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Durham Review (1897), 24 Dec 1936, p. 2

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Striding beside her, Dennis said, "With the luck of the Irish. I trap. pen to know Mrs. Crane, in the “Thanh for the blarney." he smiled. "Now I must be on my way. Time to punch the clock." "But lwk here.'" he protested. "After Fate has (one to ell thin trouble Just for me to meet you, I ean't let you walk out on me like this. I'm Dennis Maxwell, with the Ttuumm-Roa, Jewelry Company." He waited expectantly. "My name is Albertine Tevane," she responded. "I'm in the hosiery department at Graner's. I :11an must run along now." "N-no- thanks to you," she gasp- ed. then laughed shakily. "Not a hair singed -- but I must look . mesa." "You look swell to me." He turned her about toward her own image in a shop-window mirror. The face reflected there was undo- Iiably lovely, framed with golden- brown lair in natunl wove: our the cars. Delieatelr curved mouth, and on: that were his and trusting and blue. Albertine stood away from him wipggi he: smoke-filled eyes. "Hurt anywhere?" His voice held more anxiety than the usual polite concern ot I perfect stranger. BU um: still supported her. An hour later, something exeit. ing, if momentarily unpleasant, did happen. Within n block of the store, the bus on which Albertine was r1- intr to work taught fire, and a ta ' red-headed young mm kicked open I window an lifted her out. Albertine sprang out of bed that June morning with a gay, tingling ”use of allveneu and lmpeudin adventure. Surely, she told herself, something exciting must happen to her on her nineteenth birthday, even if she Win; a stranger in Detroit, with only n month-old job selling hosiery in a department store. When recent Inow II. now tor mu. _ - - e,_._- ---. "an”, v. gun‘s. “no; out n tiny sum that no budget would miss. Or Join the companion squares for spread. scarf or pillow - they're equally lovely. Pat- tern 1369 contains directions and charts for making the 10% inch square: shown (smaller in finer cotton); illustrations of them and of nll stitches used: material requirements. Sold " cents in stamp. or coin (coin preferred) for this pattern " Nooduerart Dept. Wiloon Publishing Co.. " We“ AJ-I_:.I_ 'M, _ Festivities . . . gala occasion: . . . can out this, your Ineiest, loveliest cloth! lt’n 'tfe? to crochet and, made of string. costs but - 4:-.. m... u.-. -- ...I__A ___An- __ ' A . _ A Adelaide, Toronto; [FILET SQUARES STAR RUBY CHAPTER I LuxuyL-ceNdExpuniveTolhh WithLaumWhaevPi, wow covered the natural torus in an Inn herd oi deer. Sam tte the hungry By Louise Jerrold "It's lonesome business, being alone and strange in a big city," he supplied for her, and took her hour in a firm, understanding clasp. "Don't I know! I've had to live through that, too." They, with his in- fectious grin, he said: "Well-there', one way we can get around that Albertine toyed with her purse. “I lived in a little town in Ohio till last Christmas. when I lost my moth. er. I-l havent any relatives except a great-aunt up north somewhere in Michigan, but she doesn't seem to know I'm on earth. I've been in De. troit only a month, and--" Dennis nodded. "Sort of runs m the family. Father, and trrandfatner before him, were in the jewelry business. When Dad died five years no, I came here-but how do we happen to be talking about me? I went to know about you." "Mrs. Crane thinks you’re grand! She said she's known you ever since you were a little boy back in Dose- ville, and are admired your father, too. A Jeweler, wasn't he?" She smiled and nodded, ehildishtg eager. "Did Mrs. Crane give me I good enough chorhcter so that you’d dine and dance with me some night soon. Albertine?" At six that evening, he was wait- ing for her in his shiny green road- ster. and when he had driven her home, they sat in the car for I while and talked. His smiling gaze warmed Albers tine deliciously. A friend.' A man friend.' This was the nicest birthday present she'd ever had. When they parted, Dennis had her promise to meet him after work. jewelry department of your store. Ask her for the low-down on me, and then let me drive you home tonight. My car', in the repair shop, but I'll have it this evening. I've a hunch we're going to be friends. tim. Or Join tliGGiiniG - thty'ee e.q.ually, loygly. Pat- PATTERN 1369 Glacier National Park, forest rangers m recipient: ot federal teller are am um [in-nu On Government Relief TORONTO Berlin has reported theria vaccine. With that queer Jumble of broken sentences, he darted across the dance floor toward a group of new- comers - three women and two men who were Just being seated at a table near the orchestra. (To be continued) They had been seated only a few minutes when Dennis sprang up so suddenly that he nearly upset the table. Startled, Albertine saw that his eyes had grown dark with ex- citement. "Excuse me -- a man's just come in-Lord.' If he'ts--" The dance ended and they re- turned to their table. That was ugly gossip but, loyally, Albertine discounted it. Even if Mrs. Crane hadn't voucher; for Dennis, she would have trusted her own in- tuition. He was fine and honorable "--she felt Bure. She wouldn't, Albe tine told her. s‘elf, give another thought to what Carrie Williams, another girl in the hosiery department, had insinuated about Dennis that afternoon when ‘Albertine had told her she was go- ing out with him. V "Better watch your step with that guy. Bili, my boy friend, runs the elevator in the Tannan-Roan building. and he says Dennis Maxwell got into borne sort of trouble with his firm." tarrie's ey.es had glitter- ed maliciously. "They're only keep- ing him on till he makes good what he--" Here a customer had inter- rupted. They danced silently for a. while after that, She stole a glgnce up at him undo her long curling lashes. He was so marvellous - there was such strength about his jaw, such honesty in the clear gray of his eyes. She breathed a happy sigh. “I adore dancing," she said. adding to hepstlf, "With you." "Th, fairiesmust have laid the wonderful gift of rhythm in your cradle along with so many other gifts!” Dennis murmured, smiling down into her face. Inside, they were shown to a choice table next to the dance floor, and presently, she was in Dennis' arms. They drew up finally at a bright- ly lighted dine-and-dance place. Strains of dance music drifted out into the night. Albertine’s eyes were Wide and dark with excitement as Dennis helped her out of the car and escnrted her toward the entrance. topped " tt huge electric sign. "Some day, Albertine, I want my name carved on one of those stone gateways and I'm going to live hap- pily ever after with my wife and the young Maxwella" Dennis' tone was light, but Albertine sensed the undercurrent of ambition and de- termination. They drove swiftly through the city traffic, turned into the Grosse Pointe Shore Drive, and went spin- ning past huge homes that looked like fairy-tale palaces with their lighted windows shining through the !aced bough of the trees. And then, at last. it was Satur- day, and she wus being seated again in his roadster, and Dennis was tell- ing her, with both his lips and his eyes, how lovely she looked. With an ecstatic sigh, Albertine settled her- self beside him. She lived impatiently through that handful of days before Saturday. She was thrilled that anyone so handsome sud fascinating as this young Dennis Maxwell was interest- ed in her. At the some time, she was bewildered by the feelings he had roused in her, on such short ac- quaintanee. tine?" She could, she assured him, with stars dancing in her eyes. “I'd love itt" “It's just my bad luck to have to be oat of town for s few days," he told her, "but could you have din- ner g,ith me Saturday night, Alber- tina ' rangers came to the are shown 1mm " tl. Would I" _etttsider a new diph- rescue and "read har and teed over '" (Charles Mahun in the New York Sun.) The sun his visit makes more brief. All red with cold the dsynght dies. _ The land in frozen ridges lies Black fold on fold against the skies. The oak has left one pturchmenrleU. Tonight, there is a smell of snow. But let us walk out once not fearing, ' One last night walk, and at the, clearing ' Listen for that white silence nearing, And watch the last leaf slip and trthl Dr. Booth offered a suggestion for the solution of the problem in the production by scientist: of n tonic, or diet, or perhaps a small operation that would make grandson content to be, still a schoolboy at 88 and to defer the responsibilities of marriage until he is 50. ' "There are obvious objections to this, particularly from grandfather, who controls the money and, con- sequently, the situation" "We might decide later that grand- father, even if in private and not Government business, must go and play bowls or spend his time in mo- tor cycle racing, if he prefers it, ar- ter reaching 60; or we might decide that the future grandfather, having been promised and by then, practic- ally guaranteed a healthy virile life to the age of 60, might equally be guaranteed a compulsory but pain- less departure from that exlstence at that age. 1 "Scienee has so arranged mat- ters," he says. "that grandather now stays on and manages the business --and draws the manager's Balary- so thac his grandson cannot afford to marry and his nephew cannot get employment. SYDNEY, N.S.W. - School till the age of so and marriage at b0 may be the design for living for the average man of the future, accord- ing to Dr. Edgar Booth, lecturer m physics at Sydney University. The discovery wss declared by other astronomers to disprove fur- her the old theory that the space between stars wss completely empty. [anxiously the elements calcium and soc-mm had been discovered between sure. Some doubt has been cart on ad measurements of star distances by the knowledge that dust exists In space, scientists holding that it makes stars appesr fainter and therefore at greater distances than they actually are. Doctor Suggests Men Go To School Until Thirty Astronomers of the institution's observatory " Mount Wilson. Calif., reported that with the aid of the mighty loo-inch telescope and spec- tcgrams - photogruyhs of the rain. 'r.owa of light cast by starlight {all- ice through I prism - they had .(lmtified the element in tho vast thot clouds ot the nannies f Orlon, one of the great star system. Offers Solution To Unemployment WASHINGTON. - Discovery of titanium. a common metal of the earth, in the almost complete vac- uum between stars was announced recently by the Carnegie Institu- tion. Scientists Say Titanium, Common On Earth, ls Also in Space Metal h, Found Before the White Night Between Stars The Toronto Globe and Mail r,rriltli.:-,l'i;e,e, has rounded the corner, and, having set the course, has but to continue. Trade is grow- ing; earnings of the people are in- creasing and the rich mineral herit- age is being revealed as vaeter than the most optimistic imagined. It is not gold alone. Total mineral pro- duction will exceed that of last year, when it was valued at $312,00ti,tmd But gold pay: bills anywhere, pro- vides currency backing, whether we believe it or not, and is a handy com- modity to have in the public vaults for future stability. Other Ytiottr are increasing their reserves. Canada manifestly is reaching a r)ilJl'i;'l/ where it will be unnam- " A, ‘- astrous to large sections, particularly in southern and western Saskatche- wan and southern Alberta, where the drought was the worst on record. I The size of the northern hemis- ‘crops is now fairly well established, " countries reporting a total of 2,- 971,000,000 bushels, as compared with 3,140,000,000 a year ago. This de- I cline in output was the result, not of a reduced acreage, but of intense heat and prolonged drought over the wheat belt of this continent and ex- cessive rainfall and rust in south- western Europe and North Africa. After a good start, the condition of Canadian and United States wheat this year deteriorates steadily in; June and July drought proved dis”! Including current estimates for the partly harvested southern hemisphere crops, the world, except Ruuil and China, is expected to yield a crop of 3,481,000,000 bushels, or 78,000,000 less than the 1935-36 harvest. T0R0NT0.-world production of wheat in the 1936-37 season bide fair to be the smallest in " years. ac- cording to a semi-annual world wheat review contained in the Canadian Bank of Commerce’s montly commer- cial letter, released recently. Production of Wheat Down 73,000,000 Bushels Combine tapioca, seasonings, on- ion, parsley, meat, and tomato juice. Shape ttttc, loaf in roaster or turn in- to loaf pun. Bake in hot oven (450 deg. F.) 30 minutes basting fre- quently with mixture of water and butter. Serve hot or cold. Serve;. 6. Smallest Crop In Eleven l For instance there's still Iota of ltender sweet meat left on the turkey ibut you are all heartily sick of cold jurkey and it's as much as your life F, worth to mention "turkey hash", Aut here's atnew way to bring it to Ily table that will delight everyone. ':By making a loaf roast it will look ‘and taste so different that the family will forget that it came from a Christmas "bird". Turkey Meat Roast Loaf 4 tablespoons minute tapioca, li teaspoon salt, dash of cayenne, dash of black pepper. 1 teaspoon Woreee tershire sauce, 1 teaspoon mineed: onion, 1 tablespoon minced parsley, " cups cooked turkey, 3-4 cup to- mato Juice or meat broth, % cup hot water, 2 tablespoons butter. ily can't stand them for to. long. But there’s the. turkey, the enn- berry sauce and that end of plum pudding that must not be wasted. Here are some suggestions for us- ing them so that they have an en- tirely new character and their rich- ness is offset by the ingredients used with them in their new forms. For instance there's still lots of Left-overs from the Christmas din- ner becomes very tiresome after I day or two and so many of the Christmas goodies Ire very rich and even the best digestion: in the fun- Using Left-Oven in New Ways Handy Stuff To Have liaue No. St I is reaching tt' will be poseible to ronto Globe and Mail nada has rounded the l having set t_he_course, Salada Brown Label it Woman's A World Position do the GEE! the h Mitt M. Morgan Luann than}: ......w .. ucuuuwl Dialer!“ ot ttttt fut prints. Two cover." styles, on. Munro" .4er Colours: _ Blue. Green. Red. Mann. ‘euow. sue- Rmnll unannL . - LADIES PEATE ttysyki..iLiiiJ.". and to} 617') alt-lot. no Cor-eh. from ..... Suophoneo. from Aeeitifilsn, from LOWEST PRICES EVER Gait-n, from w....'............... 8 Violins. from .q.-.--__, Place cranberry juce in top of double boiler and bring to a boil over direct heat. Combine dry ingredi- ents; add gradually to liquid and bring to a brisk boil, stirring con- stantly. Place immediately over rap- idly boiling water and cook 5 min- utes, stirring occasionally. Remove from water, mixture clears and thickens as it cools. When slightly cool, fold in cranberry jelly or mashed cranberries. Pour % mixture 'into Parfait glasses; chill. When re- maining tapioca mixture is cold. fold, in cream; pile lightly in glasses. Just before serving sprinkle each portion with blanched almonds or other nuts from the Christmas, bowl and top off with a little whipped cream fla. voured with rum or sherry. This 'cl cipe acne: 8. FREE Cranberry Arabesque 8 cups cranberry juice and water, 54 cup quirk-cooking tapioca, 1 cup sugar. % teaspoon salt, 1 cup cran- berry jelly or mashed cranberries. li cup cream. whipped. And thre’s the bowl of cranberry jelly still left. Well, you can use that for a dessert that will charm the most disgruntled dyspeptic. Quick-tsetting Jelly beaten into I meringue will give you the cool fruity flavour of the lime and will be a lelicio‘us contrast to the smnll slice of hot pudding. Lime Jelly 1 package quick-setting lime jelly. 1% cups warm wate.. Dissolve jelly in water. Turn into dish and chill. When tirmly set, heat with fork and serve on hot pudding. mother and to an ,urudii. cine um! 11'.” recommended tt.", 98 out of 100 Women Report Benefit Found. Now I m man; It "ein foe painful period. and It I. help- lnt me u lot. I In) In good spirit. and do my work every day, My The addition of the quiek-eookintt tapioca, the onion and the tomato juice take away from the over-rich- ness of the turkey meat and give it all an entirely new flavour to say nothing of its appearance. The smart shape of your lent may be en. hanced by trarnishinr, it with cress. parsley or coils of sliced green pep- R. R. No. 2.5mm, mm -'-"" “Whoa I m "r-oid [tool “I 509190! your van-bl. Con. “My nerves are better" writes Mm. P. M. nan-31.33 mama“); G' :l-aa MANSFIEEI; MONTREAL, pa y...........-... Pile' “mm; QUICK Acrrdii' HOME COURSE o....u......._.‘ mum-u... ,_-__, In“. 310 Km lulu-Inn; m - 04w- nu Mun-o... r!" M for 8 6.45 3.95 I 6.95 39.00 In a Niece-ion BO rapid u to be m- dutitteuiautru from ttimultaneity. In that plight we never bother to Mk whether we have caught a cola would; Wonk only to be told how '0 can avoid catching “other or "tetm.--damdm, Duly Mirror. in A leu'ned physician his diam. tt distinction between catching a my d and eatelutie COLDS. The distinction my have I clinical immu. We cannot say. in prur tical life we have often clugl t both 4 'ttdee by the severity of the at fuck: on. or more cold. at once, u The other dam is made an m x. '.- sons who go to a library or l t _ store with only vague ideas of v ': xx they want. The class, is in the Ir - ' ity uni its interest in hook reams is mild. It depends largoiy 1.11"” word of month information for ru tl. the. la main. and it can muILP a but seller out of u fourth rate now . any shout it. They are alert to trends 'tt literature. hue their fa its .tttttors and subjects, am! their favorite reviewers. If t favorite reviewer praises a on: book, they will try to pet Mn! it. Many in this clue: are n", 1rook-burera,. the ,rest are m patron. of the lending liln-aric-. Thou who want a book to road we not influenced by reviews. " is those who want to read a Mk Who take the trouble to find out m "vat?ee that the reviewers base (o two main ell-u of book readers, and only one of them is influenced by "View; Then two classes of book readers were cleverly Indicated by the late G. K. Chesterton. Mm spoke of the difference between ti t' interested mun who wanted to It' d I book and the inditnarmrn ",,' 1 any: a book to read. The Winnipeg Tribune writes: - It is probably We that without re- vien for fewer books would he sold. Certainly far fewer worthwl he books would be sold. But there are two min clun- of book readers, Care should be taken to protect the m" trees. Damage mu; be elirninuea largely by care tn arm‘s: and I road system is essential in order that the tnffic with teams V li‘ not be ali over the woods l Tree. ere ruined often by Lupe itreea. Melly of the shaded trees die Ibecause they are not receiving suf- .ficient mnlight. The leaders of In tr- 'greenn ere whipped and the deman- 5ous trees grow crooked trunks. “any in the past have not con- sidered the woodlot An asset. be- cause che avenue from it has been small, and the reason for the low returns is that no trees we cut 'm- in: they are dead or defective. The large sound trees should be utilized in order to receive the high- est financial returns. Many farmers allow trees in their woodlot w de- cay. Who would consider themselves skittles. if the train and lay crops were named to deteriorate in the fields. 6. Trees that are shading and in- terfering with the growth of trees beneath them. I 5. Thinninge - Second growth stand. require thinning. There is often stagnation and few of the tree. are making satisfactory growth. The removal of in percent- age of the trees will improve Brow» ing conditions considerably. Trees of the less vnlunble species. crooked ones, dean tree: and those lnfevh-d with decay should be removed am! the straight sound trees of the more nimble species are left to Crow In- to volunble timber trees A semnm growth woods will require a thin. ning every 15-25 years and the ma- terial that is taken from a lhy.'t acre woods has supplied the ordinary farmhouse with sufficient fuciwonn for years. fem with much. 4. Weed tmeg. Trees of the less valuable species should be removed from the wood- lot. The {adoring types of trees may be removed in an improvement rut- tine and they will yield . commer- ablo nmount of fuelwood. wither anon. Often the fuelwond my bemeettmd Ind the woodlot will be more valuable. Treee whoee removal will benefit future growing conditions should be selected for cutting. It my take a few days longer to cut the wood, but the farmer he. were time and men my be hired cheeply during the . The farmer who ia fortunate to own a woodlot will be cutting the fuelwood for the next winter soon. More owner. each year are 3mm: comideration to the fuelwood cut- ting " they realize that the amount of income that will be received from the wood. in yearn to come is largely determined on the management that ia given to the woods now. weu6hrtDeedT'----'thin. 'sir.hrr-ttMe-e A Cold or Colds Book Reviews W Sourceoflncome Trees wimp-My dead tops. Deana tree: and those I PW th . Ct In lit great the li hush: gave stone rn W yam " to be his h rem-ed last chap! it chl SC tow: kept tl C hris ur tt (tgg if,fttifd"

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