Til ft NORFOLK \VEEKLL NEWS-JOtlKNAU FRIDAY. MAY 27 , 1910. IN Norfolk Weekly News-Journal The NCWH , Established 1881. The Journal KaUibllHhcd 1877. THE HU8E PUBLISHING COMPANY. " W. N. Huso , N. A. HUBU , President. Secretary. Rvory Friday. Hy mull pur year. $1.6,0. EnU'nul at thu postolllcu at Norfolk , Nob. , aa Hccoiiil class inattui. TelephonesTRtllTorlnl Department No. 22. HutdnoBB Oillce a ml Job Rooms No. II 22. To tllttrnril old rules and parlia mentary tiHnKca IH much easier tlmn netting up now and bettor ones. Mr. Kdlson says u plcco of radium the Blzo of a plnhcnd would Illumlno the whole state of Arkansas. ' 1m. . . . . . would prouaoly cause twilight in U.H southern Missouri. Farrnr , the Krent grand opera singer , appeared In the pen in At lanta and sang to the convicts. A imrugrapher referred to It as a "star among the stripes. " The IJaltlmoro widower who de clines to marry until he can find a woman the proper size to wear his deceased wife's clothing , Is certainly an economical CUBS. The airship has at least one advant age over the automobile there are no cops Moating about in space with stop watches waiting to drag you in for violating the speed ordinances. A Jersey City pastor resigned be cause ho was bald. Did the revcrand gentleman never read what Ellas did when the newsboys guyed him ? He didn't resign. Ho made them milt. The colored churches of Virginia have been crowded on account of the comet , which Is having a good in- Jluencu on the poultry trade. Hadcllffe College girls are required to have "dainty and trim" feet at graduation. This will require consid erable trimming in some cases. If the man who was silling on the safety valve of those boilers nt Can ton. O. , 1ms come down yet , he should lie sharply questioned as to what he knows about it. After wearing a straw Imt down town a few days ahead of the accept ed time , you'll know what the Pil grims and Puritans suffered In defying church and state. People who imagined that their tan gled affairs were to be settled by the comet putting an end to the world , will have to take hold and straighten them out themselves. John W. Foster intimates that we liavo hesitated to raise the Maine be cause wo feared to iind she was blown up from the inside. Wo will now hear from Admiral Sigsbeo. A good memory is a good thing if it is exercised only in remembering good things , but a retentive memory that stores up every slight , neglect and grudge , might better be less ac tive. The Smithsonian institution wants $35,000 to mount the Hoosevelt tro phies , it used to be the rule that af ter n boy gets home from a llshing trip , he must dress his own fish for the table. The intense selfishness of our people ple is illustrated by the publication of Interminable matter as to whether the comet would hurt us , while no one asked what we were going to do to the comet. As the proposition for a tariff com mission was not presented by a demo crat , the unterritted of congress will solidly oppose a proposition aimed to correct precisely the evils they have been kicking about. They say it will cost $500,000 to raise the Maine. But it won't cost any less to do It twenty years from now , let alone the black eye Uncle Sam will get for the heathenish cus tom of leaving his dead unburled. A New England Judge recently lin ed a high school student $25 for cut ting a leaf from a magazine on file In a public library. This seems pret ty severe , but the mutilation of books In a public library can hardly be too severely punished. The Hungarian minister of agricul ture is In n critical condition , having had his skull fractured by an ink stand thrown by a member of the chamber of deputies. Those Euro pean parliaments are barbarous. Here Jn civilized America we use chairs. The French workman who is in jured while Intoxicated cannot claim damages from his employer. The French courts consider that drunken ness constitutes contributory negli gence. This Interpretation of the law is n step in the right direction. King George draws ns his regular salary $2,395,750 asldo from family grants. lie ought to get along com fortably on this amount oven at pres ent prices if his family have good health and the royal palace doesn't .need plumbers' repairs. Undo Sam's onumcrulorH will not be called Into service for ten years again. Sixty-live thousand men were employed In this work. The count In the big cities will bo given out first and U may be midsummer before the present population of Norfolk Is known. A "run out" New Hampshire has , under the management of n scientific farmer , who employed a logical sys tem of rotation In crops , increased In Its production eight fold in the last eight years. In many cases the land has not run down so badly ns the farmer who cultivated It. Tenement House Commissioner Mur phy suggests ns the best Way of mak ing New York city a good place to live In , the building of subways so that people may live out of if. That is the best euro for most unfortunate conditions get away from them but It Is not always easy to do it. With Mayor Gnynor forbidding sa lacious plays in Now York and Mayor Uusso refusing to allow the proposed Gotch-Zbyszko wrestling match on Decoration day it begins to look as if the man who alleges that ho has n right to do as ho pleases regardless of what other people think was right up against it. Mayor Sidel of Milwaukee Is now threatened with nervous prostration after a few weeks In olllce. He is trying to examine into every detail of the municipality's affairs personally , oven to checking up the inventory of the nppartus in the gas Inspector's olllce. A genius for details Is a valu able faculty but it may easily bo over worked. The poorer population in our great cities are scarcely located In one place long enough to be counted by the census enumerators. For exam ple , It was found that in thirty-two months 132 families had moved into and out of one tcenment building , while during that time twenty-live dif ferent families had occupied a single apartment. Up to tills time Louis Paulhan , the Frenchman , is the world's greatest aviator. He covered the distance be tween London and Manchester a dis tance of ISC miles in four hours and eleven minutes and won the $50,000 prize. This feat puts the Wright brothers somewhat In the background and has the effect of stimulating them to greater effort. Down at Cincinnati there is an original woman. Recently she se cured a divorce from her husband , Immediately had cards printed an nouncing this fact and sent them out just ns she would u wedding an nouncement. If she attracts some one to her by this new and novel style , once more will it be demonstrated that advertising pays. An investigation of the records era a largo university has confirmed the belief in the force of habit namely that those who won scholastic honors In college also maintained their stan dard in the law and medical school , while those who had n good time and made fun of the "grinds" failed to n ; habits of industry when they entered the technical schools or In later life. The several state legislatures of South America have been holding their final sessions preparatory to the con summation of the act of union. Much strife Is anticipated In nil the states over the election of the federal parlia ment. It will be a happy outcome if so broad minded a statesman as Gen eral Dotha is elected to the first pre miership of the new nation. , Germany regards national disarma ment as an irrldescent dream , but so practical a man as Secretary Knox considers ultimate disarmament through the substitution of a great in ternational court of appeals as prac ticable. Some way must be found to terminate the present competition among the nations. It is unnatural and intolerable. Probably it will end itself. Some rich men's fortunes fade away after their death. Take that Standard Oil man , H. II. Rogers , who was reported to bo really rich , but his estate shows that he left only $34.000.000 to his family. By fru gality and withdrawing from swell society and cutting down their for eign trips and reducing the number of automobiles they may manage to live comfortably for many years. Theodore Roosevelt is one of the chief advocates of tea as a harmless stimulant for men doing severe phy sical work. On his hunting trips he always uses it in preference to any other drink. He finds it more stimu lating than coffee or any Intoxicating liquor. In his Interesting descriptions of big game hunting In the west he tells frequently of the restorative pro perties tea offers to hunters wornout by long travel in stormy weather. The American Bar association re cently adopted a "code of ethics" which If adhered to by all members of the legal profession would bring about a revolution In the administra tion of justice. It proposes a vow taken on admission to the bar , In these words : "I will never reject , from any consideration personal to myself , the cause of the defenseless and oppressed , or delay any man s cause for lucre or malice , so help me God. " A code like that might not make n bad lawyer good , but It at leuht leaves no young lawyer In doubt as to what true legal ethics are. The restoration of the Campanile In Venice Is a triumph of sentiment over mere commercialism. The old tower which was begun more than : i thousand years ago had no particular utilitarian value , yet auc'h was the grief of the Venetians over the loss of Its commanding presence that they said , "The master of the house Is gone. " The now tower which the city has nearly completed is merely n re storation of the old one and the pieces of the bells forming the far famed chime which hung in the tower were gathered after Its fall and recast. They will be rung for the first time on St. Mark's day next year. HIGHER FREIGHT HATES. If the railroads are courting further unpopularity , they will persist in their present plan to raise freight rates nil over the United States. Adding to the cost of living is not going to make a hit with the ultimate con sumer , who will eventually have to pay the freight. The railroads are prospering. They are paying big dividends. With In creased bulk of business and con stantly growing experience In ways of economy , there is reason why they should be able to haul freight for smaller rates instead of having to Increase the cost. And they're starting something that they may not be able to finish. THE STAR GAZERS. Star gazing is ordinarily limited tea a few people keenly interested in nat ural science , not to speak of the many young folks who use it as an excuse for getting out of doors unchaperoned after dark. But Hnlley's comet has vastly increased interest in the heav ens , and in many place the streets have been crowded on some of these recent nights. Astronomy is a fine interest , and ono more accessible to the loneliest resident of the remotest farm than to the most favored metropolitan dwell er. There is peace and rest in look ing at the majestic march of the sun and planets , n feeling of some vast authority and intelligence that does all things well. There is all the fasci nation of a puzzle picture , in becoming familiar with the great historic con stellations , at which man has gazed In curiosity and awe for 10,000 years. And converse with these vast inter ests gives one the feeling that the strivings and competitions , the heart burnings and the ambitions of earthly life are after nil very trivial. THE SMALL COST OF PAVING. One week from Tuesday Norfolk voters will express their opinion as to issuing $12,000 bonds to pay for pav ing the street intersections in paving district No. 1 Norfolk avenue from the Northfork river west to Seventh street. Norfolk has for many years been anxiously waiting for the time when , under the law , its population would permit the legal voting of paving bonds. And now that the property owners along the main business street have shown a desire to pay the cost of the paving , It would seem that there should be absolutely no doubt as to the paving bonds carrying by nn over whelming majority. The cost of paving the street inter sections is all that will fall upon the taxpayers and this is so small a sum that the expense can not logically stand ns the slightest argument against this progressive step. Former County Treasurer Carl Wilde has figured out what the cost will be to the taxpayers , and the cost is small , indeed. On the basis of a total assessed valuation tor the city of $400,000 in round numbers , which Is rather too low an estimate by pos sibly $100,000 , the taxes on the $12- 000 bonds , bearing 5 percent interest , will amount to this : Each year for ten years , only in terest is to be paid and every taxpay er Is taxed but 15 cents for each $100 assessed valuation ( $500 actual valua tion. ) After ten years , each year one- tenth of the principal and Interest is levied , which would amount even if the city did not grow to only 30 .cents for the sinking fund and 15 cents for Interest on each $100 assess ed valuation. At the expiration of twenty years enough tax from the above small levy will have accumulated to pay the en tire issue of bonds. PAVING BONDS. About the only opposition thus far developed against the issuance of bonds for paving the intersections of Norfolk avenue , seem to bo contained In the throp questions following : Why should the city vote bonds to pay for removing the earth in front of buslnos houses to reduce the level of the street so that paving may bo placed on It ? Why are we asked to vote $12,000 In bonds when It Is estimated that the required cost for each Intersection will bo $1,000 and there are but seven in tersections In the contemplated pav ing district ? Why should the whole city be asked to pay for Intersections in the business part of town ? These are natural questions and the public has n full right to be Inform ed , before casting ballots upon the proposition as to whether Norfolk shall Issue bonds for the purpose of paying for Intersections In paving dis trict No. 1. The questions wore taken to Mayor Friday and his answers em body the following facts : No part of the money realized from sale of bonds will bo used to cover cost of removing earth from the sur face of the street. The city Is great ly In need of earth to grade up streets In the lower parts of town , and un der normal conditions this dirt must be hauled f'om hills west of the city at n considerable cost for the soil and a greater cost for hauling , on account of the distance that It must be car ried. If the dirt can be taken from Norfolk avenue , where nothing will be paid for it , the cost of hauling will be not more than one-half what It will cost to bring it from the hill. It may be true that it will cost a little more to load it , on account of Its packed condition , than it would to load It nt the hill , yet It costs the city nothing except the loading while It has to be paid for at the hill , while the hauling to the streets thatrequire to be graded will be less than half because of the reduced distance. And this dirt must be provided this year , ns the condition of lower Second , Third , Fourth , Fifth and other streets is such that the people ple living along those streets arc en titled to have them made passable in bad weather , Every load of dirt so removed from Norfolk avenue will be paid for from the street fund of the city , and the street fund will effect a saving of fully 50 percent on this repair work. Only so much of the bonds ns are needed for the work as required will be sold , the balance remaining unis sued until needed. At the present time the proposed paving district No. 1 contemplates seven intersections , which will take $7,000 of the bonds , the remaining $5,000 authorized by the election being held in reserve until needed for future paving districts. So long as any part of the bonds are not Issued they will not draw inter est , and if they are never issued of course they will not have to bo paid. It is simply giving the city authority to issue bonds for paving purposes to the extent of $12,000 when need ed , without calling a special election every time an intersection is wanted. The prime object of calling for more than required at this time is to save cost of a special election , an item of several hundred dollars. The third question is answered by the law of the state , which provides that where a town of this class paves its streets , the town as a whole must pay for intersections. If the property pwners contribute the cost of paving in front of their premises the city should well afford to put in the Inter sections , as the paving is for the whole public good and for the benefit of those who use the streets. AROUND TOWN. You did see the comet , after all. Isn't this a frost for summer ? Help yourselves , Omaha bunch. You're welcome. Oh say , did you see the comet AND the moon eclipse ? Boost the Omaha boosters. They can't help it that they live there. This is the sweet girl graduate her inning. Are those sun spots responsible for this ? Are we going to celebrate the Fourth ? Sort of punk work those astron omers did. The weather man , confound him , was right again. Was it rain or snow or comet's tail that we were bathed in Saturday morn ing ? "Me lord , there's a comet without. " "Without what ? " "Without its tail , sir. " The state fire inspector finds that Norfolk firemen fight the fires before the fires ever start. Now that the government Is after the lumber trust , maybe we'll bo able to get back to the good old days of toothpicks. . There was a light house at the Auditorium last night. But what could you expect with two free shows in the sky ? With a coon's face on the moon and a firebrand in the sky , no wonder the temperature dropped to within two degrees of a frost. Don't .get the idea that your hnlr isn't worth anything. A woman In Norfolk Is wearing $25 worth besides her own. In less than a month the longest day will have como and gone and we'll be heading back towards win ter If that's any consolation to you. The "lost" column of The News will do pretty nearly anything. AB soon as the fact that the comet had lost Its tall was published In this paper , thu comet found n new one. The astronomical editor Is apologiz ing today over that "smoked glass" paragraph In connection with the moon eclipse , because his mother-in- law sent him word that he'd have to. He's been using his mother-in-law as material for so much newspaper stuff that she got up on her ear and , now that she has him foul , compelled him to use his own mistake for a little reading matter. Wouldn't you hate to have a mother-in-law like that ? It beats the band what that comet has done to the astronomers. For Instance , there's the comet editor of The News. He's got 'em. Almost needs n padded cell. Here's an Illus tration : Yesterday's News , forecastIng - Ing the eclipse of the moon , said people ple were getting smoked glass ready for the event. Now who ever heard of needing smoked glass for an eclipse of the moon ? It's the comet's fault. No wonder two people dropped dead in one town when they took a look. ATCHISON GLOBE SIGHTS. The women say nothing makes them quite so tired ns for a man to tell them what a devil he has been. It Is human nature not to pay much attention to n warning sign until ono runs into something more substantial. People should give us credit for this , at least : We never refer to beer as "amber Iluld. " It Is not a crime to be fooled ; so many smart people are trying to fool you. But It Is a crime to fool your self. There is nothing you can do , without being criticised by the newspapers , ex cept farm , and work at a trade as a union man. When a man is applauded for doing or saying a smart tiling , he tries so hard to score again that he becomes a nuisance. When a girl goes out of town on a visit , and her hostess cries when she departs for home , she thinks her visit was successful. When a man first joins a lodge he is very enthusiastic , but when the first assessment becomes due ho begins to take less interest. In addition to dentil an'1 taxes , you may place among the sure things the fact that nothing is ever settled def initely by debate. Why doesn't Hick Colgan write a series of articles for Scrlbnor's Maga zine ? He killed eight wolves last Wednesday in five minutes. Many obituaries state that the de ceased "passed quietly away. " W . would like to ask if anyone ever passed away making a loud noise. It is your enemies who keep you straight. For real use , one active , sneering enemy is worth two ordinary friends. We have noticed that when a man goes to stay three or four months "at his old home in the east , " he usually comes back in two or three weeks. When a man believes he has a large acquaintance and great Influence , it ib easy to induce him to become an agent for an article paying a large commission. What has become of the old fash ioned man who said of the man who had had three or four wives : He has a white liver ! " The facts are that a man may breathe properly , take proper exercise , eat properly , and obey all the rules of sanitation , and then die of old age at 70 to 74. If a baby is as smart as its mother claims , it will cry at 3:15 : at night , in preference to any other hour , so that when it awakens its parents they may behold the comet. Tlie Lancaster Literary society will meet in called session this evening to discuss this question : "Resolved , That the pantalettes worn a half cen tury ago are more immodest looking than legs. " There isn't anything in the world that will give a mother more pleasure than to have all the children come In the room to be presented for Intro duction when her preacher calls , and when her husband also comes in of his own accord , her heart overflows with joy. And if her husband , willing ly and without any previous threats , hints , or coaxing from her , asks the preacher to call again , she fairly pants with bliss. A girl stenographer was discharged today for being two hours late , hei employe refusing to accept the very good excuse she gave. "I was up at the usual hour , " she said , "and , while breakfasting , and on my way down town. 1 was bothered with the tantaliz ing thought that I had forgotten some thing. I had reached the office door fifteen minutes ahead of the usual time , when I remembered ! I had for gotten to read the Thought for the Day In my Uplift Calendar. So I ran nil the way home and read this helpful motto : 'Let the True Inwardness of love penetrate to your subconscious self , and all will bo well. ' Then I started on a run back to the olllce. In vigorated and refreshed by what I had read ; got there late , and lost my Job. I claim this life Isn't up to the plans and specifications laid down in the story books. " Home Course In Domestic Science VI. Cuts of Meat and How to Cook Them. Dy EDITH G. CHARLTON , In Charge of Domestic Economy. Iowa Stote College. Copyrlf hi. 1910 , by American Preit AiiocUtion. Is one of thu chief tissue MEAT foods. It Is also ono of the foods most commonly found on the average table. No matter how high the price sours. It Is demanded at least once a day as the principal dish In thu bill of fare of the average American family. Until re cent years It was considered almost essential to life and was the last food to be sacrifice ! If a change In the diet was recommended for reasons of health. At the present time people are gradually finding out that meat Is not a necessity In any bill of faro. They are learning there are other foods which contain quite as much of the tissue building properties , and chuest1 , beans , eggs and nuts are sub stituted for thu moat dish. Still , beef , lamb , pork , fish , poultry and game continue to bo favorite foods In many homes , mill one or moro of ibi > number Is prepared for thu table every day. Universally used as It Is. meat of all kinds is the food most often spoiled in the cooking , or. to mak the state ment a little more specific , It Is the food material In which tiie scientific principles of cooking should be and arc not most carefully observed. Composition of Meat , Meat Is composed of bundles of muscle libers bound together by a filmy substance called connective tis sue. There are also in all kinds of meat moru or less fat. water and min eral mutter , besides the bone , sinew , blood and skin. Albumen , a .substance similar to the white of egg , Is found In the blood and muscle , and this is the principal protolil of meat. The ex tractive , or tlu- flavor of meat , Is also one of Its valuable properties , it is the extractives which give Home kinds of meat , beef especially , a stimulating value , and they also aid In the diges tion of the muscle libers. The amount of tissue building material , or proteld. averages from H ) to liO per cent In dif ferent kinds of meat , and thu fat va ries considerably , from i ! to CO per cent , according to the animal and the cut. Uncooked meat contains a large amount of water , usually more than fi ( ) per cent. Meat Is cooked to innko it more pala table , to develop Its flavor and to kill any germs which It may contain. Un less very carefully done cooking meat makes it less easy of digestion. Raw CUAIiT BHOWIM1 DIVISIONS OP beef finely chopped will leave thu stomach in from two and one-half to thrcu hours , while meat cooked utter the common method will require from two to three hours longer. When meat Is properly cooked the muscle libers will be softened and the connective tissue and albumen will be only slightly hardened. Boiling meat tough ens the muscle libers and burdens thu albumen. In this , thun , lies the secret of the proper cooking of any kind of meat. It should always be accom plished with a moderate temperature , below boiling point for stews , fricassees - sees , pot roust , etc. One fact should ever be kept in mind when buying meat and preparing It for the tuble. This Is that it is not neces sarily the most expensive cuts of moats which are either the ) est fla vored or most nutritious. It is a nils- take , common to both experienced and inexperienced cooks , to suppose that when u really delicious piece of meat is desired It must bo cut from thu porterhouse terhouse or sirloin. To be sure , in many minds , there is no moat quite so appetizing as a porterhouse steak , but oven that expensive and naturally toothsome cut can bo absolutely spoil ed In the cuoMtig. TjqnalJy true Is it that a piece cut from the shoulder or the flunk can bo prepared and cooked In such a way that It will bo a dish for the gods and will bo relished by oven the epicure who usually casts his vote In favor of "T" bone and ten derloin steaks. Different Cuts of Meat , A practical knowledge of the usual method of cutting beef , also of the length and structure of the muscle fibers , is almost necessary In order to Insure getting the best pieces of meat and to determine how they should be cooked. Hy the best pieces one gen erally means thosu pieces having the least bone and the tcnderest , Juiciest moat. The woman who seldom If ever visits the moat market , who invariably gives her meat orders by telephone , Is not ns likely to get n choice roust or a particularly good steak as Is the wo man who. knowing where these cuts nro icvutcd. goon to the market and makes her own selection. It Is not an easy matter to null poor meat to the woman who knows almost as well as the butcher himself the difference In the amount of bone in various cuts of moat. It is a simple mutter to become laminar with the character of the dif ferent kind * of meat and their locu tion In the en mi NH. nnd It Is a mibjoct which every woman should under * stand. The highest priced nnd tomlorcat pieces of beef are cut from the hind quarter. Custom Is so strong In It * preference that beef animals are bred with a view to having as inui'li moat and as small bones In the loin as pos sible. The largest amount of nutri ment Is obtained from some of the fore quarter pieces. In dividing the side of beef Into fore and hind quar ters the division Is generally made leaving one rib on the hind quarter. The nlrlolii nnd rump roust , loin , porterhouse terhouse and round steaks , the ( lanker or Hklrt piece and the shank arc In thu hind quarter. The rib roasts , chuck , short ribs , clod or forearm , plate plwo. including the- navel , the neck and shin , are located In the fore quarter. Most of these pieces can be cut Into smaller portions , and the quantity of bone which these Hcvernl purls contain gen erally determines which Is the best to buy. Of course animals must huvc bone , and the butcher must see to It that some one buys the bone If ho ex pects to make n good profit. Hut we nro always willing to leave the Inferior parts the big bonos-lo the customer who does not know any better. In selecting a rib roust always uslc for at least the first three ribs from the whole fore quarter. The first five ribs make a satisfactory roast for a large family. Cutting nearer the shoul der , the muscle fibers are courser nnd the meat not as suitable for rousting. The rib roust may have the bones left In it nnd be cooked as a standing roust , or the ribs may bo rut out and the incut rolled , with center filled with u bit of suet. The first method probably has a little better flavor ; the second or rolled roast Is more easily curved. The first chuck piece generally sells for n few cents less per pound than the ribs and makes a very good roust If It Is carefully prepared and cooked rather slowly. The second and remainIng - - Ing chuck pieces are bettor for pot thun oven rousting. The clod piece contains joint and bone of the fore arm. It Is often cut Into throe purls. The second or middle piece , contain ing the .smaller amount of bone. Is preferable. The rump piece , with hip Joint re moved and the cavity filled with suet , makes an excellent rousting piece. It Is very lean , the muscles closely knit , and unless the bone is taken out and .some extra fat added the meat is like ly to be dry. The tenderloin is a solid piece ot lean moat , juicy and of line grain and flavor. It Is located In ( lie loin , just under the backbone , and Is thickest In the center of the loin , Hocniiso it has no waste and Is unusually tender it Is sometimes sold In a separate plocu and prepared us a fillet of beef or broiled for steak. Hut such tenderloin Is sel dom If over taken from first quality beef , because when it has boon re moved the value of the remaining ; steaks Is considerably lessened. There fore the choicest steak Is usually the fourth or fifth porterhouse , con taining u good portion of the tender loin. Select n sirloin steak that bus been cut as fur into ( lie loin as possi ble. This gives u good sized piece oC tenderloin us well as a large middle ; piece with short muscles. Methods of Cooking Meat. Eight methods are generally em ployed In cooking meats. Those are broiling , rousting , stewing , boiling , frying , suutelng , frlcusscolng , n combi nation of siiutoing and stowing , und bruising , a combination of frying und huklng. The various methods repre sent cooking in moist bout on top of the- range and cooking in dry heat In the oven or broiler. The principle under lying all the methods Is the sumo. U Is to begin the cooking of the meut at n high temperature in order to sear over the cut muscle ends to keep the- Juices in the meat und then to cook at a lower temperature that the muscle- fibers and connective tissue umy be burdened as little ns possible. For a roust of beef choose either the first three ribs , a cut from the sirloin or the rump piece. After preparing the roast for the oven wlpo It with u cloth wet with cold water. Do not put the meat In a dish of water to wash It. Put the meat Into n dripping- pan or , better , a self basting roaster , sprinkle Itwith a little pepper and dredge lightly with Hour If deslrod. Hut do not put water in the pan nor sprinkle the mout with salt , because both oxtraet the flavor of the meat , nnd the salt draws out the juice. The oven should bo very hot. about 350 degrees , hot enough to sear the moat on all sides in ten or flflecK minutes. If desired the searing may be done ou top of the stove directly over the lire. After the meat Is well seured the tem perature should be lowered and the meut allowed to cook more slowly uu- tll It Is done , about fifteen minutes for each pound. If a dripping pan Is used the moat will require basting several times during the first hour. For this melt some butter or some good , fresh "drippings" In hot water , remove the- pan from the even and baste thor oughly. Do not pour water over the moat nor haste with clear fat. After two or throe tl.nes there will he enough fat In the pan for subsequent : bastings. Suit may be added during the lust half hour of roasting or after the moat lias been well scared. To be quite satisfactory a roust should weigh at teast five pounds. Less tliiiu that the piece will be so smnll that by the time It has boon scared on all sides there will be very little center portion. The superior man Is satisfied and composed ; the mean man is always full of distress. Confucius. Paced Too Rapidly. "Wolter. ask thu orchestra to plaj something dlrtorent. " "Any purtleular selection , sir ? " "Somettitng slower. 1 can't chew my food properly In waltz time. " Kansas City Journal.