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Durham Review (1897), 22 Aug 1940, p. 6

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spvnnoce c min that persevering eye will discover a star.â€"Octave Feuillet. careivily plannmed color scheme. trguble at all you may have a neat, wellâ€"zroomed looking room with a the curtains, so that with no dresses. These are wide flounces which have contrasting colored pipâ€" ings, solid embroidery in chorry patterns and applied motifs finishâ€" odd with fagottinc. BUY THEM TO MEASURE These serviceable modern finishâ€" es put an end to the uneven hems and skimpy widths that used to be a trial to homemakers who liked their curtains spic and span,. Nowâ€" adays, you can buy glass curtains that will fit almost every size winâ€" dow since the lengths come in three or more measurements. FLOUNCES FAVORED One pretty new style of curtain for summer is made of lovely fine voile with genmerous fullness and with eyelet embroidery flounces in & Victorian daisy pattern These curtains come in snowy white, in flattering petal pink, in cool, shadâ€" owy biues or in cheerful, sunny datâ€" fodil yellow. One curtain in this new style has flounces as varied as the trimmings of this season‘s smart new styles in glass curtains €arry labels guaranteeing that the shrinkage will nevet spoil their porâ€" foct fit. The newest curtains, taking a tip from lingerie fashions, are made of lfovely transparent cottons â€" marâ€" quisettes, dotted nets, and creaseâ€" resistant voiles. This year, many Many homemakers realize that the best way to make a bedroom look cool, dainty and restful during the hot weather is to anchor clouds of colorful crisp curtains at the Dressing table skirts and bed Hope is like the sky at night: new hats have a long back line and this is necessitated by showing the hair in front. This line is often achieved by the use cf a close‘fitâ€" ting cap of a knitted weave in wool that holds the brim firmly on the head. There are little pompadours that hardly stand up at all; both they and their woarers peep out, looking over the world in a very shy and embarrassed manner. Then there aro the frank pompadours that are waved ard stand up four or five inches and their owners, while selfâ€" conscious, hold their heads highâ€" more, we believe because they are afraid their proud poompadours wil‘ come tumbling down. SsHOW HAIR IN FRONT Both large and small hats are made to emphasize the pompadour coiffures. Many have an indentation under the brim to keep the pompaâ€" dour from becoming a bang. Most Pompadours are here. We had heard tiny, almost imperceptible whispers and then suddenly we did awaken one morning to find that pompadours were hero. Whether they are here to stay, is difficult to say. But since millinery is boing deâ€" signed to accommodate the new coiffure, they are here to stay for awhile, at least. The Pompadour Has Returned Ann Rutherford‘s highâ€"low coiffure adapts itself to either daytime or this hair style for the subâ€"deb. Ti# front hair is brushed into a soft wave that forms in bangs on the Newest Ones Take Tip From Fashions in Lingerie Introducing a New Coiffure All the Rage â€" Hats Desi cuy M How could she go on pretonding now? How could she be the glamor girl, always laughing and gay? How could she live through these next days knowing Dan was so near, yet lost to her forever, knowing that she must go on being the Sally Blair who wore Corey‘s ring on her engagement finger? She knew the answer to a lot of other questions too. This meeting, instead of convincing her that she could put Dan out of her heart, had shown her that she still believed in him, whether he ever believed in her again or not, that she could neâ€" ver forget him. "I wish you both all the happi ness in the world," Dan returned. Which world do you mean? Sally wanted to ask. Mine, or yours, Dan? But she knew the answer to that question. She knew now that Dan would never come back. He hadn‘t belonged in her world. He had been right in going away, iQht, do! intheg "Yes," Corey spoke up, he could not keep the smug satisfaction out of his tone. "Congratulations are in order again. Since Sally‘s what I do "I guess that‘s right," Dan said. His glance went to her left hand. She‘d taken off her mittens, on her third finger Corey‘s diamond sparkled in the bright sun. "I see you‘ve got what you wanted, too," Dan added. "I‘m fine," Sally said. "Never betâ€" ter, thank you." She tossed her dark curls. He must see how gay sho was, how right her world. "Oh, well, you‘ve got what you wanted â€" at last," she said. "You‘ve made the Olympics this time, Dan." Was that all he had to say to her? Sally wondered. Didn‘t he know what just seoing him did to her? Wasn‘t his heart hammering very painfully, too? "I‘m very well, thank you," he returned, taking her hand, but only for a brief moment. "And how are you, Sally?" he added, though there seemed no need to ask that, either. Sally‘s dark eyes had nover been brighter, she had never looked more lovely. "We came to congratulate you on winning," Sally said, holding out her hand. "How are you, Dan?" There was no reed to ask, this was the Dan of old, sturdy and strong as the mountains he set out to conâ€" quer, If Dan was surprised when they approached him, he did not betray it. His coior, underneath the smooth decp tan, might have deepâ€" ened a bit, but his gray eyes were grave and stcady. never refused a dare, which was practically what Sally‘s remark, ‘"You‘re not afraid to go are you?" had meant. Last week: At Lake Placid Saily sees Dan again, talks with him in the belief she may be able thus to forget him forever." There had been nothing for Corâ€" ey to do but to follow Sally. Corey could win her, except DAN REYNOLDS â€" hero. He might have had Saily but while he was king on skis ‘COREY POR.ER was king of the social whirl. So . . . But go on with the story. CAST OF CHARACTERS SALLY BLAIR â€"â€" heroine. She TRY IT THE "SALADA" way mm a Nn P en Peccd belinde ind ind Sm Infuse 6 heaping teaspoons of Salada Black lea in a pint of fresh ing _ water. 3"'6 :.ngu:'a.! liquid into 2â€"quart container; while hot, .aa“%“"'.."‘?,; cups sugar and juice of 2 lemons, strained; stir until sugar is dissolved; Till containe: with cold water. Do not allow tea to cool before adding cold wate, o2 faunl watet. tea to cool before adding cold water or liquid will become cloudy. Serve with chipped ice. The sbove makes 7 fif sirues ISSUE. 34â€"‘40 © SERIAL STORY SKI‘S THE LIMIT BY ADELAIDE HUMPHRIES safer to walk. She thought of the divide, if they missed the trail, that sheer drop of more than 5,000 feet. No one could manage that big jJump and stop himseK with a Chrisâ€" tie, not even Dan. They â€"plowed ahead, heads beat, ‘"We‘d better not use our skis," Sally said. They would carry them over a cliff too swiftly! It would be "They‘re just night clouds beginâ€" ning to gather." Corey refused to be alarmed. But even as he spoke a snowflake drifted down. Another followed, and then another. They scrambled to their feet. "I guess we had. better get going," Corey agreed. Now the snow fell with a smothering, soft persistency. The world was being blotted out before their eyes. They could not even see the waterfall that had looked like frozen rain. "I guess our friend Reynolds is the one who is slightly crazy," Corâ€" ey chuckled. "It‘s been a perfect day. I woudn‘t have missed it for anything, would you, my sweet?" "No," Saily returned. But some what absently. She had been watchâ€" ing that leaden patch in the north. While they picnicked it had spread to alarming proportion, like thick gray felt. She called Corey‘s attenâ€" tion to it now, adding that perhaps they had better pack up and start down trail. When they had had their fill, and were gloriously tired with the good weariness of clean physical effort, they stopped for time to rest. Corey built a fire beneath an icy waterfall and they had brought along steaks to broil, buns, a thermos of hot cofâ€" fee. be gayer than she was that day, full of fun and laughter, the way he liked her to be, The skiâ€"ing was perfect what with the sharp wind against their faces, the blood racâ€" ing through their bodies, the music of swift flight, the poetry of pure motion. "Perhaps you‘re right," Dan said. He flinched, a tiny white line was drawn around the stern set of his nice mouth. He knew Sally again thought him a coward. He knew she meant he had forfeited the right to make what she did any concern of his. Sally shrugged her shoulders beâ€" neath her plaid jacket, Why should Dan ask her not to go? It did not matter to him what she did. She would show him that she would not run away from his world. "We‘ll be all right," she said briefly. "I can‘t really see what concern it is of yours, Dan." She know that was a cruel thing to say. But she wanted to hurt him. If only she could make him suffer, as he had made her, make his heart ache. "You‘re crazy, if you do that!" Dan spoke earnestly now. His very grave eyes pleaded with Sally. "Do not try that trail today," he warnâ€" "Why not?" Corey said, as Sally had to him. "We‘re going up into the divide above timber . . . " "You don‘t know what you‘re talkâ€" ing about!" Dan returned roughly. He turned to Corey. "You‘re not goâ€" ing to let her go, are you?" he askâ€" "Blizzard!" Sally laughed. "Why, the sky‘s as clear as a bell. We don‘t mind a little snow, Dan! Even though we don‘t belong in this world." There was bitterness as well as irony in her tone. zard." Dan could tell without lookâ€" ing at the slate sky what the weaâ€" ther promised. He was mountainâ€" bred, mountainâ€"trained. "‘Check," Corey said, using their old phrase for agreoment. He would not refuse to go just because of one gray cloud. On their way they met Dan. He saw their skis and poles, walked over to them. He said, "Hello. You are not really going up today, are you? Don‘t you know the air‘s not right? There‘s going to be a blizâ€" "Do you think there‘s any chance of a storm?" Corey asked, a bit dubâ€" iously. "Maybe we‘d better mot try it toâ€"day, Sally." ‘"Why not?" Sally‘s dark eyes challenged the sky. She wasn‘t at all afraid of danger. She wanted, if anything, to force it, to lose herself in a new fight, That next day Corey and Sally had planned to climb to the top of one of the highest trails. The sky was as serene, as azure as the day before. But far to the north was one slateâ€"colored patch. The air hung too heavy and charged. Corey never had known Sally to COPYRIGHT, 1938 NEAâ€"SERVICE, INC. This being the day of the woman, librarians in theâ€"city. of Toronto thought it would be well to focus some attention on the exploits of â€" women famous in history, those faâ€" mous in toâ€"day‘s life being pretty well known thrcugh the medium of the press. â€" Accordingly, they dug into statisâ€" tics, reference books, encyclopedâ€" ias and private opinion and emergâ€" ed with the following: The three things for which woâ€" men became famous in history were, in order of precedence, beauâ€" â€"~ty, power andâ€"goodness. They have _ no Axplanation, they say, why the These three million women, the merchanising experts say, do 85 per cent. of all the buying in Canada. As such, their opinions are not to be taken lightly or their whims easâ€" ily set aside. Their articulate repreâ€" sentatives are comprised of 91 woâ€" meon‘s editors on daily papers from Halifax to Vancouver, and scores of ladies of the press, feature wriâ€" ters, cookery experts, magazine ediâ€" tors, and the like. THOSE FAMOUS IN HISTORY Three and a half million Canadâ€" ian women members of 30 women‘s organizations with affiliations in cities, towns, and villages in every section of Canada, are being acâ€" corded special.representation at the Canadian National Exhibition this year. 3 Million Women Do 85 Per Cent. of Buying in Canada Suddenly Corey stopped; he sank down on a log. "Sally," he said. "I think we‘re lost. We‘ve missed the trail." It seemed to Sally they had enâ€" dured this torture for hours. The sky .was almost black, the tangled brush weighted with deep snow, the tall pines bent in the wind‘s fury. shoulders touching, not wasting any breath in speech, The wind had now come up. It flung itself against them, lashing their eyos, tearing the breath from their nostrils. The snow struck in sharp pellets with terrific force. As easy to creohet as it is lovely, this set of doilies in the favorâ€" ite pineapple design will be your favorite, too. You‘ll find them just the thing for luncheon or buffet set. Pattern 2608 contains directions for rgaking doilies; illustrations of them and stitches; materials reâ€" quired. _ Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accwepted) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Write y}ainly Pattern Number, your Name and Address. Brush or comib the hair well beâ€" fore it is wet. Apply the shampoo all over the scalp. A little cotton applicator dipped in the shampoo is the best method for this. When well saturated, hold the head over the bowl and with the water a bit warmer than tepid, uso the tips of the fingers for the operation. And there should be a thick lather after a few minutes. Spray to remove the soap, then apply the egg mixture in the same way â€" the white and the yolk together. First separate the white and yolk and beat well. This breaks any of the stringy substance and prevents it from clinging to the hair. A tablespoonful of the shampoo added to the yolk will make the mixture easy to manage. The egg shampoo has long been a favorite, as one can see at once how it rot only cleanses but imâ€" parts a soft fluffiness that means real beauty, We believe when one takes the timeo to do the shampoo it will be. more interesting to make it a special kind. The theory of usâ€" ing only the whites for blonde hair and the yolk for brumettes is oldâ€" fashioned, as the whole egg is good for any and all hair. An Egg Shampoo For Fluffy Hair CROCHETED DoOILIEsSs ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO So Merchandising Experts Say â€" As Members of Woâ€" men‘s Organizations in Domâ€" inion They Are Being Acâ€" corded . Special Representaâ€" tion at the 1940 C.N.E. Here‘s How To Go About Giving Yourself One (To Be Continued) EVERYONE WILL ENVY YOU THESE LAURA WHEELER DOILIES COPR. 1980, NEEDLECRAFT SERVICE, INC. Among those whose charm and beauty made historians attentive were Helen of Troy, Cleopatra, Mary Queen of Scots, and Lady Haâ€" milton. ‘The others had qualities which were less memorable than beauty. C€iting statistics, they explain the woman has been relatively slow in emerging from obscurity. Of the 25 billion people who have seen the light of day since the beginning of the world, only 5,000 have been imâ€" portant enough to be celebrated in histories, encyclopedias, and "Who‘s Who". Of these 5,000, only 200 were women. Biographies and histories of most of these will bo assembled in a special display. goodness should be last, but thore it is. The rest of the dinner should be rather light since either the pie or the shortcake is rather a hearty dessert. For instance you might start the meal with tomato juice mixed with a little lemon Served with cream and sugar, peaches that are perfectly ripe and richly flavored are a dish fit for a king. Fresh peach pie and peach shortcake are treats exâ€" pected by the family each year, now that the peach season is in full swing. Serve these often. Dessert planning these days should not be a difficult problem with all the delicious fruit on the market, from which. to choose. Peaches are always one of the most popular. Perhaps that is why something which rates high is called "a peach." Peaches and Cream â€"Then More Peaches PATTERN 2608 1mbIn +2"° / nave seen teaches me to trust the Creagor for all I have not seen.â€"Emerson. a reply. Next week a discussion on canâ€" ning peaches, jellies and conâ€" serves. PEACH SHORTCAKE 2 cups pastry flour 3 teaspoons baking powder % teaspoon salt 5 tablespoons butter or lard % cup milk 10 peaches % teaspoon nutmeg Sift flour once; measure and add baking powder and salt; sift again into mixing bowl. Cut in shortening with a pastry blender; add milk, cutting in with broad handled knife. Turn on to a slightly floured board and knead very lightly with the tips of the fingers, which must be well flourâ€" ed. Divide dough into halves and roll gently into two rounds not more than %% inch thick. Fit one round into a well greased round 9â€"inch dish and brush with softâ€" ened butter. Put remaining dough on top and bake in hot oven for 20 minutes (400). Reserve some peaches for garnish. Separate halves of shortcake; spread botâ€" tom half with softened butter and half of the fruit which has been previously prepared with fruit sugar sprinkling. Put on top, crust down; spread with butâ€" ter and remaining peaches. Garâ€" nish with whipped cream and sliced peaches, and serve with or without sugar and cream. ting it in with a broad bladed knife. Shape into a round flat cake, roll on a lightly floured borad, roll into a sheet. Fit into a nine inch pan, which has been greased. Pink the edges and fill with the peach halves cut side up. Beat eggs until light, add sugar and a sprinkle of nutmeg; pour over peaches and bake in a hot oven for 12 minutes. Reduce heat and cook until peaches are tender, about 30 minutes longer. â€" PEACH PIE 10 perfectly ripe peaches, 3 eggs, 1 cup sugar, % cup flour, 3 tablespoons butter, 2 tableâ€" spoons butter, / teaspoon salt, 3 tablespoons water. Scald the peaches, slip off the skings and cut in halves. Sift salt and flour and work in lard or butter or equal quantitiee of each. It is best to work in with pastry blender. Add water (very cold) a few drops at a time, cutâ€" tino it in with a broad bladed All I have seen eemepee enc s fatigue and does not deteriorate rapidly with wear, will not burn, is unaffected by water, perspirâ€" ation or alcohol, and cleans easi‘y, in a few years you may not be able to tell whether a girl is wearing garters or not, no matâ€" ter how short the dresses are, for they will probably be made of elastic glass which will neither bend nor crack, and will at all times: be invisible. Braces and belts, toc, may be made of the same material. Elastic glass, a reâ€" cent.Ainvention, yields to body pressure, and then resumes its original shape, like ordinary elâ€" astic. But unlike elastic, it defies B L2 0 b4 L C or wear a goodâ€"looking beach robe. else in recent years. IT DRIES THE SKIN ‘‘No woman over 25 should sur tan from the neck up," is Miss Deâ€" lafield‘s admonition. That‘s because sun dries the skin, resulting im wrinkles, Sho adds that any woman who is more than 40 who sunâ€"tans her body is adding three years to her looks. If you still want tan, it‘s well to sun only about five minutes on your back and five minutes in front each day. The rest of the day stay out cf the direct sunlight. Wear a "It‘s a case of some folk being allergic to sunshine," says Aun De lafield, a New York beauty director, She thinks sun has caused more excess. Not only do the doctors say that, but the beauty exports too, this year. Too much tan is out. Too Much Suntan Harmful To Looks It really isn‘t smart to suntan to lc e 3 good habit of enjoying itafter # every meal! _A Women Are Allergic to It Damages ۩Collapse of esupplies have for other count Canadian fa knowledge on standards mi them, it was st trend, the int hogs far sur with every ind hibition this y important poin pureâ€"bred bree who had not ¢ whire hogs, it the market, an #tock will be sented than ex War‘s influ« miculture will for dealing in Anterest in liv Canadian Nat year, in the o7 stated last w on agricultura sought to a.; mny previous Similayr into products and stated. In eve: Aural classes, « ment time indi tion will be than ever befc War‘s One â€" ady short vacat take so lo afterwards.â€" FARMERS S The â€" wom States and of the census istration hav mon this yed the governm Mand a €hief of P There are t« parties raci rtooting hor is a good sl SHOoP A Young is lost her pi when shoppi We feel sor help remari shopped in An â€" emin working on Toronto Fai wice that w portant in whole string wided the 0 such a han« serving whi the ncighbo Unique & this year b the CNE. most beaut baby monk mre part of mothers ar together t how the nu world funct CH The child wction of D ask every for the lov Mona Mon Florence a presont, bu top honers ley, younge« ther Monk her two o and Maud. Snakes ar «of Ontario : Campbell u children‘s : evercome : are baby s hbatch fron alive. In t are babies blind, othe BANS es at C. Hoge ir Greater in Live: SUMM KEEPI THEY Eaby Mothe Beaut â€"Pe BAB adval

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