. The Ladies' home journal. rises daily at 4:30. In Italy and China, grand-mother cooks, and the young wife goes off to the fields. But most wives stayhome until noon, when they pack lunches off to their husbands. Children are the constant concern. Mrs. el Gamel of Egypt makes sure eachof hers drinks a glass of buffalo milk a day. The wives of Zamba Aluma, in Equa-torial Africa, make their twelve children wash their hands before each meal. InPakistan there is only H pint of milk a day per child—barely a taste. But in ruralEngland there is milk to spare, and Mrs. Hiatt gives the children cocoa
. The Ladies' home journal. rises daily at 4:30. In Italy and China, grand-mother cooks, and the young wife goes off to the fields. But most wives stayhome until noon, when they pack lunches off to their husbands. Children are the constant concern. Mrs. el Gamel of Egypt makes sure eachof hers drinks a glass of buffalo milk a day. The wives of Zamba Aluma, in Equa-torial Africa, make their twelve children wash their hands before each meal. InPakistan there is only H pint of milk a day per child—barely a taste. But in ruralEngland there is milk to spare, and Mrs. Hiatt gives the children cocoa at bedtime. ITALY: Grandmother Assunta Aglietti Guercini, 70, cooks for the household. PAKISTAN: Kneading doug< Here she is peeling potatoes in front of the big open fireplace, getting an a brass bowl, Mrs. Usman early afternoon start on the evening meal. She makes delicious salami, and pares chapattis (unleavened v cheese from ewes milk. But her favorite dish is soup; its easy to make. or rice-flour pancakes) while d;.
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