Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 25 May 1944, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

SAL fp, Tia Kd et nd A a *y, ey fe Sh aii on Cn ad Sn Eh J hr Sem Sn a Ni AC SR RR € » + y ~a A _ ar = A. SEE LN; PRPS SEES ROLY MASS 2 always carry ParaDoL | sin their " "Handbags % Dr. ih Parapol - 'For Quick Relief of Pain Service today are engaged in work- ing out detailed plans for protect- ing the European harbors they ex- pect the Allies to be using shortly. Theirs is the job of erecting steel booms and nets across' occupied harbors to keep out enemy sub- marines and torpedoes, Men of the Boom. Defence Service accompany favading armies in ships specially built to maintain nets which weigh from three to 30 tons, A slip that you can trust under your smartest dresses 4498, Well thought-out to the last scam, it caresses your figure just where it should, and stays in place! You couldn't ask for a better fit. A transfer pattern from which you may select-your initials is included s+ . also a step-by-step "Sew Chart. Pattern 4498 is available in women's sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size 36, 234 yards 39-inch. Send twenty cents (20c) in coins '(stamps cannot he accepted) for this pattern to Room 421, 73 Ade- laide St. West, Toronto. Write plainly size, name, address, style number, % is Pattern, MOTHERCRAFT .| HEALTH NOTES A Daily Diet For Expectant Mother Diet-throughout pregnaney should be suificient, 'good, simple, diges- tible and nutritious. It is not neces- sary. for the expect- ant mother to eat excessively large amounts of = food. The quality of the food is more im- portant: Natural foods prepired with as little cook- ing as necessary, are essential A day's dict should include: fruit, such as oranges, prunes or raisins, figs, fruit, bananas. A whole grain wheat cereal or rolled oats. One tablespoon whole bran may be "added for constipation, Milk -- one pint at least of fresh whole milk, buttermilk or skimmed milk, Vegetables, especially green ones, such as lettuce, spinach, cabbage, asparagus, ete. -- two servings be- sides potatoes. A small quantity of meat, fish~and an egg. Butter, cheese and cod liver oil. Sugar and apples, dates, grape- cereal -- especially if mother is overweight, At least two quarts of water must be taken daily. Alcoholic stimulants should not be taken unless medical- ly advised. ) Early in pregnancy the mother should see her dentist as teeth of- ten decay during pregnancy and an extra supply of mineral salts and vitamins are necessary so that the forming, child will get what it requires without depriving the mother, Make This Receipe a "Regular" This week's recipe describes a hot, healthful and delicious dish that tried once will be a "regular" on vour table, Corn En Casserole 3 tablespoons chopped green pepper 3 tablespoons finely chopped © onion 3 tablespoons Buiter 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon salt % teaspoon paprika ~% teaspoon dry mustard + 1% cups milk '# cups Bran flakes, finely crushed 2 cups canned whole kernel corn, drained "tar 1 egg, well beaten Place green pepper, onion, and 2 tablespoons. butter in saucepan and cook gently until tender. Add flour and seasonings and stir until smooth, Add milk and cook until thickened, stirring constantly." Add 34 cup flakes, corn, and egg. Turn "into greased 1% quart casserole. Melt remaining 1 tablespoon but- ter and pour over remaining 34 cup flakes. Toss lightly to mix. Sprin- 'kle over top of corn. Bake in hot oven (400° F.) 30 minutes. Makes Sl 6 servings, PLACE AT ANY MEAL,ANYTIME ! Busy housewives appreciate , Kellogg's ready-to-eat cereals more and more every day. Kellogg's are a satisfying . "dish gnytime-- for breakfast, lunch, odd-hour snacks, Ready in 30 seconds, sugar products should be restricted, | - faster than Solemn Warning Against Diphtheria Dr. D, V. Currey, M.H.O. re- minds us that, 15 ago one child in seven who developed diph- "theria died, and one baby out of every four, says the St. Catharines Standard, From 1019 to 1928 in this city there was an average of 66 cases per yaur and five deaths, Wilen toxoid treatment became general in 1928, it brought about an average of only five cases of diphtheria per year and only one death from the disease in 10 years. Since 1937 no cases have been re- ported in this city, remarkable re- cord but oné which is not at all amique, because other cities can show about the same thing. Now there is no reason what- ever for any case of diphtheria, years Toxqgid knocks it out. Dr. Currey tells what toxoid is. It is a clear veal broth which has in it the toxin of diphtheria germs rendered harm- less by formalin and heat, There are no germs in it nor any horse germs, The toxin in the-body has a stimulating ffect, the body cells producing enough antitoxin to pro- tect the recipient against the dis- case, Dr. Currey gives solemn warn- ing against diphthera. The = dis- case could come back overnight if toroid avere abandoned. something tried and tested over the years, a blessing and gift from me- dical research and discovery, and only negligence today accounts for a diphtheria death or illness. SHOVEL-SHOWER Thanks to the co-operation of a friendly steam shovel operator, First Lt. Arthur S, Carter, USMC, _of Los Angeles, enjoys a cooling shower on Cape Gloucester, New Britain. : Mosquitoes Make , Transatlantic Record Two Canadian-built. isting transatlantic records, the Air Ministry announced last week. One crossed from North Ameri- ca in 6 hours 46 minutes and the other took 7 hours 9 minutes, The distance from take-off to landing place was 2,200 statute miles, The time of 6 hours and 46 min- utes was 2 hours and 10 minutes the previous: record made by an R.A.F, Liberator. Pilot of the faster Mosquito was Wing Cmdr, J. D. Woodridge, an Australian, 'making his first lantic crossing. The other Mosqui- to was piloted by Capt. Kirk Ker- kolian. I'resno City, Cal. The Mosquito ~ bombers flew from a point in Labrador to Nor- thern Ireland, 'Princess Present . At Dinner Party The King and Queen of England gave -a "dinner party at Bucking- ham Palace on May 1 in honor of the four Dominion" Prime Minis- ters now in conference in London, the British Radio reported. "Princess Elizabeth, who re- cently celebrated her 18th bjrth- day, was present," continued the' broadcast, "It was her first- impor tant official dinner party. She sat between General Smuts and Mr, Mackenzie King. Other members of the royal family present were the Duke of Gloucester, Lord Har- wood and the, Duchess of Kent. Among the guerds were Mr, "and Mrs, Churchill and Lord and Lady Cranborne." ; 4 Unsinkable, Too Flying from London to Liverpool, a distance of some £30 miles, one is never out of sight of an airfield. England has become the world's most formidable aivargfc carrier, . Here is- . ; Mosquito planes in non-stop flight broke ex-" At-.. BR When a man's shirt is so worn at the neck and cuffs that it can't be worn, there"is still plenty of material to make a 'cotton dress or ~ apron, Where -possible, use the buttons or button holes down the front--it saves an hour's work. Two worn shirts of contrasting color can often be combined to make a smart cotton frock for your eight year old daughter. @® SERIAL STORY Murder on the Boardwalk X BY ELINORE COWAN STONE Last week: Chandra warns Chris- tine to be on her guard, urges her to come to him for advice. Chris- tine believes that he is a fake. Af- ter the show ends, she remains. Chandra comes to her at once. CHAPTER V ' , "I am glad you waited," Chan- dra began with a direct simplicity Christine had not expected. "No doubt," she said icily, "this was a fair exchange. But don't you think you might have let me in_on the plot?" "aliss Thorenson"--his smile was tired--almost, if seemed to Chris- tine, worricd--"I suppose there's no way of convincing you that I really want to help you?" : "So you do know my name! . But then, of course, you've had mie followed by some of your spies ever since I got off that train-- perhaps even before. And if you're a Hindu, I'm the Duchess of Windsor. , .. Well, I'm fed up on theatrical tricks, What I'd like is some real triple-threat facts--if you've got any." - * * * Ve "Then, Miss Thorenson," the "swami" told her with a gentleness so persuasive that, for the moment, Christine's stern young skepticism was almost broken down, "you were very unwise to register at your new address under an assumed name, [ sce for you a very real danger." "Well, Mr. Chandra--or what- ever your real name is," Christine said, "since I seem to have no se- crets front you, you couldn't sug- gest, I suppose, exactly what it is I ought to do--aside from inspect- ing my baggage for an unmention- able object presumably placed there by a person or persons unknown?" . "I could suggest--but it would do no good," he told her wearily, "that if you find--what I have rea- son to think you will--you com- municate with me at once, by a messenger I will gladly place at * your disposal. I shall then be in a position to advise you." "Thanks a lot," Christine flash- ed, "I'l take my chances on the persons unknown." * * * As she-marched out, she glanced' at her watch, . .. After 11, and she was a good two miles from home. " Don't you k tive young person. Well, she needed a brisk walk to clear her mind aftér all that hocus- pocus. i Of course the idea that she could be in any danger was just funny. The whole scenario was ridiculous- ly clear--beginning with that tele- phone girl--and all' so crude and bungling, Yet, in spite of her * bravado, Christine jumpggd when a voice said at her shontoff "it would be you, w that no girl with eyes and hair like yours is safe from unwelcome attentions on this Boardwalk at night?" i "So it seems," Christine said when she could control her voice. "No doubt if you had your way curfew would ring at sunset for every wo- man under 80." * * » The bareheaded young man must have run up the stairway from the beach, dor he "was breathing quick- ly, and_his hair was rumpled. "Well," he went on with such infectious pleasure that Christine found herself feeling for the first time that day that it was marvel otis to be young and alive, "may- be I'll be able to enjoy*my meals now. When I called the Crestview this afternoon, they told me you'd checked out. . . . But let's get out of this mob." They had been standing just in front of Christine's "studio." As they moved on under the lights of the Twenticth Century Pier, Chris- tine stopped short in the midst of the crowded, noisy Boardwalk. "But"---she- cried--"why you're drenched!" g i The sleeves and front of his coat and shirt were dripping, trickles of water ran down his light trous- ers, and his shoes were sodden and caked with wet sand. : "Oh, that?" He glanced down with some 'embarrdssment. "I got pretty close to the surf-line, and a 'big one caught me amidships." * * » i Christine was not an introspec- She was no more capable of analyzing her sud- den lift of spirit than she had been of understanding that her restless- ness and lonliness of the earlier evening had not,been entirely due to worry about. Cousin. Emma's Season's Special -- Rhubarb Pan Dowdy Lives there a homemaker who¥oesn't enjoy the thrill of concocting « something "different", : So here's a puddin'--espéciall -spring-timed, 'and casy to make be sides. It's a delightful combination of mouth-watering fresh rhubarb with a crunchy topping of whole bran, designed to do wonders for a dessert, course, And don't overlook the color--why spriiig pink, of course, as delectable as your. netv spring bonnet, i RHUBARB PAN DOWDY ; 4 cups diced fresh rhubarb 1 cup sugar 1 teaspoon butter V5 cup All-Bran 34 cup milk 1%, cups flour 1 tablespoon 'baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons sugar 1 cup shortening ; Arrange rhubarb in baking pan; sprinkle with sugar and dot with butter. Soak All-Bran in milk, Sift flour, baking powder, salt and sugar together. Cut in-shortening until mixture is like coarse cornmeal. Add soaked All-Bran and mix until all dr by large spoonfuls onto rhubarb an Bake in moderate oven (375°1%,) 3 Yield: 8 servings, ingredients are moistened. Drop spread lightly to cover rhubarb, 5-40 minutes, 'toes, . hese days, when tea must yield the utmost in flavour, quality is of supreme importance. Ask for. . strange desertion. She only knew now that she felt more at home with this tanned stranger whom she had met barely 24 hours ago--more warmly glad to see him--than she would have felt with any one she had known a lifetime; and that her pleasure in being with him again was as right and natural as the clean sea breeze, . "I'm cold, too," he was going on plaintively. "Something hot to eat would feel right good at this minute --and Decker's is just a comfor- table walk along the Boardwalk. That's the one place in Surf City that doesn't reek with fried pota- .. And I hate eating alone. Come on, Miss Thorenson," he wheeled with an engaging grin, "be a good scout." "I'd like to, only""--Christine laughed for the first time that day --"except that the fellers call you 'Bill, T don't know your name." "I answer much more docilely to 'Bill,' but if I forgot to niention it, the rest of it's" Yardley," he told her. Then "he added with someth- ing behind the smile in his eyes that made her catch her breath, "I hope you're going to like it." : * * * i While they were waiting at the table Bill had found by a window that overlooked the sea, Bill said, "It occurs to me that there's a lot about me besides my name that you don't know..T raise horses for a liv- ing--mighty fine horses. But the market wasn't too good this year; so I took over the riding school here. You see, I've had a handi- «cap over you all along. When I heard you say you were Mrs, Tal- bert's cousin. I~knew you wouldn't + be interested in lifting my watch." "If you'd known the whole truth," Christine said wryly, "you'd pro: bably have kept your hand on that watch. , , . Not that I'm not Mrs. - Talbert's cousin; but there've been occasions--not 'so long ago--when a nice 17-jeweled "watch would have ~ made my fingers itch." = . ; "Christine," he said. abruptly, "something's worrying . you. Why not get it out of your system?" "You'll probably laugh," Chris- tine 'hesitated. "I lope you will, "7... I've had a feeling all along that I ought to; but somehow my sense of humor doesn't-scem to be work- ing this week-end." . * * x Yet when she did tell him the whole story of that preposterous day, he did not laugha Instead, he frowned over his cig- - aret, "So Chandra took a hand? . . . That bird cuts a pretty wide swathe. People come here to con- sult him about everything from the baby's first tooth to the outcome of the presidential electioti:-financiers, successful writers and artists and . actors; political bosses, social reg- isterites. They say he used to be an actor, He's probably part psy- chologist, part mystic, part shrewd business man, and part stage man- ager. I've never heard of his being involved in anything really shady. home and look under my bed for Barnum"s elephant, I'm not sure I wouldn't take a chance." They had left the restaurant, and had strolled back to the Twentieth Century Pier. Suddenly Bill broke off, "Look -- there's something wrong!" 3 On the Boardwalk just ahead a crowd was milling about, inter~ spersed with figures in uniform, Afterwards, Christine remember- ed that everything that happened during the grim hours that follow- ed had much the quality of an une real but none the less terrifying dream, (To Be Continued) Who Wouldn't Rudolf Messerschmidt, aged Jerusalem resident from Switzer- land, applied to the government for permission to change his name to Rudolf Spitfire, FORD ~ Modern, * Fireproof, © Conveaiemly Located, Eosy Parking Montreal 8 (0) a0) (0) as low as and.the : vill LORD no higher E 3 thar B22 ELGIN dd Ottawa opis RE 5950 1.5350 per person, No higher! fl. 400 lovely rooms with radio! 'For Eczema-- Skin Troubles Make up' your mind today that you are going to give your skin a real chance to get well. Go to any good drugstore to-day and get an original bottle of Mooue's Emerald Oil--Iit lasts many days because It is highly concentrated. The very first application will give you rellef--the itching of Eczema 1s quickly stopped--erup- ™ tons. 37 2 scule gi! in a very ew 'days. The sam 8 true o itching Toes and oer Barber's Itch, Sait Rheum: and other skin. troubles, oi Tgher that Mosnes emarald 8 a clean, powerful penetrating Antiseptic Oil that oes Rot ain or leave a greasy resldue, plete satisfaction or money hack, HERE has been no change in the § T advanced fnnes of he fm Clove HECLA fr 3 Clare JEWEL Range, clusive "*Steel-Ribbed ~In-fact, if Chandra told me to go |= ISSUE 22-1044 pd ° of nN ; - : = oN 0 » i wilh CLARE-JEWEL . Range or 3 ay The new ap- - CLARE HECLA i | 45 FURNACE ne ape - "prance with hie ved Beet rinbed LAREJEWE Tweety Years; Fused Joint iclency cotistruction. r early 9 life, to avoid disappointment, Saves 1 Ton in 7 furmace True, there are fewde being uilt (due to paces wartime restrictions) but ox. epot with the 20-Year Guarantee ~ the patented Fused Joint Construction -- and oth . Clare HECLA adventager are ill Ene Bult to ae time HECLA furnaces . , . the time-tested features of the Clare JEW EL Range remain unchanged. dealer if you really need a new rane or range, CLARE BROS + CO LIMITE e your Clare PRESYON oNYARIO } Come. é oy Capt) ou pe A : ¥ * # + 5

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy