COVERING UP â€" Actress Sandra Giles, 23, slapped artist Phillip Paveal, threatened court action, and tearfully denounced photoâ€" graphers as she covered the midriff of "Lady Chance," a nude :ߠof her. The painting was unveiled at the opening of Fremont hote! in las Vegas, Nev. Sandra claims she posed Ser sketches for the painting in a bathing suit, and that the Onighed .painting was to show her covered up. c:rnhome â€"â€" printed in our Wheeler Needlecraft book Wor 1956! Dozens of other new designs to order â€" crochet, knitâ€" #ing, embroidery, ironâ€"ons, noâ€" %elties, Send 25 cents for your eopy of this book NOW â€"â€" with Send TWENTYâ€"FIVE CENTS {stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this rnern to Laura Wheeler, 123 ighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN WNUMBER and SIZE; your NAME and ADDRESS. :_ Our gift to you â€" two wonâ€" éerful patterns for yourself, Pattern 732; Tissue. pattern washable ironâ€"on color trans blue and green. Small (10,12) Medium (14,16); Large (18, 20) Cinch to sew. this pretty wrapâ€" halter! No embroidery! IRON ON flower trim in glowing colâ€" * _ Other : * your lett * fit by 0 * waste. p * worthless * A boy * his first ® social coc ® girls he * low him ® to break ® ate them, * himself a :* who can :* path and :* until ‘sion * him n h :* . That, h :® ways ‘ oc :* should. : :* descends ‘*_devoted 1 ® so blinde ® sharm o« "At last I got wise. I gave him | up. He had asked m« to marry | him, and suddenly I realized | what a h usband he would make. | ‘That did it! Now I have four | bays who take me out, and not ene ever stands me up! I‘m havâ€" ing a wonderful life, and only | regret I wasted so much time being a doormat for one noâ€" m boy' OO "He lied to me consistentlyâ€" and 1 was so infatuated I forâ€" gave him, though he made my gfl girl will be as dumb as bee@ since I was 16; three :: I had gone‘with just one , and my whole happiness depended on him. No one knows how often I stayed awake all might because he‘s broken our date. He took other girls out, #oo, and boasted how many he had; he even asked my best friend, and I was so humiliated A boy in his teens, having his first dates, adopts his social code from the first few girls he takes out. If they alâ€" low him to stand them up, to break his word, to humiliâ€" ate them, he is bound to see himself as a breaker of hearts who can pursue his primrose path and get away with itâ€" until some smart girl puts him fn his place. ‘That, however, does not alâ€" ways ‘ occur as soon as it should. Sometimes he conâ€" descends to marry one of his devoted followers, and she is so blinded by his physical charm, so eager to capture Othq.' young girls who read your letter will, I hope, proâ€" fit by it before they, too, waste precious years on a worthless boy. "Dear Anne Hirst: I do hope patterns printed in it! Cinch to Sew! NORMAL EHIRST MILLY" Costume jewelry that discolors the skin may simply need a good brushing with warm, soapy water. Then rinse and dry thoroughly and coat with colorle«s nail polisb. Thirty â€" five states have enacted PPTCY® Di" wou‘ld require, by laws requiring removal of door or 4D°Sthetizing them with carbon fastener from a refrigerator that|OXide or by stunning them is to be discarded. GE says it is With electric tongs or a captive now turning out a eabinet with bolt pistol. ' doors held closed by magnets only, Most of the major meat packâ€" â€"â€"doors a child can kick open easiâ€" °rs oppose this legislation, and 1g. for some strange reason they That is cerlainly a contribution have found support for their to safety. But there are undoubtedâ€"|opposition in the Department of ly several million | mechanically|Agriculture. _ The â€" Department latched refrigerators yet to be reâ€" says it "has always favored and tired. And town and country Ofâ€" worked for humane methods in ficials can hardly police every spot all ‘aspects of handling of aniâ€" every day where Im old box D‘Iiflh"mnls“ but that in this situation be thrown out. So parents woulth "is guided by a sincere belief do well to take a look around their that mandatory Federal legisâ€" own neighborhoods now that “"""]ation would not be the best tion time is near.â€"From The Chris. way to assure continued proâ€" tian Science Monitor, ’gress in the solution of this proâ€" blem." This may be sincere but Cmtl'lme feweiry inast dlscolon‘n is also unrealistic. In the first the skin may simply need a good Jag Suntare ; & f i | place, voluntary cooperation, brushing with warm, soapy wmer'ia]thnught sought for many Then rinse and dry thnrnug}zl_v and:\'ï¬art bas Sof produced comlâ€" pont with eolorises nail polish: 'p]ianre with decent standards. {In the second place. the departâ€" . & |ment has long used legislation D w th care |to assure humane treatment of rlve ' lanimals: for example, it enâ€" s [forces an effective law respectâ€" muuunenmememmmmemmmememmmmem==== |ing the treatment of animals in * s d transit to slaughterhouses. In Â¥4 s’ ;! 3i the third place, mandatory reâ€" e iiri: }a gulations afford the most equiâ€" / 4 table and evenâ€"handed way to * §‘ . obtain general observance of IFT! ; M humane _ slaughter _ methods. B § i/ 1 m R Senator Humphrey‘s bill ought # gflw PS t to become law: â€" Washington E. : M W 2w° T |Post and Times Herald Every year, says the General Electric Company, two to three milâ€" Tion refrigerators are junked in the United States. And during the last 10 years 110 children have suffo. cated inside these tempting hiding places â€" an average of 11 a year. Americans likely will be mildly shocked to learn that many of these mechanicai marvels do wear out ; they will be profoundly shocked to hear how many of them, through no one‘s intent, have become lethal traps for small fry. One editor calls Anne Hirst‘s column _ "more exciting than frontâ€"page news." Problems of every period from childhood to old age, are presented in simple language, and counsel plus symâ€" pathy reward the reader. Folâ€" low this column weekly â€" and if you are perplexed in any way, write to Anne Hirst at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronâ€" to, Ont. ° "That daughterâ€"inâ€"law proâ€" bably would like her husband to poison his parents â€" and inâ€" cidentally, if the old people had saved their money for themâ€" selves, they could buy their own car instead of using a bus. \ ‘"Hereafter, people should put ‘1heir babies out to board in ‘some cheap place as soon as ‘they‘ve _ born. Why _ should parents stay up nights taking ‘care of them and doing withâ€" out necessities to clothe and feed and educate them* They should save their money so when thev‘re old, they can live in luxury instead of a furnished room! Hunt Down The Traps "BOILING MAD" "Dear Anne Hirst: After readâ€" ing that letter about the care of old people I am boiling mad! I bet a daughterâ€"inâ€"law wrote it, and I‘d hate to be a parent to that creature. I do appreciate such rightâ€" eous revulsion as you . felt when you read the letter, and I thank you for your comâ€" ments. It is regrettable that my small _ space â€" prevents â€" my printing all of every letter that _ arrives: _ if _1 could, readers _ would realize the frequent justice of printed complaints. Thank goodness you have wakened at long last! I conâ€" gratulate you on your comâ€" mon sense. Every young girl should realize that she is a precious person, different.in some way from every pther young woâ€" man; she is entitled to resâ€" pect and consideration from every boy she knows. If she conducts herself according to the highest social standards and demands the courtesies she deserves, she changes the boy‘s attitude toward all her sex, or sends him flying. him, that she accepts with gratitude. You who have read this column â€" have â€" learned what a miserable existence she leads from there on in. Every young girl should realize that she is a precious Brooms and serubbing brushes play their part. but the magic wand which reatores summer «parkle is ‘a praint brush | For instance, if the linolenm on Ithe floor Inokm shabby, vet is still in tolerable condition, it can be given a coat of color. Scrub it care. fully, making sure that every trace of war is removed. _ (Otherwise, paint won‘t stick!). Apply one or ‘twn comts of a good floor enamel. Then. to make leas obrions the in evitable dirt and sand tracked in Summer homes are coming to life. As the last traces of snow disapâ€" pear from the woods, the annual ceremony of "opening up the cotâ€" tage" is performed by thousands of Canadians. Hints For The Summer Cottage _ Senator Humphtey will hold hearings this week on a bill to require humane methods of \slaughtering meat animals in | ! American packing houses. Alâ€" | though such methods are enâ€" ) {forced by law in most Euroâ€" pean countries, they are not mandatory in the United States and, indeed, are rarely observâ€" ed here. Cattle, sheep, calves and hogs are commonly killed here by techniques which subject | ’them to senseless terror and suffering: they are dragged aloft and suspended by a chain fastened around one hind leg; ‘then> their throats are cut and ‘they are left to bleed to death. It is entirely practicable to renâ€" der the animals unconscious beâ€" fore slaughter, as Senator Humâ€" phrey‘s bill would require, by anesthetizing them with carbon BOTTLE BUNNY â€" Puff, an orphaned _ rabbit, _ takes _ a healthy slug. of milk from fosâ€" ter mother Vickie Berglund, 11. The furry little creature, whose mother was killed, has learnec to stand up and take his supper YOU CAN‘T BEAT ‘EM â€" So you might as well join ‘em when the ladies get the urge to houseclean. If you‘ve ever thought of departing for the Orient come spring cleaning timeâ€"don‘t. Luckless wretch, at left, is pressed into service on his day off to lug floor mats out of doors so that the lady of the house can beat them. Scene is in Tokyo, dismal drama is universal. Humane Slaughter T®â€"! _ "Hell, no. That‘s our way o‘ tellâ€" C®)in‘ ‘em apart. We got two types. $®,| Yon want courtin‘ likker or fightin‘ O7 \likker ®" "You name® | If you‘re looking for makeâ€"shift ‘flll'llilln'!'. keep in mind orange erates. In the bedroom, two set side. byâ€"side from an excellent dressing table, A piece of plastic fabric on the top and a frilly skirt tacked {aronnd the edge will make any reâ€" |semblance to an orange crate pureâ€" Iy coincidental. He was directed to a shack on a «ide street. "What kind o‘ co‘n likker, strmnger?" he was asked by the moonshiner. The salesman found the town and inquired about its liquid eapâ€" acitt. "I‘d like to hur a bottle of hootch" he asked a atranger "Paw figgers ‘bout ten miles," she . said. "That is. ten miles that way | and twelve miles back. Co‘se that‘s | account he‘s a walkin‘ straighter | goin‘ than comin‘." | MODEST APPEAL â€"â€" Hillevi Rom:â€" bin, Swedish beauty currently reigning as "Miss Universe," models a conservative halterâ€" type bathing suit of lastex. Straps of the jeweled top can be tied around the back for sunbathing. Suit‘s style is a swing to more suit, less skin, dnd typifies trend in suits fhis‘ season. _ Perhaps the wooden furniture in ithu cottage is the result of doâ€"it. yourself projects. If chair seats and table tops are rougher than they ‘should be, hours of sandpapering can be saved by covering all your troubles with plasticâ€"coated fabric, which comes in dozens of colors and textures and can be applied‘ with glue or fastened down with brassâ€" studded tacks. It costs little and an occasional wipe with a damp cloth will keep it bright for many m holiday season. The traveling salesman was in the Ozarks, "How far to the nearâ€" est town?" he ealled from his car to an old lady on the porch. You can‘do this by dipping a piece of sponge in a shallow pan paiut, then dabbing it on the floor,. Or dip a brush in the paint, tap it on a stick held in the left hand, and achieve a mpatter effect. (It might be a good idea to practice on a sheet of newspaper!) A final coat of varnish will protect the paint from sumimer wearâ€"andâ€"tear. from the beach, mottle it with a contrasting color. In the living room, these crates| make ideal endâ€"tables. Disgmised‘ with paint to blend with the vest| of the furniture, they are a hand*| size for lamps. The shelf made by‘ itolinansaitl sns lc in l in nA i a & table, A piece of plastic fabric o'n‘ Another sportsman, in New the top and a frilly skirt tackud‘York County, axme(_! at a crow around the edge will make any reâ€"| 203 set off explosions in five semblance to an orange crate pure.| PUuildings OWAr;fd :y a ?)re‘;‘équs ly coincidental. | company. ve uildings In the living room, these cmtes;r}:ere bum; to tlf)fe ground, but make ideal endâ€"tables. Disguised) ;crow ew off. with paint to blend with the vest| It PaYs to take care when of the furniture, they are a handg+|MAking homeâ€"made wine. At a size for lamps. The shelf made by‘SPanish monasteryv & bottle. exâ€" the divider is a natural for hnld»"f](’de“‘ ‘;(\ §tgaen‘; W:ls t:‘(l]leg. ing magazines. two monks injured, an e abâ€" If you are not already an avid bot‘s house and part of the Aniticmmrentt dan the mmtrson is L. iohurch burnt down. If you are not already an avid doâ€"itâ€"yourself fan, the cottage is an| ideal place to test your creative| genius. If results are lessâ€"thanâ€"perâ€"| fect, who cares? | IS8UE 23 s 1986 TAKE YOUR PICK mean tou have brand | e« A minute later another gate crasher ambled up and said to the gatekeeper, "I‘m Count Turf‘s ownâ€" er."_ He got in, too. Then up stepped Frisco‘s boy. He strode through the gate and was collared by the attendant. "Where do you think you‘re going?" "It‘s O.K., partner," he answered. "I‘m Count Turf." Loitering near the entrance this chap saw another approach the gate and call out, "I‘m Count Turf‘s trainer." He passed through. Joe Frisco. that great vaudeville performer of yesteryear maintains that the greatest salesman in the world was the chap who wanted to get in to see the Kentucky Derâ€" by and didn‘t have the admission price. Careless shooting can have disastrous results. A seventeenâ€" yearâ€"old French boy missed his target, put a bullet through a 30,000â€"volt cable, blacked out a steel mill and started a fire which ravaged property worth $10,000. As her boy friend drove round a corner, a New Jersey girl kissâ€" ed him. The car hit a fire alarm, started off a burglar alarm and brought two police cars and four fire engines to the scene. Disfigurement for life was the penalty paid by a guest at a Bavarian inn who stole a kiss from a pretty servant girl.‘She was lifting a large can of hot water from a stove. Taken by surprise, she screamed, accidâ€" entally kocked the can over and the water badly scalded the young man‘s face. At Bognor Regis a few years ago a boy was flying a kite. When it got out of control in a gust of wind, a woman was flung off her bicycle and found unconscious,â€" the cord drawn round her neck. * An extraordinary occurrence is reported from Geneva, where a householder was injured as a result of pressing his front doorâ€" bell. A spark set escaping gas alight and an explosion took place in his flat. + Just as the driver poked out his head to tell the steam shovâ€" el operator what he thought of him, the shovel swung round and its jaws enveloped the moâ€" torist‘s head. It was half an hour before the angry â€" but uninjured â€" man was extricated. _ An Ipswich man was annoyâ€" ed when his lawnâ€"mower ran over a stone. He would probabâ€" ly have to resharpen the blades. But in a few seconds a far more serious situation confronted him. A spark from the stone set fire to his car and the brigade had to be called out! Mr. and Mrs. John Morgan, of Gerrards Cross, went for a picnic recently and decided to make tea on a 3!â€"0“ stove. The stove exploded, Mr. Morâ€" gan‘s trousers caught fire and as he ran round trying to put them out a 35â€"ton stack of unâ€" threshed wheat caught alight. Firemen were able to save only a third of it. One of the most embarrassâ€" ing of these chain accidents ocâ€" curred to an American motorist as he parked his car in a West Virginian town. A short disâ€" tance away a steam shovel broke down, knocked over a telegraph pole and festooned the car with wires. Amazing how quite a minor incident can sometimes set off a chain reaction resulting in inâ€" jury to human beings or damâ€" age to property. Penny wise, pound foolish is a saying which will be long remembered by an American woman motorist who had to pay $200 merely because she moved her car. A penny had rolled underneath it. When the car‘s brakes were released, it hit first a parking meter and then a nearâ€"by biu@ding, in which several windows were smashed. In 1935 a wasp cost a Stafâ€" fordshire ambulance driver his job. The driver, with a clean licence for thirty years, was stung as he took a patient to hospital. The ambulance slewed across the road, hit a telegraph pole and the patient was jolted off his stretcher. Afterwards the driver was dismissed by the loâ€" cal health committee. Rang Door Beli «â€"Blew Up Flat! or Bell Jp Fiat! -TA BLE T ;"::'“"...! PzA & Jane Andrews Make these simple POTATO SCONES tomorrow ! COCOA SYRUP 1 cup Cocoa 34 cup sugar Y cup corn syrup 14 teaspoon salt 1‘4 cups cold water 14 teaspoon vanilla Combine cocoa, sugar syrup, and salt in saucepan. Add waâ€" ter slowly and place over low flame, stirring until smooth; then boil gently 3 minutes, stirâ€" ring constantly, Add vanilla. Turn into jar; cover tightly. Keep in refrigerator, Makes about 2 cups syrup. Serve hot or cold as sauce or use in makâ€" ing delicious cocoa drinks. This syrup may be made using 1 to 1%% cups sugar instead of sugar and corn syrup. EVAPORATED MILK SHAKE Substitute !& cup evaporated milk and % cup water for chillâ€" ed milk in Chocolate Milk Shake. Add to syrup and shake with cracked ice until foamy. Serves 1. * cup corn syrup +4 teaspoon vanilla .. Place chocolate and water in saucepan. Cook slowly until thick and well blended, stirring constantly. ‘Add sugar and salt; bring to a boil and boil gently 2 minutes, stirring constantly. (For a thicker sauce, boil 4 minutes.) Add corn syrup and bring again to a boil. Remove from heat. Cool slightly, then add vanilla. Turn into jar; covâ€" er tightly. Keep in refrigerator. Makes about 1% cups syrup. Serve hot or cold as sauce or use in chocolate drinks. To make cold drinks, use‘ 2 tablespoons syrup to 1 cup milk. CHOCOLATE MALTED MILK 2 tablespoons malted milk powder 2 tablespoons Chocolate Syrup or Cocoa Syrup 1 cup chilled milk Add maited milk powder to syrup, stirring until smooth and thoroughly blended. Add milk slowly, stirring constantly, Beat or shake well. Pour into tall glass serve at once. Serves 1. CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM sODA 14 cup chilled milk 2 tablespoons Chocolate Syrup or Cocoa Syrup For chocolate drinks, use 2 tablespoons syrup to 1 cup milk. CHOCOLATE SYRUP 3 squares Unsweetened cup water cup sugar * * $§%\gge" "Corn Starch Makes Smoother Sauces! soft dough, Knead for 10 seconds on @ lightlyâ€"flovred Rake a well in dry ingredients and add potato mixture. Mix lightly with fork, adding milk if necessary to make a 1 wellâ€"beaten egg 1 c. cold mashed potatoss Blend well with a fork; then TABLE TALKS po 44 cup carbonated water , Chocolate or vanilla ice cream Add milk slowly. to syrup, stirring constantly; pour into tall glass. Add carbonated waâ€" ter and stir enough to mix. Add ice cream and serve at once. Serves 1 22 squares Unsweetened Chocolate !4 cup water l4 cup sugar Dash of salt V& cup cream, whipped 6 cups hot milk Add chocolate to water and place over low flame, stirring until chocolate _is melted and blendid. Add sugar and salt and boil 4 minutes, stirring conâ€" stantly. Cool. Fold into cream. Place 1 rounding teaspoon of chocolate mixture â€" in _ each chocolate mixture in _ each chocolate eup; add hot milk to fill cup and stir until chocolate and milk are well blended. Serves 18. For larger cups (6â€" ounce size), use 1. rounding tablespoon chocolate mixture. Serves 8. This chocolate mixture makes an excellent sauce whipped cream may be of and sauce served as hot f1 The Sales Manager and his star salesman weat to the prize fight toâ€" gether and made a fifty dollur bet on the outcome. The salesman won. The boss promptly handed him x fifty dollar bill. "In that case." said the Siles Manager, "give me back the fifty and I‘ll give you my cheque." or Cocoa Syrup 1 egg, well beaten Add milk slowly to syrup, stirring constantly; add to egg. and beat or shake well. Pour into tall glass; serve. Serves 1. 1 cup chilled milk 2 tablespoons Chocolate Syrup or Cocoa Syrup Chocolate ice cream Add milk slowly to syrup. stirring _ constantly. Beat or shake well. Pour into tall glass. Add ice cream. Serves 1. * "Thanks, Boss, and | you know what I‘m gouna do with this fifty? I‘m gonua frame it so 1 ean al~ ways show people I‘m smarter than my boss." CHOCOLATE EGGNOG 1 cup chilled milk 3 tablespoons Chocolate Syrup FRENCH CHOCOLATE CHOCOLATE FLOAT SOUVEMR xture . also sauce. The be omitted hot fudge. Jane Ashley, Home Service Department, THE CANADA STARCH COMPANY LIMITED, P.O. Box 129, Montreal, P.Q â€" The M.D. examined bim. "A my wician, eb Aud you play a wiud igâ€" strument ?" . | "HowJa know, Doc?‘ | "There‘s a distinet straining of the Hunxs. The laryux sbhows evidet«@ of abnormal pressure. What wing instrument do you play?" "The plano accordion."* Oue of the luds who is with a big name band appearing ou lelg» vision, was recently stricken with pueumonia. 8. Perfect twosome for sumimer â€"sundress with pretty yoke deâ€" tail, and coverâ€"up bolero! Perâ€" fect for the shorter, fuller figure â€"its graceful lines make you took inches taller. sizes slimmer! Proportioned to fit â€" no alterâ€" ations! Pattern 4606:; Half Sizes 14%.; 162. 1812, 20%,. 2242. 2452. Size: 16%% requires 3%s yards 35â€"inch> fabric; bolero, 1« yards. This pattern easy to use simâ€" ple to sew,. is tested to fit. Has: complete illustrated instructions." Send THIRTYâ€"FIVE CENTS (35¢) (stamps cannot be acâ€" cepted. use postal order for safety) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER. 123 Eighteenth St, New Toron to, Ont. For free tolder of other delicious recipes, write tor Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Costs less than * 1¢ per average baking POOR DIAGNOSIS Haltâ€"Size Ensemble '"