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Durham Review (1897), 6 Jan 1938, p. 2

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His first words were reassuring, "I hear the cockâ€"eyed world isn‘t treating you so good. The whole force is agog The house phone rang. Jack Newâ€" ton‘s voice answered her listless "Hello." "I‘m coming right up." She wondered if he were coming to reprove her, to tell her how miserably she had failed him on the job he had secured for her. What Happened? Elinor made no attempt to detain him. She slumped down on the davenâ€" port. She‘d never forgive Norm! No matter what he would do. But even as the angry thought went through her mind, she little dreamed of what Norm would do before many days had "Francine _ wants . you _ herself," Elinor interrupted hotly. "She went to Atlantic City to be with you. She‘s a cheatâ€"a ruthless cheat." "Leave Francine out of this," growled Norm. "She‘s been a real friend to me, Once and for all, are you going to marry me? Or are you going to let your ecrazy notions and your infatuation for Jack Newton get you into a lot more trouble? Fll marâ€" ry you, Elinor, for the sake of the girl you used to be." "So that‘s the way you feel!" Elinâ€" or stood proud and straight, quiverâ€" ing. "All right, thenâ€"I won‘t marry you!" Tense silence followed her words, "Is that final, Elinor?" "Yes." It was just a whisper. Norm turned and went out. ‘The mention of Jack‘s name was unfortunate. "You‘ll marry me now or never," Norm gritted. "It‘s Jack or 1." "Norm, if you mention Jack again . . . He‘s in love with Leola." "Don‘t He," Norm said harshly. "A man has to believe his own eyes. Francine told meâ€"" She drew away. "I‘ll marry you, Norm, but not until I can prove to the Modern Airways that I‘m competent â€"not until Jack knows his confidence was not misplaced." Maybe you need more Elinor wavered â€" trembling. Why not leave everything? Run away from it. Find sanctuary in Norm‘s arms. Run awayâ€"awayâ€"like a coward! "~orm, you can‘t go se iMm.Ss.! i won‘t let you!" He looked down at her, his eyes hostile. Thenâ€"his arms were about her again, Elinor, FH ask you once more. Will you marry meâ€"now? Will you go back with me to Atlantie City?" CHAPTER VI As Norman, his eyes averted, walked slowly toward the door, Elinor stood for a moment quite still, Then, suddenly, she sped to him, took his arin, clung to it. SYNOPSIS Elinor Ames triee to escape the heartbreak of her postponed marriage to Dr. Norman Rogers by becoming an air stewardess. Dr. Rogers‘ mother approves an alliance between Norman and wealthy Francine Bayless, Norâ€" man is jealous of Jack Newton, the pilot who helped Elinor get her job. Leola Rogers, Norman‘s sister, is in love with Jack. Leola and Jack have quarreled over Leola taking a posiâ€" tion with Ned Cathney of the Cathney Powder Co. Elinor plans a dinner to bring them together. Norman arrives unexpectedly and leaves, jealously anâ€" gry when he finds Elinor alone with Jack. The next morning, Elinor takes off for Fort Worth and, while adminâ€" istering medical treatment to a passâ€" enger, fails to notice that someone has tampered with her supplies. She is put on probation. Norman returns, and they quarrel. Of Special Interest to. Women Readers DO YOU FEEL SLUGGISH? SEKV GIRL n‘t By NELLIE GRAF TeA th A huge forest, covering about 300 square miles, has just been found in the heart of the Australian desert, by Mr. P. S. Hossfield, senior geoloâ€" gist to the North Australian Survey. It is mostly of desert oak and is situâ€" ated in likely goldâ€"bearing country about 70 miles from "The Granites" goldficld, the scene of the latest "rush." Mr. Hossfield estimates that there are at least two million trees wheh are valuable for building and mining purposes, She began to turn the pages, idly. Then she saw Francine‘s face. "Beâ€" trothed." In bold, black type. Elinor read the account of the coming marâ€" riage of Francine Bayless and Dr. Norman Rogers, word by word. "Beautiful heiress. Prominent surgâ€" eon." She dropped the paper. Again she buried her face in the coat, and wept, as only a girl can weep who has lost the man she loves, "You would shield her," Jack said. "But it isn‘t any use, Elinor." Betrothed The day Elinor was to start on her next regular trip, she noticed a gilver plane in the hangar. It looked like a privately owned plane, "It belongs to a Dr. Norman Rogers of Atlantic City," one of the stewardâ€" esses said. "He flew in this mornâ€" ing." 6 Elinor walked over to the silver ship. Norm‘s! She climbed into it. A coat lay on the pilot‘s seat. She touched the sleeve timidly, lovingly. Then she sat down and buried her face in the folds of the garment. She lifted her head. A crumpled newspaper on the floor caught her eye. She picked it up, An Atlantic City paper. i appeal. "She wouldn‘t have known it." "Jack, you don‘t mean â€" Leola wasn‘t drunk! You‘re mistaken. Norm had a wire from her. She told him I was in danger. You remember her telephone call to me before I teft for Fort Worth. She said she had to see me at once. Leola knows something, Jack. 1 do not believe she went with Ned willingly." "I had hoped not," Jack replied curtly. "But I cannot doubt my own eyes." you?" "You mean," Elinor gasped, "they are married ?" "Sorry." "Jackâ€"not Leola! There‘s some mistake. Leola is wild and reckless, but she wouldn‘t. . ." "I‘ve seen her," Jack said grimly. "In a small town near here, at a hotel with Ned Cathney." "Leola! Jack, where is she? Norm was just here. He told me she had disappeared." A "Oh, how can she hate me so much!" wailed Elinor. "You won‘t need to worry about her," said Sally. ‘I shall dismiss her at once. I‘ve got to rushâ€"get back to the airport. But I thought you should know first." Disappeared After Sally had gone, Jack said, "I‘ve got more news for you." Elinor was amazed at the hard expression on his face, the harshness in his voice, "It‘s about Leola," "I‘ve news, Elinor. It was Judith who tampered with your . supplies. Kay Esterly told me all about it. Kay is a pretty sick girl and she wanted to get it off her mind, And by the way, Jack, it‘s all your fault." "My fault?" Jack queried. "Yes, for taking Elinor as your stewardess. Judith thinks you two are in love." Jack started toward the door to answer a quick, demanding knock but, before he could reach it, it opâ€" ened abruptly and Sally Nelson rushed in. over a lot of hooey. Just what hapâ€" pened, anyway?" Elinor told him, omitting no detail. "Whew," Jack whistled. "Old Man Trouble is sure camping on your trail But don‘t worryâ€"you‘re okay. Natâ€" urally, you‘d never suspect such a trick. Ho, ho, what have we here?" «* Norm!* Elinor frowned. "Did Leola see (TO BE CONTINUED) Issue No. 2â€"‘38 The word was a call, an A Parasitic Animal The species is believed to spawn in late May or June so anyone who wants to help the museum by finding the lampreys might choose that as the best time for a search. The museum will pay 50 cents for the first speciâ€" men received and 10 cents for each additional specimen. It will be found in streams, never in lakes or ponds, and is described as four to seven inâ€" ches long, very dark green (almost black) in color. The lamprey has seyâ€" eral small holes through which it breathes. and I was much stronger," ! blood tonic, Bold by druggiste, The museum officials have asked Dr. Gemmell to get in touch with boys or anyone else interested, and ask them to try to find a few more similar lampreys. The museum would be inâ€" terested in ascertaining how the lamâ€" preys were able to reach as far inland before being discovered. Previously they have been found only in oceans, This particularâ€" specimen of lamâ€" prey is a parasitlc animal that fasâ€" tens onto other fish. Eventually it eats its way inside the fish but before the victim dies the lamprey gets enough nourishment to live and later fastens onto another fish or water animal. to put on Ealch‘afle;in'â€"'fl:ii' is the tonie for fiou. Read what Mrs, Frank Lamothe, 2; L uc;nh St., St. Cn.hflu. Ol‘l:‘.: nnd': 8 no a ite, was erweig fidn sleep well asp:i'gh: and after eating 1 sufâ€" fered a good bit with acid muml and gas. Dr. Pierce‘s Golden Medical Discovery Priite improvede, miy "digcetions Fas beues e i m $nd I ‘was much stronger,." â€" Itg & @reat In the spring of 1931, Dr. W. T. Gemme!l, of Stratford, found a small eelâ€"like water animal in a stream near Harrington. The object was sent to the Zoology Museum in Toronto for identification. First In Ontaric Now Dr. Gemmell has received a letter from the museum officials statâ€" ing the "eel" is a Ichthyomyzon fossor (that‘s not a typographical error) and was probably the first ever taken in Ontario. Here‘s a chance for a few Stratâ€" ford boys to earn a bit of spare cash next spring and at the same time help the Royal Ontario Museum of Zoology in its study of the trek of parasitic lampreys from habitual ocean haunts to little streams in this part of the province, says the Beaconâ€"Herald. A Body Builder Museum Seeks Odd Lampreys Do you know what are your most common mistakes in spelling? Since the publication in a recent book of the cleven words suposed to be the most common spelling mistakes peoâ€" ple are springing impromptu spelling matches on each other at every social gathering. Over in Hamilton the school children have been participatâ€" ing in a radio spelling match sponâ€" sored by the Jackson Bread Co. From those in charge of the spelling bee we secured a list of the twenty most common mistakes. You might like to try them out on your family. Here are the words: pedestal, courâ€" agsous, indelible, kernel, appetite, consequence, _ cession, manoeuvre, avaricious, mediate, illiterate, extraâ€" vagant, benefited, linoleum, solicit, accelerate, docility, alteration, conâ€" conant and wield. You may think these are pretty simple but rememâ€" ber they are for public school chilâ€" dren. Wants Specimens of Small Eelâ€" like Water Animal Formerly Thought to Live Only In Then a shop detective stopped her, An hour laterâ€"at police headquarters â€"faded identification papers revealed her as Princess Maria Tatiana Tunâ€" gutov, born 56 years agoâ€"@ Russian princess, once famous for her bigâ€" scale entertainments. Her husband, Prince Tungutov, shot by Bolsheviks in 1921, was one of Czarist Russia‘s wealthiest men and owned gold and silver mines in Siberia. She told the police. "For ten years I have lived in Poland, struggling to keep alive. Recently I have been alâ€" Starving Woman Thief Identified As Member of Royalty A thin, grayâ€"haired woman, dressed in old clothes, walked up to the counâ€" ter of a Warsaw grocery store, glanced over her shoulder, and put a packet of butter into her bag. most starving." Spelling Match To Shoplifting WHEN you feel out â€" of â€" sorts, when, you‘ve no appetite, or stome» ach gives trouble with gas or acid indigestion, why not try_ Dr. Pierce‘s Golden Medical Discovâ€" ery?_ If you want ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO 2 egg whites, unbeaten. 144 cups sugar. 5 tablespoons water. 1% teaspoons light corn syrup. 1 teaspoon vanilla. Put egg whites, sugar, water, and corn syrup in upper part of double boiler. Beat with rotary egg beater until thoroughly mixed. Place over rapidly boiling water, beat constantly with rotary egg beater, and cook 7 minutes, or until frosting will stand in peaks. Remove from fire, add vaâ€" nilla, and beat until thick enough to spread. Makes enough frosting to cover tops and sides of two 9â€"inch layers. Melt 2 squares unsweetened until light and fluffy. Add egg and beat well; then chocolate and blend. Add flour, alternately with milk, a small amount at a time, beating after each addition until smooth. Add vaâ€" nilla. Bake in greased pan, 8x8x2 inches, in moderate oven (825 deg. F.) about 1 hour. Cover cake with Creole Fudge Frosting. Here is a real treat in the form of Creole Fudge Loaf, a rich velvety, square loaf, beautifully frosted in a twoâ€"tone frosting of white and brown. For all its good looks and taste, this cake is surprisingly economical â€" it requires only one egg. 4% cup milk. 1 teaspoon vanilla. Sift flour once, measure, add bakâ€" ing powder and salt, and sift togethâ€" er three times, Cream butter, add sugar gradually, and cream together This cake is delicious served warm and unfrosted with baked apples or apple sauce. It is especially good for tea with caramel frosting. Caramel Frosting 1%4 cups brown sugar, firmly packed. % cup granulated sugar. 1 cup milk. 1 tablespoon butter. Boil brown sugar, granulated sugar, and milk until syrup forms a soft ball in cold water (282 deg. F.). Add butter, and remove from fire. Cool to lukewarm (110 deg. F.) ; beat unâ€" til thick and creamy and of right cons‘stency â€" to _ spread. _ Makes enough frosting to cover tops and sides of two 9â€"inch layers. Decorate with pecan halves or chopped nuts, if desired. 2 cups sifted flour. 2 teaspoons baking powder. Â¥ teaspoon salt. % eup butter or other shcrtening. 1 cup sugar. 1 egg, well beaten. 2 squares unsweetened chocolate melted. 2% cups sifted cake flour. 2% teaspoons baking powder, %4 teaspoon salt. 1 teaspoon cinnamon, f 14 teaspoon cloves. % eup butter or other shorlow‘ng@. 1 cup sugar. 2 eggs, unbeaten. 1/3 eup molasses. % cup m‘lk. Sift flour once, measure, add bakâ€" ing powder, salt, and spices, and sift together three times,. Cream butter thoroughly, add sugar gradually, and cream together until light and flufly, Add eggs and molasses and beat well, add flour, alternately with milk, a small amount at a time, beating after each addition until smooth. Bake in two greased 9â€"inch layer pans in moderate oven (375 deg. F.) 30 m‘inutes or until done. Here is a brand new cake with which to start the New Year. It is a special kind of spice cake and easy to make. It will be especially popuâ€" lar with youngsters and is perfect for teas and luncheons. Fine cakes are really a work of art and a credit to any cook. And the success of a cake is not just an acâ€" cident. Cake bakers often experiment for a long time before they acquire the knack of always turning out a perfect product. Science has eliminâ€" ated one hazard of cake baking by producing a fine cake flour. Flour that is sifted and sifted through silkâ€" en sieves till it is twentyâ€"seven times finer than ordinary flour, has been produced especially for cake making. The light, feathery texture of this flour provides a foolâ€"proof main inâ€" gredient and provided the other rules of cake baking are followed exactly, every woman should be able to turn out light, evenly textured and deliciâ€" ous cakes every time. Along with your New Year‘s resoâ€" lutions, add one about making fine cakes for the family, throughout the whole year. Gladden your table with homeâ€"made cakes which are so far ahead of storeâ€"bought ones that there just isn‘t any compar‘son. Make lots of different cakes too, the old standâ€" bys are good, but most people get tired of the same cake and the same old frosting. Delicious Cakes For Winter Monthks Creole Fudge Frosting frosting is mk*m "'"": Feathery Spice Cake Creole Fudge Cake with 2 teaspoons butter, The Scandinavian countrics have an almost fanatical dislike of horror, and this has led to the banning of several Walt Disney cartoons and all the Dracula and Frankenstein thrill ers. France, on the other hand, seems one of the most tolerant of mixture over cake, letting it run down on sides. Makes enough frosting to cover tops and sides of two 9â€"inch Nor is anything savouring of revoâ€" lutionary ideas permitted. Scenes which are hostile to royalty or police are cut on sight. And I myself have experienced the uncasiness of a Japâ€" anese audience when a man is seen opening a door for a woman. Such politenesses are considered to give false ideas to Japanese women, and not to be encouraged. Choice of Killers Stuns Italy America discovered _ during its gangster warfare that many of the ruthless killers were of Italian orâ€" igin, some coming from that island of hotâ€"blooded killersâ€"Sicily. So it was that in nearly all gangster films the most murderous character was an Itaian. Mussolini and his advisers writhed under this indictment of the Italian in America. They proceeded to ban all films in which the Italian is not the hero. Here in Britain the censor is, perâ€" haps, the most broadminded of any country, says Pearson‘s WeekTy. But even Britain lays down certain taâ€" boos for foreign films. American film magnates know that the British censor is perhaps more careful about the dignity of the British Army and Navy than about whether some ado!â€" escent is going to carry away a moral blot from seeing a picture. Certain Nations Susceptible But more worying to the film proâ€" ducer in search of world markets are the growing susceptibilities of variâ€" ous nationals. Make your villain in the film a Japanese, and the picture is promptly banned in Japan and a protest forwarded to Washington by the Japanese government. No Kissing Allowed Japan, in fact, is one of the most difficult markets to supply with films. Closeâ€"ups of kissing â€" considâ€" ered obsceneâ€"must be cut out as a matter of course. A film censor exists in every counâ€" try toâ€"day. But he works by very different standards in different counâ€" tries. What goes for one nation will not please another. So difficult are these people to please, that the film makers of Hollywood and Britain have a constant headache deciding whether certain pictures will pass the censor and make money for them in the various countries that buy these films. In Other Countries â€" Japan Is One of the Most Difficult Marâ€" kets to Supply With Movies. Standing in front of 250 prisonersâ€" some of them "lifers"â€"a stage "pickâ€" pocket" earning more than £100 a week, demonstrated the finer points of pocketâ€"picking. Giovanni was the artist,. With Mauâ€" rice Winnick, his orchestra and the entire cabaret company of 30 from the Piccadilly Hotel, London, England, he entertained prisoners at Maidstone Gaol. Pickpocket Expert Teaches Convicts Let winter winds blow, this saucy hood won‘t blow off, for it is joined to the scarf and has snugâ€"wristed mittens to match. _ The set, crocheted in deuble crochet, will keep you practically airâ€"tight on coldest days . . . 1 othing better for skating or skiing. Use soft Germantown yarn with bright Forder accents . . . the brighter the better. Pattern 1656 contains direcâ€" tions for making hood with scarf and mittens; material requirements; color suggest‘ons; illustrations of the set and of all stitches uszfl. FILM INDUSTRY ENCOUNTERS ODD IDEAS OF CENSORSHIP ___ Send 20 cents in coins (vst;xr;;})‘s.:a;n:.t be ;;;;r;;:d‘;u}zx this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 West Adclaide St., Toronto. Write plainly PATEERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. For the time being, the prison . France resents no legitil;ui; ,.m;‘-.;m. Crocheted in No Time with Laura Wheeler‘s Help Ask film producers where they find censorship most strict, and they point to two cities on the world map â€"Quebec (Canada) and Singapore (Malaya). Where Censorship Is Strictest In Quebec divorce may not even be mentioned on the screen, while affecâ€" tionate scenes even between actors who are playing happily married folk, are forbidden. French villains or comics, but will not permit a slur upon the French nation . But as he was picking the pockets of the prisoner, he caught the smiling chap picking his own pocket, pickpocket. He chose two prisoner sfrom the audience, and. with these, and with Padre Davis, proceeded to show what an expert can do. He removed the padre‘s waistcoat without touching his coat, C Then came Giovanni, who asked that he should not be introduced as a chapel became a music hall, with curâ€" tained stage fnd loudapeakers above CARRYING CASE TOUCH TYPING INSTRUCTOR 10c a day PORTABLE TYPEWRITER 'it‘ .u buys a new "In the Same Business" essential features The best results of modern scho‘â€" arship expressed "in the simple, clas sic style of the King James\ version" would be embodied in the revised work, Prof. Taylor, whiteâ€"haivcd chief of the department of Orienta} languages at the University of Toâ€" onto, said. With him will work 14 United States experts on the {i~ year task. There used to be a prejudice a> t certain colors on people with red ) > * but we are coming to understand )~» gorgeous this coloring is with r«=s onceforbidden hues, Of corsse. : hair is really red; it is carro‘, or ©~ nalr is really ped; it is carro‘, or « per, or russet, or titian, but not : The general effect any special s\ conveys is enormously modified ); skin and eyes that accompany i one would have to write at ; length in order to lay down rulos. | the writer knows a girl with bri! | carrotâ€"colored hair and blue cyes > is marvelous in pink. "Red" should be played up, not down. 1‘ and greens, mabogany and rust. 1 grey and white create luminow fabrics, such as satin, which avo ticularly enchanting. Of course thoâ€" are blondes and blondes and the +=* low skin may rebel against yellow, b=t the clear, ereamy blonde with honey ©olored halr is never lovelior than ©» *"If a man has more than one 1 that‘s his businessâ€"or problem, commented on the suggestion committee might make textual c! es in scriptural passages that | to do with polygamy. "We a planning anything sensational, Red Heads Can Wear Most Hu>s It is frequently stated that 4\ should not wear yellow. This t» however, is contrary to fact, an creative designors of costumes | always known the value of yoellow © this coloring. Worth once said, "V is so beautiful as blondes in suns} Therefore, I love to dress them in low." In this case it is the lus Even Pink Is Smart On ©s:=°:; Blue, Green, Rust Good Arguments that are "somoewha: vague" in the books of J@b and 1. mans will be clarified in m rovision of the American standard edition o( the Bible, Prof. William R. Tay!» only Canadian on the revising comâ€" mittee, said in an interview at Tor should the end of the day be free from excitement, The half hour before bodâ€" time should be devoted to quict pleasâ€" ures without romping, exciting games or stories. A child who goes to bed tranquilly is likely to sleep well and to be easy to manage the noxst da; Clashes between parents and child are often due to the fact that th« child is worn out from lack of sleep. If your child is well develop, he has firm muscles, sturdy | erect posture, a clear skin, clear without circles under them, a h disposition, and a good appetitc, | probably getting the right kind amount of sleep, Long hours of sound sleep are one 4 f of the essentials for a child‘s montal ‘ and physical development. The nisht * rest depends largely upon how the \ t day has been spent. An excitinz day 1 without a nap may Jeave a child literâ€" ‘(‘ ally too tired to sleop. Especialiy ® 1 Children who go to bed unwillingly, at a reasonable hour, or who sleep too little, have not been trained properly, If you accustom a child to a regular bedtime from infancy, you not only help his chances for normal developâ€" ment of body and mind, but also you simplify your own problems of child management. Child Must Sleep It was observed coâ€"ods crowded t] counters in department stores who longâ€"sleeved and high mneck lis» weight flannel gownsâ€"some with tin roseâ€"bud patternsâ€"and skiâ€"suit paja as were being sold. Their moth= were at other counters buying sloow less, backless gowns. Refusal to Sleep Means It Has Not Been Well Trained gone in for such items as: Earâ€"muffs, hoods, mittens, woo! socks, galoshes, flannel night gown», longâ€"sleeved and highâ€"neck cotton pa jamas and woolen heavies,. Some of the latter are in the red. Silk and wool underwear in the knoo length variety in colorsâ€"red, green, blue, yellow =â€" are favored by tho younger generation for winter sport: Woollen Heavi Again Fa has rome "sensible" in wearing apâ€" parc!. !t is their mothers and grand mothers, who still think they must freeze in sheer thisandâ€"thats to hbe Items Popular In Grandma‘s | Are Coming Back â€" Earâ€" A Revised Bible To Develop Well daughters hav« ration ny M i ty\ cometh after me he that is mig t)w» I. John here implies too is strong, the divine .tnm the word having Been given to The latchet of whose shoes I an worthy to stoop down and un! In un Oricntal household it wa task of the slave to stoop down unloose the thongs which boun{ sandals of a guest or the slave‘s ter to their feet, and John here owledges that there is such a ‘nite difference between Chrilt{ Time.â€"We do not know ex: when John the Baptist began preaching, but it is generally as ed to the summer and fall of 26, while the baptism of Jesus an ti Jordan 1 baptized, possibly Jordan 1 11 0A wh the kind of his g LESSON 11 PREPARING FOR A LIFE SERVICE.â€"Mark 1:1â€"413 iden Textâ€"Make ye ready way of the Lord. Mark 1:3. THE LESSON IN 1TS SETTUIN Or di The walking. * And did eat locusts and . *"The law permitted the »od, of locusts and certain. of grasshopper." | "There Cometh After Me" And he preached, saying, hr John the that there is rence between y and perfectr 1] ) t n WAs 1 N t Adr vas clothed with probabiy means ig, loose robe rewhere n« ere lif t M d A .D p1 AT‘K the U f t aptist n All tha garmen rn by th th such Christ ess t} IN and ton t the t} leal

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