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Durham Review (1897), 29 Aug 1940, p. 2

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s l t a" #g The rose may smell as sweet by «uy other ramo but women will fect a little smarter during the f2) and winter of 1940 and 1941 if vley are wearing costumes of "ga>va" mstead of "wine red" or "zemvie" instead of plain brown. Every year or so the differen: shadings of the good old colors children learned in kindergarton will blossom forth under new names to fascinate the ladies and conâ€" found the gontlemen, This year, erdinary red is ealled "bleeding heart" and ‘Hirdoo" red supplants the "firemen‘s red" of only yester day. Green is "frosty pin>," and in the blue department are "brooding" "f*mch" and ‘"angelica." Maybe you will havre a sport coat of "potato skin" brown, or a dinner frock in "reszency" purple. Your neutralâ€"coiâ€" ered garmconts have jumped the feuce,. to be known as "blue fox." *It doesn‘t make sense," one man zrzgued, when he heard the new colâ€" ers recited. "It is as if the bours on the clock, for instance, weren‘t zood erough to last from year to year, and one year we referred to 106 e‘clock as angel‘s wing tims, or 2 o‘etock as the hearts of gold hour Shorter skirts â€" a matter of ecâ€" enomy and not of fashion â€" are to be the style for British women, (2) Slickâ€"fitting jackets for suits with a wellâ€"defined waistline, big pockets â€" four is the ordinary allowance on a coat. Jackets come about four inches below the hipâ€" bone. loose times waist (4) Fur being on the "luxury" list . its use as trimming is strictly rationed. The majority of wrapâ€" around coais are plain and collarâ€" less; some have a shallow fur colâ€" lar, and a parrow band of fur outâ€" Iiming the pockets. For Economy For weeks new styles have been «displayed and gzenerally can be summed up briefly as follows: (1) Shorter skirts for the dayâ€" time. "We must save material," say the desizgners, so hemâ€"lines are 17 er inches above the ground â€" about two inches shorter than a year ago. Health First Aid to Charm New Color Names For Fall Clothes Shorter Skirts HEALTH AND SPIRIT More potent than beauty alone, eharm comes from within, having is roots in physical and mentai wellâ€"being. It springs from health and vitality and a lilting spirit. Without this basic wellâ€"being, charm is nonâ€"existent or so deenâ€" ly buried it cannot make itself felt. Charm and buoyant health are so intimately related that seldom does one exist without the other. Frobably no attribute is more greatly desired by women than charm, that elusive quality definâ€" ed as "the power of alluring or delighting; fascination, and whatâ€" ever gives this power." If a woman has this, she does not need to follow the whims of fashions of a season. She really has something that will stay with her as long as she lives. YOoU ARE WHAT YOU EAT First objective in acquiring charm, then, is to keep bodily func.ions in a state of high efficâ€" tercy. No cosmetics bought over a counter will clear a skin mudâ€" disd by overâ€"indulgence in fats, sugars and starches. What you eat and drink determines your complexion, your figure, the sheen of your hair â€" even the eondition of your fingernails! From the outside you can only cleanse and lubricate, or disguise imperfections. To meet everyday heaith needs, contributing to vital charm, plenâ€" ty of protective foodsâ€"vitamins and mineralsâ€"are necessary. It wasn‘t the jungle fasiâ€" ness, the heat, the wild aniâ€" mals or the insects that botherâ€" ed Marcus Tuttle during his sojourn in the wilds of Nicarâ€" agua; it was his blond hair. The only trouble he had with the natives, the 22â€"yearâ€"old exâ€" plorer said upon his return, to New York last week, was "girl srouble." Women Proved Jungle Horror (3) PRETTY MUCH SAME British Women Also Like The Slick Jackets. With Big Poc: kets "Guava" For Wine Red and "Zombie" for Plain Brown Protective Foods Are Neces sary to Good Health Wraparound coats are very with a full back, are someâ€" beited, or closeâ€"fitting to the and flare outwards at the If they had missed the trail they might, with one misstep, plangs over tho side of the canyon, 5,000 feet in depth. Sally shivered. "And what else can we do?" she asked Corey. She easily could have given up, too; her every breath was an agony to her lungs, her hands and feet were heavy cakes of ice. "We can‘t stay here all night, We‘d freeze to death. They‘d dig us out in the spring â€" and we wouldn‘t Last week: Seeing Dan only coonâ€" vinces Sally that she still loves him. Later that day Sally and Corâ€" ey lose their trail in a storm. be a pretty sight!" "Shut up!" Corey snapped. "I mean â€" don‘t talk that way. Even in fun." He knew a person could easily die of exposure on such a night. He prided himself on being a good sport, but this was a bit too thick for him. CAST OF CHARACTERS SALLY BLAIR â€" heroine. She had everything that popularity could win her, except 12 cups % inch bread cubes 2 teaspoons salt 1 cup allâ€"bran 1% teaspoon pepper 3 tablespoons minced onion Â¥ teaspoon poultry seasoning % cup fat 1% cups stock or water Combine bread cubes with allâ€"bran. Saute onion in fat and add to bread mixture. Add seasonings and stock which may be made by dissolving 2 bouillon cubes in 1% cups hot water. Mix well.. d DAN REYNOLOS â€" hero. He might have had Sally but while he was king on skis : COREY POR»ER was king of the social whirl. So . .. But go on with the story. "I‘m going on," Sally said flatly. "You can come with me, or not â€" suit yourself." She plunged blindly ahead, using the tiny wheel of each ski pole to feel her way and lend support, inching along, floundering and groping. If your taste and budget call for pork chops, cram them full of delicious allâ€"bran stuffing and surround them with slices of pineapple and sauteed apple. It‘s amazing what a wonderful looking platter it makes! Better have a good supply of chops, though, for they taste even better than they look! Here‘s what the recipe says: "Wait! Wait for me!‘‘ Corey panted. a few feet behind her. The snow was so heavy now that a few steps took one almost out of the other‘s sight. They dared not beâ€" 4 double thick pork, veal or lambl egg chops 1 tablespoon water Salt, pepper 4 cups corn flakes 1 revipe allâ€"bran stufifing Fat Slit chops through the middle to form a pocket. Season inside with salt and pepper. Fill with stuffing and fasten opening with skewers or sew together with coarse string. Beat egg and mix with water. Crush corn flakes into fine crumbs. Dip chops in egg and then in crumbs. Season with salt and pepper and brown on both sides in hot fat. Cover and place in moderately hot oven (375 F.) for about 45 minutes or until meat is cooked through. Yield: 4 servings. : T 12 cups % inch bread cubes 1 cup allâ€"bran 3 tablespoons minced onion 4 cup fat ___ Use with poultry, crown roast or press into baking dish and bake in moderately hot oven (400 F.) about 20 minutes. ® SERIAL STORY to any single Military Address Overseas _ CANADIAN SOLDIERS IN C_A.5.F. UNITS ONLY Mail Order and Remiltance to:â€"â€" OVERSEAS DEPARTMENT W. C. MACDONALD INC., SKI‘S THE LiIMIT Bex 1929, Place d‘Armes, ISSUE. 35â€"‘40 CHAPTER XXIV DRESSâ€"UP. THE PORK CHOPS FOR "COMPANY" DINNERS ALLâ€"BRAN STUFFED CHOPS BY ADELAIDE HUMPHRIES STUFFING She thought of Dan. If only they had taken his advice. Dan who now knew these mountains so well, who would not have missed the trail. For Sally had learned that Dan had been staying at Lake Placid for several months, instructing, guidâ€" ing parties, getting in form for the meet. NC USE THINKING But there was no use thinking of Dan now, she told herself grimâ€" ly. Dan, whom she might never seo again. Who had asked her not to go up into the mountains today. come separated for even a few seâ€" conds. "It‘s hopeless. We can‘t go on in this storm," Corey said. His voice broke as he spoke. Dan would never have given up, she thought. Not until there was absolutely no hope. She had resolyâ€" ed she would not think of him, yet it was this thought that made her struggle on, against all hope as it seemed. Once in a while the storm lifted for a second and then she could see 10 or 12 feet ahead, the tangled underbrush weighted all down with its whito burden, the tall pines bent with the wind‘s wild fury. Sally waited, but she could not help a slight feeling of contempt. Corey should have been the one to lead the way, to have lent her the courage. "We must go on," Sally returnâ€" ed through lips that were stiff and almost blue. She had fallen down twice, once she had struck a tree. Even rer heavy woolen parka and thick ski knickers did not keep out the cold. She struggled on, panting, suckâ€" ing great drafts of icy air, automaâ€" tically striking out, forcing her aching limbs onward. Corey groped and lunged on beside her, now beâ€" hind her. % "WE CAN‘T GO ON" "I tell you we can‘t go on," he yelled at her ones more, and Sally stopped to look at him. Poor Corey, he couldn‘t take it, after all. Fot all his smug pride, his arrogance and superiority, he lacked Dan‘s drive, resourcefulness. She saw him with crystal clearness in this blindâ€" ing moment. She knew then thai she never could have really loved Corey. She never â€"could ‘have marâ€" ried him, though she wore his ring. "We‘ll have to find the trail. Corey," she said. "We‘ll have to keep on â€" until we drop." She was so weary now it really did not matter whether they kert on or not. It would have been much easier to have given up, muc} simpler. But something within Saliy Blair would not let her do thai She had been born a fightcr. Sho would have to keep on fighting to the end. What was that she heard above the storm, the angry wailing of ths wind? She lifted her head, throwâ€" ing back the hood of her parka to listen, She heard it again, a long, high call â€" could someone else be lost in the storm, too? A HUMAN VOICE Corey thought he heard it too. COPYRIGHT, 1938 NEA SERVICE, INC. They tried to yell in response, but the wind tore the cry from their lips, smothering it. They waited & moment, then tried again. ""Yoohoo! Yoohoo . . . here We are! Hi, there!" Hope gave them fresh impetus. They plunged on again, pausing every now and then to lift their voices, to call out, to listen for that answering call that seemed to be drawing nearer and nearer. "There‘s a snowshoe track!" Corâ€" ey cried. He pointed at the ground with trembling fingers. There on the driven whiteness was a wide, webâ€"like print. "Whoever it is must have crossed here a short while ago, for no track could last. We‘ll turn here," Sally directed. "Try to follow them." There was a curve of tracks, fresher and deeper, al though some were already blurred. Sally raised her voice to call out again. They floundered on, 400 yards or so, through the thick timber. It seemed to Sally that the storm was lifting a bit. There was a break in the leaden sky, a tiny patch of blue smiling through. The snowdrops were larger, they did not fall so fast. "Look!" Sally gasped. Coming toward them was the figure of a man. A figure that even in this moâ€" ment was familiar, raising an arm to wave to them. "It‘s Dan!" Sally gasped. Dan, coming to meet them, to rescue them, Dan who must have braved this storm for their sakes, fearing they would be lost in it. His faco was crimson from the cold, his lashes frozen, but his eyes were grave and steady and his blue lips parted in a smile as he came up to them. "Are you all right?" he asked. He spoke to both of them. But his look was just for Sally. "I was afraid I‘d never find you, darling," he said. With a little cry, forgetting Corâ€" ey, forgetting the storm, forge‘ting everything, Sally fell into his arms. She buried her face against lis big. strong chest. She was no longer weary, ready to drpp from exhausâ€" tion, weak with fear. Dan had come for her. He had come back to her. He had called her "darling," he held her now, as though he would never let her go, as though their own special world had been found for them again. "There was a time â€" and not so long ago either â€" when women pilâ€" ed on glittering trinkets with reckâ€" less abandon," says a wellâ€"known designer of smart costume jewelry. "Today, however, extremes have gone out and extreme good taste has come in, The current mode is one of simplicity,. with dresses a lot slimmer; hats geared to fit the head; graceful, plain pumps designâ€" ed to flatter feet and ankles and give them a wellâ€"bred look; jewelry created to supply one or two draâ€" matic accents to the costume," the stylist goes on. Fall Jewelry More Elegant Collections of fall jewelry strike a new high in elegance and subtleâ€" ty. wear with success, and is often seen in dresses with balanced silâ€" houetteâ€"fullness concentrated at the front of the skirt. Experts at forecasting believe that necklaces will be tho most imâ€" portant single jewelry item for fall. And that the flat, collar type of necklaces will prevail. For daytime, gold and silver are equally prominâ€" ent. Combinations of pearl and of gold are second choice. The new and interesting composition baubles of jet and amber promise to be popâ€" ular. We have been talking about the bloused silhouette for someâ€" time now, and you may have alâ€" ready included in your wardrobe dresses and jacket costumes with bloused backs. There is a newer looking type of bloused back in dresses. This is the high blouse. Sometimes it is manipulated so that at first glance it looks like a cape at the back, or a combinâ€" asion of cape and hood. It is really a blouse, caught under at a high line and in no way deâ€" tracting from a slim, long and moulded waistline. It is the sort of dress that a slim woman can High Blousing Balances Style She loves an Antiâ€"Nazi . . . and as the enemy of Hitler she must die. 66 99 Mortal Storm is the powerful story what happens to life in a happy German household when Nazâ€" ism comes to power. Ornaments Are Not So Very Showy as in Recent Seasons â€" Greater Subtiety Seen T WATCH FOR IT! Fanaticism Tears Families Asunder! (To Be Concluded) OoNTARIO ARCHIVES â€" TORONTO "IT‘S DAN!" % '.P"l By SADIE B. CHAMBERS® More About Peachgs Last year we went into the different canning methods for fruit rather thoroughly, hence I have been saying little about it this year. However since I have received so many letters comâ€" plaining about fruit not "keepâ€" ing,’: I feel duty bound to write a féew remarks on the subject, for conserving fruit is of vital importance this year. ten to your ‘"pet peeves." Reâ€" quests for recipes or special menus are in order. Address your letters to "Miss Sadie B. Chamâ€" ers, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto." Send stamped, â€" selfâ€" a pool fed by a spfiné,V'Qh;;; thousands of fish live. They are a species of kiuifisii;'su;wfi'-;or: vof the Ice Age. READERS WRITE IN! _ Miss Chambers welcomes perâ€" sonal _ letters from â€" interested readers. She is pleased to receive suggestions on topics for her column, and is even ready to lis i kave no desire to sound boastâ€" ful, but all fruit which I have canned is in perfect condition and once again I will repeat my favourite method. It is true we have had a very wet sgason; your personal selection of fruit must be done with the utmost care, never buying after heavy rains; all this is most important. Howâ€" ever, there are other matters very important. Be sure that your jars are all well scrubbed with a soft brush and soap and water,â€" every corner and crevice, rinsed thoroughly and if possible dried in the sun. Then just before placâ€" ing your fruit in the jar, rinse with boiling water (be sure you know the trick how to protect your jar). These first steps are the most important to obviate all danger of spoiled fruit. Those of you who have filed an article from this column last year "Hints on Canning" refer to it; for those who have not these helps I might say I consider the next most imâ€" portant thing is to be sure the cloth you are using (for wiping your jars top and elsewhere) cloth is sterile. Having tried kettle boiling and the different "pack methods" I much prefer this type, it is simâ€" ple, sterilizes and cooks the fruit perfectly but not to a breakingâ€" up stage: PEACH CONSERVE 15 large ripe peaches 1 lemon, 1 orange and 1 grapeâ€" fruit 1 teaspoon almond flavoring 4 teaspoon nutmeg 1 cap blanched shredded alâ€" monds Sugar equal quantities for peaches. Peel and slice peaches, add orange, grapefruit and lemon. Cook for %% hour then add sugar and cook for 45 minutes until a marmalade consistency. Add nuts and flavorings; cook 5 minutes. Pour into sterile glasses; when cool seal with paraffin. If deâ€" sired !& cup chopped maraschino cherries may be added. CANTALOUPE AND PEACH CONSERVE 4 ecups peaches 4 cups cantaloupe Juice and grated rind of 1 lemen and 1 orange 1 tablespoon chopped citron peel & cup of blanched and shreddâ€" ed almonds. Cook all the fruit for %% hour. Add sugar and cook 12 minutes, stirring constantly; add nuts and cook 5 minutes. Porr into hcot sterile glasses. When cool seal with paraffin. I Cnlifornia’g Death Valley has envelope if you wish Women Are Urged To Buy Products Of Home Farms In viow of the adverse financial exchange, and awaro that Canada as a great agricultural country is producing requirements of this natâ€" ure, Canadian women are beins asked to refrain from buying imâ€" ported â€"farm products. In a letter from Mrs. Fre& Graham Millar, of Hamilton, president of the Provinâ€" cial Council of Women, the {ollowâ€" ing appeal is made: e Nee l ce malad "Considering the state of our adâ€" verso financial exchange, and the need of strengthening our home market, let us refrain from buying imported farm products." TO HELP EXCHANGE Mrs, Millar also states that the latest news received by the special conservation committeo appointed at London, is that all last year‘s pack of fruits and vegetables has been absorbed. The canners now announce that with the coâ€"operaâ€" tion of the women buyers they are prepared to preserve all the coming crop. It is being urged therefore, that women order in advance by the case, and consequently conserve all their strength for other urgent dutâ€" ies which cannot delegated. EXCLUSIVE LAURA WHEELER BASKET CHAJR SET IN EFFECTIVE CROCHET CROCHETED CHAIR SET PATTERN 2615 The same medallion repeated fills this easily crocheted basket. It‘s pleasant summer work so start crocheting it now for your own chairs or as a donation for a bazaar. Pattern 2615 contains directions; illustrations of it and stitches; photograph of set; 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. wâ€"â€" 4 PCE â€"«2 i s 1}{5 es es AT nesat A:;y}:xs‘ s ns n > ntscs <eapetpes 4 PR Rmcnewss iss soee smy o oo stee tS o Mn 8 x s Te Nee ortee se a mon T o m oc C TPmmne > " * Mn imaiinnle ce ds OS ‘~C Poulncei enc ofoheutions. _ _ CA d css i & s P Bs > 3 s ies s 47 s > > as> Encaite 3 pipN npTioN® & ts S > Ss 2PB _ _A AMA Ts CROCHETED CHAIR SET Canada is Producing, Agriculâ€" turally, Enough for its Own Requirements The Royal Canadian Air Force Manning Depotwill remain at its official station in Exhibiâ€" tion Park. See their absorbâ€" ing Ground Show, and the ing ty -:-:â€"-â€"-‘wvw- at the Exhibition this year. 1940 promises one of the most spectacular lists of sports events in Exhibition Tickets at Exhibition Ticket Offce, 44 Adelaide St. W., WA. 2296: Moodey‘s, 90 Ring 6t W., EL 3i9es Rntore, is Sloos be w "Kegin. COPR. 1940, NEEDLECRAFT SERVICE, 4NC. satisfying! Enjoy it after every meal! Millions do! _________, pleasure in the genuine, longâ€" lasting flavor of Doublemint Gum. Cooling, refreshing, See war vohicies, built for troops of the G‘?in. s: help win the war...learn how manufacturers of all kind fpkhh_cfiofisttu-; Famed throughout the world is the big Goldman Band. This year it will be a feature of the Exhibitionâ€"playing nightly from the Band Sholl. Sit comfortably under the skies and liston â€"no charge. PATTERN 2615 PATTERN 2615 Ontario Butter C Much H D n M i m« th €] 14 m The popular P. Judge Hardy how to paint a of Ann Ruthe it came in very picture, *Prid She helped fix were used in aD0Uu King Oysters WillF. n »i Candle s« Maria * crease Sh () Juiy 1939 Mont Will Ad Caicium nadian f Unites®

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