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- THE TIMES: AUGUST. 8, 1918 S3 m DAILY FEATURES SOCIAL EVENTS THE WOMAN'S FASHIONS PERSONAL NOTES edited by miss m. r. sherwood SHOPPER'S GUIDE i SPHER Care for Your Feel if You'd be Graceful By Lucrezia Bori (The Famous Spanish Prima Dorma.) Among the Chi-! nese it i the custom to pay lust as much attention to -the care of the feet as to the oare of the hands, for beautiful feet have for centuries been a matter of es pecial pride among the Chinese women. Unfortunatoiy, some IVklM ' - Ml , olnt o what constitutes beauty of the oot resulted In the ancient method of indlng the feet, and In a way per- nanently crippling them. But If we realized how much beau y of form depended on the health and eauty of the feet perhaps there vould be fewer cases of feet partly rippled by broken arches and other .voidable ailments. Sometimes an ailment of the foot s not noticed because there Is no pain mtll the trouble reaches an advano )d stage, and also, too, perhaps, be- :auee of the fact that women have iccustomed themselves to the pain of v earing tight, uncomfortable but fash' onable shoes, and are inclined to let dip any Irritation of the feet. However, 'no woman can have a graceful carriage unless she Is sup ported by feet that are strong and In perfect, healthy condition. Shoes too lght or too loose make for all sort of rrltatlons, and the tiredness of the eet that comes to the busy housewife who stands most of the day is not a imall temporary matter, but requires mmediate attention and care before t develops into a permanent lrrita- Ion, Massage an AM. If feet or ankles are tender they ihould be bathed in hot water at night vlped dry, and then massaged with Interesting Personal Events Miss Edith "Williams, daughter of 1 rins of 1165 Noble avenue, and Daniel j Mrs. John Van S. Oddle, of New York, I Zt. Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dan- I the hands for two nights. Afterward they may be massaged for two or three nights with the addition of a liniment. Massaae the feet by moving the hands upward from the toes, one after the other. This drives the blood up ward. The feet should be raised from the ground during massage, and not rested on any object. Then move the hand from side to side, beginning with the toes and working outward. 1 A good liniment for the feet is: 10 drops of strong solution of am monia. 20 drops of turpentine, 1 ounce of linseed oil. This can be massaged into the feet and will soothe them and keep the skin soft without beng too tender. The feet should be bathed In cold water each mornng, or If warm bath is taken, spray the feet wth cold water afterward. For Tender Feat. For excessively tender feet the fol lowing foot powders are helpful: 2 drams of boric add. 2 drams of zinc Oxide. 4 drams of starch. Another excellent foot powder can be made thus: 1-2 dram of salicylic acid. 1-2 dram of calamine. 1 dram of boric acid. 1 dram of fuller's-earth. 2 drams of talo. ' , ' 3 drams of starch. This should be sprinkled inside the stocking each morning, and will pre vent tender feet from becoming un pleasantly chafed during the day. Even If your feet give you no trou ble they should be as carefully attend ed as the hands, for only as long as your feet feel healthy and comfort able can you maintain beauty of car riage and grace. will be married to Lieuteant John Wil liam Moore Richardson, U. S. A., of this city, on Saturday, August 17 in the chantry of St. Thomas' church, N. T. Their engagement was announc ed last Friday. Mrs. Herbert Gallaudet who Is spending the summer with her moth er, Mrs. A. M. Young in Pine Orchard, has received word that her husband. Captain Herbert Gallaudet, has arriv ed safely overseas. Captain Gallaudet was the pastor of the North Congre gational church before It united with the South church. Both Captain and Mrs. Gallaudet have many friends In this city. lei E. Walker of 375 Clinton avenue. Father P. J. McGlvney performed the marriage ceremony and the young couple are now on their honeymoon In Atlantic Sity. Mr. Walker Is with the Lake Torpedo Boat Co., and when they return from their wedding trip they are to reside at 1165 Noble avenue. 3 fir Rev. and Mrs. A. J. Martin of this city are spending two weeks with Mrs. W. H. Adams at her cottage at Seaside Beach near Milford. Mrs. S. W. Tarr of Thompson ave nue, East Haven, is visiting for a few days with her daughter, Mrs. Harold Chadeayne at her home on French street. Mrs. Tarr will soon leave for Elmhurst, N. Y., where she will spend some time at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Sherwood Green. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Stlne and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Day of this city are registered at the Laurel House at Patchogue, L. I. Miss Rhoda Owens of this city Is a member of a party of young women who are to enjoy ai camping trip to Westport, N. Y., under the chaperon age of Mrs. William H. Smith of Nor folk. ! Reliable Recipes BARLEY DOUGHNUTS Two eggs, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup milk, 4 oups barley flour (or equal parts wheat flour and barley flour), 2 teaspoons baking powder, 1-4 cup melted lard or clear sweet dripping, 1-1 teaspoon salt, 1-4 teaspoon each of clnna-, mon and cloves or nutmeg. Beat eggs and sugar gradually, add milk and flour, mixed and sifted with baking powder and spices. Add melted fat. 2 Peanut butter sandwiches, oatmeal macaroons, bananas, chilled water in thermos -bottles. PEANUT BUTTER SANDWICHES Two quarts lightly roasted peanuts, 1 teaspoon salt, cream or melted butter. Remove shells and skins of peanuts, . put through food chopper twice, using first a coarse cutter and then the finest cutter; add salt and enough cream or melted butter to make a smooth paste. Butter two pieces of bread ever so lightly with soft butter, spread one with the peanut mix ture, the other with shredded lettuce and press the two together. OATMEAL MACAROONS Cream 1 level tableespoon butter with 1-2 cup sugar, 1 1-2 level cups raw rolled oats, 1 level teaspoon salt, then add 1 well beaten egg. Cream butter, egg and sugar, stir In rolled oats and drop from spoon on well greased pan and bake In quick oven. These macaroons have a nutty flavor. 3 Buttered corn oake (thin) cut In small squares, fruit turnovers (us ing barley pastry), orange Juice chilled In thermos bottle. CORN CAKE Two cups yellow cornmeal, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons baking pow- dere, 1 tablespoon melted fat, 1 teaspoon oorn syrup, 2 cups milk. To dry Ingredients add melted fat, corn syrup and milk. Bake in shallow pan. split and butter. Prosecuting Attorney and Mrs. A, L. DeLaney of Lyon Terrace left to day in their Pierce-Arrow roadster for a month's trip up through New York state, and will go up to the Great Lakes. They were accompanied by Mrs. DeLaney's mother, Mrs. George Fisher of Noble avenue. Miss Elizabeth Savard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Savard of Noble avenue Is spending the summer at the camp of Miss Katherine Bishop at south Chatham, N. H. Smart Millinery Miss Harriet Hummell of 101 San ford avenue, will leave next week with her sister, Mrs. Thomas A. Couhelin for East Sabago, Me., to be done two weeks. They will spend some time at the Mt. Washington Hotel, N. H. Mrs. Charles H. Sprague Is expect ed to return to her home on Honaver street thel atter part of this week after a very delightful vacation to be spent with friends and relatives in New Hampshire. Miss Stella Worth Jones suffrage organizer for Fairfield county, and Miss Edith Hastings from Stratford went to Hartford yesterday to attend the 1 conference of suffrage workers from all of the districts of the state. This conference was for the purpose of making plans for the political work of the suffragists in the fall campaign of both political parties which will soon open. Although it was a very hot day a great deal of work was done and Important plans were mapped out. Birthday Bio-Briefs FAMOUS WOMEN. To Parents and Teachers Get Your Children to Read This Instructive Dally Feature. MARGARET BEAUFORT. Miss Belle Slosberg of 173 Arch street who enlisted in the navy as a yeowoman on July 30 has passed all her examinations and is now in the service working at the plant of the American & British Company on Crescent avenue. It is expected that she will be transferred to Derby be fore very long. L. K. Porrtrt, son of Mir. and Mrs. Edward K. Porritt of Hartford, has been awarded the Italian Cross of Merit together with 21 of his com rades, Red Cross Ambulance men, for their work during the fighting on the Piave. Mrs. Porrltt has been very prominent in the suffrage work in the state and is well known in this city. Elmer S. Joyce, organist at the First Presbyterian church, has opened his summer home at Shelter Harbor, R. I. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Fenton and children of Central avenue left yes terday to spend a week with Mr. Joyce at his bungalow. WILSON'S NIECE WEDS CLERGYMAN Washington, Aug. 8 The White House was the scene today of a war wedding the first of its kind in the famous Blue Room. Miss Alice Wil son, niece of the President, and the Rev. Isaao Stuart McElroy, Jr., were married this evening at 8 o'clock. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Dr. I. S. McElroy of Columbus, Ga., father of the bridegroom. In contrast with some of the White House wedding only a small company of relatives and one or two intimates friends were in attendance at this one, which was as simple as it could be made. Dr. McElroy, standing In the bay window of the Blue Room, received the bride and bridegroom. Mrs. Martin Crook of Spartanburg, S. C, Bister of the bride groom, was the bride s only attend ant, and Prof. R. M. Turnbull of Un ion Theological Seminary, Richmond, was best man. The bride, escorted by her father, entered the Blue Room from the main corridor and Mr. Mc Elroy and Prof. Turnbull entered from the Red Room. Immediately following the cere mony a dinner was served in the state dining room with a good sized wedding cake plainly made In ac cordance with Food Administration instructions. Later in the evening Mr. and Mrs. McElroy left the White House for a short honeymoon which they will spend in the mountains of Virginia, going later to - White Sul phur Springs, where Mr. McElroy is pastor of the Presbyterian church. Those who witnessed the ceremony were the President and Mrs. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wilson, parents of the bride, Mrs. I. S. McElroy, mother of the bridegroom, Miss Mar garet Wilson, daughter of the Presi dent, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bryant, Miss Elizabeth Perkins of Muncie, Ind., a roommate of the bride at Ward Belmont College; the Rev. Charles L. King and John Ralph Boiling, brother of Mrs. Woodrow Wilson. Margaret Beaufort, countess of Richmond and Derby, was the only daughter and heiress of John Beau fort, duke of Somerset. She was born at Bletshoo, in Bedfordshire, in 1441. While very young she was mar ried to Edmund Tudor, Earl of Rich mond, by whom she had a son, who later became King Henry VII. of Eng land. The earl of Richmond died in 1456. and Margaret married Sir Henry Stafford, second son of the duke of Buckingham. He died In 1482, and his widow became thwife of Thomas, Lord Stanley, afterward the earl of Derby. She outlived her third hus band by five years dying in 16 US), in the first year of the reign of her grandson, Henry VIII. She wa bur ied in Westminster Abbey, where a monument was erected to her mem ory. She founded and endowed the colleges of Christ and St. John, at Cambridge. WINIFRED BLACK. WRITES ABOUT Chain People Copyright, 1918, by Newspaper Feature Service. Inc. "Weil," said the woman v.-ho owns a dog, "what in the world's the matter with you?" We were talking, a group of us, about the Over- : Soul or the Subconscious Mind, or the Friendly Hunch ! whichever you want to call it a group of us. : The man with the gold mine calls it a Hunch, the j young person who doesn't know what she's going to do with herself since she's left college and can't find any congenial companions calls it the Over Soul, and the young man who's called the Captain" and wears shoulder straps, and spsnds his days finding out wheth- i er the enlisted men are normal or sub-normal or super-normal, calls it the! Sub-Conscious Mind. , j ' Anyhow, whatever you call It, it is very interesting. The Captain had I just told us about a man he's curing of melancholia by a simple treatment i which is making him forget something that frightened him when he was ! a little bit of a boy. The college girl had promised'to tell us about an ex-! perlence In which her Over Soul warned her not to have a thing to do j with the new professor of chemistry, and that profesesor turned out to j be realoly don't you know ' 4 $ , WEALTHY WOMEN ENTER CANNERIES IN WISCONSIN Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 8. Wives and daughters of wealthy citizens in the Wisconsin pea. canning districts have entered the canneries to aid the labor situation. On Saturday they line up for their pay envelopes and re ceive a minimum wage for their ten hours work. Forty per cent, of the peas canned in the United States aire put up In Wisconsin plants. Earlier in the season pea packers expressed grave fears of a serious la bor shortage and pointed to the Food Administration's request for all the peas possible. George P. Hambrecht, labor com missioner, after a conference with Food Administrator Hoover, sent la bor commission employes, into all homes and obtained pledges1 from wo men In all walks of life to work in the canneries if called upon. Then a conference was arranged with the packers, who were. informed that they would be provided with help if they paid the women a minimum wage, established a ten-hour working day except in an emergency and then not more than twelve hours, and made proper sanitary arrangements. The packers signed an agreement, the women who had pledged their ser vices were called on, the response was most satisfactory and the canneries now are operating with a full force, UNUSUAL WINGS Wings of unusual shape are much in demand it seems and one small turban, of brown velvet, has a tip of castor panne; this tip Is made square in effect by four elongated beige wings that fit it snugly and spread out at each of the four corners into a small fan shape wing. Ostrich is introduc ed in a large rolling sailor of brown velvet which has nine Insets of ostrich banding laid In the brim. This banding shows alternating sections of the ostrich flue and the burnt flue, which is used as a transparent brim. ATTRACTIVE TRIM Simulating the rounded side that is so popular with turbans just now. there is a flesh color feather band that Is made of tiny quills, and laid about the tip of a turban of brown velvet. These tiny goose quills are being used by nany of the fancy houses for very smart rounded bands as well as brims flats, and some of the houses make them up on a shape so that only the tip need be filled in with velvet or some other material. GREY ' VELVET TURBAN A turban of gray velvet Is another model, the velvet drawn in folds high to the back of the crown tip where It rises high in stiff loops. Large flat daisies, of gray velvet, trim the lower part of the tusban. Very smart Indeed is the last model of rose velvet; It is exceedingly soft in effect with the velvet used loosely over the tarn crown and brim and on one side brim a double brim effect made of a ruffle of the velvet that goes into the long rose color wing-at each end, LARGE SHAPE From Marguerite & Leonle there Is a very large shape with wide point ed side brlma The effect of this pointed side is lessened and made less hasaQ In this model by an Incurving of the front brim on either side. This shape has a peacock velvet high crown softly draped, a satin brim of the same color with the velvet facing The crown is decidedly high and veils out at the tip where it rises above the tip. The trimming Is a widespread novelty wing in the coior oi the hat. laid across the crown front, and a band of the pasted feafaers around the crown. CHIN CHIN SHAPE FROM LOUISON Louison chooses a Chin Chin shape of navy velvet and trims the up turned brim In alternating small wings of rose and navy. Another saucer shape which is very large indeed and has not such a high turned saucer. Is covered in tete do negra velvet, with a band of tete burnt fancy around the under brim edge and a grild cord flower on the under brim edge at the side, FRENCH FELT French felt in terra cotta coloring is used by Madeleine for a very large at wT!u a six-inoh crown. The slightly upturned brim edge all around is edged Ih a pasted feather band of terra cotta that has the ap pearance of being wrapped at short distances by satin ribbon of the same color. A band of the pasted feathers bands the crown nd topping this, la a roll of the ribbon ending in a soft bow on one side. Miss Marie Schrieber of Poplar street and Norman M. Hartwell were united in marriage yesterday at St. Joseph's R. C. church. Rev. Hubert Dahme was the officiating clergyman. Miss Theresa Schrieber attended her sister as maid of honor and M. A. Reynolds waited on Mr. Hartwell as his best man. HOUSEHOLD HINTS To remove grass stains from white goods, use kerosene, soap and warm water. In making custard pie or in baking a crust to beu Bed with a filling, always prick the crust after placing in the tin either with a fork or the sharp point of a knife. " This prevents it rising up in the centre. Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Gaffney of Wood avenue have received word that their son, Edward J. Gaffney has ar rived safely overseas. ' Mr. and Mrs. William Lounsbury of Laurel avenue have had as their house guests Mrs. Frank Spooner and son of Spencer, Mass., and Samuel A. Gardner and daughter of New Haven. A very simple and effective hand lo tion is made of glycerin and lemon. Vinegar also is good to use on the hands after doing a washing. SHAKESPEARE'S WIFE. Wants Chain Again And I was crazy for them both to get through, so I could tell about the time that the Friendly Hunch stopped me from taking a certain little coastwise steamer at the last minute, and the steamer turned turtle with all on board, while I was sitting in a hammock eating ripe mangoes under the shade of a perfectly safe and absolutely reliable cocoanut palm And we were a good deal bored when the woman who dwns the dog Interrupted. We knew she was talking to her dog, or about him, because she's never really very much interested In anything else when he's around, unless It's the .cat (or her mocking bird, or her parrot; or the little white goat with the long white beard, who cries pathetically from, the back garden. But as we were sitting on her porch, of course, we liad to stop every- I thing and listen to her and look at the dog and say, "Well, did you ever?" i and "What do you think of that?" and all the rest of the things people ' say when they really don't think anything at all. And it was all about the dog's chain. The woman who owns him. j had unchained him, and he was running around the yard, and she had ! thrown his chain on the floor of the porch, and in the excitement of our) discussion about the Over Soul some one had stepped on the chain and rat-! tied it, and the dog was wild with excitement. He came running with all his might and main and Insisted on having i his chain put on' again, and we all wondered and couldn't understand It, but I kept thinking all the time of a friend of mine whose worthless, good- j for-nothing husband has disappeared, and she watches the newspapers day in and day out, and writes letters,- and telephones her friend, trying to -discover what has become of him. If that sin't trying to get your chain back around your neck when you might as well be free, what is, I should like, to know? I know an elderly woman who has been in straitened circumstances for : years, and she's come into some money and we're all so delighted about It. ,' C I Why Should They? I Mr. anoTMrs. George B. Whitehead and daughter. Miss Helen of Noble avenue, have gone to Goshen, N. Y., where they are to stop at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Buckley. The summer home of Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Bunnell of Stratford was the scene of a very pretty wedding yes terday when Miss Gledegarde Rogers or Toronto, Canada, became the bride of Lieutenant Gilbert Peterson, who Is stationed at Washington. D. C. Rev, Philip King, a navy chap lain, was the officiating clergyman and the attendants were Miss May Rogers and Lieutenant James Dent- sey Local society is interested in the announcement of the marriage of July 29 of Miss Marion E. Kerrlns, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. M. J. Ker- THE PORCH. Good looking rugs are a great helj. There are fine Japanese rush rugs for this purpose. They are In two-color checker board pattern. And In addition to being rather dis tinctive in appearance, these rugs have the virtue of durability. And they are not too expensive for fX average household to Indulge in, PENITENTIARY SERVICE FLAG Portland, Oregon, Aug, 8. The ser vice flag at the Oregon state peniten tiary now contains forty stars, repre senting about ten per cent, of this prison population. Each star standi for a man paroled from the prison who has enlisted In the army or navy, and practically every man has been restored to citizenship by Governor 1 James Withycembe, Hair On Face Ordinary hair tvewfaa OB face, aecfc aad am aeea niw aae and prtetty whea wkttXt i enured fraas t el the aada. The air MMHMnw war o wmm im Meettoaabte bolr t te attack It ndn fa ikln. DeSCtoaete, ke ortataal ewttaar Uai Oooa fbta fer aaaaipUuau Oner entae DcMliacaa kaa a moMr-eaok awnaatee to eaefc aafcase. At tpUt awimtets in eoa, mmi tS ' or by arail fioas as In aiala wiaape ea re ceipt of pvtee. FREE t00 wltk teattBMial 1 E labia what eaoaaa hair, way It mit uw aae bow DcMtraele ae vitalises it, aaaliaa ta plaht aealea nvatep n mwrt. DoMtnuie, Pack At taa Uatk 8U, Yaak, To mend scrim curtains, dip a piece of scrim in starch and water, being sure the starch water is not too thick; then place on the under side of the torn place and iron on the right side. In Ironing men's shirts a patch may be applied in the same way. A good way to wash white clothes and one that will not make them yel low is to melt a third of a bar of soap in two quarts of water with about two tablespoons of kerosene. Melt jt In the wash boiler and then add wa ter sufficient to boil the clothes. Boil 20 minutes. Put In the cleanest and whitest first. The clothes will re quire very little rubbing If rinsed well. As a substitute for butter in an ap ple pie or any pie that usually re quires butter, sprnkle common salt over the contents before putting on the upper crust. The pie Is just as good; the difference will not be noticed. FOOD. Be sure to have variety. Repeat a viand ic the same week only when a left-Oear demands it. At that every left-over Bhould go through a process of camouflage which leaves' its second-handed self unrecognizable. The greater variety In food put be fore the family the fewer left-overs there will be. Today is the anniversary of tho death of Mrs. Anne Shakespeare, wifo of the Bard of Avon, who breathed her last at Stratford-on-Avon, Au, 6, 162S having survived her husband by more than seven years. There is reason to believe that Shakespeare's domestic life was not happy, and that his entrance into the married state was not altogether vol untary on his part. Shakespeare was barely nineteen years old when 'ho took Anne Hathaway as his lawful wedded spouse. The bride, eight years his senior, was the daughter of a wen-to-do yeoman at the neighbor ing hamlet of Shottery. At that time Anne had reached the age which those days brought upon her the re proach of being an "old maid." She soon presented her boy husband with a daughter, and subsequently gave birth to twins ,a boy and a girl, and the happy-go-lucky Will Shakespeare was brought to the realization that, for the head of a family, life is a very serious proposition. The circumstances surrounding their marriage, and the disparity in their ages, probably made Shakespeare and his wife a poorly mated pair and not altogether congenial. This much is suggested by Shakespeare's will, in whic hhis wife is mentioned only In a few interlised words, apparently add ed as an afterthought. In the.-body of the will bequests were made to his two daughters Judith and Susanna, the former being later Mrs. Quiney and the latter becoming Mrs. Hall; to his sister, Joan Hart, and har three sons, and to a considerable number of friends and acquaintance. In the body of the will there was no mention whatever of Mrs. Shakes peare; but in an interlined bequest he wrote: "I give unto my wife my second-best bed, with the furni ture." It would seem from this that when Shakespeare wrote his will he forgot that he had a wife, although it would seem that the mentioan of his daugh ters might have recalled it to his memory, but that her existence was afterward brought to his attention and the Interlined bequest was added. By law, however, Mrs. Shakespeare Inherited a third of her husband's estate, so she was not left destitute. Anne Shakespeare was buried in Stratford Churoh. Does she dress and have good things to eat and entertain her friends : and buy new books and give some of her money away to those who need it? ? ' Not she; she frets and worries from morning until niuht. and from - night until morning, . for fear something will happen to get that money away from her. ! I know a man who has a good position, as positions go, and he frets and worries because he wants the position just above him, and he's not ' competent to fill it, and if he had it he'd be perfectly miserable. As it is now, he keeps his own office hours, doeB his own work when he feels like it, and knows his Job from inside to outside aand from the outside to inside again. The man above him has more to do, longer hours, more worry, and he must carry a great load of responsibility that is already beginning to turn his hair gray. What does my friend who wants that position want it for? What will he do with it when he gets it? He doesn't know he Just hears the chain rattling once in a while and ' can't help doing his very best to get it around his own neck. Sometimes I think dogs are a good deal like human beings, and then again I think that human beings are a good deal like dogs. Which way would you rather put it? The New Clothes . Production of war service needs, is a shirt blouse for women, strictly! tailored in design and finish. This blouse is of natural pongee, with patch! pocket, turn-back cuffs and detachable stock collar. Many high grade milliners are showing for autumn two radi cally different types of hats the very small model and the very large model and they predict the vogue of both these styles. Exquisite new negligee in combination of delicate colors are in vogue, and the rather neglected combination of pale blue and lilac Is once more' in evidence. Very new are jacket blouses finished in varying lengths. These garments are really blouses with peplum sections. Rather high collars are frequently seen In dresses of tailored serge. FLOURLESS BREAD, Amsterdam, Aug. 6 Experiments to perfect a flourless loaf to take the Place of bread have been recentlv conducted In Germany, according t word received in Amsterdam. Advices from Berlin say that the Workmen's Food Control Contmission naa successfully carried on the expert, ments with the result that bread without flour was made. The experi ments are said to have been satisfac tory. The formula for the new bread substitute u not siren. KITCHEN SCISSORS. They are useful to cut oft the fins and tail of fish. And when having a fancy salad or dessert, and marehmallows ape used, cut them wttb scissors, dip the blades la cold water, It will be easier. 7a faet, scissors are often useful m the kitchen, and the eensible hamaewife will keep an inexpensive pair there, always ready. CELERY PLA5TS $1.60 PER 100. JOHN RECK. SOJT, Ox Tongue, for Lunch fill Back Up Oar FIGHTERS! Buy W. S. S. THE smooth, mellow flavor of each slice makes Gobel's Cooked Ox Tongue one of the good things of the earth. It is perfect served cold as a lunch meat or in sandwiches for picnic baskets. Smoked and then cooked to rich tender ness in Gobel's model kitchens, it comes to you instantly ready for the table. You can buy it by the whole tongue or sliced as you wish. It is economical either way. Not an ounce of waste. Get cooked meats where you see the "Quality First" sign. From GobeVs Kitchens Indorsed by Alfred W. McCann Cooked Ham Smoked Ham Bacon Cooked Corned Beef Pure Lard Frankfurters Bologna Slicing Bologna Liver Sausage Cooked Ox Tongue For sale at all good delicates sen and food stores. TlReMEATPfiBDinS D. S. GsTernateat impeded Eitabfakneat No. 317. Morgan Ave. and Rock St Brookrym, N. T. i:nnri'mna"in-"i uMinmii -inn )