OCR Text |
Show j Helen Gould in the Meat Shop. (Xew York Times.) The other afternoon Helen Gould was seen In a butcher's shop with about twenty younp women. Miss Gould was as modestly dressed as her companions. The butcher was busy cutting, sawing and weighing, while Miss Gould was pointing out to her companions the parts which cost the least. She showed how the butcher could cut meat in a way that still kept It tender, and then she told of the proper manner of cookin? and serving. It was a lesson of the utmost ut-most value to the young women. They were working girls, knew the pinch of ! poverty, and had little time for careful 1 bargaining. They were learning how to 1 get the most for their money. To the 1 many who knew Miss Gould it would be i superfluous to add that none of the meat used In the practical illustration was wasted, and that the butcher's delivery boy carried parcels to addresses distant from his usual route. |