Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1940-04-18, Page 6u w�swr e 8$Imiiletioq of Scalp is Ina ppi'trintr , Calci.urtl in .Dli>t ,Althoi eh. the tendency to "lose sure maid `the' •normae amount 'of' • hair inay.lint mean M. than a •temporary* arrested. growth through , some physical disturbance, it win always •be''an alarming experience ' .for anyone, writes'• Donna :Grace. . beauty editor...e., The obvious, cause Sof falling hair - is illness;.'nervousuess and lack of care and proper foods,; but. -We can't, tell you why.the root should step its natural, fu tctibn.wl en one is in nor. • • mai health, • • :TIiQ110,11GIi CLEANLINESS ' There are, treatments to ,,,restore the liealth•,of the hair, and, in iliany 'eases; a•fiae"i renal growth will be the t exult:. The.: first step .is their-, ough clealaliness and general sting- ulation, of; the scalp.. Then one,sisn` • should hateenough Calcium ire the • diet to•promote growth„ Mille is- the •' food for this and the fresC leafy sa •lads will -Improve digestion, • ,et is a fast 'that nervousness and lack .of rest May affect the roots of • : thea hair, and fere this, reason one should be sire to •grave periods of 're• ` Iaxatiori .a'w'ay 'irom-mental work.' ilead niiaasage• aid, the application of hot qil will frequently correct the . troaxble ' Iadiim• Girl °'Composer Phyllis Giniareer, '21 -Year-old studene at Queen's University, Kingston; •who was awarde'd' the annual scholarship fes musical gomgosition . sponsored' by. the Canadian •Performing Rights • Soc- Lety. Th scholarship (4750) pro- vides a year tuition at the Toronto Conservatory of Music, ether Woman • ouse Member With Miss Agneii .Macp,hail Mietiing.Feminine interest in Canadian Parliament Will Be .rrovided. by New North Bat- • tlefofd M. •P. Canada's: next House Of Com- mons ag'ain..wziF have, a . woman member although .the two women members at dissolution will not be in the next house. Mrs. D. W. ,Neilsen. of North ; Battleford, ' Saskatchewan, will, have the honor' of ;being the lone . Woman parliamentarian. She wi31 • have also' another distinction-' the only. Unity member in , the Grommons, , ON UNITY 'TI'CKET • 1Virs. Neilsen will'•succee'd Miss ' Agnes Macphail veteran U. F; 0.- Labor member, , . who met defeat in the March 26 balloting in Grey- Bruce, and Mrs, George Black 'el': Yukon who did {tot' seek re- elec-tion. Mrs. Neilsen's victory • was at the 'expense of C. R. McIntosh, Liberal, .her; only opponent. Other unsuccessful women cart - dictates were .Miss R. B. J. Adams, Verdun; Miss Mary Crawford, Ed= monton West; Mrs. Borah Dy- mond, Toronto llesedale; Mrs. L. Lucas; Meet ille; Mrs. Margaret MacNab, Kamloops; ; Mrs. R. R. McBride, Macleod, and Mrs. Rose ..,Wilkinson, Calgary West. • Education Education has for its object , the formation of character. —Herbert. Spencer. lnstetta.ion increases inborn • worth and 'right discipline strengthen; the heart. --Horace We underetanef the best is that which beg;ns• in ourselves and by e8ucatiori brightens into birth. . "—Mary Baker Eddy Enlighten the people generally and tyranny and oppressions of both mi d and body will vanish like evil spirits at thedawn . of day. , �. —Thomas Jefferson • Real knowledge, in its 'progress, is the forerunner of liberality and enlightened toleration. • ' —Lord Brougham .Mere knowledge is comparat'ive- ,ly %ver bless unless .digested into practical wisdom and common sense ;t, anpi ed to 'theaffairs of tx' e!st Aavoter to o' aem atioq. ereed• oixFrombocet ,8'ocPtertcs Grap e :Nut s COST LESS TWA* ONE CENT ,4 SERV/NO/ SERIAL -STORY .SKI'S 'THE 'L'I'MIT. N6APSERVCE'�NC;' a•,BY ADELAIDE HUMPHRI'ES' CAST OF CHARACTERS SALLY `BLAIR heroine. She had everything .that - popularity could win •jeer, except DAN REYNOLDS =- 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. Last w-ek: Corey proposes to Sally but she doubts herself, is torn between her triumph and her fear ,of; losing Dan. Y, ,CHAPTER,Y At• Sally's insistence, 'that . next • morning of her 'last lesson, Dan - agreed to let ;her try a steeper hill. "But when: you come to .the eater - mediate sign," he cautioned, "bear . . , to the left: The rest of this trail is. dangerous — there's' a seiner dap •of .forty-five degrees 'at one' point, sortie wicked turns and more than • one'obstacie: an open brook for one thing; nrr the ravine, a barbed wird fence."; ' Sally had' taken that trail, more than' once•, , clearing its obstacles, ;mastering. its turns. But of"course she could not tell that to Dan. Or should she confess to him, on this last morning •-'thea last day that. they might have 'together that • she had deceived him? Would he• foegive her, understand,. • if she ' did? Looking at, his grave face, into • •• his honest gray eyes, she had her doubts. 'He would . thir.a °.she had been laughing at him, pretending to be a novice,as indeed, at the start, she had. He would not realize rshe had' chosen; the',only way she "could' contrive in her subtle feminine fa- • • shion, to make him take notice at "It has .been, fun, 'hasn't int?" she asked, impulsively; eagerly. "These,, early morning , lessons. You've .ere joyed Ahem too, •haven't you, Dan? You'll be. a ;little bit sorry to have :them. end?" Sorry that this is bur last :time together, she •meant, Sor- ry to have me go away. Perhaps ne- ver to see me ;again. It was funny, , and yet not at all funny, either, the ache that this last thought could bring. . "Yes. It's been fun."• Dan's answer Was brief, his gray, eyes .unsmiling. ;,' "Do you think I'm •the sort of girl .you thought I was?" Sally persist- ed. "Prom trotter, .party girl — not • good for' anything else?" Maybe• it was not quite fair to ask him that. But she 'had to • know, "I LIKE YOU.— A LOT" He climbed steadily on, not'turn- ing :his head to 'look at her. Maybe because he knew how lovely she looked, her cheeks flushed from the clean, sweet :air, hes` dark ' eyes shining; lovely and unattainable--- ' for him. "Don't you like me — a little bit?" Sally • persisted, her heart ,.•hammering' hard ben'e..th her plaid jacket; and not just from the long climb: r ., knew how to conserve R.1TtSH CONSOLS: • E)I'R 4 LEI<Dil>• • her breath for that. "I like you, Dan — a lot," she'added softly, and frankly, without any coquetry or guile.' • She had forgot that thisconquest had been' begun on a dare. That •, their worlds lay, miles apart. The -only thing • that . mattered 'in this beautiful white world on this crys- tal morning :was the • answer he would give. • • ' He turned : toward her now, al- most roughly.- They had reached: the mountain top.'I.t was above the timber line they could look down • on a layer of whipped -cream clouds,' • nestling low over the dark forest; the long clean sweep of deep pow- der snow. This was ,a world apart, belonging just tothem. eYou know you shouldn't ask'me that," Dan said. His tone was very rouge. alinost'l angry. - "Whynote" Sally said. Her look held his. ' ' "Because you know I'de.. I, like. you too much. Sally. Blair. Pdore 'than.I've,any'right to,: more than 1 should." . :• HOUR OF. TRIUMPH' If her heart had liammered hard. , before, now its' beating was t1mc•st suffocating, a dizzy, throbbing• song of joy. For this was Sally's moment. her hour of• triumph. He liked Iher— More-'than: he should. •He felt ste- ward her te-ward.her as she did toward him. As she had;'.as'ahe knew now, from y that first time- when• she . had stop- ped to •see him poised, high above her head, to .watch the incredibly swift grace Of his flight; to 'know that she must find out who he was, what he was, somehow to get to know him.. • • "What if i'give you the right?" .. Sally asked, Tithe was: so fleeting,. this. lovely, Moment 'would break to drift away like' the' Clouds below. • Everything had to come to an ,end, as she had said. to Corey only; last • night. Though it was not of Corey ' she thought now. "You couldn't," Dan 'answered, still griifly, "You don't know what you're.,aaying. It might seen _rig'Ift =herd; and 'now=bt t, as .I told you, I can't allow myself to have : time for girls .like: you. I don't dare be- lieve o-lieve ih you, Sally Blair„ "Then' you are 'a coward!" Sally returned. The high color flamed in Iger cheeks;. her dark eyes wore their dangerous' look. She had of- fered him her heart — she, Sally . Blair, Queen of the ceenival, most popular girl of them all. She had offered hila, her heart, and he had refuseit it. He had taken her moth - of. triumph, the song in her' heart; and broken it between his strong. hard hands. • • A COWARD AT HEART "Yeti think you're s'b fine' and brave," Sally said.;"Because•you're king on skis. But you're a coward at heart, Dan Reynolds. You're afraid of your own self, of •the. real things in the World. F knew that — from .the first. I told the others, Corey and i all the gang. I only bothered with you, let you teach me wliet, I already knew about ski-ing, to show you up, put you in your Place, have the, last laugh. It was all in fun on a dare." "Yore 'mean that?'; Dan took a step toward'.her, 'caught her two wrists in his strong 'clasp, Hi's gray- eyes were black a;th fury; 'thee high spots .of color stood out .on his smoothly tanned skin, "Of course I mean ,it!", 'Sally ,cried. Because she didn't at all. Be- cause she did not know what had made her say such things, now that, they were, no longer true. Because 'her heart was 'crying out. Because she loved him -- and hated 'hire at the same time. "I .never meant anything so much befMre. I'll prove it to; you •— if•you like." elearefl•s to any ng • Mihaly Addr•as Ovrisos (os new 1,000 lots as you wish) Mail Order and Remitfancs'to:-- OVERSEAS DLPARTMEN7 W C. MACDONALD INC,,' Box 1'929, Place d'Arni•s, Montreal, Canada Testifier tablet to any chaste Is Goyemmint ftetulatiaoi lL; swung on her skis, headed for the edge of the sheer drop. The steep, a• down•trail, , snow•crusted,_ stretched like k winding ribbon beneath them. She heard Dap call out a- warning; the whir of his'skis. But Sally had taken -.the schtnfs! — skis 'close,' body near)y 'erect,hands at her sides. Perfect forth and grace and skill. Perfect landing,'' too, on 'the r f C ttrdi twintrdv, rix-'lr lashing :against her face, the white • world skimming past like a. lantern - elide rig; off at atop speed. Thirty: rive: or qty miles ',an hour, with the wind urging; her on. Now she. world pass, the Qautien'sign of the Intermediate rule, But she would not 'bear to the deft: She would show Dan Re.yno,)ds that she could tee wpial k as expetrtly as he, gela.n. desprung at ope4'brook, break her; I,speed with a ser' ,e'of linked) `°chris- ties" and miss4 the ' barbed were . fence. •• { • • GLORY O' DANGER She thgught she head Dazt's own 'voiceagain,., raisO4 in Shrill warn- ing, or perhaps' ea a ,pry of, appeal. " But now •Sally was .driven on by 'a stronger force than anger, or hatred ort .leve. .:She wake filled with the . slicer exultation •tif -speed, the .mad glory •of dangger. • She knew that soon• Dan wotyld : . catch uli with here, althaugh: she had. got off to such $ •head. start,. Sbe ' •'could not'keep th• lead all+she way, New; .she cleared the brook with • one wide.elea•n syr„eep --,that would make• Dan . catc'h,:his breath, =open , his ' eyes!, She ceufd': ,got" see .the, fence at the foot, of the hill pen. - • hapsn snow drift -concealed it froze this distance. • •'.Once more tie heard' Dan's yoice - he must bealmost sup to' her-. This time sh•e,';heard him call ,her name, repeatedly,. urgently. Then, throwing her weight .on, the outside ski • to check control in ,the first, "christie", preparing • to vont- •' age for the forward lean, the wind caught' the tips..of`Sally's skis, she 'plunged forward, crumpling' into a tangled heap, was hurled on down • the steep pitch' toward the •'barbed wire fence .that !domed now, omin- ously near. The least thing she :remembered was Dan's cry, calling, her name,ag•' Ain, ringing faintly; persistently„ in her gams. •'` , (To Be Continued) l A' 13 L By SADIE B. Cli-IAMB.gRS•,. IRON ,IN YOUR DIET. - This week I . am again writing in answer to requests. • A few • week's -ago I wrote about .Molasses' an& its iron . properties and fol-. lowing , that I have been asked to plan 'a few mealshigh in iron. • This is a. vastly important subject, —when we are told, that:about one-half of our population are suffering from anemia. A. suffic- ient cause for this condition 'is found in the fact, that the' average diet, is deficient' in iron. The hu- man body has ;a storage of 43 grains of iron, and loses daily ono 250: thousands of,a grain (l4, gr). This " normally must be made up ,I and the anemic should as well as • making up, increase the iron • von tent daily. Fcods high in iron in the order given are,—peas, beans and lentils, whole wheat cereals. and breads, nuts (especially al - Mends ,'a'c'id pecans). 'Then come dried fruits with dates having the. highest iron ,contents. Following this' we have. meat, With liver the highest, thenthe the 'eggs, fresh fruit and .vegetables, and lastly the dairy products. In :the sugars, the brown •sugar,and molasses are the most important. Ther'beverages of , these planned mea).s tI am leaving to •your chcice, butralways keep in mind, that the stiltstitutes for tea and coffee'. are usually rich in : whole grain: pr'oduc},'ts, therefore valuable for their irdn. Something else: do not forget ;wheat germ;. ;. sprinkle it in soups; and on eve - 'eels freely. • o MEND Nd 1, ' " . Breaikfaelt Stewed' Prones Ceh ked Wheat T orridge • Poached egg, Graham Bread Toast•. Strawberry elly: Luncheon or .upper Baked Beans • Boston Brown !Bread Lettuce and Tonitato salad Red • currant jelly (jelly powder) Bran cookies , Dinner • Cream of aspara'�'us soup Roast Beef Baked potatoes Beet and lettuce salad Whole wheat bread Raisin Pig, MENU NO. 2 • Breakfast Grape juice 'Oatmeal porridge Breakfast bacon 'rye' bread toast Orange marmalade • Luncheon or Scupper Foarny Omelette ' Whole wheat muffins • Waldorf Salad (use either, dates or raisins) Dinner Grape Grape juice• cocktalZ Liver arid bacon Scalloped potatoes Buttered' spinach Cottage cheese served on' watercress Ginger .bread brows) sugar icing MENU NO.'3 Breakfast ' Tomato juice Wan cereal Cored egg - Rye • Bread: toast Stewed figs ' Luncheon Lima beans au,d corn casserole Raw carrot salad served on tvatei reser Grape jelly, -(made with grape juice and gelatine) Oatmeal . and date cookies • Dinner Jellied Beef Bouillon' Lifer patties t. Creamed potatoes Green peas and carrots mixed Date loaf and canned strawberries (or fresh), MENU N.O.. 4' Breakfast. Orange juice , Rolled wheat -porridge-. ' ,Whole veheat bread, toast Scrambled. eggs . Stewed °rhubarb • bran muffins Luncheon Tomato Soup ; Crackers' and'' cheese any duke • � $ e totous c ea Salad spring greens, (dandel �ns and wate'fcr.'ess .etc.) , • Rice pudding with dates , Danner Cream of Pea Soup Hambarg ,Steak• !Need potatoes, String ,beans . , Buttered 'beets' Prune' and *orange:, on lettuce '?Ginger ,,cookies Spanish cream Most,of these 'recipes in menu's have .)leen' given from time to ATTENTION BEGINNERS! -- LAURA WHEELER DESIGNED. THIS FOR YOU - _...... lir 0 1.M • .r; 1tt It if fe ►' `aLt ;p fist •' is. ► j�=e r cat ti e. v laiferfOisie, t.,e, it; ee•a;0410)14IItowsi • e COPS. 19ao. NEEDLECRAFT SERVICE, INC.. CROCHETED MEDALLION PATTERN 2443, It's fu"n to be just a beginner and yet .turn ,out' crochet that .aa • expert would proudly claim, as her work. That's what you'll' do with this : .medallion, ;Morning Star, Pattern 2448 contains 'directions for medal - Tion; .illustration :of it and stitches; materials required. . Send twenty cents in coins .(stamps cannot be-' accepted) for this • pattern to Wilson Needlecraft., Dept, 7.3 West :Adelaide: St., Toxonto; Write plainly Pattern Number, your name and`, address. timeduring the year, but requests are always welcome or advice on these special health, menus. • READERS, WRITE IN f • Miss "Cbt}itabers welcomes personal letters from interest• ed readers. She Is pleased to , receive suggestions .. on topics' for her :column, and is even. ready to Iiaten ,to . your''.':'pe$ peeves." Requests.' for recipes or special menus are in order. _ Address your letters to "Miss Sadie - B. Chambers, 73;• West Adelaide '• Street, Toronto." Music Leaves Dog Unmoved Stokowski's Experiment Fails to Make Wolf of Hound • If it's true that mubic can soothe the wild) beast, then sem, thing is wrong With the technique Leo- - Stokowski arid the Philadele phia .Orchestra. ". The blond maestro led a' Norweg- ian elk -hound • onto the Academy, of Music stage-at'a. children's concert in, Philadelphia,' to impersonate a wolf during a rendition of Proko- fieff's "Peter and the Wolf", ' • •'.JUST A YELP The „orchestra played, but the hound' wouldn't. He justtugged) et •his -leash, looking bewilde-red'. Final- ly'— right in thelmiddle of a flute solo —'he let out' a lusty ye'ip.' That '.ended . the . impersonation.. Forty -Eight ;Great Grandchildren A Japanese centenarian, Hachi- •- ,oemon Hattori, and: his ' wife Tobe., 90, have 48 ' .great -gram) children. , None of his children, grandchildren 1 or., great-grand- children ..has died in the last 50 year§. • BRIGHTLY COLOURED,' handaoine,thishowl will he • as ornautent to any table. Comca in Orange or green. Useful;, too, for many purposes. handy size— !%,14. incises deep by 4e,:( • inches wide. Bat got yours while -they lust!' • Your children need the extra nourishment in ALL -WHEAT Active, growing children burn, up vital energy much faster than grown-ups. That's why they need the important vitamins, body-building 'ro- teins, energizing car ' o y a es, -an ' -iglu ' e minerals contained in Kellogg's' ALL -WHEAT. ' And they love its delicious flavour. Ask your grocer to two packages of Kellogg's ALL -WHEAT today and get your first. bowl notw- , in either a rich orange or lustrous green, .as you choose. You'll want a whole set! Rt,dr. flAgts • SEE YOUR GROCER to - DAY! • fie does not have many glass bowls, and you will want a complete set. .0