West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 19 Oct 1939, p. 6

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Q I h W It; H He has recommended to school an .horities that the sole of candy in school lunehrooms be curtailed m eliminated altogether. "it is unlortunate that with but a {m exceptions. the lunch rooms in the schools throughout the country have u [not assortment of sweets.” he laid. "Too often have we mu the children buying to or " cents worth of candy for their lunch.” Dr. John J. Torres, health de- partment. dentist of Tampa, be, lines that excessive sale of sweet: in school lunchrooms is one of the principal causes of tooth decay in children. And to arrange things so that Blur really "oo have some “he to enjoy the people she asked to her homo presumably because the tlad. tlrO. mummy pleasant. Too Much Candy Bad For Children Twin her husLand appear to be giving the party just " much u me. instead of treating him like an overlooked guest. To give- her guests a chance to shine: Instead ot trying to dame them. Not to be 'tegleettul' or her guest; contort in her determina- uon not to [was over them. To make each guest (eel she is tickled to death to see It” That now that he is present, things can really start. To keep out at her eyes the tar. away look that means the hostess Is thinking of the party instead of the greet to whom she is suppos- ed to be listening. To mat? her parties distinctly her own. {She decided long ago to hulld her parties around "good la!k."l to te: Here are tho things she has now found important: To plan her parties carefully. ave-n to the point of anticipating "hilt-hes." Never to morbid her hand. That is. not plan anything. from food In ett'ertalatgtettt. so elaborate as to get her into a state ot the tit- A woman who shines in the role ot hostess says that she had to learn lo entertain alter she was married just as she had to learn to cook. Her advice will be valu- ahln to brides: Give Guests Chance To Shine; Don’t Try to Dazzle Them Pointers For int-cu. Following the "no"! of old pollnh. tho In": should In cleaned In lP,,'l't my: Inlet with medlum mm In! brim his picture I. posed by Wir, lee Guy. Metroikstuwynatav.r brill." 'A gum! appL‘u‘uhcz. naturally. "may: Int-nu spending all your hun-ukrepin: a.'!owanee on Bettie pm-lti clothon or tlolng your but In an “hill? Mrs. Smith. " Is quite 'rrviitr'e In rm well dressed on a mir," income with In?! a little I" "ebt 'HH’ m. and "are." "When I first married. tour "In no. I mentioned nine points to be happily married ttttd say happily marrif-d. They were: " ashtray: In a recent interview Myrna Lor. red-haired screen urea. hem]! successfully married. gives a mu. advice to other wives: al GIVE YOURSELF A MANICURE v--- hwy. m mun, he. t. Ihre-hr' Wife, Don't make dams (or mm with. treotr abreast with current at. -nnsult!ng him nrst Don’t rirt him up st! Study "' sokltut, Don‘t be too certain of ttim--. , him be ot ycu. Never hula over money. II he smokes. hue:- plenty of Maintain your ii-ere, The Hostess “and 'Rules Fii. It C", him up " the a. "t-"'8sarr. __ don't nag. good appear- Elma? nine It was 11:30 by the banjo clock la the living: room when Cllly was ready to anw the apartment. Only ". cuuu "new mum Lama: The hot gas tlame scorched her tttttters, but she held on until the card was nothing more than a mystifying memory. She breathed a great deal easier when both tasks had h :rn done. As soon as they were gone, ('iin went inn-k into the living room and Iookvd into the Cloisonne vase tor the twwspaier clipping. She took it into the kitchen and held it over the Home on the gas stove until it disappeared Into a trag. ment or black ash. Then she took Jim's postcard from underneath her pillow and did the same thing with that. The words on the card danced before her eyes " the flames spread around them. "Tak. ing the first plane lean nuke. Love. Jim." CHAPTER x "We're not holding anybody In yet," Bergeant Dolan told Cllly as he and Martin were leaving. "I'm telling you, and I'm tellln everyone else in the house, to be on hand for a call down to headquarters. I will be honest with you, Mlss Pierce. the one t'rn most interested in la your lrleml Kerrlgan. I'd like to know the reason he asked that girl up on the root with him. When I tInd that out _ _ . well. we'll be see- ing you." Last week: The web at circum- stantial evidence tightens around Ken-lam. when Dolan point. out that he might have been on the roof and hidden afterward in Cil- ly'l apartment until the contusion died down.' AMY ttERR-ttity'. roommate and murderers victim. JIM KERmaArt-Ariny'e fiartee. MARRY HUTCHINS - Amy’s strange visitor‘ SERGEANT DOUAN--offieer " signed to solve the murder ttf Amy Kerr. CAST or CHARACTERS PRISOILLA PIERCE - heroine you». woman "torn”. lav MARION ,mii -diGiiA ai REM}, I'm. QI,,)")" of the NIGHT There was no mystery to Jim. Cilly was certain ot that. He'd only been in New York a tew months, whereas Cllly had lived here al- ways, as had her parents. and her grandparents before them. But that was unusual. Nine out at every ten people you meet in New York come trom the West or the South or from New England. "You'd love my dad, Gilly," he had said one time. "Gee, how i'd like you to meet him . . ." and then his voice had grown suddenly very wistful. Jim had never mentioned Utah. He spoke ot Chicago. for that was where he came from. He spoke of his father. whom Cilly understood to he in Chicago. He spoke ot Mr. Maddox, the publisher ot the Mid. west Review, and a friend or his father's. who had given him a job as eastern representative because ot that friendship. He spoke ot his mother, who died when he was on- ly 12. He spoke ot summer vaca- tions on a ranch with his father, and Gilly could sense the deep and lasting bond between these two. No matter what new track Cil. ly's thoughts started out on. they invariably came back to that one vital problem. What was tho sec- ret which linked Jim and Amy? What had happened in Utah? in Bluenelds. Utah. Then the one all-important ques- tion returned. What did Amy's past life have to do with Jim Kerrigan? Hiding the Past C'llly tried to figure it out as she walked to the subway. some. how it was easier to think clearly once she was out of the house. Per. haps there was something Amy had wanted hidden . . . prison, per- haps. That was why she tried to wipe out the past tour years . ' . why she Mill spoke ot an Aunt Harriet who had passed away. Bo cause she feared to speak ot where she had been after she had left Aunt flan-lot, lest her secret slip out. She suddenly remembered some- thing she had quite overlooked. It wasn't altogether her idea that the tour ot them get together last ew ening in order ttrt they might be. come better acquainted. it had also been equally Jim's idea. He had, she recalled now, often asked her how she was getting on with the new friend who was sharing her apartment, What was she like? Where did she come trom? Casual questions. to be sure. They became important now only in the light ot what had happened. Did Amy, as Cilly discussed her, seem familiar to Jim? Was her name familiar? " so. why hadn't he said: "l know a girl chi-i: named Amy Kerr." And it Jim knew Amy, how did it happen that Amy had not re cognized Jim Kerrigan's name? Cil. ly had mentioned it often enough at home. For that matter. she had spoken frequently to Jim about the friend who shared her apartment - Amy Kerr. It he knew her, why hadn't he said so? " hours since the tour of them had stood in this very room, laughing and happy. Only 12 hours. yet one of them was dead and another had vanished in a cloud ot mystery. What was behind it all? Lost Her Secret sup Out " Amy and Jim had known each other previously. as Jim's note would seem to indicate, why hadn't Amy mentioned it to Cilly before? Certainly she had heard Cilly men. tion his name enough. COTTAGE CHEESE Heat sour milk or buttermilk un- til the whey is quite clear; drain is melted, stir in weiioGlietGiri/, cook for 1 moment. Serve on toast or on all waters. WELSH RAREBIT lk lb. cheese (grated) % or 1 teaspoon mustard % teaspoon salt Cayenne 2 teaspoons butter tt cup milk 1 egg Dry Toast Place cheese in double boiler or ehafinr dish, sprinkle over mixed seasonings. Add butter in pieces, then add the milk. When cheese A CHEESE CHAT As cooler days arrive there is [ something homey and appetizing l about cheese dishes. Then, too, cheese is one of the high protein foods and should hold an import- ant part in weekly menus. There are two forms of cheese-the soft and hard. Cheese made from skim milk is the hard; the soft type is made from milk and cream. The composition of cheese is one-third protein, one-third fat and one- third water. A gentle heat melts cheese and makes it easier to " gest. Intense heat makes cheese tough and difficult of digestion. A little soda is sometimes added to milk and water used in cooking the cheese, which renders it more so]- uble and easier of digestion. Whilst cheese is very nutritious, it is wise not to feed it to children. It is best kept in a cool place and not tightly covered. Wrapping in wax- ed paper or cellophane it will keep several days. If it becomes hard and dry, grate and keep covered until ready for use. It may be added to soups (sprinkling on top before serving) or added to any of the starchy foods. A soft crumbly cheese is always best for cooking. I hope these recipes of old favorites will help simplify your menu problems. A simple stitch made on two needles results in this lovely chair set thays.iust straight ahead knitting. Pattern 2208 contains directions for making set; illustrations of it and of stitches; photograph of pattern stitch; materials required. Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Write plainly Pattern Number, your Name and Address. KNITTED CHAIR SET Bv SADIE B. CHAMBERS Mr. Ame: turned idward the Isle. vators and saw her. It's Knitted All In One Piece-This Easy Laura Wheeler As she entered the Cannon Building. she was surprised to see Harvey Ames directly ahead ot her, He stopped at the new-Maud to my a paper; Cilly noticed that it was tho early afternoon edition. She wondered it any nears of the death ot Amy had appeared as yet. "Hello. Miss Pierce," he greeted pleasantly. "Where'g my worthy Under the circumstances, how. ever. there was nothing else to do. Tomorrow she would have to be out for Amy's funeral. And during the next tew days. there would in. evitably be many more conterenc- " with Sergeant Dolan, or num- mons trom him to appear at police headquarters. it would be much better it she forgot the Harvey brief. and adjusted her work at the ottiee so that it would not require any immediate attention on her part. She was in no mood to put her mind on the work at the'ottiee that awaited her. She would have to turn the Harvey brief over to someone else. It was a disappoint want. not to be able to finish it herself: Mr. Crowell had given it to her especially. It was after one o'clock when Gilly left, the when] parlors. And etch time n shoulder brushed here In the crowded streets. she started so Violently that her own pounding heart-beats threatened to choke her. UN I MCI-{WEE “" TORONTO COM mo. NEEDL‘CIAFI' SEIVICE. INC CHEESE FONDUE 1 cup scalded milk 1 cup soft stale bread crumbs lk lb. mild cheese (cut in small pieces) _ 1 tablespoon butter li teaspoon salt Yolks 3 eggs Whites 3 eggs Mix milk, breadcrumbs, cheese, butter and salt. Add yolks of eggs which have been beaten until creamy. Fold in whites of eggs beaten until stiff. Pour in n but. tered baking dish and bake 20 minutes in a moderate oven. in a cheese cloth and let drip about five hours without squeezing. Piece curd in a bowl; break with a wooden spoon. Season with salt and mix into a paste with a little cream. Mold and set in cool place. CHEESE SOUFFLE p, tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour EA teaspoon salt Cayenne Ti: cup milk 3 eggs Cook first five ingredients as white sauce for two minutes. Re- move from heat and add well-belt- on yolks of eggs and cheese. Set away to cool. When cool. fold in whites of eggs beaten stiff, turn into buttered baking dish. Bake in slow oven for 80 minutes. "How did I know?” he repeated stupidly. "Why, I saw it In the DI- "How did you know, Mr. Amen?" Gilly asked him. His face blanched. he leaned up against the wall " it to support himself. His dark eyes bulged. His collar choked him; he slipped one long finger underneath to loosen it. Harvey Ames was more than surprised at the death of his Bee. retary. He was terrified. . Cllly nodded. She was not pre- pared tor the mannen in which Harvey Ame: took the news ot the death of Amy Kerr. That he would be surprised. or even a little slun- ned, she well expected. But he act- ed llke a man suddenly stricken. "You don't mean - she wasn’t- that girl?" His words were Jedky. nervous. "What girl, Mr. Ames?" "That girl - in Brooklyn. St. Ann's Avenue?" A Man Stricken Mr. Ame: gasped. He stared at Cilly open-mouthed. "You haven't heard.'" Ctlly uk- ed hesitantly. . "Heard what?" “Amy was killed last night, Mr. Amos." "What?" "She fell from the root ot our apartment house." Let the police, she decided. tell him that it was 1 murder. lecretary keeping herself may?" Evidently Semen! Dolan mm seen him yet. YOUR HOUSEHOLD PROBLEMS PATTERN 2208 But the problem ot the "eternal Why?" in a real one, u there question: often require cureiuily considered replies from parents. Admittedly one mutt build up knowledge step by step. but once the child has Ihown any desire to have " knowledge satillied in I certain direction. he should be guided on to the path which will lead to full knowledge later Ind should never 'be bended ott on to side-track; Nowadays wise parents feel that sensible questions demand I reply giving suttlcient Information to be grasped by the young intelligence. Gone are the days when a child's march tor knowledge was met with a sharp "Curiosity killed the cat" or "You'll understand all when you are older." Your Children', Eternal “Win New titted cocktail and dinner blouses are shown in luscious met- at and woven silks. Shh-rings and darts give them the feminine cott- neu popular this season, and high neckllnes make these, too, pertect background: tor Jewels. Sleeve: may have the new Gibson Girl top, or may be simple and Meek tit. ting. The perfect basic blouse tor tall lulu ls introduced In the form ot a new sweater blouse with simple high untrlmmed neckllne on which may be worn wide necklaces or el. aborate costume clips. Casual and informal, they may gain beauty and formality for dreuler sum. Sleeve Inter-cot. Too Tailored blouse: with the new "bishop sleeves." are popular in all the dark fall colors. Simple High Neckline It Back- ground for Elaborate Sweater Blouse The Lesson-Sermon for Thanks- giving Day given in the Christian Science Quarterly and read in all Christian Science churches in Canada and many other parts of the world followed the second hymn, The subject of this Lesson- Sermon was "Thanksgiving" and had for the Golden Text: "Reloiee eveetttore. Pray without ceasing. In every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you." (I Thee. salonians 5: 1648). in silent prayer which was follow. ed by the audible repetition of the Lord's Prayer with its spiritual in- terpretation from the Christian Science textbcok, “Science and Health with Key to the Scrip- tures" by Mary Baker Eddy. The Scriptural selection we: from Psalms and wee read by the First Render. After the Spiritual selection the congregation united The service opened with the con- greption singing the hymn “This is the day the Lord hath mule." The T'hankstrivintr Proclamation by the Governor-General of Can- Ida was then read by Mr, John Carleton, the First Reader, Christian Science churches the world over hold Thanksgiving Dar services, and the one held in First Church of Christ, Scientist, Tor. onto, is typical of them ell. Christian Science ThanksziVinl Day Count. That we: I lie. Ind Gilly knew n. There hnd been nothing about Anny'e death in the morning - erl. They were already printed end on the news-stands by mid- night. it Mr. Ame: had not been no surprisingly nhlken. then he would have realized that. The first detail ot the tragedy. would. at the very earliest, be in the afternoon edi. tion of the evening papers. And that edition Harvey Amen w“ holding in his hand. He had not opened it yet. Beautifies Suit (To Be Continued, 00.1.11). - ( ------ MWo-Iu I In... mpotxand pans. talcum terdwrorkoutotheavvc1eania. 1repatittahmsrstutndy. AN aerubtting when you no: . solution of Gillett'u Pure Flak- Lye. It cuts Mtthmghm ckttrFeddmina, hep-out- - “no“. In II he: w. m """"re"'"ieekGilTiiui7.. Nt,',,':,",',',,,.?,,?:,,':??,???:, mm!!! m “I "no a Dr. D. Foster stnted at the in- quest that the child was given cot. ton wool sandwiches to eat in tho hope that the pin point would be covered. verdict. was OFF 6mm: Jean Agnes Gillcwuy, six, of West Hampstead, England, died last. week from pneumonia follow- ing 1n operation for the removal of a safety pin which she had Ac- cidentally swallowed. Cotton Wool B'Mcim" "‘" - _ . 'l-I'OII- 'i?iiiiEti"iriek5ii7siittATlt',u'l'Ji th-ttet/tGa-Gt" . hit gm do... at at. H - . “Wk? Wally-law.- ,'l'dL"t'gh%-iu',',t, our... Lee Denth by misadventure was tho q . . hotl- kept bright and attractive with the help of mums}; ti5ECiCai5a] and hetpcl 3tutwtttn a had seen pines in hi mounted a eyes, in hum out (In April a ot the , 80.0 a tor max Pu r the bar": lam and my the "In Nth In Du min (now other Inna " likely price: Able clot h tile Bur than“ .01) I Wtr4 Textile "tn Says ( Cut. of Present CID“- Suit-bk forms Ida by 1 Wool Shorta Held u irtr Ma The comm Niche is “I. vouch borne out by British Mud m ttt A " 'l oottcltrrion u [on mun than whys: '. eludes lists/ .rmuu-vt In dislike ot n -ttttits and The Lt-rt, tat be than vi. Low Cost M And Goo Commmds i like hr ad In nth has an bu they Can Be Hig} Value and We Though lncxpen lav kl: The, Rest and I Ctrre for Si...p|c. Thu Til Ar Albino Pore o Headache H Qu hi: expel It the If 0 11V a? o

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