¥, SAR x") a ie SRE OL SRN ek NM (rho x N A Faron Eh aE hb RON 14) TaN AY 33 HES CRRA standing, sympathetic, charm- ing and intelligent. I am consi- dered more than pretty, and I have no difficulty at all in at- tracting men, But -- "Usually it's only about five or six months after an eligible male starts dating me, sparing : WET r---- | Shoulder-Warmer Just like big sister's -- this pretty over party and schoo} dresses, too! Simple - crochet pattern stitch in open-shell design. Fun to make! Pattern 785 has easy crochet directions. Children's sizes 2 to 12 -- all included in pattern. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins (stamps cannot be ac- cepted) for this pattern to Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Tor- onto, Ont. Print plainly PAT- TERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS, Don't miss our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalog! An excit- ing variety of crochet, embroid- ery, and iron-on color transfer patterns to send for. Plus four complete patterns printed in book, Send 25 cents: for your copy today! Gifts and bazaar best sellers! little chill-chaser goes : [ ANNE HIRST | "Dear Anne Mirst: I am not far from 40, and I'm frightened. Why is it that all my life I've not been able to hold a man? I've tried to be all that is ex- pected of a woman kind, under-) no affection (and making vague promises)' that the friendship goes haywire, 1 feel he grows bored -- which of course makes me self-conscious and unable to converse on impersonal topics like world affairs, sports and other subjects that interest men and interest me, too, "Then I can only deplore the things I will never have -- a husband, a home and children. "I am a professional young Woman, and certainly should be ' & more interesting companion than a housewife who can only talk food prices, children, and what new clothes or jewelry she can coax from her husband. . . . Here 1 wait, hoping the right one will come along before I'm too old to care. ; "Men only seem to be out for what they can get, someone to practice lovemaking on (as one reader put it) so they'll know how to proceed when their true love arrives. "Do you think there is a des- . tiny that controls our lives? That no matter how desperately one tries to change a situation it is to no avail? That perhaps 'my particular destiny is never to have what all women want and most of them get -- a man of their own? ONE LONELY WOMAN" * Fatalists seem to believe * that what is to be will be, and * are convinced that it is futile * to struggle against one's pre- * destination. I am not one of * those. * When a woman knows what * she wants, I think she should * lay ber plans to get it. First, * to deserve it and Prepare for * it, then use her ingenuity and * common sense to pursue the * search. Successive experiences * with the male sex show her * what not to do, and. if she is * honest _in' admitting mistakes ~™ she makes fewer of them, * Frank analysis of one's fail- * ures is a help, too. * Many a. girl * man's love-making early, * shows a too-fervent eagerness * to oblige him. This isn't smart, * for he concludes he is not the * first male in her life and the * idea revolts him. Other young * women snub a man with such * hostility that he believes her * incapable of emotion. He can, * however, be repulsed so gra- * ciously that he feels he does * appeal to her but she has 'too * much self-respect to stoop to * conquer. ; * Some professional women * assume an arrogance that is * anathema to romance. Positive * in personality, they cannot * discuss any topic without * showing how superior they * feel. They forget that woman- * liness, a willingness to listen boi ba % = 3 x HOME WAS NEVER LIKE THIS . ~ "Annabelle," a six-year-old. orangutan from Borneo, pours herself some hot tea to warm up her inside while straw and a muffler help keep her warm on the outside. Annabelle is having trouble with London's extremely cold weather. * and learn, judicious flattery and a sense of humor can still bring a man to his knees, just as a cozy dinner she prepares -can dissolve a bachelor's will power. When a man is low and out>ef sorts, he turns to the girl he feels at home with -- one who asks question, fits his mood like a glove, who. is sympathetic and tender at the right moment. She is the wo- man he wants to come home to, and that is the keynote of his feeling for her. Examine yourself as though * you were somebody 'else, * honestly, critically, Perhaps *<that will reveal what is lack- * ing in your personaliyt, One suggestion: It is smart to date more than one man at a time; it keeps both on their toes; When a girl has had your experience of failure and al- most given up hope and then suddenly the right man ap- bears, we like to call it des- tiny, -- And then how grate- she is that all the other men passed her byl Never give up hope. Your most comforting thought should be that we cannot * know what tomorrow will * bring. FEE EEE Een LAE AE JE IE IR I IR ROO, » * * It you feel that love and life are passing you bv, chee; «pt yields to a - - Tomorrcw...s "Another day, and 1s adventures are hidden to us. Keep yourself in the mood for romance, and don't despair. It may help to write to Anne Hirst, Address her at Box 1, 123 Eigh- teenth St, New Toronto, Ont, See The Water's Really Boiling Ask a housewife if she knows how to make a good cup of Tea and she'll laugh and say, "But you're joking, of course." Ask a restaurateur if he serves a good -cup of Tea. Without doubt he will answer in the affirmative, Yet, surprisingly enough, in many restaurants and in some homes, a pale watery liquid masquerades under the name of Tea, although a good cup of Tea is a very refreshing and enjoy= able beverage, Using water that has not come to a bubbly boil and being too impatient to let it brew for 8 Quail Gives Hunters the Bird-- Eight-year-old Laura May Girdsen can give hunters a Ip about fondled than shot at. She knows, because her pet, "Tweety Bird," quall-a quail would rather be Is' a quail, She found it last July on the lawn of her home near Uniontown, Kan. It was only a few days old. For two weeks Its diet consisted of two houseflies per day, Gradually the menu was expanded and today, Tweety Bird's favorite food Is light toast (dark toast Is rejected) and warm milk, Lavra May takes it to the pasture where it feeds on seeds and insects, It never tries to escape and always Photo shows Laura'May offering the bobwhite some toast and walks or flies back to the house. / In the inset, Tweety Bird is wear Et La Sa Bu as is A Rd So ivi a i As Z & gis. Ziad dn iki DTT PII Ao rTPA Ty rh oes PUTS Ra Phe ng a 1954 Kansas quall stamp, i minutes are the two biggest faults which result in a poor cup of 'Tea, Tea is an aristocrat --it refuses to be rushed--but give it proper yet simple atten- tion and "it will give you its best, . Not so very long ago a Tea taster in the United States dis- paragingly referred to the ine. ability of many American wo- men .to boil water! Whilst his remarks were ridiculed, there is some justification for his scath-: ing comment! Did you know for example that boiling water. has to reach a temperature of 212 degrees and that the perfect cup of Tea is made only when fresh water has been drought to a furious bubbly boil? If the teapot isn't heated first, even boiling. water will drop as many as 20 degrees after 'it has been poured into the teapot. You do not get the full flavour 1and aroma from Tea's delicate oils and minerals unless it has been brewed for a full 5 minutes, There's no problem in making, a really good cup of Tea. Here are the simple, basic steps which, if followed, will result in outstanding flavour and a cup of Tea you will be proud of. 1, Use g warmed crockery tea- pot. *2. Put in 1 teaspqorn. !5c-each -« s33%a iq 1 for the pot, 3. Add fresh, bubbly, boiling water. 4. Allow to brew for 5 minutes, *Tea Bags--one tea bag for each 'two cups. 3 Mother! Look! 4691 SIZES 2-10 5 bytune Helos WARDROBE for Brother and Sister! Overalls, playsult, blazer, blouses are for both, Sister has a little jumper too. Mister Ele- 'phant is a pocket they love! Pattern 4691 in sizes 2, 4,68, 10, 'for boys 'or girls. Size 6 blouse 1% yards 35-inch; over- alls, 2% yards 35-inch nap; blazer 1% yards; jumper 1% yards, Instruction for elephant "pocket too. This pattern easy 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, AD- DRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to Box. 1, 123 Sighteenth St, New Toronto, nt. ISSUE 6 -- 1985 1 Plastic Tableware With Patterns Not so many years ago plastic dishes were considered strictly utilitarian--destined for the pic- nic basket or, at best, the break- fast table, Today, modern de- sign has carried these once-hum- ble Cinderellas out of the ki h- . en and into the\dining room, The latest development in moulded plastic tableware {is built-in decoration. This is a great achievement because, un- til now, manufacturers have been 'able to produce plastic dishes in solid colors only. In china or pottery, the pattern is usually * applied by painting the fired "biscuit" before glazing, The glaze protects the pattern from scratches, though of course it can still chip-off. In plastic tableware, however, dishes are ordinarily moulded under pres- sure in one operation and no ' glaze is used. The problem then is a design, since design applied on the surface would soon wear away. : Only in the last few months has the difficulty been solved. There are now dishes on the market which are adorned with pink roses--roses which took six years to bloom. During all this time an enterprising Canadian manufacturer was experiment- . ing with a method of imprison- ing the rose design, like a leaf in amber, within the moulded piece. His persistence brought success, x 0d A protective layer of plastic which the manufacturer used over the flower 'design is so tough he claims a piece of sand- paper 'could be rubbed 75 times . over the surface of a plate with- out harming the design, Wash it under the hot-water tap a thousand times, punish it with any amount of 'everyday wear- and-tear--the rose stays as bright and fresh as when the plate left the mould. 2D 4 RONICLES '7GiNGERFARM Gwendoline D Clarke "-- Well now, I suppose I must tear myself away from the book I am reading long enough to get this column done--and then I shall return to my book with- out delay. What book? It is called "Doctor to the Islands" by Tom and Lydia Davis, The "islands" . being the Cook Is- lands in the South Seas. It is a true narrative giving the ex- 'perience of Dr, Davis and his wife during a seven-year stay .at Rarotoga, the largest one in the Cook group of islands, where Dr. Davis was appointed as Medical Officer of Health, It gives striking examples of what happens when man-made in- tervention upsets the balance of nature. For instance there were many large mango and chest- nut trees on the island which were always left standing even though younger trees were cut down. Then in 1935 along came a Government agricultural "ex- pert." He had previously work- ed in South Africa and was under the impression that the same agricultural principles' should apply to both countries, So he ordered: the huge old trees to be cut down on the ground that their great spreading roots were = draining nourishment from the soil. The natives did as they were told although they knew that the tree roots shook and moved in the tropical ™ storms, loosening the soil better than a plough could have done, while shade from the trees gave shelter to the "low crops." The trees were destroyed and as a result the crops were alternates ly bleached by the sun and washed out by the rain. Then came the order to prune the orange trees, That, too, was a grave mistake' as, according to Dr. Davis, in this region of: tropical hurricanes, nature does her own pruning and the trees survive, whereas the trees that were pruned with clippers died within a few weeks, The story of the island, is, of course, fascinating from a medi- cal standpoint as one follo 8 the hard but successful _strufg-. gles of the young doctor against ignorance, lack of sanitation and witchcraft, So, if you really want a fas- cinating and informative book to read just try "Doctor to the Islands" --written in a style that is humourous and easy to read. Another book, that should be particularly jristesting to peo-. ple 'from England "Royal Chef," being the experience of the Royal Chef at Buckingham Palace - from the latter part of Queen Victoria's reign to that of George V and later as ehef for the late Queen Mary after she became Queen Mother, Well, for the first time this winter the fields are covered with snow. Just a light fall around here -- but I imagine there is considerably more up beyond the hills, My, what a time we had last week getting around on the ice. Partner isn't too good at keeping his balance and I. am even worse, so we make a. good pair. However, Partner has a pair' of "creep- ers" that he keeps for just such an emergency," Without them _ there are times when he would hardly be able to get up the hill from the barn, even with the help of ashes. Many times we have thought we would like an oil-burning furnace instead of coal, but as Partner says -- "What would he do without ashes in slippery weather?" Not only for ourselves but for the cows and cars too. Every day Partner goes out with his ash- pail before the truck comes in for the milk, After breakfast he starts out again, spreading ashes for the cows from the barn to the trough, and from the driving shed to where I must walk to back the car out of the shed. He also uses quite a bit of salt. And then, after.all his trouble the cows come out to drink and what do they do? Start fight- ing, no less! Just as I was going for the mail the other day, there were two of the stupid things, heads together, pushing each other around on the ice, slipping and sliding all over the place. Then a few of the others came algng and joined in the fray. It reminded me of the scrap at Maple Leaf Gar- dens on Christmas night! I was sure there would be a few brok- ~ en legs between them so I did my best to stop the rough-house but not before two of them went down.on their knees, However, they managed to survive with- out injury. As for me I had my own troubles in trying to keep right-side-up. I put on shoes and rubbers and then pulled heavy woollen socks over the, whole works. What added charm 'to my attractive foot- wear was the fact that one sock was bright blue with red tops and the other light. grey--they were the only ones in my mend- ing "basket that didn't 'need . darning. Fortunately no "one came along: the road when I was getting the mail from the box! : Apart from the ice I had a wonderful time last week. Spent nearly a whole day gathering up old Christmas cards in_an- swer to the appeal for such cards to be left at Honeydew Restaurants in Toronto. (The time limit is past now.) Then I went to work on a whole lot of papers and magazines for the Boy Scouts. After awhile we shall be able to move around at Ginger Farm! prices, value for your live stock, » Painting Pointers A paint roller must be cleaned carefully after use if it is to do a satisfactory job the next time, But cleaning can be a messy business. Here's a tidy and ef- fective method. After using oil paint, squeeze the excess paint out of the roller by rolling it in the empty pan. Then put it in an empty polythene bag--the make sure it is one without holes. Then you can squeeze the roller by hand, working ou. the remaining paint, Rinse the roller in, a pan of turpentine, mineral spirits or other thinner, painting with latex-base paints, clean the roller in lukewarm water, fa L The best.way to mix paint is to use two cans. Pour off the top liquid from the new can of paint and stir the sticky solids in the bottom of the can. Then pour the two back and forth from one can to the other sev- eral times, Keep an extra paint pail in the house for this pur- pose, . * * Be careful when painting any- Paint will not adhere to wax and in no time it will peal and chip, Scrub the surface first with soap and water, then give it a good rubbing with turpentine to re- move every trace of wax. If any gloss still remains, rub it lightly with fine sandpaper. Be dry before you -paint. NO STARCH-High wind and bit. Ing celd are responsible for this petrified assortment of laundry. Socks, slacks and shirt-left on a PUBLIC MARKET--AIl buyers may see your stock and bid against each other for its posses- sion when it is offered on the public market. On - a normal busy day, more 'than 100 different buyers operate on the. Ontario Stock Yards market at Toronto, When your stock is sold through the mar-. ket, competition influences the price you receive; competitive bidding assures you o FULLY-QUALIFIED SALESMEN--Abattoirs hire well-trained buyers to act for them; their first aim is to purchase as cheaply as possible. You need a fully-qualified salesman to represent your interests, to make sure you receive full market EK REMEMBER--The Public Live Stock Market is the only place where fully-qualified salesmen are always available as your representative, ~ "dried by Old Man Winter. maximum Fh rere rt oe ------ fod Tacs & Les Sh ( This advertisement published in the Interests of the PUBLIC LIVE STOCK MARKET AT TORONTO by two of Canada's leading live stock commission agents -- BLACK BROS. LIVE STOCK COMPANY LIMITED * and McCURDY & McCURDY LIMITED (Ontario Stock Yards, Toronto 2 + / a ~ x 5 Safe si Ca kind the groceries come in, but repeating' until clean. After" thing which has had wax on it. sure the surface is thoroughly. clothesline were really rough