A a oT ~ a SF SR ny » Hei . " their v SALA THE PRICE . TO THE oy dll TRADE. A, BC a HAS BEEN "REDUCED REBATE ON STOCKS PERMIT YOUR GROCER TO PASS ON THIS REDUCTION TO YOU - NOW SEE BELOW P06 000000000000000-0-000-000-00b-0 >> TEA BAGS 15's -- Tc per box | | 'HE 60's -- 4c per box 120's -- 8c per hox ! 30's -- 2¢ por box™. . TO THE GROCERY TRADE: Rebate forms are in the mail. Fill in your stock on hand and return -the form to SALADA. REBATES WILL BE AS "FOLLOWS: ORANGE PEKOE NO CHANGE IN PRICE BROWN LABEL Ih. pkt. 4c per pkt. 1 Ib. pkt. 2c per pkt. Va lb. pkt, Tc per pkt. 2 ox. pkt. no change | | ; | YELLOW LABEL | | 11h. pkt. 11¢ per pkt. a |b. pkt. 5¢ per pkt. = A Sais ANNE 1 Your Family Counselor. HIRST z "Dear Anne Hirst: We have three children, and my husband is good to us in every way--ex- cept concarning in-law matters « . . Briefly, he doesn't care to visit my par- ents, and when they see us for a few hours 1 hold my breath, -- hoping -he- will - not: be sulky. He never shows anw ap- preciation of their gifts or ndness to us. . "I treat his people as I do my .own, I visit them with him and the children, and everyone is congenial, I've cared for his mother - when she was ill, and 'I help her when she needs it . It is all so unfair! I try to overlook his attitude, but the time comes when I got s so choked up I explode. "CAN'T HELP IT" "When I approach my husband about it, he says. we're two dif- ferént- types, and if he doesn't - like someone be can't help show- ing it. I contend that for sake. of harmony he could be pleasant with them. Both sets of parents 'are nice, and neither interferes. "This problem is driving my - husband and me further apart all the time. It's been going on ~Jor years, and keeps getting more serious . . . I don't want the chil- dren harmed by such contention + + + Is there any way I can han- dle .the matter so that harmony will prevail? . . . Thank you, and "God bless you in your helpful LRM," * Lam " atfuld that your. hus- * band has stated 'his case and Le I brook no attempt on your rt to change' the facts as he at Hi »e : : 3 'sees them, For too many years be a he hag had bis way, Hig defense, though, is irra- "# tional. In his business, and in # other contacts, he undoubted- * Jy must deal with people whom . he does hot like--but would Be to show" ju Re Io 8 courtesy and tact es- to his successful 'ends. his attitude 'toward your - he should bg fair, if to please you, * ; haps he y just too stub. .e pr ; Win ~*- allow this one defect in _*.born to admit how right you ¢ are, too autocratic to yield to ® your pleas. How stupid (and 1 * use the word deliberately) to "his * character to destroy the har- * mony of your marriage! You * are gradually losing your re- ~~ * spect for him and your confi- T am *-sorry for-you-both.-- -- ~~~ * dence in his judgment. ¢ Perhaps I have missed a cue. put it seems to me that you can only take the children to ¢ visit your. parents more often, *® and show them even morg af- . *_ fection and thoughtfulness. 'Ac- ® cept his attitude as a lack in ® him which you cannot change, * and at'least end these unhappy ¢ argu.nents.-- which you admit" - ¢ are harmful to the-children's - * sense of security, L & v . Some men are as they arc, and in their shallow pride -resist any attempt to change their views. If you are having any trouble, tell Anne Hirst about it. Ad- dress her at Box I- 123 Eight- eenth St, New Toronto, Ont, Smoke, No Fire--Realistic to. the point of Including smoke and rubble, the "Rescue Street" Civ- ilian Defense training ground gives workers a chance to traln . under actual disaster conditions, Seen above, three team mem- bers climb a ladder to "rescua'" trapped victims, | _their__ opponents are sure. Queen Overworked? Are the British overworking their sovereign? As the old year came to a close this not new. question 'bounced back and forth - between those who feel it would be more "Democratic" to let the Queen live a simpler life, and those who feel that plenty of woman, Advocates of the pC 7 life for Buckingham Palace at- tack "court circles" for beeping But the . Queen wants it that way. Meanwhile 'Queen Elizabeth 11 is showing. herself as a very up to date young monarch, an ex- - 'ponent of simplicity, with a deep sense of democracy. Her Christ- mas message which was broad- cast throughout the Common- wealth reflected these -qualities movingly. 'In it she asked her peoples to pray for her -- that she might have strength and wisdom to perform the tasks to which she will dedicate herself at the coro- nation next June. The request re- minded many of her hearers that in 1947, on reaching the age of 21, she pledged herself as Prin- cess Elizabeth to serve them but added that she could not carry the burden alone but would need the help of all her people. What she seems to many. Bri- 1 tons ta be saying is that a na. tion's strength comes not pri- marily from its rulers or leaders but from .the character of all its people, In recent weeks London movie audiences have been watching a film dealing with -the exploits ot the first: Elizabeth, and hearing her words which were tuned to another turbulent age, words in which she said she might have the frail body of a woman but she Ei_ and, and would lead her armies to victory.- The style of this speech offers a roaring con- trast to that of the message of Elizabeth II, though with dis- credit to neither sovereign: thelr tasks differ 80. PAST TENSE Mrs. Washburne was sitting in her husband's sumptuous office whén a beautiful stream-lined . blonde .undulated in, "I'm Mr, Washburne's wife," said Mrs. W. "That's nice," .said the blonde, "I'm his secretary." "Oh" sald Mrs. W,, "were yout" "ad the heart of a King of - Ice On The River 3 The ice is on the river, the slow-flowing, un-salt water. It "began 'with shards and sheets of «ice drifting down in the slow current, forming fragile bridges where it massed, Another night "of cold and there was slush be- tween the shards and along the bank; "another day of cold and --it-was a sheet, a crystal sheet over the river which danced-with--- glitter when the sun struck it and gleamed with frost crystals in the moonlight. The flow was ~ still there;- break the ice at the --+--{fragile-edges-and-the slow move=" { ment of the dark current could be seen. But it. was: now a hid- * den flow. It will melt. The ice will loosen and. go out, and come again, river a long time say that it must freeze over three times, and then winter will settle down to stay out its time. This is the first freeze, bank to bank, Two more to come, two to go and one to remain. It is so clear, "so simple, this ice, that one forgets that ice carved the valleys. Ice was the great knife which shaped the hills, the ice after the fire had died away. Ice. crystalline water, one of the simplest solids and yet, in the crystal, close kin to gran- ite. Raise its temperature five degrees and it flows away. Raise it twenty degrees, on a chill day, and it steams, becomes a cloud. A snowflake, teather-light, or a glacier, or a river no longer open . to the sky. Ice. ice-shaped valleys, and winter "night closes - down, and highways for the wind, And man stands. face. to face with his land's beginnings, its primal force, its relentless ice. -- From The New York: Timés. Dodd's Kidney Pills yg 4 the red band at sll irl ety et od or da | ~ IT "placed" twice as far away as Those who have lived with the The slow streams flow in the .|- the : streams at .dawn are gleaming Universe : Older Than We. Thought Dr. Harlow Shapley of the Harvard College of Observatory reported to the American As- _tronomical Sociély meeting this "week that the universe appears to'b erally assumed, that it is expand- ing- at a'slower rate than has been believed, and - that it is twice as old as earlier estimates said. ; "These -the conception of the tiniverse as the result of a lifetime of study hy. Dr. Shapley. of the yardsticks distances in the universe, } The great new 200-inch teles- Cope of Palomar Observatory can see 2,000,000,000 light years out peculiarities of certain stars in galaxies which are just faintly visible at the extreme range of the galaxies are, indeed, 2,000,- 000,000 light years away. This is twice the distance that earlier studies indiéated and the mea- surement suggests that the uni- verse is bigger than it was earlier believed. he stretched to meet new teles- copic observations is the distance to the Magellanic clouds, 'com- panion galaxies to the Milky southern sky. The average bright. ness of clusters in these clouds has been assumed to be three or four times less than the bright- ness of similar clusters in our Milky "Way, But Dr. Shapley suggested that they should be * previously believed because they "of brightness as clusters in our own galaxy. Figuring backward ' in time from the present. to the moment when the universe was created, it the universe has always ex- panded at the rate it is now ex- panding, all matter was at one tiny point somewhere between three and four billions years ago. This means that 'the. creation is about twice as old as had been previously believed. Fortunately, Dr. Shapley pointed out, this estimate brings the age of the known universe' into agreement ed for rocks found on the surface of the earth. " . BONANZA Job ag janifor in a famous night club, he was given a pass key to every room in the building including the 'girls' dressing rooms. Two weeks later the man- 'ager ran into him in 'the hall and. said, "What's the matter, Ole? You haven't come round' golly," gasped Ole. "I get wages 00?" ; WARDROBE for Brother and Sister! Overalls, playsuit, blazer, blouses are for both," Sister has a 'little jumper too. phant is a pocket they. lovel 10, for boys or girls, Size 6 blouse 1% yards . 35-inch}. overalls, 2% yards 35-inch nap; blazer 1% yards; jumper 1% yards, Instruc- : tion for elephant pocket too. This pattern easy to use, sim- 'Send THIRTY-FIVE 'OENTS (35¢) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern, Print plainly SIZE, NAM y' ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER, Send order to Bax 1, 123 [ larger than has been gen- si nificant changes in developed by astronomers are * with which scientists measure into space. Measurements of the ° the big telescope indicatethat . Another yardstick which must 'Way, which are visible in the are actually 'of the same order took place then. So the universe . with 'the maximum age calculat- When--Ole- -Janssen--secured -a-- to collect any wages yet." "By: Mister. Ele- Pattern 4691 insizes 2, 4, 6, 6, -{ ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated instructions. ca Eighteen St, New Tororwy 7 Fa - Edna Jaques > : "Animals -- We Have come ato the end of our first week without company. - Lonesome? No, we have doesn't get much' from the barn these Gye wd 1 have been doing just {mn I had : promised myself I would do -- a spot of "redding up start- | ing off with the worst room ia the house" -- my office, study glory hole -- call: it what you will, Oh dear, saving and quilting patterns is bad enough but when one's clippings also include bits of poetry and prose; odds and ends: of infor. mation that might come in use- ful sometime, and stories and ar- ticles written by friends also in the writing field, then indeed one gets really swamped, I hate to throw out anything that spe- cially appeals to me, which means: I. have a collection of homely little stories frgqm the Milk Producers' Magazine; Maud: Kerr's - edito- rials from the Family Herald® and Weekly Star; Mona Pur- sers's from the Globe and Mail; H, V. McAree's "Two-Bits" col- umn, W. H, Deacon's "Fl§-Leaf," and many interesting little bits that I have clipped from this paper. from time to time. There are also very interesting local histories published ' each ~ Satur- day in two evening papers. They, also, have to be saved. But, alas, my clippings are not always cut out and put away when: they should: be --: the whole page is saved instead -- which means I invariably have a pile of mis- cellaneous clippable waiting to be sorted out "when I get around to it." Eventually I settle down to the job but by that. time the clippings are often out of date so that I look over this' one and that one and won- der what on earth I kept it for] So- that is what I have been doing for the last two days -- and you can understand why I started. "redding up" in my own room first. But thank goodness 1 didn't need any help -- other- wise there would have been some uncomplimentary 'remarks fly- ing around -- of that I am cer- tain. You see I rearranged my office a few weeks ago.-- brought up a set of shelves from the cel- "Jar and pushed a big 'cupboard T didn't want rout into the hall, meaning to have Bob put it somewhere elese when he was at home. But for some unknown reason I didn't ask him so the cupboard stayed in the hall. To- day: I brought it back again to where I took it from! By a little more re-arranging I found I could use, to good advantage, 'both the cupboard and the shelves. Now, if I had needed help for the job .. . See what I mean? Then there was my (railing ivy -- that had to be changed to a new po the register -- fine in: summer, but too hot in-winter, So. I put -the ivy where I thought it would show to good advantage, oa "tacked up all the trailers. La in the day I decided it was "t in the right place at all -- 80 I changed it all over again. So® you're "laughing, are you? Well, now, how can one be sure that one will like anything in any particular place until one finds out by putting it there? That's a logical question, isn't . it? Anyway, 1 am quite sure that I now have everything exactly the way I want it I always know when I am finally satisfied. Well, before leaving the sub- ject of clippings -- I wonder what you people have found to be the best way of caring for them -- you see I am quite sure 'you have clippings too. I find: that every clipping addict has a method of her own --. good, _bad or indifferent, I used to keep my. clippings in one section of a filing cabinet in 'alphabetical order. But I soon "found that that method didn't work too well because I never could remember low. I"had things listed. For ifi- -- stance I 'might want to look up . something on. dogs. Then 1 would |" wonder:.". . now, will that be under "dogs" or will it be -- I found another writer, Lyn" H,, n far | too busy to be udiindo ot 4 3 material n, It was over domestic"? Later . ; Ly COMFoj 1 And the RELIEF IS LASTING There's one thing for the headache s + s the muscular aches and pains Ahat often accompany a cold . « ¢ INSTANTINE. INSTANTINE brings really fast relief from pain and the relief is prolonged! So get INSTANTINE and get quick comfort. INSTANTINE is compounded like a prescription of three provem medical ingredients. You can depend on its fast actif in getting relief from every day aches-and pains, headache; neuralgic pain. Lista: Get lastantine today > "and always a ' J h handy Seay = SSN Jastantine 12-Tahlat Tin 25¢ "Economical 48-Tablet Bottle 75¢ had a much better system. She used large envelopes, plainly 'marked as to. contents, which binet, without an index. Carol N. uses scrap-books, under vari- ous headings, into which she pins her clippings. Quite neat and handy, but a lot of scrap books are, necessary. For clip- pings that contain informatiom that cannot be'listed -- like Maud Kerr's and the Homemaker -- I keep them altogether with am ordinary spring paper 'clip -- 3 for 10¢ -- which can then be -hung on a nail, Of course there are still people who prefer to --use paste for their clippings -- if * that were the only way [ wouldn't keep many clippings. Anything but that! If only I could unpaste some of the clip- pings I saved years ago -- brit fle, blotched and blurred. I know better now. Tops In Her Class--Named the most beautiful schoolteacher In Mrs. Nell Owen grades papers of her students who sent her picture in for judging. She won the prize which is an all-expense trip to Hollywood. b Itch. Itch i 1); fist nse of soothing, coolin i Bb. 5. Prescription oF. thong Nould ed Itct--caused ed by eczema, rashes, ro Ted i i hafing other i ct {roubles . ess, stall le must 7 satlsf Doe 't bi or roney your ISSUE 4 -- 1953 . RELIEF FOR COLDS Check the discomfort ofa Ee Inhale Minard's a You'll breathe easier, - feel better. Just sy =yonril see. NARDS "KING OF PAIN" LINIMENT she then put into her filling ca-- a nation-wide contest, lovely » --~rheumatic- pain, -for- 'neuritic or -- wa Reeth is swt" a