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Durham Review (1897), 9 May 1940, p. 6

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best.friead~of. the .mm with a wery ar8esyâ€"«sRiR .Neter, mever niake up vichout applying,it first; af. you do, St is salganch “?Qed.“ume".m thé .‘greasaiuatilv%r +, g@Ati Cthrouch £5 wel 895 '.},‘é' wh ui Brush. your hair, through with starch when you cannot get a shamâ€" poo. and brush it "as often as you can. Tséan antiâ€"ztedgy tonic, adopt â€"««<f@teasy hairâ€"style, and bave your .Wair pxoperiy cut and thinned. The, shorter hair is the vogue, and it‘s Casier to keep in order, Uso ‘a faee patk @t leas: every five days and keep a good astringâ€" eni handy. The asgtripzentâ€"is the + WASK WITH OATMEAL e « Wash your skin with an ‘oatmecl pad. This is not difficult. Keep a Jar of oatmeal by the washâ€"basin, put by it several little squares of muslin which take but a moment to cut up. Put a couple of thaspoonâ€" fuls into a piece of muslin, roll into a ball, and use this as a sponge for your face; Tet the film dry on,. and thea wash rwawsc*e.ss .. ® a good gemeral‘ tonic. There are plenty of firstâ€"class tonics on the market, and your doetor will alâ€" ways recommend one. > First thing if you seem to nave too _much oil in your system, get casqqanl+~%ork», g@it. through aips® m t 1 e@ C paog 5 mal ie ; Too Much Oil In The System? of the afternoon, And try to get into the habit of eating manâ€"sized porâ€" tions of everything on the dinner menu, including rich dessert, of course, mc In addition, realize the importâ€" ance of getting plenty of sleep and rest. If you are serious about gainâ€" inz a few pounds, you‘ll sleep at least nine hours every night. And most important, too, you‘ll trg not to worry. ___ NINE HOURS AT NiGHT For lunch order cream soup in stead of a clear variety, meat and vegotables instead of a light salad. Have a glass of milk in the middle mixed with milk or some soft drink and see what happens. If you ordinâ€" arily. have no appetite for breakâ€" fast, get up hall an hour earlier, take a brisk walk before breakfast. in order to make yoursolf want a bowl of cereal with cream, toast with plenty of butter and jJam or even some ham and eges. Drink a pint of cream mixed with milk or some and see what hannene IF The first thing for a woman to do, if she is underweight and wants to gain a few pounds, is to see the family doctor, have a complete phyâ€" sical examination and find out whe ther there exists some icondition which is keeping her too thin. â€" If not, and unless your doctdr advises otherwise, immediately plan a cal oryâ€"rich diet and stick to it. Drink a pint of cream per day, Underweight? Eat Caloryâ€"Rich Dict "An inch of shirt culf should a! show beneath the coat sleeve." Additional clothes â€" commandâ€" for men are, according to Mr. Block "The width of the trousers should be about threeâ€"fourths the lensth of the man‘s feet. The trousors also should be long enoush to "break" on the instep. The socks shouldn‘t show. "To begin with," he says, "women should stop expecting men‘s clothes to fit the way their own do. FIT OF COAT, TROUSERS "In order for the collar to stay put when a man moves his arms, there must be some drape in the back of the coat. The vertical wrinkles are there for a purposeâ€" they are not a misfit," Mr. Block wanis women to know. As for trousers, they shouldn‘t fit tight around the hips the way a woman wants a dress to fit. Unâ€" less they aro a bit bagsy, and sink in like riding brecches, they will not hang right â€" nor will they be comfortable. STRAINING FOR EFFECT One thing Mama should not do is encourage Pop to match up his acâ€" cessories, as she does. It gives an impression of straining for a sarâ€" torial effect. The fact that when a man buys e suit his wife generally goes along .or else gives advice as to what type to uy would be fine and dandy it Mama knew what she was talking about. But she usually doesn‘t â€" according to Norman Block, promâ€" inent New York stylist. Women Shouldn‘t Buy Men‘s Clothes Get A Good General Tonic First OHf â€" Hair and Skin Need Special Treatment Drink A Pint of Cream Per Day â€" Rest a Lot and Don‘t Worry Stylist â€" Says They _ Don‘t Know Enough About Themâ€" Gives _ Clothes â€" Commandâ€" ments for Men also Calernag â€""K.':chen"c’q'uipnzzfi'f:t 1¢ notrompleis without thlg:hand‘.;', one-li\lumer;.‘mlzu,.,, stove..Can. be vsed apy whereâ€" ome, rhxgb‘:’ég Cottage: Aakes ard" bur@3$ ‘oltn ‘gas ifrom gasoling. Lishts, wegs; uigtes .instantly.. Safe, spfi%;&o- n&xfcaf.‘ dttractiva.â€" can â€" a~ x}}'hile burnirng.« f‘uel ca.nngt spill. a%s, more fine features than any othet ons â€"busnen stoveâ€":"veo sook dexers.or write fosgonhh liter®â€" . "You‘d never guess it!" Corey returned. His grin was rueful, but his spirits, soared. Sally must be glad to see him. ‘sfter all! "What have you been doiag with yoursel? that you.never had time to drop a "Why, Corey!" Sho held out a hand, her face breaking into a nice smile. She drew him on inside, and made him welcome. "How nice, to see you again‘ When did you get home? Come in and make yourself at home., It‘s good to see you." It seemed to him much too long before the heavy door finally was urlatehbed, swung gently open. Then when be saw that it was Sally who had opened it to l im, impatience was well repaid. He had forgotten she was so lovely, that her dark eves were so soft and shining, her mouth so temptingly sweet. He had gotten any girl could make him feel as he did now. just looking at Sally again. HE MEANT BUSINESS Now he meant business, as he‘d shown Sally by the way he turned into the long driveway that led to her home, swept up under the big port cochers, grounrd on the car brakes. He took the flight of steps on to the broad piazza of the big white colonial house three at a time, sounded the oldâ€"fashioned knocker emphatig¢ally and impaâ€" tiently. Ho was going to have a showâ€" down with Sally, or else. Never, in all his experience â€" and ho had had a few,. as he prided himsel? â€" had any girl treated bhim as had Sally. Not one word from her since the houseparty, unless you wanted to count the stiff little brasdâ€"andâ€"but ter note required from formal courâ€" tesy, which Corey did not. Never in all his life had Corey been given the "goâ€"by" by any membor of the opposite sex. It was an entirely new expefience. Had Sally known it â€" and maybe she did since she was an experienced young lady. too â€" it had proved the best possible moans of bringing Corey to heel. For if he had imazined himself taken with Sally before â€" that last moonlight night of the houseâ€"party,. for instance â€" now Corey knew he was sunk. C Corey Porter, home for spring vaâ€" cation, lost no time in beading his long low sports roadster toward the suburb. near Boston, where Sally Blair lived. Corey was a very imâ€" portant young man these days, in a few months he would graduate, the head man of his class. He would be taken into his father‘s firm, start a new life. But Corey‘s handsome young face did not wear the imporâ€" tant, satisfied look it should have. His nico mouth was a bit grim; his blue eves wore a nernlexed axmres. sion CHAPTER VIiT The white world of the winter carnival had turned into a fresh new one with a gauzy scarf of tenâ€" der green covering the hillside, the birds flying north to begin searchâ€" ing for bits of string and straw to build their nests, crocuses heroicalâ€" ly thrusting up bright brave golden heads. Last week: Sally is shocked by the seriousness of Dan‘s injury. in remorse, she asks his forgiveness, kisses him goodby. Is it forever, she wonders? ‘COREY POR+ER was king of the social whirl. So . . . But go on with the story. DAN REYNOLDS â€" hero. He might have had Sally but while he was king on skis CAST OF CHARACTERS SALLY BLAIR â€" heroine. She had everything . that popularity could win her, except © SERIAL STORY SKI‘S THE LIMIT wore a perplexed expresâ€" GREEN TEA finest You Can Buy BY ADELAIDE HUMPHRIES "I hope," Corey added, "that you are going to have some time for me, Sally, my pet. We‘ll do all the hotâ€"spots, paint‘the town crimson,. if you say the words This will be my last playâ€"time for a spell. After graduation I‘m goingâ€"to settle.right down.for keeps.. You won‘t know ing. Pretty hectic, but feariully exâ€" citing and gay,. No time to spare tbeside the homefires,. or o. waste in solitude or thought. Never a dull moment. "I don‘t expect you find much time to be with him now!". Corey laughed.at .this idea. He â€"know how full the life was of a popular, girl like Sally, one party after another, a date for every waking moment, a round of places every night, a few hours‘ sleep Squeezed in each mornâ€" stay here with him; this is a big house you know for one person." Sally‘s mother had died when she was a child. "Daddy never comâ€" plained. But I know now how glad he is to have me with him." She. knew now, too, how much she had missed the companionship she had never before taken time to share‘ with the father who had given her so much, ; This useful 65â€"inch crocheted cloth in pineapple design can be made in two other sizes. Pattern 2530 contains instructions for making cloth in varied sizes; illustration of it and stitches; materials required; photoâ€" graph of cloth. . * * Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be acceptcd) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Write plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. Sally laughed, ‘shook her head. No, she had not been busy in that way. Burt Corey: wouid not unde:â€" stand, or beli_e\'e her if she denied it. She told him she had not gone back to finish out the term because sho had decided to stay at home with her father. "I never realized," Sally said, "how Daddy missed me, how all alone he was. I decided to it by name. She was prettier than ever, if possible, her dark curls drawn back with a narrow pink ribâ€" bon, her dainty frock matching the slight filush in her cheeks. Yet he felt that, somehow, she had changâ€" ed. There was something about Sally that he had not noticed before. Ho could not put his finger on it, call I suppose you‘ve been busy flirting and dancing and playing havoc genâ€" eraly from dawn urtil dawn with all the masculine population withâ€" in reach." "Rumor has it," Corey said, as he flung his long length down into a deep chair, "that you didn‘t go back to school, my sweet. How come? Did the grind get you down? "I did write â€" once," Sally re minded. She led the way on into the big living room that was so ‘cheerful with its open fire, gay chintzes and profusion of flowers. Sally was proud of the fact that she had made it so homeâ€"like now that she had taken over the task of running her father‘s house. "I have been busy," she admitted. "I am sorry if you feel I‘ve neglected you, Corey." fellow a line? What did I do to de serve such treatment?" CROCHETED CLOTH PINEAPPLE DESIGN MAKES STRIKING LAURA WHEELER CROCHETED CLOTH COPYRIGHT, 1938 NEA SERVICE. INC. COPR maod, NEEDLECRAFT SERVICE, INC. f Rit i oc w spalc, Ce S ce ~ Dr. Paul Popenoe, internationkl: ly known founderâ€" and â€"dirgitor of © the Los Angeles Institute.of Famâ€"â€" ily Relations, has at last been able to formulate a definition for "gla mour." â€"‘‘Whenever the value .of.. the package exceeds that, of, the:. contentsâ€"that‘s glamour," he. told. . a local audience," Nesm peiimnne The locket fashion, however, is new. It is in the feminine manner and has a: sentimental value. that has again..come to be. noticed by women of fashion. _ . _ Topaz, zircon and amethyst are also popular, and set,. with gold, haye added color depth. Moonstong flowers set with rubies or emeralds in gold" are lovely. j Reret for spring. There &ro rings dnd also bracelets to match these necklaces ang also earrings. ~ .. â€" The wearifg of small jewelled lockets on‘ slender chains is a new fashlon. Single strand neck: laces of beads are also being seen. Pearls, rose quartz, amber, lapig lazuli and jade ate the favourites. . «These colored, less expensive gem stones make beautiful accent notes "Glamour" Defined Jewelled Locket Fashion Revived "Walking?" Sally‘s eyes shone. her breath came with a liitle rush of relief and joyousness. "Oh, Cc_â€" ey, I‘m so glad. I was afraid. ho might never walk â€" the samr>, 1 mean â€" as he had. Maybe, betors long, he will be able to ski again." "I hardly think so." Corey would not have answered quite so bluntly had ho known what a blow it would be to Sally. "He‘ll hardly take up skiing in a hurry. He‘s walking, Sally. But he probably will always walk with a bad limp." "He‘s coming along." Corey now glanced up at Sally. There had been something in her voice. That new noto of quietness, of stability that somehow seemed to be what markâ€" ed the difference in her that he had sensed. "As well as can be expectâ€" ed. He hobbled about on crutches, after more than a month lying flat, He‘s walking now again." .. She had had reports, of course, from Doctor Barnes through her from Doctor Barnes through her father‘s lawyer, who had handled the doctor‘s bills and hospital exâ€" penses. But she wanted to hear from someone who knew Dan, who had seon him just recently, talked with him. "How is Dan?" Sally asked. This ‘was the reason she had welcomed Corey so heartily, had been glad to see him. This was the question she bhad been waiting to ask him. She wondered how she could ask it now so quietly, when it meant so much to her, when during these long terâ€" rible months that had been the only question weighing on her mind. He put a subtle implication ‘beâ€" hind his light words. For the goal Corey had set his mind on winning was Sally herself. "By the way," he added, not giving her a chance to say whether she was going to have time for him, or not, "have you forâ€" gotten you owe& ‘me payment on thatdare we made? Check, Sally, my sweet? About.Dan Reynolds, I mean. That was one man you failâ€" ed to tame and get to eat out of your pretty hand." Corey was so preoccupied in lighting a cigaret that he did not notice the swift flash of pain in Sally‘s bright eyes, or the color ebb from her cheeks, ‘"That‘s one reason for this visit. I came to collect." Dangling on a Siender Chain About Milady‘s Neck : I set out to do something I wt;xi'; give up till I make the grade." me, I‘m going to be such a dmerefit guy! I‘ve got my mind all set on a certain â€"goal. And you know when PATTERN 2530 (To Be Continued) "s > 4w en ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO t ktverm o and fill with meat mixture. . Arâ€" range in baking dish and cover. Bake in moderate oven 1 hour, Re: move covéer, sprinkle top with crumbs and butter and bake until crumbs are brown. Parboil onions 15 min., drain. Mix meat, seasoning, shortening and catsup. Remove center of onions Oneâ€"eighth teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons meited butter 2 tablespoors tomato catsup l .qup grated cheese 14 cup fine bread crumbs. 6 large onions % ‘cup chopped beef 14 teaspoon salt Oneâ€"eighth teaspoon pepper 1 cup milk w 2 cups cooked spinach A 2 hardâ€"cooked eggs Melt the fat and add flour, scaâ€" sonings; stir in the milk. Bring to the boiling point, stirring constantâ€" ly. Arrange the hot spinach in a serving dish and slico the eggs over the top. Pour on the hot sauce and serve at once, Serves 4. Stuffed Onicns Spinach Mexican Styie 1 tablespoon butter 2 tablespoons flour 14 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon eurry powder Spinach Timbales 212 cups canned spinach 2 tablespoons butter i% teaspoon salt Few grains pepper 2 teaspoonsâ€"lemon juice : 2 eggs Drain spinach and chop fine. Heat; add buiter, salt, pepper and lemon juice. Add the eggs slightly beaten and mix well. Place in cusâ€" tard cups set in a pan of water and bake in a moderate oven until firm. Serve with white sauce. â€" Garnish with hard cooked eggs. Time in the oven 25 minutes. Temperature 325 degrees. ie Ixe /.ktf!xl_a& Spinach Loaf 2 cups boiled spinach 2 eggs z 1 teaspoon choppad onion 1% cups bread crumbs 1 teaspoon sait 14 teaspoon peppor 1%4 cups milk Chop cooked spinach fine, add erumbs, eggs slightly beaten, onâ€" fons. seasoning and millk. Turn into a buttersd mould, place in pan of water and cook in a moderate oven urtil firm, If you would take grandmother‘s advice try this: # e Dandelion and Spinach Greens Gather freshly grown dandelions, when the dew is still on them. Use equal amount of dandelion and spinach. Pick carefully, throw into cold water and wash in several waâ€" ters previously salted. Piunge the dandelions into boiling water, cook oneâ€"half hour before adding the spinach. Continue the cooking until tender, then drain and add butter, salt and pepper. Mix welle turn into warm dish and serve with hard boiled eag. The addition of t spinâ€" ach ‘prevents the bitterness of the dandelion from predominating â€" the combination will be found to be very pleasing. New spinach will be on the marâ€" ket in a few days and while it is very wholesome just plain boiled with as little water as possible (do you remember?), try mixing with a little buiter and cream and seaâ€" goning. This makes it a very appeâ€" tizing dish, For variety, sprinkle the above with hard boiled eggs chopped fine. Then another method (after boiling the spinach and then draining) is to place in a baking dish alternately with a rich cream sauce, which has been previously made. Sprinkle the top with butterâ€" ed crumbs and powdered hard boilâ€" ed eggs. Piace in a slow oven for about 20 minutes. This too is very satisfying. 4 One can always lure the family into eating plenty of vegetables, if one has attractive ways in which to serve them, and lots of variety. i GREENS FOR HEALTH Now that spring seems to be realâ€" ly here, the main topics of the day are "housecleaning" and "‘spring tonics", both very closely related to the homemaker. If you desire real zip, try increasing your green vegetables and salads ‘and reduce the starch diet as much as posâ€" sible. At least two cooked vegeâ€" tables and one raw vegetable every day should be the inviolable ruie of every homemaker, Ee L en uindieinl o ratle un en oi in c e tniny . As though they swing soft light uponthe wa And there is rhythm in itâ€"I can hear & ~"_ A‘prayer begin} a chanted lullabye; ,;â€" _ : ~~ _ "Or,â€"al the Kindâ€"and swift endearing terms i a~ . â€"That. mothergâ€"know, are gently ‘passing by! : e te MBE Stisste es Ti s ie w ... My ACotherâ€"Alfâ€"Hife foveliness I know â€"? _ "*, "~6 With Sunlight dfst; and the purple way a !xs: m\:ilaabufiimmmew;beside a door.. ,;,: fremcad %qe werds gan drew mg.back to hold ground heré 5‘;:'3%15; ffififi%ll_s,éhn:; all the hurt away. . . And Tâ€"amBFACeEF MBR PI ever beâ€" _ _ it iT e dtUHthis that‘"we keep Mother‘s:Day? »; â€"â€" es Aed | APBBTRES Prat sopen it â€"Helen nWd IMTE Ig We oosl 2s tesumie o EL. Leg Bapiroi. us n By SWEET WORD: "MOTHER" SADIE B. CHAMBERS I do not know why one word is more fair Than other words;, but voices when they sa That mother word grow sweeter, tenderer, riiPeiite Aynemvnn mo o en moin tonlnet SNL UAE eAtaiiier /. T HECHEE CC L1 0 on that day also to many intelliâ€" gent â€"women will come the recog nition of the fact that it is not natural to mothers just to sit silâ€" ent and receive bouquets. Active, beneficial service is part of the very nature of motherhood and on this their day, with the world at war, we may ask that all give yet another gift to their children, the gift of democracy. Cherish Freedom, Liberty It is an example that the,mo_th; ers of all democratic‘ countries may well emulate, for the declarâ€" ation they are being asked to. upâ€" hold is significafit'â€".'a pledgé to help childrenâ€"to understand, â€"cher< ish and guard freedom of speech, press, assembly, worship and petiâ€" tion; and also "to teach children by example that they should reâ€" spect the rights and ‘opinions of To give expression to appreciaâ€" tion is the duty of sons and daughters on Mother‘s Day but on that idar malan" Falenamalins, lase Should _ Pledge Themselves to Help Children Grow Up In Unâ€" derstanding of All That Demâ€" ocracy Means ~ Mothers Can Be Aid To Democracy Scalloped Cabbage 2 cups cooked shredded cabbage 2 cups white savce 2 cups soft bread crumbs 14 cup grated cheese Mix cabbage and white sauce toâ€" gether. Put a layer of cabbage in a greased baking dish, add a layer of crumbs. Repeat until all the in gredients are used. Sprinkle with cheese. Bake in hot oven until brown (about 20 min.), READERS, WRITE IN: Miss _ Chambers welcomes personal letters from interestâ€" ed readers. She is pleased to receive suggestions on topics for her column, and is even ready to listen to your "pet peeves." Requests for recipes Oor special menus are ia order. Address your letters to "Miss Sadie B. Chambers, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto." ©@ Many people can safely drink tea and coffee. Many othersâ€"and 4ll childrenâ€" should never drink them. If you are one of these, try Postum‘s 30â€"day test. Buy Postum and drink it instead of tea and coffee for one month. Then, if you do not feel better, return the container top to General Foods, Limited, Cobourg, Ontario, and we‘ll gladly refund full purchase price, plus postage. Postum is delicious, economical, easy to preâ€" pare, and contains no caffeine. Mr. Caffeineâ€"Nerves Foiled Again! es E2000 RAZIICARTNTS MV CARUIOE, m oi s l v:.:: B * me nnp t meenye 22 * tvrian Reses i nalk . in P . 9’2' E en runeamal anamo Maa . °* Mn a -fi&én Welshime;.‘ § S POe for every week hevear Weits., "._ °C ~~® Técipp "Or every week n the year Writefor your oeg &um““?fimk «9 fia."a: E: \ TEREX, ~X e / ,_,%%nm_s t .and bead .‘ud'm Bougy 3 artmce ucn?k'. e walu» : ISSUE NO. 19â€"a49 Secret study, silent thought, i after all, the mightiest agent i human affairs. It won‘t be was easy to heritage. It will mean voting intelligentâ€" lyâ€" and abiding by laws. It will mean being able to see the faults in povernment, the things to be doneâ€"without condemning demoâ€" cracy, It will mean teaching children to be selfâ€"reliant and "proud" in the oldâ€"fashioned sense â€" too *‘provud" to want or expect someâ€" thirg for nothing. Ic will mean foregoing the smug> little remarks that, can damn a whole group of people. n eopimesse i others if they would defend their own, and thus preserve their heriâ€" tage of liberty against any and all doctrines opposed to the tradiâ€" tions of the nation. Participating In Democracy Keeping such a pledge will take tolerance, judgment, foreâ€" bearance. It will mean participatâ€" ing in democracyâ€"instead of sitâ€" ting back waiting for someone else "to do something about that," writes Ruth Millett. on t be easy. But it never easy to leave children a fine s penetra provide: mobiles while 18 to Heated Sand B On Icy Hig G Billion Cach By Europear sport popul eolon; "bull" Mary Mate ed f They éhat tion not int« €x th pa m: Onta those H Vast C Under rite hot W er Hobby Hid in No Quam;j ior to Largest}

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