d.i..... . RAISIN DUNS I No wasted time, no extra steps. Full-strength Fleischmanns active Fresh Yeast goes to work right away. Makes sweet, smooth-tex- tured buns that melt: in your mouth. And makes them fast". IF YOU BAKE AT HOME, be sure to get Fleischmanrfs active Fresh Yeast with the familiar yellow label. You can depend on Fleischmanni-Jlidafs favorite yeast for over 7O years. AlWfll/S ljfQSfll- ul your grocer’: MIDRIFF DIEASURE la‘ ( LIE '10 A WOMAN'S AGE How old is your figure? Your‘ waistline gives the answer. No fis- ' ure can look youthful if the \\"l . line ls padded by flesh iiiai scures a well-ilefinetl run e. Pf‘l'll“'t waistline is 10 inches lt‘~n the measurements oi llust anti hips. i Exercise. a sensible thet. and a well-fitted girdle will iriiig any? waistline closer to this nuirk oi‘ perfection. A sensible diet means counting calories. limiting intake of i"y foods, starches and sweets. Wclgli‘ voaisei: out-e a week and make a mock at the some time with a . measuring tape. This way _\'0u‘ll be able to detect and to control any reiiclency toward a waistline spread. Che-k your girdle to make sure it isn't guilty of adding inches to _\l.l1‘ innlrill. If the girdle pushes soft flesh up into a roll around the wiist that indicates a need for .1 hctier filling garment. A one- picl-e foundation which distributes Leah evenly, or a lilgh-ivaisterl clinic may be more suited to youl . figure. Spend a few minutes a day on exercises that help you to take a That Body of Yours! Br Janna W. Barton M. D. I DIFFERENT TYPES or ram m TEETH AND JAWS There is nothing much more painful than an aching tooth or jaw. Your dentist wl.ll tell you that i-f you can properly describe the pain he may more readily find the cause and give early relief. This is the statement of Dr. Earle E. Thomas, Chicago, in the "Jour- nal of the American Dental Assoc- iation." A pain described by the patient as knife-like. cutting, darting. stab- bing, shooting, sharp or like an electric shock, usually means an ir- ritation of the laQer nerves of the jaw by scme disturbance close to these nerves. It usually is acute in- f:ction caused by an abscess in the tooth socket, especially in the side and back or grinding molar teeth. Pain described as burning, scald- "rng, drawing or pulling also means irritation of the large nerves, but ls more likely to be caused by some blocking of the nerves or the blood supply to the part~burning tongue, pressure from artificial teeth, con- traction or drawing: of scar tissue from operation or healing after re- niovul of a tooth. Aohing. boring. throbbing or jumping pain is usually caused from infection where infected tis- sue cannot escape or drain. This jinn-ping, boring pain is very com- -mon because the cause~an infected- i reef in your belt. Here are two. [For the first, stand with feet a- . part. arms overhead. Swing your ll body from the waist in l wide , iirculnr motion. Do this 25 tlmu i as a starter, increasing the couiir. l each day. For the other. stand erect, feet apart, arms stretched out to the , side. Bend down, touching left ll toe with right hand. Straighten up. 1 Repeat, touching right toe with l left hand. Do 25 touchdowns on i each side. “For boiler value. .. iiiore real iomuio flavor... I BUY AYlMER EVERY Tl SAYS Mrs; Dorls Thompson; who feeds her family well, in accordance with Canada's Food. Rulea-fand keeps within he: budget with the help of Aylmer- .II'S‘AYLMER FOR THE GUARDIAN. ‘CHARLOTTEJTQFN Elizabeth's Claim To Throne ls Unchallenged, , Although the Grown Never ilas ilad More Heirs By HARLOW M. CHURCH IIBVIS BREAD Contains 25% Prepared Wheat Germ Tempts Jaded Appotltes 90w d w” ra-oxy " root-—is common. Wlhere cold or heat causes pain that soon passes away, the pulp (nerve and blood vessels) is not in- flamed. When the pulp is inflamed (infected), hot and cold applic- ations cause the pain to last for several minutes or hours. Where the pulp is "dead" the intense pain caused by heat is relieved by cold. Other conditions: Where jaw bone, holding the teeth. is infect- ed. pain is worse at. night. In sinus infection pain increases when the patient bends forward or is pres- ent when patient awakens. but be- comes less during the morning and stops at noon. When inflammation is in the covering of lhe tooth (in its socket), biting against the tooth relieves the pain. EATING YOUR WAY TO HEALTH Bo sure you are getting the pro- per all-round rl-aily diet for your type of build, occupation, etc. Send today for Dr. Barton's lizinriy book- let on this subject untitled “EAT- Send 10c and a Il-cciit stamp, to cover cost of handling and iniailing ING YOUR. WAY TO llF|\l.'l‘H." to The Bell Syndicate. lnc.. in care of this newspaper. Post Office Box 99, Station G, New York 1D, N. Y, and ask for your copy. rolrino cArsuP '- NBA its" Correlpondenl LONDON. Oct. 28 - (NEA) - As long as there is s possibility Princess Elizabeth may have a brother, she is known as the Heir Pre- sumptive and not as Heir Apparent. Under prevailing hereditary laws, Elizabeth's claim goes unchal- lenged. But in the earlier days of English history, the monarchy was elective. Not even the changes after the Norman conquest entirely elim- lnated this idea. although actual choice was restricted to descendants of William I. William II, Henry I and Stephen, for instance, were all chosen when others had superior claims. 4 Eventually hereditary right su- perseded the elective system. ft got. its first constitutional recog- nition when Edward I was PTO- L. Yes, every spoonful of Aylmer Tomato Soup is brimming over with real tomato flavor . . . seasoned just right and blended with golden table butter and other fine ingro- dienta. Your best buy for flavor and IlloohAylma-TQIMQBQ Ewryone says. "illylmer sure knows its tomatoes" QIIOIOOIOIIOOIOOOOOIIOOOOOOOIOQCQ_OOIQOQUUCQIIOQ ##5- egcrmw/ A little goes a long my, when you get luch real tomato flavor! And Aylmer Tomato Catsup i; just what you need to make pot roast, and other cheaper cuts of meat, taste like an expensive dinner! - |l"$ AYLMER FOR ronaro mics .vi were em/"W! Hold up a glue of Aylmar Tomato Juiootothelighfmmandlooite glowing color and richer consistency] Then you'll know why than’: no much real tomato flavor in every sip . . . why you get more for your money in Aylma- Tomato Joins! . claimed King, although he was absent on n crusade. when his father died. This accession. in- cidentally, also established for the first time the theory that the throne is never vacant. Although the throne was seized ‘on a number of occasions between the reigns of Edward and Henry VIf, the hereditary principle was never entirely ignored. and each monarch attempted to prove that the crown was his by right of in- herltance. _ Fortunately for Elizabeth the throne today is not the center of strife. For never has a crown been more plentifully supplied with heirs than Britain is right now. There are more than 120 direct descendants of Queen Victoria. ivlthout resorting to the descend- ants of her uncles. the Dukes of Cumberland and Cambridge. The line of succession goes into most of the royal families of Europe. The system of descent is simple and logical: King's children first. brothers taking precedence over sisters. Then King's brothers and sisters, the children of the elder brother having first rights. 'I‘hen King George's sister's children. Then Queen Victoria's second son's descendants. Then her third son's descendants. Then the eldest sister's descendants (that is where the Hohenzollerns come in) and so on. Out of all these. Princess Eliza- beth has prior claim. It is doubtful whether the Ja- cobite cause might again become a political aspiration of the descend- ants of James If, who abdicated in 1688. About the time King Edward VII came to the throne, Enl-lllsh Jacobltes were rather active. They published a list of all those per- sons who could claim the throne but for the Act of Succession. That document made out that Ellen's Diary (Continued From Page 2) had gone to town with Rob and Karolyn to see. I found it amus- ing, but I fancied that much in the book which had been good was 10st in the screen treatment. Of course it was not meant to show any of the delights of farming but ratha" the opposite was in- tended: the inconveniences, the monotony of the work and its ac- tual labor which the city girl ex- pected to, and did find in her new and different environment. These were all there. But in unsuspected places and not wholly with an im- partial eye, I found its niceties. In ‘the enthusiastic chicken farmer; ‘in the snug and very habitable farm house- when repairs had been made; in the kindness, not the queerness of the neighbors. "And they don't come any better any- where than Ma. Kettle" I over- heard someone say; in the friend- ly community gatherings and I think I quite fell in love with the Fall Fair. The lack ‘of city eon- veniences was obvious: The wood range battered and clumsy but s- kin to our old stove of blessed memory! The oil lamps shedding s ring of mellow light and-was’ it? water from the spring. O O O And though I hope I live to see the day when modern conven- iences in the way of heat, light, and water, may be enjoyed in the most isolated farmstead on The island, I recall now that one of the happiestmnd wisest women it has ever been my good fortune to‘ know, carried many s pail of wat- er from a spring down n hill, heat- i " " l. 921.2251‘ _30.‘_i947 T Royal Lino: soon to be a bride, someday to be a queen, Princess Elizabeth's claim to the throne of England is unchallenged, although no crown has ever been more plentlfully supplied with heirs. What determ- ines her rlght? This is the second of two dispatches tracing Eliza- beth's role in English royal in- heritance. L; -»-.~»‘»......-.»; AT, THE KING'S RfGi-IT: A month before her wedding, brlde-to-be Rllh Qucen-to-be Elizabeth rides in the royal coach to Parliament to sit beside her father and view the traditional formality with which she herself someday will have to deal, some 508 persons might claim Hoof mil-ope except those of Albania, better right to the throne than Queen Victoria's son. including the then infant Prince Carol of Romania and nil the ruling princes FAQ-Q? ~:.-- w <1» oe-vrw-"ot-jao Better English 5 DWC. Williams Q c»: ;.‘""_'.\>. w" - . 1-’ .. qm-A- nqg‘ 1. Wliut is wrong wit-h this sen- tence? "We plan on spending our vacation in the mountains." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of "Aloscowi"? 3. Winch one of these words ls misspelled? Bazaar, batallion, bas- slnet. 4. What does the word "ineon- sistcnt" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with pu that means “pertaining to the lungs"? ANSWERS 1. Say, "We plan to spend our vacation in l-lic mountnl-ns." 2 Pru- nounce mos-ko, first 0 as in of, sec- ond o us in no. accent first syllable. 3. Battalion 4. Not agreeing wi‘ itself or something else: contrncjrz- tory. “Wisdom and virtue are far from behig inconsistent with pol- iteness and good humor." -— Addi- son. 5. Pulmonary. Montenegro and Monaco. The list also included Patrick Hennessey. the brandy king. Chief of those DOROTHY IIIX SAYS- clalmants was .. _ ,3‘ After Elizabeth, Princess garet (left), then the m,“ brother. Duke of Gloucester. .. .. .. Then the King's sister. in, cess Mary (left), and 120 descend- ants of Queen Victoria. a the German prince who traced hl| descent from Charles f-Prlnco Rupprecht. of Bavaria. The First World War rather dampened ti“ Jacobltes’ ardour for this claimant, and for a time it seemed that the Jacobite: would go out. of lJIISlIlESI. But when the war ended. m, Jacobites revived. This did my mean that the most fanatic of them regarded the cause as one that could ever succeed. or that any of them were even faintly n15. loyal to the King. ft merely meant that they intended to hon. or the injunction of the hiartyr King upon the scaffold. But n Jacobite rival to Print cess Elizabeth is not. anticipated. Ir. normal circumstances she will sit. on the throne. !n the past. Britain has pro- gressed farthest under a queen Under Queen Elizabeth Britain first took herplace as the world's dominant power. Undrr Anne Britain was regarded. through m; genius of Marlborough, as the most formidable military power in Christendom. Under Victoria Brit- ain grew rich and powerful, to be regarded as the greatest country on earth. And under Elizabeth? Time will tell. (Continued mom Page z) mlration over her, she considers herself a poor, neglected, cruelly-used wife. hncl weeps accordingly. Now the strange thing about this craving for perpetual love-making that women have is that they believe it to be a strictly feminine char- acferlstic, and they do not even suspect. that men also possess it. And this perhaps explains why so many marriages that should have been successes are failures. For while the wife KXIOWS that she will perish of heart hunger unless her husbands feeds he: on cake and, at least. gives her an occasional bonbon in the way of a compliment, she ignores the fact. that he also ha: a sweet tooth and craves pie just as much as she does. It ls true that the average husband drops all lovemaking at the altar, but that isn't because he ls less fond of his wife than he was of his sweetheart. lle has just transferred the roles and it is up lo the wife to become the lover, and as long as she pours her adoration upon him and makes lilm feel that he is the king of her universe, no siren can ever take him from her. Men have to keep up n certain face. They have to pretend to be big and strong and self-contained, but it is a pose. .What they really want is to be fussed over and babied and for their wives to ac‘. foolish over them. They want their wives to tell them how handsome they are. nnc.‘ to brag about their exploits. and to show them off in public, and to believe they are going to dle every time they have a headache. For husbands. just as much as wives, want a love that. expresses itself in words as well as deeds. ed it in iron pots and a kettle over a hardwood fire, washed lines of attractive pieces with no other nid than n. washboard and a square of home-made soap, reared her fine family and never asked for any better life. She found time too to attend to many good ,work| in church and community, and that home only modest, was so balmy that many a visitor found their‘ way to its door. “Happiness. Ellen?" Aunt Kitty Mulroney used to say "you'll never find it if you go far and wide searching for it. Nor will you find it by sitting and Jlghlng for some one to fetch it to you. Nor in grieving for things you'll never get. No child if you'll just use the eyes The Good Lord gave you you can always find it right where you are!" O O And Jamie? Jamie has been tome today helping Karolyn har- vest the carrots and such, and this afternoon, when the wind that had been so blustery became kind- er. he was hoeing tops off the‘ tur- nlps, continuing a work which Rob was at in his "over-time", when not engaged at the grading up at the other fsnn, preparing for the turnip harvesting, next _ in line. And now James and Mr. 0. from the house on the hili have come indoors to compare notes on their seasonal work. Until tomorrow - Diary --Good- night. IDNDON — (UP) —— Inndon’: first prefabricated been erected on the blitled site of a Roman Oatholle church at lei-ls- s-ia. _._ .. .~. .a. "ah-ma. _ church has i in that delicate texture in all baked dishes. and you will roo. Get that spells real success king resu Q Bake a cake with Magic and win compliments galore: You just can't beat pure, wholesome Magic for that light and luscious flavor; Canada's leading cookery experts recommend it- Magic next time you bake-Q you'll never be without it.