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Flesherton Advance, 11 May 1938, p. 6

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Promenade Deck . by Islibel Ross SYNOPSIS A luxurious five month cruise all around the world aboard the "Maren- la" brings together a group of pasten- gera for adventures, rcmantic, enter- taining and tragic â€" Like in "Grand Hotel" these passengers offer a study In human actions and reactions that unconsciously bare their souls â€" These characters are aboard the ship; Macduff, dour Scotchman, single, of middle age; Miss Mudge, school teach- er, spending the savings of 20 years; Angela, faithful wife of Lovat, gigolo; Dick Charlton, first officer; Clare, a person of experience; Joan, a dissipat- ed flapper; Jenny, run-away wife, and Peter; Captain Baring, master of the ship â€" and his soul â€" NOW, GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER IV Dick danred v ' ' the swing of the sea, and ont •rtuiue Patty by telling her about some ol the things she'd see on the trip. Tlu' third time he had danced with 'â-  r he : uddenly saw that she was not listening to a word he was saying, but looking over his shoul- der with the expression of a hint child. With the next turn he could see why â€" Mis. Langford was adrift in a sea of self in' Ication, her wide lips an inch from the cheek o£ the boy whom Dick had set pursuing Pal'y around the decks ever since they had sailed. So that was the way! Well, a good thing it had happened quickly, before she had got fond of him. He swung her hastily down the other side and out for a breath of air. The prom- enade deck was enclosed with glass, and she suggested that they go still higher. "I should love to fed the wind on the top deck," she said. They then climbed up the companlouway, Patty hugging her white fur Jacket around her thin dress. A Lovely Child The moon was a crescent swung on a chain of diamonds, and the waves dashed foam against the bow. Patty had a dim idea that the woman in gold hovered like a shadow between a C'"e- fr- -> yesterday and an ominous to- morrow. It was the look in Johnny's eyes that appalled her. How did a wo- man make a merj boy, whom she scarcely knew, look like that? Dick kept nuiet, preserving a . : m- Start the day feeling HTandACTIVEU Bm'I III a tluKltli mercroirded iTSlni hold you bick.CLEtNiE IITEimtLLr WITH ORFIELD TEi.e«lrldol<lit«aitet that,; lion rou up and keep rouftel- iRf run do«rn and Inactive Utyally vorlis within 8 to 10 hri. MILD but prompt! «ldni|iloret25c&1l)c. GARFIELD TEA I I'lorte Atrniir, 'I'fironlo, L'nniidn Itriil. l.-iA. DEHF? No such thing . , . Gat an ACOUSTICON tost and learn hov/ to put your resid- ual hearing to i»e. Greater distance recaption . . . light- er .. . smaller than ever before. Write for free booklet oi 'Homo Demonstration. MOUSTICON INSTITUTE 330 Bay St. TORONTO ONTARK pathetic air. Ho was thinking: "A very lovely child, but she's in for more of it, if she feels that way about the boy. It's just another case of what the sea (Iocs to a woman." Ho felt her clutching at his :-.:;n; all of a sudden she had decided to go down to her stateroom. Terting him to kl her aunt kuov.* that she had gone to bed, Patty went below and tried to read. The typo danced before her eyes and she wondered if she were getting a littl" seasick. When her aunt came in, she 'ouiul ' fast asleep. ''Bertrand KusseH's 'Marriage and .Morals,' " sai'l Mrs. Minton, picking up the book and rov ring her gently. ''The child is growing up." J^onte Carlo The Marenia lay at i-nchor at Ville- fianche, her fUifrs slrung like a gar- Iiiid of autumn leaves over the sap- phire stret 'i of b:.. . Monte Carlo was snugly tucked In the green curve of Monaco. After eleven days at sea, .Macduff blinked at tho brilliance of the scene before him. lie had his own plans for the day. He would give Monte Carlo wide berth and stretch his legs in on' of his favorite walks. He had a poor opinion of the place and had never to.ssed a penny on the table. Any time he went to th-j Cas- ino, it was simply to see what fools human beings could make of them- selves over a ganibling-wheel. He strode along, with liis arms swinging like windmiils. More pas- sengers were getting on it Ville- frandie. That was a pity. There were altogether toi, : .any on board already. Things seemed to be happening on the ship, some of them which he did not altogether approve. Soon they would all be bickering, where now ihty were gushing and flirt hi.e;. It was hound to turn out that way when people saw too much of one another. He hoped they would not get an- othr;- Mrs. Langford on board; one of her kind was enough. She was begin- ning to get under his skin, spoiling the pleasure for him on -the lop deck, always up to her tricks, and now rop- ing in the America boy. Macduff had thought that his sex should be pro- tected fi:oni such Influences. The Fos- ter girl was showing up badly, too. He nev. V went into the bar that he did not find her there. The high jinks of the boat extended ve:i to his own al- ley, where a diamond merchant across the way was cuntinrally entertaining women in his stateroom. He came down ff the breakwater and followed II. _ iad to the Italian border, sfopring at a restaurant that stood on still:- in the sen. AJ The Casino The short lliviei'a day was passing, and llic chill of lhr,.i- o'clock was creeping in from the sparkling waters It was Bhorlllved at its best, warm and vivlfylnn, but swift In its de- cline. He remembered that he had to he on hoard Ihe Marenia by seven. He might motor hack to Monte Carlo and take a lurn iu the Casino to see whiit Ills fi'llDw iKiHsengers were doing. Hot and stuffy Inside, as usual, with an annoying I, izzing of subdued voices like a swarm of bees zooming In a ilistani grove. The merciless Il?,lii.s dug seams in weary faces. He thought lie I. ad nev seen so many jmiis of tired eyes. Wherever ho lookeil, he could spot someone from the Marenia, IjuI very few were Ihrowinr. â- u laicrs on till- tables. They were a cautious lot and ill aj ease. He was .s^irprised to see Miss Miiilgc â€" litTie .Miss Muf- fet, he called her In his own n)iiul â€" tossing two counters on the bnizi^ Willi <iuil<? a flourish. He woulil watch to see what happened. The cioiipler rak- ed lip her couulors. She looked very anxiously at his pusly face, not (iiiile sur(! which way her luck had gone, but he (lid nol lalse his eyes from the liible. (To lie continued) Discovers Women Less Dishonest Government Inspectors Say They Seldom Try to Cheat The common belief that almost all women are amateur smugglers and that no woman thinks it a crime to cheat the gover- -nent or a big cor- poration is disproved by the exper- ience of government investigators,, de- clares Gretta Palmer. Quoting facts and figures, she writes in McCall's for May : ''In spite of the common belief that large numbers of women smuggle now clothes into the country, the govern- ment inspectors know that this is not true. Thoir own experts are trained to detect the sales slips which arc un- reasonably low. They know about the women who wear three dresses, one on top of the other, and about the women who sew old labels in new foreign coats. But they say that such dishonest passengers number fewer than one per cent, of the women re- turning from abroad. They're Not The Crooks "Well, you may say, women are the sex that shoplifts. They form a large section of the criminal class found guilty of theft. Oh, do they? "Every year Mie Department of Jus tice of the United States issues a solid, bulging book known as the Uni- form Crime Reports. It lists convic- tions of criminals in every city and state. And in a nine-months' period of 1937, this book shows that 44,127 persons were found guilty of larceny or theft. Only^,159 of these were women! "The old-fashioneS woman who thought it was ethical to cheat a cor- poration 'because it was so big', has disappeared â€" if she ever existed â€" along with the old-fashioned woman who had to use her fingers to count over three. If the men of -America were as honest as their women are, our jails would be less crowded and our government many millions better off today." // Vegetables At Their Best Are Photographers' Biggest Headache Women Greatest Problem "Watch the Birdie" Men Of The Professional Photographers' Society of New York State emphat- ically declared last week that women are its greatest problem. The "watch-the-birdie" men and women agreed that it takes patience and skill to prepare women to face the camera lens and, after all that work, they are seldom pleased unless the rseult is extremely flattering. Middle-Aged the Hardest "Middle-aged women are hardest to photograph, especially if they are fat," Emme Gerhard, New York City photographer, declared. "They have to be intensely idealized because they can't forget that they once were sweet ."sixteen." Kxperts agreed that the successful photogi-apher of tomorrow will come from the ranks of artists and pictor- ialists â€" amateur camera clubs â€" and will produce arti.stically beautiful pictures through use of corrective make-up, art of reshaping the con- tour of the face and its expressive features, the eyes and mouth, accord- ing to the laws of ojitical illusion. Wray Mdtnuir, Cleveland make- up artist, demonstrated new ])rinci- ples on four mode's before the group. "The same rule.? cf make-up ap- ply to men and wonieij allTxC, but with men it is usually only necessary to correct.the heaid line and reshape the nose to get a good picture," he pointed out. Modern dietary standards demand vegetables and still more vegetables, stressing always the vitamins, miner- als, and bulk which they provide, and the particular merits of leafy greens. Granting that vegetables are a daily essential, a housewife appreciates them for still atiother reason â€" for the variety they contribute to her meals. They bring something fresh and sea- sonal to her table every day. Of particular importance in serving vegetables is their cooking. Even the finest vegetables may be made utter- ly tasteless and unappetizing by poor cooking â€" usually overcooking or else slow cooking. Their natural colour and fresh flavour must be preserved to get the best value and one of first rules to achieve this is to cool: them the shortest time possible â€" only till tender. Hero are some attractive vegetable recipes which will add variety to your meals. Carrots Au Gratin 2 cups cooked diced carrots 1 tablespoon minced onion 1-3 cup grated cheese M teaspoon paprika Cream sauce Make cream sauce by using V^ cups milk, 2 tablespoons butter, and 2 tablespoons flour. Cook until thick. To this add the cheese, onion and papri- ka, and finally the diced carrots. Mix well, place in a buttered baking dish and cover with buttered crumbs. Bake in a moderate oven for 25 minutes. Baked Stuffed Onions Select large onions. Peel and then remove core with apple corer. Fill the cavity -with seasoned bread crumbs. Bake until tender. Cauliflower A La Parmesan 1 head cauliflower, cooked 1 cup white sauce 3 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese '/4 cup buttered bread crumbs Place cauliflower in greased casser- ole. Pour white sauce over cauliflower and sprinkle -with cheese and bread Dainty Frock For Dress-up Dancing Equal To An Hour's Football No Wisecracks In .SpcMuci, Iowa, it is illegal to make rude remarks about people one passes in the streets. THE SALVATION ARMY HELPS EVERYBODY Therefore: Everybody should help The Salvation Arm.v, It inspires hope in the hopeless cxtiyids help to the helple.s.", provides shelter for the honiele8.% Rives guidance to the waywnr<l, preaches Solvation to all claii-.fs. Its work Is endorsed by Government and Civic OfTidais ns well as leaders in all lines of national endeavor. Your support of the ANNUAL SELF-DENIAL APPEAL U needed. Coiili ibutions may he addressed to: Commissioner Geo. L Carpenter 20 Albert Street Toronto Instructor Says Te:hnique On Floor As Hard As That On Field crumbs. Bake in moderate oven (375 degrees P.) 30 minutes, or until the crumbs are delicately browned. This serves G. Canadian cheese may be sub- stituted for Parmesan cheese, if de- sired. Glazed Onions 1 pound (30) small white onions 4 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons sugar Peel oulons and cook in large amount of boiling water salted until Just tender. Drain and dry on cheese- cloth. Melt butter in saucepan; add sugar. Then add onions and cook over low flame, shaking, frequently until onions are glazed. Serves 0. Baked Mushroonu 1 pound large fresh mushrooms 1 teaspoon salt Dash of pepper 2 tablespoons butter 4 tablespoons ci.am Wash mushrooms and place in cas- serole. Season with salt and pepper. Dot with butter. Add cream, cover, and bake in moderate oven (350 de- grees F.) 30 to 40 minutes, or until tender. Server 4. Spinach Ring 2^A cups cooked spinach, chopped 1 teaspoon salt Dash of pepper Dash of marjoram 1 teaspoon scraped onion 2 eggs, slightly beaten 2 tablespoons melted butter Cook spinach ('/4 peck) only until tender. Drain and chop. Add season- ings, eggs and butter, and mix very thoroughly. Turn into a well-greased ring mold. Place In pan of hot water and bake in moderate oven (375 de- grees F.) 30 minutes, or until firm. Tur;. from mold and serve with Mush- room Sauce. IndivlduU molds may be used. Serves 4. Mushroom Sauce V4 pound fresh mushrooms 3 cups water % teaspoon salt " tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour Dash of pepper Wash mushrooms well. Slice length- wise through cap and stem. Cook iu water 30 minutes, over medium fire. Add salt. Brain li(iuor and measure VA cups. Melt butter, add flour, and blend well. Add mushroom liquor (V^ cups) and cook, stirring constantly, until thickened. Add mushrooms and pepper and cook five minutes longer. Serve with above spinach dish. This sauce may also be used to serve with chicken, veal, egg and other vegetable dishes. Make« 2 cups sauce. If desir- ed, chicken broth or cream may be substituted for % cup mushroom stock. Dentists recommend Wrigley's Gum as an aid to strong, healthy teeth, cleanses them of food par- ticles, massages thegums. Aidsdi- gestion, relieves stufiy feeling after meals. Helps keep you healthy! Take some home for the children too â€" they will love it ! c$-ii "Equal Rights" Hai A Real Meaning Married Worker Teaches Husband To Cook, Mend, Darn And Sew DURHAM, Eng. â€" Defending tha right of married women to continue at work, Mrs. Rose Farrant, 26, clerk iri the same London factory which em- ploys her husband, told a meeting here of a 50-50 arrangement whicll' gives here equal opportunities with' her husband. She taught him to cook, mend, darn and sew. "By this arrangement w'H both have opportunities for attending meetings in the evening and taking part in other activities." Mrs. Farrant said she only wanted to work until they had enough money for her comfortably to retire and have eight children. Lay Awake In Agony With Neuritis Kruschen Salts Brought Lasting Relief Ordinary headaches are bad enough. but they are as nothing compared toj Quintuplets Like Dentist's Chair All Have Perfect Teeth, Examin- ation Shows .â- Xn hour's practice in modern dance le(hni(|Uo, snys Mrs. Rarhara Page Heiswanjjcr, in .\tlantn, Inst week, for the convention of the American Association for Health and PhyMiciil Kduratlon, is e(iual to an hour's serimmape on the football field. "It takes the same ability, in\oIv- \t\g <|ui(k muscular tensions and rc- Inxe.o, to snag n forward pass thnt it takes to hold nn attitude in a mod- ern dance," said Ihe Monticello Col- lege (Godfrey, III.) instructor. And the time has passed, she .^aid, when it is hard to gvt men student.^ interested in dancing classes. They have more energy than the girls and are more easily intere.'tcd. Hut Mrs. Ileiswanger admits that it woul i help if athletic conches were more infeiosted in dflncinp. The hoys admire their coaches and will follow their leadership, she said. PATTKRX 4801 By ANNE ADAMS First choice for Summer â€" this henuilinR "dre.ss up" style! You'll lie greeted with flattering comments whenever you appear «t teas or par- ties in this newest and most cliarm- intr of frocks made from Anne .Adams' oasy-to-use Pattern 4801. Don't you love the dramntic little puffed sleeves, dainty lace trim- ming, and softly gathered bodice that boa.sts sparkling button accents? .All this charm tops a full, gored skirt that's gloriously in tune with the dictates of fashion. Made ever .so (|uickly and easily, too! Lovely in a sheer flowered print. Pattern 1801 is available in mis.ses' and women's sizes 14, 16, IS, 20, 32. 31, .•?C, 3S, -10 and 42. Size 16 takes .T* yards 3!) inch fabric and 7-8 yards lace. Illustrated step- by-slep sewing instructions includ- ed to siniplifv vour sewing. Send TWKNTY CKNTS (20c) in coinH (stnnips cannot be accepted) for this Anne .\dnms pattern. Write plainly SIZK, N.-\,MK, AUDUKSS and STVI.K MMRKl!. Send your order to .'Xnnc Adams, Uoom 42.S, 73 Adelaide St. W., To- ronto. CALLANDER, Ont. â€" The Dionne auintuplets, who struggled to get into the dentist's chair all at once, were told by three specialists that nothing was wrong with the 100 teeth which the girls share evenly. Dr. Arnold D. Mason, dean of the University of Toronto's Dental Col- lege, said that the children had "un- usually beautiful" teeth. Neither he, Dr. Charles Corrigan of the Univer- sity, nor W. G. Thomson, of Hamil- ton, Ont., could find a sign of decay. Have Eaten Right Food They had no suggestions for Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe, physician to the five, about a change of diet, flnding that the food which the children were eat- ing had developed their teeth perfect- ly. The dentists took impressiovs of their toeth, which will be kept for records. As the dentists first pronounced Yvonne's teeth perfect, Kmilie, An- nette, Mario and Ceclle rushed to take her pKtce in the chair. Yvonne was reluctant to leave and It was only with the help of the nurses that the specialists could prevent all Ave climb- ing into the chair at once. the awful pains of head, says this neuritis in the; woman. Read how, Kruschen completely banished the pain: â€" "I had neuritis in the head andi right arm. I suffered untold agony with my head, and I dare not think what might have happened had it con-' tinued. Everybody knows what a' headache Is like, but it is as nothing; compared with the awful pain of neu- ritis in the head. I spent sleepless! nights tossing with pain. I began tak-^ ing Kruschen Salts, and after some months of the treatment I have effect- ed lasting relief." â€" (Mrs.) L.M. Neuritis, like rheumatism and sci- atica, frequently has its roots in intes- tinal stasis (delay)â€" the unsuspected accumulation In the system of harmful waste matter, which leads to the for-'" mation of excess uric acid. Two of the ingredients of Kruschen Salts have the power of dissolving urlo' acid crystals. Other ingredients of Kruschen assist Nature to expel these dissolved crystals through-the natural channels. Buying a Husband .Miss Klai, Hurmcse Giraffe-neck- ed beauty, is going home to buy a husband. The husband worth hav- ing, she says, is the one she picks for herself and buys with her own money. CAS A LOIVIA OI'K.\ !-'<>K SKASOX, M.4V 14 h'ram 10 n.m. to U ^.n», 1 houi-'.s tour with Kiiide â€" cJistte, towrr. tunnel, mid smhlea, royal Hiitkiiui, Hn<l iniUtHr.v exhibit.*, art i-i.lli'ctU>n, Vihi.v Itidm< Mcmorlul. .\ilnllii Mrt rhlldrra l.%r. rxrppi i>iiB4ar S.%p Issue No. 20â€" '38 C SOUR STOMACH. GAS? IF you're troubled with stomach upsets, acid indi- gestion, gas. or have no appetite, there's nothing better than Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov- ery. It stimulatss the appetite and .nifls digestion. Mrs; H. Ion«, 1 J4 Wen Ave,, \S csttrn Hill, St. C.itharines, Out., said : "A few years ago I was so weak and luf. fered from acid indigestion and sour stora- aih. 1 was almost alwa.vjt helctdng gis. Dr. Pierce's OoKIca Me<lical Discovery bm helped nic nn.rc than anything etsc I have use<i. It hflrcd to relieve nie t>i the stomach upsets and I felt 100<,{- in every way alter using it." .Sold hv dnipgists. New size, tat^ 30c. Liquid $1.00 and $\.i5. Priced troinS7.70 To 113.99 Onr- and !\in luinifi ronr tlmitr or wiitf fot riiy.K yn}M\:n\ THC COlffM^NLAMr ^No mrovK CO. ltd frpt. M ».-•«« T«roiitf»» (km. • Rurn» 96% lirâ€" 4% fuel. • Makes iti otrn RMS (rem Kaso- tine. • tUe it anywhere. No pipes or con- nections. • I.irbt<t Inntantly. N'opre-heatins. • Kconotnicil. One ir&)lon of fiiel v\y- tratra botS hiu i>.

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