Evening Star Newspaper, November 12, 1923, Page 22

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“WOMAN’S PAGE. More Elaborate Sleeves Favored BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. The trick of using the sleeve to carry elaborate and complicated trim- ming has.usually been developed in @00l climates. Cleopatra in Egypt would have found unendurable the sleeve worn by Queen Elizabeth in | England and Catherine de Medici in France The fact that the aborate sleeve has no part in classical co: tumery is due as much to the fact that Cire nd Rome were located in mild climates as to the fact that classic taste delighted in the bare arm. As far ou sleeve fashions are concerned, we seem to be traveling rapidly from warm and balmy gions to northern latitude: many of our most interesting suggestions come from Russia, where for centuries this on of women's gowns has been richly developed The French or English mediaeval lady, who in her dense-walled castle must have necded protection of many clothes even In warm months, also gives us some charming Sugges- tions for the development of sleeve fashions It s most surely the sloev from mediaeval that Poir ion_ for of black and 1o a bright lining, sleeves were not infrequently made | and put on separately from the gown | itself in mediaeval days. and it was such a sleeve that the doughty knight somctimes wore beneath his rmor as a pledige from his lady love. he sleeve borne in coats-of-arms by some English and American fam- ilies, and known as a maunche, is of this The taire sleeve will surel be heard from again. Lanvin h revived it. and it has been much ad- mired in some of the coat frocks worn this autumn. Women will probably have the mousquetaire sleeve on their sUits before spring. iCopyright a old f | | 1023.) Chocolate Nut Wafers. Beat the yolks of three eggs, two ounces of grated checolate, fine half a cupful « one teaspoonful of with half a cupful the volks one cupful of sugar, the chocolate, the almonds and the flour, then drop the mixture in rounds on greased cooky sheecets and bake them. melt chop monds and sift | Laking powder | of flour. Add to 1 _e A SATIN EMBROIDE SLEEVE DESIG OF BLACK AND Gt WITH BRIGHT Ll SLEEVE _SLIT RED. BELOW, BY POIRET, LD BROCADE, Our Birds in Verse By Henry Oldys TUFTED TITMOUSE. I hear it passing through the verdant cover, A vagrant spirit of perpetual plaint; Now here, now there, its pleadings seem to Voicing to every heart a The The woods A joyous_stir is in thesc v whispering zephyrs gossip with the flo cho many a gladsome strair hover, soul’s constraint. ers; crnal bowers; Yet still, through all, I hear that sad refrain. What is thy quest, persiste nt iterater? What is it thou dost call and call again? Hath thy too fondly cherished one proven traito: And dost thou vainly questi Or dost 1 glade and glen? like me, some lost ideal cherish And seck’st. with lambent hope, its yearned recall; Still loth to let thy heart's fond creature perish, With yet, tween heart and mind, a tow'ring wall? Oh. derelict of 1 e's tempestuous ocean ! Oh, battered wreckage from the cruel sca! Whate'er the fancied cause of thine emotion, Thy burden brings a living pain to me. Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. Utensils With Handles. “You can't imaginé how much easier my cooking has become since I have discarded practically all uten- sils that haven't handles.” wife told me recently. “I used prepare nearly | thing in bowls. just because my | mother had done so. and because 1| had always seen bowls used. Then, one moming, in lifting a heavy bowl of pancake batter back and forth | from the table to the griddle, I won- | dered why it med so awkward and why I was so tired, and it oc- curred to me that I had a bowl twice as large and heavy as I needed, and that, moreover, my hand and arm were tired grasping the rim of the earthenware utens “The next ecakes, I m e batter aluminum aucepan with a handle. This cculd be lifted casily across to the griddle, and the batter poured out via the lip instead of with a spoon. Later on I emulated the pancake ar- tists in restaurant windows, and put the batter in a light-weight pitcher after mixing. It pours out even bet- ter from a pitcher than from a sauce- pan. P%’But 1 had_learned the lesson of the handle. Now I mix all sorts of puddings, cakes, muffins and sauces in dishes with handles. Anvthing that has to be poured into a baking pan or pudding dish can be managed much more conveniently in this way. Bowls are the most unwieldly, awkward dishes in the world to serape contents from! use utensils with handles for other purposes, too. 1 keep a small aluminum cup for melting butter. I have a quart cup in which I keep hacon drippings and similar fats for cooking. The handle never gets zreasy. as a lard tin or kitchen bowl would. and it is so very handy to manipulate. Drippings can be poured from these cups without the use of a spoon,-if warmed a moment over the_fire, “I_never bake cake any more in the handleless pan. Those with the movable handle, that releases the cake from the pan, are so much more comfortable to take from the oven. In fact, I think that every utensii in the kitchen should be provided with & handle, it possibley . a house- to every- | | 1 made griddle in a light | to the entire family My Neighbor Says: To creum sugar and butter to- gcther by hand. bend the tips of fingers on the right hand down. putting thumb - nail against the index finger so as to protect the nail. Use fingers between first and second joints for kneading. You will find it is quickly done, while the hands arc left comparatively clean. An old tennis racket makes a good carpet beater. It is light and strong, does no damage, and, above all, does not hurt the hand. To render buots and. shoes water-proof, rub a little mut- ton suet around the edges of the soles. Beeswax is just as good. To wash glass, cold water is better than warm. It gives a clearer and brighter look. If the glass is washed in warm water it should be rinsed after- ward in cold. Alwa; keep cheese in a well covered cheese dish or it will becon dry and tasteless. If cheese is wrapped in° a cloth moistened with vinegar it will remain moist and retain its flavor longer. A handful of borax put in the .wash - boiler will whiten the clothes. Arnabel . Worthingion Morning Frock. Do vou realize how important it happiness that you appear in an attractive morning frock at the breakfast table? Here's a frock made of cretonne and un- bleached muslin that would sepd MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 23. 19 FEATURES. Carrots Stuffed With Onions, My cuzzin Artie stayed at our house all nite last nite and me and him was laying there going to sleep to- gether and we started to tawk about being detecktives for a living, me saying, Hay, I tell you wat. . Artie sed, and I sed, Lets you me get up a detecktive agency be the detecktives. rite, Artie sed. And we ed about it till we went to sleep this morning we started to go to skool and wat was on the frunt steps but a lot of red marks like blud marks, me saying, Hah, a mistry. Hah, blud stanes, Artie sed getting down ‘on his hands and neez and looking at them like a detecktive, and I sed, Hah, theres a big mistry heer. pardicr, somebody has went and merdered somebody and heers the clues. Youre rite, pardner. it looks to me like baby biud, by the color of it. this is getting serious, Artie sed, and I sed, Never mind, we'll track the villing down and make them pay deerly for this days work. Wich jest then ma cam door saying, Havent you do you wunt to be late? For pity sakes how did =all those red ink stanes get on the steps, for mersey sakes? she sed. o G wizz 1 wonder if my new 5 cent fountain pen leeks, [ sed. And 1 took it out of my pockit and my fingers was all red, proving 1t leeked all rite, and 1 sed,” Good nite, thats the last 5 cent fountain pen 111 ever buy I sincerely hope so, ma sed. Meen- ing on account of the frunt steps, and me and Artic went tu skool diskusted, him ony diskusted because the clues was ink and me being exter diskusted on account of the fountain p COLOR CUT-OUT Prim as Priscilla. Polly Mount” teasted Betty Cut-out, getting out of the car at the door of her cousin's farmhouse, “you're as prim as Priscilla in' the Pilgrim Book!" “1 should think your tongue would be all puckered up from say- ing so many P's,” Polly laughed. She really was the soul of neatness with her braids plaited just-so, not a wrinkle i her skirt, and always out to the gone yet, q a fresh white handkerchief in her pocket. “And vour saving I'm as prim as Priscilla gives me a won- derful idea, Betty.” she continued “When you come to our hou to spend Thanksgiving day, let's have a big play called “The First Than |giving. We'll act it out in the Ili- brary with all the neighbor children for Pilgrims!" “You can be Betty, eagerly. out.” The boys tesse Polly by calling her “House Afire” because sho is & redhead. Color her Bair with your orange crayon; make her cheeks rosy: then cut her out and paste her on light. Wolght cardboard. Her dress is blue, and her hose and shoss tan. (Copyright. 1923.) The Guide Post By Henry van Dyke Priscilla,” “Let's plan agreed it all The Royal Law. The royal law * * * thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.—James 2. This law as it stands, with its | double duty of the right love of one- self and the equal love of one’s neigh- bor, has been already. considered in these Guide Post papers. Perhaps we may come back to it again, for it is the most important of all practical directions, as well as the most difficult to read and inter- pret correctly. 1f T could do that I would be wiser than 1 know myself to be. But for today let us concern our- selves only with the question of why St. James calls this the royal law. Is it_because Christ gave it? But He also gave many other com- mandments, and He is still giving them through His Spirit. Is it because kings always keep it? But some of them have not kept it at all, and few of them have always observed it. 1 think it may be because it corre- sponds to the. true ideal of what royainess means. For only he is fit to rule men who loves them and desires their welfare as much as he values his own high place. 1 think it may be also because if this law were kept, it would make all men royal, since where all are servants one of another, all are kings, too. This is what St. Peter means when { he writes: “Ye are a chosen race, priesthood, a holy nation. (Copyright, 1923.) P e s E—— a royal| every one off for the day's activities in just the best of spirits, and it's designed with thought as to the housewife’s comfort, too. It's easily made, easy to slip into and loose and comfortable enough to work in. The pattern can be had in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. The 36-inch size requires 2 yards of 36-inch material with 1% yards 36-inch contrasting.. Price of pattera 15 cents, in post- age stamps enly. Owrders should be addressed to The Washington Star pattern buream, 32 East 18th Street, New York cfty. Please write name and address cleatiys Dont Rui Your Lifo by Ancestor Worship Ancestors Should Be an Weight, to the Living: Your Life, as They | Dorothy Dix| Quotes Modern Girl Who Wouldmt Let the Dead Rule| Inspiration, Not a Dead —Make the Most of Did of Theirs, and Don’t Be Ruled by Ghosts. GIRL came to me in great distress of woe was that she was in love A the other day. The gist of her tale with a young man whom her mother considered her social inferior, and would not hear of her marrying. L “If mother has any just objection to John,” said the girl, “if she could say that he was intemperate, or im- moral, or a neer-do-well, I would listen to her and obey her when she tells me that I must never see him any more, and that it will kill her if 1 marry him. everytn hat 1| everything that is in'a man,and he has already But she can't bring a single charge that is worth paying attention to against him. He is fine and upright made a place for himself in the worild, and is going on to be big and successful. our blue blood, and, believe me, “And what are we to boast of our- selves? The fag end of an aristo- cratic old race that has run to seed. “Mother s always talking about Danny Finds He Has a Friend A troe friend gained Is wealth attained. —0ld Mother Nature, Little did Danny Meadow Mouse guess all the things that were ahead of him. He was a prisoner in the tiny cupboard in the airplane in which he had been carried away from the Green Meadows. The man who flew that airplane had seen Danny run into that tiny cupboard and had shut the door. This didn’t worry Danny very much. He had a great deal of confidence in those sharp teeth of his, and he felt sure he could gnaw his way out. Now, the aviator, which is what a man who gets bluer and biuer all the time from | anemia because we are so poor that danced with Lafayette. restaurants. DOROTHY DIX. We are half fed. Mother is always telling me how my great-grand- mother wore a point lace dress and That doesn't mean a thing in my young life. I want a decent frock for once and to be able to dance myself in smart Mother is always brag- ging about our ancestor who was a signer of the Declaration of Inde- pendence. T'd swap him off any day for a man who could sign a cheque that commanded respect at the bank e . 4] DON'T mean to disparage my ancestors. 1 don't feel the Chinese do. the most same with tlled upon to fall do: No doubt they were w mine. they could of their lives and opportunities. If they had sat down and worshiped their forbears and . I honor and respect them, but and worship them as mother and and energetic people and made 1 want to do the wn orthy been afraid to make a move lest they should shock their august shades, they wouldn't have got anywhere, eithe: r, and we wouldn't have been called upon to make sacrifices to their memory “And, anywa should T, who live dominatéed by ghost 1 am alive, and I do in a new world, wi of the past? We are poor as Job's turkey about looking like figures in patzhed-u It's absurd. on't want the dead to rule me! Why th new traditions, new standards, be 1t's idiotic. . half starved and went yet I simply had to defy We were P old finery. mother and go to work in spite of her, because no lady of my family had ever earned an hone would have sald about it. “She thought it so much more genteel than to make a comfortable 1i labor. And when anybody called me shame. in marriage limousine. to a rich old man who .« s #ROTH of my brothers loafers, because they are fitted for or to make accept a sftuation John, th too pro n humble begin s a bank president n 1 want to marry, fourtéen years old, and now he is tarted to work. He has energy, ry quality that my brothers lack. are failures, t dollar, and she wept to think what great Aunt Clorinda egant to be hungry and shabbily ing and be independent by my own a working girl she nearly died of But she would have been as proud as 'Punch if I had sold myself could have given me pearls and a In reality they are nothing but »ud to do the kind of work they are ning. They are the kind who would but would scorn a job. started out as an office hoy when he vice president in the firm for which enterprise, ambition and initiative— “He has not only not asked a dollar of anybody or a helping hand, but supported his widowed mother and educated his younger brothers while my brothers have depended upon their family name and their family influence and felt that b grandsons special places should be m ing, the man who stands on his own fe, times mor pecause they were my grandfather's ade for them. And to my think- et and fights his way through is ten a manlier man than the one who is just a leaner. “My mother calls John uncouth always know just which fork and spos sional lapses in grammar. He doesn’t lists and he likes phonograph mu tastes with the culture the new movement in literature than the stock marke and uneducated because he doesn't on 1o use, and he is guilty of occa- anything about the Russian contrasts with now sic. She horror his ones of my brothers, who knows a lot more about they do about the last quotations in “What she doesn't grasp is that there are different kinds of education, different brands of knowledge, and tha but he knows & million vital, practical 3 isn't dull and stupid. “H He h, that ix marvelously balanced, a ment that is almost unerring. 1 “John may not read novels, but all of life is an open book to him. doesn’t know a thing about the science of ps: very depth of people's souls, and their to him. He goes to the very heart of of this isn’t culture, but its wisdom. I He is only in a monetary way but cult evervbody with whom he come wife is never going to have ¢ said the girl, wiping her eyes, I'm not going to be like “And John is on his way not from and b and— or no mother. keep her from MArrying a poor young chap she was in love with and whom | they called common, as they do my Jo and rich, and his wife's imousine splash the streets on foot.” id 1. “Marry vour John ting your life worshiping at the (Copyright Some one in Washington, D. C. made the indiscreet suggestion that wives should be rated according to their wage-earning abilities. I do not know what form that statement originally took. Probably it was quite innocuous. But it couldn’t have created a worse sensation in the homes of this land if it had been a depth bomb charged with TNT. The very idea—judging wives just as if they were scrub women or cannery workers! > Yet why shouldn't wives be judged just as if they were scrub women or cannery workers? Once upon a time wives were judged in that way, and history Wwould seem to prove that they were as happy as, if not happier than, that specics of modern wife who feels that her “charm” and “intelligence” are sufficient assets to justify her hus- band's devotion and support. The young man of today who would operly announce that he was look- ing for “a good, hard-working wife’ would be greeted with jeers of de- rision and probably doomed to per- manent bachelorhood. ~Even those girls who are perfectly willing to work hard after marriage would con- sider themselves insulted if rated as “laborers” and judged accordingly. But why? Why shouldn’t a wife be ranked as a laborer as well as a husband? Why shouldn’t an idle wife be regarded with the contempt which we now mete out to an idle hus- band? Why shouldn’t a lazy, incom- petent twife-partner be judged as harshly as any other kind of work partner? ‘Wifehood is no more inherently sa- cred and mysterious than husband- hood. A wife gives no more than the husband to a marriage contract. The dreams and labors and sacrifices of a man are exactly as precious as the dreams and labors and sacrifices of a wol The material needs of both sexes are the same. A husband can't pay for his “ham and” with his fgharm.” Then why should a wife expect her charm to pay her grocery 2 bl!}‘l'hll is_a horrible theory!” you liminates all the romance ‘Allow me to answer with equal en- thusiasm that a lot of romance ought casion to be ashamed of him. 1 am going to be that woman, mother | this | to their industrial eff t John may know little about books, things that are really important. a mind as keen as a sword, a mind forward-looking mind, and a judg- He chology, but he sees into the motives are as transparent as glass he truth of every subject. Maybe all life itself. going up. and he urally and in contac going to arrive, He is learning acquiring polish And— sociall He i ¢ Aunt Clarissa, who let the family hn. They lived to see him a senator ing mud on her as she trudged along and found your own family, instead shrine of dead and gone ancestors.” | DOROTHY DIX. 1923.) inated from marriage. The kind of “romance” which serves as an alibi for selfishness and lazine: and incompetence ought to be eradi- cated as speedily as possible. idea of rating wives according eney is a long step in the right direction. It would probably be impossible for ‘Washington. D. C., to make such a rating. But it isn't impossible for public opinion gradually to impose such a rating. And though the lazy incompetents will cry out against it, the self-respecting women will wel- come the return of the old standards of fine craftsmanship in homemak- ing, for with it will come a pride which no civie honor or social pleas- ure can bestow. For there is no finer worker in all the world than the woman who makes a good job of her home. = (Oopyright. 1923.) Ana | | H SO THE AND WITH TRAP. AVIATOR WENT AWAY PRESENTLY RETURNED A LITTLE CAGE-LIKE flies an airplane is called, was a lover of animals. He guessed right away that Danny Meadow Mouse must have climbed into that airplane way back on the Green Meacows early that morning. It tickled him to think that he had Danny for a passenger on that By Thornton | BEDTIME STORIES ¥ W. Bergess. trap. He opened the little door of the tiny cupboard just wide enough |for Danny Meadow Mouse to come |out. “Then he set his trap right in front of it. Danny couldn’t get out without going right into that trap. When he was sure that it was set just right he went away was still. Danny Meadow Mouse, hiding in the tiny cupboard, listened and listened. There wasn't a sound. He waited a long time. Then very carefully he approached the crack made by the open door. He waited there a while listening. Then he made up his mind that everything was safe, and he came out. He walked right into that cage-like trap. Snap! A little wire door had closed. Danny was a prisoner! Of course, Danny was dreadfully frightened, He tricd his sharp teeth on the wires of that cage, but he soon found that he couldn't bite through them. He merely hurt his teeth and his jaws. Perhaps you can guess how Danny felt. How he did wish that he had run away when he had the chance, despite all the dangers. “I don’t know what I'm £0ing to do. 1 guess this is the end of everything,” whimpered Dann: And then the aviator came back. He brought with him a larger wire cage. In it was a little box with a hole in it just big enough for Danny to pass through. He put Danny in the cage. Danny's one thought was to get out of sight, and at once he ran_into that little box. Inside he found a nice, soft bed. The man put some food in the cage. “There,” said he, “I'll leave you to get acquainted with your new home. I think. you and I are going to be great friends. I'm sure of it. Some day If we ever get back on the Green Meadows I'll let you go. Until then you will fly with me. I think it is going to bring me good luck.” He went away and left Danny alone to get acquainted with his new home. After a while he ventured out. He soon found out that he was still a prisoner. But he also found the food, and being hungry he proceeded to, fil his stomach. Somehow he no longer felt the great fear he had felt fore. He knew that that man me to be a friend or he would not have brought that food and provided that long journey. He decided right away that he would keep Danny. It would be fun to have Danny along on other journeys up in the air, - So the aviator went away and pres- ently returned with a little cage-like soft bed. (Copyright, 1923, by T. W. Burgess.) The next story anny Mouse sees Strange Sights.” Meadow The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL Betty Blythe Is Back. Betty Blythe is back from Europe. And, what is more, she has brought back with her a precious cargo that could not be catalogued by the cus- tomhouse officials. Which is to say that she has observed and she has seen. She has looked upon post-war Europe through the filter of a fine and original _ imagination, and she has a store of information and anec- dotes of royalty and the hostelries of _royalty. You know, many people bore you to bichloride when they tell about their travels. Often’s the time I have wished T we d and out of it all when 1 have spent an evening with some friend who has_recently been “doing Kurope, or Canada, or the north pole. But Betty didn't bore me—no, not for an instant, Translated into her vivid vernacu- lar, the old world stirred and wa modernly alive. She gave me tragic glimpses, and now and then “fun- nyisms.” She_described the pictured monarchs of Europe as having “a cordion-pleated neck “As for Paris’ course the nigl* life is still there— certain _places where there are girls dancing _indecorously—Mont- martre and Maxim's; but for the most part Paris has changed so from what it was when I studied there ten v ago that I would scarcely know it for the same city. It has become serious, commercial and, most of all, Americanized. “All_down the boulevards where once were the homes of the old aris- tocracy (hey have built skyscrapers. | The women are no tonger bird-like creatures, radiant as spring in th aigrettes and glaced glov The women are purposeful now. They are id Betty, “of i good. and always refers to his mother as “Mother dear.” Do write me again. I especially like little girls Inquirer—To be quite homest with you, "I don't think that visitors are altogether welcome in the studios Its a distraction, you see, and traction costs time, and time cos oh, codles of money! In fact, to get into a studio where First National Pictures are in the making t days requires the historical, gymnastic ability of the well known camel through the equally well known needle. Don't try it. (Al rights reserved.) self-reliant and independent. It somehow doesn't seem right for a Parisienne to be either self-reliant or_independent. = “Even the men are changed. They have grown taller, larger and most of them have abandoned the waxed mustaches of an earlier regime. Ah. yes, the war has put its mark upon Paris, and the darling of the world is a modern city, commercialized and money-mad Little Girl—Yes, honey, Jackie Coo- gan would be “a nice little boy to iplay with.,” He loves to draw air- iplanes and boats and play with elec- tric railroads, and, knowing Jackie, I believe that he would even take an interest in dolls. He is that broad minded. He very obedient and i Maple Sugar Cookies. Break up one and one-half poun: of maple sugar until it is soft, then measure off two cupfuls and cream that portion with half a cupful of butter. Beat two eggs and stir them in with the mixture. Stir half a tea- spoonful of baking soda into one cupful of sour cream or milk, add that to the mixture and beat the whole for five minutes. Then add enough flour to make a soft cooky dough. Let the dough stand for one hour or over night. Then roll it thin, cut out the cookies with a fancy cutter, press halved nut meats into the tops of the cookies and bake in a fairly thick oven. ) The One Bran tsALL Benefit HERE'S just the right proportion of “roughage” Tin Post’s Bran Flakes to promote healthful regularity. But that isn’t all. From the instant you taste the appetizing flavor of this crisp, delicious laxative food, the digestive system goes right to work for your improved health and energy. The principal conten t_of Post’s Bran Flakes is wheat bran—made non-irritating by special process- ing. ‘With the bran are retained other valuable por- tions of the wheat, rich in nutriment, including mineral elements and vitamin-B. Give health and appetite this daily treat. Order TODAY, from your grocer, and—be sure it’s POST’S. Nl T T Scrape six carrots {them in slighdy salted they are tender. large ard loil water until Cut off about two inches from the stem end of each carrot, scoop the inside out of the top part to form a cup, and save for soup the stem end and whatever has been scooped out. Place two table- spoonfuls of melted butter in a fry- ing pan, mince one large onion, add it, and fry to a delicate brown. Then stir in an equal quantity of b d crumbs, season the mixture with pep- per and salt, and fill the carrot cups with it. Bake the stuffed carrots for thirty minutes, basting them fre- quently with melted butter. g Prices realized on Swift & Company sales of carcuss beef in Washington, D. ( for week ending Saturday, November 10, 192 on shipments sold out, ran to 19.00 cents per pound and ave cents per pound.—Adsertisement. “PHILLIPS" MILK OF MAGNESIA Say “Phillips”- Protect Your Doctor and Yourself Beware of imitations of genuine “Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia,” the original Milk of Megnesia prescribed by physicians for fifty years. Acoept only the genuine “Phillips.” 25-cent bottles, also larger size, con- tain directions and nses—any drug etare. Children Cry for MOTHER:- Fletcher’s astoria is a pleasant, harm- less Substituter for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of MZA}— Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it, Co The We Westinghouse Sales & Service ( ReaQy-to d Fish Table Sharpens Dull Appetites B gakes The original ready-to- fry fish cakes, made with plenty of Gorton’s famous salt Cod (No Bones) and the finest potatoes. Ask for the blue-and-yellow can. Stove Itcooks at the table ~right before your hungry eyes

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