u . '(:lfliltl's Bad Breath r. I . timientsrealm was two run ouannun lumen 15, 1951 "rim Body or Your: . D5 W. Inrfon. III. I ' immuta- IIIVINE O BAIHN WITH . HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE i -I lose or the advertisements um ' ea in the mail to all physicians an illustration of a man just past middle-age. shoveling snow. and under the illustration is the word "DDN”I'." The man has high blood pressure. The illustration is advertising the merits of a certain drug whichidilates or opens up the bloodvesseis by releasing the ten- iion on the elastic walls of the bloodlvessels. By opening up or re- laxing the walls. less pressure by the heart is needed to pump the blood through these relaxed ves- sels than when they are tensed. Naturally I cannot mention the drug. not because it is not helpful but because there are other drugs available that will act similarly. However. some of the other advice in the advertising literature may be applied to all cases of high blood pressure and should prove valuable in high blood pressure patients. without interfering with the advice given by their physic- ians. In fact this some advice is given by all physicians in the treatment of thk condition. cultivate sensible living habits. avoiding unnecessary physical and emotional stress. we must all face some physical and emotional stress but we can avoid that which is unnecessary. Donlt worry about your blood pressure and ask your doctor to take it every time you consult him becguse the blood pressure varies hourly even in normal individuals and even more in those with high blood pressure. Real relaxation-mental as well as physical - may decrease the systolic pressure (with cuff tight- ly inflated) as much M 40 mm. and the diastolic pressure (with cuff loosen "-) by 20 mm. While many physicians advise strict dieting or reduction of food. all that is usually needed in high blood pressure is to cut down on table salt in and on foods. To many the trying to follow faithfully a reducing diet would so upset them that it would really increase their blood pressure if they failed to follow a very strict diet. A t” sensible suggestion is in the matter of exercise. Unless there are heart or blood pressure complications such as enlargement of the heart or very high diastolic pressure. light exercise is really advisable. -In doubtful cases. exer- cise such as regular walks or light home or office duties, is advisable. if short rests during the day can be taken. 'wl.th the physician prescribing nhdrug 5. xdfugs to control blood pressure and the patient following sensible living habits. high blood pressure need not be dangerous. :3 I ' often sign of llpset Tummy! lave your doctor's Ulla. For minor dilu- Hva ubsetgchildren so .dtan antler as a res i. of overeating or eating Itoo much candy or Iweats ve Children's Own . new cor- rective for yonnnura 8 03 II. The! Quickly help lwaatnn sournatrnalghs uldsctspood y oe ar out from the bowels. of- fending waste malarial In a gentle. thorough manner. You never know when will Will the help of Children's Own Tadblots ....so apuhgetndayatyour rul- . t. 0'37 SM. Made by the molten of ab 's Own Tablets-your guarantee . A reliable Phduct. L I c”HlLDTBlEiNFIllSSOWN Modern Etiquette i or. noun. as. g - . Q. I sent my employer of is .yean a wedding invitation when .my daughter was married. but never received any reply or ack- nowledgement. was it wrong for me to mail the invitation in the ant place? A. Although business and soc- ial life are not usually Joined. there was not anything at all improper in your sending the invitation. Most certainlynyour employer's neglect or refusal to Inswer the invitation was an ex- treme act of discourtesy. Q. when a hostess passes cig- arettes after a meal. isn't it per- missible for a guest to smoke his own if he prefers to do so? -A. The guest should accept the cigarette offered by his hostess. . Is it considered all right. when eating soup, to break a few soda crackers into it? A. Yes, this is quite all right. s'W Household Scrapbook By loborta us i Potato Soup ?(-ZN-at - 1 3. Sn When making potato soup. peel and dice one large potato. Cook until soft in a pint of water, then run through a sieve and return to the water it was boiled in, add one pint of milk. one teaspoon butter. and salt to taste. Let it come to the boiling point and pour it over one egg which has been beaten. Stir well. serve with crackers. Brushes and Combs A teaspoonful of ammonia added to a quart of water will remove all grease and dirt from bushes, shake. combs. Rinse the brushes. shake. and dry in the sun. Grnined Woodwork Grained woodwork may be very nicely cleaned by rubbing well with linseed oil and then polish- ing with a dry cloth. l : , Cook's Corner &'&& s NN7ON9 EVER READY ROLLS Temperature 425 deg. Yield lit 1 doun. Time 20 minutes. combine: in cup milk. scalded, 16 cup sugar, 3 tablespoons short- ening, teaspoon salt. cool to luke- warm. Add. 1 egg. slightly beaten. to milk mixture. mix well. soften l cake compressed yeast in '3 cup lukewarm water. add to milk mix- ture. Add 3V: cups sifted flour gradually to yeast mixture. blend thoroughly. Knead dough on light- ly floured board until smooth and elsstio-about 5 minutes. Place dough in greased bowl. Cover and let rise in warm place until double in bulk-about 1 hour. Punch dough down, grease top of dough slightly. Cover bowl with slightly dampened towel and wax paper. Tie securely. store in refrigerator until needed. when needed. take from the refrigerator amount of dough required, and punch down. as desired. Cover. and let rise. in a warm place. until double in built (about 2 hours.) Bake in hot oven (425 dog.) for about 20 Valid Obieclion 2 0-lb. Husband Recent: Wife's live-And-Lettuce-Leaf Meals DgAn mpg tux: can anything be done to a wife who has and- denly become a food-fsddist? 1 am a stronl. 100-pounds! Ind Mm: led an-active life. I am all bone and muscles. I have a be-man IP13" d to which. up to now. my wife has catered. But recently she has I ha some sort of a circle and the diet she has picked up there she is try I out on the family dinner table and especially on me. 311! 8011131-llllkl with a hawk'a eye every morsel of food that is in- troduced into my mouth '.lha bread slices are as thin as paper napkins and the butter patties are transparent. I .can't have potatoes if I eat bread. some evenings when I go home after an active day's work all I find is a note sayinc thll 319 35d the children have had their supper and gone In an early'movie and that I'll find my IUPDGI in '-I10 refrigerator. when I open it up. all that I discover are several thin slices of tomatoes and a lettuce leaf - x -'1 guarded on the side with a few ripe black olives. All this is wrecking my home and my wife's nerves and reducins my mental as well as physical powers. Don't you think this diet stuff is all tommyrot? I wish you would tell my wife so. E.P. ANSWER: I certainly do agree with you and am against the whole dict racket. especially as practiced upon husbands by wives. Ursnrs HOME ups: ' It isn't just merely a coincidence that domestic life islnt what it used to be. and that husbands and children wont. stay ist oirine cVl('ll- ings as they did in the deer gone days when women P! 0d him” 35 upon their housekeeping and had never heard of calories. A ays e center of a happy home has been the dining room. Our idea of family life has been father and mother and children gathered around a table that groaped with its lead of good food. But no imagination is strong enoush to picture I happy family gathered about a table sparsely furnished forth with a dab of spinach and a fragile leaf of lettuce or two and some gosh-awful mess war- ranted to be nonfattening but to include the proper vitamins that will sustain life. though why anybody wants to sustain life under such con- ditions remains s mystery only a dietitian can fathom. Of course. it would be all right for a vitamin hound to starve her- self if she wanted to-and the quicker the better-if she could do so without frartyrizing her unfortunate husband and children. and if it didn't reduce her amiability even more drastically than it does her figure; but. alas. such is not the case. when a woman suffers she never wants to suffer alone. 1 can offer you no help in solving your problem On); smipathy. DEAR MISS DIX: My daughter has been going with B YOIIHK mm for some time. I presume they are engaged. Every time he comes over. even if there is company, or if I or the remainder of the family are in the room. she is either playing with his hair or fixing his necktie or touching his cheeks. I don't object to them petting a little but I wish they would do it privately, not when other people are in the room. It is embarrassing to us. MOTHER. ANSWER: Right you are, Mother. and I never see a couple who are doing their lovemaking in public that I do not wonder that they do not realize what figures of fun they are making of themselves and how everyone is laughing at them. But everywhere you see it being done. regardless of how ridiculous it makes the performers or how sick it makes the observers. At. the movies you can hardly keep your mind on the romance depicted on the screen for the snuggicrs who are sitting right in front of you and dis- tracting your attention. On the roads your life is endangered by drivers who are trying to mix kisses with gasoline. ' g And. curiously enough. it is mostly the girls who are indulging in this harmless display of their affections. Mostly the boys are sitting straight as ramrcds with "damn" written all over their faces while the girls are encircling them with their arms. which goes to prove the fact that men have a greater sense of humor than women. For the men at least realize what a laughing-stock they are making of themselves. Surely if girls could know how cheap and common and vulgar they Lf.:::gWl;:l:n they care.-s the boy friend in public they would refrain from H 1:3-AIECMISS DIX? My husband has been called back into the Army. e as en gone three months. My old boy friend from out of town wants to start in where we left off before I married my husband since I may HCVCP See my husband again and I am not getting any younger do you think it would be all right for me to go out with this man? ' 8. M. R ANSWER: Well. I think you are about the most easily consoled V:ggwklng-::.towgegnggnglngreg; a1r'id.that yoar ability to love the medal among unfaithful wives. e '"y' en me! you to "he the APP”'"'"Y Y9" 3'0 not sivins even a casual thou ht to ' band who h tn 3 wur h"" yourself honulalrie will feeilmtko lklgollhthtgt dy?t1)'teimcioal,dl . nbrt? ubeuteruzottoulililg even for three months. Pretty shabby treatment. rd an R. E (5 .MM”””'053 -2- - lg Morning Smile . The Sign Soy... ”R& 3! Genevieve lomblo Observation . - For 'romorrow- IT is possible that only by the ludicious use of clever strategies. and very clever understanding of perplexing situations, may dim. Teacher: "Tell me. Sammy. why do women live longer than men?" Sammy: "I don't know, teacher. unless It's because paint is a great ml'"””- preservative!" cum... 10., or p,.,,u" mu nmdg stuns nun T" 133"” i'4'3"l"m ht” ""' W ' Cheap Estimate " u an ' or ' Wu" . playing the hand. Perhaps self- afgalx Mlitdd 3-Iluns Soda I; ' confidence, overbearing notions or an armor with a What willwit cost me to have or attitudes might defeat. with ' MP cloth. "1! 9” flX9d- W lost opportunity. However there -- . Whats the mnatter Wllrh lly. 1,3 g glgn of g timely pg;-3011.1 geg. JI 40'” lm0V- lure to offset and mend' broken inf, I B Fifty-two doillfl Ind MW fences. Be wise as to promises. tenth over - enthusiasm or arrogance where favors are desired. b BE IBEAUTIFUII .THIS SPRING WITH iLCANO Skin Care Weh'avearrangedfor- V snmnnn moron onownnn, Representative of BELCANOI COSMETICS on be linear Oosmetio Department for consultations. usnonisui to ma, Inclusive. I i lelephone NOW for &nmr&b courtesy rnncanolunasuuunssuz , 5 , eI;l.oANo.teAsK - sans nssus A - cotoou t - rnuluulss If it Is Your Birthday Those whose birthday it is. may fin themselves in a critical alt- ua ion because of their personal blunders, snap judgments or over- exaggerated ego. thus begetting loss of prestige, confidence and of openings for forging ahead on ambitious plans and projects False values. self- portance. could prove disastrous a spoil chances of prestige and advancement. withal by means of personal popu- larity. charm. "gentle persuasion." the breach might be. uaciousl. and edoctively. bridged over. A child born on this day. although blessed with personality. ,netisrn. may also be vain- glorious and egotistical. neutraliz- ing its efficiency in life. mm lll? Dull .1 x X. ' ouint .-'v P tw- ”I often think. Ilienutbs, days of long ago were better.-than thus". .ifnurJs":eaiarks. set armchair-.a ' an attitude -which iadioatas clearly a desire to chat. . comfortable times we have this complete unrurstandtng which belongs to our older of conversation if dmirod in this rare and delightful pert slowing old together. "lb Have we omitted tbatf. that goes to show that-we accept the fact that James like many of the husbands we have studied. sheds shrawish words casually. as a duck the rain. Nor can there be chief and" and issue - and des- pair of young married. couplu. We have been made overby race of the years. our lives forged on the anvil of time. tempemd by the vicissitudes of our living un- til now. still far from attaining perfection in design we are most- ly no longer malleable. O O C I "-then we were children liilen" J;:es continues into his smoke- wreaths "I recall the world as a fairly comfortable spot. Countries were so widely separated that it didn't seem to make much differ- .ence to us, what went on in far ones or how they handled their affairs. Now. Korea, so much in our minds these days. was only a name the minister mentioned when '-9 --ked for funds for mis- sion" work there. It had neither form nor subsiance.. . though perhaps that was our golden op- pcrtunity then - who knows? But issues appear and wrangiings and suchiike even .in Chriatianized countries. Because. Ellen. where- ever humans are, no matter of what race or creed, the old ele- ments of love and hate, of sacri- fice and greed and the other vir- tues and curses, common to man- kind are there too." "since Eden". we offer. James nods "And be- fore! But in the long ago, Ellen" he continues "when the mail was in some places a. bi-weekly occur- rence and newspapers were scarce. before the days of cars and radios. I believe we lived happier lives. We were more interested then in the items of living round about. Not that we aren't still, but these must share space with other in- iereats worldwide. Do you see what I mean?" "It's the truth! we agree. I O O "For example. Ellen, take the breakfast hour in this - and in every farm-home. We used to chat about the items of news of the farming or that had to do with the community. At this time of year.. . oh. someone was per- haps getting short of feed for his any making-over now. often ."t.he dol A.1.r. wast is wroog';witlr- sea.-”. tencet u':l'a:.!”4.30IlId make ahotlis I. aifblt is thlecrrect prIIIllno- iatiomof "dlptlis"r, , u , . 8. which one of these words is misspelled? . Ifsuaoleum. also. maverick. Inagistarial. 4. What dole the word 'qtiouous" mean? . 5. What is I. word beginning with ind that means laafneIs"f ANIWIII "rhey could make no "con- 1. Say. the th, not deps. I. Mayonnaise. 4. obvious to the eye or mind. "He made himself conspicuous by speaking in a loud tone." 5. In- ence. . stock. and about thrashing or sawing wood. Or" he uniles "about a ocming pie or parlor social". . . "Or -prayer meeting" we remind him. "or Just said nothing but cffing when all the world was stiu.' " "But this morning when the Radio was bringing it in. we talked of the news from the l"ar East, and the names of aoldiers' and statesmen were as familiar to uses if we spoke of Mr. C. from the house on the hill - or any other of the neighbors. Yes an.. while we ate. we knew what the weather was like thousands of x..iles aw what lialnents were intent upon at home and abroad. Yes, the world has surely get smaller. Why. places only vague names to us are now as near' as. . . " "rhis kitchen? we su--xy. O O 0 "And the worst of it is, Ellen" he continues "their concerns are oura now along with our ownl so that I do believe we lived more comfortable when our boundaries mayon- ' other plan that that." I. Pronounce o OOPlNHA0l:N- (OP) - Dauel. are going in for vitamin pills in a big way. It is estimated that Don- mark's 4.000.000 about 1.000.000 pills daily. mooned about a sleigh-ride in the - ' people ofacamphor and an excellent lotion . '7' ll! a Son's ll. i'&Zl'.a'i'.Ul.gSlV0li b were limited and we didn't have a whole world's troubles and tri-; buiations at our backs. But then! I reckon it's Just that I haven't got used to it yet. I suppose that is' meant by the word 'Neighbour'l 'I'he boundaries of home and com- munity pushed back to include; all kinds and colors - if only. we could all live happily iogetherl". That was one of the two great; convictions that grew out of! Prime Minister at. I.aurent's edu- cation" we offer. one was that nol amount of educational equipment can replace a wise teacher. The other is that men -of different races. creeda. and religions can live peaceably together if only there is good-will." "Thu-e would not be do many concerns then. Ei- len" James observes. a thumb in a cold pivesbowl - and adds: "Fletch m a match, will you, 1.1. len?" Until tomorrow -"- Diary Good-night. . . HATS Our - Specialty A wide selection in all the newest trends and colors; Prices From S33,-5 up made handbags of to the well groombd Handbags Enemy. A smart. beautlfulll flno materials. offer a choice of her favorite accessory. 4 The backbone of your Spring ward- robe is your suit. smartly slim in silhouette . . . appealing, wearing of fabric . . in a color that's a perfect reflection of Spring 51 fashions. Here now for your select- ion, are our Gabardlnes, Rayom Worsteds and Tweeds Price lung. 4 29.50 so 19.95 many women Gloves Am all-linlportoelt to at: . 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