I It WOMEN PI-80 IAIY IAWOITFI HAIL Advises Wives On I How She Retained Wandering Husband coming here I am delighted to read your articles telling wives not DEAR MARY HAWORTI-it Sincc LET'S KAT Canned Salmon Makes A Tempting Main Dish Iy Ida Bailey Not many years ago. many of u looked down the nose at canned salmon. It was often considered ag foodtobeusedattheeisdofthe week when the budget was low. i But now. what a difference! ! Io-Inlet Curtain-Raiser 'Pine quality cold canned sal- -on. flaked coarse. and mixed with sliced scallions, topped with black pepper and served on let tuce is a good gourmet curtain- raiser for dinner. Frozen potato chowder. heated with coarse Hak- ed canned splmon. and snipped to l xx. ' ing cup. Cook and stir 3 min. -''''W" ”- to give up their husbands to '.l'IIaG'na.nlhl Tnuday, April 5. 1955 . .. mamudmg I have . . few practical hints to pass on Alien Beans: Heat 1 INo. 2i can lima beans. or cook 1 (12 oz.I pkg. frozen lima beans; in either case. save liquid. Drain liquid from I (8 cm can salmon into measuring cup. Add liquid from lima beans; fill cup with milk. Melt 4 tbs. butter. Blend in Vs c. flour. 1 tsp. salt. In tsp. pepper and tsp. monosodium glutamate. Gradually stir in liquid in measur- Remove bones from salmon. Flake fish medium-fine. Combine with lima beans and sauce. Turn into oiled I qt. casserole. chives added. becomes a dish most hearty and appetizing. Canned salmon contains pro- teins not only oomparable to meat. but in the liquid there is a high percentage of vitamin D. that precious element essential to sound teeth and supple bones in both children and adults. because it controls the distribution of phos- phorous and calcium in the body. and plays a vital part in the body chemistry. TOMOBROWT DINNER Chilled Vegetable Juice Celery Sticks lalinon Escallnp with Lima Beans Whipt. Potatoes Buttered Beets Spring Cole Slaw Bread-Raisin Custard Coffee Tea Milk Salmon Escallop with Lima Border with l c. buttered medi- um-fine enriched bread crumbs. Baka 15-20 min. in moderate; oven. 375 degrees F.. or until crumbs are brown. Spring Cole Slaw: To 1 lb. crisp fine-shredded tender green cab- bage. add 2 tbs. snipped chives or V4 1'. sliced scallions with a little of the green top; in c. sliced rad- lahes. and 1 grated peeled small carrot. Toss with 1 tbs. not-sweet French dressing. Chill. Blend in 56 c. sour cream dressing. Sour Cream Dressing: Combine clear sky my husband asked me for a divorce. We had been hap- from personal experience. About 18 months ago out of a pily married. so far as I knew. for 15 years. I am a good house- keeper and hostess. dance and play bridge well and we like the same pastimes. I simply refused to discuss divorce and set about learning what sparked the idea. It turned out. of course. to be a woman with whom he worked- she wasn't much younger than I. Meanwhile Hank went off on a business trip and on his return I mentioned the fact that I had been seeing a doctor about a condition that might be cancer. Believe me, this set him back and he hasn't mentioned divorce since. During several weeks of diagnostic tests. I was really us- ing my wits; and by the time the medical report came through. showing nothing wrong. I had the triangle under control. Used Slander As a Weapon First I found out all I could about the woman. also her traits that appealed to Hank. and when- ever possible I either imitated or KIEUTRIII All right. teen-agers. it's your turn again.- You write that you could have so much mora..fun if you were not the short. bulgy type. and ask how to outgrow the fat. Here's the formula: Replace foods. that are adding padding with foods that help you to growl The protective foods contain an abundance of growth-promoting nutrients for comparatively few calories.- Many rich foods furnish a plethora of calories without providing the nutrients essential for growth. Without being4 aware of it. you may be skimping on the very foods that could help you grow taller. while overdoing on the foods that pile on pounds. Try this pattern on for size and shape. At breakfast you skip the growing foods. eggs. milk and cereal. and later eat a pack- age of high calorie cookies. For lunch you like a hot dog or two. a. soft drink and finish off with a candy bar. After school you're HUNGRY. and have a chocolate soda. At dinner you've been known to complain ”Potatoes, Mother how could you. they've so fattening!" - and then take seconds on dessert. About face . . . stop being a dietary dub. Here are the growth promoting foods needed daily; Milk. eggs. lean meat. fish or burlesqued her. Second. I bought a new boudoir trousseau. know- ing a man always finds these things alluring. and sooii or later will break down and be won back. Third. nevcr a word of re- proach - or just enough to give spice - and always a forgiving goodnight kiss. I went with him everywhere. advertising niysclf his ever-loving ivifc. not heslitating to show he was bought and paid for . . . Talking to other wives. I would drop hints as to how this woman was out to get some other wo- man's husband. I did this just for insurance. so she would really be taught a lesson, But the high point came by ac- cident. I met her outside a res- taurant one rainy night. and pushed her as she was walking away from our conversation. She hit the pavement just as my bus- band came up, and I ran to him and said she had attacked me. Naturally he took care of me as I was a nervous wreck. and this must have proved to her, once and for all. that his loyalty was mine. My point is A to make a long V4 2. commercial sour cream. 1 tsp. vinegar. 11; tsp. sugar. V4 tsp. salt and In tsp. pepper. TRICK OF THE CHEF To chilled canned vegetable juice add 4 drops tabasco and 1 tbs. lemon juice. Care For Good Luggage If You Want If its wise to be ready for any! travel eventuality with good lug-i gage of your own; keep it in good. condition and properly stored be- tween trips. Care Depends on Material First of all. the care given any N909 0f lllllgage must depend on the material with which it is cov- ered. No one type of cleaning is best for every type of material. In leather. rawhide is the choice If -many shoppers. It is usually while or eggshell. has brush-like markings at regular intervals. Rawhide can be cleaned easily with fine scouring powder. using steel wool for stubborn spots. working Ehntly. of course. Re-seal D0rPs of leather with several coats of clear shellac or spar varnish. allowing each coat to dry thor- oiighly. Easily Damaged Ullbrotected rawhide is candy To Last weary leathers in this story short - stop at nothing to hold your husband. I-lank has llcarned his lesson and things are just as they were before. The woman has moved to another .town and I hope she has learned ther lesson too. As philosophy its-aches. society is better for what I've worked so hard to keep. I am glad I persevered. and glad to be just a wife. F. E Wife's Bchavior ls Self-Damning DEAR F. E.: If this is the price of holding a husband. I imagine . , . CR'FR0I'.v.most really moral. self-respecting with the Juice of half a lemon inlwivt-s would make the highest A 3'5” M W8'9l'- FOP large stainsulchnice of letting him go A or such as thosecaused hy water, darken the entire case with thick coats of lemon oil. applied for two! or three days until the leather is all of the. same color. To g finish and protect after cleaning. use paste wax or ncu-l tral shoe t'l”93ITl. buffing well afteri etch application. Preservatives of to commercial type sold under trade names are excellent. Professional Job Needed If scratches on leather are very d99P- home care is not the ans. wer. Take the case to a goon M18889 repair place for a profess- ional job, Mun”? "Willy Wipes clean with saddlegsoap-paste, wax or Car Wax will restore thc sheen. Colored leathers. grained of ""00”l-l In-ly fade. as do fabrics. Uiie mild soapsuds and a nearly fnlrodcnts. will molder or mildew. quickly. To take care of snumfh leatherj dfy Sponge or soft nap cloth, rub-I bmll Very ilently. Neutral shoel cream is the best polish. Coated fabrics of the type that letting God solve the problem His way. Your bloodcurdling recital of ”practical hints" for blitzing a rival sounds like a drama played in hell. Never have I had a con- fcssion from a wife more satanic in its pitiless, usiaLsllpl.ll0ilS self- ishness. Very likely the other woman Continued on page 14 Household Hint Have enough electrical outlets so that lights and appliances need no makeshift wiring. Extension cords strung over the rugs. along haseboards for considerable dis- tances. and over windows or doors. not only cut down the electric cur- rent for which you pay. but are also fire and accident hazards. The necessity for connecting more than two plugs to a duplex and pigskin in the tan or brown usually look like cotton. linen or outlet shows you need more out- family. clean and replenish oils at the same time with saddle soap.i according to directions on the i-on-I taint-r. i Lighlrn the color of travel- i ANNE ADAMS PATTERNS i Did to sew. is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated instructions. other fabric which have been var- I nished. need their own special care. Some all-plastic material rg. sembles coated fabric. so be careful before you begin. TWO-WAYS SMART 1 TWO dresses or a dress and coat! Either way she wears them- these are the prettiest fashions Your little girl could own! Have the dress in colorful cotton - the cont-dress in rich contrasting Plflue or faille. Quick to cut out. put together. .Ioy to sew! Pattern 4564: Girls' Sizes 6. 8. 10. 12. 14. Size 10 dress. 2”: yards 35-inch: coat 3V4 yards. This pattern easy to use. sim. and THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in ) lll)c0!iIIa cannot be or s patern. Print plainly SIZE. NAME. ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER land order is ANNE ADAMS eta (I'll! Ggwg, so pm" GIS. fowl; dark green and yellow veg- letables. potatoes or another ichoice; fruits including a citrus .or juice. and whole grain or en- Teeners, Don't Be Dietary Dubs Iyldalaaalaia : riched cereal and bread, butter. Milk heads the list for it is the most nearly perfect food. Don't get the notion milk is fattening. A glass of whole milk has 160 calories. A soda contains 350. a chocolate bar 400. and a choco- late malted 450. A soft drink furnishes 75 to 100 calories. Add the lot and what have you got? Excess padding! Eat breakfast. including an egg and a glass of milk. fruit or juice, and a slice of toast. Or choose hole grain cereal and milk. A ood breakfast will stay by you until lunch time. Without break- fast you cannot concentrate. Have an adequate lunch. but skip the rich dessert. After school choose fruit or a glass of milk or buttermilk. If you carry your lunch. take a sandwich -e 2 thin slices of bread with filling of cheese. hard cooked egg or lean meat. Use mustard instead of ihayonnaise or butter. Wax wrap celery, carrot sticks or a tomato. Have a big piece of juicy fruit. and a glass of milk. At dinner. eat whatever the family has. but do not take sec- onds. except on lean meat or low calorie vegetables. Skip gravy. go light on butter and limit bread to one slice. Restrict dessert to fruit. or small serving of fam- ily dessert. If you wish special menus. send for "Teen-Age Slimming Menus". These furnish 1400 calories. all in the growing-up foods. ELLEN'S DIARY l by an Island Fa.rnier's Wife . ”Moonlight and roses bring memories. dear of . . a radio soloist sings an uilriguing old song, one which has had "fair- good" last to it down many a year . . . And hearing. we re- member that it was neither the molten silvery beams of the form- er, not. yet the inimitable fo'rm, color, and fragrance of the latter which caused our old mem- ories to "bless and burn" to- day. . it was the acrid scent from the burning coal in the portable furnace our handyman-of-neigh- hour had brought and set up in the yard to attend to an item of smithery for the farmers. Neith- er so big nor impressive but still a replica of' that forge we re- membered from the young days back home. That was an integral part of farm-living then. like the Church and manse, the school. the” corner-store. the butter land cheescl factory down the bill by a brook. Mack brought chips to help And then watched spell-bound as did we. the coal catch and at length glow red-hot. "I guess you never saw one of those before" he comment- ed. But what child was there in and about the village close to kindle the fire. and a match. and. i tried his hand at the bellows. ”oh yes" we smilcd, ”lols of times-long and ever ago." ”Before 1 was born?" he queri- ed. wonder in his eyes. "Yes indeed. long before that.” Gone for long years from earth is that smith of memory; the youngsters of those days now widely scatteredeand aged. Gone too as we remember it. the smithy' -and from the village the once familiar ring of the anvil and the scent of the smithy fire. . x e "l'll be able to catch them now!" Gage laughed happily to the younger farmer tonight when he told of the new fishing rod he had brought this afternoon with a new hair-cut from town. and they talked of the season of trouting. now not far away.” "A fellow can't be too sure" his uncle smiled. ”The best fisher- men I knew-he could land them when no one else could get as much as a bite!-always used a length of spruce sapling for a fishing pole!" O 0 It Mr. I). is at Alderlea these days. Today among other works of repair so good to have done he replaced a worn rocker in Great-grandmnther-to-Granddaugh- ler's old rocking chair. ' Until tomorrow e- - - - Diary - -- - Good-night . . . . . .home, in our day, toddler and xtime at the open door of the! smithy. or been drawn irresistibly? within? To watch the magic of the smith's hammer . . to see him. face grimy, leatliern' apron sadly black. heat .and beat and shape and temper. sometimes again and again. a required piece of iron for a farmer. 1 What a treat it was too to be there when the old mare of the. farm was being shod. she strange- ly out of place in the different surroundings. But as ELL stomedl to having her "removes" or new! shoes fitted as were many of the children of those days in the cob- bler's home. Lifting her feel. one after another at the smilh's gentle tug. while he proceeded to clean and spare and shape hoofeand shoes. and then with an expert rap and a tap hammer the heady nails home. ' dgos something Wonderful ' l for Holiday Hamil CIII3 Wk! Will PINK I.SlI.g .'..mHW'eeo MUSTARD older who had not stopped some-p ' - V ha After washing alhla H13. hang it com- plctely wet; don 1 run it through a wring- eI'- When the rug alone dripping. double I. we the lame inside ad. ins. ooanoa naosmmaa A ,COUNTRY GARDEN Once more the ancient wonder! 0 who can he a stranger To what has come to pass? The Pity of the Manger is mighty in the grass! Undaunted by December: The sap is faithful yet. The giving Earth remembers And only men forget! -Neiliardta The eternal miracle of Easter and the Spring! Another Easter is another reminder that men live by hope. It is a reminder of the continuing inner life. the inde- structible memories. the daunt- less faith in the future that under- lie and overtop passing events and external crisis. These form the bedrock and skyline. so to speak, of human existence, and they emerge into view on the age3 old feasts when people turn away from the transitory turmoil in which they live to look at things that are the same yesterday, .to- day and forever. Year after year at this season people of every race and creed fill churches all over the world. These churches are filled with lilies and other flowers making the worshippers conscious of the eternal miracle of spring and the hope of immortality. The earth continues to renew itself and in gardens we see this every day. Consider the seasons. the joy of spring. the splendor of summer. the sunset colours of autumn. the delicate and graceful bareness of winter trees. the beauty of snow. the beauty of light upon water. what the old Greeks called the t ed smiling of the sea. In the feeling for this beauty. if we have it, we possess a pearl of great price. -Viscount Grey. The gardener. and all who work in the good earth lmow the joygof the seasons and now in spring are happy walking around the garden even if others cannot see any beauty in these early springs days. The river runs clear again and every year it. is a pleasant aur- prise to see after the wintry days. The garden seems to have winter- ed very well and many perennials are showing new growth. Daffodils and Tulips have pushed through the earth and mulch. It is wonder- ful the cold weather they seem to enjoy and grow in! In the garden room some new bulbs are growing . . . . Ferraria. a rare and unusual bulb from Africa. related to the Tigridas with creamy brown flowers sweetly scented. Also the Star of Bethle- hem 'related to the Hyacinth and Scilla with the botannical name of Orinthogalum. Flowers are white with a black centre in a large cluster growing on stems twelve to fifteen inches tall. They have a pleasing fragrance and are very long-lasting remaining in good con- dition for a month. I think they will become very popular when better known. Many more tuberous begonias have been potted up for summer blooming and all tender plants such as Oleanders and Fuschias have been brought to the light. House plants are in the process of hardening up for outside plant- ing and so there is much carrying of pots and moving from place to place. Three Roses have wintered here for several seasons but last fall I carried the one tree rose to the basement as it was difficult to cover where it had been growing. Today there are roses blooming on this tree and it is thriving in the back porch where it was placed in the sun giving us a taste of the fragrant red rose of summer days. The spring is a happy hopeful time! WHO LOVES THE EARTH Who loves the earth learns all man ever knows: If doubts are hinting that the prophets erred He sees a severed slip produce a YOU CAN TELL . . . BEFORE YOU GET THEM The nice thing about Harvey-Woods hosisrv 3 list you can tell. 50'0" V00 out them home. they will fit superbly. look delightful and last longer than WAN think such sheer nylons WM couldl They're so flattering. so that . . . millions of tiny threads. for greater elasticity. gmooihtf fit Ind stronger resistance to maps. you can atweya tell-about Harvey-Woodtl 129 QUEEN er. 5. A. MucDONAI.D nioiin ma IH 81'. GEIGI IT. suursirs maoiiemi. . gg csocaarlas-veovaa ””- Easy rochat this attractive cov- And RESUBRECTION is a proven ,, 1,, '”,,,, nu W .,..n, ,..,,. If metal wings withtnian-made "”.m'”'"' ”u'' am! tiiundars ruin Pattern nu: Crocheted TV Duttianfzom the heavens once niusl- cover. Uhilrlfhgoll, Ho. 8 v I-Illllltf 0- .C0f1-0Il: 30 :11": glieul l;::8tlIlIII NITOWI niercerised And knows that life-from-rain was Job l to God's intent. TWENTY . This bound and printed loam is iacolns-fin-thiapatterii (stamps Life's own book. Its iiltlhographs in all tongues leg- Brooks 3. The prdyerfnl one who turns this onto. Ontario. Please print plainly . way to look RESS 'P Will the truths the ages have NUMBER. 0. troubled heart that seeks a liv- WONDERFUL in the word - in; cine, for our NEW Alice Brooks '!'urn back to earth and read these N99d10Cl'l" CIUOS 901' 1955- pages through! Exciting. enchanting. - our mu wangggurd, designs are all that - and even , more! Send 5 cents for your There is a wholesome quality copy of this an-me auto. .. about freshly turned up earth. just NOW! You'll want to order every as there is loveliness in the trees wonderful design in itl and shrubs. showing in clear tracery of leafless branches against the light of a setting sun. With lengthening days there is that great stirring of living growth. The sun-warmed air gains a new quality. every living thing re- moods: and we are at the titres- hold of another year of light and warmth. of growth and colour. of musical ' s' and fragrant scents. "Smells are surer than sounds or sights"! . .That must be where the reason lies. too. for the happy little thrills that the very words continued on page 14 'MORNING SMILE Cook's Corner "It says here." said one spins- ifA'LicE saooksf DESIGNS. FALSE TEET Slipping or irritating Don't. be einbarraaaeeby loose on let. reading from the newspaper. ROLLS "that a woman in Johannesburg 2 a. milk has creamated her third husband." 3 tbs, shortening Oh, isnt that just the way of 3 tbs, gnggr tljlnzs-" cried thegither spinster. Scald the above ingredients to- 50m9 0! "5 08113 lot One hu5- gether. Cool. add about 3 cups of hand and other women have hus- flour. 1 yeast cake. salt. Let stand This pleasant powder given able some of added oomrn by holding plates mo 5009Y. DIITY (Gs inc (non-actdi at any drug avtsniq 55555 "3 burn-" about 1 hour.then put his pans. fame 1&3 5? &0My) Easter enchantment with I its Cake Mix. No eggs . to hunt for with this Easter treat . . . their - golden yolks are alread blended into this mix; Hotels Shirriffs is all youna d. Betltiauae fresh milk . t t, . ..... 0”. 3...:-s-: ..i;'i.- ....f'"" ""5 Itlsa Spring Song, for aural Shir-riK'a famous vanilla makes it sing with delicate davour. Golden pineapple shoes and a e I e a . . ' ii1i'”'i?"”?'ti'"-i”il.i” Eff” Sill” - ”'”"" for the beetlwhite csdka yomw teeth sllpptns. dro ping or wobblin when You eat. t.ak or la b Ju