»udae Put Premium On S4ncerity CatliçineOli-via Philips,a gpintergetingalon'g in her 4Ps, azdadmriringly Up O ilthe, bandsome cfeaturas o'I 56-yea&r- ýoJldWte de la Warr. Hae a tz perýsuasive taîker, a.nd by h-is friendrs' accounts, an"urcg iii 'edý geni us" wliohc had in-vantedi ae bxie"radionic diagnostic inr).1uLment"àC for curing ilinesses - At long distance. For thlis de- icCat-herine Olivia paid hInm As3 înstucted by de la Warr (at $12 a: lesson), tlie spinster placed liunks of hair and dollops ofI blood collectad fromr ailing friends i n tlie bo's small draw..7 eýrs, wil were marked plus (for femnales) and minus (for males). Theni, aie tidle the box's nine humbered diais. For sixý montlis sha twiddleJd and waîted, Miss Phlips told a Britishi court, and for six mionths nothing h a p p e n e d. FinaiLy, slamming downl the lid in dis- illusionmrent, she s ue d de la Warr for damhages, accusing liim uof fraud. De la Warr's defense was that ha ha7d invested $300,000 Of hi3 tlwn rmoney in themauctr 9Jflthe instrumients in bis lîtt-Ie Wback box,. His own experts tes- tIfied that it had beeni succes- ýfl in trc-rting a lam-e alephianrt, a pa>,railyzed mon1key, an arniy majorwil migraine headaclies, Znd an ill-temparadi Irisli race horse that resented is jockey." This tesîtimony did not con- vince bwggdJustice Sîr Wil- liam ArtianDavies that- the cox actuallt!y worke(L Bu h %vas impressedi by its inventor's 6jncerity. He ruled last, monthi Vhat because de la Warr actuaîlyv believed ift lis black box, hne -Was îlot guilty, As Miss Plilips stomped out ofcourt, de la Wrr annouinced ýhat mariufacture of more black boxeswa proceediiig at a re- tord clip. "ork atth labora- Èry to probe into the mystLeriesý e« life and deatli continues un- ebated," liesaid. "New lhorizonýs areunodn" Early printars mnade opaque theets of paper transparent for eýopying pujrposes ,b 'y aoak-ing the *heats Iin raptha. When the nap- tha dries, the sheets become- oýpaque again. Cool, Fresh, Simple Styld-toshmand cut te cool rou avery day of summ-er! No WaS sams, ifs ail straiglit sew- ~i.Scoop up a special buy in P-retty cotton and save. Printed Paf telm 4593: Hfi ~4.Size l16Vs req-uîmes 4Ua ~'rs35-incb fabrie. Printedl direcetions On each pat- terri part. Easier, accurate. Send- FORTY CENTS (stapa-np- mannot be accepted, usýe postal eie fo(7r safety) for this pattern. riesepriifplalnly S 1 Z E, IM.ADDRESS, S T Y L Ei Sendr(ý ordier tô ANNE ADAMS, ~ X1, 123 EPighteenfh Sf., New rntOnt. Making Marmalade Minus The Bumps A F1orida wvoman, Ms Ada Dent Vinton o!f Fort Pierce,, wasý d. ismayed bacause sha noticed lier husband always dfiscarded the Peel from bher homnemade orange marmalade, Eager te please him, -lh- dacidad te cook orange peel in lier pressure cook- c, and put it througli an electric blendar t40 pulverize, in1stead of folIowing flie metliod e! chop)- iping if and puttinig it flirougli ricer. lhe suaad flic Peel; thani coke-d if until ifwouldin'f drop from a spoýon, at ne5àrly 220' F. (sthrring consfantly to kceep !rôim jalling on flie bofforn of the pan) and then she addeH. boney to soften the sharp fasteof the at rus. All are cooked together f0, 220, F. Mvrs. Vintron's nmarmaladas éare, a greaf sccss and sh offers the following favrorite for others wlio aise like to axperiment in Honey-Orange BuAtter of qso!oranges, unpeelad andm eut into churs 1 large lemen, quarfered 4 pounds white sugar 1 quart water 3 CLIPS hOney - l CuIP for ecdli4 cups of frui t ix Meth-od 1 (Oldi-fashiïenad but de!- 1lcieus)': Wash about 83 or 10 oranges (depending on flic siza) in soda wata wih abrusil, rinse fwice1" and dry. Cut off peel aind slice into thîn slvers onie-aigIifl inmclhic Remnove seeds and cut pulp into smnalchunks. Place in a large bol, ,ever with 1, quart of water and latý stand oengt Next .day, brn iýxture te bell in heavy pot, tumn fthc heat on low and simme-r for 20 miýn- ut'es. Letcol Put fruit tlirough-l ricer or col- ander andi add 4 pounds o! sugar and heat until sugcar is dissolved. Af this point, you may store mixture in refrigerator until youx are ready te cook if or Cook a portion o! f &--nd store ftliarasf frseveral days, states a writer In the Christian Science Monitor. Whari cooking, use a 3-quart container, putting Jin, onhyi 4 cups o! the fruit mixi at a time. Cook if faýst, sfiring constanfly until if will hardiy drop from a spoon. Then add 1 cup o! hionay and cook slowiy (to praserve the fljayer) until if is var-y thick again. Let this cooli a lit fie and then pour î-nto sterilized jars and seal. This is nice te put bc- fwean layer cakes, jelhy roil, on ice creamà, bot buttered biscuits or toaist. Mlefhod Il (A quickzie, recom- mý-ended by Mýrs. Vinton): Same as IMetloid1Iexcapf fIat bof b peel and pulp are pulvCer- ized ian Pectric blender, Il"- cups at a tima, instead o! bcbng ichopped and forced flirouglia Irider; and instead of cooking fruit In a lieavy pot, for 15 min- Utes, if i's brouglit te 10 pounds o! Pressura inia Pressu~re cookrer and removad from -lthe bfiaf, New Alphabet Thousands o! words have beena wriffan tryiing te explainwy Jfohnny can'f raad. S'ome obsemv- ers of educafienal met hods tia tbis ln wit f ohnny's lnabilitLy te spell, While, Cpp1roVerSy over fIe easft way te teacli readîngc con- tinues, along comas a, membner o! the Brifish alimn, .J Pitm-an, who is grandson 1o!flic-u inventer o! Pifman's shorthandl, wifli a new valphabet w hle miaintains wllmakeradn casier. PitxIrIan's alphabet fhrows e ut' SEE SOAR IN TORONTO - Policeman Bill Costella seems to have ccrne ,a e decid stop iii midai whlepracticin19 for a hurdies race in Toron-ýùa, Canada. The cirrestinc sight is made up oif hopefuls in the, Mî,ss Tcronto 1960 beauty contest. Bill wos training for t-he city's annoual Police Field DaDy. Last week,. for the firsýt time- tbis year, w were up at the famnily cottage. The weather was perfect and w had a g-rand timne. Somietimies we bave been inclined to wonder wliether 1lic cottage was such a good idea-i that possibly our graý&ndsoïir mniglit have been juist aýs Vwell11 at homep or spendi-ng part Of Ithe. su)mmler with us. Now w-ýe have-c cliangaed our rindis, h boys are developing an indiependance. tliey neyer would have done ath- homne, and it's wonderfu-l te sec. Tbcy go ouit in their swim- truink ' and if e preservers and pi.ly aroundi on tlie docks and in aïnd out of the boats hour afterhur., They kno exyhow to han- ede the ropes to bing either of theý boats in doSer to the dock: s0 they Cani Step in and ouit safely. They eac1li have a lttie fishing, rod a.nd "fishi" when they feel like it. That is, after DaveL lias bee-n to a neaLrby house for live bait. And tbey often runi arrands for Mummirýi-y, getting w va- ter fromn the farm pump or bread fromn tlie store haîf a mile! aw%ýay. Dave is gatting- on fine with bis swimingl and learui- ing to ha.ndie one of tha boats. T1<at is, wt oars. So we have-, finally coma to the conclusion that the cottageý was a wise in- vestment a! tar a.-. 0f course, there are occasion- ai uneasy momeýnts. For fsac 1 -was dosing in the ver-anda mvwing-couelh whlile thea boy S were playing, arouind onth dock. One time 1 lookedi up and could see 01n1V two of thlim.Be fore I Coutld lget reailly alarmned 1 saw a 'lpair o! legs waving 10i the(- ir from n ecf the botb. Jery as evidel lying on Ilis back in the boat. Another tLime Eddie fell hea,,-dfirst into flic water between a boat and the dlock - witli lis hf e jackýeton. Ha bad scramrbled ouf befo)re we Could g-et to himi. The two b o a t s arenoin !ancy but tbey area in goed con- dition and answer the purpose. One lias a small oufboard metor, the oýthar is a flat-botfomied puint. Dea operates 'the outboard but I ain more inte-rested in the punt. 1 looked at if longingcly, rememnbaring the bours 'anci heurs I Used to spend boating in Eng-land. Co-uld 1 stili ha,,ndie a boazt, 1 odrd "Well, wliy -not try?" said Art. Se I did. He camie witb mne but 1 did most o! the rowing and 1 was thrilied 1of~I~d't~ h ah Partner likes wate-r nav;igation as mIuclias 1 do but, ha gets vary stif! if ha sifs in aither of th(- boats for very lon.g. After- wa.ýrds lha gets bis musclaslos eýnedl up by splitting wood! This week Bob, Joy and their two boys have gone up for a f cw days. There seemns neouit tu the number a cottagec can ac- comnmodate. It nmay ha bursting-; at the seamns but there- is aiwaysý a little spare room o n thec floor for an extra mattress. My enly complaint new is the distance. A hundred and thrt-iv .iles is a longl way to drive.' La-st wcek we weraca'in up oni work af home - and lis- terni., and watching to thie R- pubican Convenrtin on taeviý- sin puntil nowz we were not tee mnucli in faveur rof Richard Nîxoni as a presi dential candi- date but we certainly thlougrit bis acceptanca speech was really outstanding. Ha seemied to place politics on01)a dîstinctly hili1 levai. -May it so continue. One day hast waak ;we dro% e fo M\,ilton. and ware surprîsed te- 1 find flic new bridge ovar the. "Sixteen" on the Dundas Hîgli-. way was, open te traffic, A, four-lana bridge, of couirse. Neo more holding- your breaflth n mieeting a heavy transport -wo-n- dering if there is really romr for two te pass, as we did so o'ften on the old two-lana bridge. And yet we remamiber that samne bridge being opced in 1922, an-d at that time it was con- siderard oe of the mrosf modern bridg1ces in Ontario. If was, corn- pared with the bridge that if replaced. The orig-inal bridge'ý vas i roen, v ery inadequately spaning the ravine. It was builf in stagecoacli days and was the only imaans whereby Vth stge coacli cou id cross the ravine, known at thaf tima as "Proud- foot Hiollo)w" - flic site of Pa once thriýving village, includig" a sawm7rill, grist mniii, tanncry, bouses and a large botal te acs- comnmodate the travelling pu-b- lic. The Post House was situLafed af Postvilla on VIe east bank o! the ravine. Two years ago it was damnolished te mnaie way for a gas station. The f irst raiiway spaît ruin te Proudfeot Hollow. Business dwindled, lieuses wcra vacated, biotal rooms steod emp- ty. The "Hollow" finally ha,- caine a ghost village. Now oiy lilac bushes, renmnants of an old garden, mark fthe site o! a ociec thriving comm1.-unity. I haVae heard that part off the oid L-iron bridg e remains- in the ravine. Lt Could be, as at the time the brdews replacad, it, was sEtill agood as evar but quite ýinade- qýuate to carry the traffie oýf the 2?Oth- century - with the auto- mobile just com-ing ïinto its own, The sturdy old ir-on brid-ge wXr, mute testîmenny to its engi-neer, Dr. Anson Buck, a pioneer mnedi- cal doctor, practising in ýhe naarby village of Palermoc, out- standing- in miunicipal politics, iust as lie was in mediCine and surgery. He specialized in the correction of Club feet. 1Look Out For Thos, ICarpenter AntsI The carpoente-r ant, unlike bis,ý colleague, the termite, does not aat wood. He excz-avates and ex- pals his boring as sawdust. Anid unlilke the termite, he can work iii dayli.-ht and is bi,, enoughà f0 be seen raiy Entomo-loGgists at' S. C. Johni- soni & Son, wax experts, des- cribe t1he carpenter anit as big; black, or reddisli-black in colour, about a hiaîf-incli long, and tend- ing 410 set up bouse in fig areas of bouse and garage, porci ,and',root, window sis, and ini rotting timber. Evani treas are targets of these energaetie borers, and they are seen also in attics, undar fleors, or InI any Place where they can set up co)lonies for reproduction. Carpenlte_( r atshowever, arfe far less of a m1-enace than ter- mitesfo the resn hat they can be easily spotted. Sawdust piles are. sure giveaway. Slit- lîke holes in wý,oodwoirk aIe'ê othar sgn.And the vworketrs maire no effort t0 disaguisethr presence, ïracing Darolind t lieuse befli indeQrs and outdo)ors- as thiougl-i thay owned the place. Eecomm-ýended for figbtingq carlbenter ants is chiordana, an ant spray used' affectively tej control the pçsts. Cavering the surfaces wherea nts might crawl or where a colony ight ba lo- cated with- this spray lis usually iail that 's needed. Willie WiI Have To Ride Harder Racing fans well knew that, tight-lipped-c Willie Shoamiakar ,vas no beggar on horseback; as the nation's top Jockey, lielias bean erigupwards of $100,000j a year for the past decade. Still, many a punter's eyes turnad green at the picture of wealtli dra-wn hi' a Los Angeles court last weak. Complaining tliat her bus.- band stayed out niglits and wouldn't tel", ber wherc he had been, Virginia Shoemiakar .- who narried Willie ten years ag-o, w,,hen lia was 18 and sha 15 -won a divorce. Her purse: Alimony'o! $2,500 a month for one year,' $2,000 a montlitlie second yaar, iand $1,900 a mnontli thereaafter; $600 a monfli for tlie support of two adopted children;: a $,70,000 homne; and the couple's haîf-int- crast in a caf e and service station. After- The Second -- Let The Wife Drive .A stocky, un asumAnijiln man a conservautive suit, Dr.Sea Miller'surprisingly enough drîiveýj a glemin witeThdebr wichl, with a moýst caýrefultuit of mind, he 1lias equlippd wit seat beits. He's aý social cdrinker "But when I've had more thr two drns"lie said, "i Ii ave mî wife drive me hiome." And Ithat argues Dr. _Mîfler, should betht ru le for everydrvr ~This rule of thumnb by the 54 year-old professor at the Uni- versity of Michigan MACd ica School had som-e lhe-ft for. this reason: He is chimnofthaý Amnerican Medccical Associitioni'ý Committele on MUedical Aspects ol Aýutomocbile In.juries andic Deaths. "Tlie public mnust learn the basic facts of aichol consumption," hie told the International Congrelss on1 Occupational Health rmeetinig ini New York last m-orithl.,"Ono drink may ' vbe tolerated; twe drinkcs put o-ne on the leve] of impairmient for about two hours; tliree dirinks are too mnanyý." Tlie Natioinal Safet «y Council says that alcnoilwas thecas of a sho(-cki ng liîrd of thle na- tion's 37,800 tfraffic fatablities last year. To dicurgirivers frorn drinkîng-, Dr. IVijler urged that the presept measure of drunk- eness -- .15 per cent alcohol i the blood stiýi-a - lie lowered to no more thian .10 per cent. Dr. -Miller's recomimendation mrlay very wl be adopted. Theq present drirnk mecasure was urgL- ed by tlie AM-NA fifteen years ago and is now in effect in many states, Dr. Miller thinks that the AMA will sooni recommend that a new .10 per cent limit be set - and -he hopes the states will fol- lowx as before. An Aineican e ditor wýorriei his hair grey to see thýat no typo-. raiclmistakes appear on the pages of bis magazine. The Chii- nase editor - nt least the1 pre- communist one -- was wiser than that. He Ieft is readers the supreme satisfaction ofý dis.. covering a faew de iberate typo- graphical mnistaloes for, then-. How to Saive Money Sagn1springs? W e b b i1n g Lorn? New upbelstary needad?. Do fli. job yourself NOW -- and save! If you've neyer tried, thase datailed instructions show hew, Inistructions 680: directions t@ repair and uphoîstar furifture, Evitry step carafully expiaincd. Send THIIRTY-FIVE CENTS (stamnps cannot ha accepted, use postal nota for safety,) for this pattern te Laura Wheeler, Box l 1 123 Eighitaentb St., New Toront,, Ont. Print piainly PATTERN N",MBER, your NAIME and AD-. DRESS. New! New! Naw! Our 9G Laura WhlilNeedlecraft D--)L is ready NOW Crammed witbl exciting, unusual, popular deý- sig-ns te crochet, lmit, saw, arn- broider, quilt, wava - fasbions, home furnis;hings, toys, 'gifts, bazaar bits. In tHe bock FREEP - 3 quilt patter-ns. 1urrY, Send 25 cenits fer your py USSUL 34 - 1934 l %/INGEJIKCkARM 1; Cwqt-ý-d-otirý,e P. (nt £4,ttota mucit