(Making A Purchas. a painted Per-,siani scene, Illust lng th. fines of poetry hý - ersianl Stryle painte-,d on the page abeve k -below the. iminiature, W. A pleasant refuge from the Harry B. Elis hi the Chris k darç political concerns of Teber- Science Mornitor. k nn Is the cluttered antique shop TI-- colors, wLen held te if Solaimani Rabbi, the Jew. TIc lgît, give off a duisleel k window of Sc'laiman Rabbi'& quality, nef gaudy or bri k ihop is as dusty and jumbled as Horsemnen with drawn sv, t- h.- intericxr ef the store itself, charge at each other across fi kbut just intriguing enougsh in its of flowers. Other horsemei k uray of tribal bric-a-brac, silver flowing robes play polo 0 - ~jaggers, and fly-speckled Persi- green f ield. There are qui i n miniatures te catch the strol- scenes-men and women Pi ler's eye. ben)eat-k a flowering tree,i One- caughit, and onice li.nger- b)losscm delineated witî kin,, the passer-by sees rising each fol.d of cloth, each tuf k 41owly f rom the dimi interior of grs.In Persiani painfing tl the shop a sh1ort figure muffled is neo vacuumn; space itself k la over-coat and fedora hat, be- net suggest, as in Japanese k . eath wbich hern-rimmined spec- Chinese art. Instead, fhe pa ktacles protrude. Solaimnan Rabbi of Persian miniatures, bisi k hmslfis, coing te the deeor te -at brshfipped -witî gold Ynýt OUin oranýge, blue, gren orr k Yo edg warly nte he sop, touches glowing coler te fhe kready for prom-lpt escaipe. But he limits of'lis picture. > ak and you turn te lis Paeafter, page Solaiman1 cseys nfethinke Pageubc cass e trnkes ad bubls, bi turnis ever. -A beggar ir -~peer. as lest the poor light will oranige robe and white tu] k allw at stacks ,of Copper frayei impoj),rtunes a paseýýer-by, k uredgrerwitî a.ge. There is hesitates_ beneath the>.pink1 k noting ni .. latta oment somn's of a graceful tree. A n< kSelaimlan Rbb cernes foirwýard mna, cross-îegged on a go k aaî. divan set in a Meadow o! f k"You are, jintrested in eld ers, enverses wil two foi kPerc.ian mriniatur-es?" he asks,, er~s, seated on lescer and Ic peering up frcii beneath hic bat. chairs cf geid. You areciln te look at them,, Yeu knew, as you gazE you reply, a ile sihuffles te- these unctuous pictu'res, th-ai 'kward a back- rcem_. A womnan' ludcdledl by an oil- will ret go away em-ipty-hasi k the_1If 1 buy to"Yeu Say burning heater-foýr tewinter Solairnan Rabbi. "what kmn 'Jsl cold 'in Tehecran - watches price will you give me?". k ~your movmn frm fon e 1e fixes yeu behind back. The baLck reom is werse glasses-. than thie'fro-nt in ifs clutter, f ail- "This is your f irst finie ir k ng just sho)rt of beîýg. -a flea shop. 1 have gîven yeu a market e uk Swthnena ther's price.' Every' six mo k uaked lighit bulbý, Soia 1nb may find such a book in . '"takes dowvn a battered p)ortfle village. They do net maket k ad cear a pac onfIecrak- any morie . . . 'mýere _is only k d top of a gplass case. price-." k"Here are pages f rom- old An Iranian enfers and sp kbocks cf Pecrsi 'an pcetiry," le ex- te ç'>laman Rabbi ln Per plains, "made 140 ,to 150 yearS The 'atte é ece oe k ~~~~ago, during the Qajar dynasty." Il cdysaedgenfl kf odde scrubs a and band He cru adryvan dirty had the custemer sorts thenM th4 * cross the surf ace of. one page. What Solaimnan 'Rabbi said a k "You cee'? MineraI colors remaor aynte kthey wilrvrchange." but by fhe finie he cernes1 Each, page lne exfracts trom fIeý you lave agreed witlin yeiu k portfolio is yeliowved witl age te pay wlat le asks. nd cruimbling at fIeý edges. but 1erlsu erfesr in thVe center ef cacl page, 910w- býit 01. pýaper and you pla< ïrginscf clos lke ajewel, u nder your coat against the k which lias sfarted te faîl ou' In fIe Porsian dusk. 'You kCut-to-Sienderize back te ycour hotel reom, s( k how,; fortified te face the i.PRINTED PATTERN plexities'cf modern Iran. k Drowning Rescue k Restores Sight k Tc) cheat death by a i %rat em a fanfastic o)f restoring ene's oyesight. ~ ~ à"Rebert Konyora, an eih- ohm Auistraliani sch(oolbey J-' hic new visien te an escape drowning. k Practically blind ail lis k Robert wac in danger et h k hic sigîf cempletoly, says ~ .~. .'t other. TMion, recently,v swiniming in Apollo Bay, k toria, le g(y into diffîcultie k Lifesavers dashed in to '>1 rscueand hauled hlm eut. k .Ho M'as ftlgf te be deai à ~ho sfarted brea.thingi again s art!icial respiration. kà Foleing bis recevery, R( k ~sswh a clarity ho's i. k knewn 'before. With th-e ai k ~. ~ spectacles, le can now- snewspa-persý an&.su _qJch a ci k bail]. According te, jý-eC1. SPE j îsts if~i's fairlyemn r k t egi lieir eyesight k emtienal or p-l'ys;ical ci '-But ithis is the first fime tl kchild las 1ad sucl aIn ex 4936ene k i/ J /i1;B' Anne Ahe Q' yeun V have receiv rai- 'rites istian iglf. rords. felds or a ljeter 3icnic eacî care, ift o! there d es and inter deli- É1, or ,pink, verTv Rab- i an rbati Who blos- iob1e- 01lden f ow- fflow- loweI' re ut Lyou mded. d cf l is nmy 1bre-, inths sone >eaks !sfan. lieces frue, back ircelf ain a ice if, arain utside cf art orne- way fremn lif e, ocîng is h whi le vi'c- ic tun- I, but af fýer id etL read 'icets hafter hoemî- i%,ed a iNEODING BELLS WILI. RING IN'JUNE - Edward Diike of et 25-year-old ccusin of Queen Elizabeth and eighth in line of s3uc- ce-ssion to ffhe throrne, and his fiancee, Kaihleen ýiWors!ey, 28, daug'hter of Sir William and Lady WQrsley, stroil in the gýrJen at Kensington Palace. Miss Worsley and the Duke- wilI be mair- ried June 8 in the 950-year-ià-o1d St. Petzir's Caîthedral in York, HMOICE Last week the CBC pregram "Close-Up" certainly gave v.,ew- ers plenty to talk, about. We thokuglit it wvas somnewhat repeti-, tious but we sat it throug-h to the ci-d, As we watched nieither of us was toe happy about it. For one thing we kniew if miust hiave been rehlearsed and that made fhe tears an-d emiotion scex some- wl.-at unreal. As a show it was excellent but as a nwstory-. I don'f know. But --titi I don't see how anyone could really blame Mr. Exelby' . 1He problably thoiight of it as js a job and a 1means of rmaking a )_few >dot- ls sewhy not take it? I don't supDpose hie anticipated an~y ad- ver-se publicityý. Apparenly ms of the criticism against hlm wvas because hle re:signed lfronm a $6000, a yeaý'r job; last faîl, bCecausý e it showed "littie promnise for the. futre" Welwhat's wronig with being amiibitious-eveni if it boackCfires? WiftutIamition f ew cf us vwouldge anwhre Ambiition is thie sparkI that maukes an ürdinlary jobl jusýt a stepping. stone te etertins.Iknow of twofelosrighlt ne, oth in theirthriwo are resigni- ing from SG600O jobs in a feýw months ime. One cof them ýiS: going te EnlýýandI the other has been proise-d a more lucrative job in On)taio. Maybe tîg wntwork ut for them eilher; they might ù evi en ho aonig thie unemployed bfoethe year is ouf. Bttat Least'they il l have, shown a lîttleintave As for the un0mi-ploymnieft sit- uation w,,e are, net in a position- te krew tee muich about 'It.Ex cept this. Judlging frem wlia-t we have seen and leamrd the unrem- pîcym vrent problem is net necariy se aýcute -as;it was 1in1the «"-Ti{ugry Thirties". For one thing- men woulmd take ariything theni te- earn a f ew dollars. Relief paymients were net sufficientlyr attractive te eepmen from hlon- est emplvinyent. Even wýhite- collarC men le-arnt te haindie ar pick and sheOvelJ. 1vI rmmeren mn ehired by Ithe dayvferiarmwork. We pii h im -a dellar a da 'y and boarid - and lï e wa s glad te g2et if. Actually it wýap a goed wg Tor inrskilled labeur atfatire Somie got less. This f ellew hýad nee means cf transprtation-ner »À~end, reiuuflhavaete amvy ine IW'.l lad wso, for thaf mattor, except a herse and bugy eH walked a- mile and a hitnigîf and morning te and trem euur place and wevrked trrem seven in fhe memrning te six at niilt. Day laboumiiers ladJ a lot et prîde in flhose days _- tley were cenfecnt witî wlaf ihttie thjey ceuld earn rafler tflnaccept relief. Another rma-tter ve2-!ry mmd in fhe news again no.w is margarine. The baffle et ilii ae between butter eaters and margarinie buy- ers. And stili anofler batf le about colouring or nef icelouring margarine. You lave ail heard fhe argumnents -- buy butter and support thietariner: buy mra rine and cut dlown th~ e st et living. If is an argument fIat, las boen see-sawing back anud forth for years. The Deparfnit et Agriculture can't stop heuse- wives fromr buying maqrgarine se they have tried te mnake if un-, attractive '0*yVprohibiting fhe iuse of colouir. And if lasn't dene' one bit et goed. Heinewiveswl want 'if buy if bades.Mn e! flem don't even bofler te werk in the coleur bud. Se isni't if fimo fhe goyernmont stopped trying f0 brow-beat theni inte' buyinglu itter. Wemen willuY what fîe 'y want anywy Mofl- ors whVeohvete make a numnber et lunchies overY Lday vthink thoy are, saving m one- wifh inarga- ine an-d if anothier spmead isý used n top et if, peanut, salmon or Sandwich meiat - you can, le quito sure methier isn'f wasting ber time and enorgy working a celeur bud intoetfee marguarine. Tîore is stili another reasen why people buy margarine thaf bas nothing te de wtl fle cost. Somne doctors recmmend ifte loe r fhe daily intake ot animal fat. At-the r--eont lHearf Feunda- tieýn Conterence cern-cil mnarga- rine was recemmendoed as being preferable for patienits wltl Iigî blod pressure. Se, f ring -1te tel- lowýý good adv-ice, a housewite may uvbuy Da pound oet margarine - docfor' rders - and tIen raiso 1er bleedl pressure trying te work that damn coleur bud int e fhe mess! YOu deün't believe me? Well, jucf yeu fmty if. The came goo-cs fo&r tolks witî artîri- tic hands. If ceuld mean. heurs cf paiin afferwvards. Incident ally I lave a.sugges- tion for celouring that ic cerne- what revolutienamy. Why n"Ot switch the celouiring around? Have'margarine celd -wifh a deep dandelion celeurinig and buffe-r a pale pmimrosd elo.Most but- ter is cleured anyay se if1 weuLdenly bhoLia matter cf put- f ing in lesc yelcw. YCears- agO In Fngland fIe hest butter was, always ightly c ouv dand wtl very itf lesait. Coigbuffer, or Saltitlter, was as ye'low as a ca.namy. By pretemence I aorna butter eat or. Freal bufttemed toast - tlaf's fer ime! But mY deef or sayc ne butter -- corn-cil 1marga- rine. Wouild'f you knew if? S tIat's why I'm- raising my voice against the ban on coioumed margýarine. One fh1ing I torgot te point eut - 'buffer aýs a epread] gees farther flan mriargarin2. I lave preved if. "Hundreds o! womnen in Can- da hav-e faken up la," ef ýates a judgIe. Thiere are aiseo h-usand3 wle) lay if down. cf ý'C L -,T - ,eut the gý -reat La- U-!t IclL ir rdFrieda Leider- in i p)ýri rx"cecf"Tristan anrd 1 Cea," 'ar<htrtd: "I wspe2r fmiga public sel-vice" th.an c( foMZarIt nmust surely Stir at the thcught of lisdemise,'" wrote1'he ancheterGardiani. "But if hc wasuagenluts he a aise a Iienseý-d j ester, a prediî,7 a prodigal.. . and was at ail. times to be watched wvith awe ase well as affection, like a volcano. Like Torcanini, he became a leg- end in his lifetimie." Catch Bcrby's Eye SnmaIIr Ccapocity Than He Thought As3 ex-Secretary of State Deýan Acleson fells if in The Saturd.ay Evening Post (in fhe f iret ota from AniAheeenï-'s otvmn e meirs), Sir Win>ston Church)ili once pesýed a problem when lie was a dininer guesf o! then-Pres- ident Harry Truimy.an aboard fhe Premidential yacht Williamsburg. -For some 62 years, Churclili 5a'ld, 'lelad consumed an aver- age cf a quiart cf wins,- and liquor a day. Suppojýse flaf' mnuch liquid slould le ýpeýumed inte the ship's saloon - low deep would if stand? An aide c ipe uf lis trusty clide mule anid spli-an answer: About 21k tfeet. Church- ill seemed ferriblydia'ntd Achesocn recalle1d: "11e h-ladex- pected ft; we would ail!le swixrniing ,like golffi ýh iii a He Waý; A Legend In Hs Lifetimie "There are cly fhmee er four of, us titans left," Sir Thomas Beecham- boasted on bis 80th birtilay nr_1ly twe years cge. *'One by' oecfbeydepart - Strat-s, FrwageToscýaniïni, Baller. I feel liko Rebinson Crusne on a deserf 'iand-buf wlere's my suniFrida? With Sir Thosmas's deatl last nuonth in London (col a cerebral fhrombosic),,one more titan de- parted, an outrageously outspok- en-and irrevemenit titan, telu e sure, but a true Olymipian in spirit and deed. His Jevian tire was wifhering te ail -wlo toit fhe burning lash cf bis ton gue and pen, but fhe, climate cf British, music today owos much' et ifs bealthy vigeir te the littie battl- ing bamonet witl thie geateod chinand fhe gimlof eye. 11 With a fortune whicl came freinBeeclam'e laxativerPlUIS, fhe poppory cenducter erganized orchestras and opera companies and brougîf mnusic nef enly te London but te alcof fIe pre- vinces. Ho, cîampienied Handel, Haydn, M\/ozari, Berleoz, and Sfrausc when- flose ,cemposers were noIvelties la the orchestral repertoire, nef stapleýs as fhey are teday. As a conrductor, Sir, Thomas's iYnmory was phenom>ienal-and variable. Af a performance in Manichester cno memomahie nigîf yo<ars ago, le walked in'at the last moment, picked up bis bafen and whisuýered, te fhe cencert- master:,"By fhe way, whatopera are we doing tenight?" On an- other occasion, af.ter porferming- a symphony le did nef admire, ho fturned again te fhe tirst vie- - linict- and said, rafler. audibly: "Wby don't yeu play?" If'l's oer," mîîttere'd the uncemnforf- able fiddler. "Thank God!" cigh- ed Beecham. Sir Themas'c contempt fer singeýrs was aýs menumental as lisdilk for modemn music (etNotnly. dead, but tîrice dam-ned"). Wîen accused once CHASE AWAY THE BLUES IN THE NIGHT zaeVaiydai, 19, li the oniy all-night disc jockey in Toronto, Canada, and heýr ,toetinig husky vo4ce la much appreciaited. Wyhile, on the air, sho gets many phonie colis from night workers whlo just -wanf f0ý ta'lk. 0f course, csorne callecrs try to arrange daîes butmc aýreonet lo talk. r'. J- ~e One-of-a-kind gif t! Deligit 5A new mom with this dainty, ', ib or cardiage cover. Easy to make. Parasol.- pretty cover ! Bà by loves gay colours - use scrap -for patches; kittents are e broidered swiftly. Pattern 827k nin'.e 5x7-inch m-fotifs; charts di Send THIRTY -FIVEý CENTS (stampsý cannot. be accepted us*, postal note 'for safety) for thi§ pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New ýrTor- onto, Ont. Print plainly PAT- TERN NrJMBER, your NAM.NE and, ADDRESS. JUST OFF THE 'PRESS! S2e r.ow for our exciting, new 1951 Needlecraft Catalogue. Over t2i" designs to' crochet, knit, sew, p.mbroider, quit, weave --- fa- shiens, homefurnighings, tIcys, gifts bazaair hits. Plus FREF - instructions for six smart veii, caps. Hurry, send 25e~ now, ISSUE 13 - 1961