1947 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE SEVEN MONDAY, JANUARY 27, rm -- | BEAUTY FOR YOU-- ; | Cure Sallow Skin From Within BY HELEN JAMESON - There is considerable differ- ence between the golden and the gallow complexions. One signifies ~ health and the other is a sign that all is not right with the di- gestive 'motors. The golden coat is a pulchritudinous endowment; the other is something of a good- . looks curse. : The sallow-complexioned girl can expect mo help from cosme- . tics. Even those flaying bleaches our grandmothers used will not remove the jaundiced tone, By gome means the epidermis has picked up disfigurement pigment from the blood streams. To be free of the discoloration, it is 'necessary to discover the source and remove it. If, by chance, you pay a visit to the doctor, tell him to take a bird's eye squint at your | face. It may help him to find out ~ just what makes you feel dog-|. * tired, not quite up to par, Stimulate the various avenues of elimination, so as fo be free of body wastes and poisons. The ' lungs are an organ of elimina- tion; air-wash them by taking full, deep breaths when you are out of doors. Drink six glasses of water a day to keep the kidneys in normal condition. Eat fruits and vegetables, so that the intes- tinal tract will function regular- ly. Constipation is a common cause of dingy, colorless complex- fons, ° f The daily bath and a brisk fric- tion with a heavy brush will aid the skin in its work of sending off waste fluids, This matter of eli. mination is important, not only for appearance's sake, but for general well-being, Sluggish circulation is no help, so--if your eomplexion does not qualify--make it a practice to get out of doors every day, walking briskly until the skin feels warm and glowing. Your reporter rea- lizes that many young women are more interested in plying frag- rant creams and lotions than in attending to hygienic duties, but she would not be doing her job properly if she were not to re- mind the beauty 'class, again and again, that good health is impera- tive if one is to look and feel one's best. Too frequent indulgence in carrots will give the skin a yellow cast. * Pre There is the matter of diet. Avoid yellow vegetables like car- rots, squash, sweet potatoes and turnips, Too frequent indulgence in carrots will give the skin a yel- low cast : Begin the day with half a glass of orange or tomato juice, Once a day have a green salaa. Avoid rich pastries, Endeavor to have food that is nourishing and appe- tizing, but of light, digestible cha- racter. The facal area can be encour- aged to change color slightly by teaming treatments that will loosen dead scales. Dip a wash- cloth in fairly hot water and press close to the face, Repeat several times. Then frisk an ice cube over the flesh, Alternating' hot and cold applications order the blood streams about their business. The Movie Column By TOM KENNEDY Canadian Press Staff Writer i Take a tousle-headed youngster, his animal pet, add some pictures- que countryside, film them together in technicolor and you have a hit motion picture--in this case "The Yearling." Claude Jarman, Jr., is the young- ster, Gregory Peck is his under- standing father, Jane Wyman takes the part of his broken-spirited mother, "The Yearling" is the bdy's swam, Swann which they act out the screen version of Marjorie Kinnan Rawling's prize-winning novel of grim farm life enriched by a boy's devotion. to his animal friend. Also Ran Department "Wake Up and Dream", another film slanted for family box-office appeal, lacks the appealing i= city of "The Yearling". story of a seaman reported missing by the United States Navy, his waitress girl friend, his young sister and a crochety old man with a home-made boat 300 miles from the nearest water. Danger Story Hollywood will begin shooting "Call Northside 777" soon. The story, taken directly from the news- papers and the police blotter, is _ that of Mrs. Tillle Majczek, Chica- go woman who scrubbed floors for 10 years to get the money to prove the innocence of her son who was serving a 99-year prison term for shooting a policeman. She inserted a classified ad ending "Call Northside 771" in a newspaper and, with the help of some who took up the case, proved her son innocent. New Discovery For Epileptics By HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D. RPILEPSY is one of the most dis- tressing of ailments because it in- volves loss of consciousness and, in many cases, major convulsions. Though it is one of the oldest of diseases, we know neither ity cause nor its cure. However, the discovery of new drugs has made it possible to con- trol attacks to a degree never dream- ed of in earlier days, thus permit- ting many patients to become use- ful members of society. In this con. nection 4t should not be forgotten y men reputed to have been subject to epil- eptic seizures. According to Dr. H. Houston Mer- ritt of Columbia University, New York City, the success in treatment depends on giving an adequate dos- age of these drugs together with general physical care and proper mental guidance. There are three types of epileptic seizures. The first type is known as grand mal. In it there is loss of consciousness for a few seconds at varying time. The second type is petit mal. In it there is only loss of consciousness for a few seconds at a time. The third type is known as psychomotor attacks in which there is no loss of consciousness. For grand mal attacks which oc- cur at infrequent intervals, the nerve quie drug called phenobarbital is usually administered. The main objection to this drug is that it makes the patient sleepy, A drug known as dilantin sodium is valu- able in both the psychomotor and the grand mal attacks. A Small Dose Dilantin sodium is given in a small dose at first and the amount gradually increased, if necessary, of course only under the doctor's di- rection. Such reactions as nervous- ness, sleeplessness, sickness to the stomach and skin inflammation may occur and, if so, the amount of the drug may have to be reduced or it may have to be discontinued alto- gether. Bromides are occasionally effec tive in treating epilepsy when other medicines fail. Skin rashes and mental dullness may develop if too large a dose is used. Dilantin so- dium may be given together with enobarbital or the bromides when t does not seem to work by itself. A new drug known as tridione gives encouraging results in petit mal any psychomotor attacks. If the use of the drug causes a skin rash or eye symptoms such as irritation of the eyes by light, its use must be discontinued. The exact type of epilepsy pres- ent may be determined by using an instrument which shows the brain waves, A different pattern of waves occurs in each of the various forms of epilepsy. Once a definite diagno- sis is made treatment with the pro- per drugs can be carried out. ----. Guaranteed fo Keep You "Regular" Naturally Uses Dry Icg To Make Snow By WALDEMAR KAEMPFFERT On Nov. 13, 1946, Vincent J. Schaefer of the General Electric ef logical sensation by ing" a cloud of water droplets with dry ice (solid carbon dioxide) and thus Snow. On Nov. 22 Schaefer repeated the experiment on a flight from Schen- ectady, N.Y. to the Massachusetts border and was delighted to see the billowing , tops of the cumulus clouds, which he flew, sub- side when dry ice was dropped. On his return he flew just under the cloudy region in a heavy snowfall which had not been there before. Too Much Dry Ice A third flight on Nov. 20 was not successful because too much dry ice wag used, with the result that no snow fell. "Too many nuclei in the cloud," explained Schaefer after he droplets had been changed to ice crystals--too small to fall in the ab-' sence of an additional supply of moisture. How did Schaefer know? Because of the optical effects that he observed when the sun shone the cloud. 'What is the good ef all this? Win- ter fogs may be dissipated. Such fogs are generally supercooled. This means that though they are well below. the. freezing temperature of water their droplets are still liquid. Schaefer proved it near his home by having a wire basket full of dry ice in a fog that covered riv- er flats, He left a clear space where he had walked. Dissipates Fog R. 8. Johannson repeated the ex- periment. on Mount Washington. At first the tcing clouds thickened, but as they grew the crystals settled on the ground as a barely visible layer. So much moisture was taken out of the air at this point that no more fog could form for a time. The clear area did not remain in one place. The entire cloud was moving, and so the clear space moved with it. At the recent' meeting of the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science, Dr. Irving Langmuir, in commenting on Schaefer's work, said that a single quarter-inch pellet of dry ice could theoretically produce about 300,000 tons of snow. An ice particle less than a millionth of a centimeter in diameter evaporates so rapidly that this ideal cannot be reached. Only the bigger particles survive. According to Dr. Langmuir, a single particle with a diameter of a quar- ter of an inch will produce 10,000,- 000,000,000,000 nuclei. Fashion Flashes EXQUISITE is the only descrip- tion possible for some of the pure silk prints now being shown. Brown white silk ground makes for a love- ly frock styled with sleeves moder- ately puffed, snug bodice buttoned to high neckline, hips with panier pockets and slim skirt. LA J THE LONG LINE appears in many of the new two-piece frocks. Brown silk, with a design of blue and pink dots on a fine white scroll, js used for a dress with a long, buttoned jacket top with col- lar, tie and'culfs of brown gros- grain, Front of slim skirt is finely pleated. * *P NEAT WAY to add beauty and fire to a simple sheath of a frock, is a sash with bustle bow and hem- length ends of black satin almost covered with tiny silver sequins. For extra dazzle, a big matching muff- bag. DOWN SOUTH there's a big de- mand for evening frocks of pure Iinen--both plain and printed. A pretty strapless evening frock is of white linen with a shadowy window- pane plaid spattered here and there with sea flowers in pink and blue against the mauve-gray of the plaid. Bodice slim, skirt very full. - Bowed Beau-Frock Look here, Dreamboat! Here's your new bowed beau-frock! It's the latest thing in princess design with wide yoke and panel cut in one. You can tell at a glance Pattern 4904 will do wonders for you! This pattern, easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. A Includes complete illustrated instructions. Pattern 4004, Jr. Miss sizes 11, 13, 15, 17. Size 13, 3% yds. 39-in. Send TWENTY CENTS in coins for this pattern (stamps cannot be accepted) to Daily Times-Gazette, Household Arts Dept, Oshawa. alighted. Nevertheless, some tiny | and black brush daubs on a pure] Glamorizing + Shopping For hE LJ AT mid-season time one anxious- ly awaits the moment when the in- spiration comes to clutch the purse tightly, and chase out on a wild shopping binge, Lovely duds pur- chased in October have filled the bill all right, but with shop windows displaying new models--they're al- ways there right after New Year's day--one is tempted to add a little number or two. If you are contemplating such a project let your mind dwell on the errors of the past and prepare to make happy selections. In almost every wardrobe there is an unloved, lonely, forlorn-looking frock that you just can't endure. You don't like it and, evidently, it does not Me you. Send it to the rummage sale, Extra Beauty Points Dress smartly and you'll score ex- tra beauty points. A'dowdy woman these days is an uncommon sight, fashion stylists having made ap- pealing offerings. More and more women are getting educated in the interesting study of line and color. v A New Dress By HELEN FOLLETT - An outfit such as the one worn by actress Myrna Loy will sobre . extra beauty points. LJ * The spectacle that is woman im? proves every year. If you don't be- lieve it, look at the photograph of the girl of 1927. She is wearing a waistless frock, cut like a pillow case, and that stylish lid she wears covers half of her face. To have chic, that flair that is quickly recognized and always ad- mired, one must develop the dress sense to a high degree. Take Yopr Time Unless the frock you are looking at in the shop thrills and excites you, don't buy it. It is not for you. Rez arding other dresses, be sure to note the neck line that has so much to do with sartorial becomingness. Is the belt properly placed? How about the sleeves? Does the color give freshness to the complexion? Attractive fabrics and simplicity of design form a grand combina- tion, Meaningless decorations do nothing but clutter up the composi- tion, and often prove its undoing. Take your time lady, take your time. The right frock boosts they girs, the wrong one is a wet blan- et. Austrian Studies Language of Bees By WALDEMAR KAEMPFFERT Dr. Earl von Frisch of Graz, Austria, is better known to author- ities on the social insects than he is to the general public. If he is famous in a small European ento- mological circle it is because of the studies that he has made of what cording to von Frisch, They communicate by dancing hives. Pin If all this arouses skepticism von Frisch asks you to place some little cups of honey near a beehive, The cups will often be ignored for hours, even for days. By chance a bee dis- covers a cup, then collects honey and returns to the hive. Soon other bees appear in increasing numbers. . They come from tle same hive as the discoverer. If there are several honey cups of which only one was discovered neycomers will soon fly to all the simultaneously. Evidently the bees are not following the dis- coverer; they are discovering on their own account. Some Curious Behavior Von Frisch has watched bees In glass hives and noted some curi- ous behavior. A bee that has re- turned to the hive enters a particu- lar section of comb, gives some of its collected honey to a neighbor and Hien in roar maypole dance, al right and left. More bees join the danc- er, so that there is soon a whole train of imitators; The same performance may be observed in other cells of the honeycomb whenever a bee returns from honey-gathering and gives up part of its load. "The dance means that honey is to be found near the hive," explains von Frisch. Only bees in the train of the first danc- er now fly out in all directions. When they have found food they too dance on their return, where- upon their followers fly off for food. Soon the whole hive is a dance-hall. Bees drink ordinarily from glass cups not from flowers. So von Frisch changes the experiment. Near the hive he sets up some phlox and fills the flowers with sugar water. Marked bees collect the sugar water, return to the hive and dance. Other bees that alight on the phlox are caught so that they may not disturb the experiment. Von Frisch then sets up in another place a bowl of phlox and a bowl of cyclamen, but adds no sugar water to the flowers. Bess Around the Phlox Soon new bees turn up and fly around the phlox in increasing their Costume Jewelry Is Big Business Through the ages, women have accentuated their charmg by wear- ing jewelry. When the custom started is lost in antiquity, but there is no doubt that jewels will continue to decorate the feminine figures until the end of time. Perhaps women of the stone age started the custom when they strung small stones or teeth around their neck, or perhaps it was started many centuries before the stone age The wearing of jewels, however, reached its most lavish stage dur- ing the Renaissance when wealthy ladies had their gowns decorated with pearls and man's wealth was often judged by the jewels worn hy his spouse. Jewelry has, today, become as much a necessity for women on all occasions as her clothes. With every costume a different set of jewelry is required and with every fashion change comes another change in the design of jewelry. It is for this great demand that large jewelry manufacturers are increasing their staffs and production to keep the supplies rolling into the jewelry stores. Intricate Process Manufacturing costume jewelry is an intrieate process, requiring skilled labor and a grea} deal of hand work. At the Quarrington-Os- trom Jewelry Plant, York St., To- ronto, the making of costume jew- elry starts with rolled brass, which is stamped out into its various forms, which later are pieced to- gether to form necklaces, earrings, bracelets and brooches. After the form is stamped -out in the presses it is put through an acid bath to clear it of all foreign ma- terial, then it is dunked into a cop- per bath and later into a gold- plating bath, which plates it with a thin covering of gold. After being plated the forms are dried in hot sawdust and placed in a drying closet, where they are given a coating of lacquer to pre- serve the gold, When they ark dried, the forms are then moved to a crew of workers, who fasten them toge- ther to make the bracelet or neck- lace. Imitation stones are fixed to the trinkets by merely bending prongs on the forms over the stone. New York Influence Designs, for the jewelry, are set by the fashion experts in New York. When a new style comes out, jewelry manufacturers throughout the country hastily change their forms to keep up with this style. Rapidly gaining prominence in costume jewelry styles is the imita- tion pearl, which can be inexpen- sively manufactured. For this pur- pose blown glass balls or plastic balls are used. The glass or plastic balls, with holes driled in them, picks paint material to give them a white coating. As soon as they are dry, they are dunked in a basin of solu- tion called pearl essence, made from fish scale, giving the pearl appear- ance to the imitations. They are then sorted as to size and appear- ance for the necklaces that are worn on practically all occasions by the women of today, 'Snow-Maker' Snowed Under With Requests Schenectady, N.Y., Jan. 23-- (AP) --So you don't like snow, eh? You find it a hazard to driving and a slushy - annoyance to walking? You groan at the thought of the back- breaking chore of shoveling the sidewalk? "Snow-Maker" Vincent §. Schae- fer says plenty of folks in many parts of the world are fond of na- ture's white fluff--and for a variety of reasons, Schaefer is the research scientist who last November succeeded in manufacturing an artificial snow- fall by dropping dry-ice pellets from an airplane into a moisture-laden cloud. Since the initia] experiment Schaefer has been "snowed under" yith requests to "make it snow." A class of school children in Long Beach, Calif.,, some of whom never have seen snow, forwarded a bundle of postcards asking, "Would you please make us a snowstorm?" Snow For Skiing St. Moritz, Swiss ski resort, ask- ed about chances of obtaining more snow than it has and a score of ski centres in the United States put in similar bids. y A cane-sugar manufacturer in Hawail and the Governments of Chile and Australia inquired about the possibilities of precipitating rain over moisture-scarce areas. Similar letters came from the Arizona Chamber of Commerce and an Ore- gon irrigation company. A motion picture company wired that it would like a blizzard over one of its movie lots. About the only ones 'who didn't want snow were several residents of Buffalo, N.Y, on Lake Erie. They implored Schaefer to see what |. he could do about dropping their usual winter share of snow and blizzards into the lake instead of Vegetables will stay fresh and c longer if you wrap them in a wet cl before storing in refrigerator. 'HEINZ ole] --22 VARIETIES Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUMBER. Your Baby Needs the Smooth, Fine Texture of BABY FOODS FOR THE COMPLETE LINE N ers and examine them thoroughly, though the natural nectar is so deep that it is inaccessible to them, men. But reverse the experiment, 30 that sugar water is put in the | cyclamen flowers, and the phlox will be ignored. There is no doubt in von Frisch's mind that it is the scent of a flow- > and not its nectar that attracts ees, that other bees in the hive can smell it. The language of the bees is therefore a language of odors. Von Frisch proves the point by dispensing with flowers altogether and using little cups of essential oils or synthetic perfumes. He then feeds marked bees from a glass cup which contains a little peppermint. There follows the usual dance and the usual foray for food by in- formed bees. And the informed bees fly to any object that may bear only a trace of peppermint and not to flowers alone. \ Von Frisch holds that the "langu- age" of bees can be practically ap- plied. He induces bees to visit cer- tain flowers only. The pollination and therefore the crop of red clover and other plants has been increased in this way by about 40 per cent. So with the' production of honey. Tonic For Your Home Hag your home mid-winter blues? Work ahead for Spring--give your furniture a quick recovery by mak- ing slip-covers for chairs and couch. Instructions 7397 has step-by-step directions for various chair and sofa slip-covers. Our improved pattern--visual with easy-to-see charts and photos, and complete directions--makes needle- work easy. Send TWENTY CENTS in coins for this pattern (stamps cannot be accepted) to Daily Times-Gazette, Household Arts Dept, Oshawa. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUMBER, Ss. They alight on the flow.' No attention is paid to the cycla-' The scent clings to them s0° WHAT SHOULD I DO ABOUT-- Announcing a Second Baby? ' By CORNELIUS BEECKMAN Dear Mrs, Beeckman: We have a 3-year-old daughter, and very soon I am going to have another baby. Is it proper for us to send out birth-announcements for this baby, or are announce- ments proper only for the first baby? Do you think people con- sider that birth-announcements call for a gift? I'm happy and proud of this coming birth, and I "don't want relatives and friends to think T'm greedy! To me it's such fun to look over the nice birth - announcements, choose the one I think most at- tractive, and then mail them to relatives and friends, I have wondered if it would be best for me to sent them to new acquaintances, and not to the re- latives and old friends to whom we sent them before, But if I did, perhaps the ones I didn't send them to would find out they were sent to others, and would feel slighted. So please, Mrs. Beeck- 'man, help me to decide. : P.C.R. It's entirely proper for you to send birth-announcements when your second baby arrives , . . by all means have the joy of choos- ing and sending these, and to the entire list of relatives and friends (even to relatives and intimate friends who have been informed of the birth, so they may have these announcements for keep- sakes), Don't worry that an. nouncements "call for" a gift , . . they don't, and receivers of this happy news will do as they wish to acknowledge the news, perhaps send a gift, more likely write a note of felicitation, Wife Seated at Right of Her Husband Dear Mrs. Beeckman: Recently my father and T went to a banquet. We noticed that some of the wives sat on their 'husband's left, and some sat on the right. Which is correct, If at a public dinner a wife sf next to her husband (this is the correct procedure at any er kind of dinner), the' should be seated at her hus right. This abides by the imports ant rule of etiquette, "the lady od the right of the gentleman." At 16, He Is "Mr." Dear Mrs, Beeckman: When I write to my 16-year-old godson, who is at boarding school, should . I address his letters to "Master" or "Mr."? ; : B.I.T, Address his letters to "Mr." If you addressed his letters to "Mas. ter," he would certainly think he had a tactless godmother! "Meaning of "Jr." and "2nd" Dear Mrs, kman: I am going to have a baby and if it is a boy would like % name him after my husband. . However, instead of using "Jr." after his name, would it be all right to use "IL," meaning "2nd"? (My sister says this cannot be done unless three generations have had exactly the same name, Is this s0?) T.M. If you name your son after his father, "Jr." is the suffix tha must be added to his name. I would be incorrect for you to use "II" (or "2nd" or "second") after his name, because this suffix would mean that the boy was na> med for (1) his uncle or (2) his cousin or (3) possibly his grand+ father. When a boy is named for his grandfather of the same name, he may properly be either 'junior" or d," but " a" is more commonly used, I imag- ine that your sister is referrin to this use of "second" for a boy named for his grandfather, The Mixing Bowl Hello Homemakers! All eyes are on the potato! A serving of pota- toes every day is demanded by food rules for good health, Some people follow this rule without giving it a thought. But not everyone is quite that enthusiastic about our good friend the potato which puts it up to the cook to do a spot of luring, with a different presentation of the valued vegetable as bait. There are some who have boasted that they need not serve potatoes twice the same way in a whole calendar year. I do not approve too much of that procedure myself, looking at the question from the dietetic point of view. Here are some ways to serve potatoes which make them much more valuable, nutritionally, than other ways can ever do--and so these should be featured. It is well established that the best part of the vegetable lies just beneath the skin too closely allied to that for us to fhope to do any peeling in the raw state without cutting away very valuable constituents. 80, of eourse, our best practice is to cook the po- tato, skin and all--which means, for the most part, steaming or boiling or baking. The last method is su- preme favourite, both from the en- Joyment and the nutritional point of view. " But there are other factors to be considered besides the straight question of what is the one best thing to do with a good product. Potatoes can be substituted for many expensive or hard-to-get foods. For example, mashed potatoes can be used to thicken soups instead of flour and bacon fat; to thicken sau- ces instead of flour and butter; to substitute for crumbs in poultry dressing; in pancake batter for fla- vour; in yeast mixture for good tex- ture; add to omelettes to make more of this dish; in dumplings (cooked or raw); also in many supper dishes as potato-fish pie, scalloped pota- toes with sausages, split weiners filled with mashed potatoes, potato souffle, pigs in "taters, potatoes in half shell, potato-celery and nut loaf and vegetable plates. Potato Celery Loaf 8 cup diced celery, % cup chop- ped nuts, 3 cups mashed potatoes, 3 thbsps. fat, 1 (beaten), 1 tsp. salt, % tsp, pa] a, 2 tsps. grated onion. Cook celery until tender in small amount of boiling salted water. Drain off liquid. (This may be used for soup stock.) Add remaining in- gredients in order listed. Mix well, pack in greased loaf pan and bake in electric oven (350 degs.) 35 min- utes, Serve with tomato sauce. Serves 6. : Grated Potato Soup 8 cups soup stock or consomme, thin glice of garlic, one medium on- fon (minced), 6 potatoes (grated). Heat stock to boiling and add re- maining ingredients. Simmer 20 minutes or until vegetables are ten- der. Season with salt and pepper. Serves 8. Potatoes With Savory Sauce 4 potatoes, 2 small onions cut in- to rings, 4 thsps. fat, 2 tbsps. flour, 1 cup milk, 2 tsps. salt, % tsp. pep- per, 2 thaps. chili sauce, grated cheese. Pare potatoes and cut into long matchlike strips. Cook them in boil- ing salted water until tender. Drain and place in a warm serving dish. * Brown onion rings in fat, add fioue and blend; add milk, salt, pepper and chili sauce and cook, ; constantly until thickened. ; over hot cooked potatoes and sprins kle with grated cheese.' Serves four, Scalloped Potatoes 6 medium potatoes, salt and and Peppep. 2 thaps. flour, 4 thsps. bute milk, Pare potatoes and cut -into thin slices. Place in a greased J dish in 3 layers 1 inch deep, sprink- ling each layer with salt, pepper and fiour and dotting with butter. Add milk until it can be seen betw: slices of potatoes, cover and bake electric oven (350 degs. F.) until po- tatoes are tender when pierced with a fork, 1 to 1% hours. Remove cover for the last 15 minutes to Brown, Serve from baking dish. Serves 6. WITH HAM-- Prepare scalloped potatoes and place. a 1-inch slice of ham on top. Do not cover. Bake as above. Ham may be cut into servings and arranged in layers with the potae toes. Bake as above. . Pigs in igri 4% tsps. milk, 1% tsps. salt, dash paprika, % pound small sausages. Boil scrubbed potatoes for 20 mins. Cut a slice from 1 side of eack then use coring knife, take out part of centre; fill with sausages, Bake in moderate oven (350 degs. F'.), un« til potato is brown and sausages are thoroughly cooked, about 15 to 30 minutes. Serves 6. THE SUGGESTION BOX Mr. G. C. sends us this Spicy Pod Roast Recipe: 8 lbs. beef (rump or chuck), 1 cup vinegar, 6 cloves, 1 tsp. salt, 1 cup carrot chunks, 1 cup sliced onions (or tiny whole onions), 2 cups wa- ter, 1 bay leaf, 1 tsp. brown sugar. Combine the vinegar, water, spi- ces and sugar. Pour over the beef and let stand for an hour or two, (Overnight if you have the time.) Pour off the liquid and save it. Dredge the meat with flour. Brown it in hot fat. Turn into an 'oven cas- serole, add the spiced vinegar, car- rots and onions. Cover and cook slowly for 21% hours at 350 degs.; oF in pressure cooker for 40 mins. and Country Club Potatoes 4 cups cooked potatoes, 1 can come densed mushroom soup, 2 tsps. fine- ly chopped parsley. Slice the cooked leftover potatoes, Combine all the ingrediepts. Heat in greased casserole at 350 degs. for 15 mins. or on top of the stove (if = haven't an oven) until piping Anne Allan invites you to write to her care Times-Gazette, Oshawa, Send in your suggestions on home- making problems and watch this column for replies. : Acute areso good... swollen membranes, (2) soo tation, (3) helps clear away thus makes AVR ETL ANE 0) MRR, ( Gives Grand Relief FROM SNIFFLY, STUFFY DISTRESS OF Cartarrh starts to come when you put a few drops of Vicks Va-tro-nol in each nos. tril Va-tro-nol is soeffective...results because it (1) reduces thes irri IfrN4d