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Durham Review (1897), 3 Oct 1940, p. 2

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was shown with tweed stockings to match. They were like gaiters, fastened under the shoes and with a garter fastening at the top. PRACTICAL COSTUMES The changed conditions of the new Paris life and travel were reâ€" flected sharply in many of the most practical costumes. The bicycle has become importâ€" ant again, and one mannequin in a groy jersey cycling costume made the rounds of the salons wheeling her bicycle beside her. To combat the scarcity of silk stockings, one brown tweed suit Costumes for daytime trended to trimmings of natural and dyed furs with intricate fabric workings and big gold and silver buttons. Afterâ€" rcon and evening dresses flashed with gold and jet embroideries. Fur gauntlets were featured for day Andâ€"Once this would have been big newsâ€"skirts for daytime were lengthoned below the knees. SKIRTS WERE LONGER Nearly 50 models displaying the elaborateness and chic of preâ€"war days were brought out by the famâ€" ed style house of Jeanne Lanvin in the first of the winter displays. Paris, with generations of traâ€" dition as the world‘s arbiter of feminine fashion. had its first style show since the fall of France, the middle of September. Ske bid for interest on the one hand with a practical item â€" tweed stockings to offset a scarcity of silk â€" and on the other with nostaigic offerâ€" ings roflecting her oldâ€"time glamor. Paris Showing Tweed Hosiery &A soft dough and follows spoon around bowl. Turn out immediateâ€" ly on floured board and knead 30 meconds. Roll % inch thick. Brush with melted butter, cover with apricots, and sprinkle with sugar. Roll as for jelly roll. Moisten edge and press against roll. Place in ‘greased loaf pan with edge of roll on under side, brush with melted butter, and bake in hot oven (400°* F.) 25 to 30 minutes, or until done. Serve hot with an apricot sauce, if desired. Serves 3. Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder and salt, and sift again. Cut in shortening. Add milk all at once and stir carefully until all flour is dampened. Then stir vigorously until mixture forms shall feature later: _ _ Apricot Rolyâ€"Poly 2 cups sifted cake flour; 2 teaâ€" spoons doubleâ€"acting baking powdâ€" @r; %4 teaspoon salt; 4 tablespoons butter or other shortening; 34 cup milk; melted butter; 1% cups cooked, sweetened apricots, drainâ€" ed z}gd cooled; 6 tablespoons sugar. L N here again I am suggesting zome luscious hot desserts. An apricot rolyâ€"poly made by follow, ing the recipe below will send _ § C 5J anyone away If you must make any mistake, make it on the side of too few pictures, rather than too many, in your home. Hang them only in the important spaces above the larger pieces of furniture. Use there wellâ€"chosen, tastefully framed paintings or prints and leave the smaller areas clear, 2s peaceful oases for the eye to come to rest. Yeu need be concerned only *with the lower lines of the picâ€" tures being on the same level on one wall. Invisible hanging is taken for granted. It is not necessary to use a cord stout enough to supâ€" port a grand piano from your mouldingâ€"nct when those small brass push pins do the job so neatly and simply, out of sight. Just stretch the wire taut beâ€" tween two screwâ€"eyes and hang it from the metal loop: provided. If the moulding must be utilized, hang two wires, one from each corner of the frameâ€"parallel to one another. IN IMPORTANT WALLâ€"SPACES Hang Pictures On Eyeâ€"Level Pictures, small or large, deâ€" lightfully framed and waitins to be hung will look their best when hung on eyeâ€"level, or at least in direct relation to the furâ€" niture below and about it. Reâ€" member that it is a part of the furnishings of your room, and as such should tie up with them raâ€" ther than be placed near the ceilâ€" inz, for only a sixâ€"footer to enâ€" joy in comfort. To Offset Scarcity of Silk in Occupied France â€" Bicycle Attire is Modeled 4 INVISIBLE HANGING They Should Be Placed in Reâ€" lation to Furnishings of Room and you‘ll be trying other recipes that I When they had left, Freya said tonelessly, "He can never come back. You must warn him." Slowly, Mrs. Breitner nodded and it was then that Freya reaâ€" qy M "Did you tell him?" She nodâ€" ded. Mrs. Breitner wiped away a happy tear. "I‘m very happy my dear. I always hopedâ€"I‘m very, very happy." DEFINITELY SUSPECT But the silence was suddenly disturbed by the shouts of a Brown Shirt patrol. They rushed into the house and Mrs. Breitner quickly instructed Elsa, the little serving maid, to say that she had seen nothing. Then the men stamped in and from their blunt questions it was clear that Martin was definitely suspect now. 5on fuodthnt io de! "I love him," she said softly."ft; Martin‘s mother. "Every minute." She pressed his lips with hers for one last yearning moment. Tken she stood back. "Goodbye, my love." She watched them as they disappeared down the mountainside. Then, A few moments later they were poised at the slopes and Martin took Freya‘s hands in his. "Pray for me?" he whispered. Freya‘s heart told her what Martin would do even before he spoke. The Pass was dangerous and only an expert skiier like himself could get a man through, he declared. And despite Werner‘s protests he began to ready himâ€" self for the journey. Tkey turned as Mrs. Breitner ushered in Professor Werner. Then the reality and horror deâ€" scended again for Werner told them what they had known would be inevitableâ€"since that day in the Innâ€"he was to be arrested for "treason" and the Brown Shirts were searching for him. All he wanted was a pair of skiis so that he could get through the Karwendel Pass into Austria. CHAPTER FOUR Freya was still in Martin‘s arms and they were murmuring all the wonderful and ageâ€"old words of endearment when the outer door opened. marriage, Erich and Otto, become fanatical Storm Troopers and reâ€" pudiate the stepfather they had once revered. Then young Freya Roth breaks her engagement to Fritz because he too, has offerâ€" ed himself to the State, body and soul. It is then that she realizes her love for Martin Breitner, who had been Fritz‘s rival suitor and whom the other boys now hate, labeling him a Red and a Paciâ€" fist because he refused to join the political party. asunder by the accession of Adolf Hitler t othe Dictatorship of the country. Mrs. Roth, an Aryan, is agonized by the persecution of her husband‘s race, especially when her two sons, by a former SYNOPSIS In a little University town in Southern Germany, the happy family of Professor Roth, a nonâ€" ISSUE 40â€"‘40 Adapted from the Metroâ€"Goldwynâ€"Mayer by BEATRICE FABER agine that he was her, alive and well. examining her father‘s manuâ€" script with minute care. It had been his last work and she had brought it along so that she could look, finger it, look at it with a fond eye now and thenâ€"and imâ€" train. Dully, Freya watched as they opened all her suitcases. Then suddenly, she realized that something was wrong. They were They had just reached Thalâ€" heim at the border when the inâ€" spection officials boarded the It was Otto and Erich who arâ€" ranged for their mother‘s deparâ€" ture with little Rudi and Freya. On the station ‘platform they said their farewells but the simple word "goodbye"" stuck in Freya‘s throat. Impossible to even speak to these brothers who now apâ€" peared in guise of monsters. They and their kind had struck her father down. They and their kind were murdering the people of his faith. Otto started to reply. Then his jJaw clampgd and he turned away. "Released." The word was grim irony. One day, without any warning, Otto came to the house. Yes, he told his mother, Father was released now, from all care and strife. He was deadâ€"a heart attackâ€" It was then that Freya turned on him. "They killed himâ€"your frier_x_ds. They killed my father." Mrs. Roth‘s voice was just a thin thread as she finished. "He said for us to get ready. We‘re going to leave for Vienna when he is released." Tonelessly, she told Freya the stark _ details. Chained men, marching on paved stones, as guards stocd over them with guns and whips. Barbed wire fences. Their prisoners‘ uniforms with the armâ€"band, "Jude." Fine, senâ€" sitive faces, bloated and disfigâ€" ured from starvation and cruelty. But as Amelia Roth walked inâ€" to the front door, Freya wanted to shriek aloud. Her mother â€" this womanâ€"was a ghost. Someâ€" thing inside her had died foday when she had gone through the gates of the concentration camp. "WILL LEAVE FOR VIENNA" It came a few days for hours Freya paced waiting for her mother from the prison. But Freya knew that she had won. He would get the pass for the prison. f He looked at her with tortured eyes, unable to extinguish the love that he still .felt for her. And finally he said, in a choked voice, "What you ask is difficult and dangerous. But I‘ll do my best to find out where your f2â€" ther isâ€"and if your mother can be allowed to see himâ€"" The door opened and a Gestapo agent came in. Mechanically, Fritz changed his tone. "I‘m sorry Miss Roth, there‘s no point in further discussion." The Gestapo officials however, After that, one didn‘t seem to be living at all. One merely exâ€" isted for a purposeâ€"to secure a visiting card to the prison so that Mother might visit there to see her husband. Then finally there came an hour of desperaâ€" tion when Freya went to see Fritz, at political headquarters, hoping for his help. Even so, she had thought herâ€" self steeled to shock. Until that day when Professor Lehmann hurried into the house with his infamous news. Father â€" father had been arrested. He was in a concentration camp. They had taken him off the street that morning. One black day after another passed and Freya tried to keep a tight grasp of her control. She busied herself doing research for her father. She tried to do needlework. But always the pall of this new order prisonâ€"world hung over her like the miasgma of a poisonous swamp. IN A CONCENTRATION CAMP lized the dreadful import of her words. "He can never come back now," she said again. there beside later and the floor to return COLEMAN LAMP Dept. WOâ€"12 Back in her home town Freya was taken to the Gestapo buildâ€" ing for more questioning. She was leaving the place when sudâ€" denly she saw Fritz. Impulsively, he ran to him and poured out the story. But suddenly, realization came to her. He was the enemy. He was of that breed who had destroyed her fatherâ€"destroyed all of them. And Mrs. Roth could only nod and give her daughter one last embrace as the tears rolled silentâ€" ly down her cheeks. Only at Freya‘s urgings did her mother continue on with Rudi. "Father would have wished it," she said feverishly, in that moâ€" ment before she was led away. were suspicious of such sentiâ€" ments. A manuscript like this was traitorous to the law of the State, in its scientific content. She would have to return with them. Her passport was cancelled. Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this patâ€" tern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Write plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. » Give old or new bedspread a splash of color with this glorious peaâ€" cock motif. Just a few simple stitches are required. Pattern 2602 conâ€" tains a transfer pattern of a motif 15x19% inches, two 8%x4 and three 2x2 inches motifs; illustrations of stitches; materials required; color inhnak chart. Don‘t go in for elaborate hair styles. The long bob is the easiâ€" est to manage and you can alâ€" ways push it into a snood and look tidy. When it comes to the home shampoo, whihe lots of us indulge in today, remember to choose one suited to your type of hair. Be sure you rinse your hair enough â€" that is where most of us trip up when we resort to home methods. Spray with setâ€" ting loticn if you have greasy hair, use only water if you have dry hair, and pin into waves; dry in the sun, if you can. Excessive makeâ€"up has gone by the board. Concentrate on keepâ€" ing the face in good trim rather than "goneâ€"glamorous." Rememâ€" ber that to be sure of a good result a face must be clean and it must be nourished. Cleanse it night with cream, leave on for a few seconds, then wipe off. It takes under a minute to do this. Tap in a mild astringent and you will feel the skin glow under it. Last thing at night tap the skin food all over the face and parâ€" ticularly round the eyes, because this is where lines come first. Second danger. points â€" those smile lines, and under the chin. Feed these points well. CARING FOR THE HAIR Now for the difficulty of hair. Hair feels the ‘strain of present times badly. Brushing takes up too many of the precious moâ€" ments but give it as much as you can. Use a good brilliantine if your hair is dry, and do make up your mind that you must use a firstâ€"class hair tonic. Sobs stifled her voice. "I Fiveâ€"Minute Beauty Tips BEDSPREAD omize, Here Are Helpful Hints If Youn‘re Trying To Econâ€" COLORFUL BEDSPREAD MOTIF IN EASY STITCHERY BY LAURA WHEELER & STOVE Co., Ltd. Toronte, Canada TIO ARCHIVES TORONTO piie, Ala., went out because of a blown fuse. â€"Subsequently it was found a.snake had crawled over a wrie on a rafter, shortâ€"circuited the line and burned itself to a iroubleâ€"shooters of the Alaâ€" bama Power Company have found a new cause of short circults. The pumps at a station at Moâ€" aleg nc dipms F D n ""No, I was very careful." Now Freya looked at her. There was a twinkle in the woman‘s eyes. "Why did you send for me? Is there a message?" Still no answer. "Why do you smile . ..?" And then she 1 9 mt akea uhh y 2 uesd do you smile . ..?" And then she knew. "Oh." She broke away and ran through the front door. Then she stopped. "Martin." The first happiness she had known in many days stirred in her breast. _A while later she was at the door of the Breitner house. "My dear, I‘m so thankful." Gently, Mrs. Breitner took her in her arms. "I was afraid you were followed?" don‘t know why I‘m telling you all this. I‘d forgotten that â€" we‘re no longer friends." She tore away, not heading Fritz‘s distressed cries. ""Freya â€" please Freya." MARTIN AGAIN! But as she walked up the steps of her dismantled house and opâ€" ened the door something white on the threshold caught her eye. It was a note from Mrs. Breit. ner. If should could manage it would she come up and see them this afternoon? Troubleâ€"shooters ~ of An issue of the Journal of the American _ Medical _ Association recommended elimination of "enâ€" ergy sapping"‘ motions, monotâ€" ony and immobility as the best means to avoid nervous tension, a product of civilization. Recreation shoula provide <a change from normal routine, not merely physical activity, the jourâ€" nai advises. Eat regularly and not between meals, and relax competely several times each day, the journal said. Nervous Tension Needs Recreation Keep your feet on the floor and don‘t grit your teeth if you want to escape nervous tension.‘ Snake "Shorts" Change From Normal Rouâ€" tine Helps â€" Keep Feet On Floor PATTERN 2602 An JM 4 _ lbs. veal shank 1 lb. pork (hock or other meat 2 _ quarts water 2 _ teaspoons salt % teaspoon pepper 4 teaspoon cloves (ground) 1 _ small onion 1 _ bay leaf 1 _ teaspoon chopped mint 1 _ teaspoon lemon juice %4 tsp. mustard Wipe off meat. Cover with water and add seasoning. Bring to boil and boil 5 minnta» . 1 _ tablespoon water 1 _ teaspoon tomato catsup 1 _ small onion, chopped 1 _ cup dry bread crumbs f Beat egg slightly, add water and â€"seasoning. Dip tenderloin into egg mixture then into crumbs. Place in greased pan (sprinkle with cnion). Dot with butter. Bake at 400 covered for 10 min., add % cup hot water at side of pan, cover, bake 35 minutes longer. Place brown pieces in baking pan. Add about 2 tablespoons of fat in which meat was fried, to the other ingredients. Combine together for a dressing and add to the meat (each piece) a mound of dressing. Cover and place in oven at 400 deg. F. Reâ€" move cover, bake 30 minutes longer. Serves 4 people. Spaghetti and Steak 1% lbs. round steak Y cup chopped onion Y cup chopped green pepper Â¥ cupâ€"chopped mushroom YÂ¥ cup green peas 1 _ teaspoon horseradish 3 1 _ teaspoon salt 4 teaspoon pepper 1% cups cooked spaghetti 1 _ cup tomato soup (canned) Combine steak, onion, greon pepper and mushrooms. Fry until browned. Blend in seasonings and peas. Arrange meat mixture and spaghetti in alternate layers in casserole. Pour on tomato soup (if real thek, dilute a little with milk or cream). Bake at 3.75 deg. for 30 minutes. Serves Pork Tenderloin Breaded 1% lbs. pork tenderloin 2 _ tablespoons butter Y teaspoon pepper Dip each piece in flour and sprinkle with paprika. Fry until brown quickly in hot fat on top of stove. lmmonu.i..umm“," Non. shortâ€"wave spectrum from 16 to 49 metres! Makes foreign tuning ten times easier, clearer, faster and positive! â€"Yet costs no more than embe motine t C 7 "SAVORY MEAT DISHES" As Autumn advances and the fresn fruit season nears the end, the homemaker as a natural conseâ€" quence makes changes in daily menus. As desserts change in type so do all the courses to some degree. Meat savory diskâ€" es seem to be synonymous with the early crisp Autumn days. Savory Tenderloin Casserole 1% lbs. tenderloin 2 cups soft bread crumbs 1 _ cup diced apple % cup diced onicn £ teaspoon sage % teaspoon salt The only tuning system that can locate and ‘‘expand" the signal of every audible station on the entire shortâ€"wave snactrum Lan. o2 20 sa exclusive fenture of and DeFOREST R Pressed Veal i meat. Cover with add seasoning. Bring 1 boil 5 minutes. Reâ€" MAJESTIC liam Air School and others armed services have taken rooms available. With housing accommodation of all kinds at a premium in the Lakeâ€" hoad cities, despite a building boom in houses, the Port Arthur Chamâ€" ber of Commerce has issued a call to citizens with an extra room to rent it. A memiber of the Port Arâ€" thur City Council has had to move to Fort William because he couldn‘t find a house in his own city, it was reported. Alderman G. McComber, theatre manager, sold his home, was unable to buy a suitable one, and rented an apartment from Mayâ€" or C. M. Ross of Fort William. Workers in wa}--ifid;;stries, Air Force instructog's at the Fort Wilâ€" Can‘t Find House So Leaves Town A tweed trotteur, moderately flared skirt, looks new with a doubleâ€"breasted eton for fall, here done in a heather herringâ€" bone handâ€"loomed tweed Novelty stif kind that "st: highâ€"style cho "formals" in stripes or che brocade effect. in an afternoon frock of black woollen, the skirt is slashed to show the sapphire blue velvet sheath, which also is revealed beâ€" neath the cutâ€"work~ embroidery. A widened, dropped shculder yoke is emphasized by embroidâ€" Placing a fall of gathered fuliâ€" ness offâ€"centre is an arresting feature of a dramatic white silk jersey frock, the bodice developâ€" ed with a capeâ€"like bloused back, the deeply pointed wide corselet waistline embroidered like fine grille work. a reply. quests for recipes or special menus are in order. Address your letters to "Miss Sadie B. Chamâ€" ers, 73 West Adclaide Street, Toronto." Send stamped, selfâ€" duce heat and simmer for 1Â¥ hrs., or until meat falls from the bones. Pick off meat, put through chopper. Place in mould. Cook stock down slightly; add lemon juice and pour onto tha meat until it feels soft and moist. Chill until set. Slice, arrange on plate with garnish. Serves 8. Fashion Flashes "‘stand alone," are a choice for teen girl in woven stripes or checks that suggest a stiff taffetas â€" the if in the up all casts may ne . faulty judam the predictions large an arca Weathe Eling | Not R. 4 P Aw! > W ancu .. M P Re stein Ingion in the man Rui SAlC

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