HERE WE COME AGAIN! Enchanting young fashion is por- trayed by the little Fair Lady. Peggy Chandler who is party bound. Her frock is a halierinh blue crystalette beamed with gold check Varsity jacket with patch thread and is worn over a minia-lpockets. worn with brown flannel ture crinoline. The Peter Pan col- Iiar is quainlly edged with Val lace. repeated in the pretty little. saucy, little. hat. Alan Prowse is quite the super- ishorts. bly tailored young man in his i.ET'S EAT Here's How To Organize Your Canned Foods Stock By IDA BAILEY ALLEN "A well-arranged supermarket or food store displays rnrrcspond- , upside down pie or together for convenience and eye-appeal. The lng types of foods cereals are tmlether; then Jams. jellies and preserves; flavorings. spices and seasonings: and can- ned goods of various kinds. ”ls there any reason why this system cannot be followed in the average home. Madame?" "None whatever, Chef. lt mer- arrangement and ingenuity make sufficient stnr2IR9 Spire available SET ASIDE SECTION "For instance canned goods are oftcn just stuck in every avail- able corner of the food cabincts. 'lis a far better plan to set aside 1 rcriain section of a food cabinet 'oi' them, or if wall space is avail- aliic. tiny 1li"lal or uoorlen storage shelves in hang on the wall or stand on the floor to hold them. "Or, if you own the house In which you live, build a set of shel- ves into the wall at waist level or lower, with shelves at varyinil intervals to hold cans of different heights. Then the canned goods may be arranged so they can in quickly use d. without hunting. reaching on tiptoe or standing up on a ladder to get them." The canned foods needed in pre- paring the following menu include vegetable juice. green chillies. s and pineapple chunks - a mpml, nutritious time-and-money aaving assortment well within the average food budget- Monday dinner: Snappy with DAILY PATTERN an inexpensive set ofl ' lahie juice curry and chopped beef; 4 green peas; tossed lettuce salad; iapple: cofee. tea or milk. l All measorements are level; re cipes proportioned to serve 4 to ii. in a l Curry of Chopped Beef: ilarge frying pan. barely cook I4 lib. mashed sausage meat: drain. Add l lb. chopped beef. 2 sliced ipeelcd medium-size onions and 2 mashed canned green chillies. -Saute 10 min. 42 01.! can sliced mushrooms and liquid. Stir in i 4No. 2! can to- mato. l c. boiling water and 1 beef bouillon cube. Transfer to a low casserole. 3Cover. Bake 40 min- in a moder- ate oven. 350 degrees F. Uncover to brown. Border with hot canned peas. Spicy Pineapple Upside - Down jPie: C-enerotisly rtih with btitter or margarine an ii” square bak- iing dish that can go to table. To the contents 1 1N0. 21 can pineapple chunks and liquid. stir in V4 c. sugar. 1 tsp. grated lemon rind and la tbsp. flour blended with i tbsp. cold water. Dot with 1 tbsp. butter. Top with rich biscuit crust roll if 'thick. Brush with melted but- ter; dust with in tbsp. sugar. Bake 35 min. in a moderate to hot oven. 3'15-400 degrees F- Rich Biscuit Crust: To 2 c. bis- cuit mix. add 1 tbsp. sugar and V4 c. shortening. Chop in with a pas- try blender. Mix in V; c. cold water. Roll out and use as di- rected. Trick of the Chef: Season vegetable juice to taste with Worcestershire. a dash of Ta- basco and prepared horseradish. Chill 8) min. ANCIENT ART A type of ballet was known to primitive races in semi-reliqious dances centuries before Christ. spicy pine- arnaon's TORONTO tCPl-Canada's wig- makers-thera are about a dozen .u. doing a big business mak- ing anything from patches to long bobs for women. "Forty thousand -. Irg ill- cluded among M000 Canadian: who are either bald or victims of thinning hair," says Hampua Nel- son. a Toronto wig-maker. ' Mr. Nelson. with 27 years ex perience in the trade. believes the stigma attached to hairpieces is disappearing. Some of his woman clients don wigs for evening wear. What makes a woman go bald? D.-, A. L, Hudson, ; Toronto der- matologist. attributes baldness to tension and the fast P599 0' mod- ern life. He says it could even be hereditary. NATURAL LOOK Wig-making came into its own in this country. Hair was first in)- ported from Japan and China but now European sources are more popular as wig-makers find hair there of a finer texture. g So natural looking are wigs to day. they are hard to tell from ones iovin lresses. Advances in styling hairpiet-es and the easy possibilities of changing color keep wig-wearing women in the Wig-making is A Thriving Industry, For Dozen Or So ahriluio with Irvnrd - combed curls an in the "poodle" cut. in order to guarantee a natural-loolo in van line he inaerta hair in- dividually on top of the wig. 3! Iitlchtns Ivrinzl. he inalm I iouliee fit llkeia glove. It takes 150.000 strands of hair to make a W11 large 900031! to cover the av- erage head. For a patch or hair- plecc he measures head also. get: the pattern and matches the color with niiladyis skin and eyes. CARRY SPARES If you're a toupee wearer, keep two. says Mr. Nelson. Prices range anywhere from 375 to 5275. To keep them looking trim. they should be cleaned. blocked and dreucd every three weeks. This entails dousing the hairpiece in cleaning fluid. washing and set- ting it on a head form. Women today are not "touchy" about wigs he believes. He thinks men are the touchy ones and on the whole more particular. He says many women let their hair grow for the express. purpose of selling it. It brings as much as 316 a pound. Hair braids. chlgnona and switches are made from this. As to hair-restoring methods. Mr- Nelson says "when it's gone. it's gone and there is nobody who fashion parade- the Mr. Nelson camouflage: can make it grow." PEIPING tlieutersl - Among the 621 delegates to the recent ses- sion of the national committee of the Chinese People's Political Con- sultative Conference was a youth-, ful-looking grandmother. Madamet 'Tung Tsan-chun. l J She came from Shanghai to her first meeting of the conference asi one of the representatives ot' the an achronisms of Communisti China. the self-made capitalist. Madame Tung looks an attrac- tive 40. wears a beautifully tail-L ored blue-black suit with high-I heeled shoes and uses just a touch of makeup on her unlined face. She is 53 and has five children the eldest of whom is 36. MARRIED AT 16 She dismissed the subject of her husband whom she married when only iii with the statement: "I di- vnrced him 20 years ago. He was a soldier." Then she told how she ran the highly-successful Cathay Restaurant in Shanghai for many years so she could give her child- ren a good education. Wealthy Grandmother Sits On Chinese Communist Body Before the Communists came to power, the restaurant was popu- lar with foreigners and is still noted for the high quality of its food- A successful husinesswoman with a sure financial touch. she has made a great deal of money and is the mother of a gifted fam- ily. INFORMATIVE FORUM Madame Tung's presence as one of the representatives of capital- ists who say that they follow the lead of the Chinese Communist party in building a "strong social- ist China" is an indication of the role played by the conference. i It is a body which represents 'practically every strata. Minority nationality, religious sect and l group in China. It has branches all ,over the country and its national icommittee. which meets once a year. is in some ways a forum 'where the government and Com- imunist party can propnund poli- cies and judge the reactions of l various sections of the community. Heligolanders By PETER. JOHNSON HELIGOLAND, West Germany titeuterst-Some of the people on ithe Island of l-leligoland have de- icided to fight for the right not to 'have tiled bathrooms, electric ;kitchens and other modern lux- ' uries. They are making plans to hold 'a ”plehiscite" aimed at stopping treconstruction plans under which modern boarding houses are springing up to replace the quaint, if a little unhyglentic, tishermen'a village destroyed during and after the war. Dr. Eduard Uterharck. presi- dent nf the islands' association, told rcpoters recently: "Whether we can afford it or not, we are forced to have tiled bathrooms, electric kitchens and other luxur- ies built Into the new houses." Reconstruction on Heilgoland, a red-stone island about 40 miles off the mainland in the North Sea, began in 1952. So far. about 120 houses have been built and about 300 islanders have returned. Dr. Uterharck, who lived in Hamburg for many years. said in an interview: "Do people really want to return at all to this eit- perlmental place for Architects who have gone wild. where the roofs reach down to the earth. windows are fixed slanting in the Battle Against l Modern Bathrooms, Kitchens ely depends on a sense of orderp Add 2 tsp. curry powder, 1 isp.ll lofsalt, 3 tbsp. uncooked rice and at trap or a Kaffir kraal'.'” Other islands criticized the pits- tel shadt-s of the new houses which. they say. give a falsely Mediterranean air to the land- scape. independent observers are skep- tit-al about any effect a plebiscite would have on reconstruction plans. since an official poll con- dttctcd among islanders who have returned indicates that the major- ity ars in favor of the "new look.” The planners, led by Professor Otto Bartning. one of West Ger- many's leading architects. say most objectors probably won't re- turn to the island anyway. They explain the long roofs of the new houses. which in some cases slope from the third storey at the front to the first at the back. as being designed to give more sunlight to rows of houses behind- Tbe island was given back to West Germany in I952 when the Royal Air Force, which had used it as a bombing range since 1945, fotind another site. That was the second time that Heligoland had passed from British into German hands. The island was a British colony between H107 and 1890, when it was ceded to Germany in exchange for Zanzibar. ln is:ioT-tihtidmi wi-Tv)EiEiTg described by all sensible people as an Eskimo igloo. a plthead. a bird New bound! walls and the future church is, is hours daily, with a half-hour threak. in woollen mills in Eng- ' land. kind OF 000K BOOK for girls 7 to M 48 pagoaolfnn-full rocipu in a eltildioavnlanguaplbright. pit.-heel Big.claar printl &:iraI Eanda ml Wdtobh neon-J it cyan.--- Page 10 Guardian ' r TI1u,rsday.iAprilg18.1957 Is An Honored mer Temple No. 32. Py- iii:3"ii:te...yu-is honoujd in hav- ing Mrs. Margaret Casey of (k- tom. N.S., District Deputy Grand Chief, make her official visit on April 15th. She was accompanied by Mrs. Hilda Wood. P-G-C IMI several other members from Ox- ford. The M. E. C. Mrs. Marion Buell presided at the meeting. Al- FIAMPSIIIRE W.I. The regular meeting of the Hampshire W.l. was held at the home of Mrs. Ralph Edwards on Tuesday etching April 8th. In the absence of the president Mrs. Ralph Yotinker. the vice-prel. Mrs. Everett Clow occupied the chair. The meeting opened by rinsing the "institute ode" and repeating the ”Crecd" in unison. The Roll call was responded to with 8 members and l visitor present, followed by the reading of minutes of the previous in which were aPl3l'0V9d- A business discussion then took place. The Red Cross convcncr reported on the sewing which is almost completed. Mrs. Ralph Edwards il to have door price for next card party. Mrs. George Kitson in to purchase a gift. The next meeting is to be at the home nf Able Edwards. the roll call to be answered with an exchange of flower slips or needs. The committees then gave their Mrs. Margaret Casey Guest to present was Mrs. Brady. P.G.S. A future of tho evening was the exemplilication of the instal- lation of Ollcera. conducted by Mrs. Margaret Brady an Installing Officer. lllllled by Ian. Edith Taylor and Mrs. Josephono Dal- zlel. Mn. Casey spoke very nice ly on the teachings of the Order. Mrs. Wood spoke briefly as did several other memhe . and visit- ors. A gift was presented to Mrs. Clsey on behalf of the Temple. At- ter the meeting a very enjoyable social hour was spent over the tea- cups. Margaret from the last card party was 82425 The lunch committee for the! May meeting will be. Mrs. Ray- mond Tremere. Mrs. Hadley Mac- Pherson and Mrs. Ralph Edwards The Programme is to be under the, direction of Mrs. John Clark. The correspondenc was read and discussed It was moved andl seconded that 32.00 be given tol the Easter Seal Campaign. The: collection was taken up amount-l ing to .95 cents and the Gift Fund, 36 cents. , It was moved that the meeting be adjourned followed by singing" "The Queen". Lunch was served by the Hostess assisted by Mrs. Hilbert Tremere and Mrs. John Clark. - -- l LONGEST RIVER '3 The Nile, flowing 4.145 miles; reports and the bill of 33.35 was noved to he paid. the proceeds from Ethiopia to the Mediterran- EABTEE V A ROAST near lb. 39: PORK ci-tors tit. 51: SIDE BACON, lb. 69: BETTY CROCKER CAKEMIX 2for59c APPI.ES....... 5lb.baj59c rarraalou-a nun I-Ac! CHOCOLATES . . lb. pkg. 95: GANONGT ASSORTED - CHOCOLATES lb. pkg. 51.32 savn: 31: NOXZEMA 2for99c our Lnar IONELESS CHICKEN fin 45: ORANGES -. . . . . . . 2 dox.79c - SPECIAL 4: OFF NOW BAG 45: 9.79 25 LB. can, is the world'n longest river.l Comer Grafton & Cumberland VICTOR McKARRlS Free Delivery n Dial 9310 xiftems cO'”"' Quodaia - ' Final--. .,,,, 1.5. t-t:'4itt-ck pd! h. ICC. ":3: 't"' .HmwumnL .. tutiorl N ew! Deliciously different! A Monarch Date Square Mix The only mix with moist dates in the package, ready to spread! EASIESL Mixed in 5 minutes! What an idea for a Date Square Mia-your filling completely prepared! What. could be oui Everybody will love the Invour of the aunt-Q delightful blending etoooonut. rolled oats and purogoldon honoyl Monarch's famed research division was challenged to produm a dilerent and better-tasting date square. They succeeded, hrillintly, with this new Monarch Data Square Mix. Nov: you out niake wonderful new date squares. easily, in minutes. With this Iuperb new Monarch Mix. all your inpatients are right in the package. are single, results are delicious. Try the new Monarch Qe Square Mix right away. 4.- IASIIESL Real titties, riclier ingredients! You get a tin of luscious date Illling ready to be spread-' aavo time and work. and get a better data square! Monarch Duo Squares taato oven Isotlc the aooosul day. So anoint-rich with the Iavour of no! Ilalul Dally Tut: Slat laurel lists an tasks that Monarch Toot Kitchen are qaothuoualy toting Monarch Mixes for you against all others. Not one Monarch Mix ispoasorltillvdro oareitiathetinestaiixyoaoanbuy. positively Cmadah Finest. raid! u Vtwjaaw