it exceedingly
  difficult to earn a bare subsistence. The clever
  girl with talent must be prepared to throw her
  whole heart and soul into study for her pro-
  fession. Tliis study must necessarily begin very
  early ; the fingers of the pianist must have
  acquired suppleness from childhood onwards.
  The earlier a violinist acquires the rudiments of
  her art the more skilled musician will she make.
  A child should be made to practise her piano
  and her violin at least one hour every day. As
  she gets older two hours should be given to
  practice, and when she is completing her studies,
  at least four hours' practice daily should be
  taken. This is necessary in order to obtain
  good technique. The singer, on the other hand,
  must not strain her voico in childhood, but her
  training, when it does begin, must be pains-
  taking and thorough. No girl, however clever,
  should attempt to earn a living by music alone,
  unless she has some small income which will
  help her to tide over the time when she is
  struggling to make a position for herself. For
  the pianist and the instrumentalist especially
  are these difficulties in the way. There must
  be something distinctive about the perform-
  ance, something characteristic about the per-
  sonality of an unknown artist for her to be able
  to attract public notice. Without this she may
  
  
  spend large sums of money in giving concerts
  without avail. By the influence of her concert
  agent perhaps she may be successful in procur-
  ing one or two minor engagements, but of what
  avail will these be as a means of livelihood -
  she will discover too late that she would have
  done better to devote the time spent on music
  to training for a more money -making career.
  Even the girl with talents above the average
  shoiild not rely upon making a sufficient
  income as a performer at first ; she should in
  all cases combine her work with that of teaching
  until she has become sufficiently well known
  to command a large number of regular engage-
  ments. The vocalist has perhaps more scope
  than the instrumentalist in many directions.
  In addition to the concert platform there are
  openings in comic opera and musical comedy
  for the well-trained singer, and if her voice
  be above the average then in grand opera she
  may find her goal. For the last, needless to
  say, she must have a voice of great power and
  wide compass, and she must undergo a train-
  ing which will be necessarily long and ex-
  pensive, usually finishing with a term of study
  abroad. She will require to have a good know-
  ledge of French, Italian, and German, for she
  may bo called upon to sing in opera in any of
  these languages. When her training is complete
  she will often require to have years of experience
  in both singing and acting before she succeeds
  in attracting any measure of notice.
  
  In regard to comic opera there is loss difficulty,
  although talent for acting, a good appearance,
  and charm of personality are necessary. The
  great difficulty in this branch of the profession
  is to get a fair start. If a girl begins through
  the medium of the chorus, and has all the
  qualities mentioned, she will rise to a higher
  position in time, but the chances are that years
  will elapse before she obtains recognition, and
  in the meantime her voico will probably have
  deteriorated in quality by reason of the severe
  
  
  ARTS AND CRAFTS
  
  
  683
  
  
  strain to which it has been subjected by chorus
  work.
  
  For the girl who is not ambitious and is con-
  tent with earning a moderate income, there are
  many minor branches of the profession in which
  opportunities are to be had. She may form a
  connection for " At Home " engagements,
  dinner concerts at hotels and restaurants, or
  she may join one of the ladies' orchestras which
  play at " At Homes," tea-rooms, restaurants,
  and also at bazaars and other similar functions.
  In good and well-established orchestras fair
  salaries are to be had, but in many cases the
  work is intermittent.
  
  The Accompanist. - One of the most promising
  fields for the pianist of average talents is that
  of the accompanist, but curiously enough it is
  the one branch of the musical profession that
  few are anxious to enter. The accompanist has
  no scope for individual display ; her perform-
  ance must be subservient to that of the singer -
  and yet it is an art to be a good accompanist,
  an art in which very few excel. The accompanist
  must have had a good musical training, for she
  must be able to read at sight, and even to
  transpose if needs be. She must be able to
  adapt herself to the methods of each different
  singer, always keeping time with, and slurring
  over any mistakes made by the vocalist. It is
  not such an easy matter as one would imagine for
  an accompanist to accompany singers whom she
  has never seen before, and of whose methods
  she is entirely igncvant, but this she is often
  called upon to do. When once an accompanist
  has proved her capabilities, engagements are
  not slow to follow. Singers remember the names
  of those who accompany well - ^very often they
  will always retain the services of one accom-
  panist whose value they have proved. It is
  better for a beginner who has no friends or
  influence in the concert world to register her
  name at a good concert agent as soon as she
  is ready to accept engagements. A small per-
  centage will be deducted from her fees for
  commission in this way, but this is well worth
  while if good engagements result. Fees paid to
  accompanists at concerts average from one to
  two guineas for the evening.
  
  Teachers of Music. - This presents the most
  favoiu'able means to the well-trained musician
  of earning a regular income. A thorough train-
  ing concluding with success at examinations for
  the A.R.C.M. or the L.R.A.M. or some other re-
  cognised quaHfication is necessary. There are
  good posts in schools for teachers of piano, viohn,
  and singing. Higher posts are to be had in
  schools and colleges of music. Good connec-
  tions as visiting teachers may also be formed.
  Salaries in schools vary to a great extent, but
  an advanced music mistress may earn as much
  as £120 a year from one sc'iool ulone, and aug-
  ment her income considerably by private lessons.
  F->r the higher posts as teachers in colleges and
  
  
  Schools of Music the highest musical honours
  and also a certain amount of experience are
  necessary. For teacliing, an A.R.A.M. or an
  A.R.C.M. degree, or a degree of music awarded
  by one of the universities will be found most
  useful. A teacher's diploma is very desirable
  now that such a high standard of efficiency in
  teaching is exacted.
  
  There is a great opening for teachers of singing
  under the tonic sol-fa system in the schools
  under local authorities. Candidates for posts of
  the kind should prepare for the School Teacher's
  Certificate of the Tonic Sol-fa CoUege. The
  London County Council also recognises the tonic
  sol-fa music certificate as a quaUfication for
  teachers of singing and music in secondary
  schools and pupil teacher centres. Salaries
  in some cases amount to £200 a year. Full
  information in regard to training may be ob-
  tained from the Secretary, Tonic Sol-fa CoUege,
  Finsbury Square, London, E.C.
  
  Training. - ^A great deal of the expense of
  training may be saved by gaining one of the many
  scholarships which are awarded in the musical
  profession by the various music academies and
  colleges. The best centres for training are un-
  doubtedly in London and other large towns.
  In aU of these are special hostels where music
  students can get board and lodging at moderate
  fees. The following are the chief institutions
  where training may be obtained : -
  
  TheRoyal Academy of Music,Tenterden Street,
  London. Entrance fee, £5, 5s. - £1, Is. payable
  for entrance examination and £4, 4s. on becoming
  a pupil. There is a very full course of study
  wliich must extend over three terms, including
  instruction in theory, harmony, and counter-
  point. Fees for ordinary course are £11, lis.
  per term ; for special studies, in accordance with
  the subjects taken. Examinations are also
  held twice a year for music students trained
  independently of the Academy, and successful
  candidates are entitled to use the initials L.R.A.M.
  Successful students trained at the college are
  entitled to the distinction A.R.A.M., and those
  who distinguish themselves after quitting the
  institution may be elected by the Directors
  Fellows of the Royal Academy of Music and are
  entitled to use the letters F.R.A.M.
  
  There are sixty scholarships in connection with
  the Academy, full particulars of which niay be
  obtained upon application to the lady super-
  intendent. They are usually tenable for three
  years, and pro^^de for free instruction during
  that period.
  
  At the Royal College of Music, South Ken-
  sington, London, W., at least a year's course
  must be taken. The entrance foe for examina-
  tion is £2, 2s., and fees for ordinary course are
  £12, 123. a term. Tliere is also a department for
  students under sixteen at which the fees are
  exactly halved. A nmnber of scholarships are
  awarded, in connection with some of wlxich, in
  
  
  684
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  addition to free musicsal education, special grants
  towards maintenance are made. Many prizes,
  consisting of musical instruments or medals,
  are given annually. A student desiring to
  join the College should write for an appHcation
  form, and when this Has been filled up, the
  entrance fee and one term's fees should be paid.
  Among the subjects taught are the piano, solo
  singing, viola, cello, double hass, organ, harp,
  wind instruments, theory, languages, elocu-
  tion, &c. One principal and one secondary
  subject is generally chosen, and an entrance
  examination is held in order to ascertain the
  degree of proficiency in each subject. A second
  principal subject may be taken by paying an
  extra fee. Such subjects as dancing, deport-
  ment, and dramatic action are extras. Fre-
  quent lectures are given, fully illustrated by
  voices or instriunents. In order to be able to
  write the letters A.R.C.M. after her name, a
  student must, on the completion of her training,
  pass a final examination, the fee for which is
  £5, 5s.
  
  Alexandra House, Kensington Gore, is a well-
  known place of residence for lady students at
  the college. The number of music students re-
  ceived, however, must not exceed fifty. Each
  student has her own bedroom and shares a
  sitting-room with another student, and has also
  the use of the drawing-room, library, and
  concert-room. The terms for board are sixty
  guineas a year, with £1 extra per term for wash-
  ing. Full particulars may be obtained upon
  application to the college.
  
  Associated Board of the Royal Academy
  and Royal College of Music. - Local Centre
  Examinations and School Examinations in
  music are held by the Associated Board of the
  Royal Academy and Royal College of Music.
  These examinations, which include both theo-
  retical and practical music, are held through-
  out the United Kingdom and in the Colonies.
  The subjects include primary theory, rudiments
  of music, harmony and grammar of music,
  counterpoint, pianoforte, organ, vioUn, viola,
  cello, double beiss, harp, wind instruments and
  singing.
  
  Six exhibitions are offered by the Board
  tenable for three years at the Royal Academy
  or the Royal College of Music.
  
  At the Guildhall School of Music, Victoria
  Embankment, London, a very good training
  may be had in every branch of music. The
  entrance and deposit fees are each Ss. There
  is a term fee of 2s. 6d., and fees for singing and
  music range from £1, lis. Gd. to £0, 6s. a term.
  There are a number of scholarships in connec-
  tion with the school, and examinations are held
  for the Associateship of the school and for
  teachers' certificates.
  
  Special teachers' diplomas are granted by the
  London College of Music, Great Marlborough
  Street, W., Trinity College, London, and the
  
  
  Royal Manchester College of Music. There are
  a number of other colleges and schools of music
  throughout the country where fees are moderate
  and students are prepared for the L.R.A.M. of
  the Royal Academy. This degree is most use-
  ful for teachers, and the would-be teacher should
  strive to prepare for it or for one of the special
  teachers' diplomas awarded by other colleges.
  Examinations are held by Trinity College at a
  number of local centres, for wliich any student
  may enter. Full particulars of these may be
  obtained upon application to the Secretary,
  Trinity College of Music, Mandeville Place,
  Manchester Square, London, W. Women can
  also take the degree of Bachelor of Music and
  Doctor of Music at the Universities of London,
  Edinburgh, Manchester, D'orham, Dubhn, and
  Wales. They are not allowed to take the
  Oxford and Cambridge degrees. They can
  enter for the examinations, however, and suc-
  cessful candidates receive certificates.
  
  THE STAGE
  
  Most girls are apt to be "stage struck" at
  some period of their lives ; that is to say, they
  develop a desire to go upon the stage, and no
  matter how little histrionic capability they may
  have, their determination to enter the dramatic
  profession cannot be shaken. Not all the advice
  of their parents or friends can turn them from
  their purpose, with the result that valuable time,
  which might have been spent to advantage in
  the pursuit of some other calling, is irretrievably
  wasted, until by dint of rebuffs and disappoint-
  ments the crestfallen aspirant is brought to
  realise that it is only talent supplemented by
  thorough training and hard work that can open
  the doors of the dramatic profession to any new-
  comer. The best training for the stage is that
  of actual experience : - most of our noted actors
  and actresses have been acting almost since
  childhood ; they have had to rough it in " fit
  up " companies at small provincial towns - often
  they have found themselves stranded far away
  from homo, the finances of the management
  having suddenly collapsed. Many and various
  are the stories related of heirdships endured and
  \acissitudes encountered - stories which should be
  enough to deter any budding aspirant after stage
  fame who has an idea that the dramatic pro-
  fession is syTionymous with a life of ease and
  comfort.
  
  Where dramatic talent is present, however,
  the stage should be its natural outlet. It is
  very seldom that a person who has the decided
  dramatic temperament will make a success in
  any other calling. But she must not have the
  idea that she has merely to step forward and
  grasp without any effort the laurels which others
  often much more talented than she is have
  worked so hard to attain. She must take into
  account also the present overcrowded state of
  
  
  ARTS AND CRAFTS
  
  
  685
  
  
  the profession, and remember that as far as
  newcomers are concerned preference is nearly
  always accorded to the young members of old
  theatrical famiUes who have Uved in a stage
  atmosphere almost since birth, who have gone
  through a thorough course of trairang under their
  parents' giiidance, and who, in addition,can boast
  of names which their parents have made famous.
  There are therefore many disappointments
  which the young beginner will have to face ;
  but there is an old saying that " talent will out,"
  and if she is really gifted, and is prepared for
  years of hard work, there is no doubt that one
  day, sooner or later, her chance will come.
  
  Training. - A thorough training is absolutely
  necessary. The earlier tliis training begins the
  better, for the sooner will the novice's dramatic
  apprenticeship be served. A girl should begin
  training before her twenty-first year if possible.
  Carriage and deportment must necessarily take
  an important part in an actress's education. A
  beginner will find it difficult even to walk grace-
  fully across the stage - how much more so then
  if her acting has to include a fall or a faint. We
  all admire the suppleness and litheness of a
  Bernhardt, for instance, but suppleness of the
  kind must be acquired early, before the bones
  are set, otherwise this part of the training will
  be exceedingly difficult to other than a natvirally
  graceful girl with a supple figure. Sixteen is a
  very good age to begin training. If before this
  a girl has made some preliminary study of elo-
  cution and dancing so much the better.
  
  There are several good Iramatic schools over
  the country at which thorough training may be
  had. In some cases pupils are given actual
  stage experience in the course of their training.
  This is the case with pupils of IVIr. E. F. Benson,
  whose provincial Shakespearian companies are
  well known. They are rehearsed with the
  professionals by Mr. Benson and are allowed to
  appear in stage crowds, choruses, &c., at the
  different theatres visited. This gives them valu-
  able practice in stage deportment.
  
  There are other advantages which may be
  derived from training at a thoroughly good school.
  Introductions to managers may be obtained, and
  on many occasions engagements are procured
  which in other circimistances would be very
  difficult to obtain.
  
  The chief dramatic schools are : -
  
  The Academy of Dramatic Art, 62 Gower
  Street, London, W.C.
  
  This school was founded by Sir Herbert
  Beerbohm Tree in 1904, and many of the students
  there have found their way into this well-known
  actor-manager's companies, thus embarking upon
  their theatrical careers under the most favourable
  auspices. Each student is required to pass an
  entrance examination, which usually consists
  of a short recitation which thf student may
  choose for herself. The fee for this examination
  is £1, Is. Eighteen months represents the
  
  
  average course necessary, but this must neces-
  sarily depend upon individual capabilities, some
  students taking longer than others to complete
  their training. The year is divided into three
  terms, and the fees for tuition are £12, I2s. per
  term. Instruction is given in every branch of
  stage work, including voice production, elocution,
  deportment and dancing, fencing and acting in
  general.
  
  The Ben Greet Academy of Acting, 3 Bedford
  Street, is another successful theatrical school.
  There is no entrance examination necessary.
  Fees for full com-se of forty-eight lessons,
  £10, 10s. to £15, 15s.
  
  At the Neville Dramatic Studio, 624 Oxford
  Street, Marble Arch, six private lessons of ono
  hour each are given for £4, 4s.
  
  The young girl who has completed a course
  of training at one of the recognised theatrical
  schools, and who has succeeded in winning the
  approbation of her tutors, must not make the
  great mistake of tliinking that she will at once
  step into a big part in a production at one of the
  London theatres. She must recognise that with
  the completion of her studies her apprentice-
  ship is only just beginning. Years of hard work
  in the pro\'inces may be before her before she
  finally reaches that Mecca of every young actress,
  the London stage. There are one or two excep-
  tions to this ri'le, but these exceptions can only
  be ascribed to chance which favours the few at
  the expense of the many. The young stage
  aspirant must therefore be prepared for a great
  deal of h£ird and plodding work, and for many
  heart-breaking disappointments and disillusions
  before her turn comes ; but tliis period of hard
  work will give her that experience which is
  necessary before everything else - if she is to
  make a success of the career of her choice.
  
  A small income independent of her earnings is
  almost a necessity for the girl who wishes to
  enter the dramatic profession. Engagements at
  first are difficult to procure ; very often she will
  only be worldng four or five months out of the
  twelve, and how can she live during the other
  months if she has not a Uttle money of her
  own to fall back upon. It may, indeed, be said
  that lack of means has been responsible for half
  the failures of girls who seemed to have had most
  promising stage careers before them at the out-
  set. On the other hand, I do not wish to suggest
  that girls with comfortable incomes, who have
  no need whatever to earn their U%nng, should go
  upon the stage. Such a course of action is
  manifestly unfair to those other women to whom
  the dramatic profession represents their solo
  means of livehhood. Nevertheless, a girl should
  tliink twice before she embarks upon a career
  wliich has probably more " ups and downs "
  than any other calling, unless she has some small
  sum put by which will help to tide her over those
  months of the year during which she is out of
  an engagement. Without this she will find
  
  
  686
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  many diflficultics in her way. As in any other
  profession, appearances count for a great deed,
  and the chances of the girl who is forced to go
  about shabbily dressed are materially lessened
  when it comes to the question of seeking an
  engagement. There is also the danger of her
  health gi^■ing way if life resolves itself into a
  mere hand-to-mouth struggle for existence, and
  with the loss of health she must needs say good-
  bye to her last chance of success, for in the pursuit
  of this profession, even more than in that of
  any other, good health and a soimd constitu-
  tion ase indispensable if any headway is to
  bo made.
  
  ART
  
  It is only those who are endowed with the rare
  and wonderful genius of the artist who can ever
  hope to make a li\^ng by painting pictures - and
  even genius has at times to forsake the higher
  walks of art for by-ways that are more remuner-
  ative. Successful artists have devoted their
  lives to their work, and often success has only
  come to them after years of endeavour to obtain
  just that touch of originality which serves to
  raise them above their fellows.
  
  There are many of the lesser branches of art,
  however, at which a clever and talented girl can
  earn a very good living if she possesses the
  essential qualities of perseverance and keen
  aptitude for catering to the taste of the pubUc.
  In poster and advertisement designing, cata-
  logue illustrating and fashion-drawing there are
  many prospects for the girl who has had a
  thorough training and can use her pencil with
  skill.
  
  Training. - There are a number of schools and
  institutions at which a good training may be
  had, and at which all branches of painting and
  colouring should bo studied before specialising
  for any particular art career. The following
  are some of the principal art schools : -
  
  The Royal Academy Schools, Burlington
  House ; the Royal College of Art, South Ken-
  sington, \V. ; the Slade School of Drawing,
  Painting and Sculpture ; The Byam Shaw and
  Vicat CJole School of Art; University College,
  Gower Street, S.W. ; The School of Art, Edin-
  burgh.
  
  Royal Academy Schools. - Tuition is free, but
  before admission students must submit certain
  specified works as a test of their ability. Such
  specimens, however, need not be submitted by
  those who can show certificates of proficiency
  from the Royal College of Art and certain other
  institutions. Successful candidates are ad-
  mitted for threo years.
  
  Royal College of Art (see p. 688).
  
  The Byam Shaw and Vicat Cole School of
  Art, Camden Street, Campden Hill, Kensington.
  The purpose of the school is to provide a thorough
  art training for students of both sexes. The
  building has been expressly erected as an art
  
  
  schooL It contains three studios about thirty
  two feet square. It is Ut by electricity, wanm( I
  by hot-water radiators, and well ventilatnl
  The school is situated on the top of Campden
  Hill - five minutes' walk from Netting Hill Gate
  Stations (Metropolitan Railway and Centrn!
  London Tube).
  
  Work is carried on for forty-four weeks in
  the year, the school only being closed for a
  week at Cliristmas and Easter and six weeks
  in the svunmer. Students are not bound by
  fixed terms, but may enter the school at any
  time. Students who join before the summer
  holidays continue their term when the school
  re-opens. The work is strictly progressive.
  Students must pass in antique drawing and
  elementary painting before attending the ad-
  vanced classes. New students submit work
  to qualify for the Life class. Beginners as
  well as advanced students are invited to join.
  Students are prepared for the Royal Academy
  Schools.
  
  The working day is from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
  with intervals for lunch and tea. The schools
  close at 4 p.m. on Saturdays. Supplementary
  classes are held in the evening for students who
  are unable to join in the day-time. No entrance
  fee is charged. Students must provide their
  own easels. These and other materials can
  be purchased in the school at the usual discount
  prices. A Scholarship (value £23) is offered
  yearly for competition. The school is always
  under the supervision of one or both the
  principals. During the absence of either of
  them liis place is taken by one oi the
  augmentary staff. The curator attends daily
  during working hours. Students must conform
  to the rules of the school and to the ruling of
  the curator, who is responsible for their obser-
  vance.
  
  Fees. - By the year (10 a.m. to 6 p.m., ten
  months' tuition), from date of joining to the
  same date in the following year . . £19 19 0
  Six months (10 a.m. to 6 p.m.> 14 14 0
  Three months " " 8 8 >)
  
  One month " " 4 4 0
  
  Three months " " (3
  
  days per week) .... 550
  Sketch class (4. 30 to 6 p.m.) (free
  
  to day students) 2 months 3 3 0
  These fees are reduced by 20 per cent, for
  the sons and daughters of professional artists
  and students engaged in teaching. All fees
  are payable in advance. No fees will be re-
  turned. Time lost through illness (only), if
  exceeding one week and certified by a doctor,
  may lie made up.
  
  The Heatherley School of Art, Newman
  Street, is one of the oldest art schools in
  London. The course is suitable for beginners
  as well as for more axlvanced pupils, and pupils
  are encouraged to work from the living model.
  Special instruction is given to those students
  
  
  ARTS AND CRAFTS
  
  
  687
  
  
  who intend to become illustrators. There are
  both day and evening classes, and a ticket ad-
  mitting to all the classes costs 25 gviineas, or
  for the day classes only, 3 guineas per month.
  Special classes can also be taken, and private
  lessons are given. Fuller particulars can be
  obtained by writing to Mx. Massey, the principal
  of the school.
  
  After their general training has been completed,
  people of limited means will find abundant faci-
  lities for special training by attending evening
  classes at one of the technical schools and schools
  of handicrafts under local authorities.
  
  If the training can be completed by spending
  a year or two in a Paris studio, it will be very
  much to the advantage of the art student.
  Instruction in Paris does not cost much, and
  by studying economy in Uving, £100 a year can
  be made to cover expenses, while with an
  extra £50 this hfe can be quite comfortable.
  
  All information regarding art schools and
  studios may be obtained by applying to the
  Secretary of the Franco-English Guild, 6 Rue
  de la Sorbonne, while board on very reasonable
  terms can be had at one of the houses run in
  connection with the Y.W.C.A., or several
  students may club together and take a small
  appartement, and by doing their catering the
  cost of living may be still further reduced.
  
  As a rule, three lessons a day wiU be given in
  the large studios, one from 8 a.m. to midday,
  a second from 1 p.m. until 5 p.m., and a tliird
  in the evening, but it h not usual to attend more
  than one or two of these. The pupils work in
  class under the direction of a professor. Private
  lessons can also be obtained from many of the
  well-known Paris artists, but, as a rule, a student
  prefers the life of the larger studios where there
  is more opportunity for criticism.
  
  Poster and Advertisement Designing. - ^For the
  girl with original ideas and a keen eye for effects
  there are many opportunities in this direction.
  It has been abundantly proved that talent
  utilised in commerce brings in the best returns,
  and the successful poster and advertisement
  designer can count upon making a very fair
  income. The woman who makes her name in
  this direction and becomes known for her skilful
  treatment of advertising ideas c.i,n always com-
  mand a good price for her work. Some instinct
  for advertising, for bringing out the most striking
  points of a proposition is necessary. In poster
  designing especially a girl must strive to strike
  out upon oiiginal lines in addition to executing
  work of artistic merit.
  
  Designing advertisements for reproduction in
  papers and magazines, designing show-cards
  and covers and illustrations for trade catalogues
  are all remunerative branches of the designer's
  art. Striking ideas which will serve to advertise
  their wares are alwuys welcomed by business
  firms who are willing to pay well for really good
  work,
  
  
  The woman who wishes to become a successful
  designer must have had a thorough training at
  a good art school. This should take at least
  four years and should be supplemented by a
  study of the business side of the question, in-
  cluding the various methods of reproduction and
  the different costs entailed. A short course at
  a good college of advertising will also be most
  useful. Experience in the business side of art
  is best obtained by either paying a premium for
  the opportunity of learning the work with a
  firm of illustrators and designers, or a position
  may often be obtained in a studio of the kind at
  a small commencing salary. Here the student
  will get experience in all kinds of black and
  white work, line-drawings and wash-drawings,
  also colour work, and will soon be initiated into
  the mysteries of the technical and business part
  of her calling. It may happen also that she wiU
  find her opportunity in the studio at which she
  takes this part of her training, for designers eire
  always willing to keep willing and capable artists
  who have made themselves really useful to the
  firm.
  
  At the New Art School, 3 Logan Place, Earl's
  Court Road, London, S.W., especially good
  training is given in poster designing and work
  for the press generally. The student has also
  the advantage of tuition under Mr. John Hassall,
  the most succesriul poster artist of the day.
  
  Book and Magazine Illustration.- Black and
  white work and colour work for book and
  magazine illustration is also very profitable
  once an artist has estabUshed a good con-
  nection. To do this she must have the capa-
  bilities and push of a good business woman.
  She should keep a selection of drawings in her
  best style to submit to the various editors of
  magazines and periodicals ; she will also have
  to have something of the instinct of a joiu-naUst
  to make this branch of her calhng a success.
  She will have to become famiUar with the style
  of illustration adopted by individual publica-
  tions and adapt her works to suit this style.
  Clever suggestions are always welcomed by
  editors, and she must lose no opportunity of
  making these. Very often she will bo given
  an article or a story to illustrate. Generally
  the various passages to be illustrated will bo
  pointed out to her. She may be given an idea
  of what is required, or she may be asked to do
  the work according to her own ideas. In regard
  to black and wliito work for magazines and
  papers, promptitude in delivering the drawings
  is essential; and very often the artist v"-ill
  have very little time in which to put her ideas
  into form. This is a feature of the work
  which must not be lost sight of. Tlio girl who
  is quick at her work and can keep her promise
  in regard to time of delivery will make much
  more headway than the girl wlio, however
  talented, cannot get a drawing ready to time or
  who never fulfils her promise in this respect.
  
  
  688
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Lady artists in colour illustration are em-
  ployed a great deal by pubUslung firms who
  make a speciality of colour work.
  
  Fashion Drawing. - The clever ftisluon artist,
  once she obtains a footing, has every prospect of
  success before her. There is scarcely a day or
  an evening newspaper nowadays which has not
  its fashion page, wliilst ladies' fashion papers vie
  with each other in being up to date in their
  dress designs. It is true that most papers have
  their own fashion artists upon their staffs, but
  there is always room for good ideas and good
  work. Besides, vacancies will occur, and then
  who is more likely to step into them than the
  girl or woman who has made her work known
  and who is ever watchful for her opportunity.
  The fashion artist should first of all be au fait
  with the fasliions and their various possibilities.
  She should be essentially a woman with ideas
  in regard to dress. She should make herself
  acquainted with the personaUties of leaders of
  fashion and take every opportunity of sketching
  the toilettes of leaders of society upon interesting
  social functions. She should regularly submit
  work to the fashion editress of the principal
  ladies' journals and also to those of the ladies'
  pages of daily or weekly papers. If she can
  begin by becoming assistant to a fashion artist,
  her path will be made all the easier for her.
  
  A fasliion artist may either obtain work as a
  free lance with various papers, or she may obtain
  a post on the staff of a paper. In the latter case
  she will be given a salary. A capable and ex-
  perienced artist employed by a paper of standing
  will often earn as much as from £300 to £500 a
  year, and a really capable artist may calculate
  upon earning £250 a year when she first obtains
  a salaried post, for none but efficient workers are
  employed on first-class pubhcations, and these
  always can obtain their price.
  
  The free-lance must necessajily be paid by
  piece-work, and prices obtainable average from
  33. 6d. to 10s. 6d. per single figure. When an
  artist is given a number of drawings to do at
  once, as, for instance, several small illustrations
  for a fashion book, she would be asked to do
  them at an inclusive charge, which would work
  out at a lower sum per figiire. Tlio artist
  who is employed on the staff of a paper has as
  strenuous a life as a journalist in every sense of
  the word. She is, in fact, a journalist of the pencil.
  Her working days are long - often she has to go
  f8ir afield for the subjects of her sketches, and
  very often the time allowed in which to work
  them out for press is all too short. But there
  are many compensations ; the work, besides being
  remunerative, is full of fascination and interest.
  
  Teaching. - There are many openings for
  teachers of art in art schools and technical in-
  stitutions under local authorities, also in private
  schools for those who have had a thorough art
  training. Teachers must obtain the art teacher's
  certificate of the Board of Education. Full
  
  
  training may be had at the Royal College of
  Art, South Kensington, London, wliich was
  first established for the training of art masters
  and mistresses as a college in which recognised
  art students could take their training, and it
  can be entered free by means of scholarships.
  Valuable training scholarships are offered gi\nng
  free tuition and a maintenance grant from
  12s. 6d. to 43s. 6d. a week, and also a number
  of free studentships. The fees charged to the
  general public range from 5s. to £5 a term,
  according to the course taken. A prospectus
  of the college may be obtained post free 4d. ; in
  this full information in regard to scholarsliips,
  conditions of admission, &c., will be found.
  
  The art teacher's certificate is almost a neces-
  sity to those who wish to teach in any of the
  municipal schools or classes, or in the best
  secondary schools which are under the Board of
  Education, but those who have received their
  art instruction in any of the famous schools of
  the country would have many posts open to
  them.
  
  MINOR ARTS AND CRAFTS
  
  Photography. - Photography affords escellcnt
  opportunities for the woman with artistic tastes
  combined with good business capacity and the
  requisite amount of capital with which to start
  a business of her own. The minor posts in
  photography, such as retouching, &c., are very
  poorly paid, and a woman is ill-advised to train
  with only a post of this kind in view. Tlie best
  salaries are paid to those who are termed
  receptionists. Their duties are to be in the
  studio, to receive cUents, make appointments,
  and to keep the books. They may also be
  required to do some retouching, photograph
  tinting, &c. A receptionist will get a salary of
  from £1, 10s. to £2, 10s. a week, whilst the salary
  of a retoucher seldom averages more than from
  10s. to 153. weekly.
  
  Training. - A professional course of photo-
  graphy may be taken at the Polytechnic, Regent
  Street, London, for £52, 10s. The course com-
  prises the scientific as well as the operative part
  of photography. Another way of traim'ng is to
  become a paying student in a high -class studio.
  Opportunities of practice are of first importance,
  and if the student can fit up a studio in her own
  homo, practising her art with her friends as
  sitters, this will give her a great experience of
  the practical part of the work as well as of its
  artistic side.
  
  Artistic photography should be the aim <>t
  every photographer who sets up in the business
  for herself. She should aim at making studirs
  of her pictures. Women photographers, a.s a
  rule, are experts in tlie art of pose, and all women
  who have followed this profession with ai;iy
  success are renowned for their artistic pho i,o-
  graphs.
  
  
  ARTS AND GRAFTS
  
  
  689
  
  
  The principal of one of the most fashionable
  studios in London is a lady who has made her
  name for artistic work. Her clientele consists
  mainly of the upper classes and her income is
  a large one. It is a good plan to specialise in
  children's photography where possible, for this is
  a very paying branch of the profession.
  
  Little capital is necessary to start a studio in
  a coimtry district. In London and other large
  towns from £200 to £300 woidd be required, and
  in order to set up in a fashionable district any
  sum of from £500 to £1000 would be necessary.
  The girl who wishes to carry on photography
  as a home occupation for profit may try her
  hand at writing articles for magazines and
  periodicals and illustrating them with her photo-
  graphs.
  
  Dancing Mistress. - This is a career well suited
  to girls of refinement who are also graceful in
  their movements and lithe and supple of figure.
  The dancing mistress must begin her training
  very early if she is to attain not only grace of
  movement and proficiency in her art, but also
  efficiency in teaching. The best method of
  training is to serve an apprenticeship of at least
  two years in a first-class dancing academy.
  For this a premium of £50 and upwards will
  have to be paid ; even more in some of the most
  select schools of dancing. In this time every
  branch of ball-room dancing and the chief
  fancy dances will be learnt, also Swedish or
  other simple physical exercises. After the ap-
  prenticeship has expired it is better to remain
  on with the same dancing teacher as assistant
  in order to gain experience. The assistant will
  receive a small salary of 10s. a week at first,
  but this will rise in proportion as her usefulness
  increases, and at the end of the first year, if her
  services are retained, she will probably receive
  a salary of from £1, 10s. to £2 a week. Very
  often, however, the dancing mistress has to
  take an enforced holiday during the summer, as
  few classes are held in this season, and this is
  a point to be remembered.
  
  Given a thorough training and good experi-
  ence as assistant, a woman can quite easily
  open a class of her own. She might aim first
  at getting a good appointment as visiting
  dancing mistress in a girls' school, and gradually
  extend her connection until she is able to hire
  a hall in which to hold her classes.
  
  HANDICRAFTS FOR HOME WORKERS
  
  There are a number of arts and crafts in
  which the woman worker can engage at home,
  and by the pm-suit of which she can add
  materially to her income. Needless to say, a
  thorough training in each particular handicraft
  is necessary before it can be utiUsed for monetary
  consideration.
  
  Metal Work and Enamelling. - This proves a
  most fascinating occupation for the woman who
  
  
  has artistic perception and skill of design-
  Beautiful work can be executed in the produc-
  tion of brooches, chains, clasps, and other
  jewellery, ornamental buttons, hair -combs, also
  fire-screens, frames, lamps, and all other articles
  to which this art may be appHed. The girl
  who wishes to take up the study of metal work
  and enamelling with a view to profit should
  have some idea of drawing and design, and also
  good business capacity, for she will have to
  estimate the costs of materials and put upon
  her work a sufficient price for it to yield a profit.
  The home worker should also remember that
  the smaller articles, such as jewellery, hair-
  combs, &c., are most often easier to sell than
  the larger ones.
  
  The metal and enamel worker must neces-
  sarily have an outfit of the tools and an enamel-
  ling stove. The latter cannot be had under £5,
  but this is the most expensive item. The
  enamels cost about 4d. per ounce ; a brush and
  a pestle and mortar are also necessary. Extra
  tools will be required for chsising work. A girl
  should therefore have a httle money not only
  for the purchase of the outfit, but for materials
  such as gold, silver, &c.
  
  Training. - Lessons in metal work and enamel-
  ling may be had at most of the art schools and
  polytechnics. Excellent training may be had
  at Alexander Fisher's Studios, 17 Warwick
  Gardens, Konsin_gton, London. At the Bir-
  mingham School of Art a particularly good
  training is given. At the art schools and poly-
  technics the training is exceptionally cheap,
  amounting to only a few shillings a session, but
  then only one or two lessons per week are given.
  Another way of training is to become appren-
  ticed to a metal worker for six months to a
  year. For tliis premiums vary, some firms de-
  manding more than others. Tliis second method
  of training, though more expensive, is certainly
  more effective, as the student in this way gains
  practical experience of every branch of the
  work, and a keen insight into costs, proper
  scales of prices, &c., &c. An expert designer
  will be able to complete her training in the
  course of a few lessons.
  
  Prospects. - When the training is ended the
  best way to attract general notice to one's work
  is to send exliibits to the cxliibitions organised
  by the various arts and crafts societies. These
  exhibitions are held in almost every large town.
  In London the Arts and Crafts Exhibition
  Society holds a yearly exhibition of all handi-
  crafts. Exhibits can also be sent to the British
  Industrial League and United Gentlewomen's
  Handicraft and Homo Industrial Exhibition
  (address - Tlie Hon. Secretary, 42 Vardens Road,
  London, S.W.).
  
  Apart from home work posts may be had
  as designers and workers with firms of metal
  workers, a good designer earning from £75 to
  £80 a year. Teachers' posts in county council
  
  "2 2
  
  
  690
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  art schools are also to bo had by those with
  exceptional qualifications.
  
  Leather Work and Wood Carving can also
  be turned into a profitable home occupation if
  the worker adopts the methods detailed above
  to make her work known. Both are taught
  at most art schools and polytechnics. At the
  School of Art Wood Carxdng, Thurloe Place,
  South Kensington, a good training in wood
  caa-ving may be hsui at a cost of £5 a quarter.
  The time training will take must necessarily
  depend upon the aptitude of the pupil ; the
  fuU course extends over three years. A month's
  training will cost £2 and a year's training £14,
  reduction being made for each successive year
  of training.
  
  Bookbinding. - Bookbinding is a most inter-
  esting occupation for women, and can prove
  most remunerative to the woman with a good
  connection if she can open her own workshop.
  Apart from this there are not many prospects
  in regard to paid positions in workshops, for
  the generaUty of these are filled by men,
  and in any case the weekly remuneration is
  small.
  
  The bookbinder, to do really tasteful and
  artistic work, should have a knowledge of design.
  The training, which is an expensive one, costing
  usually about £70, takes one year, and after
  this it requires constant practice to become
  really proficient in the art. The necessary train-
  ing can be obtained at the estabhshment of Miss
  Woolrich, 5 Bloomsbury Square, W.C. Lessons
  in bookbinding may also be taken at London
  County Council Central School of Arts and
  Crafts, Southampton Row, W.C. On the
  whole, as a career bookbinding does not offer
  many opportunities for women. The woman,
  however, who has managed to get a good con-
  nection together by means of private work,
  and who has a fair amount of capital, backed up
  by skill and business ability, should be able to
  start a business of her own with fair prospects
  of success.
  
  Lace-making, Spinning, and Weaving. - There
  has lately been a revival of the ancient arts of
  lace-making, spinning and weaving, and some
  prospects in this direction have been opened
  out to educated women as well as to the poorer
  classes. Posts as teachers in county council
  classes, especially in those villages where the
  
  
  lace industry haa been revived to any great
  extent, may be obtained by the efficient worker.
  Fine laco-mending and repairing may help to
  add to her income to a certain extent. The
  lace worker must be able to turn out work of
  the first quaUty and have a certain gift for
  design. In regard to spinning and weaving it
  is anticipated that these arts wiU soon be de-
  veloped as a field of employment. Full par-
  ticulars in regard to training may be had from
  the British and Irish Weaving and Spinning
  and Lace School, 28 Davies Street, Berkeley
  Square, London, W.
  
  Needlework. - In needlework itself as a pro-
  fession there are not many prospects, although
  good needlewomen may dispose of their work
  by entrusting it to a society organised for the
  sale of the work of gentlewomen. Women who
  are anxious to dispose of their work should
  communicate with the " Gentlewomen's Work
  Society," which has been specially founded to
  help gentlewomen in reduced circumstances who
  are anxious to add to their incomes by the aid
  of the needle. This society receives orders for
  all kinds of fine needlework, including trousseaux
  and layettes, also for fancy work of all descrip-
  tions, lace mending, cleaning, &c. Full parti-
  culars may be had upon application to the secre-
  tary, 114 Church Road, Norwood, London, E.
  The Girls' Friendly Society, Victoria Street,
  London, S.W., also undertakes to a&sist in the
  sale of needlework by members. In Edinbvugh
  the Society for the Sale of Gentlewomen's Work
  and the Princess Helena Society have been
  founded with the same object, and also the
  Work Depot for Irish Distressed Ladies,
  20 Dawson Street, Dublin. In fact, in almost
  every large town there are societies with this
  laudable end in view. Women with a httle
  capital of their own cannot do better than start
  a fine needlework shop where every kirnl of
  work is undertaken and where work materials,
  &c., are sold. They should select a suitable
  neighboiu-hood, and church work might well
  be made a speciality.
  
  There are schools of plain needlework, fancy
  work, and embroidery all over the country, at
  which the work can bo learned. At the Royal
  School of Art Needlework, South Kensington, les-
  sons in all kinds of embroidery and fancy work
  may bo taken. For terms apply to the secretary.
  
  
  SOCIAL AND PHILANTHROPIC WORK
  
  This article deals with a phase of work for women which is at present little understood and even
  less appreciated by a large number of women workers. The openings for social and philanthropic
  workers are, however, steadily increasing, and the paid posts are becoming more and more numerous.
  Tlais article gives details in regard to the various branches of social and philanthropic workp and the
  prospects which they offer to educated women workers.
  
  
  For the woman of leisure and means, as well
  as for the woman who has to toil for her daily
  bread, philanthropic work of all kinds should
  have an absorbing interest. In the many
  responsible unpaid posts the former may find
  full scope for ameliorating the lot of those less
  fortunate than themselves ; and the latter,
  whilst engaged in the task of earning their
  livelihood, are happy in the knowledge that they
  are doing good and useful work by following
  one of the noblest careers open to women.
  
  A great fund of sympathy and understanding
  of human nature aie necessary for the woman
  who would take up pliiianthropic work with
  success. She should be patient and intuitively
  thoughtfvil for the feelings of others, and refine-
  ment will not prove her least valuable asset.
  Added to this, a regular course of training should
  be undergone to fit her for that particular branch
  of philanthropy which she wishes to take up.
  
  Training. - Those who wish to be efficient
  workers should take a course of training at one
  of the recognised training institutions. This
  course should extend over two years in regard
  to the more important work. There are many
  facilities for training nowadays, which some
  years ago did not exist. At the following
  institutions instruction in the various branches
  of the work may be had : -
  
  The London School of Sociology and Social
  Economics, Denison House, Vauxhall Bridge
  Road. Fees, twelve guineas the session ; the
  complete cou'"se is two years, but shorter courses
  may be taken.
  
  The Women's University Settlement, 44 and
  45 Nelson Square, Blackfriars Road, London,
  S.E. Fees also twelve guineas per session.
  The ordinary course lasts one year, and con-
  stitutes a training in social work generally, but
  students who wish to specialise in any particular
  branch should remain a secc.id year. Resident
  students pay £60 a year for board and lodging.
  
  Lady Margaret Hall Settlement, Kennington
  
  
  Road, Lambeth. Fees, resident students £48
  a year.
  
  Training may also be had at many of the other
  settlements and at the London School of Econo-
  mics, Clare Market, W.C. Girls may obtain
  an insight into practical social work at various
  branches of the Charitable Organisation Society.
  
  The chief openings for women social workers
  are as almoners in hospitals, settlement workers,
  welfare managers, secretaries to philanthropic
  societies, clubs, &c., rent collectors, relieving
  officers. Poor Law inspectors (see p. 680), mana-
  gers of milk depots, &c.
  
  Hospital Aimoner. - Tliis is a comparatively
  new career for women. A few years ago there
  were no women almoners ; and, though their
  number is not gi'eat at present, in all probability
  it will be added to considerably in the future.
  Posts as assistants to almoners may be had, in
  wliich a very full knowledge of the work may be
  gained, so that the assistant will in time be
  qualified to take the post of almoner herself.
  
  Tlie duties of an almoner are many and varied,
  but they may be classified in one sentence-
  the supervision of the out-patients' department
  of a hospital. The work has two different
  aspects, each of which is of the utmost import-
  ance. First, it is the duty of the almoner to
  check abuse of the charity of the hospital, seeing
  that only those who are eligible receive free
  treatment, and so preventing a waste of hospital
  funds ; for often the benefits of the hospital are
  extended free to those who can afford to paj' for
  medical and nursing aid,a factwhich is manifestly
  unfair to the hospital, the other patients, and
  to medical practitioners. The almoners' duty
  it is, therefore, to make inquiries in regard to
  the circumstances of out-patients, to receive
  recommendations from medical men in regard
  to deserving cases, and to advise those applicants
  who are in work to make provision for times
  of illness by subscription to Provident Dispen-
  saries. Then it is her duty to provide eligible
  
  
  691
  
  
  692
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  patients with all the help in her power, seeing
  that they carry out religiously the treatment
  prescribed, visiting their homes if necessary, or
  getting into communication with the district
  visitor of that particular locaUty, and gaining
  her co-operation, asking her to report upon any
  case in her district. She should also be m
  toucli with the various charitable organisations,
  enlisting their help where necessary on the
  behalf of deserving cases.
  
  It will bo seen, therefore, that the work of a
  hospital almoner is no sinecure. Every moment
  of her day is practically mapped out for her.
  On the other hand, her work is full of variety and
  interest, and her scope for doing good among
  poor patients is practically unlimited.
  
  Training. - The hospital almoner should first of
  all have had a thorough general education. She
  should have, in addition, a good knowledge of
  book-keeping,managementof money andb\isiness
  methods generally. She should also possess that
  tact so necessary for dealing with the different
  classes of people with whom she will have to
  come in contact. The girl who wishes to become
  an almoner should write to the secretary of the
  Almoners' Training Committee, Denison House,
  Vauxhall Bridge Road, for full information in
  regard to training, prospects, &c. The princi-
  pal part of the training is usually to be had
  from hospital almoners, who train pupils m the
  actual work of the out-patients' department,
  usually free of charge. In all cases £5 covers
  the cost of both theoretical and practical tram-
  ing. Candidates for training must be under
  thirty -five years of age.
  
  Prospects.- The openings at present are few,
  but there is every prospect that they will in-
  crease. There is nothing to prevent every
  hospital appointing an almoner in time, when
  the usefulness of their work is fully appreciated.
  Salaries vary according to circumstances ; they
  are rarely less than £100 a year, whilst in many
  cases much higher salaries are paid.
  
  The Social Secretary.- The duties of a secretary
  to a philanthropic institution or society represent
  a very large sphere of social work. Most of the
  social secretaryships are now paid posts, although
  a great number of these secretarial posts are
  filled by voluntary workers. The scope of the
  work is wide and varied, as the many charitable
  associations deal with so many different phases
  of charitable work. Thus wo have societies
  dealing with holidays for invalid workers and
  children, others engaged in rescue works ; then
  wo have the girls' and boys' clubs and societies
  for improvingthe conditionsof the poorgenerally,
  &c., &c. In each case the secretary must have
  a thorough knowledge of her duties, have had a
  good general education, supplemented by special
  secretarial training as well as training in the
  particular branch of social work which she takes
  up. She must be a good organiser and have
  plenty of self-reliance and power of initiative.
  
  
  No mere routine worker, who can only do as
  she is told and not be able to think or act for
  herself, can successfully take up a post of the
  kind.
  
  An Honorary Secretary does a great deal of
  work for no pay, and if capable, conscientious,
  and enthusiastic, is one of the most useful
  members of society. She is generally elected
  to the office on the groimd of special fitness,
  owing either to her interest in the particular
  work of the association, her social influence
  which can enlist subscribers and desirable
  members, or her enthusiasm and persuasive
  advocacy, a qualification which has much to
  do with the prosperity of a public cause. The
  combination of these three recommendations
  makes an ideal secretary, whether honorary
  or paid.
  
  One of the first duties of the secretary will
  be the drafting and issuing of appeals. Now
  considerable skill is required for this. Then
  she will have special duties in connection with
  the organisation and arrangement of com-
  mittee meetings and public meetings, seeing to
  all the preliminaries in connection with each.
  It will also be her duty to inform the local
  press of the place, day, and hour of public
  meetings, sending cards of invitation for the
  occasion so that the proceedings can be weU
  reported. She must be careful to show all
  courtesy to the reporters who go to her for
  information and give them all the assistance
  they require.
  
  The duties of a secretary to a philanthropic
  institution or association cover a very wide
  field of activity for the voluntary as well as
  for the paid worker. It will be realised, there-
  fore, that a thorough training and some amount
  of experience of the work are necessary for
  the women who wish to fill a position of the
  kind with success.
  
  Training. - Good training may be had at the
  different schools of sociology and at a number
  of the women's settlements. Excellent training
  is also given by the Charity Organisation
  Society. The cost of training varies at the
  different institutions, and the intending social
  worker should write to the settlement or society
  of her choice asking full particulars as to terms,
  varying courses of training, &c.
  
  Prospects. - ^Vcry good secretarial posts may
  be had with rich philanthropists who make good
  works their hobby- such posts, as a rule, are the
  most highly paid. Salaries to be had from
  charitable institutions are not, as a rule, high,
  though they vary to a great extent, £80 to £100
  or £150 being the average ; whilst the salaries
  paid by private philanthropists often reach the
  sum of £250 a year. .
  
  Welfare Work.- Tliis is a very important
  branch of social work, and one which is of com-
  parative recent growth. Many of our largest
  and wealthiest of manufacturers have reahsed
  
  
  SOCIAL AND PHILANTHROPIC WORK
  
  
  693
  
  
  the importance of improving the social and
  general conditions of their employees, realising
  that pleasant, happy, and conifortable sur-
  roundings form the best incentive to good and
  conscientious work on the part of the workers ;
  and it has been abundantly proved that the
  employer who takes an interest in the well-
  being of his employees is paid many times over
  by the willingness and appreciation displayed by
  the workers, who are always grateful for any
  kindness exercised on their behalf.
  
  It is the duty of the welfare manager (or
  social secretary, as she is often called) to see that
  the best is done in promoting the welfare of the
  employees in every conceivable way. She must
  see that they work under the best conditions in
  regard to sanitation and comfort, and that good
  meals are provided at a nominal cost. Also that
  these meals are taken in pleasant and cheerful
  siuToundirigs, so that the dining-hour is one of
  the most cheerful hours of the day for the
  workers.
  
  She organises entertainments, encouraging the
  workers to form entertainment clubs and com-
  mittees. It is her duty to receive and deal with
  all complaints in regard to their food or surround-
  ings. Another important part of her work is to
  promote thrift amongst the employees. Some
  large manufacturers have founded savings banks
  for their employees, giving a fair rate of interest,
  and the welfare manager encourages the girls
  to save in this way. The health of the em-
  ployees is also under her supervision. She sees
  that a girl who is taken ill receives proper atten-
  tion, and visits her home to make inquiries as to
  her progress and to afford any little help that
  miay be necessary. In most factories where
  welfare workers are employed, there are play-
  grounds and gardens for the employees. The
  welfare manager must see to the organising of
  outdoor sports. Usually she will organise a
  games club, of which she will encourage all
  employees to become members. Very often a
  reading library will be under her direction, and
  she will be required to organise instructive
  lectures for educational purposes.
  
  Tliere is practically no limit to the scope
  afforded to a welfare manager for doing good,
  provided she has those persorial qualities which
  are so necessary to win the respect and affection
  of the workers. Tact and sjnupathy, combined
  with firmness and a sense of strictly impartial
  justice, are the qualities which will stand her in
  best stead. The woman who is suited to the
  work will find it full of interest and variety,
  and will leave no stone unturned to promote
  the welfare of those under her charge.
  
  Training should be taken preferably at a
  settlement. Good advice upon the best method
  of training may bo received from the Hon.
  Secretary, The British Institute of Social
  Service, 4 Tavistock Street, W.C, or from any of
  the Social Settlements.
  
  
  Prospects. - ^The posts are weU paid - £150 c
  year representing a fair average.
  
  Settlement Workers. - Settlement workers are
  engaged in carrying out social and educational
  work amongst the poor - religious work also
  being undertaken in this connection. In regard
  to social work, many of the duties are similar
  to those of the welfare manager, only they are
  applied to a more varied community, for the
  work is amongst the poor generally. The
  organisation of clubs, tlirift societies, the pro-
  viding of entertainmenta, and organisation of
  play centres for children, the conducting of
  educational work in the form of lectures and
  classes, district visiting, and last, but not least,
  religioios work, all come within the scope of the
  charitable work directed by the various settle-
  ments. Another important branch of settle-
  ment work is the training of all kinds of social
  workers. Each settlement is under the direction
  of a warden, who receives a salary of from £50
  a year and upwards. Some of the chief settle-
  ments for the education of workers have been
  mentioned in the first part of this article.
  Amongst other settlements which do a large
  amount of work amongst the poor are the
  following : -
  
  The Canning Town Woman's Settlement,
  East London.
  
  Passmore Edwards Settlement, Tavistock
  Place, W.C. (No resident women workers.)
  
  The Bemaondsey Settlement, 187 Bermondsey
  Street, London, S.E.,f or the benefit of the fewitory
  girls of Bermondsey.
  
  The work of the following societies are especi-
  ally deserving of mention in regard to religious
  as well as philanthropic work among the poor.
  
  The Greyladles. - This is a society of ladies
  which devotes itself to rehgious and philan-
  thropic work, whose headquarters are the
  Greylands College, near Blackheath. The
  members of the society can either be resident or
  non-resident, and tliree months' probation is
  generally required before one can be formally
  enrolled as a member. The fees for resident
  members are £50 per annum, to be paid in
  quarterly instalments. The college, which is
  most comfortably fitted up, is under the super-
  intendence of ^liss Wordsworth, and there is
  notliing ascetic about the life.
  
  The Greyladies do district visiting, hold
  meetings and classes, give lectiures and addresses,
  organise clubs and excursions - in fact, all kinds
  of parish work, with the exception of nursing. Tlie
  Bishop of Southwark is president of the college,
  and the work is carried on under the incvmibenta
  of the diocese, each member of the society being
  given the work which seems best suited to her
  capabilities.
  
  The aim of the society is to bring together
  ladies who wish to devote themselves to Clmrch
  work, and enable them to carry it out on some
  definite plan and on community lines.
  
  
  694
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  The Bible women and Nurses' Mission. - The
  
  headquarters of this society are at Ranyaxd
  House, 25 Russell Square, so called from the
  founder, Mrs. Reuiyard. The aim of the mission is
  to send workers into the homes of the poor and
  give them religious teacliing and nursing when
  required. The Biblewomen are trained mission
  visitors who live in different districts of London,
  and generally work in connection with some
  church or chapel. They try to introduce the
  Bible into the homes they visit, and encourage
  the poor to buy it on an instalment plan. Can-
  didates for the post of Biblewomen should be
  between the ages of twenty-five and thirty-five,
  and a short training and probation is given in the
  hostel, Ranyard House, under trained workers,
  the time varying according to the needs of the
  worker. A salary is afterwards given according
  to the kind of work that is undertaken.
  
  The Ranyard nurses must be fully trained,
  and they have generally a few weeks' probation
  before being formally accepted. The nxirses
  also receive a salary, varj'ing according to their
  capabilities, and work under the direction of a
  superintending sister.
  
  Both nurses and Biblewomen meet at the
  headquarters for devotional services and to give
  in reports of the work. Needless to say, only
  women who are prepared to live a very simple
  life, and who can manage their own hovisekeeping
  if necessary, besides having a special love for
  the work in hand, should think of taking a post
  of the kind. Further particulars can be had
  by applying to the secretary of the mission.
  
  House Management, or, as it is most commonly
  known, " rent collecting," also affords good
  scope for the trained social worker ; and since
  the first organisation of this particular work by
  Miss Octavia Hill, a number of women have
  taken it up with success. The work consists of
  transacting all kinds of btosiness in connection
  with house property of the poorer classes, and
  the house manager will require a good knowledge
  and experience of the people among whom she
  will have to work. The houses under her
  direction will bo almost exclusively those let at
  weekly rentals, and in connection with these she
  will have to see to the arranging of improvements
  and repairs when necessary - reporting upon any
  defects in sanitation or other matters reqmring
  attention. This is all in addition to the actual
  work of rent collecting, which of course also
  falls to her share.
  
  The house manager should have a good know-
  ledge of the law of landlord and tenant as
  applied to weekly tenancies ; she should also
  have some knowledge of sanitation, sufficient for
  her to advise upon defective sanitary conditions
  and suggest improvements where necessary.
  A knowledge of book-keeping and business
  methods is also essential, as various accounts
  in connection with the property have often to be
  kept by the house manager.
  
  
  Training. - A good course of social training,
  supplemented by training in business methods
  and sanitation will be necessary. It is always
  best to train in a settlement, and to supplement
  the training by a few months' actual experience
  with a house manager. The student should also
  take a short coiurse at the Sanitary Institute or
  the National Health Society (see Sanitary
  Inspectors).
  
  Prospects. - Salaries vary - £40 per annum
  being, as a rule, the minimum figure. The
  Ecclesiastical Commissioners and many other
  large companies owning houses for the poorer
  classes employ lady house managers, as do also
  other property owners. As a field of work for
  women, house management promises further
  development in the future.
  
  Relieving Officers. - This branch of social work
  for women is as yet in its infancy, as there are
  only one or two unions which have appointed
  women relieving officers. A number of unions
  have, however, appointed women as assistant
  relieving officers, and there are therefore much
  better prospects to be found in this minor
  position. The duties of the women relieving
  officers are principally among women. They
  have to visit those who are receiving relief and
  to arrange for the reception of those women who
  wish to enter the maternity wards. A good
  knowledge of social work is necessary for the
  relieving officer to be able to deal efficiently
  with all the applications coming under her
  notice. Salaries range from about £100 for
  assistant relieving officers, and from £120 for
  relieving officers.
  
  Manager of Municipal Milk Depots. - ^Municipal
  milk depots have now been inaugurated in
  varioxis towns throughout England for the
  supply of pure milk to the poorer classes. So
  much good has been done by these institution'
  that there is every prospect that their ntimber
  will bo increased. Women managers are em-
  ployed in the milk depots at fairly good salaries,
  though these vary in different localities. Train-
  ing may best be had by actual experience under
  a nianageress.
  
  Children's Care Committees. - The new Acts
  in regard to the medical inspection and feeding
  of school children are responsible for the evolu-
  tion of another field of activity for the social
  worker - that of the supervision of Children's
  Care Committees.
  
  These committees deal with the work of pro-
  viding meals for necessitous school children.
  They are required to see, however, that dis-
  crimination is exercised in this respect by only
  administering the charity where real need for
  it exists. They also watch over the health
  of the children. They employ health visitors
  to visit their homes and give advice to their
  parents in regard to health and hygiene. The
  London County Council has appointed two
  organisers and twelve lady assistant organiaera
  
  
  SOCIAL AND PHILANTHROPIC WORK
  
  
  695
  
  
  to supervise this work. The work of health
  visiting under the conunittees is apportioned out
  amongst its members, each being responsible
  for a certain district.
  
  Posts as school niirses or health visitors and
  sanitary inspectors are to be had in London
  under the London County Council, in addition
  to those to be had in connection with these
  committees (see p. 637).
  
  Women in Local Government. - By the Quali-
  
  
  fication of Women (County and Borough Councils
  Act), 1907, women are now eligible for service
  on borough and covin ty councils. As is well
  known, all administrative work in local govern-
  ment is unpaid, but such work ofiers unlimited
  opportunities for many well-educated women
  who are not obliged to work for their livelihood,
  and enjoy incomes of their own. (For paid
  official appointments under local authorities,
  see Civil Service and Public Work.)
  
  
  WOMEN IN POLITICS
  
  
  In this article a comprehensive survey is taken of the part played by women in politics at the present
  day. The various ways in which women may help their part at election time are detailed, and
  hints are given in regard to the special training needed to become a successful canvasser, platform
  speaker, or an efficient worker in committee rooms.
  
  The information in regard to the actual progress of the Women's Suffrage movement, which is
  included in this article, will be welcomed by those who have not hitherto studied the question, as it
  gives them the knowledge they lack in a simple and easily intelUgible form.
  
  
  THE WOMAN CANVASSER
  
  In the ranks of all political parties nowadays
  the woman electioneer plays a prominent part,
  - a more prominent part, in fact, than at any
  previous period of our political history, al-
  though women have always exerted a certain
  influence in politics, an influence which has gone
  a long way towards deciding the fate of many
  an election.
  
  In former times the weapons employed by the
  gentler sex to secure votes for their favourite
  candidate were those of fascination and charm,
  and many a recalcitrant voter was brought to a
  sense of his duty as an elector by the persuasive
  smile of some noble dame who often knew little
  of the political principles which she had pledged
  herself to advocate.
  
  With the canvasser of to-day methods have
  changed ; the woman canvasser is a trained
  worker, and not only an ardent disciple of her
  cause, but also one who is entirely conversant
  with the principles which that cause embodies.
  She can argue like an expert upon tariff refomi,
  free trade, sociaUsm, or any vital point at issue,
  and knows to a nicety the kind of argument
  which will have most force with the particular
  voter she wLshes to capture. Her arguments,
  what is more, are based upon a thorough know-
  ledge not only of the cause she has espoused,
  but also of the claims put forward by the
  opposing party ; and with all the tact of a trained
  pohtician she points out the flaws in the political
  programme of her opponents. Tact, that
  greatest of feminine attributes, is absolutely
  necessary to convert opponent or " doubtful "
  voters to one's own political opinions. Tact,
  therefore, is not the least effective weapon in
  the armoury of the woman canvasser.
  
  The importance of the role played by suc-
  cessful women canvassers at elections has re-
  ceived widespread recognition, and the estab-
  
  
  lishment of classes for canvassers conducted
  by political organisations, in which women can
  learn the principles and practice of electioneer-
  ing, is now one of the outstanding features of
  the preparation for elections. In these classes
  inexperienced women are initiated into the art
  of canvassing and all the principles governing
  election procedure.
  
  THE WOMAN SPEAKER
  
  There are speakers' classes, too, for women
  who wish to aid their cause by speaking at
  political meetings, and the ntunber of these
  classes is more than ever typical of the im-
  portant part played by woman in poUtics, and
  the still more important part which she may in
  the future be called upon to play. Not only
  is the student initiated into the mysteries '.f
  intonation and correct deUvery, but she is
  also made to realise the importanco of that
  simple, direct, yet forcible style of speaking
  which carries conviction, and does more than
  anything else to obtain the sympathy of an
  audience and hold its attention and interest.
  The woman who is a naturally gifted speaker
  will do well to attend these classes; by doing
  so she will acquire a self-confidence and a finish
  which will stand her in good stead. Attendance
  at a speakers' class is doubly necessary for the
  woman who is not naturally gifted for platform
  oratory, but whose duties, nevertheless, will
  call upon her at times to speak in public ; for
  though she nnay never become a brilliant
  speaker, at least by taking instruction at
  classes she will learn to say what she has to
  say audibly, clearly, and as convincingly as
  possible.
  
  Some knowledge of the procedure at public
  meetings is also essential. It often falls to
  the lot of a woman to take the chair at some
  political meeting, and much of its success will
  
  
  WOMEN IN POLITICS
  
  
  697
  
  
  depend upon the manner in which her duties
  as president are fulfilled.
  
  WOMEN ORGANISERS
  
  But there are many other important parts
  played by women in helping the success of their
  cause beyond that of speaking and actual can-
  vassing. Nowadays, careful organisation is the
  most characteristic feature of our elections,
  and often the faihure of a particular candidate
  at the polls is largely ascribed to some defect
  in the electioneering machinery. Women now-
  adays enter largely into the actual organisation
  of the campaign of their party. Thus in many
  women's committee rooms we find capable
  women in authority, carrying on work for the
  election agent, attending to important details
  in regard to statistics in connection with
  voters, &c., and directing a large number of
  voluntary women workers who see to all im-
  portant detail work in regard to correspondence,
  filing of records, making appointments, &c.
  The work of these women is of the utmost
  value, and cannot but be productive of the
  best results.
  
  The woman who embarks upon any of the
  branches of election work above described,
  and who does her work earnestly and con-
  scientiously, may rest satisfied that she is acting
  up to her poKtical principles by helping in the
  smooth rtmning of the organisation of the
  campaign of her par*y ; in fact, that she is doing
  her best to help it in every way, whatever may
  be the ultimate results of the contest in which
  the parties are engaged.
  
  WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT
  
  The question of women's rights is one of the
  most passionate questions of social reform of
  ovir day. The character of the women who are
  leading the movement, the determined way in
  which the arguments are being fought out, the
  great impression produced in Parliament, and
  the deep and almost unexpected response wliich
  the cry of revolt has produced tliroughout the
  masses of women of the country, all go to prove
  that this is a question that must be seriously
  faced and dealt with.
  
  Women, like men, have the desire to expand
  their realm of intelligence, to take part in the
  affairs of the world, wliich bear upon their lives,
  and the restraint and force of mere tradition,
  prejudice, or caste, have become intolerable to
  them. Women want freer lives because they
  want freer development ; they want more cap-
  able minds and increased capacities for grappling
  with the increasing difficulties of modern civi-
  lisation.
  
  The agitation for women's riglits is no new
  thing; in many respects it has the air of the
  recovery of privileges once enjoyed. In feudal
  
  
  days women who possessed lands held them on
  the same terms as men, and exercised the right
  of taking part in the election of members of the
  House of Commons. Even as far back as 1739
  it was proved that women who held the freehold
  of a landed property should vote for Parliament.
  In that year, however, the Court decided against
  the claims of women. Even as late as 1867 the
  law was still uncertain in regard to a nmnber
  of these questions, and in that year 230 women
  were on the List of the Voters of Manchester,
  and the matter was re-argued before it was
  definitely decided that they should not exercise
  the vote.
  
  There have been many champions of women's
  rights long before those with whose names we
  are familiar at the present day. Mary Astell,
  for example, was one of the great pioneers of
  the movement, and her " Serious Proposals to
  Ladies " is overflowing with wit and wisdom.
  Another, still later and better known, is Mary
  Wollstonecraft, and her "Vindication of the
  Rights of Women " affords admirable reading.
  The next great name is that of John Stuart Mill.
  His famous book, " The Subjection of Women,"
  made a stir in its time, and brought the question
  of Women's Rights within the range of practical
  politics, but his movement was defeated.
  
  Following John Stuart Mill we find Benjamin
  Disraeli in 1873 advocating Women's Rights in
  a letter to a friend.
  
  Of late years the movement has been steadily
  gi-owing. Petition after petition, signed by
  thousands of women, has been presented in
  Parliament, many societies have been founded
  throughout the country, and several members
  of Parliament have made themselves conspicuous
  in advocating the cause. The movement is
  organised ; it is becoming consolidate, efficient,
  
  and very powerful. Amongst the multitude of
  
  helpers may be mentioned such influential
  
  bodies as : -
  The National Union of Women's Suffrage
  
  Societies, comprising over 200 societies - which
  
  is the parent of all- U Great Smith Street,
  
  London. President: Mrs. Henry Fawcett.
  
  LL.D.
  
  National Women's Social and Political Union.
  
  - Founder and Hon. Sec. : Mrs. Pankhurst,
  
  4 Clement's Inn, London.
  Conservative and Unionist Women's Franchise
  
  Association, 48 Dover Street, London, W.-
  
  President : Countess of Selbome.
  London Society for Women's Suffrage, 58
  
  Victoria Street, S.W. - President : Lady
  
  Frances Balfour.
  The New Constitutional Society, 8 Park
  
  Mansions Arcade, Knightsliridge. - President :
  
  Mrs. C. Chapman.
  The Actresses' Franchise League, 2 Robert
  
  Street, Strand. - President; Mrs. Forbes
  
  Robertson.
  
  The Church League for Women's Suffrage,
  
  
  698
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Irish Women's Franchise League, Free Church
  League for Women's SufErage, Men's Political
  Union for Women's Enfranchisement, and many
  others.
  
  AU these movements have been conducted
  on " constitutional " principles, except that
  of the Social and Political Union, over 300
  of whose members have suffered varying terms
  of imprisonment. How far the daring but
  self-sacrificing efforts of these ladies have " kept
  back the cause for twenty years," or given
  it a reality, a vim, an impetus, and a hope-
  fulness, it must be left to each reader to form
  her own judgment.
  
  In 1910 all the Suffrage Societies imited in
  support of a Bill (introduced by Mr. Shackleton,
  M.P.) to extend the vote to those women who
  now vote municipally. This Conciliation Bill
  was carried on its second reading on July 12,
  1910, by a majority of 110, and was sent to a
  general committee of the whole House, but was
  " shelved." Sir George Kemp will submit a new
  Bill of a slightly amended form for its second
  reading on 3Iay 5.
  
  The text of this new BiU, which is known as
  the Conciliation BiU, 1911, is the following : -
  
  1. Every woman possessed of a household
  qualification within the meaning of the Repre-
  sentation of the People Act (1884) shall bo
  entitled to be registered as a voter, and when
  registered to vote for the county or borough in
  which the qualifying premises are situate.
  
  2. For the purposes of this Act, a woman
  shall not be disqualified by marriage for being
  registered as a voter, provided that a husband
  and wife shall not both be registered as voters
  in the same Parliamentary Borough or coimty
  division.
  
  The militant suffragists, as well as the con-
  stitutional suffragists, are absolutely at one in
  their intention of giving all possible support
  to this Bill.
  
  What have women to expect as a result
  of their enfranchisement ? Certainly not the
  '* Golden Age," nor a sovereign remedy for all
  ills, but rather a lever to help them slowly so
  that in time many of the laws which affect them
  may be improved. Tlius by the exercise of the
  vote working women expect gradually to im-
  prove their conditions of work and wages as
  men have done by their enfranchisement. The
  present restricted range of women's labour is
  another they hope to see removed in time, and
  no matter what the character of their work may
  be, to have it judged by its true market value
  and not by the sex of the worker.
  
  There are various other matters which closely
  
  
  affect women, such as the housing of the poor,
  prison reform, relief of the poor and needy, &c.,
  all of which ought to come somewhat within
  their jurisdiction.
  
  There are also certain existing laws which
  they would have altered, more especially the
  divorce laws, which, as they stand, axe a crying
  injustice to women.
  
  To remove the stigma now placed upon all
  women by including them in such categories
  as lunatics, criminals, paupers, aliens, and
  minors, and in this way to raise the status of
  woman, is another of the aims of the suffragist.
  This is a stigma which every self-respecting and
  thoughtful woman must resent, and so must any
  man who is forced to swear before the altar that
  he will " honour " liis wife.
  
  Granting the franchise to women will also re-
  move that anomaly of taxation without represen-
  tation, which we declare in the case of men to be
  tyranny, and it will increase the honesty of our
  claim to be a free nation.
  
  It is not only to elevate the position of all
  women and to aid the wage-earner and the poor
  that the suffragists desire a particular share in
  the legislation of the country. By introducing
  a new and practical interest into the narrow
  lives of that large section of women whose ideas
  at present do not extend beyond their attire,
  their household, and their domestic or love
  affairs, or those of their acquaintances, they hope
  gradually to do away with the pettiness, the
  narrowness wliich generations of such limited
  interests have engendered.
  
  One notable and most desirable effect of this
  demand for the elevation of women which is
  already perceptible, is the drawing together of
  women of all classes of society and poUtics in
  one common bond. In the suffragist pro-
  cessions are to be seen walking together tho
  peeress and the laundry girl, the university
  woman and the factory hand, the mistress and
  the maid. There is nothing of condescension
  or servility on either side, and this condition i^
  characteristic of the whole movement.
  
  It will be seen then that the granting of tho
  suffrage to women would produce no great
  political or social revolution. The demands are
  all moderate, just and elevating, for man and
  woman alike. Women desire to forward the
  progress of humanity towards a higher and
  purer civilisation which will include the whole
  race. Thus the modern woman having shaken
  off much of her dangerous ignorance, her help-
  lessness, her weak sentimentality and artifi-
  ciality, will become an ennobling and straighten-s
  ing influence in national as well as domestic life. \
  
  
  MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND FIGURES
  
  
  WOMEN'S SOCIETIES AND INSTITUTIONS
  
  
  POLITICAL ASSOCIATIONS
  
  The Women's Liberal Federation, 72 Victoria
  Street, London, S.W., and nearly 700 branches.
  
  Women's Amalgamated Unionist and Tariff
  Reform Association, 13a George Street, Hanover
  Square, and many branches.
  
  Women's National Liberal Association, 138
  Palace Chambers, London, S.W.
  
  Scottish Women's Liberal Federation, 7 West
  George Street, Glasgow.
  
  Women's Free Trade Union, 185 Palace
  Chambers, Westminster.
  
  The Primrose League, 64 Victoria Street,
  London, S.W.
  
  LOCAL GOVERNMENT
  
  Women's Local Government Society for the
  United Kingdom, 17 Tothill Street, Westminster.
  
  Women Guardians and Local Government
  Association, 8 Kinnaird Road, Withington.
  
  Yorkshire Ladies' Council of Education, 7 Cook-
  ridge Street, Leeds.
  
  Appointment of Women to Public Boards, 83
  Bath Street, Glasgow.
  
  Irish Women's Local Government Association,
  125 Lunster Road, Rathmines, Dublin.
  
  WOMEN'S NON-POLITICAL ASSOCIATIONS
  
  The International Council of Women, with
  which national councils in all j^arts of the world
  are affiliated. This Association provides a
  means of communication between women's
  societies in all countries. The British Branch
  is known as : -
  
  The National Council of Women of Great
  Britain and Ireland. - Parliament Mansions, West-
  minster, London. There are also many branches.
  
  Women's Industrial Council, 7 John Street,
  Adelphi, London, W.C. Its aim is to improve
  the industrial conditions of women.
  
  Scottish Council for Women's Trades, 58 Ren-
  field Street, Glasgow.
  
  Women's Co-operative Guild, 66 Rosslyn Hill,
  London, N.W.
  
  
  Women's Institute, 92 Victoria Street, London,
  S.W., for women and others engaged or interested
  in professional, educational, and other work,
  lectures, conferences, &c.
  
  Victoria League, 2 Millbank House, London,
  S.W. An association of British men and
  women formed with the object of promoting a
  close understanding between British subjects all
  over the world.
  
  Society of Women Journalists, 1 Clifford's Inn,
  London, E.G.
  
  National Union of Teachers, 67 and 71 Russell
  Square, London, W.C.
  
  Teachers' Guild of Great Britain and Ireland,
  74 Gower Street, London, W.C.
  
  Association of Head Mistresses, 92 Victoria
  Street, London, S.W.
  
  Joint Agency of Women Teachers, 74 Gower
  Street, London, W.C.
  
  Association of Assistant Mistresses in Secondary
  Schools, 23 Berners Street, London.
  
  Women's Agricultural and Horticultural Union,
  64 Sloane Street, London, S.W.
  
  Association of Women Pharmacists, Gordon
  Hall, Gordon Square, London, W.C.
  
  Association of Registered Medical Women,
  New Hospital for Women, Euston Road, London.
  
  Scottish Association for Medical Education of
  Women, Edinburgh.
  
  Women's Sanitary Inspectors' Association, to
  protect the interest of sanitary in"; tors and
  health visitors. Honorary Secretary, Miss M.
  Portlock, 42 Lordship Park, London,' N.
  
  PHILANTHROPIC SOCIETIES
  
  Women's Imperial Health Association, the
  object of which is to teach women and girls the
  importance of personal and domestic hygiene.
  Caravan tours are conducted tlu-ough rural
  districts for this purpose.
  
  London Bible women and Nurses' Mission, 25
  Russell Square, W.C.
  
  Society for the Relief of Distressed Widows,
  32 Sack\nlle Street, London, W.
  
  Associated Societies for the Protection of
  
  
  700
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Women and Children, 60 Haymarket, London,
  S.W.
  
  Governesses' Benevolent Institution and Regis-
  tration Offices, 47 Harley Street, London, W.
  
  Society for the Relief of Widows and Orphans
  of Medical Men, 11 Chandos Street, Cavendisii
  Square, London, \V.
  
  Little Sisters of the Poor, St. Joseph's House,
  Portobello Road, Notting Hill, London, W. A
  Roman Catholic order which undertakes the
  care of tlie aged poor.
  
  Heartsease Society, 17 Moore Street, Cadogan
  Square, London.
  
  Gentlewomen's Work Society, 55 Church Road,
  Norwood, S.E. For gentlewomen of limited
  means.
  
  TEMPERANCE ASSOCIATIONS
  
  British Women's Temperance Association, 47
  Victoria Street, London, S.W. President, the
  Countess of Carlisle.
  
  Women's Total Abstinence Union, 4 Luc^ate
  Hill, London, E.G.
  
  World's Women's Christian Temperance Union.
  - President, the Countess of Carlisle.
  
  United Kingdom Band of Hope Union, 60 Old
  Bailey, London, E.C.
  
  Young Abstainers' Union, 33 Henrietta Street,
  Strand, London, W.C.
  
  FOR CHILDREN AND YOUNG GIRLS
  
  National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty
  to Children, Leicester Square, London, W.C.
  
  Children's Country HoUdays' Fxmd, 18 Bucking-
  ham Street, Strand, London, W.C. It was
  founded with the view of affording country
  hohdays to children attending pubUc elementary
  schools when needed.
  
  Children's Protection League, 8 More's Gardens,
  Cheyne Walk, Chelsea, London, S.W. The aim
  of the society is to help in the carrying out of
  existing legislation in regard to child life and
  to promote further legislation towards rescuing
  children from dangerous surroundings.
  
  Girls' Friendly Society, 39 Victoria Street,
  Westminster, London, S.W. A society for girls
  and young women to encourage mutual help and
  good citizenship ; has homes and employment
  bureaux for girl workers.
  
  National Society of Day Nurseries, 1 Sydney
  Street, Fulham, London, S.W. Organised to
  promote the efficiency of creches throughout the
  kingdom.
  
  Guild of the Brave Poor Things, University
  Settlement, Farncombe Street, S.E., to help
  crippled men, women and children.
  
  National Vigilance Association and Interna-
  tional Bureau for the Suppression of the White
  Slave Traffic, 161a Strand, London, W.C. This
  Society has national committees all over Europe
  actively engaged in furthering its objects. A
  
  
  feature of the work is the sending by the Society
  of ladies to the chief rjuiway stations and ports
  in England to meet girls travelling alone to or
  from this country and give them any assistance
  they may require. Inquiries are also made by
  the Society on behalf of girls about to take
  situations abroad, in regard to the character
  of their employers.
  
  Ragged School Union and Shaftesbury Society,
  32 Jolin Street, Tlieobalds Row, London, is
  engaged in all kinds of charitable work for
  children.
  
  Santa Claus Society, Choknely Park, Highgate,
  London, N., provides gifts for sick people in
  the hospitals and toys for the children.
  
  Girl Guides. - ^Honorary Secretary Miss Baden-
  Powell, 116 Victoria Street, London, S.W. The
  aims of the organisation correspond with those
  of General Baden-Powell's Boy Scouts, namely,
  to teach girls the duties of good citiziensMp and
  practical self-help.
  
  Travellers' Aid Society, 3 Baker Street, London,
  W. A society for the protection of young
  women and girls travelling alone. These may be
  met by arrangement at railway stations and
  ports by ladies employed by the society, who will
  see them to their destination and engage rooms
  for them, if necessary%
  
  Young Women's Christian Association, 25 and
  26 George Street, Hanover Square, London,
  with branch offices all over the Idngdom and also
  abroad.
  
  LONDON RESIDENTIAL HOMES AND
  CLUBS
  
  Alexandra House, Kensington.
  
  Boarding-House for Governesses, &c., 223 Elgin
  Avenue.
  
  Brabazon House, IMoreton Street, S.W. Single
  rooms from 7s. 6d., double rooms IBs. 6d.,
  cubicles 5s. to 7s. Full board 10s. Rd. a week.
  Breakfast and dinner only with full board on
  Sundays, 8s. 6d. a week.
  
  Hall of Residents for Students and Professional
  Gentlewomen, 33 Cheniston Gardens, Kensington,
  S.W.
  
  Hopkinson House, 88 Vauxhall Bridge Road.
  Under same management as Brabazon House.
  
  Rudyard House, 52 Longridge Road, Earl's
  Court. Nine single rooms with board from £1, Is.
  weekly. Cubicles from 18s. 6d.
  
  Connaught Club, 134 to 136 Elgin Avenue.
  Entrance fee 5s. Rooms, furnished and un-
  furnished, 4s. 6d. to 12s. Board 9s. 6d. /
  
  St. George's Hostel for Ladies, 77 and 79/
  Gloucester Street, Warwick Square, S.W'
  Board and lodging (cubicles) from 14s.
  Rooms (single) 19s. to 21s. Bed-sitting-rr
  from £1, 2s. 6d.
  
  St. Monica's Hostel, 19 Brooke Street, Holbc
  Cubicles with board 12s. 6d., rooms from 14s.
  
  Residential Home and Club. - ^Miss Lena As ^
  
  \
  
  
  MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND FIGURES
  
  
  well's scheme to provide a home for women con-
  nected with the diamaticj, musical and artistic
  professions bids fair to be fulfilled. A large
  house has been taken in Marylebone Road, and
  it is anticipated that it will be ready in September.
  It will provide accommodation for a hundred
  ladies. The residential rates will be from 15s.
  to 25s., including cubicle or bedroom, breakfast
  and dinner.
  
  20th Century Club, 24 and 29 Stanley Gardens,
  Netting Hill Gate. Terms moderate.
  
  St. Andrew's House Club, 31a Mortimer Street.
  For nurses and ladies engaged in the medical
  profession.
  
  French Home for Governesses, 18 Lancaster
  Gate, London, W.
  
  Roman Catholic Home of Residence for Gover-
  nesses, Brompton Square, London.
  
  Y.W.C.A., Kent House, 89 to 91 Great Portland
  Street ; Y.W.C.A. Home, 8 Kemplay Road,
  Hampstead, and many others.
  
  FLATS AND RESIDENTIAL CHAMBERS
  IN LONDON
  
  Chenies Street Chambers, Bloomsbury, W.C.
  
  York Street Chambers, Bryanston Square, W.
  
  Waterlow Court, Hampstead Garden Suburb.
  Rents of flats from £1, 14s. a month.
  
  Holbein House, Sloane Square, S.W. Rents
  fro.n £1, lis. a month.
  
  HOSPITALS FOR GENTLEWOMEN
  
  St. Saviour's Hospital for Ladies of Limited
  Means, Osnaburgh Street, London, N.W. For
  terms, &c., apply to the Honorary Secretary.
  
  Hospital for Invalid Gentlewomen, 19 Lisson
  Grove, London, W.
  
  Hospital for Invalid Gentlewomen, 90 Harley
  Street, London, 25s. to 60s.
  
  CONVALESCENT HOMES FOR GENTLEWOMEN
  
  AND MEDICAL AID SOCIETIES
  
  The Buckmaster Memorial Home for Gentle-
  women, Broadstairs.
  
  
  St. Mary's, Dean Park, Bournemouth.
  
  Lady Smyth's Home, Long Ashton, Bristol.
  
  Home of Rest for Necessitous Gentlewomen,
  FeUxstowe.
  
  Teachers' Home of Rest, Hastings.
  
  Governesses' Convalescent Home, Southport.
  
  Medical Aid Society for Necessitous Gentle-
  women, 7 St. Catherine's Precincts, Gloucester
  Gate, London, N.W., provides medical and
  surgical aid for gentlewomen of limited means
  and women workers.
  
  LOAN FUNDS FOR WOMEN
  
  These funds help women who are desirous of
  training in any special subject and have not
  sufficient means to do so. The loan was to be
  repaid in instalments when a post has been
  obtained.
  
  The following societies have instituted Loan
  Funds : -
  
  (1) The Society for Promoting the Employ-
  ment of Women, 23 Bemers Street, Oxford
  Street, London.
  
  (2) The Central Bureau for the Employment of
  Women, 5 Princes Street, CavencUsh Square,
  London.
  
  (3) The Women's Institute, 92 Victoria Street,
  London, W.
  
  (4) The Manchester Employment Association,
  1 Ridgefieid, Iving Street, Manchester.
  
  (5) Scottish Central Bureau, 25 Queen Street,
  Edinburgh.
  
  (6) Irish Central Bureau, 30 Molesworth Street,
  DubUn.
  
  (7) Gentlewomen's Emergency Fund, Leeds.
  
  (8) Guild of Service and Good Fellowship, La
  BoUe Savage, Ludgate Hill, London.
  
  (9) Educated Women Workers' Loan Training
  Fund, St. Stephen's Chambers, Telegraph Street,
  London.
  
  Note. - ^There are many other training funds
  in connection with training schools and em-
  ployment bureaus throughout the country.
  
  
  Seep. 361.
  
  
  LADIES' CLUBS
  
  
  PLACES OF INTEREST IN LONDON
  
  
  ART GALLERIES, &c.
  
  Academy, Royal, BurUngton House, Piccadilly,
  A&V- Open from 1st Monday in May to 1st
  the ^nday in August, from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Ad-
  
  f ission Is. Evenings last week, 6d.
  fif Dor6 Gallery, 35 >^ew Bond Street, W. Private
  
  orallery.
  I Dulwieh Gallery, Dulwich College, S.E. Free.
  
  
  Open every day from 10 .\.m. to dusk. Sundays,
  July to September, from 2 to 5 p.m.
  
  French Gallery, 120 Pall Mall, S.W. Private
  Gallcrj'.
  
  Goupil Gallery, 5 Regent Street, S.W. Private
  Gallery.
  
  Grafton Gallery, Grafton Street, Bond Street,
  W. Private Gallery.
  
  Guildhall Art Gallery, the Guildliall, King
  
  
  702
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Street, Cheapside, E.G. Free. Open daily from
  10 A.M. to dusk.
  
  Hanover Gallery, 47 New Bond Street, W.
  Private Gallorj'.
  
  Lelghton House, 2 Holland Park Road, Ken-
  sington, W. Tuesdays and Saturdays free ;
  other days Is. by ticket. Open 10.30 a.m. to
  5.30 P.M.
  
  National Gallery, Trafalgar Square, W.C.
  Thursdays and Fridays, 6d., 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. ;
  other days free from 10 a.m. to 4, 5 or 6 p.m.
  Simdays from 2 to 4, 5 or 6 p.m.
  
  National Gallery of British Art (Tate Gallery),
  Grosvenor Road, ^lillbank, S.W. Tuesdays and
  Wednesdays, 6d., from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. ; other
  days free from 10 a.m. to 4, 5 or 6 p.m. Sundays
  from 2 to 4, 5, or 6 p.m.
  
  National Portrait Gallery, St. Martin's Place,
  W.C. Thursdays and Fridays, 6d., from 10 a.m.
  to 4 or 5 P.M. ; other days free from 10 a.m. to
  4, 5 or 6 P.M. Sundays from 2.30 to 5.30 p.m.,
  or until dusk in winter.
  
  New Gallery, 121 Regent Street, W. Ad-
  mission Is.
  
  Royal Institute of Oil Painters, 195 Piccadilly.
  Admission Is.
  
  Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours,
  195 Piccadilly, W.
  
  Royal Society of Painters in Water Colours,
  5a Pall Mall East, S.W.
  
  Royal Society of British Artists, Suffolk Street,
  Pall I\Iall East, S.W. Admission Is.
  
  Wallace Collection, Hertford House, Man-
  chester Square, W. Tuesdays and Fridays, 6d. ;
  other days free. Open from 10 a.m. (excepting
  Monday 12 noon) to 4, 5 or 6 p.m. Open Sundays
  from 2 P.M.
  
  CATHEDRALS, CHURCHES, &c.
  
  Brompton Oratory, Brompton Road, South
  Kensingixsn, W. This well-known Roman
  Catholic Church is a fine example of the Itahan
  Renaissance style of architecture, and is noted
  for the beautiful musical services held there.
  
  Chapel Royal, Color Court, St. James's Palace,
  S.W.
  
  Chapel Royal, Savoy, W.C.
  
  City Temple, Holbom Viaduct, E.C. Wa,s
  built for the late Dr. Joseph Parker. The present
  minister is the Rev. R. J. Campbell. A service
  is held every Thursday at 12 noon in addition
  to the Sunday services.
  
  Great Synagogue, St. James's Place, Aldgate,
  E.C. Chif>f Rabbi : Rev. Hermann Adlcr, D.D.
  
  St. Bartholomew Church, Smithficld, E.C.
  The oldest and one of the most interesting
  churches in London. Open daily from 9 a.m.
  to 5 P.M.
  
  St. George's Cathedral, St. George's Road,
  Southwark, S.E. Roman Cathohc.
  
  St. Paul's Cathedral. The main entrance
  looks down Ludgate Hill, E.C. This magnificent
  
  
  and colossal edifice took thirty-five years to
  build, and was completed in 1710. It contains
  the remains of some of our most famous naval
  and military heroes and other eminent men.
  The nave and transepts are open free. Admis-
  sion to view the Wliispering Gallery, Stone
  Gallery, Clock, and Librarj-, 6d. ; Crypt, 6d. ;
  Golden Gallery, Is. ; Ball, Is.
  
  St. Peter's (Italian Church), Clerkenwell Road,
  E.C. Roman Catholic.
  
  Southwark Cathedral, lately St. Saviom-'s,
  Southwark.
  
  Temple (The) Church, situated in The Temple,
  off Fleet Street, celebrated for its musical
  services. Orders for service on Sunday at
  11 A.M. may be obtained by writing to the
  Master of the Temple. Afternoon service
  at 3 P.M. without orders. Master, Rev. H. G.
  Woods, D.D.
  
  Westminster Abbey, Old Palace Yard, West-
  minster, S.W. A magnificent ecclesiastical edi-
  fice, founded in the seventh centiiry. From
  the reign of Edward the Confessor to the present
  day, without a break, the Sovereigns of England
  have been crowned in the Abbey ; and here also
  are the tombs and montunents of many of
  England's monarchs and of numbers of the
  leading men in English liistory. Open daily.
  Ambulatory and Royal Chapels, admission 6d.,
  except Mondays and Tuesdays, which are free
  days. From November to February the Abbey
  is closed after the afternoon service.
  
  Westminster Cathedral, Ashley Gardens, S.W.
  Roman Catholic. Wlien completed, this superb
  cathedral will be one of the finest of its class
  in existence. The foundation stone was laid in
  1895.
  
  Tabernacle, Metropolitan, Newington Butts
  (close to liilephant and Castle). In the original
  building enormous congregations were attract^I
  by the preaching of the late Rev. C. H. Spurgeon.
  Burnt down in 1898 and rebuilt in 1900.
  
  MEMORIALS, MONUMENTS, &c.
  
  Albert Memorial, facing the Albert Hall,
  Kensington Road, W. A handsome monument,
  vdih gilt bronze statue of Prince Albert and over
  150 figiu"es in marble. Erected by Queen
  Victoria and the people of England in memory
  of tlio Prince Consort, at a cost of £120,000.
  
  Cleopatra's Needle, Victoria Embankment, S.W.
  This famous obelisk, which originally stood
  before the Temple of Heliopohs, is 68 feet high.
  It was presented to the nation by Mehemet Ali
  in 1819, and conveyed to this country by Dr.
  Erasmus Wilson.
  
  Duke of Wellington's Statue, opposite Apsley
  House, Hydo Park Corner.
  
  Duke of York's Column, St. James's Park, S.W.
  A column 120 feet high, surmounted by a statue
  in bronze of the Duke of York, second son of
  George HI.
  
  
  MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND FIGURES
  
  
  703
  
  
  Marble Arch. This sculptured arch, with its
  handsome bronze gates, forms the north-east
  entrance to Hyde Park, and cost over £80,000.
  It was designed by George IV. as a porte-cochere
  to Buckingham Palace, but was re-erected in its
  present position in 1851.
  
  Monument, at the northern approach to
  London Bridge. A fluted column of Portland
  stone, 202 feet high, and ascended by a spiral
  staircase of 345 steps. It was erected to com-
  memorate the Great Fire of London of 1666,
  which started at this spot. Admission 3d.
  
  Nelson Column, Trafalgar Square, W.C. A
  granite Corinthian column 150 feet high, sur-
  mounted by a statue of the hero of Trafalgar,
  erected by the nation to commemorate Nelson's
  great victory.
  
  Queen Victoria Memorial, in front of Bucking-
  ham Palace. Unveiled May 1911.
  
  MUSEUMS
  
  Bethnal Green (Branch of the Victoria and
  Albert Museimi), Cambridge Road, E. Free.
  Open Mondays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, from
  10 A.M. to 10 P.M. Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and
  Fridays, from 10 A.M. to 4, 5 or 6 p.m., according
  to the time of year. Simdays from 2 p.m. to
  dusk.
  
  British, Great Russell Street, Bloomsbiary, W.C.
  Free. Open week-days from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
  Sundays, 2 p.m. to 4, 5, or 6 p.m., according to
  the time of year.
  
  Carlyle's House, Che5me Row, Chelsea, S.W.
  Open daily from 10 a.m. to stmset. Admission
  Is.
  
  Homiman, London Road, Forest Hill, S.E.
  Free. Open daily ; week-days, 11 a.m. to 6 or
  8 P.M. Sundays, 3 to 9 p.m.
  
  Imperial Institute, South Kensington, W.
  Opened by Queen Victoria in 1893. Contains
  interesting collections representing the industries
  of the British Colonies. Open daily, except
  Sundays, from 10 a.m. to 4 or 5 p.m. Admission
  free. The main portion of the building is
  occupied as the headquarters of the London
  University.
  
  Indian Museum (part of Victoria and Albert
  Museum), Exhibition Road, South Kensington,
  S.W. Free. Open daily. Hours same as
  Victoria and Albert.
  
  NaturalHistory(Branch of the British Museum),
  Cromwell Road, South Kensington, S.W. Free.
  Open week-days from 10 a.m., and on Svmdays
  from 2.30 p.m. Time of closing varies from 4 to
  8 p.m.
  
  Practical Geology, Jermyn Street, Piccadilly,
  S.W. Free. Open week-days 10 a.m. to 4 or
  5 P.M. Mondays and Saturdays to 10 p.m.
  Sundays from 2 p.m. till dusk.
  
  Royal United Service Association, Whitehall,
  S.W. Adrnission 6d. (Sailors, Soldiers, and
  Policemen in imiform free). Open from 11 a.m.
  
  
  to 4 P.M. in winter and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. in
  summer.
  
  Science Museum. - Exhibition Road and Im-
  perial Institute Road, South Kensington. Free.
  For times when open refer to Victoria and
  Albert.
  
  Sir John Soane's, 13 Lincoln's Inn Fields. Free.
  Open daily, excepting Mondays and Saturdays,
  from 10.30 a.m. to 5 p.m. from March to August
  inclusive.
  
  Victoria and Albert, South Kensington, S.W.
  Open Mondays, Tliursdays, and Saturdays from
  10 A.M. to 10 p.m. free. On Tuesdays,
  Wednesdays, and Fridays, 10 a.m. to 4, 5 or 6 p.m.,
  according to the time of year. Admission 6d.
  Sundays free from 2 p.m. to dusk.
  
  PRINCIPAL THEATRES
  
  Adelphi, 410 Strand, W.C.
  
  Aldwych, Aldwych, Strand, W.C.
  
  Apollo, Shaftesbury Avenue, W.
  
  Comedy, Panton Street, S.W.
  
  Court, Sloane Square, S.W.
  
  Covent Garden, Bow Street, W.C.
  
  Criterion, Piccadilly Circus, W.
  
  Daly's, Leicester Square, W.
  
  Drury Lane, Catherine Street, W.C.
  
  Duke of York's, St. Martin's Lane, W.C.
  
  Gaiety, 345 Strand, W.C.
  
  Garrick, 2 Charing Cross Road, W.C.
  
  Globe, Shaftesbury Avenue, W.
  
  Haymarket, 7 Hajonarket, S.W.
  
  His Majesty's, Haymarket, S.W.
  
  Imperial, Tothill Street, S.W. (closed).
  
  Kings way, Great Queen Street.
  
  Little Theatre, John Street, Adelphi.
  
  Lyceum, Wellington Street, Strand.
  
  Lyric, 29 Shaftesbury Avenue, W.
  
  New, St. Martin's Lane, W.C.
  
  New Royalty (Theatre Frangais), 73 Dean
  Street, Soho, W.
  
  Playhouse, The, Northumberland Avenue, S.W.
  
  Prince of Wales's, Coventry Street, W.
  
  Princess's, 152 Oxford Street, W. (closed).
  
  Queen's Theatre, Shaftesbury Avenue, W.
  
  St James's, Iving Street, S.W.
  
  Savoy, Strand and Embankment.
  
  Scala, Charlotte St., Fitzroy Square, W.
  
  Shaftesbury, Shaftesbury Avenue, W.
  
  Terry's, 105 Strand, W.C. (now a " Picture
  Palace ").
  
  Vaudeville, 404 Strand, W.C.
  
  Whitney, Aldwj^ch, E., Strand, W.C.
  
  Wyndham's, Charing Cross Road, W.C.
  
  CHIEF VARIETY THEATRES
  
  Coliseum, St. IMartin's Lane, W.C.
  London Hippodrome, Cranboume Street, W.C.
  Palace, Shaftesbury' Avenue, W.C,
  Palladium, Oxford Circus, W.
  
  
  704
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  OTHER PLACES OF ENTERTAINMENT
  
  Agricultural HaU, Royal, Upper Street, Isling-
  ton N Trade and other exliibitions and shows
  are'lieid here. Cattle Show, Dairy Show, and
  
  Horse Shows. ,-,-•. owt
  
  Albert HaU, Royal, South Kensington, S.W.
  ConcertB and large ]SIeetings. The haU holds
  from 8000 to 10,000 people and contains one ot
  the largest organs in the world.
  
  Alexandra Palace, Muswell HiU, N. Exhibi-
  tions and various Entertainments. Tlie palace
  stands in delightful grounds.
  
  Crystal Palace, Sydenham, S.E. Exhibitions,
  Concerts, &c. Beautiful grounds of 200 acres
  First-class Cricket and Football grounds and
  -Vthletic tracks. The final tie for the Association
  FootbaU Cup is held hero. Headquarters of the
  London County Cricket Club, which is managed
  by Dr. W. G. Grace.
  
  Earl's Court, W. Summer Exhibitions.
  Horticultural Hall, Vincent Square, S.W.
  Exhibitions and Shows held here.
  
  Madame Tussaud's, Marylebone, N.W. Cele-
  brated Waxwork Exhibition.
  
  Olympia, Addison Road, Kensington, W.
  Large Spectacular Exhibitions, including Mih-
  tary Tournament. "t /-i
  
  Queen's HaU, Langham Place, W. Concert
  
  Steinway HaU, Lower Seymour Street, W.
  Concert Hall. ttt it
  
  St. George's HaU, Langham Place, W. Mas-
  kelyne's Home of Mystery.
  
  White City, Shepherd's Bush. Annual 3i.x-
  
  hibitions held here. , ^ , -kt tut t-
  
  Zoological Gardens, Regent s Park, N.W. tux-
  tensive and interesting collection o£ animals,
  birds, reptiles, &c.
  
  OFFICIAL BUILDINGS
  
  
  Bank of England, Threadneedle Street, E.G.
  The premises are guarded every night by the
  military. .
  
  Central Criminal Court.- It is built on the site
  of Newgate prison, and takes the place of " The
  Old Bailey."
  
  Custom House, Lower Thames Street, E.C.
  
  General Post Office, St. Martin's le Grand and
  King Edward Street, E.C. Here are situated,
  in a group of lofty and extensive buildings,
  the headquarters of the enormous postal and
  telegraphic businoss of this country.
  
  Greenwich Hospital (now known as the Royal
  Naval College). The Painted Hall contains a
  coUection of naval reUcs and pictures. May be
  viewed free daily.
  
  Greenwich Observatory.- This famous obser-
  vatory is not open to the pubhc, and cannot
  be viewed except by special permission of the
  Astronomer Royal.
  
  
  Government Offices.
  
  Admiralty, Tlie . .
  
  Board of Trade Offices
  
  Colonial Office
  
  Foreign Office .... Whit^haU
  
  Home Office . ■ ■ • . \ and
  
  Horse Guards .... g^ James's Park.
  
  India Office . .
  
  Privy Council Office
  
  The Treasury . .
  
  War Office ...... . , x^ /^ xt * i
  
  GulldhaU, Iving's Street, Cheapside, E.C. Noted
  for its great civic functions and receptions to
  foreign potentates and distinguished persons.
  On the 9th November each year the Lord Mayor a
  Banquet is held in this liistoric and interest-
  ing building. An excellent Museum and Art
  Gallery and Free Library are contained in the
  Guildlmll, and are open to the pubhc free daily.
  Houses of Parliament, Westminster, b.W.
  Visitors are admitted to view these beautiful
  and stately buildings on Saturdays from 10 to
  4, except when ParUament is assembled. Ad-
  mission to the Strangers' Gallery of the House
  of Commons, when sitting, can be obtained by
  an order from a Member of ParUament.
  
  Lambeth Palace, Lambeth Palace Road, close
  to Lambeth Bri.lge. The town residence of the
  Archbishops of Canterbury. May be -viewed by
  permission of the Archbishop's Chaplain.
  
  Law Courts, Strand, W.C. A magmficent
  block of buildings, opened by Queen Victoria
  in 1872. Visitors are admitted to the public
  galleries when the Courts are sitting, or may view
  the Central Hall dming the vacation upon appli-
  cation to the Superintendent.
  
  Mansion House, Queen Victoria Street, Ђ^.^.
  Tliis historic building, which dates back to the
  year 1739, is used as the Official Residence of the
  Lord Mayor of London. _
  
  Mint, Tower HiU, E.C. Upon application, by
  letter, to the Deputy -Master of the Mint, admis-
  sion may be obtained to inspect this establish-
  ment, where the gold and silver coinage of tho
  realm is produced by wonderful machinery.
  
  Record Office, Chancery Lane, W.C. A
  splendid block of fire-proof buildings of Tudor
  architecture, contairung priceless nationa records
  and State papers, including the celebrated
  Domesday Book. The public are admitted free
  
  Royal Exchange, Threadneedle Street and
  Comhill, E.C. May be viewed by any one vnsh-
  ing to do so, except during business hours- .i.^u
  to 4 30. Part of the building is occupied by
  " Lloyd's," known the world over in connection
  with underwriting and ship insiu-ance.
  
  Royal Hospital, Chelsea, for old and disabled
  soldiers. Founded 1682. , ". , . xp_
  
  Somerset House, Strand and Victoria l.m-
  bankment, W.C, contains numerous Govom-
  ment offices, including Probate Registry Office,
  
  
  MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND FIGURES
  
  
  705
  
  
  Inland Revenue Office, Audit Office, Office of
  the Registrar General of Births, Deaths and
  Marriages, &c. It is a remarkably fine building
  and one of the largest in London. It cost about
  £1,000,000 to build.
  
  Stock Exchange, Capel Covu-t, Bartholomew
  Lane, E.G. The money market for buying and
  selling Stocks, Shares and Securities. Not open
  to the public.
  
  Tower of London. - Tower Hill, E.G. This
  ancient fortress has a most interesting history
  dating from the time of WiUiam the Gonqueror.
  Open daily (Sundays excepted). Mondays and
  Saturdays free. Admission to view the Ar-
  mouries, 6d., and the Crown Jewels, 6d.
  
  Westminster Hall. - The entrance to the
  Houses of Parliament. Originally built by
  WiUiam Rufus, it is one of the oldest and grandest
  architectural c+ructiu-es in the Metropolis.
  
  Woolwich Arsenal. - Open for inspection by
  British subjects on Tuesdays and Thiirsdays by
  card, to be obtained at the War Office, Pall Mall.
  
  
  ROYAL PALACES
  
  Buckingham Palace, St. James's Park, S.W.
  Built by George IV. The London Residence of
  their Majesties the Bang and Queen. Not open
  to the public, but permits to inspect the Royal
  Stables may be obtained from the Master of the
  Horse.
  
  
  Hampton Court Palace, Hampton, Middlesex.
  This imposing mansion, erected by Cardinal
  Wolsey, with its beautiful grounds and park, is
  situate on the Thames, 15 miles from London.
  The State Apartments, with a choice collection
  of pictures, are open to the pubhc free of charge
  daily (except Fridays), Sundays from 2 p.m.
  
  Kensington Palace, Kensington Gardens, W.
  Tliis Palace is of particular interest as the birth-
  place of Queen Victoria. The State Rooms are
  open to the public free daily (except Wednesdays,
  Christmas Day and Good Friday). Sundays
  2 to 6 P.M.
  
  Marlborough House, Pall Mall, S.W. The
  town residence of Queen Alexandra. It was
  built in 1708.
  
  St. James's Palace, St. James's Street, S.W.
  Built by Henry VIII. The official town residence
  of the Court since the fire at Whitehall in 1698.
  The Park of the same name was originally the
  grounds of the Palace, but was opened for the
  public in 1829.
  
  Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berks. Has been a
  residence of the British sovereigns since the time
  of the Conqueror, who began the first building.
  Many monarclis have added to and altered the
  original building. When the King is not in
  residence, the State Apartments are open to the
  public on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thiirsdays
  from 11 A.M. to 3 or 4 p.m. The Stables daily
  from 1 to 2.30 p.m. St. George's Chapel daily,
  excepting Wednesdays, from 12.30 to 3 or 4 p.m.
  
  
  THE ROYAL FAMILY
  
  
  His Most Excellent Majesty George the Fifth,
  by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of
  Great Britain and Ireland, and of the British
  Dominions beyond the Seas, King, Defender of
  the Faith, Emperor of India ; second son of
  lais late Majesty Edward VII. and Queen
  Alexandra, born 186.5, married 1893 the Prin-
  cess Victoria Mary of Teck, only daughter of
  the Princess Mary Adelaide (of Cambridge) by
  her marriage with Francis, Duke of Teck, suc-
  ceeded to the throne May '-j, 1910, and has
  issue : -
  
  (1) H.R.H. Edward Albert Christian George
  
  Andrew Patrick David, Prince of Wales -
  born -JSrd Juno, 1804.
  
  (2) H.R.H. Albert Frederick Arthur George -
  
  born 1895.
  
  (3) H.R.H. Victoria Alexandra Alice Mary -
  
  born 1897.
  
  (4) H.R.H. Henry William Frederick Albert
  
  -born 1900.
  
  (5) H.R.H. George Edward Alexander Ed-
  
  mund- born 1902.
  
  (6) H.R.H. John Charles Francis- born 1905.
  
  
  DESCENDANTS OF QUEEN VICTORIA
  
  (1) H.I.M. Victoria, Empress Frederick of
  Germany - born 1840, married 1858 Crown
  Prince, afterwards Emperor of Germany, and left
  issue of whom the eldest is William II., Emperor
  of Germany, born 1859, married 1881 to Princess
  Augusta Victoria of Schleswig Holstein.
  
  (2) The late King Edward the Seventh.
  
  (3) H.R.H. Alice Maud Mary- born 1843,
  married 1862 to H.R.H. Louis IV., Grand Duke
  of Hesse, died 1878 and left issue. Alice
  Victoria, the youngest, born 1872, married 1894
  H.I.M. the Czar of Russia. They have four
  daughters and one son.
  
  (4) H.R.H. Alfred Ernest Albert, Duke of
  Edinburgh, and Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha -
  born 1844, married 1874 the Grand Duchess
  Marie Alexandro\Tia of Russia, died 1900, and
  left issue one son and four daughters. The
  eldest daughter, Marie, married Ferdinand, the
  Crown Prince of Roumania.
  
  (5) H.R.H. Helena Augusta Victoria - born
  1846, married 1866 to Prince Frederick
  
  2y
  
  
  706
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  Christian, C.A. of Schleswig-Holatein, and has
  issue.
  
  (6) H.R.H. Louise Carolina Alberta - born
  1848, married 1871 the Marquis of Lome, now
  Duke of Argyll.
  
  (7) H.R.H. Arthur William Patrick Albert,
  Duke of Connaught^ - born 1850, married 1879
  Princess Louise Margaret of Prussia, and has
  issue. The eldest daughter, Margaret, married
  1905 the Crown Prince of Sweden.
  
  (8) H.R.H. Leopold George Duncan Albert,
  Duke of Albany - born 1853, married Princess
  Helen, daughter of the late Prince George of
  Waldeck, died 1884 and left issue - Leopold,
  Duke of Albany and Duke of Saxe-Coburg, and
  Princess Alice Iklary (Princess Alexander of
  Teck).
  
  (9) H.R.H. Beatrice Mary Victoria Feodora -
  born 1857, married 1885 to Prince Henry
  Maurice of Battenberg, who died 1896, and left
  issue. The only daughter, Victoria Eugenie,
  married 1906 H.M. King Alphonso of Spain,
  and has issue two sons and one daughter.
  
  
  DESCENDANTS OF EDWARD VII.-
  ALEXANDRA OF DENMARK
  
  (1) H.R.H. Albert Victor Christian Edward
  of Wales, Duke of Clarence and Avondale -
  born 8th January, 1864, died 14th January, 1892.
  
  (2) H.M. King George V.
  
  (3) H.R.H. Louise Victoria Alexandra Dag-
  mar, Princess Royal, Duchess of Fife - born
  1867, married 1889 to the Duke of Fife. They
  have two daughters - H.H. Princess Alexandra,
  born 1891, and H.H. Princess Maud, bom
  1893.
  
  (4) H.R.H. Victoria Alexandra Olga Mary -
  born 1868.
  
  (5) H.R.H. Maud Charlotte Mary Victoria -
  born 1869, married 1896 to Haakon, King of
  Norway. They have one son, Alexander
  Edward Christian Frederick (Olaf), bom
  1903.
  
  (6) H.R.H. Alexander John Charles Albert,,
  bom 6th April, died 7th April 1871.
  
  
  THE CONSTITUTION AND ADMINISTRATIVE GOVERNMENT
  OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE
  
  
  The country is governed by a Sovereign
  Parliament consisting of three interdependent
  parts - the Crown, the Lords, and the Commons.
  From a legal point of view it should be re-
  niembered that Parliament includes the King
  as well as the two Houses.
  
  The Crown. - The King has certain rights,
  powers, and prerogatives which enable him to
  do certain things without the concurrence of
  the Lords and Commons. He has the right of
  making treaties with foreign sovereigns and
  states, although in practice the King never
  makes any treaty except on the advice of his
  Ministers. The King has also the prerogative
  right of making war on foreign states, although
  he does not exercise this right except through
  the instrumentality of his Ministers. The
  creation of Peers, conferring of the order of
  knighthood and various other orders and titles,
  together with the regulation of the order of
  precedence, also form part of the royal pre-
  rogative, although in practice appointments are
  made and honours conferred by the King after
  consultation with his Ministers.
  
  When the owners of land die intestate and
  without heirs, the Crown succeeds to the pro-
  perty. The Crown has also a prerogative right
  to gold, silver, or other treasure found in the
  soil in cases where the true owner is unknown.
  
  The Crown has also the right of pardoning
  persons convicted of crimes - a right, however,
  which is only exercised upon the advice of the
  
  
  Home Secretary. It is also a constitutional
  precept that " The King can do no Wrong,"
  consequently it is impossible to take any pro-
  ceedings against the King for any crime or
  tort. If, therefore, property has come invO the
  possession of the Crown which rightly belongs
  to a subject, the latter can only proceed by
  way of petition, which is drawn up and left at
  the Home Office for His Majesty's fiat (pwr-
  mission to proceed). When the fiat is granted
  the petition is heard in the High Court of
  Justice and judgment given upon it in the same
  manner as in the case of actions between sub-
  ject and subject.
  
  House of Lords. - The House of Lords or the
  Upper House of Parliament consists of the Lords
  Spiritual and Temporal. The number of Peers
  who sit in the House of Lords is not fixed.
  Peers are members of the House of Lords by
  hereditary right. Hereditary peerages are con-
  tinually becoming extinct through the death
  without heirs of the holders, but this con-
  tinual and gradual decrease in their numbers is
  more than made up again by the creation of
  new Peers. The House of Lords has the power
  of amending or rejecting a Bill passed by the
  House of Commons. They cannot, however,
  amend a " Money Bill," and their legal right to
  reject this is practically obsolete. The refusal
  of the House of Lords in 1909 to pass the
  Budget until a General Election had taken place
  upon it raised the great constitutional question
  
  
  MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND FIGURES
  
  
  707
  
  
  whether the House of Lords had the right to
  reject the Budget. In 1910 a conference of the
  Government and the Opposition met to consider
  the question so raised, but they failed to arrive
  at an agreement, and the reform of the House
  of Lords is a matter now under consideration.
  
  The House of Commons. - The House of
  Commons consists of 670 members who are
  elected to represent their constituencies. At
  the opening of ParUament the Commons are
  called to the bar of the Upper House and directed
  to elect a Speaker, and the first duty of members
  after the election of their Speaker is to take the
  oath of allegiance. The House arranges its own
  sittings and can always alter the arrangements.
  Of the three portions of our Sovereign Parlia-
  ment the so-called Lower House is undoubtedly
  constitutionally the most important. The
  Commons are an elected body, and since the
  electors are drawn from practically every class
  of the conununity, the political opinions of the
  House of Commons fairly represent, as a rule,
  the opinions of the majority of the nation. In
  fact, it may be said that the House of Commons
  rule the country subject to the power of the
  Crown and the House of Lords to check party
  and ill-considered action.
  
  Party Government. - It has always been the
  practice of the various individuals who con-
  stitute the two Houses of ParUament to organise
  themselves into parties for the purpose of
  securing legislation according to their opinions,
  as opinions are only pass'^d into law when
  backed by strong majorities. From the larger
  of the two leading parties in the House the
  executive Government is formed, the duty of
  criticising their policy and administrating Acts
  failing to the smaller party known as the
  " Opposition."
  
  Cabinet and Premier. - The Cabinet is a body
  composed of the heads of the chief executive
  department who are jointly responsible for the
  government of the country. The chief of the
  Cabinet and the head of the Parliamentary
  executive is called the Prime Minister.
  
  The Ministry. - His Majesty's Ministers are
  now always appointed on the advice of the
  Premier, and consist of some forty or more
  persons, rather less than half of whom fom* the
  Cabinet. The Ministry is drawn from the
  predominant party in Parliament, the majority
  being chosen from the House of Commons. If
  the Secretary uf State for any of the great de-
  partments is a member of the House of Lords,
  it is usual for the department to be represented
  in the House of Commons by the corresponding
  Under-Secretary, whose duty it is to answer
  questions respecting the policy of the depart-
  ment.
  
  
  COLONIAL GOVERNMENT
  
  
  Difierent colonies are governed in different
  ways ; all are under the Crown, but they are not
  all subject to the control of the British ParUa-
  ment.
  
  Sir William Anson in his " Law and Custom of
  the Constitution " groups the systems of govern-
  ment for different colonies into four great
  classes : -
  
  (1) Colonies with no legislature. For these
  the Crown legislates by means of Orders in
  Council, usually counter-signed by the
  Secretary of State, the executive powers
  being vested in a governor appointed by the
  Crown on the advice of the Ministry. Gib-
  raltar is perhaps the best-known instance of
  this class of colony.
  
  (2) Colonies with a nominated legislature.
  In each of these there is a governor and exe-
  cutive and legislative councils, all the members
  of which are nominated either by the Crown
  or by the governor. The best-known Instance
  of this class are the Straits Settlements of
  Singapore, Penang, and Malacca.
  
  (3) Colonies with an elected legislature and a
  nominated^ executive. Even in these colonies,
  of which the Bahamas are an instance, a
  portion of the legislature is nominated by the
  Cx'own.
  
  (4) Colonies with responsible government. In
  these the Crown is represented by a governor,
  who is assisted by two chambers, generally
  called the Legislative Council and the
  Legislative Assembly. The assembly is
  wholly elected by the colonists, whilst the
  members of the legislative council are in
  some colonies elected, and in others appointed
  by the governor on the advice of the executive
  council, a body nominated not by the Crown
  but by himself. To this class of colonies
  belong Canada, Newfoimdland, Australia,
  New Zealand, and United South Africa.
  
  Tlie Home control of the colonies is exercised
  on behalf of His Slajesty by the Colonial Office,
  through its Secretary of State, and this right of
  control is exercised over all the British pos-
  sessions except the Isle of Man, the Channel
  Islands, and the Indian Empire. Indian affairs
  are under the control of the Secretary of State
  of the India Office. Tlie Secretary of State is
  assisted in advising the Crown by a council of
  twelve members, none of whom may sit or vote
  in Parliament. The major part of the council
  is chosen from persons who have spent at least
  ten years in India.
  
  
  708
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  PRINCIPAL COLONIES AND THEIR GOVERNORS
  
  
  Component Parts.
  
  
  British India-
  
  Ceylon
  
  BRiTisn America-
  Canada
  
  Newfoundland .
  British Honduras
  
  British Guiana .
  
  British Australasia-
  New South Wales
  Victoria
  Queensland
  South Australia
  Western Australia
  Tasmania .
  British New Guinea
  
  New Zealand
  
  BRITISH Africa-
  (1) South Africa.
  Cape of Good Hope .
  Natal
  
  Orange RiTer Colony
  Transvaal .
  Basutoland
  Rhodesia .
  
  Bechuanaland .
  
  
  Form of Government.
  
  
  Crown Colony.
  Crown Colony.
  
  
  Self-governed.
  Self -governed.
  Crown Colony.
  
  
  Representative Government.
  
  
  Forming the Australian
  Commonwealth, a feder-
  ation of self -governed
  states.
  
  Administered by the Com-
  monwealth Government.
  I Self -governed.
  
  
  Forming the Union of
  South Africa, a feder-
  ation of self-governed
  provinces.
  
  Crown Colony.
  Administered by Chartered
  
  Company.
  Protectorate.
  
  
  GOVKRNMBNT REPRESENTATIVE.
  
  
  Lord Hardinge, G.M.S.I., G.M.I.B., Viceroy and
  
  Governor General.
  Col. Sir H. E. McCallum, K.E., G.C.M.G., Governor.
  
  
  Earl Grey, C.M.G., Governor General.
  
  Sir R. C. Williams, K.C.M.G.. Governor.
  
  Col. Sir Eric .Tohn Eagles Swayne, K.C.M.G.
  
  Governor. "
  
  Sir F. Mitchell Hodgson, K.C.M.G., Governor.
  
  
  >Earl of Dudley, G.C.M.G., Governor General.
  
  
  Lord Islington, K.C.JI.G., Governor.
  
  
  Viscount Gladstone, G.C.M.G., Governor General.
  
  
  Of the smaller possessions the West Indies,
  including Bahamas, Jamaica, Windward Islands
  Leeward Islands, Barbadoes, Trinidad, and
  Tobago, are Crown Colonies. In West Africa,
  Gambia, Sierra Leone, the Gold Coast are Crown
  Colonies. Northern Nigeria is a Protectorate,
  and Southern Nigeria a Crown colony and Pro-
  tectorate. In East Africa we have the East
  Africa Protectorate, Uganda, Zanzibar, Nyassa-
  land Protectorate, and SomaU Coast Protec-
  torate. Gibraltar, the Maltese Islands, and
  Cyprus in the Mediterranean are Crown Colonies.
  In the Atlantic Ocean, the Bermuda Islands
  have a representative government. St. Helena,
  Tristan da Cunha, Falkland Islands, and South
  Georgia are Crown Colonics. Ascension Island
  is governed by the Board of Admiralty. Our
  possessions in the Indian Ocean include Aden,
  the Straits Settlements, the Federated Malay
  States, and several groups of islands. In the
  
  
  Pacific Ocean the British possessions include
  British Borneo, Hong-Kong, and several island
  
  groups.
  
  The self-governed colonies possess legislative
  assemblies, the members of which are elected by
  the colonists. The Governor is appointed by
  the Crown, and is the only official coatroUed
  by the Home Government. Crown Colonies are
  under the direct control of the Imperial Govern-
  ment, and the administration is carried on by
  governors and officials appointed by the Home
  authorities. Dependencies are subject to the
  Government of the colony to which they are
  subordinate, and are administered by officials
  appointed by such Government. Protectorates
  retain a considerable measiu-e of internal inHe-
  pcndonce, under the general influence and
  direction of British officers, but in their extei-nal
  relations they are completely under British
  control.
  
  
  EMPIRE DAY- 24th MAY
  
  
  On the 24th of May, 1904, a meeting was held
  in St. James's Hall, London, to establish an
  Empire Day Festival. Previous to this an
  Empire Day had been observed as a legal
  holiday in the Dominion of Canada. Under the
  name of " Victoria Day " it had been legaHsod
  in Natal, Barbadoes, Jamaica, and the Straits
  Settlements; under the name of "Empress
  Day " in India, and under the name of " Empire
  Day " in New Zealand and Newfoundland, but
  the first Imperial Celebration was held in May
  
  
  1904. The day chosen is the birthday of oiir
  late Queen Victoria, and its aim and object is
  to develop those bonds of friendly feeling and
  imperial sentiment which could never be em-
  bodied in any treaty or commercial agreement,
  and to train the rising generation m patriotism
  and their responsibility towards others.
  
  The great supporter of the movement in
  Great Britain is the Earl of Meath, who has taken
  considerable pains to explain the proposal, and
  to enlist the support of the Home Government
  
  
  MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND FIGURES
  
  
  709
  
  
  and that of the British colonies. The " League
  of the Empire " has done much to forward the
  estabhshment of an Empire Day Festival in all
  the schools of Great Britain by promoting co-
  operation between the different colonies in
  
  
  educational affairs. The movement has spread
  with wonderful rapidity, and the 24th of JMay
  is now looked upon throughout the Empire as
  the birthday of the Empire, and is celebrated as
  such.
  
  
  HINTS TO AUTHORS
  
  
  PREPARATION OF MSS.
  
  The printer's charges for Author's corrections
  are frequently the cause of great annoyance
  and dispute, but if the following rules are cari'ied
  out in preparing the MSS., a considerable amount,
  if not all, of this annoyance may be prevented.
  
  Use large post quarto or foolscap quarto, as
  this is the most convenient size of paper for the
  printer to work from.
  
  Have the paper ruled with lines wide apart
  to allow of alterations being made distinctly ;
  or a good plan is to have the Unes rather close
  together, and write on every other line.
  
  Have a 'nade margin on left-hand side for in-
  structions to printer, &c.
  
  When making alterations, strike out the part
  to be altered and re-write above it. If a long
  piece is to be altered, it is well to strike out tlio
  old part and say, " See (A)," and re-write on a
  separate sheet, marking the new part "To go
  at (A), sheet. ..."
  
  Number the sheets as you go along.
  
  Write on one side of the paper only.
  
  Do not crowd a number of lines at foot of a
  sheet after the last ruled Jne. Start a fresh
  sheet if only for two or three hnes.
  
  Write as plainly as possible, giving special
  attention to proper names,foreign words, &c.,and
  all words that the compositor may easily mistake.
  
  Typewritten copy is the most easily read.
  
  Give full instructions to the printer as to type
  to be used, and the marks you use for liis guidance
  {e.g. sot in minion, words underlined to be in
  italics, those doubly underlined in clarendon).
  Tlus should be put on the first sheet of every
  portion of copy sent. It is best to write all
  instructions in red ink.
  
  Put extracts quoted from other works in the
  next size smaller type.
  
  Remember that the compositor will follow
  your punctuation, use of capitals, spelling (of
  words that are spelt in two different ways, as
  almanack, &c.), unless you instruct him other-
  wise.
  
  Fasten the sheets together, being careful that
  they are all there and in order.
  
  Mark distinctly on the MS., or " copy," what
  it is for and by whom sent. Also give instruc-
  tions where the proofs are to be sent when ready.
  
  PRINTERS' TECHNICAL TERMS
  
  Broadside. - A sheet of paper not folded, but
  pri'.ted as one page the whole size of the sheet.
  
  
  Composing. - Setting up the type ready for
  printing. The mechanic who does this is called
  a Compositor.
  
  Distributing. - Breaking up the type after the
  printing is done and returning each type to its
  proper box. Tliis takes about half as long to
  do as the composing.
  
  Folio. - The nimiber of a page. The size of a
  sheet of paper folded once, making two leaves or
  four pages.
  
  Forme. - When the make-up is complete, a
  number of pages (generally sixteen or some
  multiple of sixteen) are brought together and
  locked up into one complete, rigid piece, ready
  to place on the machine. This is known as a
  Forme, and from this the actual printing is done.
  
  Fount. - ^A batch of type of the same size with
  the proper proportions of the different letters,
  &c. {i.e. so many a's, so many b's, &c.).
  
  Headline. - The top Kne of a page, usually con-
  taining the title of the book or chapter, and the
  folio.
  
  Imposing. - ^Arranging the pages on the
  machine so that when printed and the sheet is
  folded the pages will come in proper sequence.
  
  Imprint. - The name of the printer or pubUsher,
  or both, at the end of the publication and on the
  title page.
  
  Inset. - Pages that are sometimes printed as
  alterations or additions, after a publication has
  been printed, and inserted during the binding
  operations.
  
  Make-up. - Wlien the whole of the matter for
  a publication has been set up into tj'pe, it has
  to be arranged into pages. Tliis is called the
  make-up, and is done by the author and sent to
  the printer.
  
  Octavo (8vo). - Denotes a sheet of paper folded
  three times, making eight leaves or sixteen
  pages.
  
  Proof. - When the author's copy has been set
  up into type, a proof is printed from the type
  and sent to the author. This proof is corrected
  by the author and returned to the printer, who
  makes the corrections and sends a revised proof
  to the author. If necessary, this pi-ooess is gone
  through again (there rnay be second and tlurd
  revised proofs), but when the author is finally
  satisfied with the proof he marks it press, anil
  this is the press proof from which the publication
  is printed.
  
  Quarto (4to). - Denotes a sheet of paper folded
  twice, making four leaves or eight pages.
  
  Register. - The printer has to put the type for
  the different pages on the machine in the exact
  
  
  710
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  position that they should print on the sheet, and
  in such a way that the pages on the opposite
  sides of the slieet should exactly back one
  another. This is called the Register.
  
  Set off. - Sheets that are just printed some-
  times come in contact with other sheets, and the
  wet ink makes an impression on these other
  sheets. This is called a set off.
  
  Signature. - A sign (usually a letter or figure)
  iin the first page of each sheet to show the binder
  tlio sequence of the sheets.
  
  Stet. - ^If any part of a manuscript or proof is
  struck out by mistake, the word stet placed
  against it shows that the part struck out should
  stand.
  
  SIZES OP TYPE
  
  The size of a type is the depth of the type and
  gives the number of lines that can be got on a
  page. Each size, however, is made with what
  is known as a different " face," i.e. the letters
  are of different widths, and therefore one style
  of any size of typo will give more words to a line
  than another style of the same size.
  
  The examples given in the opposite column
  are all of the same " face."
  
  The name of a type is its size, and each size
  has at least three different styles ; these are
  " Roman," " Clarendon," and " Italics," and
  each of these three has its Large Capitals and
  Small Capitals. The " Roman " is the ordinary
  typo, the others being used to emphasise any
  words or sentences.
  
  Excepting the last four, the examples given
  in the following column are *' Roman," the first
  letter " T " being a Large Capital. The last
  three examples show the Roman Small Capitals,
  Clarendon, and Italics of Minion type.
  
  There are various stylos for headings and titles,
  but it is better to arrange these with the printer
  from what he has in stock or can obtain.
  
  The Typewriting Typo is an imitation of type-
  writing copy and is used for Circular Letters, &c.
  
  Printers measure the length of a line by the
  number of ems that the line \\nll take. Although
  the typos vary in width it may bo taken that
  4J ems of Groat Primer . . . . = 1 inch.
  
  
  5i
  6
  
  7
  
  H
  
  ^
  
  12
  17i
  
  
  English
  Pica . .
  
  Small Pica .
  Long Primer
  Brevier
  Nonpareil
  Diamond
  
  
  It can also be reckoned that
  
  One line of Double Pica = 2 lines of Small Pica.
  
  " Great Primer = " Bourgeois.
  
  " English = " Minion.
  
  " Pica = " Nonpareil.
  
  " Long Primer = " Pearl.
  
  " Bourgeois = " Diamond.
  
  
  Diamond.
  
  
  Pearl.
  
  nie sixe of a typo gives the number
  o( lines that iviii lie got on :i page.
  
  Nonpareil.
  
  The size of a type tcivcs the number
  of lines tliat can be got on a page.
  
  Minion.
  
  The size of a type gives the number
  
  of lines that can be got on a page.
  
  Brevier.
  The size of a type gives the number
  of lines that can be got on a page.
  
  BOXTROEOIS.
  
  The size of a type gives the number
  of lines that can be got on a page.
  
  Long Primer.
  
  The size of a type gives the number
  
  of lines that can be got on a page.
  
  Small Pica.
  
  The size of a type gives the number
  of lines that can be got on a page.
  
  Pica.
  
  The size of a type gives the number
  of lines that can be got on a page.
  
  English.
  
  The size of a type gives the
  number of lines that can be
  
  Great Primer.
  
  The size of a type gives
  the number of lines that
  
  Double Pica.
  
  The size of a type
  gives the number of
  
  TrpEWBiTiNa Type.
  
  size of a type gives
  of lines that
  
  
  The
  
  the number
  
  
  MmioN Small Caps.
  The size of a type give.s the number
  ok lines that can be got on a page.
  
  MiNioN Clarendon.
  The size of a type gives the number
  of lines that can be got on a page.
  
  Minion Italics.
  The nize of (ttype gives the number
  
  
  of lines thatran i>e got on a page.
  
  
  MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND FIGURES 711
  
  HOW TO BIARB A PROOF FOB CORRECTION.
  C) 1. OATMEAL is to ^o- many people indigestible, verv/though ndtirishlag "jfe
  2. if it can be digested
  t^/r^u/i Cuft4 3. OATMEAL water is made by placing a han'pful of Oatmeal In & I 6) _
  
  jjr: ^ 4. muslin bag ancyaliowin;; it *n soalj^n a gallon of wat"r^and then boiling / y^y- ^z-jt, 'n  Mcc "-J^'.^^ ^№^ twenty minutes. Th^upper^portion^is/then/ pouredAjff^gently. * -CC/
  
  y ^ - ' o- OBESlTY^iiterally^on account of eating "^is t)  
  / /) /. 7. an undue accumulation of fat in the body, thefeauses of obesity vary; A^ ^ CXco^
  
  V ;i:l ^- heredity is respor^ble/ in some cases, butunsuitahlej -^c^^^V <7?v
  
  ^/ 9. 'diet in most cases. The anjl^mie shop-girl "!■ drnper'a aiFiotanK who^e^ ^
  "^ Ua\0. mid-day meal is Cja and bu/is instead of/ meat, is often fat. Many / j^ p >y,
  
  d 11. Qother examples will occur to the reader. //oPH TH A LMIA'^. In- ^-7? O ' '^^-^^^^
  
  €/ 12. flammation of the inner surfac^of the eyelids. (See Eye.) ^tittf.^^
  
  ■^ilC' l^. OPIUM is the dried t*ti">" of the white poppy. iTTontains resin, and
  
  THE ABOVE PROOF AFTER CORRECTION.
  
  OAT.MEAL IS to many people indigestible, though very nourishing if
  it can be digested.
  
  OAT.MEAL WATER is made by placing a handful of oatmeal in a muslin
  bng and allowing it to soik in a g.allon of water for an hour and thea
  boiling for twenty minutes. The upper portion is then poured off gently.
  
  OBESITY, literally " on account of eating "-is the term u.sed to denote
  an undue accumulation of fat in the body. The causes of obesity vary;
  heredity is responsible in some cases, but unsuitable diet in most cases.
  The ansemic shop-girl, who.se mid-day meal is tea and buns instead of
  meat, is often fat. Many other examples will occur to the reader.
  
  OPHTHALMIA. Inflammation of the inner surface of the eyelids.
  (See Evi.)
  
  OPIUM is t..e dried juice of the white poppy. It contains morphine.
  'codeine, resin, and other bodies.
  
    Inj:opy. InMar|n. E..p,a,iation. j:,, Lines
  
  
  /
  
  
  7 ^^elctPoromit the words or letters. Ac, struck out , , 18 9 10
  
  :^?H-x^ ^"> Put words underlined in small capit^xl letters * * 'q '
  
  
  =^^ Divide the words
  
  
  capital letters 3
  
  
  X i^ Equalize the spaces shown \ ', '. \ 5
  
  /y Insert the words or letters, &c., .shown in the nwrgin .* .* 4, 6 12
  
  ^ "V Insert invertcd-comnns or asterisk, &c., where shown '&'
  
  / A Take out bad letter and replace with good one ... . 7
  
    
  ^^ <^o>"rcct word pi' letter, A-c, as shown in margin ........ \ \ 6,9
  
  < Q The full-stop 13 shown in a circle II
  
  ;^^ '^31^ Close up ._
  
  '/ ^ Wrong fount, i.e. a wong-eized type is used and must be altered 10
  
  '- CZT C Bring the word or letter, &c., to where showa , n
  
  - /~* ^y Transpose , ' * .
  
  : - <7^ Reverse letter .'.., •••
  
  / t5.o. I>ower case, i.e., use small letters, not capitals 5
  
  / .■^<.^a.cfc"'^'^e if there is too much (or too little) space between these lines 6.0,10,11
  
  - "Cof^v Letter underlined should be a capital '7'
  
  , C^^x/ty Put words underlined in clarendon type- 7
  
  c:f? •to^^v- ctW Continue in the same lino ^ gg
  
  II Tt^.P. This word should start a new paragraph 11
  
  ;^ Jt:vCic^ Put words underlined in italics .№ '.'.'.'.', 1"
  
  V"" 'O'CvC^ ^№ "№*' №'"'* the parts struck out j.t
  
  When the ends of the linos are uneven, draw Ilr.cs .as shown on right hand mf.xyihx,
  U th|^ is not room opposite the line, in the margin, a correction can be p-t
  
  • anywhere, but & liae must Uc drawn from the error to the correction . . 13
  
  
  712
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  MEANING OF GIRLS' CHRISTIAN NAMES
  
  
  H = Hebrew. G = Greek
  father's delight,
  
  
  Abigail (H.),
  
  exultation.
  Ada or Adah (H.), ornament,
  
  happiness.
  Adelaide (H.), noble maiden.
  Agatha (G.), good.
  Agnes (L.), a lamb, pure, chaste.
  Aileen or Eileen (G.), hght.
  Alice (T.), noble.
  Alexandra (G.), a helper of men.
  Amelia (T.), industrious, ener-
  getic.
  Amy (L.), beloved.
  Angelina (G.), angehc.
  Anna, Anne, Annie (B..), grace,
  
  mercy.
  Augusta (L.), majestic.
  Aurora (L.), dawn.
  Barbara (G.), foreign, strange.
  Beatrice (L.), making happy.
  Bella (L.), beautiful.
  Belinda (L.), charming, a serpent.
  Bertha (T.), bright.
  Blanche (F.), white, fair.
  Bessie, from " beth" in Elizabeth.
  Caroline, Carlotta, Charlotte, fem.
  of Carolus (L.), for Charles,
  noble spirited.
  Catherine (G.), pure.
  Charity (G.), love.
  Christabel (G.), following Christ.
  Christine, Christiana, fem. of
  
  Christian.
  Clara (L.), clear, bright.
  Clarissa (L.), most bright.
  Claudia (L.), lame.
  Constance, fem. of Constantine.
  Cora (G.), a maiden.
  Cordelia (K.), a sea-jewel.
  Cornelia (L.), horn.
  Daphne (G.), a laurel tree.
  Deborah (H.), a bee.
  Denise (G.), a reveller.
  Diana (L.), a goddess ; the
  
  moon.
  Dinah (H.), judged.
  
  
  L = Latin. K = Keltic. T = Teutonic.
  
  Laura (L.), bay, laurel.
  Lilian (L.), a Uly.
  Lucy (L.), bright, shining.
  Madeline, form of Magdalen.
  Magdalen (H.), of ]Magdala.
  Margaret, Margery (G.), a pearl.
  Martha (H.), a lady.
  Mary, Maria, Marian (H.), a fori
  of Miriam, that is, bitterness.
  Mildred (T.), mild in counsel.
  Miranda (L.), one to be admirec
  Nancy, form of Annie.
  Naomi (H.), pleasant.
  Octavia (L.), eighth.
  Olive, Olivia (L.), ohve, peace.
  Paulina, Pauline, httle.
  Phoebe (G.), hght.
  Phyllis (G.), fohage, a dish
  
  herbs.
  Priscilla (L.), ancient.
  Psyche (G.), the soul.
  Rachel (H.), a ewe-lamb.
  Rhoda (G.), arose.
  Rosa, Rosalie (L.), a rose.
  Rosabella (L.), a lovely rose.
  
  Ruth (H.), a friend.
  
  Sara, Sarah (H.), a princess.
  
  Selina (G.), the moon.
  
  Septima (L.), seventh.
  
  Sibylla (G.), a prophetess.
  
  Sophia (G.), wisdom.
  
  Stella (L.), a star.
  
  Susan, Susannah (H.), a hly.
  
  Theodora (G.), gift of God.
  
  Theresa, a gleaner.
  
  Una (L.), one.
  
  Ursula (L.), a httle bear.
  
  Vera (L.), true.
  
  Victoria (L.), victory, success.
  
  Viola, Violet (L.), a violet.
  
  Virginia (L.), maidenly, chaste.
  
  Wilhelmina (T.), a defender.
  
  Winifred (T.), winning, peace.
  
  Zoe (G.), life or lively.
  
  
  Dora (G.), a gift.
  Dorcas (G.), a gazelle.
  Dorothea, Dorothy (G.), the gift
  
  of God.
  EUzabeth, oath (solemn promise)
  
  of God.
  Ellen, a form of Helen.
  Emily, a form of Ajnelia.
  Eric (T.), kingly.
  Estelle, star.
  Esther (H.), a star.
  Ethel (T.), noble.
  Euphemia (G.), well spoken of.
  Eva, Eve (H.), hfe.
  Evangeline, a bearer of good news.
  Eveline, short form of Evangeline.
  Felicia, happy.
  Flora (L.), flower.
  Florence (L.), flourishing, bloom-
  ing.
  
  Frances (T.), free woman.
  
  Frederica (T.), peaceable.
  
  Georgina (G.), a rustic.
  
  Geraldhie, skilful with the spear.
  
  Gladys (K.), a fair maiden.
  
  Grace (L.), favour.
  
  Gwendolen, Gwendaline,
  white bow, new moon.
  
  Hannah (H.), grace.
  
  Harriet, ruler of the homo.
  
  Helen, Helena (G.), torch,
  brand.
  
  Henrietta (T.), home ruler.
  
  Hilda (T. ), warrior maiden.
  
  Hortensia (L.), fond of gardening.
  
  Irene (G.), peace.
  
  Isabella, fair Eliza.
  
  Jane, from Genoa.
  
  Janet, Janette, httle Jane.
  
  Jemima (H.), a dove.
  
  Joan, Joanna, Johanna, the Lord
  graciously gave.
  
  Josephine, may Ho add.
  
  Kate, Katharine, Kathleen (G.),
  pure.
  
  I Laetitia (L.), joy, gladness.
  
  
  (K.),
  
  
  fire-
  
  
  MEANING OF BOYS' CHRISTIAN
  
  H= Hebrew. G = Greek. L= Latin. K= Keltic.
  
  
  Aaron (H.), lofty, inspired.
  Abijah (H.), one to whom God is
  
  a father.
  Abraham (H.), great father.
  Absalom (H.), father of peace.
  Adolphus (T.), noble wolf.
  Alan or Allan (K.), harmony.
  
  
  Alexander (G.), a helper of men.
  Alfred (T.), all peace.
  Algernon, with a beard.
  Ambrose (G.), immortal.
  Amos (H.), one who bears i
  
  burden.
  Andrew (G.), a man.
  
  
  NAMES
  
  T = Teutonic.
  Anthony (L.), worthy of praise.
  Archibald (T.), brave and bold.
  Arnold (T.), strong and swift.
  Arthur (K.), of high birth.
  Athelstan (T.), stone of honour.
  Augusttn, Austin, Augustus (L.),
  
  majestic, imperial.
  
  
  MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND FIGURES
  
  
  713
  
  
  MEANING OF BOYS' CHRISTIAN JiAfllES- Continued.
  
  
  Baldwin (T.), bold in battle.
  Barnabas (H.)> son of a prophet.
  Bartholomew (H.), a friend.
  Basil (G.), royal, kingly.
  Bede (T.), a prayer.
  Benedict (L.), blessed.
  Benjamin (H.), son of the right
  
  hand.
  Bertram (T.), fair, illustrious.
  Boniface (L.), a benefactor.
  Caesar (L.), with much hair,
  
  blue-eyed.
  Caleb (H.), a dog.
  Cecil (L.), with dim sight.
  Charles (T.), a man, noble spirit.
  Christian (L.), a follower of
  
  Christ. ,
  Christopher (G.), bearing Christ.
  Clarence (L.), illustrious.
  Claude, Claudius (L.), lame.
  Clement (L.), mild, gentle.
  Conrad (T.), resolute, bold in
  
  counsel.
  Constant, Constantine (L.), firm,
  
  steady.
  Cornelia (L.), horn.
  Cuthbert, known to fame.
  Cyril (G.), lordly.
  Daniel (H.), God is judge.
  David (H.), beloved.
  Denis (from Dionysius), the God
  
  of wine.
  Donald (K.), proud chief.
  Douglas (K.), dark, grey.
  Duncan (K.), a dark-com-
  plexioned chief.
  Ebonezer (H.), stone of help.
  Edgar, happy in honour.
  Edmund, rich protection.
  Edward, defender of property.
  Edwin, a winner of possessions,
  
  rich.
  Egbert (T.), bright eye.
  Eldred, fierce in battle.
  Eleazar (H.), helped by God.
  Erasmus (G.), worthy of love.
  Eric (T.), kingly.
  Ernest (G.), earnest.
  Eugene (G.), well born.
  Eustace (G.), strong, healthy.
  
  
  Evan, Welsh for John.
  
  Everard (T.), brave, strong as a
  
  boar.
  Felix (L.), happy.
  Ferdinand (T.), brave, valiant.
  Francis, Frank (T. ), free.
  Frederic, Frederick (T.), peaceful
  
  ruler.
  Gabriel (H.), hero of God.
  George (G.), a farmer, a rustic.
  Gerald (T.), skilful with the spear,
  Geoffrey, same as Godfrey.
  Gilbert (T.), bright as gold.
  Godfrey (T.), God's peace.
  Godwin (T.), good in battle.
  Godwin, fortunate in war.
  Gregory (G.), watchful.
  Griffith, ruddy.
  
  Guy (G.), good sense, a leader.
  Harold, leader of men.
  Harry (T.), ruler of the house.
  Hector, brave defender.
  Henry (T.), see Harry.
  Herbert (T.), a bright warrior.
  Honor (L.), honour.
  Horace, Horatio (L.), worthy
  
  behold.
  Hubert (T.), bright in spirit.
  Hugh (T.), high, lofty.
  Humphrey, support of peace.
  Ivan, Russian for John.
  Jacob (H.), a supplanter.
  James, Jacques, see Jacob.
  John (H.), the Lord graciously
  
  gave.
  Jonathan (H.), the Lord hath
  
  given.
  Joseph (H.), may He add.
  Joshua (H.), a Saviour.
  Justin (L.), just.
  Kenneth (K.), a leader.
  Lambert, endowed with land.
  Lancelot, little warrior.
  Laurence, Lawrence (L.), crowned
  
  with laurels.
  Leonard (T.), brave as a lion.
  Lewis, Louis (T.), brave in battle.
  Lionel (L.), a Httle lion.
  Llewellyn (K.), lightning.
  Lucius, Luke (L.), bright, shining.
  
  
  Marcus, Mark (L.), a hammer.
  Martin (L.), martial.
  Matthew (H.), gift of the Lord.
  Maurice, dark in colour, Moorish.
  Michael (H.), who is like God.
  Nathan (H.), He hath given.
  Nathaniel (H.), God hath given.
  Nicolas (G.), victorious.
  Noel, relating to Christmas.
  Norman (T.), a northman, or
  
  from Normandy.
  Octavus (L.), eighth.
  Oliver (L.), olive, peace.
  Patrick (L.), of noble birth.
  Paul (L.), Httle.
  Peter (G.), a rock.
  Philip (G.), a lover of horses.
  Ralph, Rodolph (T.), hero of
  
  renown, or wolf.
  Reginald (T.), powerful ruler.
  Richard (T.), stern king.
  Robert (T.), famous in counsel.
  Roger (T.), powerful, able in
  
  counsel.
  Roland, Rowland (T.), famous.
  Rupert, same as Robert.
  Samson (H.), sunny.
  Samuel (H.), asked of God.
  Saul (H.), asked for.
  Sebastian (G.), to be reverenced.
  Septimus (L.), seventh.
  Sidney, a conqueror.
  Silas, short for Silvanus (L.),
  
  sylvan.
  Simon, Simeon (H.), famous.
  Solomon (H.), peaceful.
  Stephen (G.), a crowm.
  Theodore (G.), gift of God.
  Theophilus (G.), a lover of God.
  Thomas (H.), a twin.
  Timothy (G.), one who fears God.
  Tristram (L.), grave, sad.
  Uriah (H.), the Lord is light.
  Valentine (L.), strong, healthy.
  Valeria (L.), a sort of eagle.
  Victor (L.), a conqueror.
  Vincent (L.), conquering.
  Walter (T.), a leader.
  Wilfred, strong and peaceful.
  William (T.), a defender.
  
  
  714
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  RELATIVE HEIGHT (1) OF MEN, (2) OF WOMEN
  
  A glanoe at the table below will give a fair idea of what people's weight should be in proportion
  to their height. The average man or woman grows stouter with advancing years, and slimness is
  becoming to the young, but to be well-proportioned the fully -developed man or woman should con-
  form to the following standard : -
  
  MEN
  
  Five feet two inches
  Five feet three inches
  Five feet four inches
  Five feet five inches
  Five feet six inches
  Five feet seven inches
  Five feet eight inches
  Five feet nine inches
  Five feet ten inches
  Five feet eleven inches
  Six feet ....
  
  
  WOMEN
  
  stones.
  
  Pour
  
  Five feet
  
  about 7
  
  5
  
  Five feet one inch . .
  
  " 7
  
  10
  
  Five feet two inches
  
  " 8
  
  0
  
  Five feet three inches .
  
  .. 8
  
  7
  
  Five feet four inches
  
  .. 9
  
  0
  
  Five feet five inches
  
  " 9
  
  7
  
  Five feet six inches
  
  " 9
  
  13
  
  Five feot seven inches .
  
  . " 10
  
  6
  
  Five feet eight inches .
  
  . ,. 10
  
  12
  
  Five feet nine inches .
  
  " 11
  
  2
  
  Stones.
  
  Pounds
  
  about 9
  
  0
  
  " 9
  
  7
  
  " 9
  
  13
  
  " 10
  
  2
  
  " 10
  
  5
  
  " 10
  
  8
  
  " 11
  
  1
  
  " 11
  
  7
  
  " 12
  
  1
  
  " 12
  
  6
  
  " 12
  
  10
  
  POSTAL INFORMATION
  
  
  INLAND RATES OF POSTAGE
  
  {United Kingdom, Channel Islands, Orkney,
  Shetland, and Scilly Isles)
  
  LETTERS
  
  Not exceeding 4 oz. in weight. Id. ; for every
  additional 2 oz., ^d.
  
  Double postage will bo charged on delivery for
  letters posted unpaid, and double the deficiency
  for letters not sufficiently paid.
  
  Letters may not exceed two feet in length or
  one foot in width or depth, excepting those to
  or from a Government Office.
  
  LATE FEE LETTERS
  
  To catch the night mails, inland letters for
  the country and abroad must be posted in
  London before 6 o'clock, and in suburban places
  from half-an-hour to an hour and a half earlier.
  If, however, an extra ^d. be affixed to the letter,
  it will be forwarded by the night mails when
  posted after that hour. The late fee posting
  time is 7 p.m. at most town branch offices ; 7.30
  at General Post Office, and 7.45 at Mount
  Pleasant. Letters bearing an extra id. stamp
  may also be posted in the letter-boxes affixed
  to all mail trains to which sorting carriages are
  attached.
  
  RE-DIRECTION OF LETTERS, &c.
  
  No charge is made for the re-direction of letters,
  halfpenny packets, post-cards and newspapers,
  provided they are re-posted not later than the
  day after delivery (Sundays and public holidays
  
  
  not counted), and that they do not appear to
  have been opened or tampered with.
  
  Re-directed registered letters must not be
  dropped into a letter-box, but must be taken
  to a post-office to be dealt with as registered.
  No additional postage or registering fee will
  be charged, provided they are presented for re-
  registration not later than the day after delivery.
  
  Re-diroctod parcels are liable to additional
  postage at the prepaid rate for each re-direc-
  tion, except in those cases where the original
  corrected addresses are both within a delivery
  from the same post-office.
  
  Letters, &c., will not be officially re-directe^J
  for a person leaving home temporarily, unless the
  house be left uninhabited, nor will they bo re-
  directed when addressed to Clubs, Hotels,
  Boarding-houses, or Lodgings.
  
  NOTICE OF REMOVAL
  
  Notices of removal and applications for letters,
  (fee., to be re-directcd by the Post Office authori-
  ties must be duly signed by the persons to whom
  the letters are addressed. Printed forms can
  be obtained from the post offices, and when filled
  up and signed should bo given to the postmaster
  or to the postman. Separate notices must be
  filled up for parcels and telegrams. The Post
  Office will continue to redirect letters, &c., for
  a period of one year, but the time may be ex-
  tended, if desired, on payment of Is.
  
  POSTE RESTANTE
  
  Letters, "&c., addressed to a Poste Restanto,
  to be called for, are retained for one month. If
  
  
  MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND FIGURES
  
  
  715
  
  
  not called for by the end of that time they are
  sent to the Returned Letter Office to be disposed
  of. If, however, a letter be addressed to a post
  office at a seaport town for a person on board a
  ship bound for that port, it is kept two months.
  The Poste Restante is only intended for the
  accommodation of strangers or travellers who
  have no permanent abode in the town.
  
  Persons applying for Poste Restante letters
  or parcels should be able to produce some proof
  of identity. Foreigners should produce their
  passports.
  
  REGISTRATION OF LETTERS AND PARCELS
  
  The ordinary registration fee for each inland
  letter, parcel, or other postal packet is 2d., in
  addition to the postage. The payment of this
  fee secures compensation in the event of loss or
  damage up to £5. Compensation up to a limit of
  £400 may be obtained on the following scale :
  Fee of 2d., compensation £5 ; 3d., £20 ; and
  after tliis every additional penny on the fee adds
  £20 to the amount of compensation, up to the
  limit of £400.
  
  Registered letters must be handed to an agent
  of the Post O^co, and a receipt obtained. They
  miist not be posted in a letter-box.
  
  Letters containing money must be posted in
  an envelope supplied for registered letters by
  the Post Office.
  
  EXPRESS DELIVERY OF LETTERS AND
  PARCELS
  
  There are three systems for the special delivery
  of letters and parcels : -
  
  1. By special messenger the entire distance, for
  which the charge is 3d. per mile, or part of a
  mile (ordinary postage is not charged). Special
  charges are made where the packet is hea\'y or
  bulky, and for long distances whero no ordinary
  public conveyance is available. Thi^ is the
  quickest service, and letters, &c., for Express
  Delivery are accepted at all the more important
  post offices. They must bear the word " Ex-
  press " in the top left-hand corner of the cover.
  
  2. By special messenger after transmission by
  post. By this system letters and parcels are
  forwarded in the regular course of post, and on
  arrival at the office of delivery are sent out by
  Express Messenger. The charge is 3d. per mile,
  or part of a mile, from the office of delivery, in
  addition to the ordinary postage. There are
  special charges as in system No. I.
  
  3. By special delivery in advance of the ordinary
  delivery. Any persons wishing to receive their
  letters, &c., in advance of the ordinary delivery
  may have -fhem delivered by special messenger
  on payment of 3d. per mile for one packet, and
  a further charge of Id. for every ten, or less,
  additional packets.
  
  
  HALFPENNY PACKETS
  
  Printed or written matter not in the nature of
  a letter may be transmitted by the halfpenny
  packet post. Tho packet must not exceed 2 oz.
  in weight, and the regulation size is the same
  as that of letters.
  
  Rules Concerning Halfpenny Packets. - A half-
  penny packet must be posted without a cover,
  or in an unfastened envelope, or cover which can
  be easily removed to allow of examination. It
  may be tied ■with string for security. It must not
  contain any communication in the nature of a
  letter. Should any of these regulations not be
  complied with, the packet will be treated as a
  letter. If posted unpaid, double postage will be
  charged.
  
  NEWSPAPERS
  
  The postage is id. for every registered daily or
  weekly newspaper, whether posted singly or with
  others in a packet. The newspaper must be
  posted without a cover, or in a cover open at
  both ends, and must be folded in such a way as
  to show the title. Nothing in the natm-e of a
  letter must be enclosed, but the name and address
  of the sender may be written on the wrapper, a
  request for return in case of non-delivery, and a
  reference to any page in the newspaper to which
  the sender wishes to call attention.
  
  
  PARCEL POST
  
  Not over 1 lb.
  
  . 3d.
  
  Not over 8 lbs. .
  
  . 8d
  
  " " 2 lbs.
  
  . 4d.
  
  " " 9 lbs. .
  
  . 9d
  
  " " 3 lbs.
  
  . 5d.
  
  " " 10 lbs. .
  
  . lOd
  
  ,, " 5 lbs.
  
  . 6d.
  
  " " nibs. .
  
  . lid
  
  ,. " 7 lbs.
  
  . . 7d.
  
  Regulations. - No parcel may exceed 11 lbs.
  in weight, 3 feet 6 inches in length, or 6 feet in
  length and girth combined. Parcels must not
  be posted in a letter-box, but must be handed
  over the counter of a post office, or given to a
  rural postman, and the postage must be prepaid
  by postage stamps affixed by the sender. The
  words " Parcel Post " should be -wTitten in the
  left-hand corner above the address. The sender's
  name should be on the cover or inside the parcel.
  A certificate of the posting of a parcel may be
  obtained at the time, if so desired.
  
  
  FOREIGN AND COLONIAL
  POSTAGE RATES
  
  LETTERS
  
  From the United Kingdom (1) to British
  Possessions generally and to Eygpt, the United
  States of America, and tho places in Jlorocco
  where there are British Post Office Agencies the
  rate of postage is Id. per ounce ; and (2) to
  all other countries it is 2Jd. for the first oimce.
  
  
  716
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  and 1^ for ectch succeeding ovince or fraction
  thereof.
  
  REPLY COUPONS
  
  Coupons exchangeable for stamps of the
  value of 25 centimes (2M.) each in any country
  participating in the arrangement can be pur-
  chased at any Money Order Office in this country
  at the price of 3d. each for the purpose of pre-
  paying replies to letters. The coupons can be
  exchanged by the addressees of such letters at
  the post office of the place of destination for
  local postage stamps.
  
  Coupons received from other countries may
  be exchanged for postage stamps at any Money
  Order Office in the United Kingdom.
  
  POST-CARDS
  
  Official post-cards are transmissible to all parts
  of the world. Id. single, 2d. reply. Inland post-
  cards may also be used, provided the additional
  postage is supplied by means of postage stamps.
  Private post-cai'ds may be sent abroad if they
  are of the same size and substance as the official
  cards and have the words " Post Card " printed
  or written on the address side. Plain cards
  without any inscription cannot be sent abroad
  86 post-cards.
  
  A post-card from a place abroad, if unpaid,
  is chargeable with a postage of 2d. ; and if parti-
  ally paid, with double the deficient postage.
  
  PRINTED PAPERS AND SAMPLES
  
  Printed Papers comprise newspapers, books
  (stitched or bound), periodical works, pamphlets,
  sheets of music, proofs of printing, plans, maps,
  engravings, photographs, &c. Printers' proofs,
  corrected or not, and the corresponding manu-
  scripts when included in the same package, are
  admitted as " printed papers," but not the
  products of the copying press and typewriter.
  
  The rate of postage on printed papers for all
  places abroad is ^d. per 2 oz., and on commercial
  papers is 2Jd. for the first 10 oz., and ^d. per
  2 oz. thereafter.
  
  Packets must be posted without a cover, or
  in an ordinary envelope left entirely unfastened,
  or in a cover wholly open at both ends. To
  ensure the safety of the contents, however, the
  ends of the packet may be tied with string, but
  it must be easy to unfasten.
  
  Packets must be prepaid ; if wholly unpaid
  the packets will be stopped ; if not fully prepaid,
  double the deficiency will bo charged on delivery.
  
  Canadian Magazine Post. - The postage rate
  on British Newspapers, Magazines, and Trade
  Journals intended for Canada is Id. per lb. ; on
  packets not exceeding 2 oz. it is Jd. Such
  packets must be posted in covers open at both
  ends and easily removable.
  
  
  Sample Post. - The rate of postage for all
  places abroad is Id. for the first 4 oz. and id.
  per 2 oz, thereafter. Packets containing goods
  for sale, or articles sent by one private individual
  to another, cannot be f orM'arded by Sample Post.
  
  Samples must be sent in such a manner as to
  be easy of examination and, when practicable,
  must be sent in covers open at the end. In
  order to secure the return of packets which
  cannot be delivered, the names and addresses
  of the senders should be printed or written
  outside.
  
  FOREIGN AND COLONIAL PARCEL POST
  
  The rules and regulations for foreign and
  colonial parcels are similar to the rules for inland
  parcels, but the sender of each parcel must make
  a declaration as to its contents for Customs
  purposes. This declaration must be made on a
  form provided by the Post Office for the purpose.
  The sender can prepay all charges to certain
  countries and places by paying a fee of 6d., sign-
  ing an undertaking to pay on demand the amount
  due, and making a ^deposit of Is. for each 10s.
  and fraction of 10s. of the value of the parcel
  (to Canada and U.S.A. Is. for each 4s. with a
  minimum deposit of 5s.), otherwise the Customs
  and other charges must be paid by the addi'essee.
  The size hmit to some places abroad diSers from
  that for inland parcels. All parcels must have
  the fastenings and knots on string carefully
  sealed.
  
  The rates for postage and also for insurance
  can be obtained at any post office.
  
  CASH ON DELIVERY
  
  Arrangements have now been made whereby
  the senders of postal packets exchanged be
  tween the United Kingdom and certain British
  Possessions and Egypt can have the value of
  the contents collected from the recipients and
  remitted to them by money order or postal
  order. '
  
  
  MONEY ORDERS
  
  INLAND
  
  At every Money Order Office Money Orders
  can be obtained between the hours of 8 a.m. and
  8 P.M. The poundage for these orders is : -
  
  For sums not exceeding
  £1 £3 £10 £20 £30 £40
  2d. 3d. 4d. Gd. 8d. lOd.
  
  No order may contain a fractional part of a
  penny.
  
  No single Money Order can be issued for more
  than £40.
  
  A Money Order may be crossed like a cheque
  for payment through a bank.
  
  
  MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND FIGURES
  
  
  717
  
  
  TELEGRAPH MONEY ORDERS, INLAND
  
  Money may be transmitted by Telegraph
  Money Order from any Money Order Office in the
  United Kingdom, whicli is ako a despatching
  office for telegrams, and may be made payable
  at any Money Order Office which is also an office
  for the delivery of telegrams.
  
  The charges for Telegraph Money Orders are
  a Money Order poundage at the ordinary rate for
  inland Money Orders, with an additional fee of
  2d. for each Order and the cost of the official
  telegram of advice.
  
  POSTAL ORDERS
  
  Postal Orders are issued and paid at all Money
  Order Offices in the United Kingdom during the
  ordinary hours of business on week-days, and
  in certain British Colonies and places at which
  British Postal Agencies are maintained.
  
  Orders may be had for every 6d. up to 19s. 6d. ;
  and for 20s. and 21s. Those for 6d. up to 2s. 6d.
  cost ^d. each ; after that, up to 15s. the charge
  is Id. ; after that, to 21s. the charge is l|d.
  
  By affixing stamps (perforated ones not
  allowed), not exceeding 5d. in value nor three in
  number, to the face of any one Postal Order, odd
  amounts may be made up, but not fractions of
  a penny. An Order not cashed within three
  months from the last day of the month of issue
  will be charged a fresh commission.
  
  FOREIGN AND COLONIAL MONEY ORDERS
  
  For sums not exceeding -
  £1 £2 £4 £6 £8 £10
  
  3d. 6d. 9d. Is. Is. 3d. Is. 6d.
  and for countries on which Orders may be issued
  fop a larger sum than £10 the charge is 3d. for
  every additional £2 or portion of £2.
  
  TELEGRAPH MONEY ORDERS
  
  Foreign and Colonial
  
  Telegraph Money Orders may be sent to or
  from certain places. The charges for those
  issued in tho United Kingdom are the ordinary
  foreign and colonial Money Order poundage,
  with the addition of a feo of 6d. and cost of
  official telegram of advice.
  
  TELEGRAMS
  Inland
  
  For the first twelve words, 6d. ; for every
  additional word, Jd. Figures are counted at
  the rate of five to a word.
  
  Stamps in payment must be affixed by the
  sender. The address of the receiver is charged
  for, but not that of the sender, if written on tho
  back of the tolegi'aph form.
  
  The charge includes delivery, provided the
  address be within the Towr Postal limits, or
  within three miles of a head office. When the
  address is beyond the free delivery limit, a
  
  
  charge of 3d. for each mile is made, reckoned
  from the office door. This charge to be prepaid
  by the sender. RepHes not exceeding forty-
  eight words in length may be prepaid by the
  sender.
  
  Telegraph forms are of two kinds, the A form
  (given gratis) wth no stamp ; and the Al form
  embossed with a stamp, which may be purchased
  singlj', or in a book of twenty, price 10s. 2d.
  
  Any one may register an abbreviated address
  on payment of a fee of 21s. per year.
  
  Telegrams re -directed by wire to a second
  address are liable to an additional charge.
  
  The usual hours of attendance at Telegraph
  Offices on week-days are from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
  The usual Sunday attendance in England is from
  8 A.M. to 10 A.M. ; in Scotland from 9 a.m. to
  10 A.M., and in Ireland from 8.25 a.m. to 10.25
  a.m.
  
  A few special offices are always open.
  
  CANCELLING TELEGRAMS
  
  The sender may have liis telegram cancelled,
  and if it be cancelled before the commencement
  of transmission the sum paid will be returned at
  the time, less a fee of 2d. for cancelKng it ; but
  if transmission has commenced, the sum will not
  be returned. If transmission has been com-
  pleted, an official telegram, prepaid by the
  sender, will be sent to the Postmaster at the
  Terminal Office. If the official telegram should
  arrive too late, the sender will be informed that
  the attempt to cancel his telegram has ftiiled,
  but the sums paid will not be refunded.
  
  FOREIGN AND COLONIAL TELEGRAMS
  
  The following are a few of the charges for the
  transmission of telegrams abroad.
  
  [Where more than one price is given, the charge
  varies according to the route, or to the part of
  the country to which the telegram is sent.]
  
  
  Rate
  per word
  s. d.
  
  Aden 2 0
  
  Algeria 0 2.
  
  Argentine Republic
  
  3s. 3d. and 3 7
  Australia 2s. 9d. and 3 0
  
  Austria 0 2.
  
  Belgium .... 0 2
  Brazil . . , Ss. to 6 5
  British Central Africa 2 11
  British East Africa
  
  2s. 6d. and 2 9
  Canada ... Is. to 3 2
  Cape Colony ... 2 6
  Ceylon . Is. lid. and 2
  China . . 4s. 2d. to 4
  Costa Rica .... 4
  Denmark .... 0
  Egypt . . . Is. to 1
  
  France 0
  
  Germany .... 0
  Gibraltar .... 0
  Holland .... 0
  Hungary .... 0
  India . Is. lOtl. to 2
  
  
  Rate
  
  per word.
  
  s. d.
  
  . - 0 2i
  
  ..30
  
  d. and 4 10
  
  
  Italy .
  
  Jamaica . .
  .Tapan . 48.
  Madeira. . .
  Malay PeninsnU
  
  3s. 3d. and 3
  
  Malta 0
  
  Morocco . . Sd. to 0
  
  Natal 2
  
  New South Wales . 3
  New Zealand
  
  2s. 9d. and 3
  
  Norway 0
  
  Orange River Colony 2
  Portugal .... 0
  Rhodesia 2s. 8d. and 2 11
  Roumania .... 0 3
  
  Russia 0 4i
  
  Spain . . 3d. and 0 .'>
  Sweden ..... 0 3
  Switzerland ... 0 Z
  Transvaal .... 2 6
  
  Turkey 0 6
  
  United States . Is. to 2 9
  
  
  1 0
  
  6
  4
  4
  
  6
  0
  
  0
  2i
  6
  3
  
  
  Special forms are provided for Foreign and Colonial
  Telegrams.
  
  
  718
  
  
  THE WOMAN'S BOOK
  
  
  TELEPHONES
  
  The Telephone Trunk Lines which connect the
  various Telephone-Exchange areas tliroughout
  the country are the property of the Postmeister-
  General, and are worked by his officers. The
  Trunk lines can be used by callers at Post Offices
  wliich are connected with the Trunk Telephone
  system as well as by subscribers and callers xising
  Telephone Exchanges.
  
  The fees for the use of the Trunk lines are as
  follows : -
  
  For 25 miles or under . . . Threepence.
  
  " 60 " " . . . Sixpence.
  
  " 75 " " . . . Ninepence.
  
  " 100 " " . . . One Shilling.
  
  " Every additional 40 miles
  
  or fraction thereof . . Sixpence.
  The period of conversation is three minutes
  from the time when the caller has been informed
  that the connection is completed ; but any
  person, by prepaying a double fee, may secure
  either the tminterrupted use of a Trunk line for
  six minutes, or the option of continuing it at
  the end of three minutes. In the latter case the
  fee for the second period is refunded when the
  call is completed in three minutes. No person is
  entitled to use a Trunk line continuously for
  more than six minutes.
  
  The charge for a six minutes' conversation
  between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m. is the same as for a
  conversation of tliree minutes' duration in the
  day-time. All sums payable for the use of a
  Trunk line must be prepaid. Callers are re-
  quired to pay the Call Office fee in addition to the
  Trunk fee.
  
  RADIOTELEGRAPHIC SERVICE
  
  Radiotelegrams are accepted at any Telegraph
  Office for transmission to ships equipped with
  wireless telegraph apparatus through different
  coast stations in the United Kingdom or abroad.
  The usual charge for a radiotelegram sent
  through a British Coast Station is lOJd. a word.
  Further particulars can be had at any Telegraph
  Office.
  
  TELEPHONE EXCHANGES
  
  The Postmeater-General has Telephone Ex-
  changes in London and at a large number of
  provincial towns. The rates of subscription in
  London for the Ordinary Mesaagc-rate Service
  (including one telephone at the subscriber's
  premises) are as follows : -
  
  (a) For connection with any Exchange in the
  County of London witliin two miles of the sub-
  scriber's premises, annual subscription £5.
  
  Message Fees : (1) One penny for each call to
  
  
  a subscriber on any Exchange in the County
  of London. (2) Twopence for each call to a
  subscriber on any Exchange outside the County
  of London.
  
  (6) For connection with any Exchange miiside
  the County of London within two miles of the
  subscriber's premises, annual subscription £4.
  
  Message Fees : (1) One penny for each call to
  a subscriber on the same Exchange. (2) Two-
  pence for each call to a subscriber on any other
  Exchange.
  
  N.B. - The minimum yearly amount payable
  by each subscriber for Message Fees is 30s.
  
  Any person can use a Call Office in London for
  a fee of twopence.
  
  TELEPHONIC DELIVERY OF LETTERS
  IN LONDON ON SUNDAYS
  
  A message posted in the provinces or in
  London in time to ensure arrival at the General
  Post Office, London, on Sunday, can be de-
  livered by telephone to a subscriber in the
  London Exchange area. For the special con-
  ditions inquire at any Telegraph Office.
  
  SENDING TELEGRAMS AND EXPRESS
  LETTERS BY TELEPHONE
  
  Any subscriber to a Telephone Exchange may
  telephone messages (except those for trans-
  mission at Press rate) to many post offices
  which can be reached through the local Ex-
  change System, or by means of the Post Office
  Trunk wires, in order that the message may be
  written down and dealt with as telegrams or
  express letters or ordinary letters. For special
  regulations inquire at any Telegraph Office.
  
  TELEPHONE COMMUNICATION WITH
  FRANCE AND BELGIUM
  
  London and certain provincial towns in Eng-
  land can communicate by telephone wath Paris,
  Brussels, and certain provincial towns in France
  and Belgium. The fee is from 8s. to 10s. for a
  conversation of tliree minutes, the same condi-
  tions and regulations in this case as in that of
  ordinary Trunk line conversations.
  
  PROVINCIAL SYSTEM
  
  The Postmaster-General has Telephone Ex-
  changes at a large number of provincial towns.
  The terms for Telephone Exchange circuits, and
  for circuits to post offices for use in connection
  with the Telephone Trunk lines, may be ascer-
  tained on application to the local post office or
  to the Secretary, General Post Office.
  
  
  MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND FIGURES
  
  
  719
  
  
  GENERAL INFORMATION
  
  THERMOMETER FOREIGN AND COLONIAL MONEY
  
  
  To convert Centigrade into Fahrenheit, multi-
  ply by 9, divide by 5, and add 32 ; Reaumur into
  Fahrenheit, multiply by 9, divide by 4, and add
  32 ; Fahrenheit into Centigrade, deduct 32,
  multiply by 5, and divide by 9 ; Fahrenheit into
  R6aum\ir, deduct 32, multiply by 4, and divide
  by 9.
  
  F = I C + 32№ = f R + 32№.
  
  R = ^ (F - 32№) = ^ C.
  
  The following are equivalent degrees: -
  
  Cent. Fahr. K6au. Cent. Fahr. K^au. Cent, Fahr. Reau.
  100 212 8U 60 140 48 20 68 16
  
  
  95
  
  203
  
  76
  
  55
  
  131
  
  44
  
  15
  
  59
  
  12
  
  90
  
  194
  
  72
  
  50
  
  122
  
  40
  
  10
  
  50
  
  8
  
  85
  
  185
  
  68
  
  45
  
  113
  
  36
  
  5
  
  41
  
  4
  
  80
  
  176
  
  64
  
  40
  
  104
  
  32
  
  Zero
  
  32.
  
  Zerc
  
  75
  
  167
  
  60
  
  35
  
  95
  
  28
  
  6
  
  23
  
  4
  
  70
  
  158
  
  56
  
  30
  
  86
  
  24
  
  10
  
  14
  
  8
  
  65
  
  149
  
  52
  
  25
  
  77
  
  20
  
  15
  
  5
  
  12
  
  THE
  
  SEASONS
  
  Spring commences March 21st and lasts 92
  days 21 hours {Vernal Equinox).
  
  Summer commences June 22nd and lasts 93
  days 14 hours {Summer Solstice).
  
  Autumn commences September 23rd and lasts
  89 days 17| hours {AtUumn Equinox).
  
  Winter commences December 22nd and lasts
  89 days 1 hour (Winter Solstice).
  
  The longest day is the 21st of June. The
  shortest day is the 21st of December. Two
  days in the year are equall}' divided into day and
  night, viz., the 21st of March and the 23rd of
  September.
  
  
  Countries.
  
  
  Argentina . .
  
  Austria-Hungary
  Belgium .
  Brazil . .
  B. Honduras
  Bulgaria .
  Canada . .
  Ceylon . .
  Chile . .
  
  China . .
  
  Cuba . .
  Denmark .
  Egypt . .
  Finland
  France . ,
  Germany .
  Greece . .
  Holland .
  India . .
  Italy . .
  Japan . .
  Mauritius .
  Mexico , .
  Newfoundland
  Norway
  Peru
  Portugal
  Roumania
  Russia .
  Servia =
  Spain .
  Straits Settlmnts
  Sweden
  Switzerland
  Turkey . .
  United States
  Uruguay . .
  
  
  Chief Coins.
  
  
  Peso tpaper)*=100centisimos
  " Cgold) ,
  
  Krone or Crown = 100 heller
  
  Franc - 100 centimes . .
  
  Milreis (paper) " = 1000 reis
  
  Dollar (gold) =100 cents .
  
  leva = franc = 100 stotinkis
  
  Dollar (gold) = 100 cents .
  
  Rupee = 16 annas . . .
  
  Peso (paper) * = 100 centavos
  " (gold) ....
  
  100 candareens=10 mace =
  tael of silver (a weight)
  
  Dollar (gold) = 100 cents .
  
  Krone = 100 ore ....
  
  Egyptian £ = lOO piastres
  
  Markka = 100 penni . .
  
  Franc = 100 centimes . .
  
  Mark = ]00 pfennige . .
  
  Drachmfe (paper) *= 100 lepta
  
  Florin or Gulden =100 cents
  
  Rupee = 16 annas . . .
  
  Lira= franc =100 centesimi
  
  Yen = 100 sens ....
  
  Rupee = 16 annas . . .
  
  Dollar (gold) = 100 centavos
  
  Dollar (gold) =100 cents.
  
  Krone = 100 ore ....
  
  Sol = 100 centismos . .
  
  Milreis = 1000 reis . . .
  
  ley = franc=100 banis .
  
  Rouble = 100 copeks . .
  
  Dinar = franc = 100 paras .
  
  Peseta = franc =100 centimes
  
  Dollar (silver) ....
  
  Krone = 100 ore ....
  
  Franc = 100 centimes . .
  
  Turkish £ = 100 piastres .
  
  Dollar (gold) = 100 cents .
  
  Peso (gold) =100 centimes
  
  
  Approxi-
  mate
  
  value in
  
  British
  
  money.
  
  s. d.
  
  1 9
  
  4 0
  
  0 10
  
  0 9i
  
  1 3J
  4 1
  
  0 9i
  4 1
  
  1 4
  
  0 10
  
  1 6
  
  2 4J
  4 1
  
  1 U
  20 6J
  0 9i
  
  0 9J
  0 11}
  
  0 9
  
  1 8
  
  1 4
  
  0 9^
  2 OJ
  
  1 4
  
  2 0
  
  4 1
  
  1 li
  
  2 0
  
  3 10}
  0 9J
  2 li
  
  0 9i
  
  0 8i
  2 4
  
  1 IJ
  
  0 9i
  18 0
  
  4 1
  
  4 2
  
  * The exchange value of paper money fluctuates consider-
  ably in countries where it is not readily convertible, at its
  face value, into gold
  
  
  STANDARD TIME
  
  In Great Britain Greenwich Time is adopted as the Standard Time all over the country. The
  same is also adopted over Belgium, Holland, and Spain. In Franco, Paris time (now the same as
  Greenwich) is the standard. In countries of great ejrtent it is impossible to adopt one Standard Time
  and meridians 15№ apart have been chosen, and each place within 7J№ of these meridians have the
  same Standard Time. Thus, Mid Europe (Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy,
  and Ser^^a), 1 houi- fast of Greenwich ; East Em-ope (Roumania, Bulgaria, Turkey, Egypt), 2 hours
  fast of Gretmwich ; Cape Colony, li hours fae^t ot Greenwich ; Natal, 2 hours fast of Greenwich ;
  India, 5^ hours fast of Greenwich ; Burma, Ql hours fast of Greenwich ; Japali, 9 houre fast of Green-
  wich ; West Australia, 8 hours fast of Greenwich ; South Australia, 9i hours fast of Greenwich ; New
  South Wales, Queensland, Victoria, and Tasmania, 10 hours fast of Greenwich ; New Zealand,
  Hi hours fast of Greenwich ; America - Newfoundland 4 hours. Eastern 6 hours, Central 6 hours.
  Mountain 7 hours, and Pacific 8 hours slow of Greenwich,
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  2z
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  Accidents, first aid in, 673
  
  Accompanist, the, 683
  
  Accountancy as a profession, 666
  
  Accounts, how to balance, 363
  
  Addressing persons of rank, mode of, 354
  
  Administrators of will, 375
  
  Advertisement designing, 687 ; hints on answer-
  ing, 666 ; writing, 628
  
  Africa, information on South, 663
  
  Afternoon " At Homes," 252 ; etiquette of, 339
  
  Afternoon tea, 251
  
  Agents, house, women as, 667
  
  Agriculture, women in, 647-657
  
  Air-cushions, 553
  
  " Aid, first," 648-579
  
  Air gas, 9
  
  Almond paste, 225
  
  Almonds for cakes, 225
  
  Ammonia, for laundry work, 276
  
  Anemones, 590
  
  Annuals, garden, 5S1
  
  Annuities, deferred, 371 ; Government, 372 ;
  immediate, 371
  
  Ants, extermination of, 80
  
  Apoplexy, 573
  
  Apple cream for invaUds, 659
  
  Apple ginger, 229
  
  Apples and nuts, game of, 535
  
  Apples, various dishes with, 196
  
  Aprons, 313
  
  Armorial bearings, 354, 384
  
  Arms, how to whiten, 450
  
  Army, how to address officers of, 355 ; nurses in
  the, 643
  
  A^ro^vroot for invaUds, 559
  
  Art schools, 686
  
  Artichokes, cooking of, 149
  
  Artist, the career of the, 686 ; the fashion, 688
  
  Arts for women, 682
  
  Ap.paragus, cooking of, 149
  
  Associations for children and young girls, 700
  
  Assurance, 371
  
  Asters, 586
  
  " At Home " day, the, 334
  
  " At Homes," 252 ; etiquette of, 339 ; invita-
  tions to, 332
  
  Attendance officers, women as, 681
  
  Auction game, 533
  
  Auriculas, 582
  
  Authors, hints to, 709
  
  Aviary, the, 514
  
  
  Baby, the, 473 ; and the bath, 479 ; feeding of,
  476, 478, 479 ; weaning of, 477
  
  
  Baby's beisket, 470 ; binder, 472 ; clothing, 470,
  
  471 ; headgear, 444, 445 ; outfit, 469 ; vest,
  
  472 ; washing of clothing, 297
  Bacon, treatment of, 100
  Badminton, 547
  
  Baking powder, 214
  Ball gowns, 304
  
  Balls, county, 341 ; etiquette of, 340 ; invita-
  tions to, 332 ; pubhc, 341
  Bandeaux, 433
  Bank of England, the, 369
  Bank manageress, how to become, 666 ; notes,
  
  366 ; rate, 369 ; Savings (Post Office), 369
  " Bank Return," the, 369
  Banking account, how to open, 366 ; hints on,
  
  366-370
  Bankruptcy, law of, 370
  Barracoat, the, 473
  Baseball, game of, 546
  Bassinette, baby's, 469 ; cost of, 469 ; how to
  
  trim a, 469
  Basting of garments, 388
  Bath, baby's, 480 ; child's, 479 ; hip and sponge,
  
  448 ; hot air, 564 ; how to enamel, 607 ;
  
  mustard foot, 564 ; soda, 564 ; steam face,
  
  451 ; sulphur, 564 ; vapour, 564
  Bath-room, the, 33 ; cleaning of, 61
  Baths, 447 ; in illness, 664 ; rubber camp, 448 ;
  
  salt (at home), 448 ; sea, 448
  Beans, cooking of, 150 ; French, how to cook,
  
  152 ; haricot, how to cook, 153
  Beauty speciaUsts, 669
  Bed covers, 259 ; cradle, 560 ; how to make
  
  patient's, 551 ; hnen, 257 ; pans, 560 ; rest,
  
  660 ; sores, 567 ; table, 560
  Bedding, 31 ; in sick-room, 549
  Bedroom, decoration of, 32 ; furniture, 29, 32 ;
  
  spring cleaning of, 81 ; ventilation of, 453 ;
  
  colour schemes for, 16
  Beds, care of, 68 ; naaking of, 67 ; water, 553
  Bed-sitting-room, furnishing a, 33
  Bedsteads, cleaning of, 68
  Beef, coUops, 168 ; creams, 169 ; darioles of,
  
  179 ; how to choose, 107 ; how to serve, 243 ;
  
  juice, 558 ; olives, 169 ; roast, 168 ; roll,
  
  glazed, 179 ; Russian steaks, 170 ; salt,
  
  boiled, 167 ; sandwiches for invalids, 659 ;
  
  steak, 168 ; steak and kidney pie, 181 ; steak
  
  and kidney pudding, 181 ; tea, 658 ; use of
  
  different joints, 108
  Bee-keepers' Association, 655
  Bee-keeping for won\en, 654
  Beetles, extermination of, 78
  Beetroot, cooking of, 160
  
  
  T"
  
  
  724
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  Begonias, 697
  
  " Best Man," the, 347
  
  Bibs, baby's, 473
  
  Bilious attack, 567
  
  Bills, checking amd filling of, 366
  
  Binding, method of, 403
  
  Birds, cage, 512 ; ailments of, 515 ; various
  
  kinds, 514
  Births, registration of, 376
  Biscuits, cocoa-nut, 219; milk, 220; oatmeal,
  
  220 ; various kinds, 218
  Bite, frost, 576
  
  Bites, dog, 573 ; insect, 573 ; snake, 573
  Black eye, cure of, 574
  Blewjkheads, 567
  Blanc-mange coffee, 203
  Blanket stitch, the, 398
  Blankets, 261, 262 ; how to mend, 415 ; washmg
  
  of, 288
  Bleaching, 278
  Bleeding, nose, 576; of rectum, 577 ; of stomach,
  
  577
  Blind man's buff, 531
  Blinds, 21, 22 ; cleaning of, 70 ; how to make,
  
  608
  Blisters, 566
  Blood-spitting, 577
  
  Blouse, 496 ; directions for making, 421
  Blue, for laundry work, 276
  Boarding-houses, 501
  Boating-parties, 344
  Boiler, burst, 607
  Boils, 567
  Bolster slips, 258
  Bonnet, baby girl's, 444
  Bonnets, 308, 309
  Bookbinding, 690
  Book illustration, 687
  Book-keeping, 666 ; system of, 3G3
  Books, cleaning of, 72 ; for children, 488
  
  Boot cupboard, 610
  
  Bootees for baby, 473
  
  Boots, 309 ; care of, 314 ; choice of, 452 ;
  cleaning of, 78
  
  Borax, for laundry work, 276
  
  Botanic Society's school, 648
  
  Bottles, hot-water, 560
  
  Bottling of fruit, the, 232-235
  
  Bouts Rim6s, 535
  
  Bow, the Alsatian, 438 ; the butterfly, 438 ; for
  hat, 437
  
  Bowls, 547
  
  Bows, the making of, 437 ; sewing on of, 440 ;
  of velvet, silk,   
  Boxes for windows, 600
  
  Boys' Christian names, meaning of, 712
  
  Braid, how to, 404
  
  Brain, concussion of, 574
  
  Brass, cleaning of, 72
  
  Brawn, how to make, 173
  
  Bread, brown, 214 ; household, 214 ; treat-
  ment of, 101 ; Vienna, 215
  
  Breakfast, how to serve, 249, 250
  
  Breakfast -room, coloior schemes for, 16 ; fur-
  nishing of, 28
  
  Breakfast sets, 238
  
  Breathing, the art of, 454
  
  Bridal procession, the, 348 ; trousseau, the, 321
  
  Bride's dress, 347
  
  
  Bridesmaids, 347
  
  Bridge drives, 542 ; parties, etiquette of, 340 ;
  
  teas, etiquette of, 339
  British Empire, administrative government of,
  
  706 ; constitution of, 706
  Bronchitis, 568
  Bronze, cleaning of, 73
  Brooches, how to clean gold, 312
  Broth, how to make, 119 ; various kinds of, 120,
  
  121
  Bruises, 573
  Brushes, care of, 78 ; care of paint, 606 ; hair,
  
  466 ; how to wash, 457
  Bugs, extermination of, 79
  Building society, 2
  
  Bulbs, cultivation of, 587 ; for garden, 582
  Bunion, 568
  
  Buns, how to make, 216 ; rice, 218
  Burns, cure of, 574
  Business, women in, 665-677
  Butler, the, 54
  Butter, treatment of, 100
  Button-holes, 400
  Buttons, how to sew on, 400
  
  Cabbage, cooking of, 150
  Cabinet and premier, the, 707
  Cages, care of bird, 512
  
  Cake, angel, 220 ; cherry, 220 ; Christmas, 221 ;
  Easter, 221 ; holiday, 221 ; iced, 223, 224 ;
  invalid, 222 ; luncheon, 222 ; Madeira, 222 ;
  orange, 223 ; Scotch seed, 223 ; sponge, 224
  Cakes, 211-218
  
  Cakes, chocolate, 216 ; Coburg, 216 ; decoration
  of, 224 ; ginger, 218 ; girdle, 217 ; how to
  bake, 213 ; icing of, 225, 226 ; queen, 218 ;
  tea, 216 ; tins, how to prepare, 212
  Calceolarias, 596
  
  Calf's feet, 175 ; liver, 174 ; sweetbreads, 176
  Calico seams, different, 391
  Calls, etiquette of making, 330; paying and
  
  receiving, 333
  Calves' brains, 174
  Canada, information concerning, 663
  Canaries, varieties of, 512
  Canary, breeding, 513 ; cage for, 513 ; food for,
  
  513 ; how to choose a, 513 ; taming of, 514
  Candy, how to make American, 672
  Candytufts, 585
  Canvassers, income of, 676
  Cape, evening, 429
  Caramel walnuts, how to make, 672
  Cards, gentlemen's, 331 ; visiting, 329
  Cards and fortune telling, 538
  Carnations, 582, 591
  Carnival, roller skating, 542
  Carpet, Axminster, 20 ; beating of, 62 ;
  Brussels, 20; choice of, 18, 19; Kidderminster,
  20 ; kinds of, 20 ; measurements for, 19 ;
  stair, 20 ; sweepers, 61 ; tapestry, 20 ; to
  remove stains, 62 ; to revive colour of, 62 ;
  velvet pile, 20 ; Wilton, 20
  Carriages, licences for, 384
  Carrots, cooking of, 150
  Carving, hints on, 244
  
  Cash book, specimen page of, 364 ; use of, 363
  Cash box, use of, 363
  Cashiers, women as, 666
  Castor-oil enema, 661
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  725
  
  
  Caterers, how to sslect, 340
  
  Caterpillars, destraction of, 602
  
  Cats, common ailments of, 512 ; care of, 511 ;
  different kinds of, 512
  
  Cauliflower, cooking of, 151
  
  Ceilings, cleaning of, 69
  
  Celery, how to curl, 161 ; how to fry, 151
  
  Chairs, cleaning of, 64
  
  Chairs, re-upholstering of, 613
  
  Charades, 528
  
  Charity, entertainments for, 541
  
  " Charts," " feeding," 477
  
  Cheese cakes, 197 ; custard, 186 ; souflB6, 187 ;
  treatment of, 101
  
  Chemise, how to iron and fold a, 284
  
  Chemists, women, 639
  
  Cheque-book, the, 367
  
  Cheques, alteration of, 367 ; cashing of, 368 ;
  crossing of, 367 ; dishonoured, 368
  
  Cherries, with cream, 206
  
  Chestnuts, ho;7 to cook, 151
  
  Chicken, 4 la Cardinal, 177 ; and ham pie, 182 ;
  chaudfroid of, 176 ; for invalids, 558 ; potted,
  180
  
  Chiffon, how to wash, 292
  
  Chilblain, 568
  
  Child, the, 466-497 ; the bath, 479 ; feeding of,
  476 ; training and education of, 485-487 ;
  weaning of, 477
  
  Child's hair, the, 480 ; exercise, the, 482
  
  Children, advantages of reading, 487
  
  Children's ailments, 483-485 ; clothing, 495 ;
  clothing, washing of, 297 ; endowments for,
  371 ; hterature, 487 ; milUnery, 444 ; nurses,
  661 ; pocket-money, 486 ; punishment of,
  486 ; shoes, 497 ; stockings, 497
  
  Chills, danger of, 484
  
  Chimney on fire, regulations as to, 382
  
  Chimneys, care of, 65
  
  China for table, 237 ; how to mend, 607 ; w"ish-
  ing of, 76
  
  Chintz, how to wash, 294
  
  Chocolate caramels, how to make, 673 ; pepper-
  mints, how to make, 674
  
  Choking, treatment in case of, 574
  
  Cliristening fees, 350 ; lunch, 350
  
  Christenings, 349, 350
  
  Christmas parties, 536 ; postman, 536 ; tree, the,
  536
  
  Chrysanthemums, 585, 591
  
  Church decoration, 360
  
  Circular notes, 368
  
  " Circulator," 7
  
  Cisterns, 7
  
  Civil Service, the, 493, 678-681
  
  Clarkias, 585
  
  Clergy, how to address the, 355
  
  Clerks, lady, 665 ; in post office, 678
  
  Clothes, care of, 313 ; care of men's, 315 ; clean-
  ing of, 316 ; dyeing of, 316 ; horse and puUy,
  273 ; ropes, pins and poles, 273 ; storing
  away of, 314 ; children's, 495 ; choice of, 451 ;
  coloiu" of, 451
  
  Clubs, ladies', 701
  
  Coal gas, 9
  
  Coal, various kinds of, 98
  
  Coats and wraps, 306 ; motoring, 306
  
  Cocoa-nut dropo, how to make, 673 ; slices, 217
  
  Codicils to wills, 375
  
  
  Coffee caramels, how to make, 673 ; how to
  
  serve, 250 ; pot, 530
  Coiffure, the, 458, 460
  Coke, use of, 98
  Cold in the head, 568
  Collars, how to wash, 295 ; of dress, 311
  Colleges for girls, 494 ; of cookery, 660
  Colonial government, 707 ; outfit, hints on, 664
  Colonies and their governors, 708 ; work in the,
  
  663
  Combinations, how to iron pair of, 286
  Combs, how to wash, 458
  Commission agents, 383
  Compensation Act, Workmen's, 370
  Complexion and skin, the, 448 ; general hints,
  
  451 ; influence of health on, 449 ; " making
  
  up " of, 465 ; use of powder for, 463
  Composite drawing, 530
  Concussion of brain, 574
  Condy's fluid, 464
  Consequences, game of, 530
  Constipation, 468, 568 ; in children, 484
  Construction of house, 3
  Consultations, 551
  Continent, hohdays on the, 502 ; hotels on, 503 ;
  
  pensions on, 503
  Convalescence, 556
  
  Convalescent homes for gentlewomen, 701
  Convent education, 494
  
  Conversation, the art of, 352 ; topics for, 352
  Convtilsions, treatment for, 484
  Cook, the, 48 ; duties of, 49, 50
  Cookers, electric, kinds of, 97
  Cookery classes, 659 ; guide to, 11 6-235 ;
  
  teachers, dress of, 660 ; teaching of, 659
  Cooking by electricity, 97 ; on oil-stoves, 97
  Cooks, lady, 661
  Coral stitching, 397
  Cornice poles, 22
  Corns, destruction of, 568
  Corset, the, 451
  Costvunes, outdoor, 303
  Cot, baby's, 469
  Cottages, country, 501
  Cotton material, how to darn, 411
  Cough, 569
  
  Counter clerks in post office, 679
  Counterpanes, 259
  
  Country, hohdays in, 501 ; house parlies. 336
  Court dress, 360 ; presentation at, 358, 359
  Covenants, 379
  Covers, toilet, 260
  Cradle, baby's, 469 ; bed, 560
  Crafts for women, 682
  Cramp, 569
  
  Cream, treatment of, 101 ; ices, 209
  Creams, opera, how to make, 674 ; various kinds
  
  of, 201-204
  Credit, 367
  Creepers, 598
  Crests, 354
  
  Cricket, rules for game, 544
  Crimping of Unen, 283
  Crocuses, 588
  Croquet, 546
  Croup, treatment of, 484
  Crown, the, 706
  Crullers, 217
  Crumpets, 215
  
  
  726
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  Cuffs, how to \rii8h, 298
  
  Cup, spit, 563
  
  Cupboard for boots, 610
  
  Curling-pins, use of, 459
  
  Curtains, 21 ; arrangement of, 22 ; casement, 22 ;
  
  how to make, 610 ; how to wash, 291 ; the
  
  drop, 526 ; various kinds, 610
  Cushions, air, 553 ; water, 553
  Custard, caramel, 204 ; chocolate, 205 ; orange,
  
  206
  " Customs," inspection by, 506
  Cutlery for table, 236
  
  Dadoes, 15
  
  DaffodUs, 588
  
  DahUa, the, 592
  
  Dairy work for women, 664
  
  Damp, cause of , 4
  
  Dances, etiquette of, 340 ; fashionable, 341 ;
  
  invitations to, 332 ; various kinds, 342
  Dancing mistress, 689 ; value of art of, 491
  Darning, the art of, 408, 410, 412
  Deaf, teaching of, 618
  Death, 566
  
  Deaths, registration of, 376
  Debt, actions for, 370 ; recovery of, 370
  D6but of daughter, 495
  Decoration of church, 360 ; of houses, 667 ; of
  
  table, 253
  Degrees, medical, 634
  Dental hospitals, 640
  Dentistry for women, 640
  Deposit account, the, 366
  
  Designing of advertisements, 687 ; of garden,
  649 ; of posters, 687
  
  Dialogues, 526
  
  Diamonds, how to clean, 312
  
  Diarrhoea, 669 ; in children, 484
  
  Diet, AUenbury, 656 ; and health, 452 ; chart
  for baby, 478 ; for patients, 556 ; in convales-
  cence, 657 . .
  
  Dining-room, colour schemes for, 15 ; furnishing
  of, 26
  
  Dinner invitations, 332 ; party, 240 ; service,
  238
  
  Dinners, etiquette of, 337 ; serving, 238, 239
  
  Discharge of bankrupt, 370
  
  Diseeises, infectious, 382
  
  Dislocation, 574
  
  Dispensing, 639
  
  Distemper, 14
  
  Distempering, 605
  
  Distress Amendment Act, 381
  
  " Distress," levy of, 380
  
  Divinations by tarocs, 540
  
  Djibbah, the, 497
  
  Doctor, the, 473, 660 ; and consultations, 881
  
  Doctors, cost of training, 634 ; women as, 633-
  646
  
  Dog collars, 385, 609; kennels, 608; licences,
  385
  
  Dogs, ailments of, 610 ; and railway companies,
  386 ; exercise for, 509 ; how to feed, 508 ;
  management of, 507 ; various kinds of, 507
  
  Domestic science, 658-664
  
  Domicile, 374
  
  Dominoes and fortune telling, 639
  
  Door-steps, cleaning of, 73
  
  Drain pipes, 6
  
  
  Drainage, 6 ; earth systam, 6 ; testing, 6
  
  Dramatic profession, the, 684 ; schools, 685
  
  Drawers for baby, 473 ; how to iron psur of,
  285
  
  Drawing, black and white, 687 ; fashion, 688
  
  Drawing-room, colour schemes for, 15 ; fur-
  nishing of, 23, 24
  
  Dress, accessories of, 311; allowances, 319;
  allowances, specimens, 320 ; buying at sales,
  319 ; collars, 311 ; etiquette of, 335 ; for
  holidays, 502 ; for nurse, 549 ; for presenta-
  tion at Court, 360 ; for woman worker, 305 ;
  its choice and care, 301-324, evening, 304 ;
  morning, 429 ; style and colour, 302
  
  Dress bodice, how to wash, 294
  
  Dresses, dinner, 304 ; summer, 304 ; theatre, 304
  
  Dressing, the art of, 301
  
  Dressing-gown, 430
  
  Dressmaking, 668 ; at home, 419-431 ; general
  hints, 426 ; tools for, 420
  
  Dressing-room, decoration of, 32
  
  Drill, teaching of, 621
  
  Drivers, licence of, 385
  
  Driving, etiquette when, 327
  
  Drowning, 574
  
  Druggists, women, 639
  
  Duck, roast, 177
  
  Ducks, how to choose, 112
  
  Dumb crambo, game of, 529
  
  Dust-bin, kinds of, 94
  
  Dusting, directions for, 63
  
  Duty, house, 382
  
  Dyspepsia, 570
  
  Ear-ache, 569
  
  Ears, care of the, 464 ; foreign body in, 575
  
  Earwigs, destruction of, 601
  
  Eating, etiquette of, 327
  
  Editing, sub, 627
  
  Editor, exchange, 625 ; society, 625
  
  Editors, women as, 624
  
  Education of children, 489 ; university, 493
  
  Egg cutlets, 185 ; drink for invalids, 669
  
  Egg-plant, how to cook, 152
  
  Eggs d. la Chartres, 183 ; depots for collecting,
  
  655 ; in bread sauce, 183 ; poached, 185 ;
  
  scrambled, 185 ; treatment of, 101 ; with
  
  green peas, 184 ; with shrimp sauce, 184 ;
  
  with tomatoes, 184
  Electric hght, 9 ; fittings, 10
  Electricity, cooking by, 97 ; in nurse's work, 646
  Electrolysis, 451
  Electro-plate, 237
  Embroidery by hand, 426
  Empire Day, 708
  EnameUing, 689 ; of wood, 606
  Endive, how to cook, 152
  Endowments for children, 371
  Enema, castor oil, 561 ; glycerine, 662 ; olive
  
  oil, 561 ; salt, 501 ; starch and opium, 561 ;
  
  turpentine, 561
  Enemata, 561 ; nutrient, 562
  Engagements, 345 ; breaking oft of, 345
  Entertaining, etiquette of, 337
  Entertainment, indoor, 524
  Entertainments for charity, 641
  Epilepsy, 575
  Eschscholtzias, 585
  Estate agent's commission, 383
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  727
  
  
  Etiquette, general hints on, 328 ; guide to, 325-
  361 ; for visitor, 333 ; in olden times, 326 ;
  of eating, 327 ; of introductions, 328 ; of the
  table, 327 ; of to-day, 327 ; of visiting, 335 ;
  of visiting cards, 329 ; out of doors, 327 ;
  wedding, 345 ; when dri\nng, 327
  
  Examinations for teachers, 616
  
  Exchange editor, 625
  
  Excise licences, 384, 385
  
  Exercise, value of, 454
  
  Exercises, chart of, 455 ; physical, 454-456
  
  Executors of will, 375
  
  Eye, cure of black, 574 ; foreign body in, 575
  
  Eyes, care of the, 462
  
  Eyebrows as aids to beauty, 463
  
  Eye-cup, use of the, 463
  
  Eyelashes as aids to beauty, 463
  
  Eyelet holes, 402
  
  Face, the steam bath, 451 ; how to wash the,
  449 ; massage of, 450 ; use of powder for,
  465
  
  Factory inspectorships, 680
  
  Fainting, 575
  
  Fan fight, the game of, 533
  
  Farmers, women as, 652
  
  Fashion and dress, 301 ; drawing, 688
  
  Fastenings, 400
  
  Feather stitching, 397
  
  Feathers, how to wash, 318 ; sewing on of,
  439
  
  " Feeding charts," 477
  
  Feet, care of the, 464
  
  FeUing of garments, 390
  
  Ferns, 599
  
  Fever, hay, 570
  
  Finger, crushed, 573
  
  Fire, conduct on outbreak of, 85
  
  Fire-guard, the, 474
  
  Fireplaces, cleaning of, 64, 65
  
  Fires, how to light, 65
  
  " First Aid," 548-579
  
  Fish cakes, 133 ; calendar of same in season. 111,
  112 ; cream, 133 ; curry, 134 ; custard
  puddings, 134 ; cutlets, 134 ; how to boil, 130 ;
  how to broil, 131 ; how to choose, HI ; how
  to clean, 130 ; how to fry, 130 ; how to serve,
  248 ; how to skin and fillet, 131 ; how to steam,
  130 ; omelet, 134 ; pie (Russian), 139 ; pies,
  136 ; puddings, 135 ; rules for cooking, 130 ;
  scalloped, 136 ; smoked, 136 ; steamed for
  invalids, 558 ; treatment of, 100 ; various
  kinds, 131-140
  
  Fixtures, landlord's and tenant's, 380
  
  Flageolets, how to cook, 15'J!
  
  Flannel seams, 393
  
  Flannels, how to wash, 287 ; prevention of
  shrinking, 288
  
  Fleas, extermination of, 79
  
  Flies, fcxt-ermination of, 80
  
  Flooring, 18
  
  Floor-cloth, cleaning of, 66, 67 ; coverings, 18
  
  Floors, polished, care of, 66 ; scrubbing of, 66 ;
  staining of, 607 ; tiled, care of, 67
  
  Florists, women as, 651
  
  Flowering plants, 600
  
  Flowers for decoration, 253 ; sewing on hats of,
  440
  
  Fomentation, laudanum, 566 ; turpentine, 566
  
  
  Food and health, 452 ; and the kitchen, 87-115 ;
  
  Benger's, 556 ; patients', 556 ; treatment of,
  
  100
  Footman, the, 64
  Forks, care of, 76
  
  Foreign languages, teaching of, 618
  Forfeits, 529
  
  Fortune telling by cards, 538 ; by dominoes, 639
  Foundations, 3
  Fowl, curried, 177 ; fric"i8s6e of, 176 ; how to
  
  roast a, 175 ; how to serve, 247 ; how to steam
  
  a, 176
  Fowls, keeping of, 517-523
  Fractures, 576
  " Free Lance," the, 627
  Fritters, various kinds of, 195
  Frock for baby, 473 ; the yoke, 496
  Frost-bite, 576
  Fruit and the complexion, 453 ; bottling of, 228,
  
  232-235; calendar of same in season, 114;
  
  how to choose, 114; how to serve, 256;
  
  marzipan, how to make, 673 ; preserving of,
  
  228 ; salads, 206, 207 ; storage of, 102
  Fuchsias, 597
  Fuel, kitchen, 98
  Funerals, formalities of, 350
  Furnished house, letting, 40
  Furnishing, estimates of, 35
  Furniture, arrangement of, 24 ; cleaning of, 63 ;
  
  choice of, 16 ; distinctive styles in, 34 ; pur-
  chase of, 17
  Fur, how to cut, 442 ; how to join, 442 ; in
  
  millinery, 442
  Furs, 307 ; how to clean, 319 ; storing away of,
  
  315
  
  Game, calendar of same in season, 113 ; how to
  choose, 112 ; how to serve, 247 ; salmi of, 178 ;
  treatment of, 100
  
  Games for parlour, 529-536 ; indoor, 524 ; out-
  door, 542-547 ; teaching of, 621
  
  Garden annuals, 581 ; arrangement of beds, 584 ;
  borders, 590 ; designing, 649 ; fences, 597 ;
  parties, invitations to, 332 ; the suburban,
  580 ; tools, 602, G03 ; walls, 597
  
  Gardeners, 531 ; lady, 647
  
  Gswdening, French, 651 ; Glynde School of, 648 ;
  home, 580-603 ; jobbing, 650 ; landscape,
  649 ; market, 650 ; schools of, 647 ; teachers
  of, 651
  
  Gas escapes, 608 ; fittings, 10 ; heating by, 11 ;
  stoves, 95
  
  Gathering of garments, 390
  
  Geese, how to choose, 112
  
  General information, 719
  
  General Post, game of, 531
  
  Goneral servant, 53
  
  Gentlemen's cards, 331
  
  Gentry, how to address, 364
  
  Geranium, the, 596
  
  Gingerbread, 221
  
  Ginger tablet, how to make, 673
  
  Girl clerkships in post office, 679
  
  Girls, accomplishments for, 491 ; Christian names,
  meaning of, 712
  
  Glass for table, 237, 238 ; washing of, 75
  
  Glaze, how to make, 119
  
  Gloves, 309, 310 ; baby's, 473 ; how to keep clean,
  305 ; how to mend, 417 ; how to wash, 295
  
  
  728
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  Glycerine enema, 5fi2
  
  Goffering of linen, 284
  
  Golf, 547
  
  Goloshes, 310
  
  Goose, how to serve, 247 ; roast, 177
  
  Governess, the, 492, 619
  
  Gowns, evening, 305 ; for balls, 304
  
  Grafting in repairing garments, 410
  
  Grass plota, 581
  
  Green-fly, destruction of, 601
  
  Groceries, ordering of, 106 ; storing of, 104
  
  Grubs, destruction of, 602
  
  Gruel, oatmeal, 559
  
  Guest, etiquette of, 335
  
  Gum-boil, 570
  
  Gymnastics, teaohing of, 621 ; value of, 491
  
  HAEMORRHOIDS, 571
  
  Hair brushes, choice of, 456
  
  Hair, care of patient's, 554 ; care of the, 456 ;
  dyeing the, 458 ; how to comb the, 456 ; how
  to dreae the, 459 : how to strengthen growth,
  458 ; how to wash the, 457 ; lotions, 458 ;
  use of false, 458 ; waving and curling of the,
  459
  
  Hairdressing, 669 ; styles of, 460
  
  Hall boy, the, 55
  
  Hall, cleaning of, 60 ; coloiir schemes for, 16 ;
  furnishing of, 25
  
  Ham, how to boil a, 172
  
  Handicrafts for home workers, 689
  
  Hands, care of the, 461 ; how to dry the, 461 ;
  how to keep clean, 461
  
  Hare, jugged, 179
  
  Hares, how to choose, 113
  
  Hat, a river or country, 440 ; baby boy's, 445 ;
  for little girl, 445
  
  Hats, 308 ; care of, 314 ; care of men's, 316 ;
  how to clean felt, 318 ; straw, 318, 442, 443 ;
  straw, how to cover brim, 443 ; straw,
  trimming of, 443
  
  Headache, 670
  
  Head-hnings, 432
  
  Health and cleanliness, 447 ; and diet, 452 ;
  and exercise, 449 ; and food, 452 ; how to
  retain, 447 ; importance of good, 447 ; in-
  fluence on appearance, 447 ; visitors, 637
  
  Heartburn, 468, 670
  
  Height of men and women, relative, 714
  
  Hemming of garments, 389
  
  Hem-stitching, 399
  
  Hen-house, the, 517
  
  Hens, keeping of, 617
  
  Herbs, storage of, 102
  
  Herring-boning, 397
  
  Hiccough, 570
  
  Hieroglyphics, game of, 533
  
  Hire-purchase system, the, 383
  
  Hoarseness, 570
  
  Hockey, rules for game, 545
  
  Holiday abroad, the, 501 ; the annual, 498 ; the
  woman worker's, 500 ; dress for, 502 ; in the
  country, 501 ; on the continent, 502 ; the
  children's, 499 ; the question of, 498, 500
  
  Holland, how to wash, 294
  
  Home nursing, 548-579
  
  Home workers, handicrafts for, 689
  
  Honeysuckles, 598
  
  Hooks, how to fasten, 401
  
  
  Horticulture, schools of, 047 ; women in, 647-
  657
  
  Hospital nursing, 641
  
  Hospitals, dental, 640 ; for gentlewomen, 701 ;
  list of chief London, 642 ; hst of lying-in,
  646
  
  Hostess, etiquette of, 336
  
  Hotch-potch, 121
  
  Hotels, continental, 503
  
  Hot-water pipes, 12 ; supply, 7
  
  House, the, 1
  
  House-agent's commission, 383 ; women as, 667
  
  House, aspect of, 5 ; decoration, 12, 13, 14, 667 ;
  duty, 382 ; furnished, 381 ; general condition
  of, 12 ; heating of, 10 ; lease of, 1 ; locality
  for, 2 ; on shutting up a, 85 ; purchase of, 1 ;
  site, 3
  
  House versus flat, 2
  
  House of Commons, 707 ; of Lords, 706
  
  Household accounts, payment of, 365 ; ex-
  penses, 365 ; repairs, 604-614 ; Work, guide
  to, 58
  
  Housekeeper, the, 54
  
  Housekeepers, 662
  
  Housekeeping without a servant, 56, 57
  
  Housemaid, the, 50, 51
  
  House-parlourmaid, duties of, 51
  
  Housewifery, 41, 660 ; teaching of, 659
  
  Housing Act, 380
  
  Hyacinths, 588
  
  Hygiene, importance of, 447
  
  Hysterics, fit of, 577
  
  ICB applications, 566
  
  Ice-cream, 207, 209
  
  Iced, puddings, 210
  
  Ices, 207 ; cream, 209 ; how to serve, 210 ;
  water, 208
  
  Icings, 225, 226, 227
  
  Illness, symptoms of child's, 483
  
  Incandescent g€is, 9
  
  Income, allotment of, 302
  
  Indexing, 631
  
  Indigestion, 670
  
  Infants' clothing, washing of, 297
  
  Infectious cases, 555 ; diseases, 382
  
  Infirmary nurses, 643
  
  Infiuenza, 670
  
  Inhalations, 562
  
  Injection, saline, 662
  
  Insects, destruction of, 601
  
  Inspectors, factory, 680 ; medical school, 637 ;
  sanitary, 637 ; school, 681 ; under Poor Law,
  680
  
  Insurance, 370-374 ; accident, 372 ; burglary,
  374 ; endowment, 371 ; fire, 373 ; Govern-
  ment, 372 ; interest, 372 ; of servants, 373 ;
  with profits, 371
  
  Insure, how to, 372
  
  Interest, how to reckon, 366 ; insiu-ance, 372
  
  Intestacy of husband, 375 ; wife, 376
  
  Introduction, letters of, 329 ; etiquette of, 328
  
  Invalid, consideration for, 554
  
  Invitations, 332, 333 ; acceptance and refusal
  of, 332 ; general hints, 333
  
  Iron-stand, 274
  
  Ironing boards, 274 ; general directions, 280 ;
  irons for laundry work, 273, 274
  
  Ivory, cleaning of, 73
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  " Jaegbb " xinderwear, the, 451
  
  Jam, hints on making, 228 ; varioua kinds of,
  
  230
  Jasmine, 598
  Jellies, 199, 200 ; hints on making, 228 ; how to
  
  make French, 673
  Jelly, apple, 229 ; aspic, 176 ; coffee, 200 ;
  
  orange, 201 ; port wine, 201 ; with bananas,
  
  Jewellery, 312
  
  Joumahsm, 623 ; training for, 628
  
  Judges, how to address, 355
  
  Kennels, dog, 508
  
  Kettle, steam, 562
  
  Kidneys, curry of, 171 ; gi-illed, 171
  
  Kindergarten teaching, 618
  
  Kitchen, how to clean, 91 ; how to furnish, 87 ;
  
  price list of utensils, 90 ; range, the, 89 •
  
  utensils, 90
  Kitchen-maid, the, 55
  Knickerbockers, washing of, 299
  Kjiives, care of, 76
  
  Labour Exchange Acts, 681
  
  Lace bows, 438
  
  Lace, cleaning of, 317 ; how to wash, 290 ; quills.
  
  Lace-making, 690
  
  Lady ccoks, 661 ; salaries of, 661 ; servants,
  660
  
  Lady's maid, the, 54
  
  Lamb cutlets, 172
  
  Lamb, how to choose, 107 ; how to serve, 246 ;
  use of different joints, 110
  
  Lamb's fry, 172
  
  Lamps, care of, 77 ; gas, 10 ; oil, 10
  
  Land tax, 383
  
  Landings, furnishing of, 25, 26
  
  Landlord and tenant, law of, 378
  
  Landscape gardening, 649
  
  Languages, teaching of foreign, 618
  
  Larder, the, 99 ; economy in, 101
  
  Laundry -maid, the, 55
  
  Laundry manageress, 662 ; utensils, 272-275 ;
  price list of, 276 ; work, guide to, 271-300 •
  teaching of, 659 ; training in, 662 '
  
  Lavatory, cleaning of, 61
  Lawn tennis, 542
  
  Layette, the, 470 ; on making the, 471
  Leather work, 690
  Leases, 379
  
  Lecturers, women as, 619
  Ledger, the, 364
  Leeks, how to cook, 153
  Legal guide, 362-386 ; notes, 374
  Lentils, how to cook, 154
  Letter-writirg, the art of, 353
  Letters, business, 353 ; of condolence, 351 : of
  
  introduction, 329
  Letting a fximished house, 40
  " Lever embossing press," 354
  Liabihty, husband's, 374
  
  Library, colour schemes tor, 16 : furnishine of
  29; work, 631 * '
  
  Lice, destruction of. 571
  Licences, 384, 385
  Lighting, 8 ; artificial, 8
  
  
  729
  
  
  Lmen, crimping of, 283; airing of, 284; cup-
  board, the, 264, 267 ; drying of, 279 ; estimates
  of prices of, 268-270 ; folding of, 279, 284 • for
  bed, 257; goffering of, 284; how to dam,
  411 ; how to mark, 265, 405, 406; inventory
  266 ; press, 264 ; household, 257 ; manghng
  of, 279 ; mending of, 267 ; scenting of, 265 •
  table, 262 ; washing of, 278
  Linings, 432
  
  Linoleum, 21 ; cleaning of, 66 ; how to lay. 610
  Literary work, 623-630
  Literature for children, 487
  Loan funds for women, 701
  Lobehas, 596
  Lobster cutlets, 137
  Local Government, 699
  Lodger's property, 381
  
  London, cathedrals, churches, &c., 702 ; flats
  and residential chambers, 701 ; memorials
  monuments, 702 ; museums, 702 ; official
  buildings, 704 ; places of entertainment, 704 ;
  places of interest in, 701 ; principal theatres,
  /03 ; residential homes and clubs, 700
  Lounge hall, the, 26
  
  Luggage, treatment of, 335 ; question of, 504
  Lumbago, 571
  Luncheons, 251 ; etiquette of, 338
  
  Macaroons, 219, 220
  
  Machine, the sewing, 417
  
  Machines for washing, 272
  
  Magazine illustration, 687
  
  Maintenance, ^egal notes on, 374. 376
  
  Mangle, the, 272
  
  Manicure, 461
  
  Manners, as mark of good breeding, 325
  
  Mantelpiece decoration, 22 ; drapery, 609
  
  Manuscripts, sending of, 626
  
  Marble, cleaning of, 71
  
  " Marcelle " wave of hair, the, 469
  
  Marigolds, 586
  
  Market gardening, 650
  
  Marketing, hints for, 105
  
  Marmalade, 230, 231
  
  Marriage by banns, 345; by ordinary Ucence,
  346 ; by registrar, 346 ; by special hcenoe,
  346 ; expenses, 347 ; fees, 346 ; forms of,
  345 ; settlement, 374 ; in Scotland, 346
  
  Marzipan potatoes, how to make, 674
  
  Massage, 450, 451 ; for scalp, 457 ; in nurse's
  
  work, 646
  Matrons, 662
  
  Matting, Indian, cleaning of, 67
  Mattresses, care of, 68 ; covers, 268 ; how to
  
  remake wool, 608
  Mayors, how to address, 355
  
  Meat, boiling of, 166 ; braising of, 166 ; broil-
  ing or griUing, 167 ; calendar, 108 ; dishes,
  165-183; frozen. 111; frying of, 166; how
  to bake or roast, 165 ; how to choose, 107 ;
  how to glaze, 119 ; scallops, 180 ; steaming of,
  166 ; stewing of, 167 ; treatment of, 100 ;
  use of different joints, 108; \vith pastrv.
  181-183 ''
  
  Medical aid societies, 701 ; degrees open to
  women, 634 ; missionaries, 637 ; school in-
  spectors, 637
  Medicine as a profession, 633-646 ; chest, 679 ;
  glasses, 563
  
  
  730
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  Medicines, 863, 064
  
  Mending and sewing (plain), 387-418 ; the art
  
  of, 407
  Mental nursing, 644
  Menu, drawing up a, 243
  Metal goods, cleaning of, 75
  Metal work, 689 ; and enamelling, training for,
  
  689
  Mice, extermination of, 79, 602
  Midwife, the, 473
  Midwifery, 644
  
  Midwives Act, the, 645 ; salaries of, 645
  Mignonette, 586
  Migraine, 567
  
  Mildew, how to remove, 277
  Milk, Horlick's malted, 556 ; treatment of, 101
  Millinery, 668 ; children's, 444 ; equipment,
  
  432 ; home, 432-446 ; preliminaries of, 435
  Mincemeat, 198
  Mince pies, 198
  Ministry, the, 707
  Mirrors, cleaning of, 72
  Missing ring, game of, 635
  Missionaries, medical, 637
  Mistress and servants, 41-57 ; duties of the,
  
  41
  Money equivalents in travelling, 503 ; foreign
  
  and colonial, 719 ; management of, 362-386
  Money orders, foreign and colonial, 717 ; inland,
  
  717
  Morning-room, furnishing of, 28
  Motherhood, preparing for, 466, 467
  Mother's requirements, the, 468
  Moths, extermination of, 79
  Motor cars, hcences for, 384 ; registration of,
  
  385 ; regulations for light, bells, &c., 385
  Mourning cards, 352
  Mourning, formaUties of, 350 ; notepaper, 352 ;
  
  periods of, 351
  Mouth, care of child's, 481
  Muffs, 443 ; black satin and fur, 444 ; fashions
  
  in, 443
  Mushrooms, 154
  Music, Royal Academy of, 683 ; Royal College
  
  of, 683 ; teachers of, 683 ; training in, 683
  Musical chairs, game of, 530
  Musical profession, the, 682
  Muslin, how to mend, 418 ; how to wash, 289
  Mutton cutlets, 171
  Mutton, how to choose, 107 ; how to serve, 246 ;
  
  roast shoulder, 170; scrambled, 180; use of
  
  difierent joints, 110
  
  Naits, care of child's, 481 ; care of finger, 461 ;
  
  how to manicure the, 462
  Name divinations, game of, 534
  Napkins, 472
  Narcissi, 588
  Nasturtiums, 685
  Nature study, teewjhers of, 651
  Navy, how to address officers of, 355 ; nurses in
  
  the, 643
  Neck, cure of stiff, 573 ; how to whiten, 450 ;
  
  massage of, 450
  Needlework, 690
  Net, how to wash, 291
  Neuralgia, 871
  
  Night-dress, how to iron a. 287
  Nobihty, how to address, 354
  
  
  Non-political associations, women's, 699
  Nose bleeding, 576 ; foreign body in, 576
  Note-paper, choice of, 354 ; how to stamp, 354
  Notice, on giving, 381
  Nurse, the, 475, 476, 549 ; and night duty, 650 ;
  
  children's, 661 ; choice and qualifications,
  
  476 ; co-operation, 645 ; day's work, 555 ;
  
  dress of, 549 ; duties of, 476 ; in army, 643 ;
  
  in colonies, 646 ; in infirmaries, 643 ; in
  
  navy, 643 ; monthly, 473 ; professional, 650 ;
  
  training of hospital, 641 ; village, 646
  Nursery, the, 474, 475
  Nursery College, Hampstead, 477
  Nursery cupboard, 474
  Nursery, fiumiture of, 474 ; recipes, 478 ; rusk,
  
  479 ; the night, 476
  Nursing as a profession, 633-646 ; district, 646 ;
  
  home, 548-579 ; infectious cases, 555 ; menttJ,
  
  644 ; private, 645
  Nut omelet, 165
  Nuts and nut foods, 164
  
  Oatmbsal gruel, 659
  
  Office, typewriting, 675
  
  " Official receiver," the, 370
  
  Oil fittings, 10
  
  Olive-oil enema, 661
  
  Omelet, cheese, 186 ; ham, 186 ; plain, 185 ;
  
  savoury, 186
  Oven, regulation of, 213 ; gas, 96
  Overalls, 313 ; child's, 496
  Overcasting for sesuns, 391
  Overdrafts, 368
  Ox-tail, haricot of, 169
  Oyster souffles, 138
  
  Pack, hot and cold, 664
  
  Packing, hints on, 506
  
  Paint brushes, 606
  
  Paint, how to wash, 70
  
  Painting, 14 ; of wood, 606
  
  Palms, 599
  
  Palpitation of heart, 671
  
  Pancakes, 192
  
  PanelUng, 15
  
  Pansies, 593
  
  Pantry, the, 236
  
  Papering of rooms, 604
  
  Papiers poudr6s, 465
  
  Parlour games, 529-536
  
  Parlour-maid, the, 52
  
  Parqueterie, 18
  
  Parrots, care of, 614 ; kinds of, BIB
  
  Parties, boating, 344 ; children's, 342 ; Christ-
  mas, 636 ; dinner, 240 ; etiquette of evening,
  339; garden, 342; invitations to garden, 332;
  juvenile, 342 ; tea, novel, 537
  
  Partridge, braised, 177 ; broiled, 178
  
  Party government, 707
  
  Pass-book, the, 367
  
  Peltry, genoise, 217 ; flaky, 163 ; how to make,
  162; puff, 1(53 ; rovigh -puff, 164 ; short crust,
  164 ; suet, 164 ; to make patty cases, 166
  
  Patches, various kinds of, 413, 414
  
  Patching, method of, 412
  
  Patient, care of the, 551 ; food for, 556 ; how to
  feed helpless, 557 ; treatment for insensible,
  554 ; hau-, care of, 554 ; teeth, care of, 553 ;
  toilet, the, 653
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  731
  
  
  Patterns for dressmaking, 419, 426 ; illustrations
  
  of, 426, 427
  Patties, sweetbread, 183
  Paying-in book, the, 367
  Peas, green, how to cook, 153 ; sweet, 688
  Pease pudding, 155
  Pelargoniums, 596
  Pen, play, 474
  Pensions, continental, 603
  Peppermint creams, how to make, 674 ; cushions,
  
  how to make, 674
  Persons of rank, how to address, 354
  Pests, extermination of, 78
  Pets, home, 607-576
  Petticoats, 307 ; how to wash cotton, 294 ; the
  
  baby's, 473
  Pharmaceutical society, 639
  Pharmacy, 639
  
  Philanthropic societies, 699 ; work, 691 ; train-
  ing for, 691
  Photography as an art, 688
  Piano, care of, 73 ; choice of a, 25
  Picnics, 343
  
  Pictures, cleaning of, 71
  Pie, chicken, 182; pigeon, 182; Roman, 182;
  
  mince, 198
  Pigeon for invalids, 659
  Pigeons, how to choose, 112
  Pilches, 472
  Piles, 671
  Pillow shams, 269 ; slips, 258 ; how to remake
  
  feather, 608
  Pinafores, washing of, 298
  Pipes, burst, 607
  Piping, method of, 394
  Plackets, 424
  Plants for decoration, 253 ; for rooms, 699 ; for
  
  suburban garden, 681 ; for windows, 599
  Play, the pastoral, 627
  Play-pen, 474
  
  Plays, choice of, 626 ; for " grown-ups," 527
  Pleating, method of, 404 ; various kinds of, 404,
  
  405
  Pneumatic gas switch, 9
  Poisoning, cases of, 677
  Poisons, kinds of, 577
  Political associations, 699
  Politics, women in, 696
  Poor Law inspectors, 680
  Poppies, 586
  Pork cutlets, 172
  Pork, how to choose, 107 ; bow to serve, 247 ;
  
  use of different joints. 111
  Postage, inland rates of, 714 ; foreign and
  
  colonial, 715
  Postal information, 714 ; orders, 717
  Poster designing, 687
  Post-office clerks, 678 ; employment in, 678 ;
  
  savings bank, 369
  Potato chips, 166 ; fritter, 156 ; pie (sweet), 168
  Potatoes, now to steam, 155 ; mashed, 156 ;
  
  new, 156
  Poudr^s, papiers, 465
  Poultice, bread, 566 ; charcoal, 666 ; jacket,
  
  665 ; linseed, 565 ; linseed and mustard, 665 ;
  
  mustard, 565
  Poultices, 666, 666
  Poultry, breeding of, 620 ; calendar of same in
  
  season, 113 ; common ailments, 622, 623 ;
  
  
  cooking of, 100 ; fattening of, 521 ; food,
  618, 519; how to buy, 519; how to carve,
  247; how to choose, 112; how to feed, 518,
  619 ; how to kill, 622 ; keeping, 517-523 ;
  keeping for women, 656 ; runs for, 618 ;
  varieties of, 520
  
  Poultry Organisation Society, 656
  
  Precedence, rules of, 356
  
  Pregnancy, 466, 467
  
  Presentation at Court, 358
  
  Preserve fruits, how to, 228
  
  Press for trousers, 316
  
  Primroses, 693
  
  Printers' technical terms, 709
  
  Prints, how to wash, 293
  
  Professions for women, 615
  
  Prolapse, treatment for, 485
  
  Pronunciation, 352
  
  Property Acts, Married Women's, 374
  
  Property of lodgers, 381 ; of married women, 374
  
  Proverbs, game of, 631
  
  Provisions, ordering of, 106
  
  Pruning of shrubs, 683
  
  PubUc work, employment in, 680
  
  Pudding, cabinet, 190 ; Chester, 190 ; chocolate,
  191 ; Christmas plum, 191 ; date, 191 ; fig,
  191 ; ginger, 192 ; orange, 198 ; Yorkshire,
  193 ; hot, 190 ; iced, 210
  
  Pulley for patient, 560
  
  Pulse, the, 663
  
  Puppies, care of, 609
  
  Pur6e3, 124-129; vegetable, 125, 129; with
  nuts, 126
  
  QuARANTiNB officers, 637
  Quilling, 437
  
  Quills, lace, 438 ; sewing on of, 439
  Quilts, how to wash, 289
  Quinsy, 572
  
  Rabbits, how to choose, 113 ; stewed, 178
  Radiators, electric, 11
  Radiotelegraphic service, 718
  Railway tickets, coupon, 602
  Rates, 379 ; gas, 383 ; water, 383
  Rat", extermination of, 80
  Reading aloud, the art of, 353
  Reading for children, 487
  " Receiving Order," the, 370
  Recreations, 524r-547
  
  Refuse, removal of, 6 ; treatment of kitchen, 94
  Registry office, 44
  Relief work, 16
  Removal, notice of, 381
  Removals, how to conduct, 83-85
  Rent, 379
  
  Repairs to property, 380
  Reporting, social, 625
  Respiration, 563
  Rhubarb mould, 206
  
  Ribbon, how to finish ends of, 438 ; rosettes, 439
  Ribs, broken, 677
  Rice, to boil for curries, 157
  Ring, fixed (removal of), 577
  Ringworm, 485
  Rissoles, 180
  
  Roller-skating carnival, 642
  Roses, 682, 593 ; kinds of, 595 ; priming of, 594
  soil for, 694
  
  
  732
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  Rosettes, how to make, 437 ; kinds of, 439 ; of
  narrow ribbon, 439 ; ribbon, 439 ; silk, 439 ;
  tulle, 439
  
  Rouleau, a, 433 ; sowing on of, 440
  
  Rounders, game of, 546
  
  Royal Family, the, 705
  
  Royal palaces, 705
  
  Royalty, how to address, 354
  
  Ruching, 436 ; sewing of, 440
  
  Rugs, cleaning of, 62, 63
  
  Running of garments, 390
  
  Salad basket, 169
  
  Salad, cucumber, 161 ; dressing, 160 ; fish, 161 ;
  how to serve, 160 ; mixed, 162 ; oyster, 162 ;
  tomato, 162
  
  Salad -making, 159
  
  Salads, fruit, 206, 207 ; various kinds, 161, 162
  
  Sales, how to buy at, 319
  
  Salmon, 139
  
  Salsify (to fry), 157
  
  Sandwiches, 187-189 ; beef, 188 ; jam, 222 ;
  nut, 189 ; tomato, 189
  
  Sanitary inspectors, 637 ; regulations, 382
  
  Sauoe, anchovy, 141 ; apple, 141 ; apricot, 146 ;
  brandy, 146 ; bread, 142 ; butter, 142 ; caper,
  142 ; celery, 142 ; chestnut, 143 ; cranberry,
  143 ; custard, 146 ; directions for making,
  140 ; egg, 143 ; gooseberry, 143 ; horse-
  radish, 144 ; jam, 147 ; lemon, 147 ; melted
  butter, 144 ; mint, 144 ; mxishroom, 144 ;
  onion, 145 ; orange, 147 ; oyster, 145 ;
  parsley, 145 ; savoury, various kinds, 141-
  146 ; sweet, 146-147 ; tomato, 145
  
  Saucepans, kinds of, 90 ; the cleaning of, 92
  
  Scalds, cure of, 574
  
  Scalloping, 398
  
  Scalp massage, 457
  
  School attendance officers, 681
  
  School, choice of girls', 492 ; inspectors, 681 ;
  inspectors, medical, 637
  
  Schools, boys', 492 ; dramatic, 685 ; girls' high,
  494 ; grammar, 493 ; of art, 686 ; private,
  493, 494, 619 ; preparatory, 492 ; public, 493 ;
  secondary, 617
  
  Sciatica, 572
  
  Science, domestic, 658-664
  
  Scones (bread), 211-216; materials for, 211;
  various kinds, 215
  
  Scullery, how to fumiah, 87
  
  Scullery -maid, the, 55
  
  Seaming of garments, 390
  
  Sesuns, different calico, 391 ; flannel, 393 ; how
  to press, 425
  
  Seasons, the, 719
  
  Secretarial work, 630, 632 ; training for, 630
  
  Secretary to editor, 625
  
  Seed, how to sow, 584
  
  Servant and master, law as to, 376
  
  Servants, bedrooms of, 47 ; character giving
  to, 45 ; characters, 377 ; dismissal of, 377 ;
  duties of, 48 ; engaging of, 44 ; food allow-
  ances of, 45 ; hohdays of, 46 ; injuries, 377 ;
  lady, 660 ; licences for, 45, 384 ; on giving
  notice to, 377 ; treatment of, 46 ; wages of,
  45
  
  Serviettes, 263
  
  Serving, hints on, 244
  
  Sewing and mending (plain), 387-418
  
  
  Sewing-machine, the, 417
  
  Shadows, game of, 531
  
  Shawls, washing of, 288
  
  Sheets, materials for, 257 ; prica and size of, 267
  
  " Sheringham Valve," 8
  
  Shirts, how to wash, 296
  
  Shivering, 572
  
  Shoes, 309, 310 ; care of, 314 ; children's, 497 ;
  
  choice of, 452 ; cleaning of, 78
  Shortbread, 218, 223
  Shorthand typist, the, 665
  Shrimp patties, 139
  Shrubs, 582
  Sick, food for, 556
  
  Sick-room, the, 548, 549 ; ventilation of, 648
  Sickness, morning, 468
  Silk, how to mend, 417 ; how to wash, 292
  Silver, care of, 74, 75 ; for table, 236
  Sinks, cleaning of kitchen, 94
  Sitting-room, cleaning of, 59
  Size, how to make, 605
  Skating carnival, roller, 542
  Skin and complexion, the, 448
  Skin food, use of, 450
  Skirts, how to make, 422, 423
  Slang, avoidance of, 352
  Sleep, for children, 481 ; need of, 453 ; periods
  
  of, 453
  Sleeplessness, 468, 572
  Sleep-walking, 485
  Slops, emptying of, 68
  Slugs, destruction of, 602
  Smocks, washing of, 299
  Snowshoes, 310
  Soap for laundry work, 275
  Soap-jeUy, how to make, 287
  Social guide, 325-361 ; reporting, 625 ; work,
  
  691 ; training for, 691
  Societies and institutions, women's, 699
  Society editor, 625
  Socks, washing of, 288
  Soda for washing, 275
  Soil for shrubs, 583
  Soils, 3
  
  Sominambulism, 483
  Sorbets, 211
  Sore throat, 572
  Sorrel, 157
  
  Sorters in post office, 679
  Souffle, apple, 194 ; apricot, 194 ; how to make,
  
  193 ; lemon, 194
  Soup, almond, 126 ; artichoke, 125 ; bean, 127 ;
  
  cabbage, 122 ; calf's tail, 122 ; carrot, 125 ;
  
  chicken, 127 ; creana of barley, 128 ; fish,
  
  127 ; green vegetables, 129 ; haxe, 128 ; how
  
  to make, 116; lentil, 127; lettuce, 123;
  
  macaroni, 128 ; mock turtle, 123 ; onion, 126 ;
  
  oyster, 123 ; pea, 127 ; potato, 126 ; sorrel,
  
  124 ; tomato, 126 ; turtle, 124 ; various kinds
  
  of, 119, 120; vegetable marrow, 126;
  
  thickened, 122
  Spider, destruction of red, 601
  Spinach, 157
  
  Spinning and weaving, 690
  Spirits, care of, 105
  Spit-cups, 563
  Spitting blood, 677
  Splinters, 578
  Sponges, care of, 448
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  733
  
  
  Sponging, cold and tepid, 665
  
  Sprains, 578
  
  Spring cleaning, 80-83
  
  Stage, the, 684 ; training for the, 683
  
  Staining of floors, 607
  
  Stains, how to remove, 276, 317
  
  Staircase, cleaning of, 60 ; furnishing of, 25
  
  Stair rods, 21
  
  Stamps on policies of insurance, 372
  
  Starch, for laundry work, 276 ; how to make,
  
  280 ; use of, 280-282
  Steam, applied, 562 ; face bath, the, 451 ;
  
  kettle, 562
  Steel, cleaning of, 72
  " Sterihser " for fruit-bottling, 233
  Stew, Dutch, 171
  
  Stitches, fancy, 397 ; hints on simple, 388
  Stitching, 390
  Stock, how to make, 117
  Stock-pou, the, 118
  Stocking web tissue, 410
  Stockings, 311 ; children's, 497 ; the mending
  
  of, 408 ; washing of, 288
  Stocks, 586
  
  Stones, symbolism of precious, 312
  " Stoppeur," the, 417
  Store indicator, 103
  Store-room, arrangements of, 102
  Stoting, the use of, 416
  Stove, how to black-lead, 92
  Stoves, 11 ; care of, 77 ; cooking with oil, 97 ;
  
  gas, 95 ; gas, cleaning of, 97 ; gas, directions
  
  for use, 95, 96 ; oil, 12
  Stories, short, 626
  Strangulation, 578
  Strings, 402
  Stroke, 573
  
  Stroking of garments, 395
  Student teachers, 616
  Stye, cure of, 573
  Sub-editing, 627
  Sub-letting a house, on, 381
  Buet, how to choose, 108 ; how to keep, 100
  Suffocation by gas, 578
  Suffrage, women's, 697
  Sugars, coloured, 224
  Suits, boys' sailor, washing of, 299
  Sulphur bath, the, 289
  Sunstroke, 578
  Supper, how to serve, 252
  Sm'geons, women as, 638
  Suspenders, 311
  Sweet-naaking, 671
  Sweet recipes, 672-675
  Sweets, hot and cold, 189-211
  Syringe, Higginson's, 561
  
  
  Tablb, the, 236-256 ; cloths, 263 ; cutlery, 236
  decorations, 253 ; etiquette of the, 327
  Unen, 262 ; sotting the, 239 ; silver, 236
  serving at, 243, 244 ; waiting at, 241
  
  Tableaux vivants, 527
  
  Tacking of garments, 388
  
  Tact, 325
  
  Tapes, 402, 403
  
  Tapioca, for invalids, 559
  
  Tarocs, divinations by, game of, 540
  
  Tart, apple, 197 ; gooseberry, 197
  
  
  Tartlet cases, 199 ; chocolate, 197 ; strawberry,
  
  199
  Tax, land, 383
  Taxes, 379
  
  Tea, afternoon, 251 ; how to serve, 250
  Tea-parties, novel, 537 ;
  Tea-room, opening a, 670
  Tea sets, 238
  Teas, book, 537 ; etiquette of bridge, 339 ;
  
  general knowledge, 537
  Teachers in Scotland, 618 ; of domestic subjects,
  
  659 ; of gardening, 651 ; of nature study,
  
  651 ; high school, 617
  Teaching profession, the, 615
  Teeth, care of child's, 481 ; care of, 464 ; care of
  
  patient's, 553
  Teething, 484
  Telegrams, 532 ; cancelling, 717 ; inland, 717 ;
  
  foreign and colonial, 717
  Telegraph money orders, 717
  Telegraphists, 679
  Telephone exchanges, 718
  Telephones, 718 ; provincial system, 718
  Temperance associations, 700
  Temperature of body, 563
  Tenancies, varieties of, 378
  Tenancy, termination of, 381
  Tennis, lawn, 542
  Theatricals at home, 524, 525
  Thermometer, 719 ; clinical, 563
  Throat, sore, 572
  Thrush, 484
  
  Tickets, combined coupon, 502 ; season, 503
  Tidings, game of, 532
  Tie, how to wash gentleman's, 292
  Time, standard, 719
  
  Tips after sea voyages, 503 ; subject of, 336, 337
  Toe nails, care of, 464
  Tof?ee, how to make Russian, 674
  Toilet, the, 447-465 ; child's, 479 ; patient's, 653
  Toilet covers, 260
  Tomatoes, how to cook, 158
  Tongue, boiled, 170
  Tonsilitis, 572
  
  Tools for garden, 602, 603 ; for house, 604
  Toothache, 468, 573
  Tooth powder, 464
  Toques, flower, 441 ; fur, 442
  Tourists, advice to, 501
  Tours, general hints on, 303
  Towels, 260, 264 ; kitchen, 264
  Travel, 498-506 ; foreign, as an educator, 504 ;
  
  general hints on, 503 ; luggage in, 504
  Trays, Japanese, cleaning of, 72
  Trees for garden, 583
  Trimmings, 426 ; sewing of, 439
  Tripe with tomatoes, 170
  Trouser press, 315
  Trousseau, the bridal, 321 ; estimates of coat of,
  
  322
  Trunk, how to pack a, 506
  Tubs, washing, 272
  Tucking, method of, 393
  Tulips, 589
  Tunic, boy's, 496
  " Turban " coiffure, the, 460
  Turkey, how to choose, 112 ; how to serve, 247 ;
  
  roivst, ITS
  Turnips, how to cook, 159
  
  
  734
  
  
  INDEX
  
  
  Turpentine for laundry work, 276
  
  Tweed cloth, bow to mend, 416
  
  Type, sizes of, 711
  
  Typewriting ofifioe, opening a, 675 ; price list in,
  
  676 ; prospects in, 675 ; training in, 675
  Typist, the shorthand, 666 ; in civU service, 680
  
  
  Ulcbrs, how to cure child's, 484
  Umbrellas, care of, 314
  Underdo tiling, 306
  Underskirts, 307
  University education, 493, 494
  Upholstery, 604-614
  
  
  Vaccikation, 376
  
  Valet, the, 65
  
  Varicose veins, 573
  
  Vases, for table decoration, 284
  
  Veal and ham cutlets, 174 ; cream, 173 ; for
  
  invaUds, 558 ; galatine of, 175 ; how to
  
  choose, 108 ; how to serve, 247 ; jellied, 173 ;
  
  kidney, 174 ; oUves, 173 ; steamed, 173 ; use
  
  of different joints, 109
  Vegetable " cookers," 148 ; marrow, 159
  Vegetables and salads, 147-162 ; calendar of
  
  same in season, 115 ; cooking of, 148 ;
  
  curried, 151 ; how to choose, 114 ; preparation
  
  of, 148 ; storage of, 101
  Vegetarianism, 148
  Veils, 309, 446 ; various kinds, 446
  Veins, varicose, 468, 573
  Velvet, how to raise the pile, 318 ; use of,
  
  434
  Velveteen, how to wash, 289
  Venison, how to choose, 108 ; use of different
  
  joints, 111
  Ventilation, 7
  
  Vermin, destruction of, 508
  Violas, 693
  Visiting cards, 329
  
  Visiting, etiquette of, 336 ; general hints, 330
  Visitor, etiquette for, 333
  Vomiting blood, 677
  Voyages, tips after sea, 603
  
  
  Walking as an exercise, 464
  
  Wall-papers, 14
  
  Walls, cleaning of, 69
  
  Walnut molasses, how to make, 673
  
  Warts, 673
  
  Wash-stand, care of, 68
  
  Washing day, preparation for, 276 ; directions
  
  for home, 271 ; machines, 272 ; sending out
  
  the, 266
  " Washing up " directions for, 73
  Water-beds, 553 ; closets, 6 ; cushions, 563 ;
  
  ices, 208 ; for laundry work, 276 ; how to
  
  soften, 449 ; supply, 6
  Waxworks, 535
  Wedding anniversaries, 349 ; cake, 349 ; cards,
  
  349 ; day, fixing the, 345 ; etiquette, 345-349 ;
  
  luncheons, 349 ; reception, the, 348 ; trip, the
  
  349 ; golden, 349 ; invitations to, 332 ; silver,
  
  349
  Whipping of garments, 396
  Whist drives, 542
  Whitewash, how to make, 605
  Wife as husband's agent, 376
  Will, how to make a, 376 ; in Scotland, 375
  Window-boxes, 600
  Windows, cleaning of, 69
  Wines, care of, 104, 105 ; how to serve, 248
  Wiring (in millinery), 437
  Wizard photography, 535
  Women, legal position of married, 375
  Wood, aa fuel, 99 ; carving, 690
  Wool mattress, how to remake, 608
  Woollen articles, how to wash, 287 ; clothing,
  
  461
  Work-basket, the, 387
  Workmen's Compensation Act, 370
  Worms, cure for, 485 ; in pots, destruction of,
  
  602
  Worry, 468
  Wounds, 578
  Wraps, evening, 305
  Wringer, the, 272
  Wrinkles, cause of, 448
  Writer, the special, 627
  
  YoKM frock, tho, 496
  
  
  Printed by Ballanttnb, Hanson &• Co.
  Edinburgh &* London
  
  
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