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Durham Review (1897), 29 Feb 1940, p. 6

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There are 5,000 publicâ€"houses in London, Englard. "Ssave on a new hat if you must," Miss Poppoer said, "Don‘t save on a lifetims investment â€" a healtby save on HATsS [novo are also problems for the swall â€" salaried stenographer who wants to savo her money for a suutâ€" mer boliday and cuts down on her foml allowance. éat There are problems for the bach elor girl who does bher own cookâ€" inz. She must guard against being "i100 tired" to bother about proper eooking. "Whatever you do, don‘t be food taddists," she said. "Watch the men at lunchtime, and you will see the majority of them insist on a glass oi milk no matter what else they Business girls are not faivr to et ther themsolves or to the familios of the future by skimpy eating, Miss Popper said, warning young women not to diszegard nutrition in thair foods. Gizrls, Eat Well "To ensure adequate medical and dental services, there would be needed, according to the siandâ€" ards formulated by the United Siates Committee on the Cost of Medical Care, an additional 4,7¢9 physicians and 6,323 more dertâ€" Rita Johnson is one of the most avid riding enthusiasts in Hollywood. After completing her role in "Congo Maisic," she takes time out to relax and enjoy a little fresh air and exâ€" vreise before starting work in "Forty Little Mothers," starring Eddie Cantor and "Edison, the Man," starring Spencer Tracy. health workers in the !arger cenâ€" tres of population. Apparently, the distribution of physicians, dentists and nurses is determined more by epportunities to gain a livelihood than by accual medical needs. MORE DENTISTS, TOO Refutation of the conteniion that there are too many doctors in Canada is found in the chapâ€" ter which deals with "Conclusions and Recommendations." "Canada," the study points out, "is served by 55,513 health personnel, includâ€" ing 10,031 physicians and surg» cons, 4,089 dentists and 20,474 zraduate nurses. CONsSIDER ACTUAL NEEDS "There is a concentration of vould Take a Lesson From The Hearty Meals Men Down, Says Ottawa Nutrition Expert Canada still faces a huge tak in bringing adequate medical care to all classes for her population, it is disclosed in a comprehensive study of the distribution of mediâ€" eal care and public health services in Canada which has been comâ€" pleted under the auspices of the National Committee for Mental Hygiene. The study, carried out by the division on public health and mediâ€" ul services of which Dr. Grant Fleming dean of the facuity of medicine at MeGill University, is direcetor, shows that 25 per cert Survey by National Committee for h Mental Hygiene Shows We Need An Increase of 50 Per Cent for Adequate Medical Coverage lireetor, shows that 25 »f the people of the ome within the category cally indigent." At Lunchâ€"ti More Doctors g en ring mm t oo 60 umt momoecies ..3 EVW L. ... . couge en ies «ce t nieete es Nee ie m C CCC CCC on in eating from own, Miss Laura of the consumers‘ { the Agriculture in an interviow crowd luuch over a sandâ€" a cigarette eating from per cent Dominion of "medâ€" "Well, Dad was comvicted. We had not a shred of evidence to save him â€" at least nothing that would stand a chance in court. There was only one thing â€"â€" one intangiâ€" ble fragment of Amy‘s imagination, our lawyer called it, Novertholoss, sho stuck to it, she followed her one little clew right through â€" to the end, for her." "What was that clew, Jim*"" "The day bofore the theft, she was visiting some friends in Ogden â€"that‘s about 30 miles from Biue fields. One of the girls was leaving for the East, and Amy went to the airport to see her off. There, in the ticket office, she heard a man order & ticket on the plane three days laâ€" "But it wasn‘t that way at all. Those lawyers, the state‘s lawyers, built up the most intricate, the most infallible case! Step by step. they proved my father . guilty . . . step by step, yet we knew, Amy and Dad and 1, that nono of it was true! We were helpless, hopeloss. It drove me mad at times. There were days when I wanted to choke the breath out of those lawyers for their insinuations, their tricky sarâ€" easm ... " bothered him more than he let on to Amy or me. Then out of a clear sky, these bonds were stolen â€" ne gotiable bonds, which were as good as cash anywhere. My father was accused. i can‘t tell you what a shoek it was. All my life I‘d assumâ€" ed blindly that you can look a man in the eye and tell whether he is honest. 1 laughed when they came to arrest Dad. The judge would throw the case out of court. beard that ho was the squarest, fip est man that ever lived. He never did a crooked thing, he never even thought a crooked scheme. Never, He lost a great deal of money. It bank much weve the law . x/‘. W Periys h my poor Jim‘s arms were around her, a buiwark against fear and uncertainâ€" ty and death itself, and Cilly was sobbing bysterically on his shouldâ€" ers. Sobbing with wild abandon beâ€" eause sho was so uttorly and sup remely relieved. No matter what might occur now, Jim was here at last. "There‘s so much to explain my dear," he went on, "so much that I coutdn‘t tell you before." "And so much that 1 wanted to tell you," Cilly replied. Her sobs stopped abruptly. Brief ly sho recounted the developments of the last fow days. tho scarch for Last week: Cilly is saved at the last possible second when Sergeant Doian enters Mrs. Elliot‘s apartâ€" ment. But her attacker escapes. She is returned to her apartment to await police protection for the night and then three sharp rings at the door â€" Jim‘s ring! "Cilly! Ob, my darling, 1 never knew what happeoned . . . I neve: knew . . . I didn‘t see a newspaper until balf an hour ago .. ." SERGEANT DOLAN â€" officer assigned to solve the murder of Amy Kere. AMY KERRâ€"Cilly‘s roommate and murderer‘s victim. JIM KERRIGANâ€"Cilly‘s fiance. HARRY _ HUTCHINS â€" Amy‘s strange visitor, CAS1 OF JHARACTERS PRISCILLA PIERCE â€" hercine young woman attorney. Iy Hy ie Myv 6G My IBY MARION WHITE _ Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc. OUT of the NIGHT ONLY oNE THING tod, CiNy," he eried desparâ€" it terrifies me to think what ‘ can do to an innocent man here would I be now if the had not mot mo? In jail, like r father, only I‘d be a mur Listen to me, Cilly, I bave el} you the whole story. fathe M nodded CHAPTER XXIX Ol GREEN TEA it ed _ imderstandingty, ecord said Jim went | is bal HL Jinest You Can Buy y heard that couldn‘t havo + squarest, fln MEiC "It was the final link, apparently in Amy‘s chain of evidence against Worth. That is â€"â€" if her suspicions SHE HID THE PROOF "I found tha‘ clipping, Jim," "illy cried. "It was still in Amy‘s hand when I reac‘ d her." She explainâ€" ed how and why she had burned it. "She did. What‘s more, she gathâ€" ered enough evidencs to send him to prison. Thero was only one thing ... she had to be able to prove he was Worth. The man had been de clared legally dead, you know. But however, last Saturday she saw an item in a "lucfields newsp ber â€"â€" she got them regu‘ ‘y â€" C ‘ch fin ally oponed her oye: Some old herâ€" mit in the moun‘‘ns was missing, bad been r.issi~~ for ronths, Amy felt sure it was his body which had been mistaken for Worth‘s . . " "I‘m sure of that. When you first spoke of Amy Kerr, I wondered if it could be my Amy, but it didn‘t seem likely. The world is a big place . . . Then I saw ber on Surâ€" day night! Cilly, I can‘t tell you just how happy I was . .. we‘d boon outâ€" casts so loug. I wanted to tell you then and there, but A:ay warned me. Anyway, I slipped her that note your sergeant found and I met her upstairs on the roof as soon as 1 left you. The was so much I want ed to know ..." "Did she really find Worth?" "She did. What‘s more, she gathâ€" ered enough evidencs to send him to prison. Thero was only one thing "Then you think Amy followod him here to New York?" p "So Amy went to Chicago, on a wild goose chase, our lawyer said. Imagine tracing a voice! By ihis time my father was serving a senâ€" teonce. He was badly shaken by the trial, and 1 seemed to be tho one who disturbed him mos?. He begged and he pleaded with me to }save Utah and start life somewhero else where 1 wouldn‘t be linked to him. The police were still watching me, day and night, trying to trace the bonds through me. They‘vo never been found." "Where is he now ?" "That‘s the joker. Tho very night of the robbery, Worth‘s body was found in a ravine some few miles out of Bluefields, pinned under his overturned car. He‘d been burned pretty badly, but the body was identified to the satisfaction of the court. Call it woman‘s intuition or what you will, Amy believed that Worth had taken the bonds and had skinned to Chicago. Trve, the court said there was no sign of the stolen bonds in the burned car. And whose body was it, if not Worth‘s? People don‘t just disappear in a town like Bluefields. ter â€" a ticket for Chicago. The man‘s voice sounded familiar to her. Sho remembered it as one that had answered Dad‘s wire at the bank. We decided it must have been a fellow named Worth â€"â€" a new man at the bank â€"â€" the only one Amy would not have recognized on sight ... " in heuripn rvricn dn renes beaitdienaigabess® "Then you can get it the first thing in the morning? Tomorrow we‘ll know who did it ... " Cilly stopped abruptly. Upstairs she had heard somgone walking around. Was it the special officer, or had Dolan roturned? "That might be he police sergeant," she added, "and he‘ll want to question you imâ€" modiately, Jim." THE WINDOW OPEN AGAIN Jim jumped to his feet. ‘"I don‘t want to see him, Cilly. Not yet. 1 want to go over Amy‘s evidence before the police do." He smiled a little sheepishly, "I‘m still afraid of the technicalities ‘of the law, my "No, thank God," Jim said earnâ€" estly. "She was prepared against any emergency. Every fact she had unearthed is in a safety deposit box at the National Trust Company‘s downtown branchk. The key to the box is in her desk at Ames & Wakeâ€" field." "But what about Worth?" Cilly begged nervously. "Did Amy tell you who he was? Did all the proof she gathered die with her?" "Amy doubted whether he ever reached home that night, _ Worth hbad run him down, perhaps, and then . conceived the bright idea of changing personalities. That‘s just where I‘ve been this week, to the shack of Smokey Joe Barlow. And none of my clothes were there! He never reached home. Knowing that, we can have the body disintarred and identified more accurately . . "Just this, Amy know the old her mit pretty well. Frequently she rode out through the mountains and she stopped at his shack soveral times. She‘d been kind to him. The day of the robbery, she saw him in the town. She told him of some old suits of mine, which he might have if he wanted to stop for them. He did, that afternoon, It was getting late and she suggested that he sleep in the room over our garage for the night. But he was in a hurry to get home, he told her. "What did you find out in Blue fields?" were true. That‘s why she sent me to Bluefields immediatoly. to check for her, while she kept hor eye on Worth here in New York. Sho was so terribly afraid he‘d begin to got suspicious . .. " The bluebirdâ€"symbol of happiness and good luck! Crochet it in filet cwochet for chair set, scarf ends or buffes and be delighted with your new accessories, Pattern 2457 contains charts and directions for set; materials required; illustrations of stitches. Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be acceptedy for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 78 Woest Adelaide St., Toronto, Witie plainly Pattern Number, your Name and Address. LAURA WHEELER DESIGNS BLUEBIRD CHAIR S=T TO BRING YOU HAPPINESS A motor driver of Wood Green, London, England, Mr. W. R. Clatâ€" worthy, has spent three years makâ€" ing a doll‘s house. It has 1,000 tiles, glass windows, electric light and frenchâ€"polished furniture. His only tools were a penâ€"knife and a sixpenny drill, How large that thrush looks on the bare thornâ€"tree! A swarm of such three little months ago, Has hidden in the leaves and let none know Save by the outburst of their minâ€" strelsy. A white flake here and thercâ€"a snowâ€"lily Of last night‘s frostâ€"our" naked flowerâ€"beds hold; And for a roseâ€"flower on the darkâ€" ening mould The hungry redbreast gleams. No bloom, no bee, The current shudders to its iceâ€" bound edge; Nipped in their bath, the stark reeds one by one Flasn each its clinging diamond in the sun; ‘Neath winds which for this Winâ€" ter‘s sovereign pledge Shall curb great kingâ€"masts to the ccean‘s edge And leave memorial forestâ€"kings . o‘erthrown. CROCHETED CHAIR SET Doll‘s Mansion WINTER â€"D. G. Rosseiti Cor FR. 1949, NEEDLEC®AFT CRAFT SERVICE DERVICE, INC TORONTO Toting a 74â€"pound pack, Maurâ€" een tried to get a job as stoker aboard the vesse! at Vancouver, B. C., when she heard that some of the crew had refused to sail because of the hazards of war. She didn‘t get the job, but the master of the freighter agreed to grant her freo passage if she signâ€" ed a pledge to keep aloof from every male on board. Maureen Parry, pretty English girl whose accomplishments inâ€" clude a bieycle trip across Canada, is getting ready to return home as the only woman aboard a Greek freighter. Suddenly she sat bo!t upright, her eyes staring into the bedroom beâ€" yond. The window to the fire es cape, the one she had so carefuily left open only one inch, was now halfway open, and the curtains were blowing in the breeze! (To Be Continued) Signed A Pledge To Remain Aloof The next minute he was gone, and Cilly sat down on the divan to await Sergeant Dolan. She would not tell him anything about Jim‘s visit, she decided. She would say only that Jim would see him the first thing in the morning. "Think of it, €illy," he murmur ed shakily. * This is the key which wil} unlock my father‘s cell ... " She got it out, handed it to hite. He. clenched his band around it very tightly, and toars sprang into his eyes. FOoOD At this season of the year the wise homemaker takes a careful inventory of daily menus and a reâ€" gister of the various members of the family as to their reactions and requirements of the different food constituents. All find it necessary no doubt to increoase the leafy vego tables and the salads. Not a few of us in this rigid climate are lacking the iron requirements. Molasses, good oldâ€"fashioned black strap, is one of the most important items in all diets for anemias of all types. It should be used at least three times a week, better still, every day in some form. I have a whole mediey of things about which 1 should like to write you, but what could have a better reception from all mombers of the family than gingerbread, â€" that versatilo cake concoction ? 1 cup fig sirup 1 tablespoon cornstarch 1â€"8 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons lemon juice Add fig sirup gradually to corn By SADIE B. CHAMBERS ind good luck! Crochet it in buffec and be delighted with MOLASSES AN ESSENTIAL PATTERN 2457 FIG SAUVCE Perhaps no icing is as popular 2s the plain sweetened whip cream. This makes a perfect dessert, My next favorite is the following: 1 cup of cream cheese 2 tablespoons icing sugar (all level measurements) 1 teaspoon grated orange rind 3 tablespoons orange juice 1 tablespoon grated candied ginger MR. CAFFEINEâ€"NERVES IS BLUEâ€"PENCILLED Cream the butter and sug@?, veâ€" ing sure that the sugar has no lumps. Add beaten eggs and beat well together, Have sifted the flour with spices, Add the soda to the sour milk to which add the molasâ€" ses (mixing well the sour milk and soda first). Add this last mixture to butter and sugar; mix well, addâ€" ing gradually the flour. Placo in wellâ€"greased pan, 8" x 11". It is best to havo at least two layers of oiled paper well oiled or greasod fitting neatly to all corners of the pan. Bake in a very moderate oven for 45 minutes. If baking too quickâ€" ly on the top, cover with paper, 2 eggs 1 cup molasses 1 cup sour milk 1 cup brown sugar 2 cups flour (scant) 14 cup butter 2 teaspoons ginger 2 teaspoons soda 2 teaspoons cinnamon starch, stirring until smooth,. Add salt and cook until thick and clear. Stir in lemon juice and serve hot over pudding, GINGERBREAD 1â€"8 cup shortening % cup sugar 1 egg 14 cup Kellogg‘s Adâ€"Bran 23 cup milk 1 teaspoon Vanilla extract 1 cup flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 14 teaspoon salt 12 canned figs Blend shortening and sugar thor oughly; add egg and beat until it is light and fluffy. Soak Allâ€"Bran in milk; add flavoring. Sift flour, bakâ€" ing powder and salt together and add to first ammixture alternately with Allâ€"Bran and milk. Put one drained fig in bottom of each greasâ€" ed muffin pan and fill 23 full with batter, Bake in moderate oven (*57 degrees F.) about 25 minutes, Serve hot with fig sauce. Yield: 12 servings (3 inches in diameter), earthen container. These will koep for a long time, This makes about 40 cookies, SEE THE NEW NORGE AT YOUR LOCAL DEALER‘s Miss _ Chambers _ welcomes personal letters from interest> ed readers. She is plcased to receive suggestions on topics for her column, and is even ready to listen to your "pet peoves." Requests for recipes or special menus are in order, Address your letters to "Miss Sadie B. Chambers, 73 West Adclaide Street, Toronto." New Norge Refrigerators have an Extra Shelf, Plus Extra "Cellavret" Compartmentâ€"at No Extra Cost! READERS, WRITE iN! FIG PUDDING Emt an wost s Feiel 2 on 27 &\ whose as "Wi your »« is the : or "Yo day of: Berv man, mto t ly af down male S\ State 1 Â¥t. W indowâ€"Sh: Service ing for has tah past 20 game h him sta Be Good .. Be P i I sebail Pitcher s Another Comp Detive Lak do! in th ing 1 Doct M 16 M Fly M« W 0v6 U W 172

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