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SOCIETY
THE NEW YORK SUN, MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 1942.
NEWS OF WOMEN
15

DISCUSSING PLANS FOR GARDEN PARTY
[[image]]
Left to right-Miss Corinna Devendorf, the Misses Jane and Dudley Kenyon and Miss Jean Leslie, all debutantes of the season, meet at luncheon at the Stork Club to discuss plans for the Turtle Bay Street Fair and Garden Party on September 15.

Garden Party and Street Fair 
   To Be Staged for British Seamen

   The gardens of Turtle Bay and 48th street, between Second and Third avenues, will be the scene, on the afternoon and evening of September 15 of a garden party and street fair which members of the British War Relief Society are staging for the benefit of the Merchant Navy Clubs for British Seamen in the United States.
   Mrs. Hugh de Haven is in charge of arrangements for the street fair. Admission will be free and amusements will include dancing, boxing bouts by bantams from the Madison Square Boys Club, under the direction of Lieut. Jack Dempsey, United States Coast Guard, refreshment stands and a Soho Market staffed by Miss Dudley Kenyon and a group of this season's debutantes.
   Miss Kenyon has called a meeting of her group for tomorrow morning at the headquarters of the B.W.R.S., 730 Fifth avenue. Her aids include the Misses Jacqueline White, Emma Davis, Jean Leslie, Jane Eyre, Edythe Morris Thompson, Corinna Devendorf, Gloria Morch, Jane Kenyon, Hope Chipman, Ellen Pearson, Helen McCulloch, Nadine Nunes and Clementine de Long.
   Mrs. P. Albert Stilwell has planned the garden party, for which admission, including tea, will be $1.65. Miss Jan Struther will preside in Mrs. Miniver's Tea Garden on the terrace of Katharine Hepburn's home. Other features of the garden party will include the Old Bull and Bush Pub complete with a dart game and staffed by barmaids; a Pierrot show and a musical program by Welsh singers and lute players. Mrs. Forrest Stockton is general chairman, assisted by Mrs. Henry James Whigham, Mrs. Carman H. Messmore, Mrs. Halstead G. Freeman and Mrs. Edward S. Knapp.
   Others planning the entertainment, which will be continuous from 3 until 10 o'clock, are Francis W. Crowninshield, chairman; Mrs. Edna Woolman Chase, Mrs. Irving Berlin, Mrs. Margaret Case Harriman, Mrs. Brock Pemberton, Mrs. John Elliott, Miss Margaret Case, Miss Clare Boothe, Miss Helen Menken, Major Edward Bowes, Bruce Barton, Conde Naste, George Abbott, John Golden, Rube Goldberg, John Erskine and C. Hansen Towne.
   Mrs. George U. Harris heads the sponsoring committee with patronesses including Mmes. Arthur Osgood Choate, Thomas J. Watson, William O'Donnell Iselin, Burgoyne Hamilton, Harold Otis, Stanley Richter, Otto H. Kahn, Robert LeRoy, Harry Forsyth, Robert H. Patchin, T. Dennie Boardman, Oakley Sheldon, William Armour, Edgar W. Leonard, Jackson Dykman, Henry S. Breckinridge, Francis Meredith Blagden, Averell Dougherty, Clark H. Minor, Somerset Maugham and Lady Salvage, and Messrs. Francis LeB. Robbins, Gilbert Miller and Dr. Sigmund Spaeth.

[[L.K.?]] Curtis to Wed Miss Abigail Wheeler
   Greenwich, Conn., Aug. 24.– Mrs. Driggs Wheeler of Greenwich has announced the engagement of her daughter, Miss Abigail Forrest Wheeler, to Thomas Knickerbacker Curtis, son of Mrs. John Harrington Green of Harrison, N.Y., and the late William John Curtis Jr.
   Miss Wheeler, whose father is George Forrest Wheeler of Washington, D.C., attended the Abington Friends School in Jenkintown, Pa., and the Edgewood School in Greenwich.
   Mr. Curtis, a grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Todd Porter of Montclair, N.J., is a graduate of Avon Old Farms School at Avon, Conn., and Roosevelt Aviation School, L.I. He is now with Pan American Airways.
   The wedding will take place this autumn in Greenwich.

To Give Tea-dances For Debutante Daughters
   Mr. and Mrs. George Devendorf of Great Neck, L.I., and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Alan Moore of 4 East 95th street will give a tea-dance next Saturday afternoon at the Stork Club for their debutante daughters, Miss Corinna Devendorf and Miss Tricia Hurst. Ted Steele and his orchestra will play.

Huntington Group To Present Musical
Special to THE NEW YORK SUN.
   Huntington, L.I., Aug. 24.– More than fifty youngsters and oldsters, members of the Huntington Crescent Club, are hard at work preparing for the presentation of a second edition of the "Crescent Capers," an amateur musical scheduled for this Friday and Saturday. The show, presented on the dance floor of the main dining room, is being directed by Miss Dorothy Fine.
   Mrs. Berkeley W. Jackson is chairman of the cast, assisted by Mrs. Frank Gilbride and the Misses Margot Grace and Margaret McDonough, with Mrs. Fred S. Ferguson as chairman of the reservations committee.

Annual Amateur Show At Saranac Inn
Special to THE NEW YORK SUN.
   Saranac Inn, N.Y., Aug. 24.– Members of the younger set here will take part in the annual amateur show to be given in the Casino tomorrow night under the direction of Al Davies of New York city.
   The annual Saranac Inn boxing bouts are scheduled to take place in a tent in Saranac Inn park Thursday night. John Highland, New York State boxing inspector, will referee.
   Mr. and Mrs. Howard C. [[Brokaw?]] of Oyster Bay, L.I., have arrived here. They were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. George S. Mahana of New York city.

Button up your lips and save our ships.

Miss Dixon Engaged to Capt. Thacher
   Lieut.-Col. and Mrs. Edwin Malcolm Dixon of Mitchel Field, N.Y., and Cranston, R.I., announce the engagement of their daughter, Dorothy Jean, and Capt. Coleman Wallace Thacher, United States Army, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Franklin Thacher of Dorchester and South Dennis, Mass.
   Miss Dixon attended schools in Maplewood, N.J., and Cornwallon-Hudson, N.Y.
   Capt. Thacher commands Battery B, 101st Field Artillery Battalion. He graduated from Roxbury Latin School and Harvard University, and attended Harvard Law School and Harvard Business School. He also completed the battery officers' course at the School of Fire, Fort Sill, Okla.
   The wedding will take place Saturday, August 29, at the post chapel, Mitchel Field, N.Y.

By Way of Mention

   Mrs. John F. Whitelaw is expected at the Biltmore today from Bar Harbor, Me., where she will remain for several days before going to her home in Cleveland.

   Miss Joan Muckerman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Muckerman 2d of St. Louis, ahs come to the Biltmore from New London, Conn.

   Mrs. Thomas W. Phillips Jr., accompanied by Roger S. Phillips, is at the Waldorf-Astoria from Phillips Hall, Butler, Pa.

   Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fisher Jr. of Gladwyne, Pa., are at the Weylin.
   
   Mrs. John W. Williams is at the Ambassador from Baltimore.

Miss Beavers Engaged to Lieut. Murphy
   Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gaylord Beavers of Bronxville, N.Y., and Bellport, L.I., announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Arden Beavers, to Liet. (j.g.) Peter James Murphy Jr., U.S. N.R., son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter James Murphy of Scarsdale, N.Y.
   Miss Beavers attended Brantwood Hall and Miss Porter's School in Farmington, Conn., and made her debut in 1938. 
   Lieut. Murphy attended Newman School in Lakewood, N.J., and was graduated from Princeton University in 1939. He is on active duty.
   The wedding will take place in the early fall.

LEAVE THE WALDORF.
   Mr. and Mrs. James W. Kemp have returned to Baltimore, after a brief visit at the Waldorf-Astoria. Mr. and Mrs. Rober H. Gardner have returned to Washington, D.C., after several days' stay at the same hotel.

ENGAGED
[[image]]
Chilton-Butler Photo.
Miss Joan Van Vleck.

Miss Van Vleck To Be Married To Cadet Shaffer
Prospective Bride Made Her Debut in 1939.
   Mr. and Mrs. A. Nye Van Vleck of Ridgewood, N.J., announce the engagement of their daughter, Joan, to Air Cadet John Hixon Shaffer, son of Mrs. S.C. Shaffer and the late S.C. Shaffer of Riverside, Everett, Pa.
   Miss Van Vleck was graduated from Dwight School of Englewood, N.J., and Finch Junior College of New York. She made her debut during the winter of 1939.
   Cadet Shaffer was graduated from the Franklin Marshall Academy, Lancaster, Pa., and attended the Franklin Marshall College before entering the United States Military Academy, West Point. He will be graduated in the class of 1943.

Lieut. Barton to Wed Miss Nancy Whitten
Special to THE NEW YORK SUN.
   Boothbay Harbor, Me., Aug, 24.– Mr. and Mrs. Robinson S. Whitten of Winchester, Mass., and Boothbay Harbor announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Nancy Hemenway Whitten, to Lieut. Robert Durrie Barton, United States Marine Corps Reserve, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Barton of Happy Hollow, Foxboro, Mass.
   Miss Whitten was graduated from Wheaton College in Norton, Mass., and attended Radcliffe Graduate School.
   Lieut. Barton was graduated from Bowdoin College.
   The wedding will take place in the fall.

Kate Smith's Mother Joins Her at Lake Placid
Special to THE NEW YORK SUN.
   Lake Placid, N.Y., Aug. 24.-As a means of conserving gasoline, members of this camp colony are using paddle boats on Mirror Lake and for trips between camps along the shores of Lake Placid. 
   Miss Kate Smith, radio artist, was joined at her Camp Sunshine here by her mother, Mrs. C.Y. Smith of Arlington, Va., Miss Helen Slotberg of Glen Ridge, N.J., and Washington, D.C., and Dr. Frank R. Ferlano of New York city and Lake Kushaqua, N.Y.
   Mrs. Winfield Scott Schley of New York, daughter-in-law of Admiral Schley, is among guests at the Mirror Lake Inn. 
   Mrs. Mary Meyer and daughter Mrs. H. A. Dexter of Princeton, N.J., have joined the colony at the Lakeside Inn. 

GOES TO VISIT SON.
   Mrs. Ward A. Wickwire of Buffalo, N.Y., has left the Biltmore for New Haven, Conn., to visit her son, John R. Wickwire.

ARRIVE AT THE BILTMORE.
   Mrs. Irving Odell and her daughter, Miss Ann Odell of Winnetka, Ill., have arrived at the Biltmore. 

Bretton Woods Will Be Scene of Benefit Cabaret
White Mountains Event Wednesday to Aid Relief Fund.
Special to THE NEW YORK SUN.
   White Mountains, N.H., Aug. 24.-A cabaret by staff members of the Mount Washington Hotel at Bretton Woods will be held on Wednesday evening for the benefit of the army and navy relief fund. A dress rehearsal is scheduled for tonight at the Hall in the Pines. 
   Mrs. Louis Lapham of New York gave a luncheon at the Mountain View, Whitefield, in honor Miss Miriam Dwight Walker and members of her house party. Mrs. Lapham and Miss Walker have homes in New Canaan, Conn., and Miss Walker is building a stone mansion at Whitefield on the crest of Kimball Hill, where she also has a guest house and a summer home. 
   Frederic G. Foster of New York who has been at Murray Bay, Canada, arrived at Crawford Notch for a short stay. There also are Dr. and Mrs. Henry C. Cowles, Dr. and Mrs. George C. Bailey and Mr. and Mrs. John C. Parker, all of New York. 
   Many members of the summer colonies at aid near Whitefield will attend the Village Auditorium tonight to see a performance by village folks of Demnan Thompson's "Old Homestead," for the benefit of the Morrison Hospital, Whitefield. 
   Mr. and Mrs. Francis White and Miss Elizabeth M. B. White of New York are at Peckett's, on Sugar Hill, to remain until after Labor Day. Mrs. Grover Edson of New York also is there. 
   At Thorner House, Franconia Swiss Ski Lodge, for the month are Mr. and Mrs. Welles Bosworth and the Misses Francoise and Audrey Bosworth of Locust Valley, L.I.
   Mrs. Robert Mazet, Plandome, L.I., and R. L. Gordon New York, held top scores at the weekly putting tournament held at Sunset Hill House, Sugar Hill.
   Mrs. Albert H. Jones of New York is at the Mountain View House, Whitefield.
   Major and Mrs. George Wolcott Hubbell of Forest Hills L.I. are at the Crawford House.
   Mr. and Mrs. Carroll S. Bayne and Carroll S. Bayne Jr. of New York are at the Mount Washington, Bretton Woods. Lieut. Joseph V. McKee Jr., who visited his parents, Joseph V. McKee and Mrs. McKee, has started for Fort Bragg, N.C.
   Mrs. William S. Halstead of Huntington, L.I., and Miss Josephine Offray of New York are at Maplewood Club.


Miss Watson Affianced to Lieut. Jenkins
   Mr. and Mrs. William R. Watson of Greenwich announce the engagement of their daughter, Rosemary, to Lieut. Murray G. Jenkins, son of Mrs. Murray G. Jenkins and the late Mr. Jenkins of Greenwich.
   Miss Watson was graduated from National Park Seminary in Washington and the Katharine Gibbs School in New York. She is now a member of the staff of Vogue Magazine.
   Lieut. Jenkins was graduated from the Hoosac School, and before his enlistment in the United States Army was associated with the Texas Company.
   The wedding will take place in October.

[[stamp]]U.S. NEEDS US STRONG
EAT NUTRITIONAL FOOD[[/stamp]]

Nutrition for Victory
Edited by Edith M. Barber

Sound Reasons for Refrigerating Protein Foods as Quickly as Possible.
   The care of perishable food is an all-the-year-around problem which is, of course, more acute in warm weather than at other times during the year. Animal foods, such as meat, fish, milk and eggs, because of their protein content, spoil easily in a warm moist temperature.
   Cheese, because it is cured, is immune to most spoilage, although it is susceptible to molds. Butter, which is made, of course, from the cream or fatty portion of the milk, contains little protein and does not spoil easily in the sense that milk does, but will change in flavor unless well refrigerated.
   Meat, fish, milk and products such as custards, made from milk and eggs, are particularly susceptible to bacteria, which thrive on moist foods at a temperature over 45 degrees. As soon as meat comes from the dealer it should be placed in the coldest part of the refrigerator and it should be only partially covered with parchment or wax paper. Ground raw meat spoils more quickly than the solid portions. Leftover cooked meat should be returned to the refrigerator as soon as possible. On a warm, muggy day it is advisable to do this even before the meat has entirely cooled. Fish should be treated in the same manner as meat.
   Milk should be brought in from the doorstep as early as possible. When milk and cream are used the paper tops of the bottles and the edges, inside and out, should be wiped with a wet cloth before the tops are replaced. It is hardly necessary to say that bottles should always be washed before they are placed in the refrigerator. Proper protection of protein foods will do much to prevent digestive upsets which are called ptomine poisoning. Bacteria, which causes this, may also be found on raw vegetables, and this is one of the reasons why salad greens should be so carefully washed before they are served.
   It should be mentioned that there is still another reason for refrigerating all perishable foods as quickly as possible. There is a smaller loss of vitamins under good storage conditions.

SALMON AND CORN CHOWDER
1/8 pound salt pork, or
1/4 cup butter or margarine.
1 medium-sized onion, sliced.
3 cups sliced potatoes.
1 cup boiling water.
2 teaspoons salt.
1 teaspoon pepper.
1 1/2 cups corn cut from the cob.
1 1/2 cups flaked cooked or canned salmon.
2 cups milk.
   Heat fat, add onion and saute two minutes. Add potatoes and water and cook about fifteen minutes until potatoes are tender. Add other ingredients, bring to boil and simmer over very low heat five minutes.
Yield, six servings.
   Note--Any other fish may be substituted for salmon.

RAGOUT OF KIDNEYS
6 veal or 2 beef kidneys.
Salt.
Pepper.
Flour.
2 tablespoons butter.
1 1/2 cups hot water.
1 onion, finely chopped.
1/4 glass tart currant jelly.
2 tablespoons prepared mustard.
   Slice kidneys across or lengthwise. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and dredge with flour. Brown in heavy frying pan in hot butter or drippings. Add remaining ingredients and add more salt if necessary. Cover tightly and simmer together five to ten minutes until tender. Serve with brown rice. 

Painting Your Own Walls This Autumn?

It's Not Hard, Decorating Expert Says, if You Know Your Paints, Surfaces and Brushes.
By Elizabeth MaeR. Boykin.
   Many buildings are redecorating the walls as usual this moving season, but we are already conditioned to the idea that such peace-time services will probably be on the descending scale as the war settles in for grim earnest. Hot water may not be the only thing we'll be cutting down on. But when it comes to fresh walls for the apartment the tenant holds the trump cards ... because in a push you can take a paint brush in hand yourself and do your own redecorating. It's really not hard.
   Though the future for paints hinges on the war, the present isn't too bad for the retail customer. Most paint stores have sufficient stocks on hand to meet normal needs. But when present stocks are exhausted there may be shortages of certain types...such as the faster drying paints and some of the darker colors. Brushes are feeling the war pinch, too–the best types of bristle brushes in big sizes are hard to get and expensive, but you can still get an adequate brush at a price within reach. This shortage of brushes should make us all blush for the good brushes we've let get hardened and ruined for the lack of proper care. And let this be a real warning to take care of brushes you buy for this job because there may not be more where those came from.
   Another war note in the paint picture is the relationship between paint and light. Judicious use of light tints of paints is said to increase illumination greatly. With need to conserve electric power, it might be a patriotic idea to plan light walls for that new apartment.

Two Types.
   There are two major types of paints for interior walls–the water soluble type and the more familiar oil base paints. The oil base paints include flat (for walls), semi-gloss (for walls or woodwork) and high gloss (for bathrooms and kitchens).
   And don't think of the modern water soluble paints as the same thing as old-time calsomine that comes off when it gets wet. These paints are thinned with water, but when they're dry they have a surface that water doesn't affect. They are completely washable, quick drying, odorless, economical, suitable for most any surface.
   There are two kinds of water soluble paints--the resin base type, which is actually a synthetic plastic, and the casein type, which is a product made from milk curds. These water soluble paints may be used directly over any interior wall surface (such as wall paper, brick cough plaster, insulating board) -- except over calsomine.

There is still another interesting type of paint if you have a calsomine wall on your mind... this is an over-calsomine paint which is thinned with benzine and when dry it is washable, too; this is also inexpensive and easy to apply. Consider it not only for calsomined walls, but for the ceilings in rooms with other types of wall finish... many ceilings have calsomine finish, even when the side walls have oil paint or some other surface. But ceilings are not easy to do, amateurs who have painted them admit.

If you want to use oil, resin or casein base paints on a wall that has been calsomined, you must wash it thoroughly first, using any good paint cleaner or special calsomine remover.

If you are using water paint over wall paper be sure to check the surface before application, searching out seams and corners that may not be firmly pasted to the wall. Either re-paste these firmly or else tear them off and sandpaper the torn edge smoothly. 

If you want to take off wall paper before refinishing the wall use warm water in a pail, a stiff brush or a big sponge and a scraper or broad putty knife as your weapons. Just be careful not to gouge the walls. Use resin or casein base paints over wall paper - never oil base paint or over calsomine paint. But if you clean the paper off the wall you can choose any type of paint you choose. 

There is a basic procedure to follow for painting walls. The surface to be painted must be clean, dry and free from oil or grease stains. For new walls, the first, or priming coat should seal all seams and be followed by filling nail holes and cracks with putty. Small plaster cracks should always be resealed with putty before a new coat. Big cracks need doctoring with plaster.

If oil paint is used on new walls three to four coats are necessary; for repainting two coats will usually be sufficient, especially if there is no radical change in color from old to new. Allow each coat to dry thoroughly before applying the next (one or two days between coats is best).

If the paint has scaled, leaving bare plaster, sandpaper the edges of the bad spot and apply a priming coat of the new paint to the bare spaces.

Water Soluble.
When water soluble paints (either casein or resin based) are used on new walls, no sizing is needed. Nail holes and cracks should be filled before the first coat. For new walls two coats are recommended, but in repainting, unless there is a great color change from dark to light, one coat of water paint is sufficient. Although most people prefer the practical gloss finish oil paints for woodwork, the flat surfaced water soluble paints have been used very successfully. 

In most of the paints we have mentioned today you can get a wide variety of colors and subtle tints, many of them already mixed. But mixing paints isn't hard these days either. With certain types of the new paints you get a bucket of white with a small tube or can of tinting color, and mix in the proportion noted on a color chart that shows many tints for each color. Just remember that you can't use oil tints for resin or casein pains, nor can you use water paint tints with oil paint. 

The equipment you'll need includes: brushes, one good sized one and one smaller brush, the best quality you can afford; lots of rags and newspapers and preferably a big piece of cloth to spread on floors or furniture, like an old bedspread or maybe you have a couple of discarded tents tucked away in the bureau drawer. We hope you have rubber gloves and a smock to protect yourself from your own artistry. A good way to keep the paint off the window panes is to paste gummed paper tape on the glass around the frames...saves lots of razor-blading later on. But if you do smear paint here and there clean it up before it dries; in case you don't a razor blade will take it off window panes.

If you want a stippled effect you can apply the water paints with a special roller designed for the purpose. For a plain surface the water paints go on with a brush like other types of paint.

[[image]]

In Millicent Jones Ayres's living room she has wisely had the walls painted so as to give the room a feeling of tranquility despite its small size. A pale rose-beige for walls and for the two tall cabinets--the same tone for draperies and floor covering--make it possible for her to have unity and smartness in this small room.

Cold Water Shaving
Helps the Mayor Save Hot Water--Cosmetic Stockings--True Red Lips.
By Belle Victor.

We don't know what His Honor is going to do about keeping shaves at all hours, dashing off to fires like that, and we aren't curious enough to get up at 3 A.M. or stay up till 4 to find out. 

In any case, a good many hard working men in this town who leave the house before half-past 6 in the morning and get back just under the nose around 8 at night are going to find the new hot water restrictions something of a hardship when it comes to shaving. Personally, we wish they'd all grow beards, they look so virile. It must be admitted, however, that our enthusiasm is not shared by the great majority of American wives and mothers. Well, mesdames, you may all come to sponge baths yet and lose that other ancient American prejudice, that the French are not a cleanly race because they haven't god running hot water. How nice for the French and the gas company. Meanwhile, a leading manufacturer of shaving preparations isn't stumped at all. He recommends a brushless shaving cream for cold water shaving, since the toughest whiskers should capitulate to it when it's well rubbed into the skin. The cream has a pleasant, spicy fragrance and it's less greasy than most, so that the skin will feel clean and fresh when rinsed in cold water. 

A shaver whoe prefers a brush will find that he can work up quite a decent lather by the use of a little more elbow grease. This extra working up of the lather dissolves the soap just as hot water used to - and if you're not too energetic you should be saving soap as well as fuel. 

To look on the bright side the hot water restriction should force every one to scrub a little harder, which helps circulation and is lovely for the complexion. Also they're a boon and a al-most unanswerable excuse for those bright little boys who never saw any sense in being clean all the time anyway. 

-

One nice thing about real stockings, a girl's public couldn't always tell when we should have used a depilatory on her legs but 

[[image]]
New under-arm 
Cream Deodorant 
Safely
Stops Perspiration
Arrid is the largest selling deodorant
1. Does not rot dresses or men's shirts. Does not irritate skin. 
2. No waiting to dry. Can be used right after shaving. 
3. Instantly stops perspiration for 1 to 3 days. Prevents odor.
4. A pure, white. greaseless, stainless vanishing cream. 
5. Awarded ApprovalSealAmer-ican Institute of Laundering - harmless to fabrics. 
ARRID [[stamp]]Guaranteed by Good Mousekeeping[[/stamp]]
39₵ Buy a jar today at any store selling toilet goods (also in 10₵ and 59₵ jars)
[[/image]]

For names of shops where the products mentioned in this column may be bought, send stamped addressed Belle Victor, ca[[?]] York Sun. 

hadn't. Just glance around and you'll see that cos stockings don't offer anything like the same protection. 

There's a new hair remover, you'll be glad to know, which is as quick as it is efficient. It's also simple to use. The kit contains a little wooden holder and five hair remover pads. All you do is insert one, and smooth it over your skin.

Your initial investment is just a dollar, and you can get five double-faced refills for fifty cents. 

-

A bright, true red, which is almost every one's dream shade for lipstick because it does so much for you and goes with almost everything, is new in the shade called "red pencil." This definitely has no yellow nor any of that difficult blue tinge. 

It comes in a cute gray and red kit, which includes a jar of make-up cream which is nice and moist and shouldn't cake or crumble on your puss-complexion veil, they call it. This is $2.50, or you can choose the lipstick in the dollar or larger $1.50 size. There's also cream and dry rouge available in a matching shade.

-

Sandwich Spread. 
A healthy, tasty and inexpensive sandwich spread is made by putting a celery heart, a green pepper and an onion through a food chopper and adding the chopped vegetables to creamed butter.

-

United State Saving Bonds or Axies bonds?

[[image]]
The Emperor's Chef-
Qualliotti, head chef to Napoleon, fled to London after his master's exile. For crosse & Blackwell he created the secret recipe for Chow Chow which today delights epciurean palates with the flavor never since duplicated elsewhere- 

CROSSE&BLACKWELL'S
ORIGINAL 
CHOW CHOW
[[/image]]