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Keeping Safe One’s Jewellery

There’s more jewellery to be seen in London these days than ever before the war. If one looks around a restaurant or any place where women have taken off gloves and coats, one notices the flash of rings, the sparkle of jewels on the neck of simple daytime dresses. Th 6 reason is that since bombing roads began no one can find a safe place to keep their valuables. The banks will no longer accept them; and one’s home may become a heap of dust containing everything one treasures just in the space of time one is out shopping. And so, the safest way of keeping one’s jewellery is to wear it.-

In making boiled icing, add a teaspoon of vinegar when the flavouring is added and the frosting will not be brittle and break when cut.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BOPT19410502.2.41.4

Bibliographic details

Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LXIX, Issue 13327, 2 May 1941, Page 7

Word Count
141

Keeping Safe One’s Jewellery Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LXIX, Issue 13327, 2 May 1941, Page 7

Keeping Safe One’s Jewellery Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LXIX, Issue 13327, 2 May 1941, Page 7

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