Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 7 Jul 1938, p. 6

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Sr " fe Et i ' a Ha Has % A --y ol 7 ---------------------- a REA NE Rae IN NRL 3% Tae pg rare Serial Story rm ---- wi Fashions Page of Interest to Women ; Recipes Deck . # " by Ishbel Ross -- ee Synapsis A luxurious five-month cruise eround the world aboard the "Marenia" brings together a group of passengers for adven- tures, romantic, entertaining . . and tragic . . . Like in "Grand Hotel" these passengers offer a study in human actions and re- actions which unconsciously bare their souls. . . . These characters are aboard the ship: Macduff, dour Scotchman, single, of middle age; Miss Mudge, school teacher, spending the savings of 20 years; Angela, faithful wife of Lovat, gigolo; Dick harlton, first offi- cer; Clare, a person of experi- ence; Joan, a dissipated flapper; Jenny, run-away wife, and Peter; Captain Baring, master of the ship . . . and his soul. . . NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. American 1 ad- "perhaps that's why women accomplish so much. mire them greatly." "Do you?" } "yas... Don't you?" Her voice ex- profi surprise. "No. They're scatterbrains -- fcekless creatures. They're also ghockingly vain--spending, spend- ing, everything for clothes and ap- pearances." Dols In A Window But how stunning they look «Like so many dolls in a window. The same eyes, the same lift to their chins, the same way of wear- ing their c'othes, and the same ankles." 'put I can't imagine a race of women with better ankles! Ameri- can women always surprise me x0 afresh with the buoyancy of their. | gpirit. 'They have such grace--per- haps because they're free fd have r They' with econom'c independence. the enly women hope and assurance. «] don't approve of them at all." "Oh dear! What a pity! If 1 were a man and lived in America, I should admire them very much, and fall in love "with any number of them. They'te intelligent, too. Dut I see it's a hopeless argument." Macduif Lad lost the thread of the conversation, and seemed to be stumbling towards an important conclusion of his own. He was who walk "standing, looking down at her with ~ an air of gloom. Angela gazed at him softiy and he shifted his weight, The sun was in his eyes, the garden was fragrant with blooms, the Union Jacks were still pleasantly warm in He rubbed the back of his hea meditatively and couldn't imagine why his feet were moving towards the river. What was the sense of gphing to the Ganges with a chance travelling acquaintance? "How delightful of you to come with me to the river, Mr. Macduff." Angela's voice was gay with plea- sure as she saw him falling into | step. Her companion grunted and pull ed on Lis pipe. We'll ride to Tiger Hill together to see the dawn over Mount Ever- est when we reach Darjeeling," he announced, amazed at his own de- gire to ¢stablish a deeper contact with thefwoman at his side. "That will be splendid," she told him. CHAPTER XII The afternoon sun fell in slanting rays over the Indian Ocean, shed- ding a flutter of gold on water that heaved in a darkening swell. The aquatic sports were about to begin in the swimming pool. Patty, brim- ful of energy, was diving repeatedly »™] 'e tet, doll that h 34 Fongive ros A Ming (A smile, , gentle laxative {Recially made foe ies and growing children. For more than 100 years Mothers eves 3 here have sted Steedman'stokeep children healthe folly regular from infancy to early teens. FREER Samble and Booklet "Hints to Mothers" on request. Write John Steedman & Co. Dept. 10 442 St. Gabriel Street, Montreal 67N CLL a s, g*STEEDMAN'S seeing tires POWDERS Look for the double ER symbol on each package. Issue No. 286--'38 p C his stomach, from the highest springboard, "She was born to live in a swim- ming-suit," Jenny sald, admiringly. "A genuine water-nymph!" Peter remarked, always appreciative of the manifestations of physical per: fection. Jenny saw that Clare and Patty were both in the mice. It would be interesting to watch the two of them together, for they were even- ly matched, in spite of the diference in their ages. Clare was a gifted swimmer, and her speed and form were equal to the best that girls half her agg could do. No woman on the boat could compete with her except Pat- ty. Joan Foster was good, but she slept all day and took most of her swims late at night. £4 Swimming Contest' Clare was in tangerine, a brilli- ant flash in the clear water of Le -tank. It suited her dusky i Patty was in a striking greens it. The whistle blew and the con- testants were off, with orange and green in the lead. Clare tore through the water like a goldfish, using the long Australian crawl Patty made better time with the American crawl, Johnny was perched in a corner close to Angela. His face was set in anxious furrows, for he felt that the race had somthing to do with him. Patty won the first heat, Clare the second; they seemed to be mar- vellously paired. Angela sat silent, thinking of Johnny and wondering whom he wanted to win, _ Clare was leading now, put Patty was creeping up. Every stroke brought her nearer to the fleet or ange figure. Patty was breathing easily and turning in the water with each long stroke. Johnny's heart was pounding. Clare was losing. Did he want her to lose? He did not know. Patty wag magnificent. He liked the --clean sw op of her strokes. He re- remembered his college days, and his heart went out to Patty. He - knew that she would root for him, but Clare bewitched him. But this was Patty's race. She must win! Johnny's throat was soapy, as it used to be when he tackled at football. Shadow Disappears Patty won, and, as she touched the end of the swimming-pool, he bit his lips on a shout of jubila- tion. Angela felt his suppressed ex- © citement and was suddenly sure of something that had puzzled her heart for years. N But it was Clare he went over to speak to, Clare h2 helped out of the water. "Good stuff, Patty!" whis- pered Johnny .s she passed him on her way to the dressing-room. "You and I'll have a race pretty soon." Patty laughed in her throat, toss- ed her cap and strode on. She felt robust and 'happy, as if a dark shadow that had been creeping up on her for wecks had taken to fits heels. Clare was also in gay spirits, a step from Peter's side. She had not cared whether she won or lost; She had not cared whether she won or lost; stress did nothing but give one crow's feet, wa that's over," "Patty'd like the wind. her form in the water." "You weie quite worth watching, too." Peter's voice was warm, and his glance passed over her like a searching flame, | "Why didn't you compete, Mrs. Rumford?" «Oh, I'ni a drone," laughed Jenny. "She's a lorelei who 16oks for rocks to sit on in the sun while she combs her hair," said Peter. | Unexpected Sight Was Jenny dreaming, or did she catch a look of understanding, the sudden raising of a curtain, be- tween those two? Her heart miss- ed a beat. No, that was absurd. Day-dreams! Clare and Peter had scarcely spoken to each other since they'd come on the boat, except for their chat fn the lounge at Bombay. They all moved out to the deck to dry themselves. "Jgn't the sea strange today?" Jenny murmured, after a long sil. ence. "This is the first time since we left the Mediterranean that I've geen the water crumpled, or foam breaking on the waves." ' No one was paying any attention to what she sald. "This is no place to dry," said Clare, shivering with cold. "It's too late. The sun's gone down." Jenny was lost in her thoughts, watching the sunset lasted. The others had already gone; she had not noticed them leaving her. She went down to B deck and she said, I admire . ness," he ' Dentists recommend Wrigley's Falling Hair Isn't A Sign Of Baldness Normally Heathy Scalp Sheds Continuously, Says Specialist { Persons who don't become bald before they are sixty grow an average of 1,650,000 hairs--a new crop of about 110,000 every four years--a noted scalp specialist told a conference of trichologists. "Contrary to popular opinion falling hair isn't a sign of bald- said. "A normally healthy scalp sheds continuously and regrows new hair to replace those lost so that anyont escaping baldness for the average life span must grow about fifteen crops. Depends On Gomplexion "While blonde scalps always contain far more hairs than biun- ettes or red-heads, the average healthy scalp contains about 110,- 000. While the hair 'turnover'-- the time for a new crop--is about the same for everyone, the actual number of hairs you will lose and regrow daily depends on your complexion. "Blondes' scalps normally con- tain about 140,000 to 150,000 hairs and lose about 95 daily. Be- cause blondes' scalps have so many hairs and their scalp structure is so delicate they are perhaps 25 per cent. more prone to baldness than brunettes. What Prevents Growth "Brunettes' scalps contain ap- proximately 100,000 hairs and the fall average about 66 daily. Red- heads, who have far fewer, coars- er hairs--about £9,000--have an average replacement rate of 33 daily. ) "Ths ratio of daily hair loss is natural and results in baldness only when something prevents new hair from growing. Mzals Injected By Hypodermic Sciertist Finds Way to Inject Proteins Into Blood Stream: System Expected to Keep Ill Folk from Dying of Starva- ticn. A full meal by hypodermic needle--an improvement on the old idea of a meal in a pill--be- comes reality under a discovery announced to the American Medi- cal Association, meeting last week in San Francisco. . The discovery enables a doctor to inject proteins, the "ham, eggs and milk" of menus, directly into the blood. Heretofore the needle has been confined to injecting sugars, water and salts. The needle meals will save the lives of persons whose stomachs refuse food. This happens not in- frequently after surgical opera- tions. While the patients do not directly starve to death, their partial starvation weakens them so that other complications kill, them. The protein injection leaves only fats and vitamins out to com- plete the "ideal diet" by needle. Some of the vitamins already are in pure form whicl: can be inject- ed, and fats can be dispensed with for some time in the starvation cases. Education Note' An American woman petitioned for divorce because her husband preferred going to night school {o taking her to the roovics, along the corridor. Her glance swept by chance towards an alley- way, and her hand went up to her mouth to stop the exclamation that sprang to her lips. (To Be Continued) Gum as an aid to strong, healthy teeth, cleanses them of food par- ticles, massages the gums. Aidsdi- gestion, relieves stuffy feeling after meals, Helps keep you healthy! Take some home for the children too -- they will love it! cn Urges National Promotion In Public Health Field Robe Yourself For Th Beach , PATTERN 4781 You need extra glamour when you step out of the water on the beach. Something gay to fling around your shoulders and reflect color into your face--a gala robe like Pattern 4781, for instance! There's plenty of swirl and loveli- ness in the skirt, which cmpha- sizes the waistline in the clever- est way, making it seem far smaller than it is. In a cotton seersucker or other wrinkleresist cotton, this new beach-combing triumph will see you smartly through long, happy hours lounging and sunning. Order the design today. You'll marvel at how quickly you can complete it. Pattern 4781 is available in misses' and women's sizes 14 to 20 and 32 to 42. Size 16 takes 41, yards 36-inch fabric. Jllus- trated step-by-step sewing. in- structions included. Patterns 20c each. Write Anne Adams, Room 425, 73 West Adelaide St, To- ronto. i New Gloves Streamlined Gloves have gone streamlined, air-conditioned = and generally modern as the house or car--or the latest fashions. There are crocheted gloves and string gloves, and gloves with long wrists and short ones -- with fingers. And there are all the popular leathers, doeskin and pig- skin, etc., ete, all in washable varieties. Our mothers and grandmothers wore a great many white gloves, but they were not washable, in the. kid types.| Al- ways these ladies were seeking some really reliable solution to 'save cleaners' bills. And the modern silk gloves are something to write home about, too. They are ribbed and woven in all sorts of 'rattractive- and novel dffects. ~ Trees (From The Countryman) In sleep of helpless infancy Trees were the arms that cradled me, On Tree my daily food is sptead, Tree is my chair and Tree my bed. 43 Fibre of Tree the books I con, And Tree the shelves they stand upon, Primeval Tree burns clear and bright : : To warm me on a winter night. I hear, to wind irl woods akin, 'Tree-music of the violin; And at the last, when I shall die, My tired dust in Tree will lie. of Canadian Health Association Asks Federal and Provincial Action on Common Problems --Advocates Widespread Education = in "Preventive Measures. HALIFAX.--To make the "part- nership" in promotion of public health between the Dominion and the Provinces "more effective, . some Provinces at least require financial assistance from the Do- minion in order to maintain and extend certain services for which they are now obligated," Dr. P. S. Campbell of Halifax = told the Canadian Health Association in his presidential address here. "The. promotion of the public health is now recignized as an es- sential function of Government and is gradually being accorded similar recognition to commerce, finance, defence and other impor- tant activities," Nova Scotia's chief health officer said. "This is as it should be, since any nation can- not prosper unless the health of its people is not only preserved but is developed to the greatest extent possible within human en- deavor. : 1 Teach How td Keep Well - "As to whether public health 'per se' is a Federal or Provincial oblighktion need not be debated here.! . . Without a doubt some of the health problems of Canada are common to all the provinces while others are of local con- cern. , . "We are pleased to note of re- cent years a tendency on the part of the Federal agency to assume more of the burden. ..." The most important work in any Health Department was "of a broad educational character so that all health officials are to a large extent concerned with the business of teaching the people to keep well" ; Dr. Campbell noted develop- ments in the public health field. "Until recent years physicians grand idea | sweetening my morning sain = with 3 BEE HIVE. TRY<IT (RN syRI? TOMORROW. ~~ GOLDEN were concerned almost entirely with the cure of disease, and medical schools taught cure rath- er than prevention" During the past decade there has been a defi- nite tendency towards having pre- ventive and curative medicine act together and present a co-ordin- ated program for looking after all the problems connected with both the individual and public health." + Sugar From Beets Four beetroot sugat factories were in operation in Canada in 1937, the-~Ganadian and Dominion Sugar Company Ltd., at Chatham and Wallaceburg, Ontario, and the Canadian Sugar Factories, Ltd., at Raymond and Plcture Butte, Alberta, Sirius is estimated to be 70,- 000,000,000 miles distant, yet it is one of the brightest stars visible. It is a "fixed" star, but it moves apparently about an inch a cen- tury. % ! « Cherry Pic Is Very Good » "+ Tt used to be necessary for her to "make a cherry pie, fast as cat can wink its eye', according to the nursery rhyme. That ac- complishment does not seem to be of prime importance when the modern man goes looking for a yourig thing that can leave her mother, but she is outstanding of she can do it. g : We don't guarantee that the recipe here for cherry pie, will enable anyone to make a pie "fast as cat can wink its eye" but we do guarantee that it will be a grand pie and Billy Boy will be more than pleased. FRESH CHERRY: PIE Combine 8% cups pitted red cherries, 1% to 2% tablespoons quick cooking tapioca, 1 to 1% cups sugar, % teaspoon salt, and 1 tablespoon melted butter. Let stand 15 minutes, or while pastry is being made. Use as filling 'for 9-inch pie. Bake in hot éven (450 degrees F.) 16 minutes; then decrease heat to moderate (350 degrees F.) and bake 20 to 30 minutes longer,: or until cherry filling is cooked and crust is deli- cately browned. PIE CRUST 21% cups sifted cake flour 2-3 cup cold shortening. ' 14 teaspoon salt 1-3 cup cold water (about). Sift flour once, measure, add salt, and sift again. Cut in short. ening until pieces are about size of small pea. Add water, sprink- , ling small amount over flour mix- ture and mixing with fork only enough to make flour hold togeth- er. Continue until all flour has been mixed in separate portions. Wrap in waxed paper. Chill thor- oughly. Roll out on slightly Housed; board, using light springy touch, Line 9-inch pie plate with about % of pastry, rolled % inch thick, allowing pastry to extend 1 inch beyond edgé. Fold edge back to form standing rim, Fill with cher- ry mixture, Moisten edge of pie with cold water; arrange .lattice of pastry strips across top, Flute rim with fingers, Bake as directed above, : While cherries are in season, she c#n add to her accomplish- ments by making delicious cherry jelly for use throughout the win- ter. i A 2 SOUR CHERRY JELLY 31% cups (1% lbs.) juice 7 cups (3 lbs.) sugar 1 bottle fruit pectin To prepare juice, stem and -erush about 8 pounds fully ripe cherries. Do/mot pit. Add ': cup water, bring to a boil, cover and simmer 10 minutes. (For szopg. er cherry flavour, add % teaspoon almond extract before pouring.) Place fruit in jelly cloth or bag and squeeze out juice. Measure sugar and juice into large sauce- pan anil mix, Bring to a boil over hottest. fire and at once add bot- tled pectin, stirring constantly. Then bring to a full rolling boil and boil hard 3% minute. Remove from fire, skim, pour. quickly. Paraffin hot jelly at once. Makes about 10 glasses (6 fluid ounces each). UC -- VANILLA WAFERS 1legg ; 1 cup white sugat 3 cup butter or shortening 3% cup Bee Hive White Corn Syrup 1 tsp. baking soda, dissolved in 1% cup warm water 8 tsps. vanilla : Flour to make a dough (about 3 cups). Roll out and cut, or form dough into a roll, chill, and slice with sharp knife. Bake in moderate oven. b to 6 dozen small cookies. Instant Lighting o Quick Heating Save 1/8 ironing time with this iron that makes and burns its own gas, No cords or connections, Can be used anywhere, See the Coleman Degjer near you or write for details! The Coleman Lamp and Stowe Company, Lid, Dept. WL32S : Toronto, ont, 2%) SELF~ EATING Use Dark Clothes For Travel Wear 'Friple Sheer Fabrics Aré Good --That Do Not Crease Or Soil -- - For travelling on vacation by plane, train or motor, you must be smartly dressed. Just any>old dud won't do. : With modern conditions as th Y are, you should arrive as spick an span as you start, And here is a secret of the well-dressed travel-v er; wear something dark -- black, brown, navy, whichever is most becoming. "Dark" doesn't mean heavy, of course. If you are journeying in a hot zone, select one of the trip- le-sheer fabrics--silk or rayon-- that do not crease or show soil." Dress and Jacket Ideal A dress and jacket are perfect. Town clothes are nearly ak'n to travel costumes and need the same air-conditioning to make them cool and comfortable. There are thin silks, thinner linens, airy chiffons, diaphanous nets, and combinations of these materials are high in favor, Skirts flare youthfully although the flare, except in the dirndl, is confined at the hipline to make a neat line. Sleeves of dresses and coats are short. There are slim one-piece dresses in coolest of cottons, dotted Swiss, lawn, in white, quiet pinks, blues, navy and brown -- the lat- ter surprisingly popular in vari- ous shades for this time of year. Crisp looking nets' "are high _fashion, They are worn in fiesh looking black, with light--maybe white--details, and with white or pale colored accessories. -- ------ -- Cost of Living Higher In 1938 Labor Report Shows -- Cana- dian Foodstuffs and Retail Prices Are Up The cost of living was higher in April than in the previous month, or in April, 1937, accord- ing to the survey published by the Department of Labor in the Labor Gazette for May. Foods and rent show an increase while fuel and light costs remained stationary. The cost per week of a group of foodstuffs which would be used by the average family is shown at $8.69 in April, compared with the same figure for March and $8.54 for April, 1037. Rent is shown at 185.96 compared with $5.94 in March and $5.77 in April, 1937. Average In 69 Cities It is pointed out that the family budget used in compiling these statistics for purposes of compari- son is not intended to be a mini- mum budget and is not based on quantities which wbuld be used by an average family. It is just a group of foodstuffs priced each month in 69 Canadian cities to show price. trends. Employment in the furniture in- dustry showed a slight decrease for April, at an. index figure of 82.56 compared with 84.1 in March. In April of last year it was 88.8, the highest figure shown in the chart which goes back to 1934. A survey of retail prices in principal cities reveals that Strat- ford enjoyed lower prices'in April than the average for the province in almost all staple foods. The price of round steak, sirloin steak, rib roast, shoulder roast and stew- ing beef was lovew than in Wood- stock or London, but beef sold slightly cheaper in Kitchener. Nippon Emperor 'Decorates Duce 29 Other Italian Statesmen and Diplomats are Honored In Recognition of Pact TOKIO.--Emperor Hirohito has conferred decor .tions on Premier Mussolini, Foreign Ministep Gale- azzo Ciano, vice-Foreign Minister Giue-ppe Bastianini and 27 other Italian statesmen and diplomats Italian statésmen and diplomats. This recognition of Italy's parti- cipation with Japan and Germany in the pact against the Communist International was. accompanied by announcement the King of Italy had conferred decorations on 30 Japanese 1.aders, including Premier Fumimaro Konoye and former For- eign Minister Koll Hirota. Mussolini was given the Order ot the Chrysanthemum, "first class, with the grand cordon. Leather From Canada . Canada and Germany are the largest single suppliers among the nations of box and willow calf leather to the British arket. From 1,618 cwts. in 1982 pur- chases from Canada increased to 10,145 cwts. in 1936, falling in. common with other countries to 5,989 cwts. in 1937.

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