a Belletonte, Pa., August 17, 1917. WHY IS IT? Some tind work where some find rest, And so the weary world goes on. I sometimes wonder which. is best. The answer comes when life is gone. Some eyes sleep when some eyes wake, And so the weary night hours go. Some hearts beat where some hearts break | I often wonder why ’'tis so. Some will faint where some will fight; Some love the tent and some the field, I often wonder who are right— The ones who strive or those who yield. Some hands fold where other hands Are lifted bravely in the strife. And so through ages and through lands Move on the two extremes of life, Some feet halt where some feet tread. In tireless march, a thorny way; Some struggle on where some have fled; Some seek when others shun the fray. Some swords rust where others clash; Some fall back where some move on; Some fiags furl where others flash Until the battle has been won. Some sleep on while others keep, The vigils of the true and brave. They will not rest till roses creep Around their name above a grave. —Father Ryan. NOBLESSE. (Concluded from last week.) However, when the time came, it was all worse than she had imagined. How could 2 woman gently born and bred conceive of the horrible igno- miny of such a life? She was drag- ged hither and yon, to this and that little town. She traveled through sweltering heat on jolting trains; she slept in tents; she lived—she, Marga- ret Lee—on terms of equality with the common and the vulgar. Daily her absurd unwieldiness was exhibit- ed to crowds screaming with laughter. Even her faith wavered. It seemed to her that there was nothing forever- more beyond those staring, jeering faces of silly mirth and delight at the sight of her seated in two chairs, clad in a pink spangled dress, her vast shoulders bare and sparkling with a tawdry necklace, her great, bare arms covered with brass brace- lets, her hands increased in short, white kid gloves, over the fingers of which she wore a number of rings— stage properties. Margaret became a horror to her- self. At times it seemed to her that she was in the way of fairly losing her own identity. It mattered little that Camille and Jack were very kind to her, that they showed her the nice things which ner terrible earnings had enabled them to have. She sat in her two chairs—the two chairs proved a most successful advertisement—with her two kid-cushiony hands clenched in her pink spangled lap, and she suf- fered agony of soul, which made her inner self stern and terrible, behind that great pink mask of face. And nobody realized until one sultry day when the show opened at a village in a pocket of green hills—indeed, its name was Greenhill—and Sydney Lord went to see it. Margaret, who had schooled herself to look upon her audience as if they were not, suddenly comprehended among them another soul who under- stood her own. She met the eyes of the man, and a wonderful comfort, as of a cool breeze blowing over the face of clear water, came to her. She knew that the man understood. She knew that she had his fullest sympa- thy. She saw also a comrade in the toils of comic tragedy, for Sydney Lord was in the same case. He was a mountain of flesh. As a matter of fact, had he not been known in Green- hill and respected as a man of weight of character as well as of body, and of an old family, he would have rivaled Margaret. Beside him sat an elderly woman, sweet-faced, slightly bent as to her slender shoulders, as if with a chronic attitude of submission. She was Sydney’s widowed sister, Ellen Waters. She lived with her brother and kept his house, and had no will other than his. Sydney Lord and his sister remain- ed when the rest of the audience had drifted out, after the privileged hand- shakes with the queen of the show Every time a coarse, rustic hand reached familiarly after Margaret’s Sydney shrank. He motioned his sister to remain seated when he approached the stage. Jack Desmond, who had been exploit- ing Margaret, gazed at him with ad- miring curiosity. Sydrey waved him away with a commanding gesture. “I wish to speak to her a moment; pray leave the tent,” he said, and Jack obeyed. People always obeyed Syd- ney Lord. Sydney stood before Margaret, and he saw the clear crystal, which was herself, within all the flesh, clad in tawdry raiment, and she knew that he saw it. “Good God,” said Sydney, “you are a lady.” He continued to gaze at her, and his eyes, large and brown, became blur- red; at the same time his mouth tightened. “How came you to be in such a place as this?” demanded Sydney. He Soke almost as if he were angry with er. Margaret explained briefly. “It is an outrage,” declared Sydney. He said it, however, rather absently. He was reflecting. “Where do you live?” he asked. “Here.” “You mean—?” “They make up a bed for me here, after the people have gone.” “And I suppose you had—before this—a comfortable house.” , “The house which my grandf ther Lee owned, the old Lee mansion-house, before we went to the city. It was a very fine old Colonial house,” explain- ed Margaret, in her finely modulated voice. “And you had a good room?” “The southeast chamber had always been mine. It was very large, and the furniture was old Spanish mahoga- ny. i { | | i 1 i | | | 1 | , seemed to see past him. | last,” she said. | never married. mer i anyhow,” said Jack. i “And now—" said Sydney. “Yes,” said Margaret. She looked at him, and her serious blue eyes | was tc remain with Sydney’s sister ! . while Sydney went away on business, | A wonderful “It will not “What do you mean?” “I try tolearna lesson. Iam a i child in the school of God. My lesson is one that always ends in peace.” “Good God!” said Sydney. He motioned to his sister, and El- len approached in a frightened fash- Her brother could dc no wrong, | ion. but this was the unusual, and alarm- ed her. “This lady,” began Sydney. “Miss Lee,” said Margaret. “I was I am Miss Margaret Lee.” “This,” said Sydney, “is my sister Elien, Mrs. Waters. Ellen, I wish you to meet Miss Lee.” Ellen took into her own Margaret's | hand, and said fesbly that it was a visit. Sydney moved slowly out of tent, and found Jack Desmond. He was standing near with Camille, who looked her best in a pale-blue sum- silk, and a black hat trimmed with roses. Jack and Camille never really knew how the great man had managed, but presently Margaret had gone away with him and his sister. Jack and Camille looked at each other. “Oh, Jack, ought you to have let her go?” said Camille. “What made you let her go?” asked Jack. “I—don’t know. thing. That man has a tremendous way with him. Goodness!” “He is all right here in the place, “They look up to him. He is a big-bug here, comes of a family like Margaret’s, though he hasn't got much money. Some chaps were braggin’ that they had a bigger show than her right here, and I found out.” “Suppose,” said Camille, “Margaret dces not come back ?” “He could net keep her without be- in’ arrested,” declared Jack, but he looked uneasy. He had, however, look- ed uneasy for some time. The fact was, Margaret had been very gradu- ally losing weight. Moreover, she was not well. That very night, after the show was over, Bill Stark, the little dark-man, had a talk with the Des- monds about it. “Truth is, before long, if you don’t look out you’ll have to pad her,” said Bill; “and giants don’t amount to a row of pins after that begins.” Camille looked worried and sulky. “She ain’t very well, anyhow,” she. “I ain’t going to kill Margaret.” “It’s a good thing she’s got a chance to have a night’s rest in a house,” said Bill Stark. “The fat man has asked her to stay with him and his sister, while the show is here,” said Jack. “The sister invited her,” said Ca- mille, with a little stiffness. She was common, but she had lived with Lees, and her mother had married a Lee. She knew what was due Marga- ret, and also cue herself. “The truth is,” said Camille, “this is an awful sort of life for a woman like Margaret. She and her folks were never used to anything like it.” “Why didn’t you make your beauty husband hustle and take care of her and you, then?” demanded Bill, who admired Camille, and disliked her be- cause she had no eyes for him. “My husband has been unfortunate. He has done the best he could,” re- sponded Camille. “Come, Jack; no use talking about it any longer. Guess Margaret will pick up. Come along. I'm tired out.” That night Margaret Lee slept in a sweet chamber with muslin curtains at the windows, 1n a massive mahog- any bed, much like hers which had been sacrificed at an auction sale. The bed-linen was linen, and smelled of lavender. Margaret was too happy to sleep. She lay in the cool, fragrant sheets and was happy, and convinced of the presence of the God to whom she had prayed. All night Sydney Lord sat down stairs in his book-wall- ed sanctum and studied over the situ- ation. It was a crucial one. The great psychological moment of Sydney Lord’s life for knight-errantry had ar- rived. He studied the thing from every point of view. There was no romance about it. These were hard, sordid, tragie, ludicrous facts with which he had to deal. He knew to a nicety the agonies which Margaret suffered. He knew, because of his own capacity for sufferings of like stress. “And she is a woman and a lady,” he said aloud. If Sydney had been rich enough, the matter would have been simple. He could have paid Jack and Camille enough to quiet them, and Margaret could have lived with him and his sis- ter and their two old servants.” But he was not rich; he was even poor. The price to be paid for Margaret’s liberty was a bitter one, but it was that or nothing. Sydney faced it. He looked about the room. To him the walls lined with the dull gleams of old bocks were lovely. There was an oil portrait of his mother over the man- tel-shelf. The weather was warm now, and there was no need for a hearth fire, but how exquisitely home- like and dear that room could be when the snow drove outside and there was the leap of flame on the hearth! Syd- ney was a scholar and a gentleman. He had led a gentle and sequestered life. Here in his native village there were none to gibe and sneer. The con- trast of the traveling show would be as great for him as it-had been for Margaret, but he was the male of the species, and she the female. Chival- ry, racial, harking back to the begin- ning of nobility in the human, to its earliest dawn, fired Sydney. The pale ‘daylight invaded the study. Sydney, as truly as any knight of old, had girded himself, and with no hope, no thought of reward, for the battle in the eternal service of the strong for the weak, which makes the true worth of the strong. There was only one way. Sydney Lord took it. His sister was spared the knowledge of the truth for a long while. When she knew, she did not lament; since Sydney had taken the course, it must be right. As for Mar- garet, not knowing the truth, she vielded. She was really on the verge of illness. Her spirit was of too fine the : I couldn’t say any- said ! {a strain to enable her body to endure long. When she was told that she : she made no objection. i sense of relief, as of wings of healing being spread under her despair, was : upon her. ' good-by. i “I hope you have a nice visit in this | lovely house,” said Camille, and kiss- ed her. Camille was astute, and to be trusted. She did not betray Sydney’s i confidence. Sydney used a disguise— ia dark wig over his partially bald head and a little make-up—and he on three chairs, and shook hands with the gaping crewd, and was curiously happy. It was n:addening ta support i by the exhibition of his physical de- i formity a perfectly worthless voung couple like Jack and Camille bling for the man himself. Always as he sat on his three chairs, immense, grotesque—the more gro- tesque for his splendid dignity of bearing—there was in his sou! of a gallant gentleman the consciousness of that other, whom he was shielding from a similar ordeal. Compassion and gzenerosity, so great that they comprehended love itself and excelled . its highest type, irradiated the whole ' being of the fat man exposed to tho gaze cf his inferiors. Chivalry, which ‘rendered him almost godlike, ; strengthened him for kis task. Syd- ! ney thought always of Margaret as i distinct from his physical self, a sort of crystalline, angelic soul, with no encumbrance of earth. He achieved ‘a purely spiritual conception of her. | And Margaret, living again ; tle lady rife, was likewise ennobled by | a gratitude which transformed her. | Always a clear and beautiful soul, she i gave out new lights of character like | a jewel in the sun. And she also: i thought of Sydncy as distinet from The consciousness | this physical self. i of the two human beings, one of the moving forever parallel, separate, and | inseparable in an eternal harmony of | spirit.—By Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, {in Harper's Monthly. | September Cosmopolitan. { Of course, Robert W. Chambers’ | newest and best novel, “The Restless i Sex,” is the big feature of the new i Cosmapolitan now on sale. { Next to that comes a story by Fan- t nie Hurst. “Get Ready the Wreaths,” | (is this popular writer's masterpiece {up tc date. There is a tear and a smile in almost every line. Gouverneur Morris is there with a tale of terror and romance, entitled “The Purple Flask.” This popular writer appears again after a long interval. His new story is a gripper. Theodore Dreiser makes his ap- pearance in September Cosmopolitan with a story entitled “Married.” Every reader will feel a sympathetic understanding with Marjorie and Du- er as they endeavor to adjust them- selves to their new relation and envi- ronment. “Blue Aloes,” by Cynthia Stockley is continued. This is a three part mystery story of South Africa, land of adventure and romance. Read the synopsis of the first installment and be sure to finish this remarkable narra- tive. Herbert Kaufman writes about the Morgans, father anc. son. The per- sonalities of these colossal figures of finance are depicted wonderfully picturesque phraseology. C. N and A. M. Williamson write of “The Adventure of Jose,” the girl in search of a husband. A motoring ro- mance of rare entertainment. Lillie Langtry, the famous beauty, writes her reminiscences for Cosmo- politan readers in “Myself and Oth- ers.” In this issue she tells of her ac- quaintance with Oscar Wilde. Jack London’s “Michael,” the great- est dog story ever written, is in this number. Also a new Fable in Slang by George Ade, the philosopher in cap and bells. Ella Wheeler Wilcox is represented by a great, moving po- em entitled “The Message.” Mary Roberts Rinehart writes of her camp- ing trip in the Northwestern Rockies. All things considered this is one of the best numbers of America’s Great- est Magazine. Men Needed for Quartermaster Corps. Two thousand men are needed at once to form eight new Quartermaster Corps Supply companies for the new National army. Each company will consist of the following: 1 1st ser- geant; 1 mess sergeant; 1 supply ser- geant; 8 sergeants; 16 corporals; 2 mechanics; 3 buglers; 4 cooks; 71 pri- vates, first class; 143 privates. Total- ing 250 men for each company. Capt. W. O. Bowman, recruiting of- ficer for Northern Pennsylvania, has been authorized by the Adjutant Gen- eral to accept 40 recruits for the field artillery, Regular army. This branch of the service has been closed for sev- eral weeks owing to having been filled up and this opportunity should be grasped quickly by those desiring to serve in the Field Artillery. Able bodied men are stiil needed in large numbers for the aviation section of the signal corps. Nearly every trade in existence is required in this branch and a man can almost invaria- bly be used for the same work which he has been accustomed to in civil life. Opportunities for advancement are excellent. A number of men are needed as bakers and cooks in the Regular ar- my. An able bodied man enlisting in this department will be sent to school to learn the baker’s trade and if he has a fair education stands the best chances to be promoted to a non-com- missioned office. The Quartermaster General has also announced that all commissions in the Baker companies will be given to deserving men from the ranks. U.S. Army Recruiting stations are located in Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, Erie, Williamsport, South Bethlehem, Shamokin, Sayre, DuBois, Hazleton, Mauch Chunk. Vain Attempt. Urchin—What’s the time, mister? Gentleman (to teach politeness)—If what? If what, my boy? Urchin—1If yer got a watch. Camille came to bid her traveled about with the show and sat ; Des- | ) i meno, but it was all superbly enno- | beautiful day, and she hoped Miss Lee : | found Greenhill a pleasant place to— | her gen- | in Kaufman’s | "HEALTH AND HAPPINESS | | “Mens sana in corpore sano” Number 20. The Bacterial Content of Milks Sup- plied to Bellefonte Samples of milk from eleven dairies supplying Bellefonte were collected May 14, and May 31, 1917, and exam- ined for bacterial contamination in the Laboratory of Bacteriology, The Pennsylvania State College, through the courtesy of Dr. J. M. Sherman. The report is as follows: Number of bacteria per cubic centimeter 13,000.000 12.000.000 8.500.000. . 8.000.000 1.560,000 1,440,000. . .. 1,270,000. 1,070,000. . 1,100,000. 470,000. . . 225.000 Milk from Dairy A, examined May 14, contained 84,000,000 bacteria per Cc. ¢.; examined May 31, contained 13,000,000. Milk from Dairy .B., morning delivery, examined May 14, contained 68,000,000; May 31, morn- ing delivery, had 12,000,600. The question, “What should consti- tute a milk standard,” is answered in the following article from The Amer- ican Medical Journal, June 30. STANDARDIZING MILK. Much progress has been made in the Name of dairy yr A ¢'B no D methods of production of clean milk, ! and conditions have been improved in ! almost every community, yet definite standards of quality have been estab- lished in only a few of the larger cities. The National Commission Milk Standards (Public Health Reports, Feb. 16, 1917) ards and grades of milk for small cities and towns. The commission has , worked to establish standards . milk production and grading, and its two former reports have been taken "as the basis for recent municipal and : state regulations. . o! i advocates the practicability of stand- | i other, wets a consciousness as cf two | wonderful lines of good and beauty, on ; in its latest report UY ! The consistently | 91 day Ny 'it has reached 12 cents per quart; 11 ; Baltimore. nor consumer would go back to the old methods. New York State and Cali- i fornia have state regulations based on | the recommendations of the commis- sion. In Boston and Philadelphia the milk dealers themselves have started agitation for the grading and labeling of milk. The effect is undoubtedly to improve the quality of the supply in every respect, and recommendations coming from an authoritative source, such as the National Commission on Milk Standards, should have the most careful consideration. Applying these suggested standards | of th> National Commission on Milk to the milks of our community, they will fall, with two exceptions, into Grade C. It will be noticed that “Grade C.” milk must be pasteurized gad must contain less than 50,000 bae- teria per cubic centimeter when de- livered to the consumer, so that our milks would not meet requirements even of “Grade C.” Coming as our milk-supply dees, from a few dairies within our own limits there could un- doubtedly be great improvement. Tha nes of the dairies have been withheld for the present as these ar- ticles are not intended to arouse ill- will or prejudice and the significance of the bacterial count might be un- ngcessarily magnified by certatn con- sumers. This subject will be discuss- ed later in the Next week—-“What are Bacteria?” cam series. College Dairy Head Explains High Cost of Milk. Recent increases in the price of milk and the discussions attendant upon these increases render singularly tiraely a statement on Lhis subject by Professor Fred Rasmussen, head of the Dairy Husbandry department at Pennsylvania State College Schoo! of Agriculture and Experiment : Station. Said Prof. Rasmussen, “The price of milk is goirg ap. In several cities cents per quart in Philadelphia and In a few instances in this ' State milk has recently risen from 7 The latest report | 'is a continuation and practical exten- | is ; : tein] [SiR of 3 milk gradingiong 1sbaling rat one time and naturally people ask | system heretofore advocated, and as i now | the commission urges should be re- | garded as the minimum standard. If ‘ the local conditions of a community permit, however, higher requirements i should be adopted. | As set forth in the report, Grade A, i raw milk, must come from cows free { from disease as determined by tuber- i culin tests and physical examinations | by a qualified veterinarian, produced and handled by employees free from disease as determined by medical in- spection by a qualified physician, un- | der sanitary conditions such that the i bacterial count shall not exceed 10,000 | per cubic centimeter at the time of de- | livery to the consumer, and the dairy ! shall score at least 80 on the U. S. | Bureau of Animal Industry score card. { | Grade A, pasteurized milk, must come from cows free from disease, must be produced and handled under sanitary | conditions, and the bacterial count | must at no time exceed 200,000 per . cubic centimeter. Milk of this class must be pasteurized under official su- i pervision, and the bacteria must not | exceed 10,000 per cubic centimeter at | the time of delivery to the consumer. | | | Dairies producing this class of milk ‘must score at least 65. | Grade B milk must come from cows | free from disease as determined by an {annual physical examination, and must be produced and handled under sanitary conditions such that the bac- terial count shall at no time exceed 1,000,000 per cubic centimeter. This milk must be pasteurized under offi- cial supervision, and the bacterial count must not exceed 50,000 per cu- bic centimeter at the time of delivery to the consumer. It is recommended that dairies producing Grade B milk be scored, and that efforts be made to improve the scurces of supply as rap- idly as possible. Grade C milk must come from cows free from disease, as determined by physical examinations, and includes milk having a bacterial count in ex- cess of 1,000,000 per cubic centimeter. This milk must be pasteurized, or subjected to a higher degree of heat, and must contain less than 50,000 bac- teria per cubic centimeter when deliv- ered to the consumer. As milk is one of our most valuable foods and one universally used, chem- ical standards should be established defining its nutritive value. After a most careful consideration of this sub- ject the commission proposes a food value standard of 3.25 per cent. fat and 8.5 per cent. solids, not fat, as be- ing a fair requirement to make of the producer and a standard of food value to which the consumer is entitled. It will be seen that the bacterial count is still made the primary basis of sanitary milk. Milk produced and handled under conditions conforming to the prescribed grades, if kept cold, will always have a low bacterial count. The number of bacteria mentioned un- der each grade is not, however, to be regarded as inflexible for all commu- nities. It is said that in establishing bacterial standards for a city milk supply, the age of the milk, the dis- tance hauled, the methods employed in handling and the sanitary condi- tion of the milk at its source may all be taken inte consideration. Cities requiring a limited supply, coming from a few dairies within their own limits, or within a transportation dis- tance of not over twelve hours from its source may require a higher bac- terial standard than a large city. Approximation to uniformity in the sanitary and chemical standards of milk and milk products is undoubted- ly most desirable. The grading and labeling of milk react to the benefit of producer and distributor as well as consumer. The former, whose pro- duct comes up to standard require- ments, should receive a better price for his milk, and the latter, in addi- tion to the safety feature, is enabled to make an intelligent selection of milk for his various uses. New York city first adopted the system of the national commission. Practically, it has worked well, and neither dealer developed provides for three | Sinates of ley. aad Onieh | statement that in cities where milk to 10 cents per quart. To some it seems very unreasonable that the price of milk should increase so much the reascn why. “It is absolutely safe to make the during the last two years has been re- taiiing in bottles for 7 cents per quart, the price has no* paid for the cost of producing and distributing milk. The wonder is that the price has been kept at this low figure for so long. Even with an increase in milk to 10 cents per quart, which may seem high in a particular locality, it should be remembered that in some sections milk is selling at an even higher price and that it is still one of the cheap2st animal food products available. “In certain sections of Pennsylva- nia and other States, thousands of dairy cows have, during the last two or three months, been sold away from the farms. Many have gone to the butcher. If there were a profit in pro- ducing milk, this would not happen. “Dairy cows are being sold for sev- eral reasons: (1) The price of milk has not in- creased with the very rapid increase in price of feed, labor and cattle. These three items represent eighty per cent. to eighty-five per cent. of the total cost of producing milk. (2) The increase in the price of beef, mutton, poultry and eggs has re- sponded much more rapidly to the in- creased cost of feed and labor. Meat is very high and therefore the dairy farmers under the present high prices of feed and scarcity of labor find it ad- vantageous to sell their dairy cows. (3) In sections , where cows are supported on land adapted for staple crops, such as wheat, corn, barley and potatoes, all of which are much need- ed at the present time, the dairy cow is rapidly disappearing. These crops offer an opportunity in such localities to change from unprofitable dairying to a profitable system of farming. (4) Added to these outside eco- nomic influences upon the dairy busi- ness, there is further reason for the increase in price of market milk, viz: The great demand for milk to be made into butter, cheese and condensed milk. The price of these products has increased much more rapidly than the price of market milk because of their great food value and of their adanta- bility for use by the armies of the world. “No manufactured article will, for any length of time, be sold below the cost of production. Like any other article of commerce, the price of milk must fluctuate with the cost of raw material and labor. No one questions the desirability of keeping milk at a price within the reach of the working classes, nor is the motive of those who are making strenuous effort to pre- vert a rise in the price of milk. ques- tioned. “Yet it would be most unfortunate, both for the industry and the people at large, if by artificial means a legit- imate increase in the price of milk should be prevented. Such a condi- tion would mean more cows to the butcher, an increased shortage of milk and still higher prices for milk. It would be a sure way of taking the milk away from thousands of poor children during the coming winter.” ——A solicitous mother wrote to a Congressman at Washington to in- quire if her son could not be exempt from the draft on the ground that he is left-handed. The Congressman is said to have taken the matter up with the War Department and learned that “a large number of left-handed guns had been ordered” for soldiers of left- handed tendencies! Seriously, there are probably as many absurd excuses given by slackers who wish to escape the draft as there are slackers in number. The frankest of these is a Philadelphia youth who, the other day is reported to have made a personal visit to the White House at Washing- ton, and lodged a plea for exemption on the ground that he was too big a coward to fight.—The Monitor. ——Put your ad. in the “Watch- man.” aR . FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. { i, DAILY THOUGHT i God is love. Therefore love. Without | distinction, without calculation, without | brocrastination, love. Lavish it upon the i poor, where it is very easy ; especially up- on the rich, who often need it most ; most of all upon our equals, where it is very i difficult, and for whom perhaps we do i least of all—H. Drummond. 1 The woman who travels across the i continent this summer—or takes even | an overnight journey to Canada or the ; West will revel in a new Pullman coat | of thin pongee, designed for use as a | negligee when trips are made from sleeping berth to the dressing room, and for comfortable lounging all day in one’s section. All-covering and loose enough to feel cocl and comfort- able, like a negligee, the garment is cut and finished to look like a smart coat. It would be quite presentable in the dining-car, or on a station plat- form where one gets out a moment, during a stop, to stretch the muscles and breathe the fresh air. Ice in the Sick Room.—Get the best and purest obtainable. To keep it properly, wrap the block of ice in flan- nei, place it on a piece of wood in a basin. When wanted for use remove the flannel and chip off some small pieces. Lay a piece of muslin around the top of a tumbler so that it may form a pouch; put the chips of ice in it. Leave the tumbler within easy reach of the patient, so that he or she may help himself or herself as often as allowed or feels inclined. The water that drips from the muslin bag may also be drunk. Miss Jeannette Rankin, the only woman Congressman, employes three secretaries. A woman’s body is warmer than that of a man by about three-fourths of a degree. Women school teachers in Ireland receive the same pay as men for the same kind of work. According to Mrs. Raymond Rob- ins, forty-five per cent. of the women who live at home are supported by their relatives. Registration of women with the view to recording what work each can do for the country during the war will begin soon under the auspices of the Council of National Defense. Styles in neckwear for autumn are extremely diversified. It is safe to say that all styles of neckwear virtu- ally will be in good style. Street dresses in many designs demand low, flat collars and flat, turned-back cuffs, and these may be procured in ready- to-wear neckwear. High stocks and jabots will return to popularity with cool days. It is hardly to be expected this type of neckwear can be popular in swelter- ing weather, but the new autumn suits will make high stocks necessary in many cases. Vests or vestees to wear with dress- es and suits are a feature of autumn neckwear fashions. Separate skirts for autumn are as interesting in design and fabric as the splendid assortment presented for summer wear. Soft silks, crepe mete- ors and satins will be used, and navy, black, prune and taupe are leading colors in these rich fabrics. An effec- tive trimming for separate skirts of silk is chenille stitching, done to de- fine narrow hems on the bias satin folds and in other trimming arrange- ments. Overalls for women continue in pop- ularity. And it seems certain that after enjoying the comfort of these practical garments for gardening and other outdoor work and outdoor sports, this summer, they will be ac- cepted for housework and other in- door activities. Overalls in attractive silk make charming lounging gowns. In dresses, combinations of blue serge and black satin with metallic embroidery will surely be widely ac- cepted by well-dressed women. New autumn dresses for street wear have long closely fitted sleeves of the dress fabric. This necessitates the re- turn cf dress shields, which will not inflict discomfort if lightweight, wash- able shields are used. You may look for severely tailored models in underwear for autumn. Jer- sey and other silks are being made up on tailored lines. It is said that the practical trend of women’s minds at this time makes these garments ac- ceptable. Whether this is true or not, surely we will appreciate not having to mend fragile lace every time an undergarment is laundered. Many Parisian novelties in blouses show peplums, but I do not believe the average American woman will wear a peplum blouse to any extent this sea- son. Beads are used to a considerable extent on fall blouse models of georg- ette, chiffon and crepe. New modes in millinery for autumn and winter show turbans with ex- tremely high draped crowns. Such models require little, if any, trimming, are always smart and generally be- coming—the practical headwear for utility use. Look for hats of plush in combina- tion with silk or satin for early fall use. Scalloped Cabbage.—Cut % head of boiled cabbage in small pieces; sprin- kle with % teaspoon salt, 3 teaspoon pepper, and 1 finely chopped pimento; pour over it 1% cups of thin white sauce, mixed with 1-3 cup of grated cheest. Mix well and turn into but- tered baking dish; cover with butter- ed and seasoned cracker crumbs, place in the oven and bake until crumbs are brown. A Luncheon Relish.—Boil eggs un- til hard and, when cold, cut into halves lengthwise. Make a sauce of a little melted butter, vinegar, pepper and salt and pour over them, serving them on individual plates with cress or parsley for water cress, if washed, or in a large platter with cress or pars- ley for decoration.