It’s Canada's favourite tomato juice! Who says so? The thou- sands of Canadian families who have made Libby's the fastest selling tomato jlllCfi in Canada. Best because it's "Gentle Pressed”_ for peak of perfection flavour. The sweetest, freshest juice is extracted-bitter seeds and core are dis- carded. That’s why Libby's “Gentle Press" is unsurpassed for garden-fresh goodness. Libby's is sought after for its _ health-giving qualities. too.\it’s an excellent dietary ' source of vitamins A and C. These vitamins are essential to normal growth and health, are needed daily for teeth, and bones. You ll have no trouble making sure that your children get their share of these vitamins if you serve them the‘ delicious way-in Libby's "Gentle Press" Tomato Juice. The youngsters love it! l D O U B L E Y Q U R M O N E Y B A C K, it you don't agree tho! Libby's "Gentle Press" Tomato Products W Juice, Colchuo. (hili Sauce and Qenl/e Press TOMATO JUICE McNilll. I HllY OF Soup- ore the best you've ever tasted. "BBY- CANADA iiniiiro 0 ciiAriiAuhourAitio MODERN FOLK MAKE BITCH OF , MOTHEBHOOD RESTRAINT at Ann's attitude. 1t T‘“" day. It was Ann's first get-together with "the girls" after she had brought her sccond hiiby home from the hospital. [ifld they WPF€ all prepared to lend her their sym- hard you work; how you are; Paglia‘, (‘I "h ’ v i d_ ' h“ hours. touch. y wheeler will give two adults and a who“ {hi-- lllndhfl-i ‘Ilvol-filflm-r. You re supposed to expect sym- In choosing a color, Cflfpfltdlllrlll- child 300 miles of pleasure motor- Dld-uddm‘ H ‘ _ r - j i <_ ‘ pzilhy ns your nnturzil (inc. fuclurers recommend selecting n lug. Gas consumption is over 1C0 ll. cnio o a ntw oao) Thnts the modcrn lllllllldti’, Anti shndc Siifliilly more intense than miles to the gallon. ‘mm U“! l“’ll‘l"" "T l1“1‘ 111131 any womiin who (‘lilllflfi right out the one you had planned to selecL This machine hums along the Bu! All" "Hlfillvfl i110 55111911.“! and says that taking mirr- of Small Rugs and carpets, they explain, road at a comfortable thirty and aside. No, she w'.isn’i having n hard time. Sh:- omit‘: finil taking care of u f\5'fl-)'(?2ll'<<)id and a new baby at nil (lifiicult. There “Yer.- plcnty of hours in the diiy to get. everything done. (it course, q“; admitted, she seldom went out. But she didn't si-om lrrmlnd. She was enjoying stiiying homo. “The girls." couldn't believe their ears, i-ninmcnls Ruth hiillrtt. Ann had thrown ii bombshell at li‘l"f1l. Herr: she was. coniplntoLv down; rlolng iill new baby and ri two-yr-ar-old Jflvi not compliiiniiig about it. downright oddity. about rugs. the most. important held how wrindcrful "get away from it all" for a fow isn't cepted attitude toward children to- ll you have small children, you're supposed to talk n lot about how tied down it is lo children isn't murh of a trick is a KNOW’ YOYR STUFF ABOUT RC GS Before you put clown any for floor coverings, know your puff in n wool r112. rlcnsity of pilr- V single fut" iictll in determining tiuriihiliziy .Rug pile lhc \\'l)lk for a‘ ls made up of tufts of woolen turn together hy barking Look first for closoni-ss of iveuve No \V0i’i(i(?l' "the girls" were igug that, i5, the number of “m; cast, ,"'ll‘7'l. the aic- f rows of wool to the inch. Count them on the back of the rug. If lhr- count is uround eight or ninc tufts to the inch, the rug is high quality. Whether pile is long or short l‘. should be thick and sprlngy to tlii. "gray down" after a few weeks‘ USE. Now cut-pile rugs~Wilton, vel- rci. Axmlnster and chenille - “ill "fluff". This fluff comes from the short ends of yarn left in the fah- ric during the cutting process. The fluff, which will disappear soon after a rug is put into use as a floor covering does not mean the rug is losing its pile. When a rug contains a mixture of rayon and wool fibers, the rayon may have a tendency to mat and may be less soil-resistant than the wool contained in the carpet. Of‘ MINICAR SEEMS LITTLE MARVEL Britain's first factory-produced all-aluminum minicar is ready. 0n Britain's standard gas ration which gives a 90 mile a month mileigc for ordinary cars, this small three- olimbl gradients one in four witn ease. Maximum speed is 40. Total weight of the car is under 200 pounds and the overall length ls eight feet. Running costs are nllfbecuuse there's nothing to 3o wrong. ~ This runabout will certainly be popular in Britain where the gas ration is smiill. The $600 price will be popular, too. Bread making. or the preparation of cakes from flour or parched grain by meant of heat, isone oi‘ the most ancient of arts. e g u: l . , fin 7 to sumo sh I lumg I 50 o TOASTED ALMOND ANGEL CAKE" l anythmwgr Qconotny to _ - n8 on "l, 8 and: fir; n sifted Irons Down Cah lib teaspoons colonel inn! - I gqono 8 lit 1h fi “lkog a,‘ s‘! ETe-Qf- | Iwr 1 amp-v vanilla | my r0 use s Mm of "menu Wn hm Wicvnitootwnodufl ‘known-Incarnate | Qtsofqke Wlllgbovn eflouar_ With ‘Lug-gum. VQIIMIW-ilniblsndid | fiqmqpmw\m‘dgbygxzr;m' ' “t; "w" °l‘.§’"....”"" .,..-.':'...*.*. mrrantrlfimmrii: ,' t... i...» i... ’ ‘M. “"'= In u t I y I . i L“: ars'.-;'m:::.'..:::::.::."l '.‘.'l'i.€‘;2:’.‘.'.°.".‘il.?.'.f'§.‘.? I '~ 1-1- - Yo" 1»- w’ ' after ‘each nddiriod until sup: it innit‘ IBgIl fllmllllll. Sift I fldlbie tested recipes for uh‘. 1 ' 39'5". I iii-tr i... r2122“: ma‘: I first? '3"2'.‘.';.§§i"i'l5.°$'é’..'.’2.'$ | 31%;»;- )1=;-;;;;~;- :3“; ggg,ggtf,'g;fl'f;;g,qytoggrbgy_g I new, .0 o.» in Gcflflli FOOdI, limited. Li?’ m; pm until ck: ii cold, then noon the I Commit 013mb‘ “mo: t . "its: ,,,,,,,_,,, ffii-lafimnasmii ' " "M" CARS FLOUR vent to lrt- 51") ii rpm -;.7.:.:.:1;.:.'.:..'."';j_j_";1j LSWQHQ DOW“ THE c GUARDIAN» NCHAFFBLQTTEWWN LivingiSleisure /THE WQM AUTUMN hutrrn Red as a forest fire upon the hllll. The winds have fanned the maple trees to flame; Torchlllre they blaze beneath the Autumn sky, Like some parade whole Jenner: passing by Crlsp the dull spirit with n thou» and thrills. Along the wide white roads, illum- ined lines Proudly await the countryside: acclaim; Arid like Boy Scouts in orderly array A guard of‘ honor stationed by the way, Stiffly saluting stand small, sturdy l pines. -Mary Coles Cerrington in the New York Times. “EAR YOUR SPECS WHEN MAKING-UP The woman who wear: glasses for reading or sewing also nestle to use her specs in order to apply her ill.» stick accurately. ‘ So says a make-up expert who maintains that the reason so many older women appear with hit-or- mlsii lipstick lines and badly-up- plled rouge is because they don't use their specs for better-seeing. Says tlils critic: “A woman should not only put: on her specs before she puts on lipltlck and rouge, but she should also illumin- ate her dressing table mirror with a good strong light." The best light, according to our expert, is strong sunlight, prefer- ably from a north window. The woman whose dressing table mlr-s ror can't be illuminated by good natural light should. he insists supply herself with a reasonable facsimile thereof from a powerful electrLc bulb. He says the strong electric bulb used for lighting up a face should be stripped off a lamp shade. COLOUR HELPS THEM GET WELL When the old folks in the wards at Orsett Lodge Hospital, Grays, Essex, England, acted al if they didn't really want to get well, the officials knew they were on the wrong track. Then Dr. L. Z. Cosin stepped in Why not introduce colour into their lives? Today, ward colour liemcs are based on primrose and tur- quoise blue. Window frames mo in pillar-box red, ceilings in pink. Scenes recalling the good old days —Victorian courting couples listen- ing to the hand, biithlng incidents in the elghtles—are painted on the walls. Snyii Dr. Coaln: "Gay colours help patients keep on their toes." Statistics prove his plan ll work- ing well-only a very small per- centage of patients stay in bed all day. Greatest testimonial comes from an elghty-year-old who hail broken a leg. "We got him out of bed every dnyf.’ says the dnctorw-fl-After three ANS REALM Sh: tells you unpleasant fnotl “for your own good" or because lhl thought “you ought to know."- She often makes you feel dilutin- fled with what you are and what you have. She acts “hurt" when you make plans that don't include her. She enjoy] your friendship our tirely at her own convenience. without considering yours. When you are proud of n new ouealion, lhe Always manage to find some flaw in it. She doesn't. hesitate to laugh at your expense. She mOflOPOlinuo your own time and friendship, never letting you feel free to leek other acquaint- iinces. She ulcs prying questions — iii- ltead of being satisfied with what you tell her of your own free will. She imposes on you in the name of friendship. - You can't be sure when you tell her something you don't want ll- poated that it will go no further. Though the welcomes a chance tn sympathise with you when you are in trouble, you're never quite lure just how she will take the good things that happen to you. If you fold straight ploou straight u they come from the wiishlino and place them flat and smooth in the basket to keep them in shape and as unwrlnkled u pol- sible, you will lave extra wont in ironing. WHAT BENJAMIN FRANKLIN SAID [at n A Bible and a newspaper in every house. a good school in ur- sry illutrlct-all studied and sp- preeinted u they merit-arc the principal support. of virtue, moral- ity and civil llbertya-Benjamln Franklin. 111 YEARS AGO (Toronto Globe) Life, We've Been fang Together —Thls night in 1825 Ann: Letitia Bubaauld, an old lady whole writ- ings were widely known. sat alone in her room. She wrote: "The way is dark, but it is well troddeii." Then her lianiit were still, and an hour afterward they found her asleep-hei- last sleep. She had gone, but the was laying, not "Good-night," but "Good Morning." Here is n poem for which lite will long be remembered: Life! We've been long together. Through pleasant and throulh cloudy weather. "lfis hard to part when frieiidl Ire dear, , Perhaps ‘twill cause u sigh, n fur. Then steal away, givd- little wun- ing: Choose thine own time; Say not Good-night. but in some brighter cllme Bid me Good-morning. FURNITURE FOB NEW APARTMENT weeks he insisted on doing exer- cises. Today, he's so active in: catches a bus three times a week to n nearby village where he‘: courting a widow with a chicken form!" CATTY FEMALE FRIEND TO NON has been found the on her hands. ed stylel. such s difficult dultlng problem. She's not a real friend if-—- 4. Aritlered A. Bird of peace animal 2 5. Bubble 5. Flock 9. River (Russ) 6. Wash 10. Infrequent 7. Before 11. Deposit 8. A largo temporarily collar (slang) 1S. Mature t2. Across 14. Suitable 13. Colleague 16. Tree 14. Enemy 18- Skill l5. Toward 19. Arnblfl 1.7. Earth as a letter goddess i1. Molt l8. Help 22. Forth . 19. Exclama- 23. Enthusiastic tlon follower ‘l0. To exact 23. Anti-alr- cratt fire 241love! 25. Cebine monkey 2B. Talk 28. Consult together ACROSS l1. Chop l2. Undeveloped flower 33. Greek letter '34. Mulberry 35. Obtained 80. ‘Pal 88. Bearing l0. A cowl l1. Beige l2. Otherwise l3. Head cover- ings (shortened) ll. Obnoxious plant. DOWN f. Twofold 2. Verbal I. Differ IILOH Yeltelllfl f’ DAILY CROSSWO RD ll. Turf ' 0. Mandarin to a 27. Metal or 28. Slice M. ‘trickled out. 80. Border 35. Micro- ar. Stocking 1.1.1!" ~-1 " i-ifllfllflis.‘ Dldlalli [ZILTIU Tllflllill.‘ UlZll-l ifllil? leather armor for the heed organism 86. Pllnt of cabbage family nmv cnmoquom-nuim m u w»: iii Al!!! LILAXI GIILLOW Ono lettu- slmply stands for another. In this ample A ll iml for the tlim Us, X for the two 0'0, ate. ling/is mun, spoo- tropiiu, the length and formation of the words are all lilnts. lull day tlis code letter! are diluent. Awlwlflifioblll VDN KAUJ KRTI VDNN’ IINILII ILL MAI’ ORPP UNLRTI ILAOQILII: 3N’?! IPP NPJI Ill‘ INNU-ATRU. t GOD XI III‘! HUOWN IN N01‘ KNOWING @l.—l'l‘. AUGUIITNI. . . MIMI!“ W HIIIQIIIIIIIIfl. IS Once the harii-to-get apartment new house- wife will have furnishing problems If she's looking [or furniture she'll play wine and choose from the plain, unornament- Not only are they eas- ier to match. but they don't present In the simple styles maple and bleached mahogany harmonize well. "You ran certainly u] lbat I m‘- ammmd Gm-Pu most high/y." writes Mrs. J. . Giant of the Seafield Kennels, Re 'd.,Edmon-‘ ton, Alta. “Wfr: fir! wonderful Jurcm irilb i! for awr l0 yum. Cbam/ziari Lady Betb of Seaficld, shown abut/e, was raised on Grit-Pup from puppy/road." Why breeders feed Gm-PQ anzeoeiis KNOW it is not sail to ti- to raise dogs on “tab e scraps." Do s need I properly balanced iet that gives them everythinithey must have for strong ones, sound teeth, and a beautiful cont. That's why breeders feed Gro-Pup. GIIO-IUPJS A PROPERLY BALANCED mnw keep dogs of all ages, sizes and breeds at their natural best. Not only do dogs like it but it Contains every vitamin and mineral —feed your dog as. famous kennels do . . . "Wonderful success with . Gro-Pup” QPTOBEBn Z1» . 1.953 theymre known to need. ciio-rvr SAVES YOU MONEY. lt costs only 5t a day to feed n good-sized do . It is all dry solid food. hat is why Gro-Pup is so economical. A 2-lb. package actually contains as much solid food (dry wag/r!) as your dog could et in ue 1-lb. can: of ordinhry og food. Feed your dog as famous kennels do. Buy him Gro-Pupi Your grocer has itin both cubs: and meal form-Jot‘ variety. M140 K llo ' h bloiddonggbliituth Walnut goes with dark oak, maple or cherry. Because it can be painted to harmonize with a sur- rounding colour scheme, many Can- adian householders nowadays are buying unfinished furniture. This way be bleached. stained or vani- lshed but for painting the piece should be made of birch or maple o bring out the best results. With reasonable care good fur- nlture will last a life-time. Eit- penslve wood should not he kept near hot-air registers or in front of open windows. n Peg-legged coyotes are at leait 50 per cent greater killers of live- stock than are normal coyotes. Ceylon has bats with a wing- spread of more than three feet. HELP OI‘ GUESTS OFTEN USELESS The problem-facing many guests in today's servafltless households ll to know how persistent they should be with offers of help to the hostess. The guest who goes uninvited to the kitchen to assist the hostess- cook—-to cite a typiciil cnse in point _/ls more apt to lie i-i hindrance than a help. Most hostess-cooks mnp their party procedure before- hand. so no guest should assume Fallowfcn o YNIIIIUIUVIITLMI PIIRITEI tgiifillfi. that her advice or her hclp will Remember, Purity Flam‘, miIhd/mm firm! band w ul- hn [or l" your h!‘ llew Remedy Amimsi Brings foster relief to itching-helps clear up PIMPLES New Cutlcun Liquid Items div aomiorr instantly-actually ipreds Imiling of skin and scalp irritations. Uiie anytime. it’! untisrp/ib-grenreless- invisible -sfa|'til:ss. Buy today. Sfllil/IO- tiim assured or money refunded. CUTICURA simplify an existing plan. To show her tact and good mills nor: a guest should, however, make a sincere offer of her services when the arrives. This gives the hostels ii chance to indicate what, if any, kind of assistance she could use. If the hostess says to an offer of help. “No thanks, I've got things under control," a guest. lhould take her at her word. After dinner. a guest may repeat nn offer to help with dishes but again the should not assume that her help will be needed. Many hostess-cooks, be- lieve it or not would much rather swing chores single-handedly thlii have to direct an uninitiated guest into the rites of washing dishes and putting them nwny. l s . Itflllhlhllt LIQUID is coining round again! When your doorbell tings, be Iitb this grand Purity Pumpkin pin i: zmldl with Purity Flour naof course! Here's l melt-in-your-inoutb pastry recipe. ti w) no“... ~-=;,:,:-r.c'8ingi§, olks nN bu; nun i s4 at W v4 out" i 1:300" l "out!!!" v‘- “f; rd: mg. its-i; .. pliihi-mwmme m: nix» Mfilrin §-$.'i'§'iis."".fl n i .-oa .' yglf-ifleliii. aifimhflf’ 32'“... Nalo.......:..............u-...m..mu ltrem;ti:Inn-um..."nun-um"..- do........:............Provhinsn£i3-_