Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 18 Jan 1940, p. 2

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se Ay Ante San pi Y Ti, oman "hae rbrt aie EE Wie he Band Leaders Bad Husbands Psychologists Explain Kind of Lite Dance Maestro"s Wife - Has A warning to the girls of this continent that dance band leaders make bad husbands was voiced last week by two sociologists, Dr. Rich. ard T. Lapiare of Leland Stanford University, and. Dr, Carlo Lastruc- ti of San Francisco State College, They reported on the results of thar study of 100 successful band leaders, from whom they. had ex- tracted answers to questionairés. The professors said they found out, from it, that dance band mu- sicians lead very non-typical lives, 'and that their idealization of early jazs band leaders, such as Beider- becke, "border on religious wor- ship." . Lead No Stable Existence Other findings of the savantis follow: "Their working activities are such that all their other ac- tivities are affected. Working con- ditions determine how, when and where these men eat and sleep. They enforce an average of at least ten changes of residence a year, They offer no economic security, And they preclude quite largely the achievement of family, home or friends, outside the oc- cupation, as roots of a stable ex- istence." "While the dance band musician is as :ikely to be married as are - other men of his age group, at its best, marriage can. only mean a wife who is expensively and per- petually moved from place to place, Thus, the married dance band musician ordinarily, particu- larly if he -has_ children, leaves his wife behind and sees her when he can." 1940 Glamor Girl An Elegant Lady Expetgs Picture The Ideal Girl 0Of'1940 To Be In the Style" of the Duchessiof Kent ---- Slender, But Well-Rounded Glamour, 1940--how will it dif. fer from 19397 And who will best iypify it? The answer, according to sev- * eral-experts, would be. the: 'Duches 5s of Kent, Here are some of "the forecasts about the new type: Mainbocher (Paris designer responsible for the wasp waist and back-to-corsets - movement) : - "She'll look like a goddess, but, she'll know all the answers.' Bursting With Health ~"Tony Sarg (illustrator and mari- - onette artist): "She'll be a full- fledged lady--and not cafe soc- iety. The. Duchess of Kent fills the bill." Dean Cornwall (illustrator and mural painter) : "She'll have a full figure -with_nice long straight legs. And she'll be bursting with health, Medium height, well-rounded, aid "muscles all co-ordinated." Specifications Here's a composite view of the girl: Height--about five feet seven. "(No taller than before, perhaps -even a tiny bit shorter). Slender but well-rounded body. : Average weight--120 pounds, Bust--34-36; waist, 26-27; hips about" 85. Skin-- healthy, glowing, prefet- ably 'ivory-white with a rosy tinge. . i Hair--Dblondes, red-heads and ------brunettes all come:into the picture -{- for a change. (Black was the col or last year). § ---- What Books Cait Mean To Child Not Having Them Means. Miss- ing Happy Hours, and Life- long Friends . Those children who grow up without learning to like books are missing not only lifelong friends, 'happy hours, but the pleasures of "knowledge and tools fd* carving - careers. The child who isn't "book. ish" can profit just as much as the student, says Toni Taylor, in Mec. Call's, "Which child f(s yours? The dreamer? The gamin? The tom. boy? The student? Whichever he 1s, you have it in. your power to open to him a world filled with nis particular magic, He will begin to learn, with the first piéture books you show to him, that these are ox- eitihg new acquaintances; and then that they are loved and trusted Telends, Help in Interests; Activities "There arg so many things that books: will mean to your growing boy or girl. First it means'the close and happy ir act with the ( who reads him; just a little 'while later, it becomes' the medium El his own accomplishment -- 'then, whon the child Imself, books become ve slpers in the interests and ac- T eities of/ the child." "week for food alone, -- 3 'entertainment, 'but ac-. SE EAT TN VTS : 2 ONL TEA ® SERIAL STORY - BRIDE. ON A BUDGET Copyright, 1939, NEA Service, Inc. Ie "BY JANET DORA N, CAST OF CHARACTERS IRIS IVES--a radiant bride who thought love came first and money could take care of itself. BART WHITTAKER--a right- eous bridegroom who looked at the bankbook first and his wife afterward. . + a Yesterday: Iris can't cook, Bart finds out. So they dine out reg ularly while Bart's money dwin- dles, They spend right and left for other things. But Bart fecls sure Iris will settle down soon. CHAPTER 1V It was Bart himself who brought home the little budget book, a month later. After spending rath- er a bad hour with his accounts, and figures. After discovering that" two could not only live as cheap- "ly as one, but instead, could not, apparently, live for three times what it cost one! After the cold figures told him that he had spent at- the rate of $25 -or better a for the two of them! "Food, including , milk, fruit, meat, vegetables, $9," the little budget book said. And offered lists of groceries, as well as menus for each meal, allowing for guests and entertainment! Bart brought that little black book home as if he'd found Alad- din's magic lamp. "After reading those delicious sounding menus, he felt actually hungry to begin eat- ing on one right away! In the little apartment, spic and span, order reigned. The dishes were washed, the dish towels drift- ing on the June breeze, and in the open kitchen casement win- dow, the pot of navecissi smiled whitely in the warm sun, Iris always came home' an hour "before he did. The dean's office closed at' 4, and he rarely man- aged to close up the shop before 6.80. But as usual, there was no array of pans and kettles on the little gas range, and no collection of utensils and food in stages of preparation, on the porcelain --topped-table,- Dining, Dancing Out In the bathroom, a high sweet contralto 'sang happily. Obviously his 'little wife was having herself: a tub and shower. And on the bed*- was spread a billowing concoction of pale 'green organdie -flounces, with a deep, leaf green satin sash, and a big floppy milan hat of green straw. On, the rug stood two diminutive size. AAAA white" kid sandals.- They were "dining out. were dining and Again, Bart sat down heavily in the sehilit, and Chinese grass rush They dshsing. out. was so beautiful here in Linwood. The elms, lacy fronds against a pale blue sky, and the sun hot 'and mellow over everything, The drowsy hum of inscets, and the shrill, happy clamor of children playing marbles, playing hop- scotch, playing hide-and-seek. It was curious that in all this beauty, Tie could feel s0 hollow, so empty and scared. So panicky. Then Iris came out, trailing her pale blue chenille robe about her, her ivory shoulders bare and glowing, rising above the robe caught together carelessly, her slender legs and thighs pecking in and out as she hurried to find . fresh lingerie, stockings, powder and make-up. "Hurry, Bart darling," was her slightly absent greeting, when she noticed him sitting there by the window, "we'll be late if you don't. You'll have to get a bath and dress. Or: had you forgotten we're dining with the Kents?" Forgotten Invitation ° He hag, forgotten, Completely. So eng ed had he been in the budiet book; so lost in the wild UCKL a MIXTURE - and John Kent's invitation to dine ~him slowly, "Bet the check, because John Kent small bouquet, . where she sat at the vanity mirror. ~ most of their meals out. Still Iris a book. It tells all about budgets " up shop directly after 5, He pulled b clad-in a faded pink check: ging- + blond 'curls. Iris; bending over the hope of curbing their extravagant mdoe of living to a scale he could encompass, the memory of Ellen with them at the new Bay-shore Plaza, and 'then go to the new play the Guild was putting on, had completely slipped his mind, "Did you remember to bring flowers for Ellen, dear?" Iris ask- ed, smoothing on rouge with swift deft strokes before her vanity dresser. "Flowers? Ellen? What for?" he demanded sharply. Iris faced her hand with the powder-puff- arrested halfway to her chin, "But darling," she exclaimed perplexedly, "you always Dring your hostess flowers. when you dine out!' Bart stood up, taking his okt off carefully. It was too warm for his" winter suit these days, but he couldn't afford a summer suit; for that matter he couldn't afford to have his old summer. suit fixed up so he could wear it. "That's only for a thank. -you when you dine at home, Iris.' not _ dining out at a shore place. ud He did not. add, "I'll probably is always wool-gathering when the check comes- around, even if his wife. does do the invitifg" It would make no difference eithar way to Iris. She was a stickler for doing the smart thing, the correct gesture always, Only it ran into steep costs at times. + "We can't accept their invita. - tions and not even bring 'Ellen a Bart! With sum- mer flowers in, and so inexpen- sive, too." "Ellen will manage," he said drily, "if John comes up to scratch, she'll have a corsage way ahead of anything I could: afford to bring her." He laid out his shaving kit and turned thd hot water on in the tub. Rubbing the shaving lather over his face, he 'watched Iris in the mirror over the wash-bowl, that reflected squarely the entire wall of the bedroom beyond, "We're eating at home tomor- row, honey," Bart said casually, cutting a neat lane through the drift of lather and faint stubble, "I've got. a surprise for you." . "Oh Bart, not company!" Iris exclaimed petulantly, "When yon know how much I have to do at the office, and .all this besides.": Bart grinned silently at the "all - this." He did more than half the * housework around the little apart- - 'ment, and: thus far, they'd eaten . took her home-making seriously, -"No,-not- company, honey. Just. and menus and buying and plan- ning 'meals. So we can begin to save a little," "It costs. almost as wiuch to live at home, Bait, as it does to dine out," Iris argued, "with pric. es the way they are." - "You don't see any restaurant -- en going broke-do you, Iris? No; and you won't. And this book tells how we can eat like- kings on a third of what it's costing us now. Better: food, home cooked, and at a third the cost." Iris said nothing. But the tiny line between her wide violet eyes* was. warning that she was think ing intently. Life of hte Party All that evening, Iris was the life of 'the party. She flirted with staid John Kent when she danced with him, and teased Bart con- stantly, She kept them all in gales of merriment. She _had such a. . grand time horself it was a shock' | to discover it was time to go oh- to the play: And then all at once it was 11, and they were home . Saaln, and, 'yawning sleepily to bed. Next day, Bart managed to shut the curtains as soon ds the whis- tles blew, and didn't 'answer ' knocks on: the door as: he made everything fast for the 1 ight, But Iris was home ahead of him, Iris, ham gown with a ragged tear in one puffed sleeve and a tea towel « pinned| bewitchingly. about' her "stove, hurrying to. and fro, study. ing a cookbook. Cooking dinner, wr . eee esi -------------------- 'Blended For Quality The bedroom was in order, the living room neat, and the table + set. 'And a pot-roast simmered in the oven in an iron kettle, and" vegetables steamed in the rich brown juices. .On the window- ledge an apple pie cooled, and she was deep in a bran muffin recipe when he came in, Saving A Bit of Money "Hi, wife of my bosom," he greeted her fervently, She flung hiv "4 worried, absent glance and wiped her damp forehead on thie ragged sloeye, " "Hello, Bart," wanly, ' That was the beginning. When Iris answered ' thé -meal*.wvas on the table, Iris wasn't' hungry. She was too tired to cat. Too hot. There was too much to do.' "Besides; you want to ccono- 'mize, Bart, and you'll save what- ever I might eat." He grinned, not taking it seri- ously, It was too silly, really, to take in any other light than as a joke. Only she didn't eat. And he did not guess she had had a sand-, wich and a glass of milk and small cupcake before starting her cul- inary preparations, After dinner, when all efforts to coax her into eating some of the really good dinner failed, Bart tried to make her lie. down and rest a bit, . "It's this heat, honey; you over did. You shouldn't try to do every- thing at once, weather like this." "As if that mattered, so long as you can save a little, Bart!" Iris muttered petulantly. Putting On A New Act Bart's, slow, quiet wrath sim- meted slowly at that, but he said nothing, And Iris attacked the dishes with more-temper than cau-. tion, smashing a fragile blue pie plate as. it slid to the floor crash- ing against the gas stove, " Bart picked up the pieces silent. ly. And when the dishes were done, and Iris took the vacuum cleaner and dust clothes and ie. ADORABLE KIDDIE : OUTFIT PATTERN 4320 By ANNE ADAMS: Even tiny tots may be smart "tailor-mhids'"! For is anything more beguiling than a small, sturdy figure in a trim little suit like Anne Adams' Pattern 48207 The short, - eight-gore. 8s k i ¥t flarés | jauntily above dimpled 'knees and would be dashing in a brave- plaid. The jacket has a cunning hankie pocket and a four-sectioned match- ing cap. 'Why not. make a smart wool suit; then use the same pat- tedn for a two-piece cotton dress? Pattern 4320 is available in chil-~ dren's sizes 8, 4, 6, 6. and 8. Size + b, blouse, takes % yard 86 inch fabric; skirt, % yard 64 inch fab. rie; jacket and cap, % yard 54 inch fabrie. 2 Send TWENTY CENTS (208) in coins (stamps cannot be ac- cepted) for this Anne Adams pats -tern. Write plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER, Send your order to Anne Ad- ams, Room 4256, 78 West. Adelaide St., Toronto, GIRLS: 5 Crying apt, on real "woman's friend' ie m's Vegetable Compoun LydiaE. Pinkhan's 55288 < ISSUE NO. 3-140 Ji =-ternoon ~haps not, | Ward iwi for more than. 7, - New Minister to Canada James Cromwell, husband of Doris Duke, "the richest girl'in the world," has been named by Presi. dent Roosevelt as the successor to Daniel 'Roper as vepresentativa of the United States to Canada. His appointment will have to he ratified by the U.S. senate. gan thoroughly cleaning the liv. ing room, his wrath began to pass" the temper stage. "Look, "Iris, this room looks all right: You' re tired, why don't you quit and rest, now?" . "This place is a pig pen," she stated shortly, "and work Has to be done. Your precious budget - book said nothing about that, Bart Whittaker. It was concerned only _ with pennies; not persons!" Bart went into the bedroom, taking the evenjng paper, and lay down on the bed and read it. But the sound of her energetic clean ing, the whisk of the brush on the cushions, the roar of the electric cleaner, distracted kim. Until 10.30, Iris worked at her cleaning She washed the windows, she cleaned the paint, she wiped the floor around the rug, and she pol- ished "the furniture. Then, spent, weary, she crept" into bed to sleep instantly, while her puzzled young husband lay wide awake, trying to figure out. this newest angle, This martyred - strike against economy and budg- eting,. This act that "he did not recognize as an act, nor guess was a role played with the gusto und enthusiasm _of 'sheer relish, (To Be: Continued) Adapt Wardrobe To Way Of Life Cloths Are Smart When Suit- able for the Occasion -- the Fundamentals of Good Dressing. | "Prepare to see yourself as a new woman this winter but don't get so excited about bustles, basq. ues, etera, that you forget the fundamentals of good ds. ing -- fine quality, good lines, perfect fit and suitability to your way of life." This Is advice compiled from the opinions of seven outstanding fash- fon authorities, ™ 3 advice worth taking ser. fously too -- pdri'cularly the part about suitability to your way of life. A wardrobe composed entirely of bustle dresses would be as un- | satisfactory fo: a business woman as one. including only simple wool shirtwaisters would be for a wom- | an whose» life' 17a round of parties. Quality, Line, Fit; Sultabllity To "ascertain what you really need most, think a bit about . the kind of iite you lead. Is it one con- tinuous calendar of luncheons, af._ --and pvening:- parties bridge? Then you need more dressy day frocks than tailored street mo- dels, of 'course. Do you work fn an office? Then suits and a couple of basic dresses are tho answer. One, or at the most two, dressy frocks for cock. ~Jail parties after work, dinner wear and Sunday suppers:should suffice, - Put the bulk of your clothes allow. | ance Into the kinds of clothes you have to wear most of the time, It you live in the country, tweeds and other country-dsh 'clothes should be your main concern. Pro bably one cititied outfit for shop- ping lunch in town™will do, Por: Famous Women's, Homes Designated Although few famous women have statues erected to their mem- ~ ory in Lonlon, they have fared bet ter, in ¢cmmemorative tablets af- fixed to houses they lived in. Christina Rosetti's is in Torring ton Square; Mrs. Browning has one in Gloucester Place as well as "the one in Wimpole Street; Fanoy Buiney's is in Bolton Street, Pic = 'cadilly; Jenny Lind, Mary Somer- ville, Lady Diana. .Beauclerk, George Eliot, Teresw Tietjons, Joanna: Baillie and Elizabeth Charies are also commemorated, " Outsize Hoosegow Jaae Jail in the world is in ad, - Shangbal, with Aes 000 prisoners. Violent Exertion } Not For Girls ~-- Strenuous Athletics Often Have Ill-Efféects in Later Life ¢ ticipation by girls in the more strenuous sports was voiced by Dr. G. Shepherd, in bis address to graduates: of © the. . Walkerville, school's commencement exercises Strict Supervision - "To the student body, and espec . lally the girls," Dr. Shepherd, who is himself a "graduate of Walker: ville Collegiate, declared," 1 would beg of them to refrain from violent excursions in the realm of phy-~ical of tralned supervision, "Lr should like to go on record "here as being violently opposed to the participation of our girls in the confines of this school, The tragic ¢ourse. of what | bellpve was "one of our most famous girls' teams speaks eloquently for itself. 3 Athletic Heart May Result --~ "It is a terrible and a shocking group of girls, to have been proud of them and cheered them on, and then to have experienced the tragic end of nearly some third of that group, to realize now that those cheers were hollow -mockery and the utgings with which we forced them on but gped them more quick ly to an untimely end. "Mark you, the so-called athletic heart is one that already has been damaged before being subjected © ing" ' Crowns High In New Spring Hats Well As Straw PARIS--The tendency toward slightly higher crowns for spring, - noticed in one or two other col- lections, is apparent in several hats at Molyneux. By higher crowns are meant those of three or four inches, in contrast to the flat little pillboxes and canotiers, or the fur "toques raised at front only, which have been so successful all win- ter. The height of the new hats is not so great that it is worth special comment except that us. ually Paris = milliners promote height for fall and not for'spring, One such hat is almost' small enough to be called a toque in three round layers, the Jargest be- ing the lowest. One of the pret- tiest is a fairly wide - brimmed shape with a. little sweep to it, up at one side and down at the oth- cr, and a small crown nearly 4 _ inches high, It is done in baku in a lovely contrast with three sprays -of rosy pink wall flowers, against one side of the crown. Flowers or Fruit There -are pretty flower trim. « mings. at Suzy also, among the smartest being small bunches" of , violets, one a little" larger than the other, at opposite sides of the a ~br:m of 'a small canotier: of blacfl "felt, each'side rolled a little. Fruit is' also: being used by this milliner; tiny, smart and picturesque .is. a small shape in* honey color felt or . straw covered by .velvet crab: ap- "ples tinted by/ hand in rosy tones ; over the golden -base, © 'How Many. Calories "\. Do People Require? | The calorific value of food is - the proportion of heating units the food contains.. The harder you work, the more calories you need. These are the calories per day needed to maintain health by dif- ferent classes of workers: -- Woodcutter Stonemason Blacksmith ... University rower Labourer Painter Soldier in War w..iueuesmsiennn 8,146 Soldier in peace ... on 3020 Outspoken opposition to the par (Ont.) Collegiate Institute, at the : "demands of the holiday exercise, except under the strictest. styenuous sports in leagues beyond thing to have grown up with a' to severe physical strains and train. ° Flowers and Fabrics Used As - a soft Nattier liue, which makes "| -lemon and orange. ~ paraffin an Advices, Against EL = Strenuous Sports | By SADIE' B. CHAMBERS .A' CHAT ON MARMALADES' About this time of the year as =~ we make an _ {nventory of . the shelves of the Jellies' and jams, we find they are beginning to become 'depleted especlally after the extra season, The. wise homemaker begins now to replenish, I am giving a few ot my favorites, For any of these, shop for tho very best fpuit, This has always been a favorite season of mine for making these concoctions as the very choicest of fruits are.now, be" ing .offered, For the orange, 1ohon and-grape- "fruit marmalade be sure the fruit is fresh and the skins of the fruit, smooth and unblemished. This us one of the socrets of a cléar amber colored mixture, Do not use fruit you. have had for some time, with skins wrinkled and blemished, Orange, Lemon and Grapefruit _ Marmalade y 3 lemons 3 oranges 3 grapefruit 1 cup of white corn syrup Sugar an equal measure 'of fruit minus the corn syrup. Wash the fruit thoroughly. Use the squeezer for extracting juice from all fruit. From -the peel re. move all the white membrane, Slico the peel very thin and cut in strips about 1% inches long. Placa juice. and peel In an earthenware dish and leave over night, adding three times as much water as juice and pulp of fruit. In the morning boil for 11% hours, ;Remove from the heat; stand over-night. The se. "cond morning boll for 45 minutes, It you like the bitter taste of the seeds; save some of cach fruit in a dish. Cover with boiling water as you are preparing the fruit and before boiling the first. morning, "add to the juice. Have ready an equal amount of sugar to that of fruit less one cup (for which use a cup of white corn syrup). Slowly stirring, add to 'the juice, It is difficult to give an exact time of boilng but 'watch carefully and "drop from the spoon; and as is gives the jelly test remove from the heat. Be careful of overboiling after the: addition of sugar, or the mixture will be too dark ia color, Prune, Orange and Lemon Let ~ Marmalade 1 Ib. prunes - 1 lemon 1 orange a 1 Ib. sugar Wash prunes carefully, also the Extract the juice of orange and lenion and slice peels, finely, Boll all the fruit to- gether after having soaked the prunes for three hours. When boil ed thoroughly, remove from- the heat, put through the colander. Measure the pulp, using equal-am- ; ounts of sugar. Bofl for 20 min. utes, then remove from heat and place in jelly glasses. Top with dstore in a dry, cool place, Liat, : Apricot Marmalade 2 1bs, dried apricots - 1 lemon -- 1 orange. 533 6 cups water : 1'can shredded pineapple 1% cups sugar 1 cup,corn syrup 14 cup candied ginger Wash - apricots .thoroughly; add -- the water and allow to remain over night. "In the morning, add the pines apple and bofl until the upricots' are tender. Add sugar and corn syrup. and boil until the: mixture thickens. Add the ginger .and the juice of lemon and orange. and simmer for ten minutes, Remove from heat, put in jelly glasses, par. affin the top and store in icool, dry a place, READERS, WRITE IN! Miss: Chambers welcomes: personal letters from: interests ved readers, She is pleased to receive suggestions on: topics for her column, and is .even ready 'to listen to your "pet peeves,' Requests for racipes H wife 2 2,800 or special megus are in order,' Doctor © 2,762 Address your: letters. to Tailor 2,760 Sadie: Bl Chambers, 73 West: Teacher 2,600 Adelaide. Street, Toronto." A A AN Mt» a) a --

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