HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-11-02, Page 2°medic Job
Held $erious
•
ereen's Institutes of Canada
Are Urged Not To Forget the
Needs of .Our Own .Country
•• °OMURA women have a seriods..
• $01) to do war time putting
•
-4-- •
4,41
, , • . • %urn !cr-i'isiI7..•••17.,..;
preSident• of the Associated- Coun-
•• • • try. WoMen. of the World., said hi-.
ti,reeent addressat'Ottawa to the
,V.'•••• „•'.' Eastern Ontario :WoMea's
Instit-
• ates. .• • t •
Mrs. Watt .gaid the had been .told
that, the best thing 'Canada -.could,
do was to make its War efforts.ati
pleMentery.;ito its nertnel economy: •
•. Don'tForget.Nortnel
Responsibilities .;
The,nortual responelbilities and •
• work `cif the •Institutes• sheiricF•tfoi*,,
.•,be subtrierged••ip,•• "'wartime eget-hi; •
' • ••• slre, urged, It ;was no act „of pat-
riotism to forget the needs'ef one's
own.'cOuntry leeegernese to save
el villas !'i•rn. „setneWbere.• el s es '
•
1
„
ougy. wo9L. sure
lite greater Satisfaction is to be found"
In 'a Woman's wardrobe; than her
'sulta•Atid,iforma Shearer choosesthis
eIasIc two-plece in grey wool. The
jacket hakwide lapels.'dOuble-buttonf •
lastaningand...tinr Wickets:with crea.
Coot flaps. The. crossed.. vest: is of,
White Silk! jersey. 'The -skirt has Ch. -
eider fullness. Miss Shearer wears a
mari‘colored •Jewelled 'floater in her •
•
Girl Athletes:
Be• Lady -like
1Physlial; "(Along and "Char• ='• '
acter Strauss Are battlers to
• Women of Commercialized
Sport •
Substitution of lady -like 'grace
• in• amateur ;play for the emphasis
•en •sex in commercialized girls'
_athletics is demanded by two• wo-
, men' recreation leaders.
•
• "Wei want to Make girls more
attractive, more • feminine," de-
clared Misa Dora Dodge, directer
•• of the Worcester Girls' Club, at a
forum conducted -by the 24th Uni-
• •• ted States recreation congress.
• "We prefer:to see iils in archery,
tennis. and badminton costumes,
-•,,, rather than in flannel baseball
t; stita with, catch. mit and alask."
. Deploring thi practice of- Put-
• ting young girls in "skin-tight,
• • „red -satin" unif,irma and , of en-, •
ceuraging them to play •"high-
• , pressure," commercialized sport, .
Miss Ethel BoWers of • New York
• • declared in an i .eryiew that form
• ,of sport ":might not harm a hard-
' boiled, husky factory girl."
• • Deplores "High.Prestuie" Play
• • She 'added, "we feel
• Irtn,d" I speak for hundreds of wo-
men all • over the country—that
• that girl' is an exceptional •girt
•• that can't he hurt by cornmer-
claJW.kr-atliletic,-,„ _and that a re. .
• creatidn progr* should be sub-
stituted to en .our&ge all 'girls and
Women to ,play for fun and 'for
health,"•
• ..• Miss Bowers listed physical, e-
motional an character strain as
. among the `dangers" of commer-
cialized feminine sport.
„ • • .1letitt.tante „ ctinner dresses ,are
".- -• •••• '
:•••„•CBI
. .
teai-
ar illh F G
0-oace
Sri/00104 41#0.4 NEASeriice .1W .;
CAST OF CHARACTERS if Hai* intini y T.
PRISCILLA PIERCE' heroine,
Young woman' attorney.
AMY , KERR:--pilly's •rOommate.,
and tisurdereeir victim.•
JIM KERRIGAN-:-CilljeaTfiatibe..
HARRY HUTCHINS Amy's
strange visitor. •
"SERGEANT GO..AN—officer as,
'Signed te solve Ithe ,mtirder of :
Amy Kerr.
-Last week: Harry Hutchins in- ,
timates that Amy had a 'past she
wanted hidden. Dilly resents ,this
but nevertheless decides to cheek
• further into Amy's life •through
letters, 'ete.,' she had left. ,
•
•'CliApTER Kr1 ' • •
•Methodieally and. systematically
YiIl'•Went threugh Amy's effects;
,por the second time that day, she
looked over the contents of :the• '
bureau: • ,
, In the lower drawer; Amy 'kept
,"111,.3- -large box 4illed-v.,-.141h---ocld
bitif Of. jewelry. ,Tbere was' a locket
—dnold gold, locket- which Cilly •
picked Out particularly. It was the
only article ,she did net remember
seeing before. But that was not
surprising. Nobody wore. lockets
this season. There • was a tiny dia-
• mond hip on. one side, On the oth-
er the initials Cilly Chem
• sliPpeil her thumb -nail beta the
two sections of gold and opened it. '
There:, were the natal sections for .
, pictures which all'old lockets ten-
-tained.” One was empty; in the Oth-
er thetewas; the picture of a
• young man— an attractive y9ung
man, apparehtly in, his late 30's;
Cilly -looked more closely at the
picture. Where. had she seen that
'face' befere? It did not resemble..
Aniy 1:Particularly:. Amy. was fair
and . golden, her ,features. aquiline. ,
This an was 'chubby. almoet„rot-
und, his eyes and hair' were dark.
• It might have • been a brother, or
even her father; yet there -ma no
definite. fandly resemblance.. 'Was
this the men to whom Harr' Hut-
• chins referred? She dotibted it,•.be-
cause she did not believe Harry's '
story about another Man. •
• Next, she -Went through, ,Amy's ,
section of the desk. There were, as
• she had told Sergeant' Dolan, ncith-
•ing hut' a; few ,unusual recipes
• an elderberry chutney, a." lemon
'custard pie,' p, Chocolate, frosting
• guaranteed to remain 'soft. There
was initialled note -paper, 'hilt Cilly
,had nevetlieen Amy write'a letter,
•There were advettiSementioffur
cdats; Axiiy had been savi-g up for
a aquirrel,swagget. No, "it looked as
yj
Haidwaro dealers pa authorized to
alio* you 51.00 on tidy old iron toward
the oritchate 'of a new Coleman. • It
makes and brims 'own gait. No erirds.
*fres. Lights instantry.
tiss YOUR. DEALER...of Witte to in
tot details!. f , •
THE COLEMAN LAMP & STAVE Cp..
td. Dept. WO -327i Torontmoot.
- • .
(9327)
•just so much idle chattesp and Cll..
'IY put it out of her minck,
Dinner. That was somethi. •• to
•
be consicleted.'• She could not sub -
„Alit indefinitely on •black :offee.
Tonight she had. better eat some-
Cill. changed the black dre-- for
a thin Cotton wrap-around, and be-
• gall her preparations' for diaper.
One by one she broke fol eggs
into a mixing bow'
Cooking, she realized suddenly,
• was a splendid tonie tyed
• nerveS.: The Monetoneus.. mechan-
ical detail of it was „soothing -and
restful. She v-hitted the egg -beater
effic' ntly. It was easier •to think
• •
„She tried: to analySe* the situa-
• thin calmly. •' •' •
' Amy had 'kept 'a secret hidden in
•her heart . : someone feared lest.
that secret become knoWn. Hs had
feared it 'so terribly that.he was.-
--tet.e•pd-Perl—ter"itiii---ilre/40 Vellt'
' • Whose sepret was it? • Surely
Am' had no connection With `the
.tYpe of :iinderwOrld racketeer who
stoops tt Mtn -der. casually. Ili the
• few Months she had bec•n liv•ing in :
„New York 'l where could she have
poin4 iu contact with,such ple,?
Not at the r'es,pairingly reapec`bble
' residence ,.:. Not:at •tbe conser-
'vativelY 6orrect.offices of'Ames &
• "Wakefield. , .
••Yet there was Harvey Ames. Cil--
ly reconsidered his startling reac-
tion to the news of Am,y's•
•How cOuld he have known Of the
tragic death of a girl 'in Brodklyn,
. when- helived in a Park Avenue
apartment in Manhattan?' VVhp'had
• he deliberately lied about •reading
• it. In the • Morning' Papers•? •
• If Someone, had' said t� him: "I
live in Brooklyn, and last night a
girt in the neighborhood was killed
by a fall from the roof," that would
have been comnaonplace. He Would
have said to Cilly then; "Yes,
heard that a girl was killed last. •
• night in Brooklyn:" But he Would
not have lost his headarid. said: •"I
read it in -the morning paper." And
. what was therein the'ocaltriieriee •
which had terrified him? Why did
he lie? •
Only poured a little .milk •Into
• the eggs and continued beating.
Did Amy's secret, she, wondered,
concern Harvey Ames in some way
and (IL( he suspect that she' was in
• danger of her life? That would .a.c; •
count- for his terror-stricken .Oe-
havior on hearing the news. • Yet
he had not been surpritied at the
tragedy .. . he had been surprised• .
to learn that the girl was .Amy
Kerr, his own A secretary. If he had
.1.1earned..,4ilsofit•-,-Oin---•'-occurrence"'
• thrciugh some sotirce other than
the morning paper, as he had in-
dicated, why had he not•also learn-
' ed who the 'girl was? •
• • Cilly 'buttered' the skillet and.
poured theegg mixture into, it.
It,, all, came back to the same
,' stalking point. What was the .sec -
rat Amy wag hiding? Discover that,
and you would dist-Over what peo-
ple it Concerned, and lwhleh ones
would benefit by -Amy's death; But
Amy's lips were, closed in death
nOW, and who else was there to
• throw any light on, the matter?
' None whOin Cilly knew. ' •
Cilly gathered the ,egg shells 'and
• put thern into a brown paper bag
and she .scooped up some .cantel-.
me seeds also. She picked up • the
' brown Paper bag. and went out
. into the hallway.
s eves, a er nee
tidal scarfs, in silver thioaded
•"ra,yor Iace, rayon net, metal cloth
'and starched Chiffon..
• • i"•• \, • •• \k,\
t?'
THE ONLY DRY YEAST
SEALED IN AN
AIRTIGHT
WRAPPER-
SOS PURE
FUWSTRES014,
Ali tl'\ • ' ‘•
\\At\ •i' r• •h , ' ' •
...•••
••••'"4"
44
YEA
C4 k
"C S
4 • -
- •
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•
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•
Dr, Bernotdo't Boys
Aro Enlisting Again
Since 1882, thousands of •boys
of Pr. .Barnardo's Homes have left .
'4110' .Motherland for Canada and
,
other pats:o the* EMPire, These
lads, who received their start in
•life trough the hemes, have made
good :in he OVersees 4omittiotts. •
In; the dark' days of 1914-1918
tioriary Foree033,1 Oftliefir did not
,return 'Canad.ft 'Flanders" re
cords. that one ,eLthese Bernardo,
lads was 'reeonimpicleci
.C..before he die* •: '
Once ageni•the'Y hate heard the
• Call of the llotheriaOd; Mid,many
pf them are enliSting to aid her in
just as they did in
• The management • of the Homes,.
. 53S Jvis Street, Teironto,, 'are,•`
. particffierly siniietia to compile d
•
complete honor rsli of those who
•'have enlisted' for 'The present War;
and shall be glad to heve their
names and regimental addresses.
•
A Good Pasture
' • ,
The secret ofa49od pasture is:
(1), Goki soil. fertility. • (2.) A
mixture of grasses and &avers
suitable to the soil type and dis-
trict." (3) Good management,
which means do not over -graze or
• under-graie. • Mow weeds and. tall
• Uneaten' grasses and harrow in
• Julie -and October in order to
• spread • droppings arid • entourage
•unifer mgrazing., —
A
B
e• •
•
Laura Wheeler Crocheted Maks4r Piece In Simple Filet
Crochet ,
11
•
:ittAted
•
• •
• . ,
.EGG RECIPES AND REMARKS
Egg's form a typical food, 'ctin..7
teining all the, elements proporti-
. oriately for the stippoit of the
body. ,-No doubt the price of eggs .•
,Will rise along with the prices QV .
• „other-.fOOCIatlAs.clkie to war ebodi.7.
thane'. and . profiteer ingi• ,bitt renlems'
ber one Way in which we nitty-dO
Tearpart.:in this" -War is .to lie that
'.•our • fandlieS and' Ourselves.haYe• •
• .balanded :diets. I-. These 'cannoCbco-.:.
, • properly: balineed if We. neglect.
• • the daily 'egg. _We are told that
nine eggs' (total Weight; , one•
pound) •is ,equiValent :in nutritive •
to a pound of beef steak.
The' highly. concentrated nutritive,'
value of eggs rendersit nedesSary
to use them in combinatioM.with
• Other foods rieh •in 'starch: • .1
Here aro a few general ruled
about. eggs, which are well. to re- • •
inember;,:Eggi are fresh, if rough
•:and .dull in • 'appearance. ' They •
•••shetild. be washed as soon at,they
are brought, in from the' -store- and •
.kePt , itt a • vie' place. •The,•
broken. yolk tA al:Legg may be kept
hardening by cuveringit with
• cold water. If not used •in .a cou-
ple of days, change the water.'••
.• .
President Roosevelt Views Gift fron!' King George VI
s'• •
•
• •The Rev. Frank k. Wilson, LEFT, holds the handsome St. Jamea.version •
• of the Bible presented td St. James Episcopal church, Hyde Park, N.Y., .
by Their Majesties King George and Queen Elizabeth, while President
Franklin' p. Roosevelt, who attended the special service at •which•the
book was dedicated, casts his eyes upon it. The book was dedicated in
memory, of their majesties' worship at the Hyde Par,ic church last Juni
11. The Rev. Mr. Wilson prayed that ' King 'George be given divine
strength so "he' may vanquish and overcome all his enemies."
1
:P. rill'
•tu, .
OPR
.....
1..r.:KYF4Y44. nadt "4"
1,1 tiirgeoi5.,:-Llisogieniu... •
lin14••• ... .... ....
goisom sERvitg,
• THE LAST' SUPPER' • •
. : PATTERN 2318 .
• The subject of the Last Supper inspired many of the old masters• ;
In this .panel, the painting by Champaigne has been transposed into filet
'crochet.' Use it in yeur.home or for -an altar cloth. Pattern 2318 con-
tains chart and directions for panel; illustration of -it and stitches; ma-
• terials required.
Send twentY dents in coins- (stamps cannot be Accepted) for, thia
pattern -to Wilson Needlecraft Dept.,- 173' West Adelaide St., Toronto.
Write plainly. Pattern Number, your Name and Address. '
Keep white of an egg covered in
cool- place. For results, never
cook eggs at a tigh temperature,
for they will rebel. There •is a
wide and delightful variety ' of
cookingeggs. Eggs need not al-
ways •be boiled or scrambled for
breakfast. . • •
• . FOAMY OMELET
•A 'egs,s--(-allow .1 Tegg
, adult). '
% teaSpoon of salt and pepper. .
• % tablespoon of butter
• 1 ta.blespeon of water for, each
egg1
•
Beat the yolks and whites of the
•eggs separately. Beat the yolk
until creamy, and add the salt and
pepper and Water; Beat the whites
until dry; cut and •fola into the
first mixture. ' Butter sides and
bottom pf a skillet and barn in the
mixture . smooth, • evenly.'CoOk
slowly' until well puffed up. With
a thin, silver knife, keep loosening
the Omelet from the Pan. 'When
the omelet is a delicate brown un-
derrieath, 'set in oven until it feels
firm to the touch. The tempera-
ture ,of the oven _should be medi-
um. This can be varied by serv-
ing with a white. sauce:
If you want something. different
add some mushrooms fresh if pos-
sible, but canned will do, to the
white sauce. Some grated cheese,
added to the white settee. also is a
• welcome addition for variety and
palatcibRaA
ility.m
ED EGGS AND
. •'MUSHROOMS
To serve six, people. Rave ready
six hard cooked eggs. Slice the
• eggs pr gun them through the, food
chopper. To the eggs add 2 'cups
4, cooked mushrooms. • Make a
white .sauee of 2 cups of cream or
rich milk, 2 tablespoons of con1i
starch. If milk is used, add 1
•tablespoon of butter. Add the egg
and mushroom mixture and serve
on slices.of toast, the toast to 'be
browned delicately and evenly.
. •
The incinerator floor was stuck.
Ordinarily 'it open4d out Otte eas-
ily like a mail -box 'slot. You Ore*
the refuse into thetalot; from there
it fell into the iddinerator lhaft.
The shaft rose directly through
the -house, between apartments A•
and i3 •oq each flo r, and emptied
into a Cary pi' in the basenient
where all refuse was burne. Cilly
had never found th,4 door •sttiek be-
. fore •
She pulled at it Irmly. It budged
a. trifle. She could! tell that some-'
thing wet caught in it. Son_stiiing
4thrown from aboveA probably which
had in some way !leaded on this
'side-chate. She tugged harder. /4.nd
gradually the slot Widened, and she
caused •the stlekin, . She hoped it '
could look •• inside4and see what'
would not be garbage. No . . - it
was a newspaper. ; An enormous
pile of.newspapers ather, and they
had become wedgq4 Into the Slot
as the Y fell down ithe shaft. Why.
did •Sonleene have to throw r Ich a
'bunch at one time? Ariyr- could •
realize that it would 'get, stuck.
she. tried to dislocate them, orte
'at a time. Finally she •managed • to
Work most of the pack either diown
,the shaft or our on the floor at her
feet. She picked up her Own brain
paper hag and threw it down. And
then she stoopei tp,gather „irp'th.e
remaining sections of newspa per.
-As she did 'so, she 'glanced at 'one
of the sheets. She stopped, '
ing the paper it her hand..•
. It Was lieded: "Bluefields,
Utah!' •,•
• Quickly eine picked up ill of
the remaining sections and carried
tly in into her own apartment::
Sd theae was eoindone in the
-house Wbo kneW about Bluefieldt-
k- eeping 1' ac.', of doveloPmeini
't that Place thrtagh ,the out-of,town
nevvspapois; %wit who -edto
hei4ptile psper. in his, a -.•„tent
• 1.‘ •
. * 40 %,
now that the police. veer* 0cki.fig
• more thoroughly.
. Here was something to interest
Sergeant Dolan, Cilly thought. And
here was something which •would
, take his mind off the case he' was .
•trying to...build amend Jim Kerriz
• gan. Here wait absolute proof that
someone in the house had murder.
ed Amy! .•
Why had she ao impulsively de-
stroyed the piecer of 'newspaper •
-clipping whiqh had fallen from the .
lifeless fingers of Amy Ker:? Cilly
wished” she had it now, to mark it
"Exhibit A" and tie it up • with
these newspapers 'from upstairs.
But perhaps the timetable whith
• Dolan had found In Amy's bag, se .
definitely 'narked to indicate the
same place, would be sufficient.
• Cilly Caught a w1iiff of burning
omelet; she hurried into the latch- °
en. She could sit down to dieter
now:with less or the heavy *dread,
- which had dulled her digestitni all
day. She could enjoy* the omelet
• and the canteloupe. For Jim .Was
free of the encircling web of cif- '.
• camstanCe and atislaiCitini
(To Be Continued)
BACKACHE, HEADACHE
ITAMILTON, Ont.
Mr's. Earl
• rohnston of 150%
Loge St. N. „iiiys:
"1 suffered from
headaches and pains
acrose. my back and
through my.side
periodioally, and I
Was Sti weak and
riertious. Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription helped to relieve mo of
• those awrul Pains and headaches an t build
trio,„up an. that: T ieLt._!‘10,._tar
• SFANISH- OMELET
eggs
4 tahlespobns milk
% ‚teaspoon salt
% teaspoon pepper'
2 tablespoons butter
I3eat eggs. slightly, just enough
to blend: yokes and whites; add the
milk and seasonings. Put butter
in hot•othelet pan and when melt-
ed and :hot' turn in the: mixture.
As it cooks, prick and pick up with
a fork; until the whole is of a
creamy consistency. When the
omelet is an even brown on the
bottom, fold and turn •on hot
platter, • pouring tomato • sauce
(which has. Peen ready and •kept
hot) around the edges.: •
TOMATO SAUCE '
Cook two tablespo'ons of butter
•
••••.:Y•Xf
..44k44••• • •
A,: • •:•
if":71A.
• With one tiblespoen, of 'chopped
:'cnion until Yellow: .Add 1% cups-
of tomatoes and cook ten minutes;
add a quarter teaspoon salt and
a few &Tains of catenne. Tc' im-
prove this tomato sauce, adda lit-
tle chopped green -pepper to •the
onion ,.and butter, when cooking. ,.
Or . for a • different flavor add a
tablespoon of, sliced :reashroeins
•and one-tableaptren a capers. 13dt •
'peppers, Mushrooms '.and capers ,•
-• are all ,optional and tomato sauce
may he used plain. •
• YOUR HOUSEHOLD •, •%„.
PROBLEMS . •
:Have you fussy eaters in your
'family? • Do .you have trouble •
• providing a varied and interest-• ,
ing menu? '1,-)0 your Cakesiall?''
'Then write, •enclosing a stamp. •
ed, self-addressed envelope • to,
Miss Sadie B. Chambers, care of
this paPer;•andshe will 'endea-
vour to :solve your -oroblema.
•
•
Why You Prefer
A Certarn Color
• ..,l_iklets.. is wise to consider the char--
, help us aaalyze our likei and dis-
•
ledge of the -leaning of color will
of• us know -hy. A slight know- „•• •
°
Colors Have Meaning
• Each of us has a preference for
some particular color, but not all
Emotionally •.
• . •
aeteristic 'Properties of individual
colors before we proceed ro change
the color combinations in our own
• homes. Red, for instance, symbol-,
izes vitality, energy, power. It is
bighly stimulatiag. Blue,.signifiea
tranquility. Psychologically •its in-
'flueriee is quieting. yellow Symbol- '
izes light, cheerfulness. Green does • •
soothe, yet exhilarateS.
Out$ide'clOeti.'0
'KEPT -CLEAN
ikis EASY*,
• banish offensive outhouse
odors.• . ;just sprinkle half a
. tin of Gillett's Aire Flake Lye
'over contents of the closet—once
a week: No need to remove the
contents . . . Gillett's does it
for you. ••
Gillett's Lye will ;save your
time...save your energy in heavy
cleaning. It scours dirty pots'and
pans . . clears clogged drains. . .
cuts through grease. geep a tin
handy.
• FREE BOOKLET — The daletes: Lye
Booklet -tend how this powerful cl
' clears clogged drains .keeps a-
tomises clean and odorless 13.3, dent' ink
the Contents of the Closet, how it
performs dozerii of tasks. *Send for a
free copy to Standard Brands Ltd.,
Fraser Ave. and • Liberty Streeti
Toronto, Ont. •
aician unusually experienced lit the :treatment of
moteen'a Peculiar ailments. It Edda the nu-,
[titian to that you gain atrengthi. It calms the
nerves and lesatna the dAcern(Orta of the men.
atrual period. pot Dr. Plereee Favorite Pre.
atription ttoin your dratgiat today. '
• •
• •\!' •t'• •
• • 1.0 •
• 1 • ,•‘,
•
•
A
:t
'•
414levei dissolve lye in hot vatet. PUP
veto!' of the lie itself heats theivatet.
" "N• ;
V V•'a,i • •