FANG FERN A A RY Toe Te a TA Toa det Ea SEAR EY Ly ARGON AR Lei ob cs eke TN EAGT i od REL GE if Wak stay ee LG Los Cheb BI BI RT An HIRST amily QGunsclor ------------------ et When a wife forgives her hus- band's unfaithfuness, what does se really mean by. it? ' Usually, she it too, Yet how many hurt wives make their 'hus: bands suffer for vears after, be- lieving that the men desire (at least) to be un- 4 faithful again. One dictionary explains the word forgive this way: "It not only lifts punishment . . . from the offender, but restors to an unresentful place in the affections of the offended one." HOW UNFAIR! "Ever since my husband had an affair with another woman," writes | one distracted wife. "He has been a model husband, trying in every way to 'make up the heartache he caused me. -- "Yet after all these years, | still can't get over the hurt, "When we go out, [ am in utter misery, - feeling he is looking at every pretty girl in the place. I can't seem Sto get, back the self- confidence I once had. Truthfully, I feel like: the most lowly little niouse that ever crept across the floor! N "He is Vory. patient. He tries to make me sce that | am imagining all these things--and 1 know 1 am, But I just can't scem to "fight it. "I'm not unattractive. even at 35, men still Took at me twice. [ don't SEW THE ONE - YARD SKIRT! Yes, this requires only one yard of 54-inch fabric for any ofits sizes--waist-24, 25,26, 28, 30. Look at thie smart button trim and front flaps: the back-closing which makes this the best-fitting skirt you ever had! Look at the - diagram above, two big. pieces, three: little ones! Fashion, thrift _and easy sewing in Pattern 4899. ~~ "This pattern casy to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated instructions. Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35¢) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for: this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to Box 1, 123 Eigh- teenth St, New Toronto, Ont.2- ~intends to forget forget, want other men. wanting me! I pnly want my own man, and to feel safe nd secure again, : "I did forgive him, but I ¢annot [ am in despair." Ce * * 'vs [t will help a wife in this state <to think ®f her husband instead of herself, How must he feel when,safter five long years of devotion, he still realizes that his wife is afraid every day may be their last day togethsey She watches him like a hawk, expecting to see again that gleam in his eye for some other girl. She still sits in judg- ment on his one depatture from the right, and waits, expectantly, for the next. a Suppose this husband had never ended his one affair? The thought should destroy all her doubts of him now. She may think she has lost her self-con- fidence, The truth is ,she has lost her faith in her husband. Can she be good to live with these days? How can he feel at home with her? And how long will any man be content to live with a woman with whom he cannot relax? To "THE LITTLE MOUSE": If you want to keep your husband, ponder "thé possibility . of losing him again. He has done every- thing he could to prove his_in- tegrity. Don't try him too far. Robert Browning knew what he was talking about when he wrote: "Geod, to forgive; Best, to forget." : EER ERR EES EEE EE REEL EEE EEE EE EEE EEE REE * ¥ * When a man has made one mis-' take, is he to bé condemned to lifelong punishment? Keep your husband so sure of your faith in his goodness that he would rather - - be with. you than any woman in the world . , Anne Hirst can help 'you keep faith, if you write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. ' : Modern Etiquette Q, Is it necessary to give a din- ner, or any other form of entertain. ment, -for the purpose of announc- ing an engagement?" A. This is a popular way of an- nouncing an_engagement, but it is not absolutely necessary. The news of-an engagement can very well be conveyed by a newspaper an- nouncement, or just by word of mouth, : 4 * * Q. When a married woman is travelling alone, should she sign the hotel register as Mrs, Henry L. Hudson, or as Mary Lou Hud- son? A. She should sign as Mrs. Hen- ry L. Hudson. - y . * Q. May men's formal evening trousers be cuffed? A. No. ' . * ¢ + Q., What is the proper fee. to give the clergyman for a baptism? A. Baptism is a sacrament of the church, for which no fee is ever required. A donation to the church, however, may be given--whatever amount vou wish. * * * Q. How can I remove spots and stains from silk without injuring the color? A. Take five parts of water and six parts of alum, well pounded. Boil 'a short time, and then pour into a vessel to cool. Previous to using, the mixture must be made warm. Then wash the stained parts and allow to dry. : * ° . Q. It is all right to write invi- tations to tea on one's visiting card? A. Yes, this is perfectly proper. "CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS Matron Slagle i Strike gently ac Persian fairy Short Jacket alt of titanic Thaw acid Telephone girl American red man Mohainmedan priest . Salad plant Cuto Flower Body joint . Chemical combining orm ' . Armed conflict . Precious stone © 34. Golf mound 35. Yale i itnessed Lure Scotch cake Catnip CEN OBANS B IAT LNBO~ CAES LIPID me ps ht a me 37. Yigllant 39. Empty ina MASS Hy Location 43. Afternoon * functions 48. Yeast 49. Motherly , Terrible 88, Genus of wild | # iy RITE Malt beverage ro MOPS Na Spray 0 ' 2% Tranquility 1. Combining 32. Opening form meaning with 38. Guide 4. Mule sheep 40. Portion S$. Tapestry 12. Relieve 1. Sleeveless 414. District In wrap London 2. Take a seat 46. Degrading 4. Bard' 47. Gaelle bo. Impressed 48. Require with wonder 19. Floor covering 6. Healthy 150. Knot - 1. Verse of three "51. Peer Gynt's feet mother Afiswer Elsewhere on This Page / camino, Sky White With Wings books Whatever the geography say, an--island is not always "a small body of land surrounded by water," At several points along the southern sea-rim of Louisiana, great subterranean deposits of salt were forced upward, in "bygone ages, by the terrific geologic deposits above tiem, And wherever this occurred, the upward: gush of salt lifted: some "surface soil above the surrounding marsh- land to form isolatéd knolls of high - ground. One of. thiese came : into the possession of the Avery family' more than a century ago, and that is Avery island, whose salt mine, pepper sauce factory, oil fields, jungle gardens, bamboo groves and bird sanctudry have given it world- wide renown, In 1898, young Ned Mecllhenuny, recently returned from the Arctic, went out into the swamps and marshes surrounding Avery Island. By dint of arduous searching, day after day, he finally managed to capture seven snowy egrets alive, Over the lake that is now Bird City a big flying-cage of wire was built. The seven snowy egrets in the flying cage were well fed with shrimp and minnows, Three pairs of birds set up housekeeping in the cage with one frustrated bache- lor--or spinster--as envious audi- ence. Three broods of young were reared in _capitivity. 'Then came the great experiment. The cage that hemmed ghem in was destroy- ed in early November and the 'released herons took wing. But the following spring they and a num- ber of others returned to Avery Island, And each spring thereafter their numbers increased. Other _ birds share the colony with the snowy egrets. Occasionally an egret's hospitality is abused and then. resentment flares into angry ° action, For instance, when an out- lier invades: a mother egret's nest, she defends it us- best she can, while her mate flies to her rescue and their friends give a general alarm. Presently, the sky is white with 'wings. The outl the. startled parents _; soothed, and "the egrets drop swiftly to their own nests. Then 'the sun goes down and Bird City is hushed for the night--From "All. This Is Louisiana," by Frances Parkinson Keyes. Digestible Wood Scientists at General Electric's Research Laboratory with bacteri- ology professors at the State have found a method of making sawdust digestible in a cow's stomach. The sawdust is irradiated with high- voltage electrons or cathode' rays. Sawdust or wdod is largely a com-__ bination-of cellulose and lignin. But the lignin makes the combination indigestible. Sulphuric acid and ir- radiation get rid of -the lignin. It remains to be scen whether irra- (diated sawdust is less expensive than hav--and whether - the cows like it TAKES THREE DAYS to make these three doilies! That's how easy they are! Make them up now, to come in handy at Christmas time. "Everybody loves to get these use- ful little doilies! ? Pattern 692: crochet directions: two round doilies; one -qvalidoily, Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins (stamps' cannot be ac- cepted) for this pattern tg Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St, New Toronto, Ont. Print. plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and AD- DRESS. Send Twenty-five Cents more (in coins) for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book. Illustrations of patterns for crochet, embroidery, knitting, _ houschold accessories, dolls, toys', . , many hobby and gift ideas. A free patiern is printed in the book, f pressures of outlier- is ousted," Doubly Dangerous--Peering from behind their Bren gun in a for. ward entrenchment somewhere in a hot sector of the battlefront, two lads of the Royal Canadian Regiment in. Korea keer their eyes sharply open for Communist troops. These fighting lads, spelling trouble for the enemy, are Pvt. left, and Harold DeMontford, 22-year-old - Hamilton, Ontario. Richard DeMontfort, twins from South "Toast Of 'the = Town Lugging a loaf * of 'bread almost as big as herself, Mavis Hughes, 7, "Pearly Princess of Acton," arrives. at the Costers' Harvest Thanksgiving service in the Church of St, Mary 7% Magdalene onthe Old Kent Road, London. "GINGER FARM A Cpvonds" cae DD Clanke Much: to ow regret we did not sec Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh, But we¢ fol- lower them by radio--until we got too annoyed to listen. Not with<the Royal visitors, bless their tired, patient and forgiving hearts--but with the officialdom 'for its flagrant of the young couple for a visit "with as little formality as possible" Think for a minute. Here is a young girl who, twice during the last few years, has become a moth- er. Add to that the strain of the King's illness-- and possibly the unspoken fear that, all too soon she might be called upon: to take over the responsibilities of a sovereign state. Then comes this tour of th: Dominion--iIncongruously des- cribe! as "a holiday in Canada™! Our daughter said Elizabeth look- ed very tired on Saturday, But .1 venture to say it would not be the thousands of cheering children who tired her. nor meeting the patients at Sunnybrook Hospital, but rather the State functions "with their nu- merous guests and the -constant barrage of photographer's bulbs. Even on Sunday there was no let- up--no privacy, even at church, 1 don't this any of us are so curious that we need quite co many intimate detailg, ed Prince Philip has certainly won great popularity for himself. We were glad to hear his splendid ad- dress to the Board of Trade and to know the care he is takina of his princess. wife, - . And now to change the subject. I haye always wanted to go to the International Ploughing Match-- enjoyed the atmosphere of © the event, Everyone was friendly, there wads 'fiot too much noise, né mid- way, no clutter; and you didn't feel pushed around. There was plenty of commercial advertising, but it was the real thing--not just some- thing to catch the eye. Exhibits were constructive attempts to keep farmers up-to datd with modern ma- old threshing machine driven by 'a steam engine--and both were do- ing a good job. As the sheaves were fed into the machine it was one man's job to'cut the bands. For regular field threshing it would take disregard of the expressed wishes - 'and last Friday 1 did just -that.. I~ chinery, As a contrast there was an' _ sixteen men to' keep the machine "going. I was wishing Partner had been there to see it but he has been to the ploughing match other years and it makes less rish if onc-of us stays at homie, A number of trucks and tractor- trailers were, taking people on a tour of inspection of the entire grounds. I got aboard one of them .and had my rough ride along with the rest. 'All the ploughing looked so nice I was glad I didn't have to decide which was the best. The farm pond was interesting . , . 7% feet deep and, by means of a force pump, was the main supply for an extensive irrigation system. The fire-fighting demonstration was splendid. Firemen poured ker- osene on to a shallow pond and then set fire to it. "Immediately there was a huge volume of smoke with an- gry flames licking their way sky- "ward." Two firemen stood by, hose . City" in hand. Just as you begin to feel scared in case the fire might really get away the men went' to work J with their hose. In a little while the fire was completely extinquished, I imagine it wasn't more than three minutes. - ! Of course | found the "Tented quite an attraction.' [- left my coat for the Family Herald to look after but [ was disappointed none of the editors were on hand to meet the public. In the W.L tent Mrs. Thomas Myers, Zurich, and Mrs. J. H, McCulloch, Bramp- ton, were kept busy talking to inter- ested visitors and serving tea. Inci- dentally there were several attrac- tive rest rooms serving tea free of charge. ; - For. years <1 have leard of the wonderful job of catering done by two separate church organizations. n.t very far from here.. So I set out to investigate, Wonderful is an understatement-+I would call it a stupendous ~ undertaking. In" one tent I knew quite a féw of the men and women in charge--and more of them knew me through this col- umn, Many of them looked tired-- quite: a few were far from young-- but they were alfl in good spirits, Imagine taking truck loads of ne-: v cessary equipment over 80 miles-- tables, sgoves, benches, 'cots and bedding--to say nothing of the food and baking necessary to feed a con- stant stream of hungry dinets, . Imagine the work at home prepar- ing for the event. And then leav- ing home; being on your feet for |. four days; working without accus- tomed conveniences; sleeping away from your own bed and taking a chance on the weather. But I am glad to say it wasp't all left to the women. The men were helping too --in fact one man---a six-footer-- - looked really cute, waiting on the tables with a pretty little red and: * white apron. tied around Fis waist! re B Young Couple Make Pottery-Glaze | By Novel Use Of Chemicals Shs] .California abounds in creamists, some nationally known, many amateurs and hobbyists, but it is safe to say that Jane and Jack Brinker of San Francisco are the only newcomers in the field whose pottery is .s0 different that it actually is: made "backivards." The Brinkers, young and attrac-' tive ex-Hollywoodians (they work- "ed behind, not before, the cameras), left the cinema world for the cera- mics world only two and one-half .years ago. They are now turning out unusually glazed vases, lamp bases, 'plant holders, decorative platters, tiles, and magnesite table tops which do not require kiln-fir- ing. Their heatless pottery is hard- ened and glazed by a chemical pro- cess which has never been patented and 'is known to only a few stu- dents of the artist who taught the San Francisco couple. 1 Their tutor was the late Henry Albright of Glenmont, New York, a friend of Jack's father. Mr. Al- bright's portrait of Grover Cleve- land is in the White House. he made the bronze plaques, on the "Freedom Train," and his work is in other national institutions. Chemical Hardened Clay At his eastern studio, he devel- oped the chemical process of Pard- ening clay and glaze, but never didi anything with it commercially because it takes more time than 'fired pottery. Each piece must be fashioned by hand. not thrown on a wheel or cast as slip in a mold. In the basement of their home, Jane and Jack have worked every hour not needed for sleep and - meals to perfect their product and develop new marketing possibilities for it. Untd recent months when an agent took over their busiiess contracts, they preferred to stay frome and work, rather than ' go around to buyers. " Consequently they've had a ra- ther lean time of it financially, for 'they started with- no capital, But now they know wlat they can do, and it's beginniiig to make buyers look twice. , " In comprehending how this fire- less pottery is - made, one must reverse every -step in the 'usual ceramics manufacture. First the Brinkers scour all types of printing and paint suppliers, for their dry pigment with which they mix glazes. Lag : They use simple tools such as- a the size of a lamp or vase sides, or in irregular pieces to curve over _a shallow bowl, and the glaze is crackled by hand. The glaze strips are placed next to the mold, the . color facing the mold. Then the chemicalized clay is modeled onto : the glaze, and the entire piece is sealed with clay along the seams. They use simple tool such as a flat baby spoon on a long handle or flexible ten-cent-stove knives. Little Boy Blow--Rehearsing for a sidewalk Symphony. Concert to be staged by youngsters at the Williamsburg Settlement House, is nine-year-old Charles Liotta, The event for which the _youngster is getting in some heavy lung exercise is the 'launching of a drive for music school. funds. A typical céramic piece is hard enough to remove from the mold in eight to fifteen hours, but must set for two weeks before the chem- jcalization has knit together and. completely hardened the clay and glaze, aE ER "Our things are as durable in 'normal usage as fired pottery," they explaing "but over a long period -- say 100 years: of being buried in . the earth--ourg would not hold together as perfectly as vitrified china, Our dishes can't be used for cooking, and because of the joined pieces of glaze they are not practical for dinner ware, either. Our platters are for hors d'oeuyres and buffet uses." The Brinkers are primarily intér- ested in the decorative values of their ware, and they have made several designs for coffee table tops. In such large objects, they apply the glaze in hundreds of separate piece, like a jigsaw puzzle. The pieces may be fitted closely in .an intricate, jewel-like pattern, or they may be outlined bodly in the Florentine "intarsia". method. Pieces done in this manner have the effect of mosaic, ; Also in the decorative line, they look forward to making fireplace tiles or an entire wall in- ceramic . design, Jack is working out a way of painting on the glaze with a brush, so that a tile mural may be achieved almost as directly as mural painting. His first experi- ment, a gaily-colored clown por- trait which looks at first glance like a tempera painting, hangs over the fireplace. ; 1 RELIEF IS LASTING For fast, prolonged relief from headache get INSTANTINE. This - prescription-like tablet contains not just one, but three proven medical ingredients that ease the pain fast. And the relief is, in most cases, lasting. Try INSTANTINE just once for pain ~ f relief and you'll say as tliousands do that there's one thing for headache «+ it's INSTANTINE]- And try INSTANTINE for other aches, too .. . for neuritic or neuralgic pain , . . or for the pains and aches ' thataccompany a cold. A single tablet usually brings prompt relief, Get Instantine today ond always keep it handy Instantine 12-Tablet Tin 25¢ Economical 48-Tablet Bottle 75¢ New Souvenir Stamp | Upsidedown to Prevent. Peeking 3