Lena Caroline Ilchurn. Women's Editor. Phone IN Page 8 The Guardian Wednesday.Jan.9.1957 HAPPENINGS Miss Wirinifred Cairns. Assistant Mrs. J. Scott Cairns Freetown. Head Nurse in the Ear. Nose and M,-. and Mm Douglas V. re,-.. Throat Department at the Roya Ch I" t Ch- L Victoria Hospital returned toyiusonl 3"” emwn lliilenh risf Montreal by plane on New Yearslm" '" Freemw" " l S ""9 ” Eve after spending a weeks holi-:Mrs. FHBUSOHS l-"H9111! M1 W5 days with her parents Mr. and Mrs. J- Scott Cairns. Take No Risks With 2,300 Year Old Venus de Milo K in his 705 He used to come everyl; . - ' - day and sit on that wood benc l war veteran drarted 8llSplCl0l.lSl.VIright were in "um 0! her. He 1”” 'ldE ” "M " M guarded-would stay three or four hour! 0!! 2.300')'9Bl"0ld Venl” 59 Mil” staring at her. it lasted three or ”We aren't taking any risks." four years. until last year he he confided. "We have always didn't come any more. He's proh- watched her closely, but after thel ably dead now. We never knew savage attack on”Mona Lisa the his name. He wouldn't talk to any- r other day . . . lbod.V-" PARIS iAPi---The eyes of the wrapped. schoo" eyes auxiously.on the clock, quir led with a show of impatience. SLENDERIZING STYLING If you are one of the many who! are inclined toward a well-round-.5i8:9fi '0 3l9"df9rli)ll9 l:-50 Cunloll-'5 i-W9 9' "'Y”"3 599" in ""3 mm beading detail at the neck. It has sheath just the flatterer you've a narrow self belt and three-quar- been looking for. 'ter sleeves. There's More Of A Challenge To A Nurse In The North By DAVE QUANCE Trained in New Zealand. she Canadian Press Staff Writer was working in England when LA RONGE. Sask. tCPi-Nurse she decided to come to Canada. to l.400 Indians-that's Nancy Now she flies thousands of Ferguson. New Zealand - born miles annu inin rugged bush brunette who has worked for two and muskeg country to treat hun- years among nortlicrn Saskat- dreds of patients. She must decide t:hewan's Indian population. whether a patient should be taken At 27. this attractive woman to the nearest hospital, tr i at has handled problems few nurses the main clinic in Prince ...oert. have to face. Last year she deiip- 170 miles to the south, or at the cred 43 babies without a hitch. little nursing station at La Ronge Miss Ferguson is one of Ii half- which is her headquarters. dozen nurses with the Federal In- BUSY CENTRE dlan Health Services who handle "We have three adult beds. one the nursing chores among 8.000,m;m-rinity bed. two cou, two Indians in more than ill.000icrihs and a spare mattress I was square miles of northern Saskai-llucky enough to find one night cliewan. when l didn't know where on -- carth lid put a patient.” she said in an interview here. three rooms for patients. a kit- chen and an office where volum- inous records are kept. Upstairs is Nancy's bedroom and a small sitting room where she seldom has time to sit. She shares the hospital with Mrs. I-Inid Broome. a public health nurse who treats the area's metis and delivers about the same number of babies each year as Nancy. Mrs. Broome. wife of the Saskatchewan government trad- ing post manager here. lives out. Nancy. like the nurses working out of Prince Albert and at two other northern stations. has a modern station wagon which con. vcrts easily to an ambulance. She uses it mainly to drive patients to and from the airport. Dressed in blue Jeans and a sweater in The station's ground floor has in winter. government or private plane. Dr. Douglas Jsmicson. in charge of the Prince Albert division. says most nurses my in the north only a year. "They can spend longer if they want but the work in so lung 14 is better to give them a change at the end of a year." with the Scottish accent he brought from Scotland three years I30. said the nurses face a big problem In public health and llyllene Mis s Ferguson said "the work is encouraging when they respond to treatment and instruction but so often they don't. Then you wonder if you're doing any good or not " It is a beautifully cut dress do-y summer or bundled up warmly she commandeeru at The doctor. who speaks Creel The tension in the corridors oil the Louvre Museum was caused when a Bolivian visitor threw al stone at Leonardo da Vinci's paint-5. ing. the Mona Lisa. Her elbow was injured but was quickly restoredn Since then guards in the mus-l eum have doubled their vigilance but no treasure is cared for like. the armless stone statue of Venus that was uncovered on the small Greek island of Melos in 1820. l "The Venus de Milo has never been attacked." the guard said. "Her admirers are many and they sometimes lay flowers at her feet. OLD ADMIRER ''I recall a white-bearded man Eds note: A vivid color trans- parency of I.eger'a The Great Julie, -art of the collection in New York's Museum of Mod- ern Art. is available on special subscription for 320. The picture is representative of modern American painting which has caused a raging controversy among critics and art experts. Orders may be placed through your CP bureau chief. APN print subscribers will be mailed a black and white study of mod- ern 'art exponent Huntingtoli Hartford standing before. a painting by American impres- sionist Mary Cassatt. By RELMAN MOIIIN NEW YORK (AP) -- How do you feel about "modern art"? Could you learn to love Picasso's multi-faced ladies. or say. some- one like l.eger's Big Julie? or do you prefer. over your mantel. a simple seascape in which a ship looks like a ship and a seagull is recognizably a white bird? It's a fierce argument. of ions standing. one development in it hit the front pages in the form of an an- lnouncemcnt from a man who holds such strong feellnil I50"! modern painting that he is going to build his own art gallery. He is Huntington Hartford. wealthy grandson of the founder of the A. and P. (T0087! NOTE PRINT!) PATTERN She plains to return noon to New Zenlnnd. but she is enjoying the work here. "Therein more of a challenge here than any other st: '”I'here'I a problem here and you :1! you're dehg something about MORNlNG SMILE IUMVD With Printed directions on each pattern part-sewing just couldn't be easier. Make a dntuiresa, or nu jumper and blouse; its lovely lin- es an ideal for winter-cotton, cor- duroy. rich velveteen. Printed Pattrn BIO: Misses linen IO. 1:. II. II. II. I. also Il)nnperrqnirnal7-lynrdaI- inch fabric; blousll-lyarda. patternpart. uateaoain-as lalllllfv i its”?--iii-9” "' The discreet admirer never touched the statue. "Please, you cannot touch her." said the guard. ”She could fall and that would be the end of the world's most beautiful woman. "We cannot fix her to the pedes- tal. you know. because that would make it part of the statue forever land what if we need to carry her :away in case of war. for instance? xlt would lie so heavy we could yhardly carry it." The guards did carry the statue away during the Second World War when the Germans occupied Paris. She was hidden in the country. Plans To Build TO-Storey Gallery Of Modern Art chain. BOPES FOR CONTRAST He has disclosed plans to build a l0-storey gallery in New York. It will be called the Gallery of Modern Art, and Hartford frankly hopes art lovers will contrast it with the adventurous and often avant-garde Art. Hartford is a slim man of 45 who speaks with great fervor when he talks about painting. To him Picasso is "an oppor- tunist who has jumped on one bandwagon after another," con- t , nay painters are "too much influenced by mathematics. architecture and modern psycho- logy." and "more of the experi- ments in painting should be done in the studios and less in the art galleries." Yet he likes Salvador Dali who painted the melting t' epleces, and considers cubism and surreal- ism to have been "healthy at- tempts ht a new way of expres- sion." ' TEMPERATE THOUGHTS These are considerably more temperate thoughts than the ones Hartford set down in 1955. He then took full-page advertisements in the New York he , a to at- tack expressionism and abstrac- tlonisis. the critics who like this form nt painting. and the com- ments they have made on it. "I will give Picasso credit." Hartford wrote. "He has gone, an amazing (ii-stance toward wiping out. single - handed, all the gains that have been made in the world of painting for the last 500 years." ”Donil be afraid to dlsagrt-r- loudly if necessary - with the critics. When the high priests of criticism and the museum direc- tors and the teachers of mumbo jumbo throughout the country and- denly ht-gin to realize that you mean husincss. you will be aston- ishcrl. in my humble estimation. how fast they will change their tune " Today Hartford feels that great art lies between photographic re- alism and pure abstraction. There- fore. his gallery will strive for that golden mean. "I hclieve the Museum of Mod- ern Art has gone much too far in the direction of abstractlonism." KNOWS ANSWERS Rene d'Hsrnoncourt. director of the museum. disagreed. d'Harnon- court is a tall. amiable giant who has been in the fight I long time and knows the arguments and the IIISWPFR. "You judge the museum ' what we buy." he said. "A cross- neciion of the pun anent collec- tion shows what the museum re- ally believes in - quality and I!- lllki his l I '1 -A r p . . . . rsooo Museum of Modern, ELLEN'S own! Saved In A Nick Of Time lnnetime-helper of summery days. ' a to James. when with the cares of the outdoors at peace. this house-up "Ali's well that ends weil."' our visitor to Alderlen tonight smiled old drew chairs up to the firej This we remember now was the day which added some perplexitiea and annoyances to the farmers' round. These were mostly the after- math we expect from the passing of a night of sharp frost. After a spell of coaxing. the tractor which is to be seen those times hauling hither and yon along the fields, had to be towed to start on its way, The happily begins its day by hearing the children out to school. also re- fused to "catch." little truck which so What is the matter with her?” Granddaughtea, walling, winter- on shoulde.. "She's just cold!"' Mack sald,l coming smartly to the defence of -u eyegwunesl. this tried and proven friend of the Family ”You'll hear her in a min-- ute." He listened eagerly for the familiar sound, face clean and shin- ing. eyes bright in nice anticipa- tion of the new winter-day. IN A MINUTE And so it was . . And with our lhoughts following them to that By VERA WINSTON Two-Way Style For Resorts The best resort clothes are dis-i iinguislicd by well-bred siiupliciiy. Typical of the feeling is this hand- some sheath drcss of Irish linen. Its dazzling white is set off by a clever device. It's a gathered pan- el of patterned coral and white silk crepe. which forms it cowl collar and front panel. When desir- ed, the panel is detachable, reveal- ing the stark sheath dress beneath. HOUSEHOLD HINT A good kitchen knife with a bev- eled blade is usually very satisfac- tory for general use. Beveled blad- es are cut from a piece of steel that is thicker on one side than the other, tapering from the back to the cutting etlg--2. which is ground. cellenrl rather than any on: par- ticular movement." D'Harnoncourt noted that peo- ple frequently look at an abstract painting. the daubs and apparently aimless splotches, and say. "my four-year-old boy can do the same hm... His anawerz" "Then he should. It would be wonderful for the fam- ily income." Hrnl Wonder why K5001 Which Ills by the River nines mild. i-Illinl of! successive gen- dispenses a er-lions of the children of the dis- the custuiner must complete an trict, "she" eucd down the drive- imolved lot of paper work. VII)! and was presently out beyond ' "”TT the road-hilltop. a light cloud of L-elnbt'i'. dust in her wake. There was too by wgy of 3 gem. and school committees. . poi-ary umoyuce, the add water. Liver Oil capsules were distrib- to members. Material re- PAPEI won: I PARIS lAPi - French iratiuuing has llIIld('l'pald clerks. are asking the goxerumeut tog pay them indem- Eacli tune I garageman few gallons he and Reports were heard from sick tap in the buildin s can ht by mud the night's frost. lTut nonge that CONN ”'”",i R” C”” l" nub did not yield quickly to the bian-ii-is WW5 c.”"””8 W" ”” dllhlnents of the we-kettle. which SW9" WL A i,n5c"3sl0" me," wok over the wood-fire sings for us now P13" '93i”'dm3 3” mldmg M .cc.,mp.,,y;n we black cm on the card parties for school and Mrs. couch ,g bu? qmet tune. -Iudtlill Peters offered to conduct ithe first at her borne on Jan- 19- 3'" " W” 'm" '”pp."' '" mi" hlrs. Russell Perry. Mrs. George cozy spell of leisure which follows Chmmm and Mm Harold Mc. it. when the worst blow struck. EM." agreed to brmg lunch (0, the tidings gathering the farmers Sam, ' -and visitor quickly to a stable.- 1-hm? Ming no further businesl There an ox of those coming up to i memng Clnsed on motion of 3d. um "”"ke""gv hm Pamlken 93"?" jourliment. after which a delicious lessly of n turnip. and now a piece ilumh was Served by the hostess, of it Wu lodged in his sullet. lassisted by Mrs. George Christian. We heard of its removal from-. ?- ”It was prettty firmly lodged,"4 Gage. who had come with Jamiel and Rob at a summons. said. "But a length of hose eased down his gull-at with some mineral oil" he smiled, "soon brought him relief.” And naturally the Family as wellf We listen in to James and our visitor now. talk returned to the stables- "A farmer has to keep his eyes to things” James says from the old armchair. ”Yes, morning, noon ION! KOIIGMST, Sllllllff-MOISEI and night-always. If the young (ominllouup. lad hadnlt noticed that right away.l - box 201, we would have had a dead ani-I . i rosmsunorr. mal before too long. As it was, we. V”? - mom just got him in the nick of llIIlf:."1 Defective: Seeking o-norm template"! iigznfisgifg Vandals At Halifax HALIFAX (CP)-Detectives here, are looking for vandals who dese-l crated two Anglican churches over fetti and envelopes were suite the weekend and tried to set fire in aisles, felt pads torn from c to one. Police said tbai group. aPP3T' ently juveniles, left a trail. of charred paper through St. Philip's! Church Sunday evening, V four separate fires but doing little damage. only the are resistant en. velopes used to set the biases saved lthe church from destruction. said a detective. g In All Saints' Cathedral. cog. lection plates. book racks o'er- turned and hymn books soaked with water. Burned matches were found near collection boxes but the cath- wmng edral safe was untouched. JANUARY CLEARANCE ( SALE At The GLORIA STARTS wan. JAN. 9n. AT 9 AM. 33 1-3 OFF ALL nnnssus, surrs, sroar JACKETS. SLACKS and wnrra UNIFORMS (not off tariians) 2070 OFF COATS, SKIRTS. BLOUSES. LINGERIE AND ” SWEATERS LOADS OF SPECIALS. LOOK FOR THE RED SALE TAGS ALL SALES FINAL it "Well. everything is fine now"l our visitor offers. ”fIouidn'l be bet- ter. And iAll's wcll that ends wcll" he repeats with a chuckle Un-til tomorronm -- - Diary- - - Good-night . . . . . . .. nu GLORIA 179 GRAFTON ST. "I hope you and your lomily enyoy Ihggg n.-one-. ri'. much as we do i would like lo know -how rnurh you liked lhem, and who! you sh wk of Sh-mil Flavour Extracts Please wine and let me lnow" It0LLO BAY EAST W. I. On January 2nd Mrs. John Mooney was hostess to the mem- bers of Rollo Bay East ll'onicu's Institute. l2 members and one visitor were present. ltlet-ting opened by repeating Crced fol- lowed by roll call which was re- sponded to with 25 cents from each member to be used as ices for Institute News. Minutes of previous meeting were read. ap- proved and signed; also the fin- nncial report for month of De- IIINCEMEAI IARS Blend together Ftuys lollsd oats lit (upznltei lnui V, tsp baking suits lrup blflllfl sun! (parked) Cul Ill -l cup shollening until Inuluie is crumbly Dmlr this mixture tnlo two parts sod park hall on botiutn of 9'' x 9' pan. Smart on lop -li- (ups NIOISI vnmtemeat to which has been arlilm llso Shlmll Rum tr tract Add llviisiliillgllali olcmmh mixture and pack ltlllily llakc at ivIJ' F for 50 minutes This lerlpii my he used e-ltw at I -imrit. srived hnl Willi irr ucam or IIHDDPII mum, at it may he rocll-1an.ttul mlo squares Ill hats and srvw-.1 with a simple dessert at on a cookie plate INIAKED MIME Ciloitlu soil for 3 minutes-Z cup: brown sum ';i cup milk V; cup butter Remove tram heat and mid: Clcups has rolled nIl.t lisp Siimlllvaniilalrliatl 'xl isn Stuiutl's Msplc irtlarl I can tune rbconut Drop by Ienpoontuls on wood paw Shirri" . Break Through That Stuffy l HEAD COLD FOG 0'ple'gu(rl'7ll05e'I When a head-cold stun": up your nose, makes breathing difficult. nothing works like Vicks Va-tro-nol Nose Drops to bring fast, soothing relief. Afcw drops up each nostril as directed. That's all! . . . Your nose opens. You can breathe again! Won- derful relief, too, for sneczes or dry nose. VICKS WIFE PRESERVIER:m EXTIACIS i ........ l A watt repellent garrnenlti ea": yous smsot. Hymn”. wnitedrnnonpor detergen an s.g V op ouaurv NOSE DROPS unt.;.t,out.umuaapwheonnIIII(- Innnauinu EWJTT both in one package! Cakejn Frogting Mix Yes. new Betty Crocker Cake'n Frosting Mix . . . in one pnckag . . . p'ves you aquick and thrifty way tomako n favourite-sine cake with liolrin' good frosting lt'stliencw easy way to a home-gootlBettyCrot:ker cake. . .light, moist and delicious, perfeotevnrytsme. It's the new quick way to creuny, fudgy hosting. Betty GmkubvlauFrm&m Mixsequires no cooking at hating. Add water only. Try&noItnne-nver' soon. (ltKE'liFROSTlliG Mix aora ll 0" P”'”' I; Rt ll; gunrnntogn ' n or-Inctt