West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 25 Apr 1940, p. 2

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+ss 3. 4 46 t & F4 &1 b Â¥o¥¥ X t In Minneapolis, Frank Leschisâ€" in, 67, who said when arrested by police for murdering his nagging wife, "Yes I shot herâ€"I should have done it 15 years ago," was set free because a grand jury reâ€" fused to indict him. Reason: his son, his wife‘s sister, all the witâ€" messes called (and 50 neighbors who wanted to testify) all said Miss Ethel Greenwood, of Torâ€" onto told the 300 nurses that 1,260 nurses bhad been enrolled in Canâ€" ada for war or disaster duty, with 82 of them in military unfform in Ontario. In 1936, the number of murses enroiled for war or disaster duty was 345 she said. The worid is in crying noed of what the professional nurse can of ter and depends a great deal on the type of nurse and her professional equipment, said Miss Marion Lindâ€" »burgh, of McGill University in an rddress before the 15th annual meeting of the Registored Nurses‘ Association of Ontario. THOUGHTFUL IN MIND Director of the school for gradâ€" wate nurses at McGill, Miss Lindeâ€" burgh told of professional educaâ€" tion, characteristics and trends within the field with significant bearing on the nurses‘ education. "Nurses can never be too well edâ€" ucated, cultured, thoughtful in mird or skilful of hand," she said. Today‘s World sports or school has skirt and sleeveless jacket of soft, mossâ€"green wool and wool shirt of mossâ€"green, blue and white plaid. The sleeveless jacket may be worn open or closed; the gored skirt has inset pockets. The model is Larraine Day and she ehooses a green felt hat with a sugâ€" gestion of a crown and saucerâ€"brim, highlighted with tall green feathers. Among the cosmetics which have given rise to trouble are powders, creams, shampoos, lotions, perâ€" fumes, hair dyes, eyeâ€"drops, nail polishes and even tooth paste. While milady gets dividends of selfâ€"assurance from the use of cosâ€" metics, sho is also subjected not inâ€" frequently to various types of skin injury and infections caused by irâ€" ritating cosmetics, the physician points out in the current issue of the Canaditn Medical Association Journal. "With the tendency to :s version to the savage type," he huâ€" morously writes, "more and more cases of allergy to cosmetics are reported. EYELIDS, SPECIAL HAZARD The specialist bhas found that the eyelids constitute a special haâ€" zard. The frequency with which dermatitis has been observed in this area has led to the labelling of the condition as "cosmetic eye." Nagger‘s Desert / forth the fact that "blondes outâ€" numbered brunettes as reactors to €osmeti¢s," Women of blonde type must be careful when they apply cosmetics. A series of observations conduct=d by a Montreal specialist brought Blondes Fall Heir To Cosmetic lIls Education, Culture, Thoughtâ€" fuiness and Skill Required, R. N‘s Hear Growing Volume of Skin Inâ€" fection Noted by Specialists _ Slow Burning CIGARETTE PAPERS . NONE FINER MADE "My face ... ?" Sally asked, af ter another long moment. Her pretâ€" ty face that had caused so many masculize hearts to pound more quickly. Would she look the same when thoso bulky bandages were removed? The uurse shook her head. "But there is a wire from your father. He will be hore sometime today, though Dr. Barnes, talking long distance, assured him it was not necessary." Sally‘s eyes, behind closed lids, misted with tears of weak gratitâ€" xdeo. Dear Daddy, she always could count on him. Always he had come when needed, always he got her everything that money could purchâ€" After a while she opened them again. "Is anyone waiting to see me?" There was only one person Sally wanted to see. MIGHT HAVE BEEN KILLED There was no reply to this. She might have been kilied. Sally saw, once more, the barbedâ€"wire fence rushing up at her. Sho closed her eyes a moment. "Just a few scratches," the nurse nformed her soothingly, "There "You‘re in a hospital," the nurse replied. Her cool hand on Sally‘s forehead cautioned her to lie quiet. "You had a bad tumble, my dear. But you‘re going to be as good as pew in & week or s0." ‘"You‘re lucky to get off with that." The nurso‘s tone was rim. ly. "How did I get here?" Sally counâ€" tered with arother question. Where was Dan? Had he carried her the rest of the way down that stippery ravine? Ohb, what a litile idiot she had been, trying to show off, trying to give vent to her injured pride and anger. Now he would think she needed lessons, not only in the art of skiâ€"ing, but in good common sense! She stirred and gave a »little groan and a nurse, in stiffly starchâ€" ed white uniform, bent over her. "And how are you feeling now?" her pleasant, efficient voice inquirâ€" ed. * Her head throbbed with a dull heavy ache; sho felt too weary to eare where she was. Then one hand seeking her burning templeercounâ€" tered bandages, remombrance then came back to Sally. Sho experiencâ€" ed again that swift downward flight and that terrific plunge forward, the siddy sensation of helpless skidding. Again she beard Dan‘s voice calling her name. CHAPTER VI When Sally next opened her eyes she was in a small room, a narrow white bed, She could hear the bells of Baker Library Tower, whose tall steeple kept guard over the campus, pealing out their coliege tunes, and summoning the students to classes. Sho still must be at the houseparty. But the houseparty was over. This was not the colorful, coloniat room of the fraternity dorm. Last week: In a fit of anger, Salâ€" ly dashes down the mountain, and plunges headlong toward a wire fence. The last thing she remem bers is Dan‘s cry ringing in her ears. had everything that popularity could win her, except DAN REYNOLDS â€" hero. He might have had Sally but while he was king on skis COREY POR»ER was kirg of the socia! whirl. So . .. But go on with the story. "A week!" Sally protested faintâ€" CAST OF CHARACTERS SALLY BLAIR â€" heroine. She © SERIAL STORY SKI‘S THE LIMIT â€" Blended For Quality *T CEA BY ADELAIDE HUMPHRIES could say just then. She clung to "I don‘t mean just that," Sailly said. It was difficult to explain. She did not know what they could do for Dan, she who had taken away the one thing he loved, her father from his deep debt of gratitude. "We must find some way to help him afterwards. You see, Daddy," her dark eyes, turned to her father. were filled with a new pain, "Dar may never be able to ski again." "That is indeed a very sad thing," her father returned soberly. "But we‘ll fix it somehow. It may. not be, as bad as you think, my dear, You forget I said this boy is to have the very best care, the finest doc tors. And after that â€" well, we‘!! manage, somehow, to see that the right thing is done by him." j "Ob, Daddy!" It was all Saily "Of course we‘ll do something for a lad like that," her father said. "We‘ll see to his doctor bills, all of his exponses. He must have the best of everything!‘" Nothing was too good for a young man who had done what this lad had done for his girl. ed. "The boy who brought me here to the hospital." She repeated just what the nurse had told her. "We must do something for him, Daddy." A BITTER ‘LESSON Sally was not sure whether what sho wanted was in his power or not. For Sally was learning the bitter lesson that there are some things that even love cannot meot. "It is about Dan Reynolds," she explainâ€" "Daddy, there‘s something you‘ll have to do for me," Sally said. She reached out for his hand, wanting to hold it. She must make him see this as she did. "Tâ€"expect you have only to name it." Her father smiled on her fondâ€" ly. "Well, well!" he said in his big booming voice, that matched the rest of him, for Sam Blair was a big man in more ways than one, "you came off lucky, as usual, honey. Just a few scratches, eh? Pretty badly shaken up. You must stay quiet a few days though, the docâ€" tor says. Then I‘ll bundle you off home â€" and no more of this scarâ€" ing your old Dad half out of his senses!" Her father got there late that afternoon. His relief when he found his beloved daughter, whom he managed to spoil as outrageously as everyone else, was not seriously hurt was almost beyond bounds. And Sally had called him a cowâ€" ard! She had told him he was afraid of the real things of life, that he would run away at the foot of the mountain. # WwHAT HAD SHE DONE? She buried her head in the pilâ€" low. She could not bear to face what she had done. It would be a long time, the nurse said, before Dan could ski. Maybe he could ne ver ski again. Maybe she â€" Sally who loved him with all her heart, with every painful breath â€" had done this to him. "It looks like it may be a fract ure," the nurse admitted. She did not divulge information about the patients as a rule. But the feverish intensity of this girl‘s bright eyes, the agonized pleading in them provâ€" ed the exception. "I‘m afraid he won‘t walk â€" or ski â€" in some time. But the miracle is howâ€"with that leg â€" he managed to half carry, half drag you on down the mountain, get you on the rescue toâ€" boggan, and bring you here. That young man should have a medal for bravery!" "How bad? You must tell me. please." Dan hurt, Dan who had hoped to make the Olympics, who was such a beautiful, swift thing on his smooth long skis. Hurt beâ€" cause of her foolishness, her headâ€" strong vanity. "Dan hurt?" Sally tried to sit up, her eyes wide open now. â€" The nurse‘s strong hands rently held her back. "Not too badly," she rcassured her. "One leg banged up a bit . .. " DAN HURT? "What young man?"â€"Sally asked. There could only .be"one. But she wanted to hear his name. She wanted just to hear someone say it. "Young Reynolds," the nurse said â€"â€" "you know â€" the ski champion. It seems he was right behind you. He managed, by sbme spectacular leap or turn, to save you from being whirled into a fence. And then, though he was badly hurt himself won‘t be even a scar. Thanks to the young man who got you here in time for Doctor Barnes to take the stitches." COPYRIGHT, 1938 NEA SERVICE, INC. miles to eat an egg, and lunch, with coffee to follow, takes jus: over 180 miles, ° On the American air routes nassengers have a strange way of measuring meal times. On ° the Pacific Clippers it takes about 50 there is a height of heel that is graceful but not too high. Judge for ycurself from the shoo that has heen the most satisfactory to you." "And I know high heels are the most flattering kind but you can‘t be charming if your feet hurt. And "Necklines aro important for maâ€" ture women and the high, plain ones of this season may make you look dowdy. Best trick I know to counteract this is to nick a collar front and back, about an inch and a half deep â€" a heartâ€"shaped cut to give the effect of a slimmer neck and face. The right necklace will do wonders, too â€" not a long string of beads or a chain, but one of the new choker necklaces that has pendants or tassels. > Caoking by Distance Heartening to women whose figâ€" ures aren‘t young enough to wear every season‘s styles is the opinion of Spring Byington, charming Holâ€" lywood actress, aged 42: "I don‘t believe in the current vogue of tryâ€" ing to change your typo every time a new waistline comes in. Start from where and what you are, and make it better. With a practical mind the mature woman who wants to be well dresâ€" sed knows her figure problems and builds ber ‘costumes around them, not around her best points. Older Woman Can Dress As Smartly But would Dan allow it? Would Dan accept help from the father of the girl who had caused his acciâ€" dent? A girl for whom he bhad no time, in whom he had refused to bee lieve? ber fathor‘s hand more tightly. She might have known she could count on him. One glance will tell you how effective this Southern belle will be embroidered on a bedspread. Pattern 2528 contains a transfer pattern of a 15% x 20 inch motif, 5 motifs 2 x 4 inches; illustrations of stitches; 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. A missionary, the Rev..J. A. L. Singh, removed the children to his orphanage and attempted to bring them back to a human way of life, but their animal upbringing had become ingrained in them. At first they would only «at raw meat, and ripped off their loin cloths. And; they walked and ran on all fours. The younger child, Amala, died shortly afterwards, The elder, Kaâ€" mala, lived for nine years at the orphanage.. But she never learned to use her human faculties. Her voâ€" cabulary was limited to some forty words, and to the end she wen:t down on all fours when she wished to move quickly. Covering the ground in this animal fashion she easily outpaced human beings. There have beén several cases of. children being brought up by animal fosterâ€"mothers, but the very strangest is that of the Wo‘lf Girls of Midnapore, in India. They were discovered when natives ‘dug. into a wolf den under a huge antâ€"heap. Huddled togetherâ€"in the‘ noisome den were four shapes â€" two wolf cubs and two children," girls.of about 1% and 8 years old. Two Young Girls Reared by Wolves Start From Where And What You Are â€" And Make It Betâ€" ter (To Be Continued) Near â€" Midna; Discovered â€" Dug Into V Antâ€"Heap . : LAURA WHEELER DESIGNS EFFECTIVE SPREAD QUICKLY DONE ONTARIO ~ARCHIVES TORONTO A tree often transplanted never grows nor thrives. A walnut tree is as good to a poor man as a milch cow.â€"Italian. All superfluous branches we lop awsy that â€" bearing boughs may As the twig is bent the tree is inclined.â€"English. Good fruit never comes from a bad tree.â€"Portuguese. Great trees often give more shade than fruit. As the tree so the fruit. Great trees are uprooted in an hour. When baking a rich, dark fruit cake in a metal pan, line the pan with heavy greased brown paper; for a white fruit cake line with greased waxed paper. A soggy, sticky dressing is no compliment to a tender fowl. When making bread stuffing, use stale bread preferably, or dry fresh bread in the oven before mixing, or toast fresh slices. & To remove burned food from tin cooking utensils, fill the pan with cold water, a:;ifi soda generously, bring to a boil and continue boiling until the food is softened. Never use a metal scraper or coarse abraâ€" sive on the utensils. Harsh courâ€" ing injures the outer tin scoating leaving the basic steel exposed. Arbor Day Proverbs Bookcases built in the corner of a small apartment are convenient and require a small amount of space. If they areo topped with wide panels of mirrors, the effect is deâ€" corative as well as pleasantly cool, and an impression of added size is given to the room. f Annoying, isn‘t it, when the bristles of your pet hair brush go all soft and "goosey" on you! Here is a way of stiffening them up agâ€" ain. Make a strong solution of alum and dip the bristles into it until they are thoroughly soaked and then dry them as quickly as posâ€" sible. They‘ll bo quite firm and stiff again, A twig in time becomes a tree. ... = _ SPRING â€" TRIFLES _~â€"_Inâ€"the early spring days when the appetite seems to be lagging and the homemaker extra busy, there is perhaps a greater demand thanvever for attractive desserts. Pineapples are now appearing and they always put. up a vigid chalâ€" lenge for an allâ€"season favorite. They have an incomparable flavor and an aromatic "air,"‘ which helps them wend their way into the highways and byways of nearâ€" ly all type of menus, especially when something that is different is sought. Just one thing about pineapple: remember that fresa pineapple cannot be mixed sucâ€" cessfully with gelatine unless it has been previously cooked. One of the acids of pineapple, uncookâ€" ed, ‘destroys proteins,â€"hence the result. However, do no allow this to discourage you, for fresh pineâ€" apple cooked does have a fresher taste, different from the fruit we have stored. : Handy Hints 14 Pireapple Parfait 1 medium sized pineapple © Fruit sugar Vanilla Ice Cream Whipped Cream Maraschino: cherries. Several hours before serving, prepare pineapple, cutting in cubes <or shredding (running through the food chopper is a favâ€" orite way) Mix one cup of fruit sugar for every cup of pineapple. Place this in refrigerator or cool place until ready to serve. Servâ€" ing time, drain juice from pineâ€" apple and place alternate layers of ice cream and syrup in parfait glasses. Cover with the pineapple, top with whipped cream and marâ€" aschino cherry. 1% tablespoons gelatine 14 cup water % cup boiling water 1 pint cream (whipped) :4 cup sugar 1 cup cooked grated pineapple 12 marshmallows Cook until thickened but do not allow mixture to boil. Cool slightâ€" ly, add flavorings and fold in egg whites beaten until stiff. Bake in a moderate oven. Serve hot with whipped cream Time in oven 45 minutes. Oven moderate. Serves %4 cup butter % cup cornstarch 1 cup milk _z Pinch nutmeg 1 cup shredded pineapple 3 eggs f 14 cup sugar 4 teaspoon vanilla Melt butter, add cornstarch, blend thoroughly. Add milk gradâ€" vally, stirring constantly. Boil, add pineapple, beat eggs slightly, mix with sugar and add. Mr. Cafieiqe-Nerves Jumps Off Pineapple Cream Whip ORDER CGRAPESNUTS FROM YOUR GROCER TOMY Pineapple Souffle m s tapioca f % teaspoon salt 4 cups milk scalded % cup sugar 1 or 2 egg yolks slightly beaten 1 teaspoon flavoring 2 egg whites stiffly beaten Add tapioca and salt to milk and cook 15 minutes in double boiler or until the tapioca is clear. Stir frequently. Add sugar and pour small amount of mixture over egg yolk, stirring vigorously. Return to double boiler over heat, and stir and cook until thickened. Remove from heat and add flavorâ€", ing. Fold a small amount into egz white. Add to the remaining tapâ€" ioca mixture and fold in. Chill. Serve with whipped cream to which has been added some maple syrup. To % pt. whipped cream, add 2 tablespoons maple syrup. Sprinkle with chopped pecans. %4 .cup chopped blanched almonds Soak gelatine in cold water. Add boiling water and stir until dissolved. Stir occasionally, while cooling, until .it thickens slightly. When the mixture is the consistâ€" ency of strained honey, fold in stifflyâ€"beaten cream sweetenced with sugar, the pineapple and the marshmallows cut fine. Lastly add chopped almonds. Chill until firm. Or special menus are in order. Address your letters to "Miss Sadie B. Chambers, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto." Tapioca Maple Cream Oneâ€"third c up quickâ€"cooking READERS, WRITE IN! geiiin e o mommoprimCaly 4 MR CAFFEmEâ€"NERYEs; | | I‘m out! Ifs no i i place for me + w he n thgy, switch to i tatle # .. * South Pole Said Moving To West Genoa claims the h scraper in Europe, 4 building, with 31 floor Mr. Byrd, re reported that Antarctic regio Government ex ered lands not He a mounta hithert sent expe again but cause of i eats. netc Iv di said la n 19 Navy blue mccents the colla Bborders the hemâ€"line of Vi Q’eidler’s favorite afternoon tripes of paisley print lend ito the beige background. The waistâ€"band and shirred bodic grownâ€"up touches. Virginia next be seen in the Metroâ€"Gol« Mayer production, Young (Edison," starring Mickey Ro G pote Admiral Byrd Reports tion of Magnetic Ro‘le Changing UNKN PUrDOses with a â€" prices a seed w! The vitality ary storage was after the fourth clover showed germinating now that i: ard the would n a fo sam Jit Imin Sto conc mep The Ans wor garding the p BAbN arhinh a~ the had mov ty Life L;n; thi ain wh C wh d uct farm fo need to be per HOLD SEEDs Yitality of tin it the wo & TEENâ€"A CRE&TIO * ARMCUItY Goop FIVE Tests Reveal No Loss in Wheat Alive R n mos ound at O Py ha h ie b uray to whic} perfe to t rmin boe collar w imo m M m d N D

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