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Durham Review (1897), 22 Apr 1937, p. 2

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44 Claudia Townsend meets Dick Whaâ€" len at a hockey game in Seattie one night. Mer interest in Dick infuriates Wallace Bornell, rich young lumberâ€" man, who wants to marry her. To get Dick out of the way, Wallace offers him a job i~ one of his lumber camps in British Columbia. Claudia, mean while, persuades her father to give Dick a job in his office. However, they Each cake of Royal Yeast is sealed in an airâ€"tight wrapper... It stays fresh... pure! Send for FREE Booklet! G()()l) bread needs a vifal yeast . . . one that‘s fullâ€" strength, pure, dependable! ‘That means Royal . . . the only dry yeast that comes sealed in an airâ€"tight wrapperâ€" securely protected from contaminationâ€" its keepingâ€"qualities insured! Seven out of 8 Canadian houseâ€" wives today prefer Royal when they bake with a dry yeast. They Anow it‘s dependable! For 50 years, it has been the standâ€" ard of highest quality. Don‘t risk baking failures with faulty yeasts! Always deâ€" pend on Royal! Royal protects you against homeâ€"baking failures : . . It‘s always fullâ€"strength! Spoiled Bread‘ Standard Brands Ltd. "_l?.trAAvc‘. & Liberty St. Please send me the free Royal Yeast Bake Book. Weak Yeast can cause Love Huntress Tea for every Taste To get uniform results in bread baking, it is im« portant to keep the spooge at an even temperature. ‘The ‘"Royal Yeast Bake Book‘* gives instructions for the care of dough. Send coupon for free copy of the book, giving 23 tested rcdro for tempting breads, coffee cakes, buns and rolls. "Buy Madeâ€"inâ€" Canada Goods" T EAL Byv H. GLYNNâ€"WARD It made her even more bitter to know that he had settled somewhere and still did not write her a line. She But Claudia did not want to leave Seattle vith so much going on. Even from herself she tried to conceal her real reason for staying â€" hope that word might come from Whalen. At the hotel they had finally received and given her Dick‘s address at Burns Lake, British Columbia. She had never heard of Burns Lake. # "Claudia, you are doing too much," her mother said one day. "Why don‘t you go up to Banff for the winter sports with the Hodgsons?" Claudia was not the sort of girl to show how much she had been hurt by a man who had snubbed her. Now she threw herself into all the excitement that offered, accepting all invitations <nd lived in a continual whirl. But though Claudia tried to harden ber heart and not care, she had been more attracted to Dick Whalen than by any other man she had ever met. She had fallen in love with him and she realized now that no other man could possibly fill the gap left by him in her heart. The shock left Claudia trembling. Obviousiy, she told herself, Dick Whaâ€" len had amused himself with her, and gome out of her life without a word when it suited him. What a fool she had been! Better even to have listenâ€" ed to Wallace Bornell‘s advice not to run arourd with a man too much, who was an utter stranger. ‘"Yes, ma‘amâ€"" came the voice a few minutes later â€" "a telegram was delivered to Mr. Whalen on Friday evening." "Could you tell me if a telegram was delivered to Mr. Walen on last Friday? It is very important!" Claudia was sick with disappointâ€" ment. Dick had gone â€" after all the plans they had made, after all she had promised to do in his behalf â€" and h> had left not a word for her! "Butâ€"" she said excitedly, "where did he go?" "Mr. Whalen left no address, Miss," the clerk told her. "He told us he‘d send an address later." "Mr. Whalen checked out on Saturâ€" day morning," was the answer. Confused and hurt, Claudia rang up the Hotel Metropole and asked for Mr. Whaten. ‘‘Well, Claudia," he said, "your young man never turned up! Had to give the job to the next man. I guess he didn‘t want the job." The answer â€" "No Mr. Whalen in this office" â€" left Claudia unbelievâ€" ing. She asked to speak to her father. CHAPTER V When Claudia Townsend returned to Seattle from Victoria, she was buoyâ€" antly happy. She had managed to arâ€" range the job for Dick, and she teleâ€" phoned her father‘s office immediately to ask for Mr. Whalen, have to go to Victoria for a few days to settle the matter. Claudia wires to Dick on Friday to tell him that the job is his ‘but when the telegram comes Bornell manages to Intercept it. Hurt by Claudia‘s failure to keep her promise, Dick accepts Bornell‘s offer. He goes to the lum®*" camp at Burns Lake, and a short ume later, he discovers that the Bornell company is steaiing lumber. He asks the boss, Braddock for an explanation, but he puts him off and the next day starts for Seattle. That night, Dick writes a letter to Claudia. T F4 Coming back through town she had to pass the building which housed the Bornell Lumber Company‘s ofâ€" fice. She looked up at it, smiled and parked her car. She would run up and see Wallace in person. She had made up ber mind now. It was late in the afternoon and Claudia met the stenographer leaving by the outer office door. Impulsively one day she decided to accept Wallace. She went to the telephone to call him, but then changed her mind and went out for a lonely drive in her car to think it over,. She had carefully refrained from asking Bornell if he know where Dick Whalen had gone. She knew that Wallace had known how much they had been together, and she did not want to risk his sarcastic smile. Claudia toyed with the idea. Here was a man who loved her madly, was immensely rich, had position, and was well known to her family and friends. It would be an excellent match, She told herself she wouldn‘t marry Dick now if he came to her on bended knees! tossed her head and tried her best to forget him. "Claudia," he said to Mher once, "don‘t you know that I‘ll move heaâ€" ven and earth to get you? You may as well say yes now!" Meanwhile, Wallace Bornell purâ€" sued his adventure. He was with Claudia more than ever before. It is their hope not on‘y to keep abreast of the times, but to be known as one of the good employers with whom men and women can join their efforts to their lasting satisfaction, so that they would want to find their lifeâ€"work within the company. The increases were worked out beâ€" tween the management and the emâ€" ployees through the plant assemblies, composed of representatives elected by the employees and representatives appointed by the management. Swift Canadian Co., Limited, anâ€" nounce an increase in wages at their Dairy and Poultry Plants, located at Stratfcrd and Belleville. In accordâ€" ance with the policy of the company to keep abreast of the times, they have established a minimum rate of 35¢ per hour for male employees, and 27%ec¢ per hour for female employees, and have also established an equitâ€" able differential for employees ocâ€" cupying skilled and semiâ€"skilled posiâ€" tions. Send 20 cents in coin for this pattern to Needlecraft Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Write plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. A regal peacock, his tail suread, inspired this rich design that‘s just the thing for scarf ends, dinner cloth, chair sets, or pillow! In years to come you‘ll treasure the linens you adorned with this exâ€" quisite cutwork motif. It‘s simple to do, mainly without barsâ€"and the smaller accompanying designs are ideal for mapkins or towels. Paettern 1145 contains a transfer pattern of two motifs 9% x 12% inches, two motifs 6% x 8% inches and four motifs 2 x 2% inches; material requirements; illustrations of stitches used; color suggestions. Wages Increased ‘CUTWORK PEACcOCKS Linens Acquire Untold Loveliness Done In Laura Wheeler Cutwork "I‘ve said I wouldâ€"" came Borâ€" nell‘s quick, irritated voice, "only hurry up about it! Communicate with me by wire, using the word accident." "I‘ll see to it." They were coming out. Claudia, her heart pounding with anger and excitement, hurriedly opened her vanâ€" ity case. They musn‘t knowâ€"musn‘t suspect that she had heard! If it realâ€" ly was Dick Whalen they had been talking aboutâ€"then he was in dangâ€" Claudia bent forward, straining straining to hear the next words. "We‘d be cleaned out of business, Braddock, lose all our holdings in that country! We‘d be ruined!" This voice was Bornell‘s, and it sank hoarsely on the last words. "You do as I say. Get rid of himâ€"and quick!" His voice dropped too low to be heard. er. "... won‘t lie heavy on my conâ€" science!" the man was saying. "He‘s got what‘s coming to him all right for nosing into things that ain‘t his busâ€" iness. Whalen‘s just the sort to turn spy and inform the government. Then where‘d we be?" "Easy enough," said the other man‘s voice a moment later. "There‘s aplenty up there with a grudge against Whalen. One fellow specially, and it happens I‘ve got something on him! You‘ll stand by me, Mr. Walâ€" lace, should anything come of this?" Claudia could hear voices from the inner office, Bornell‘s and anâ€" other man‘s. Then chairs moved back â€" they were coming out. The handle turned, the door opered & crack â€" then discreetly the man pushed it to again. A crack still reâ€" mained, open enough to allow Claucia to hear what was being said. She listened idly, at first, an unâ€" willing eavesdropper, as she realized that the talk was serious and confiâ€" dential. Then suddenly she caught a name â€" the name that was upperâ€" most in her heart â€" and she sat rigâ€" id, listening with every nerve. *‘That‘s all right," said Claudia. "I‘ll wait here." The girl closed the door and left her alone in the luxâ€" urious outer office. She sat down to wait. "Oh, do you want to see Mr. Borâ€" nell?" the girl asked. ‘‘Yes, is be in?" "Yes, but Le‘s in conference in the inner officeâ€"" Tailpiece â€" Scotland Yard, coâ€" operating with police of Europe and the United States, have prepared a complete list of all the unwelcome visitors â€" international â€" tricksters, confidence men, and pickpockets, who were expecting rich hauls, They will be kept under a strict watch. Men average $13.75 a week in the textile groups, but the wage average of all workers is lowered to $9 by the wages paid to women and girls, some of whom receive only $3.25 a week. Among the million workers in the textile industrics many earn as much as $18 a week, making hosiery, while others make as little as $11 a week spinning flax and hemp. LONDON.â€"The average weekly wage of nearly 2,000,000 British factory workers is 10.75, a census recently compiled by the Ministry of Labor shows. Average Weekly Pay In Britain Is $10.75 Issue No. 17 â€"‘37 (To Be PATTERN 11498 TORONTO Cheese Savoury â€"â€" Spread seasonâ€" ed cream cheese on small rounds of previously cooked short pastry. Over the cheese place a round of tomato and a dasl. of mayonnaise, and top each with a slice of olive. Place in Cheese and Tomato Salad â€" 3 oz. cheese, 2 mediumâ€"sized tomatoes, seaâ€" soning, salad cream, lettuce Jleaves. Grate the cheese finely, then skin and chop up the tomatoes and mix to a paste with the cheese, adding seasonâ€" ing to taste. Serve the mixture on inâ€" dividual plates surrounding with letâ€" tuce leaver. Sprinkle the salads with a little finelyâ€"grated cheese and decorâ€" ate with small pieces of tomato. Cheese and Spaghetti â€" Break up 1%, oz. spaghetti into a small piedish and simmer in water for half an hour, Then mix 2 teaspoonfuls flour and % teaspoounful mustard with 2 oz. grated cheese. Season well with pepper and salt and cook for half an hour. Serve on rounds of toast. 114 squares unsweetened chocolate, cut in pieces; 3 cups cold milk, 1 cup a fsugar, %% teaspoon salt, 3 eggs, slightly beaten, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1% cups % inch cubes stale bread. Add chocolate to milk in double boilâ€" er and heat. When chocolate is meltâ€" ed, beat with rotary egg beater until blended. Combine sugar, salt, and egzs. Add chocolate mixture gradualâ€" ly, stirring vigorously. Add vanilla, Place bread in greased baking dish. Pour mixture over it. Place dish in a pan of hot water and bake in modâ€" erate oven (350 degrees F.) 50 io 60 minutes, or until the pudding is firm. Serve hot with hard sauce, or whipped cream or cold with cream. Serve six. It adds to the appearance of the pudding if from two or three tablespoonfuls of the hard sauce or whipped cream is placed on the top of the pudding just before serving. Since this really is an cconomy desâ€" sert, got the best chocolate you can buy. It inakes the pudding and will prove to be an economy in the long run. Weil, you all know what they say about puddings, so let your family prove it. If your family is like most ot the families in this country, they will turn up their noges at ordinary bread pudding. They take it for granted that it is a makeshift dessert and they feel that the place for any left over bread is in stuffings, not desserts. But here is one way to make real bread pudâ€" ding that will fool them and surprise ‘The addition of rich, flavoursome chocolate seems to make all the difâ€" ference in the world in the taste and gives you a lovely looking dessert. No one will turn up their noses at this Chocolate Bread Pudding, but they will pass their plates back for more, It‘s a wholesome, nourishing dessert and good for every member of the faâ€" mily, even the youngest. New W-g. With CE Cheese and Spaghetti â€" © Keep your outhouse saniâ€" tary . . . odorless this easy wayâ€"once a week sprinkle half a tin of Gillett‘s Pure Flake Lye over contents of closet. It cleans thoroughly & . . quickly destroys conâ€" tents. There are countliess uses for this powerful cleanser. It frees clogged drains, cuts right through grease, wipes hours of drudgery. Keep a tin always on hand. tin always on hand. _ Never disolve lye in hot water. The action of the lye itrelf heats the water. Keeps outside closets clean and sanitary Chozolate Bread Pudding New Ways With Cheese *"Cleaning outhouses is easy with GILLETT‘S LYE" *"Yesâ€"I use it regularly . . . it drives away odors fast" stubborn dirt, saves you Woman‘s World By Meir M. Morgan Sdelé)rice 20e: 11 for $1.65 MONEY TALKSâ€"Reg. 35¢ Sale price 20e: 8 for $1.30 TROUBLE COMES TO TOWN Reg. 35¢. Sale price 20c: 14 for $2.10 WHEN SIN RIDES HIGHâ€"Reg. 35¢ Sale price 20c:; 10 for $1.50 YES MA‘AM, NO MA‘AMâ€"Reg. 25¢ Sale price 1§¢: 11 for $1.10 Set of 1 copy eacn, 70e Buy Now And Save Two thousand new passports for them were issued in February, 8,000 in March, and there will be over 4,000 this month from present inâ€" dications. The yearly issue is between 24,000 and 25,000 and they are good for five years. Anyone having such a passport can use it now without the necessity of coming back here for renewal or certification. When washing soda or a similar chemical has been used, thorough rinâ€" sing should follow to take off all the traces. Painting should not start until all the surfaces are thoroughly dry. 15,000 Canadians Going To London OTTAW Aâ€"Fifteen t ho usana Canadian residents are likely to go to Great Britain this year mainly but not wholly to the Coronation. If the old surface is glossy the gloss must be dulled in order that the new paint may hold. This can be done by rubbing with sandpaper or steel wool. A washing #oda solution will eut the gloss. The firs step in reâ€"painting a kitâ€" chen is to clean the walls and the woodwork. All the surfaces of a kitâ€" chen pick up a film of grease. . This must be, taken off, for paint will not hold over it. It can be removed with a washing soda solution or with a mixâ€" ture of ammonia and water. With grease and smoke in the air, kitchen .alls, cellings and woodwork quickly become dingy. For cleanliness therefore, the _ preparations used should be 0f a kind to which grease and dirt wi‘l not hold. Enamel is the best for a kitchen, its glossy surface making washing easy. End of Season Clezrance Sale lyâ€"grated cheese, and garnish, Cheese Aioulds â€" Pour 1% cupfuls miik over % cupfuls soft breadcrumbs; add 3 wellâ€"beatea eggs, 1 heaped cupâ€" ful of grated cheese, 1 teaspoonful of salt, peper to taste, and 1 tablespoonâ€" ful of melted butter. Pour into butterâ€" ed moulds and bake from 20 to 30 minutes in a moderate oven. Postpaid at These Prices A CURE FOR LOVEâ€"Reg. 85¢ A. Maynard Robinson Co. tacke. Send for a free copy to Standard Brande Ltd., Fraser Ave. and Liberty St., Toronto, Ont. PREE BOOKLET â€" The Gillett‘s Lye Booklet tells how to use this powerful cleanser for dozens of 128 Burgess Ave., Toronto Plays of All Publishers BALE CLOBES MAY 31, 1937 containers, sprinkle with fine Painting A Kitchen Bubject 1» these simple mulos #e motorist may park, provided he has official business at the offices c»~ cerned, and then only for as lons »# hhl.hhbmuhbum.s loup Penalty. from five pounds ($25) (> ten pounds ($50). Make any violent outery, no! disturbance or sound, or play an gical instrument or noisy instr=> Bring with them a hors sheep, pig or goat, whether o Melbourne Also Objects to T c Jumping Fences "or C:!)Zr.’ ~.; Motorists wishing to park nc: Government offices in Melbourn« tralia, may do so privided th« form to the conditions set forth « newly erected parking standard they may not:â€" Preach, declaim, harangue 0: ver an address of any kind. *"And while I waited, I on remembered Gerolamy‘s sio=~ two kinds of shoes you cov!i either for everyday or church no nonsense in betwecr." MotoristsMay Park But Not P reac‘h "It looked to me like s« Sir Francis Drake might ha Light brown with & lot of !i fastened together with how artisan who made it eviden: down at random and then + again," She tries it on and th« so overpowering: "Bring thing with a sensible hecl, said. VANCOUVER â€" Grase Lo the writer who never forpe: childhood days in Tara, On:t. | story in The Province about « shoes. It will find sympath©: in middleâ€"aged women‘s hes mothers who wish to keep u; their daughters, even if they ; few laps behind. Sensible Heels Topic of Debaie Fancy Shoes Much in Limcl=‘; But Comfort Be:t A‘ts: *"We respectfully request that it be made clear during this assembiy representatives from all parts o'.:: British Empire that Canada desirg the removal of ail disabilities of the marriled women in matters of nston ality," Jump fences or climb on bs Drive anywhere except on th Have a dog with them exc©: "We have been informed : Pritish Government has of%ic clared itself in favor of the 1« all disabilities of married w« matters of nationality and tha far as nationality is concerned siders that a married woman be in the same position as a m ried or unmarried, or of ans "At the Hague Nationality Convep. tion in 1930, Canada ,through its 30 credited representatives, approyed the recommendation Of this conlorey» that a certain larger freedom i1 PS forded to women marrying allons q the matter of nationality and tha certain â€" specified disabilitics \ithe. to incurred in such marriages be de. amoved all of which has since boop . corporated in an amendmen; the Canadian Naturalization Act st 3, 1931). *‘"This question which has hboop g, bated in British and Domini« n 'ln:.g(.fi of Parliament, at Geneva, :; pp Hague and elsewhere concoms g, nationality of married women mgEe Tnai 1i P DPOUEDT up 2t th forthcominng Imperial Confercace, ) OTTAWA, â€" A rosolution from the Liberal women to the offect that «;. nada desires the removal of a}} ¢i,;, ilities of married women |» mattern of rationality," is now in the hang., of { + Prime Minister, Rt. Hon, . 1 Mackenvie King. The resolution, Das. sed at a meeting of the Nation,) Feg. eration of Liberal Women in Canaq, mske that it be brought up 1 n «6 Of Married Wome , with an arch so inqat ult t y dn have On d 1d .‘. “ Quints‘ Popalar e of the requests o (‘hwhih& & Japan during stay of herself and her / Canada was for a photog! Dionne quintuplets. Thes ies hay> certainly advert aminion more than any ot â€"Brantford Expositor Dean Inge has pr book in which he things. OQne of h that there will not 4 Earopean war becan of funds, He depicts « bad financial shape whether the Hitier ; wery much longer, an 4s not in much bette At a wal‘paper she pattern included a k glove draped across keyboard. In the bas with branches of b cullers, a reading la: come, a hu clock centr« of teacups. and the asl out of it is the individu First Inventor: "I‘m & vent an auto brake that a car going 40 miles an Aoad stop within 20 feet." Becond Inventor; "Fin« invent a gadget to keep from going throuch the when it does." Othave t} Titled ladies have @ucts of industry 1« ~â€"notably cosmetios But they, and all ot amatour®®gom pared Dioune quintuplets. ©Ceicic, Â¥vonne ani provriately enough, suis. They swear b Of breakfast food ar mXl i ‘hligatio There may for Weople th a joke and 1: with the limit They en« a famous ma and, behoi their bank given a $275u0 Loost. lf+ girls, but honestly caurned prising as the prices pail endorsements is the varict they approve. Cod liver oil, togs," w-, tooth pas coâ€"u ®@®@RP;â€"children‘s . p bags, shoes, Golls and ribb grist for the Callander mi is revealed, has mow ¢ l1 W Some of the fruit growe! bit of clipping a branch ach treos, putting it in itch for the extent of th one case, the result a ont which indicates that V O P 1y OV t it is a xpositor One Way Out «< News from Niaz THE WORLD AT LARGE le . â€" Ottawa Citize huyg HMope He‘s Ris Stey Under Fift ife for and «of The Quick St CANADA In Obviou kiss |# Good Radima Co On the Wall Sentin Just hy nKil f1 wh not 8OT M W

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