of the 13 prominent chorus girly shows, only Alice Faye lory and f tae 13 art the ehesing mg of Smaill Vegetable Seeds on‘t ndes, roducer ul the Farm Plant 18 ‘, but actual atter, "Au.Wavs ho Stages ter le Wh beauty Blonde rs‘ Notes W aged K Up K acing the oven cot« b a stick pods or seed and k, downâ€" lers to pay i. _ Slacken repair any > on storm air broken lics; thor,. it root ¢el« lakes and ables, pig» horeughly v‘ater supe up on the see that cted from age the the One es that n hand ed sev. aft and ip seed 1ld he 10 m P the be of Melt butter and stir in flour. When bubbling add tomato soup. Rinse out can with water and add to first mixâ€" Rice With Tomato Sauce Two cups hot boiled or steamed rice, 1 cup tomato soup, 1 tablespoon butâ€" ter, 1 tablespoon flour, ‘4 cup water, 1 cup minced cooked sausage. If the family has suddeniy develop ed a "sweet tooth" the following re cipes will adequately meet their deâ€" . mands: Rice with tomato sauce makes a nourishing dish that is easy to preâ€" pare. Leftâ€"over meat is suggested in the recipe but can be omitted it not at hand. Put about 1 teaspoon butter in a smooth sauce pan, add ci.éese and melt over a low fire, stirring constantâ€" ly. Slowly add milk, stirring until blended. Stir in soup and cook, stirâ€" ring constantly _ until t‘ick â€" and smooth. Season with salt and pepper and add !4 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce if liked. Pour over hot toast and serve. Tomato Cheese Toast Two cups cream cheese, 1 cup milk 1 cup tomato soup, 8 triangles of toast Tomato cheese toast is a good lunâ€" cheon dish that uses tomato soup to advantage. Cream soups may be made into sat Isfactory sauces for vegetables of con trasting flavor. Consomme improves many a cream sauce and jellied salad. Meat gravies and many salads are given a pleasing richness of flavor by the addition of bouillon. Dishes made with rice, macarouni, apaghett!, kidney and navy beans gain much by the addition of tomato soup or clear soup such as bouillon. Canned soups, too, lend themselves to many excellent dishes and simplify their making to a marked degree. For instance, canned tomatoes must be aimmered until reduced, seasoned and strained before they can be used in a sauce, while the soup is ready for inâ€" stant use. Delicious Cream Cookies Ingredients: 1 cup shortening, 4 beaten eggs, 1 cup nut meats, 14 cup chopped raisins, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 4 cups flour, 2 cups brown sugar, 23 cup sweet cream, 4 cup corn syrup, 1 teaspoon lemon essence, 1 teaspoon galt, 14 cup corn starch, 4 teaspoons baking powder. Cream the shortenâ€" ing with the sugar and then add the eggs and beat until light. Mix the cream with the corn syrup and add to the batter alternately with the nuts and raisins. _ Flavour and drop by apoonfuls on buttered baking pans and cook in a moderate oven (350 deg.) Carrot Pie Ingredients: 2 cups grated carrot, 1 tablespoon corn syrup, 2 teaspoons cinnamon, 4 eggs, 1 cup sugar, 2 cups milk, 2 tablespoons shortening, 1 teaâ€" spoon ginger, 1 tablespoon corn starch( a pinch of salt. Mix the corn atarch with the syrup and the beaten yolks, then stir into the carrots and add the spices, sugar and salt. Bake in a single crust for about 30 minutes or until firm in the centre. Add 3 table« spoons sugar to the stifly beaten whites of the eges and pile the merâ€" ingue on top of the pie. Brown in a rather hot oven and serve either hot or cold. This recipe is sufficient for two mediumâ€"sized ples. Leftâ€"Over Soup Do you regard a cup of leftâ€"over soup with some resentment as just so much waste? Don‘t, because it can be made to serve many culinary purâ€" poses. Soups always are highly seaâ€" soned and are a decided help in changâ€" ing flavors, combining with other maâ€" terials in sauces, salads and meat dishes and in extending and utilizing other leftâ€"overs in a savoury fashion. Coffee Cake Ingredients: 1 cup sugar, 1 cup raisâ€" ins, 4 cup corn syrup, 2 eggs, 1 teaâ€" spoon cinnamon, 2 cups flour, %& cup shortening, *4 cup strong coffee, 1 teaâ€" apoon soda, % teaspoon nutmeg. Beat the eggs and sugar until very light, then add the asyrup and stir in the fHour siited with the other dry ingrediâ€" ents and mixed with the cleaned and dried raisins, add the coffee with the shortening and bake in a rather quick oven untll the cake leaves the sides of the pan. Mit JEBE You aND muTT are iT waAS THS ACCUSED oP DiSTURBING wAY, JUD6C.â€" Te CEWTIRE WEéIGHBoRHoObD | / me Awnb MUTT LAST NIGHTâ€" wHAT Have HAD AD ; You To SAY & ARGUMENTâ€" 3 For YourseLF & ~| .: "s % ‘ % mÂ¥ 4/ .",. *4 * ks s a 'l'fl. & J tw \ Ib <ae. / p e ‘ 4 L . 1"5.5 7& : j For the Cake Box iâ€" AND !tkbâ€" Turnip pie makes a savoury little supper dish. Boil and mash the turâ€" nips, season with pepper and salt and a few mixed herbs. Butter a pieâ€"dish, put in the vegeâ€" tables, add a little finely chopped ‘ Another way to bake lima beans is to boil them, after soaking ove. night, until tender. Drain and place in a shallow baking dish. Cover the top with strips of very thin bacon. Pour tomato juice seasoned witl onion in at one side of the dish until the beans are barely covered. Then bake in a moderate oven until the bacon is crisp. It will take about 40 minutes. Apple Pudding A hot pudding tastes mighty good on these cold nights. Pare and slice four apples, mix with one cup sugar and cinnamon to taste. Then make a batter of one egg, one tablespoon sgar, one teaspoon baking powder, two cups flour, a pinch of salt, one cup milk. Pour over apples and bake in a moderate oven for 45 mintes. Serve with hard sauce.> Soak beans in water to cover over night. In the morning drain and simâ€" mer :n boiling saited water for 30 minâ€" tes, letting the water cook away as much as possible. Put a layer of beans in a greased casserole. Sprinkle with finely minced pepper, onion cut in thin slices and bacon cut in tiny squares. Sear bacon in frying pan before cutâ€" ting in squares. Continue alternating until all are used. _ Add salt, sugar, pepper and mustard to tomatoes and. pour over beans. Cover casserole and bake in a moderate oven for lourj hours. Baked Lima Beans Two cups dried lima beans, 1 small onion, 1 sweet green pepper (optionâ€" al), 4 slices bacom, 2 cups canned toâ€" matoes, 2 teaspoons sugar, 14 teaspoon pepper, i4 teaspoon salt, 4% teaspoon mustard. Long low cooking is imperative to soften the tough fiber and make them palatable. _ When served tc small children or old people they should be rubbed through a sieve to semove the coarse outer coverâ€"digestive apparatâ€" uses. Since legumes are mild in flavor they are more appetizing it combined with highly flavored foods and made savory with carefu} seasoning. Peas and beans also contain much starch and care must be taken in planâ€" ning meals that other foods rich in starch are not included. Because these vegetables have long been known to be rich in protein they are often called the "poor man‘s meat" and are regarded as meat subâ€" stitutes. However, with the realizaâ€" tion that a great difference exists in ‘the nutritive value of proteins from different sources, legumes nowadays are not considered an adequate subtiâ€" tute for meat unless they are served with such protein foods as milk and eggs. The protein found in dried beans, peas and lentils is known as an "incomplete" protein which is lacking in those substances necessary for growth and health. . Minerals in Legumes These qualities are mentioned not with the intention of discouraging the use of legumes, but to give mothers a clearer understanding of the actual value of these foods in the diet. Quite aside from their protein conâ€" tent, legumes furnish iron and phosâ€" phorus in worthâ€"while quantities. Both these mineral constituents are of great importance for body growth and veâ€" pair. One of the best bargains the homeâ€" maker can buy is found in the dried vegetables known as legumesâ€"peas, beans and lentils. Although poor in calories and mineral salts they lend themselves to many savory dishes suitable for cold days. Vegetable soups add savouriness to stews and casscrole dishes. The vegeâ€" tables should be strained out and added just long enough before serving to heat thoroughly. Otherwise the vegetablés will be overâ€"cooked and unâ€" attractive. heat. Drop rice by 'sbo;n(;lvnâ€";nt:a large hot platter, pour over sauce and serve. ture. . Cook and stir until bubbling point lg reached and add meat. Re By BUVD risHER Peas, Beans, Lentils Tasty Turnip ts ; \_. _ _ q 2 \ $ /l HC CALLED Meé A woremâ€" AND T SockEeD Him wiTh A BRick. uP HE HoPSs Awmp socks T MG IN e Eyeâ€" When sewing fur, have a small piece of cardboard between the two edges that are being joined. Keep the fur down with this as you sew, and move it along as the work proceeds. Never cut fur with scissors, or it will be spoiled. Turn on the wrong side and cut with either a safetyâ€"razor blade or a very sharp knife. Household Hints A good way to darken beige stockâ€" ings is to rinse them in strong coffee while they are still wet from washing. The coffee should, of course, be well strained. Turn into a fireproof dish, sprinkle with breadcrumbs, dot with butter, grate over a little nutmeg, then brown in a hot oven. Fry an onion, add this to the cabâ€" bage with 1% lb. peeled and sliced apples and a little stock, then gently stew until tender. Rinse well, then drain and cut it inâ€" to shreds. Put into boiling salted water and boil quickly for ten minâ€" utes, then drain. Cut a red cabbage into four, trim it carefully, removing the hard stalk, wash it, then leave it to soak in cold water with a little vinegar added for threeâ€"quarters of an hour. Red cabbage with apples is an unâ€" usua; dish with a piquant flavor.. Bake in a moderate oven for twenâ€" ty minutes, garnish with chopped parsâ€" ley and serve with melted butter. toes. _ Sprinkle with breadcrumbs, grated cheese and finely chopped parsâ€" ley. C Size 16 requires 3%4 yards of 39â€" inch material, 4% yards of lace. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 15¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. onion, then a layer of mashed potaâ€" Style No. 8250 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years,, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. It is a boon to the business woman, Ligh school and college miss, for it‘s so easily and quickly slipped on. Beâ€" sides it fits the figure without any uncomfortable bunching. It assures an unbroken line to the outep‘ garâ€" ment. The brief attached pantees are comfortably full. Crepe de chine, at crepe or washâ€" able satin crepe are popular mediums. It can be trimmed with lace or with self binds. ' Today‘s pattern will do much toâ€" ward making your figure look youthâ€" fully slender, IWlustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furâ€" nished With Every Pattern By HELEN WILLIAMS. Slip ’5; A:. & ©:_ 2 k m T u:P is n iyt on en on is a burst of t,hanksgivjng that God in his infinite mercy and wisdom had granted it to the obedient, simple disâ€" ciples who stood before him. "I thank the, 0 Father, Lord of heaven and earth." Note Christ‘s humility even as he is about to declare his unique relationship to the Father. "That thou didst hide these things from the wise and understanding." Christ is thinkâ€" ing of his work in the world, and the "At that season." In Luke 10: 21, 22 the following words are uttered to the Seventy when they returned from a successful evangelistic tour. They are appropriate in both places. "Jesus answered and said." He answered here the question which doubtless arose in the hearts of his listeners: "If Tyre, Sidon, and Sodom would thus have responded to the gospel, why was it not Eiven to tl‘lem.?" _Our Lord‘s reply "The Sou of man came eating ana drinking." He was no weird prophet coming forth from the wilderness in hermit‘s garb, but a homely man, affable, approachable, sociable in his manner of life, kindly with his kina. "And they say, Behold, a gluttonous man and a winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinnwrs!" The religious leaders of the Jews were no better pleased with Chr;st’s joyousness than with John‘s sternness. "And wisdom is justified by her works." Wisdom shows that she is wisdom by results. The success of Christianity has proved Jesus right and his critics wrong, as he knew it would. "For John can« neither eating nor drinking. John lived on locusts and wild honey, wilderness fare. He would not think of attending a feast. "And they say, He hath a demon." The reliâ€" gion of the Baptist had been too hard for the Jews because of its stern morâ€" ality. _ "And say, We piped unto you, and ye did not dance; we wailed, and ye did not mourn." The children played, first, at a wedding; and then, at a funeral. Jesus marked the same sort of fickle, imitative tendencies in their treatment of himself and John the Baptist. They were captious and‘ careless, MR AE ts â€"Anbier Wistsiatsrattic css M i5 " jin darkness and in the shadow of death. "And the lame walk, the lepâ€" ers are cleansed " A miracle involyvâ€" ing the restoration of parts of the body that were rotting away or had eitirely fallen off. "And the deaf hear." A miracle even more comfortâ€" ing, perhaps, than the restoration of sight to the blind. "And the dead are raised up." The Gospels contain only three detailed accounts of this which seems to us the greatest wonder of all, though to Christ it was no more than waking a person from sleep. "And the poor have good tidings (the gospel) preached to them." This comes last as the climax of the list. "And blessed is he, whosoever shall find no occasion of stumbling in me." Who is repelled by nothing in me, as Moffatt translates it. 1 "But whereunto shall I liken this generation?" by this generation (Luke T: 29, 30) Christ meant not the comâ€" mon people, who heard him gladly, but the scribes and Pharisees. "It is like unto children sitting in the marketâ€" places." The open squares of the towns, not too crowded for children‘s sports. "Who call unto their fellows." "The blind receive their sight," Jesus came as the Light of the world. He came to be a light to them that sit in darkness and in the shadow of askt 7Â¥ weP w t & P "And Jesus answered and said unto tiem." There is no upbraiding of John, but only the most tender underâ€" standing in his reply. "Go and tell John the things which ye hear and see." Christ is always ready with eviâ€" dence and proof. 4) uy oo 90 in orer CL . U06 Messiah, the man who had so readily recognized Jesus as the Christ, so cleld-ly proclaimea him to be the Lamb of God. "Arc said anto him, Art thou he that cometh?" The Messiah foretold by David, Isaiah, and all the prophets the great hope uf the nation for wh m all their history had been seeking to prepare them. "Or look we for anâ€" other?" That seems a strange query to coms from the forerunner of the "Now when Jolin heard in the priâ€" son the works of the Christ." John the Baptist, Christ‘s great herald. "He sent by his disciples." The journey from éuab to Galilee was long, but John‘s followers were devoted to his wishes, and doubtless also desired to sâ€"e for themselves the wonderful teacher. Lessoa IX, â€" March 4. Jesus‘ Testi mony Concerning Himse!if.â€"Matt. 11:26, 16â€"16, 25â€"30. Golden Text. â€"Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I wiil give you rest.â€"Matt, 11:28, TIMEâ€"Midsummer and (chap. 12) autumn of A.D. 28, the second year of Christ‘s ministry, PLACEâ€"Galilee. » PARALLEL _ PASSAGE â€" John sends to Jesus, Luke 7: 18â€"35. TME» L HUTS HIM wiTe A â€"CHAIRâ€" AUD He RETaLIATES WiTH A KICK iN THE Facé Prolific Song Writer Iriving Berlin has written more than 800 songs. His frst big hit was Alexâ€" ander‘s Rag Time Band. The number of people rescued by these vessels, motor and rowing, stationed round the coasts of Great Britain numbered 398, the largest number of five years. In dddition to lives rescued, 45 boats and ships were saved or helped to safety. Since the founding of the Royal National Lifeâ€" boat in Institution in 1824 the rescues average out at over 11 per week for 110 years. London, â€" An almost record fine summer made litt‘e difference to the good work achieved by British lifeâ€" boats in 1933 In Great Britain the index figure of employment for December showed an increase of 6 per cent. over the same month of 193%. Figures for the United States for October, 1932, show the inâ€" dex figure 59.6, and for October, 1933, 73.5. Canada, Japan and Italy also showed perceptible rises in employâ€" ment figures. There has been a diminuâ€" tion of recorded unemployment in 19 countries. British Lifeboats Rescue 398 in ‘33 Geneva,â€"Encouraging news of more employment in major industrial counâ€" tries is reflected in statistics for the last months of 1933 published here by the International Labor Office. y Employment Gains In Major Nations The final test of democracy will be the British Commonwealth, the speakâ€" er declared. His eightâ€"point example of unity included: government by conâ€" sent, autonomous within the system; democratic conduct in industry and finance; political freedom, without disâ€" crimination on the ground of race, reâ€" ligion or color; security for minoritâ€" ies; universal education and freedom of opportunity; the ideal of society where dissimilar modes of life may be followed; and the supreme rule of Toronto.â€"The everâ€"increasing need for more interchange of ideas and common discussion to bring different parts of the British Empire to a conâ€" sciousness of what they have in comâ€" mon, and to develop reciprocity of aims and ambitions has led to the establishment of the Institute of Eduâ€" cation in London, Eng. This new, meâ€" dium of Empire unity was described by Prof. F. Clarke of McGill Univerâ€" sity in a recent address here before the Empire Club. The director of the institute is Sir Percy Munn, and Lord: Eustace Percy is chairman. \ British Empire Unity Being Sought }wu the yoke of a perfect surrender to the will of God. "For I am meek and lowly in heart." Humility in the old world was a vice. It was a thing abhorred and accursed, utterly anâ€" worthy of the gentleman, but Chrisâ€" tendom has given it the primacy of virtue. "And ye shall find rest unto your souls." "For my yoke is easy, and my burâ€" den is light." No life is easy that is not usader some firm control. All wanâ€" ton, passionate, undirected or misâ€" directed lives are miserable, tasteless, burdensome. P i: ste ‘ontnddisentne Primaly css ta ds 2 4 / t 2 c) 2 there is alwavs inspiration in the metaphor. _ When Jesus said "Take my yoke upon you," he ;poke of the yoke l_le himseif wore as man. That "Take my yoke Ilpoâ€"n)-t‘m, :‘n‘d learn of me." The service of Christ is elseâ€" v:'_here c_hlnc'wrizeq in other ways, but â€" Come unto me, all ye that labor and~are heavyâ€"laden, and I will give you rest." There is no saying, even among those of Christ himself, that makes a wider appeal; for the appeal was as wide as t e human race. â€"Z 4rmer, neither doth any know the Father, save the Son." The Son is the revealer of the Father. "And he to whomsoever the Son willeth to reâ€" veal." He knew the Father by inâ€" stinct, they must be given the knowlâ€" edge by instruction. way in which it has been received. *+And didst reves. them unto babes.," Some of the apostlesâ€"Johnâ€" especial! â€"â€"were possessed of penetrating intol{ lects; yet all of them were as babes in their simple faith and trus:, and so could raceive Christ‘s revelations. "Ye«, Father, for so it was wellâ€" Lleuing in thy sight." Without deâ€" bate, it was enough for Christ that this was his Father‘s will; he was sure, then, that it was for the best for ail. "All things have been delivered unto me of my Father." The great Lord of heaven and earth gave all things into the hands of Jesus Christ so that he might save mankind from the peril and destruction which threatened it. "And no one knoweth the Son, save the Father; neither doth any know the Father, save the Son." The Son is * | anb THemw, JUbGC â€" YJ mew Botna or os |) z Gets mab Awb |/ * FigHT â€" 3 ’lhl " . ‘f':v;‘;.‘ & f ( ( | ept + "0 * P â€'?‘; t N râ€". L d W n t imedt A U,; It Finally Got Rough Climbing "For the first time in the depression every business index is pointed upâ€" ward. The starved demand cf four years of privation opens hungry maws in all directions."â€"General Johnson. No Overproduction, "There is no overproduction of anyâ€" thing so long as there are people in the world who want that thing, but cannot get it."â€"Henry Ford, Philadelphia.â€"Take it from Capt, W. J. Ruch, of the State Highway Patrol, there is no necessity for the modern automobile to be geared to go more than 50 miles an hour because "the average man is not physically or menâ€" tally capable of driving at greater speeds." That, says the troop comâ€" mander, is the explanation for most accidents. Few Able to Drive Auto Over 50 M.P.H. _ New York. â€"Miss Florence Kehoe, who has entereq nearly every slogan contest that came along in the last 10 years, final‘ly came through â€" reâ€" cently and won a $25 first prize, "By law abideâ€"put trash inside," she submitted as a slogan to be painted on New York City‘s trash cans. . The judges considered it best of more than 10,000 that came ln‘f Among slogans that failed were "No refuse refused" and "Spare the can and spoil the street." Persistence Wins _ Salvador, Sask.â€"A,. J. Mace is setâ€" ting the sty‘e for district farmers by "breaking" two milk cows to work with his horses for Spring plowing. Two of his horses died, and Mace needed more horseâ€"power to seed his land. Many more farmers in this dried out area, intend using cows for seeding. 1 Farmers Break in Milk Cows to Aid is in Spring Plowing "Few servants can have had such a life of experiences in so many counâ€" tries." RUSSIANS‘ OFFER, "Miss Vincent was a wonderful nurse and before she left Russia had offers of big salaries to stay on there as a nurse. "She was promised her own suite of rooms and her own servants, but preferred to stay with the family, "Travel was in those days very difâ€" ferent from what it is today, but she was always ready for any emergency and was a clever organizer., was in St. Petersburg durlni ;h; Russoâ€"Japanese War, when I was a child. "She has had a most interesting life. She travelled all over Europe with my mother in the ‘seventies. She ‘"When she first entered my fathâ€" er‘s service, she was obviously a girl of unusual abilities, and she had plenty of opporunities later to put her "Her length of service is surely a record, and I hope some of the modâ€" ern servants will read about her and take her as an example. "All her family, who are well known in the Purbeck area, have reached good positions, ‘ *"They have oeen there for generaâ€" tions, and are said to be descended from survivors of the Spanish Armâ€" woman, Mrs, Bevan said. "In spite of her age she is still extremely active and she keeps the whole of my house accounts. She is really a marvellous accountant. For 70 years without a break Miss Elizabeth Vincent, who belong‘s to Purbeck, Dorset, England, and is now 85, has been in the service of one family, She entered the employment of the third Lord Radstock as an undermaid before she was 15, Later she was Lady Radstock‘s perâ€" sonal maid, then housekeeper, and now whw is houschnaner in mho Th a, " Reigate, Entered Service of Third Lord Radstock at Age of F ifteen Housekeeper Has . |{What To Do Been Seventy Years With N: ARMADA sURvIvOoRS $25 Slogan Prize is a most remarkable TORONTO in the public schools is three yeéara Chicago. â€" Accidents in Chicago‘s public parks decreased 20 per cent. im 1933, despite the fact that trafic was greatly increased because of the World‘s Fair. A girl less than two years oid in North Berwick, England, has had her hair permanently waved. Charged with bholding up a girl at the point of his revolver, a Cheshire laborer said he had turned novelist and was seeking "copy." Fifty tons of rock were blasted away to rescue a dog entombed in a cleft in the Langdale Pikes, Westmorland. To win a £50 bet a Cambridge un dergraduate walked from Cambridge to London and back, 1090 miles, in 21 hours. The first nouâ€"stop flight from Lon don to Paris by autogiro is recorded The pilot was an English officer. A Wellingborough man ate 1990 doughnuts at a sitting. William Murray, blacksmith, servâ€" ing in the Canadian army in 1917, was wounded in the head by a sniper‘s bul let. He has just died. The export in livestock from Argen tina to Britain, it is now disclosed was started by a Scotsman who has just died in Guernsey, aged 102. * Newlyâ€"weds may enjoy free holidays at Margate in June. Complimentary passes will be issued to all amenities and amusements. Tom Collins, _ England‘s _ oldes} cricket "Blue," who remembers being "noâ€"bailed" when he sent down overâ€" arms for Cambridge, is 93. A Short But Usetul Life The average life of a textbook used Nail biters are unconscious of thei: hands. To make them "hand consciâ€" ous" is to win the battle. "Why do you call mining prog arty a claim?" *Too often you find out that is all it is Yet there are three things that may do wonders. One is to appeal to th« child‘s pride. The next is to keep his hands so busyâ€"and his arms, tooâ€" that the faceâ€"urge won‘t present itselt and to see that he is tired enough : bedtime to go right to sleep. The third is imporiantâ€"to get him a nai brush and a simple manicure set. 1 you can afford it, have his nails maniâ€" cured once in two weeks so there wil be no rough places to bite off. 9y scoiding or shaming the child. What then is to be done?* If there is nothing real to get at or to remove, and no scolding or punishment may be given. Tying the hands is not re commended because constriction dam ages the temper and this damage is dificult to repair, One thing that blocks us is this We have learned that any habit, either physical or mental, is more deeply set by scolding or shaming the child. 8o, without a tangible cause, how can we overcome it? Te usual way to cure anything is to get a: the cause and remove it. It is not necessarily a nervous or unbappy person who does these things. Some of the most evenâ€"tem pered people we know lhave a habit trick of some kind or other that lifus the hand to the head. A man may scratch his car, or & woman smooth back her hair; rubbing the nose, brushing the lips with the back of the hand, straigtening the glasses, touching the jaw, siroking the moustache or beardâ€"all are hand4o face habits; the same crook of the arm resorted to without apparent reaâ€" mroutes Ah.cis c d c cca id is d Is it any wonder then thai after they come to live they continue to enjoy their little digits? * _ Perhaps nailâ€"biting is just carried over from a preâ€"natal gestureâ€"who knows* But one thing is certain, it is harder to break up the handâ€"toface urge than almost any other unconâ€" sciously repeated gesture 0/ the body. Effect on Muscics In time the arm muscics ise!l more at home in that position than any other. It does not necessaily denote nervousness, although it sometimes does. It accompanies deep thought, concentration and even extreme hap piness as often as it does fear or strain. Yet these things may be ahâ€" sent and a child will still bite bis nails for no apparent reason. Habdit is a strange thing. Take bit> ing the nails for instance, Actually, biting one‘s Anger nails is not so different from many other manâ€" nerisms. Nature seemed,to have it in for us by planting some unusual coâ€" ordination between hand und face. Babies, before they are born, often suck their thumbs, we are informed. This Habit is Actually ! Very Different From a Number of Other Habit is Young For Permanent Accidents Decrease British With Nail Biters