Timely Advice fly Geode: uldaay Smith) KEEP GOING — It is no trouble at all to have a clean. well grow- ing garden, if one spends a little time on the job right now. The weeds are small and easily de- stroyed. The soil is moist and quick- ly cultivated. Thinning and tram- planting are done with a minimum of worry and effort. A few minutes with a cultivator or spade at this season of the year will save hours later on. with "both flowers and veget- ables. the best plan is to have the bed thoroughly cultivated or dug before any planting is done and the soil worked up to the fin- est possible tilth. In early spring this is soon done and particularly before the seeds are sown and have started to sprout. After this thorough preparation, it is a com- paratively simple matter to run over the whole plot or bed once ii week with a light cultivator and this routine will keep the garden flourishing. KEEP PLANTING — Another point on \\l‘llrh too much emphasis cannot be laid is to continue plant- ing. It is much better to plant a little every week for a month or so than to try and get everything in at once. There is no good reason why most vegetable and a lot of flowers cannot be planted for many weeks yet and this gradual planting will produce far more satisfactory results tnan sowing or setting out al‘. at once. The vegetable garden partictiiarly. , should be planted gradually with only a portion of the carrots. beets, beans, com. etc. soon at one Lime. In the flower line. experienced gardeners will sow such things as zinnias. petunias. asters. cosmos and other annuals in little plots here. and there in the flower gar- den. When these come up they wil: leave only a few plants in the original position and transplant the surplus to other parts of the garden. Handled carefully, these ‘Tm-‘plants will come along almost as QlllI'l(l_\' as those left untouched and thus a large flower garden can be planted at trivial cost. AVOID THESE -— The three corn. For Gardeners too thick and too deep. These fundamental Wl.I'n.lI'l§3 reier to seed planting. The average person is in- clined to start too soon, to plant while there is still danger of sharp frost. One should read the direc- tions on the seed pat-ket or the seed catalogue carefully. Little is gained and much risked by rush- ing the season. Seed is usually small but the plants produced from that seed may be several feet tall. Bear- ing this in mind, we should spread seed thinly. never closer than an inch or so. and even when so spaced. most things will require rigid thinning later on. And almost every one is inclin- ed to plant for too deeply. With tiny seed such as that of lettuce. cai1'ol.s. cosmos. ziniiias. puppies. and alyssum, which are not much larger than the head of a pin or shingle nail. it is not necessary to cover at all. We sow these in the finest. soil and merely press in. Then. if possible. we keep the soil dampened until germination starts. With larger seeds such as nastur- tiums. peas, beans and corn. one should cover lightly, say a Quarter to half inch. With bulbs or corns of gladioius. dahlias. or potatoes, one plants four to eight _lnches deep. IN HI-IAVY SOIL — Germinating seeds and roots do not like air. Hence in any seed bed one should have the soil as fine as possible. raking several times or cultivi-iting thoroughly to break up the lumps. Then after the seed is sown, the soil should be pressiad down firm- ly and if it is not moist, it is a grind plan to water thorouglily. but care- fully. to avoid washing out the seed or covering it to deeply. In moist. fine. warm soil. germina- tion will start quickly. In very heavy still sometimes it is hardly possible to create this situation and experts advise a lit- tle extra effort especially where fine seed is sown or things like carrots and parsnips which are most difficult to germinate. With these it is an excellent plan to dig I shallow trench and fill with special fine. rii-li soil i'i'om the compost heap. Where this prac- monrist mistakes made by amateur iardeiiers are planting too soonf .._. __. How Can I? By Anne Ashley Q Should new rubber rings al- Wfiyé be used when canning?‘ ' A. Yes. as ii is false economy to! use old ones. Rubber rings deter- iorate. so new ones should be pur- chased at the canning season, even. thouizh some were left over from last season. l Q flow can I save time when measuring dry and liquid ingred-’ ienrs? A_. The methodical housewife Will have two measuring cups or. hand. one for wet ingredients and one for dry. It will save. much time. Q. How can -I clean woolen shawls? A. Wash in warm soapsuds to Whifih DOWdered- borsx is added. Rinse well and dry slowly. "*“(’lM’lIw .-gi . I).-1/1, , ,. ‘ .5 and 51-4’ :73,‘ Q’ INTYsizi: Dfimlggrras tice is followed carrots will germ- inate and grow almost without thinning. BREAD AND BUTTER PICKLLS 6 quarts small cucumbers l to Ila inches in diameter 1 quart small white onions 4 green peppers 1 sweet red pepper 1 cup table (bag) salt or 1% cups coarse salt I cups water I cups vinegar 4 cups augar I tablespoon turmeric I teaspoon mimtard seed l teaspoon celery seed. Wash all vegetables. Slice cucum- bers and onions thinly. Removi- seeds and dice peppers. Make it birine of the salt and water. Cool and pour over vegetables. Let stand over night. Drain thoroughly. Combine vinegar, sugar and spices. Bring to boil and add vege- tables. When thoroughly l1<"flll’(l. pack in hot. sterilized jars and seal. Yield: about 6 quarts. ——Mrs. Charles Reid. I Suffolk W. I. Coated Marshmallows Melt two barii of toffee in a double boiler. to which add a little milk and butter to make the “"96 lliithily thinner in con. Si-9lv€nC.V. Drop approximately 30 marshmallows into this liquid, WHH1 i-My are coated, place them 111’ l_/1>aper bag containing rice crispies or fine coconut and shake Two bars of toffee will make 20 coated marshmallows. Anne Adams Patterns , DEF-as on l'INAl-‘ORE I M°m- POD her into pinafores! Most practical for summer ._ "MY T’ 3 snap to sew. iron in a jiff_v!_ Use remnants for thrift _. °°mbm€ Plaid ‘ii’ plain cotton. Make two or three with pant];-3 to match almost as quickly as one. She'll wear them all summer. Pattern 4616: Children's Slit-5 3. 4. 6. 8. 10. Size 6 dress 13,’; yards 35-inch: panties 7- yard. This pattern easy to us¢_ gm. pie to sew. is tested for fit. Hes complete illustrated instructions. 59"“ Thirty-nve cents (350) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this Plttem. Print plainly like. N"m¢- Addfeli SW18 Number. Send order to ANNE ADAMS 1/0 The Guardian. so Front Street Wall. Toronto. Ontario. m l Morning Smile lawyer: "You soy you want to get a divorce on the grounds that your husband is careless lbout his esipearanoe?" client: "Yes. he hasn't shown up in nearly two years." KING Efllli TITZX Swallowing Poison First Aid and Home Nursing (St. John Ambulana) Quick work is necessary to save the life of a person who has swal- lowed poison. says St. John Am- bulance. Every moment's delay means that more of the poison is being absorbed into the system. Call a doctor immediately. tell him brief- ly what is wrong, and then take steps to get rid of the poison. First of all_ don't waste time trying to find out what poison was ta|ten—-chances are you would not have the right antidote handy anyway. Try to induce vomiting by tickling the back of the patient’: throat with a spoon or two fingers. If this doesn't work give him a tumbler of water containing two tablespoons of salt. Vomiting, however. should not be induced when the patient is unconscious or when the lips and mouth are burned. An antidote — one pint of milk is the simplest -- should be given next, except when the patient is unconscious. If milk is not avail- able, then a pint of water may be given. Water won't neutralize the poison but it does dilute it. Although to each type of poi- son has its own antidote, milk or water, is the best antidote for an untrained person to remember for general use. 0 I 0 Here are four other rules for the treatment of poisoning: 1. Place an unconscious patient in the prone position with the face turned to one side and not resting on a pillow. The prone posi- tion also facilitates the start of 'dl‘ldllClal respiration. 2. Start artificial respiratioii in- stantly if the breathing is feeble or unduly slow. Keep it up until a doctor takes charge. 3. Preserve for the doctor any remaining poison and any vomited matter. 4. Do not give any laxatives such as caster oil. Remember. the most lmpoflanl thing to do when someone nai- lows poison is to summon a doc- tor as quickly as possible. Household Scrapbook By Roberta Loo Maltreca Stains rlothee Drying Siiiisliino is more desirable in drying clothes than a high wind. since sunshine both sweetens and bleaches them. while a high wind may tear the clothes and will take the stiffness out of starched goods. The Polished Table OMEN Page 8 The Guardian Wednesday, May 12, 1954 If paper sticks to the polished surface of a table. it can be remov- ed by softening with olive oil and then rubbing with ti soft cloth. Paint Bnsah To soften a used paint brush. boil it in vinegar. If the brush is very full of paint, boil it the second time. ' The Stars Say By Eatrelllta For 'I‘omorrow ON this day, the lunar vibra- tions are excellent for all house- hold matters. Renovating and iii- terior decorating plans started now should culminate most successfully and any purchases made for home use should prove satisfactory. Real estate matters are also favored. Do what you can to promote happiness and congenislity in your home. Go out of your way to dis- play affection to those near and dear to you and. regardless of pos- sible confusion around you. keep the emotions at a steady levti. If tomorrow is your birthday, you are now in the midst of an excel- lent cycle from both a professional and financial point of view and. since your horoscope assures ihe co-operation of those in a position to aid you, you have great reason for optimism. Personal relationships should prosper during most of 1054. and travel and romance will be under particularly beneflcent aspects dur- ing the summer months, For the Birthday Ari inclination to splurge socially may cost you more than it is worth during November and December. In fact. it would be extremely wise to watch finances in general during that period and to take no risks that might reap future hardship. If faced with any‘ problun in- volving monetery matters then, seek constructive criticism and ex- pert help. A child born on this day will be intelligent, self~confldent and Ii]- gresslve. . Miss Byline Battle’ ' I Houseflies Gets Tougher !(ON'I'R.IAL. OP) —- An expert said Monday battle against the common house is being won—by the flies. Dr. Ralph '1. Heat, executivo secretary of the National Pest control Association, said files have managed to build up a general resistance against all specially developed insecticides. i«:LL1:N's DIATRY ‘ by an Iahld Pu-iur‘| Wla .:'=:°..:;°°'.:. tr. --mi - an iv - i:-..";: .2: mm -‘°"“ ‘"5 :"“nh‘l“’:'“':“‘“v Much she must have done to sum springtide oi the year. in the lova- of ‘cod nvmm um “cum, m I. ly season of promise. there ap- with more and less we.ra- ‘um ‘M and mm. ‘M ”" own tune. Veg withhes-!anIytodth.,. ..Aw°. main 0! dignified hearing, .',“ “she hath done what shl ooulq. on this old world and teach it w.,, mambared our-helpful vol“ ,. “When DDr was introduced view. "But the fly built up resistance to the stuff. have resisted each in turn." there now is "some hope" in new drug called inalathion. _DOR0’I‘HY DIX Poison: Pen Episode been told I don‘t look evenings when he's not home. was advised to watch me since pant wedts. DF.SER.\' ES PRAISE few years ago we thought we had ,4 on" we moum_ the answer," he said in .an inter- - o - “We switched to chlorinated hy- human gm Jgwgfleq Q1. mm. drocarbomi Iuch II l1Ddl-fl¢- Chlffi‘ pond and caressed the spire of the dime uni deildrin but the flies 01;; K1,]; .; mg Wm" u ,-ad‘. Dr. Hell. here $0 add!“ I "°n‘ against the sky's sapphire blue. ference of the Canadian Pest Con- W. um. to ‘mend . gun“-g] "1-. ts-oi Operators‘ Associltiolh “id visa for a mother, departed. We The CODJPOUDG. d¢V€1°P¢d "Om merit such a passing brings. If aged. a chemical group used by the Ger- W, men “mam”, our gender “.1 mans during the war. has been mawrma nu, Wynn plum, H. reduced to a from that kills flies exceedingly du, um I, w¢h_ me but d0!-189" hlrm hum“ b°"‘55- added wisdom and charm of their “However if- hill 00 be “Md WW‘ westering lives, enriched. beauti- caution and we still are stressing flu‘ by um Mug“ 0; ;,,me_ elimination of breeding grounds." DEAR MISS DIX: I am 35 and the mother of six children. from 2 to 16 5"” of we’ 1 havilofgfél this mother of a large family must My husband is a wonderf person. good provider, intelligent, and has a highly skilled job. He works nights every other mont.h and, since I have many friends and social connections. 1 often go via- iting for a few hours on those When I go out, I dress well, since I always try to keep up my appearance. Now, to the pro- blem. l..ast month my husband re- ceived a letter signed, "Good friend and neighbor" in which he looked so attractive when I went out. My husband passed the let- . W: on as .. joke‘ but I know it which had given her to I. rather has him worried from a few snide remarks he him let drop in the new‘ Mm 1" stead of the flower-covered casket. ings those hsrvesungs which take I to their far Home. iriends sud lov- I This afternoon, when the May- iun picked out the green on the ing Iieavenward it rested prettily I came remembering that age has nothing to do with the bereave- One full of years this mother was. indeed one who had lived long beyond life's alloted span . . . And as we sat there. waiting a moment for the service to begin mundane thoughts came to mind. Or were they altogether worldly. because in mothers’ lives so often we see the two. earth and i-leaveii mixed. How tireless. we thought.i have beeni How many little gowns she must have fashioned in her young days—-and garb for her small onesi How many times she in her busy round must have stop- ped to sympathize with and smooth away children’: concerns! And did she not try to peer into the future then as mothers \\‘ll. ..nu I). i accompanying petitions as their bedtime prayers were iieiiig SHAH.’ This a young mother of years vanished now. replaced by an age little skin. was one much admir- ed. and respected in the com- munities about. And so it was fit- ting that after an absence of years I distant community. she came back today to scenes she once’ well It was our privilege to see in- she who came in the olden years amazing ' DGW bring old neighbors and friend. and new in a large gathgnw ‘‘ pay a last tribute to ffibpecg’ h recall her gifts and grace. at hm‘ and heart. 0 O 0 Not dead our hearts. ‘Until tomorrow — ._ _ _ ml" —----060d-n1s'iit..... mm 4' if’: A 4 % here! ‘.1 *3R but by music Gothic’: aitdinlw new °fla¢I¢h controe9s...expoodI...iIocld|. loved one; M They came back to Is d|1Iy_ N we go to them with reverent .1. faction when we look upon the“ faces in the secret place: of W Seventeen-year-old .lr-an Hunter. Toronto collegiale student. was chosen Miss Byline of 1954 at the Byline Ball in Toronto attended by newspaper men and women from across Canada. She won out over 19 other contestants. Prizes included A week's holiday at an Ontario summer resort. The hall is staged annually hy the Toionio Men‘: Press Club and the Canadian Women's Press Club.--((‘I' Photo). That Body of Yours By James W. Barton, M. D. CANCER OF LUNG INCREASING The wars caused so many cases of stomach ulcer and stomach cancer that many of us may have the idea that cancer of the stom- ach is still the commonest kind of cancer. It may therefore surprise some that cancer of the lungs is today responsible for most cases of cancer. Thus we read in Geriatrics, the medical journal devoted to "Research and Clinical study of the Diseases and Processes of the most recent studies of Bronchog- enic Carcinoma «cancer of the lungi as presented by Drs. Alton Oschner. Paul di Camp. and 0.]. Ray of the staff at the Oschiicr Clinic and Foundation Hospital, New Orleans. “Bronchogenlc cancer is in- creasing more than any other cancer in the body, which cannot be ac- counted for entirely because. men and women live so much longer than ever before although naturally cancer of the lung is primarily a disease of older people." In a series of 1.112 seen at the Clinic. 38 per cent were in their seventies. 30 per cent. in their sixties. 19 per cent between 40 and 49. 5 per cent between 30 and 39. in this series. 89 per cent. of the pa- tients were men and only 11 per cent were women. There were about an equal number of whites and colored. These cancer resarch workers. re- port that it is the complications of lung cancer that oaiise most of the symptoms. It is only when there Contlniiedr on pageufl A u» ? '/ 0 ICE cum : a R I c K 3 ‘J DEL/C/Of/5.’ Wednesday Morning Specials THIS YEAR'S STOCK 4 Evening Gowns. Stills and 8 Fitted Cools, Less 38 1/8 per cent. I-Iouiiecoats, soiled, 102 Great George st. Spring Dresses and last year summer Dresses Greatly Reduced. All other Coats and Suits Less 20% Other Specials Not Listed. ooeoeeetuanrceeso W eceeccosaeeseeecoeseseea 8llll'l'Ell’8 LADIES’ WEAR Greatly Reduced. Dial 0881., ANSWER: You deserve nothing but commendation for bringing up a good-sized family without losing all outside contacts or your ap- pearance. That‘s no easy accom- piishment. -The writer of the let- ter was undoubtedly someone so inadequate and so mean that the sight of another's efficiency is gaillng to an insufferable point. No matter how one tries to shrug off these despicable anonymous letters. the venom they carry seems PAINT A ROOM ,.i W W Gives you wondcrlul Iplfl ply. all-day eoiiifou. It-oodeletii, nth, nylon. Sizes s2-as — $2.50 And ask for Entry Blanks for oil GOTHIC BIA OONTESI‘ The FASHION SHOP? 141 Great George st. 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