. \ \ _ rEBeUeRY’".‘55i°‘~°’ ' ,4} . _ Four Woiii Sunshine and flowers seem g‘ ems-pity away to the shut-in. A gay colourful bouquet is the surest way to bring a ray of sunshine to the sick room. Just pick up your phone and send the cheer that only flowers can bring. A iiorothy iilx Says — (Continued from Page 2) the truth. the whole truth, and nothing but the truth; but few of us have skins thick enough to smnd it. None of us want to be told of our faults and blemishes and reminded of our mistakes and, in reality, about the only time we are absolutely veracious is when we are so rip- rearing mad we don't carswhst we say. The truth of the matter is that truth is strong medicine, to be handled with discretion. Sometimes a little pink lie leans to virtue's side. A little tact, a little praise. a little blindness-is there not more virtue in these than dragging out our skeletons and rattling their bones? DEAR DOROTHY DIX: My brother, who is 26, is desperately in love with s sweet college girl who is equally in love with him, but the girl refuses to marry him because she is afraid of marriage. The girl's mother was a very poor wife, made her husband desperately unhappy snd ho finally divorced her. and that makes the girl fear that if she married my brother she would ruin his life. She loves him so much that she would rather sacrifice her own happiness than run the risk of wrecking his life. Do you think she is right? ' SISTER ANSWER: No. she is absolutely wrong. She has broodedover her father's unhappy marriage until she has gotten morbid and lost her per- spective. Because-s girl's mother was a poor wife is no proof that she will be one. On the contrary, the chances are that she will make sii the greater effort to he's good one. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: We are "two very troubled school girls, sgss l5 and 16 and we are very much in love with two boys who are l‘! sad l9. We are thinking of getting married because we are tired of loing to school. What do you advise us to do? SCHOOL GIRLS 1 ANSWER: I advise you not to try the experiment of jumping out of the frying pan into the. fire, because if you do you will surely sot badly burned. You are tired of going to school. Believe me. my children, you will get a lot more tired of matrimony if you undertake it st your tender age. School lasts only a few hours. but marriage is forever. unless you go through the horror of divorce. Your school hours are short hours, but marriage is a 24-hour-iob, with no holidays and off days for a wife and mother. "' - Don't make the mistake of thinking that matrimony is a soft snap, and don't be foolish enough to ruin your life in its beginning by marry- in: another silly kid. yilVl/amrza UDEX SCAP _fl Gets skin rosliy clean ‘Q lisnishos perspiration odor Q Lssvss W! Siilsei and dainty fifi-"fi-rinfifi .3” —usr one ' the: Judge sn gly. . .l,v I l ‘lb ths girls, in ‘frequent slave" over developments, the pros- pects seemed to favor Judge Purvis. The unfavorable report of throt- ficlsi ~dslegstion brought down-l visitation of Harvey executives with- thelr‘ own experts. They gave the eating house an‘ absolutely clea bill of health. ' ed‘ Manager Boll-moroselv. “with _ these scorpions after us?" He asked The Harvey principle was to snake :13 of the ground and than i t. , , - Old "Duke" Msrnssduke. W310 Md inopportune time to die. Several days before his death. he had eaten breakfast (4 pm.) at the Harvey lunch counter. Upon news of his demise, Judge l>urvis sent for Dr. Leonard Gibson. “You attended- poor old Duke?" said the jurist. V u! did}: v "What. would you say hfe died of? It wouldn't be that he was poison- ed‘, would it. now, Doci", suggested the Judge persuasively. ' "Certainly he was poisoned.‘ Chronic alcoholic poisoning. Hasn't been sober for ten years." " "Did You happen to know. Dr. Gibson, that shortly before his death, Mr. Marmaduke ate s meal at the railroad counter?" ' “What of it?" - ‘And that he had a glass of milk with it, and that our analyses mow the Harvey milk is full o germs?" » "All milk is full of germs. if it weren't, it wouldn't be milk." “That's what kind of "s. doctor you are," returned the local msg- nate sadly. "New" tangled. If you out up poor old Duke's body, coui you find those germs?" ‘ "No. Nobody could." " "Well; it's" my belief that he was poisoned by the bad food in that Harvey Joint. Didn't you ever have any cases of sickness there. Doc?" “No, I didn't." "Pry and think. worth your while." "What are you driving at. Pur- via?" “The place ought to be closed as a danger to the public," said It might be "It's the only place in a hundred miles where there's food fit for humans to eat. I'll go on" thsstand and testify to that." . ‘Not in my court." reibrted the Judge. ' v By way of working up public re- sentment. the astute Purvis fin-i anced a fancy funeral f8: the de- ceased sot. and employed a broken- down newspaper man with a dead- and buried reputation as a banquet orator to deliver a eulogy with a few well-directed sideswipea st the Marmaduke. Unfortunately, old Pop Braydon ,having tanked upain preparation, spoke his inner senti- ments with more emotion‘ than Judgment. After psying- eloquent tribute to the imaginary virtues of the corpse,-.the panegyrist al- tered the spirit of his theme to denomination. " "Lured tohia doom by sirens. my friends, in black necktfes and white collars, who haughttly deny an honest citizen food-and drink at their whim and caprice." (Ser- vice had once been‘ refused the cgstleas and’ semi-intoxicated Mr. Braydon.) "I tell you, gentlemen, I solemnly warn you that this sterling and independent com- munity which is our pride and Joy-this too will be lured. to its doom unless we take measures against the peril. I as! you my friends, snail we stand by and see our Sands-oak brought under petti- ooat domination? Do we want to see our beloved town sink tic-be- come a female-run, no license. psai- ' ‘_ Joint. where a man can't get a drink when he wants one? Shall we let ottrselves be run by a. whits-iivered, pink-whis- ksred preacher and s lot of touch- me-not schooirnarms? If that ain't unfair competition. u-ixat is? “Bo, I say to you, my good friends. in the spirit of that other good friend. who has just passed from among usrlet the girls that have got the spirit to stay and grdw up with the country come across itiotracka and take e job with our honored fiilflflyeflflll Purvfl; where they can learn our great. the rest. load ‘emlnto box cars and ship 'em back where the! came from and let the Cents Pa pay the biiia of fading." (Cheers and pistol shot-s.) ‘. The return of the oortege from the dry arroyo burial groundwss buildlnll- All bahds theffretitdd Judge Ptrrvis’ expense. ind devise means for ridding Bandrockof its Wcstoalns rims-spot .015 virtue. Thereafter. "the streets became unpleasant fosfthe Hervey staff. Aloemhre slrls eibewed Hervey girls off the town's one» and only sidewalk. . __ . . . » Ruby Watrous had-s. pitched .bet- tie in thebpen with Woof-the sbowsirls. from which she emerged with a black e e'of.tier own and a hank of sed- once the poo- perty of the enemy. Sonora Oaseidy exhumed a very practical looking six-shooter from her trunk and. an- vhoh...iriooog 1 Gen Improve ‘ flheusaads of g m. motocross-oars "What good will that/do!" uk- . for a transfer. which was refused. ' lived too long. anyway, elected this .. i free, Western ways of life. As" for ~ signalizsdby a scattering volley in e l the general direction of the Harvey to the Alhambra, bar. to _drink.'at ' pounced ‘that anyone looking" for GERALD nous». "snoossasnv " Among ' , o. GRIGNON, of. nmrraau: Managed to Bays-Four, . Two off-duty Quebec provincial policemen risked their’ lives to rescue four struggling. schoolboy: from a cake of ~ice in the St. Lawrence river near Longueuil. but failed to save a fifth who wii-‘I. washed‘ to his death "beneath tons of fast-moving ice, All five on a one-day holiday they received be- achool commission chairman, were rescued a few seconds before the. ice fioe, crumbling under‘ a hot midday sun, disappeared‘ down the swift-moving river. Saved were Serge Oharron, nine; his brother. Annand, six; Andre ~ Goaselin, eight, and Gerald Rould. 10. Jean-Guy Curadeau. nine, whom the boys tried to save, died ‘be- fore policemen reached him. _ trouble would be accommodated at the drop of,s. hat, man, woman, or Old Goat Purvis himself. No- body-accepted this liberal offer. Feeling reached such ajpltch that the more tirnorous girls were afraid to cross the tracks without a male ucort. There was no lack of voi- unteers for this duty. among the railroad employee or from ille bet- ‘ home- cause of the death '0! s. Catholic ' i noun Ami Welfare . d _ lhew (sf-leads " Frequent and careful washing of 1 the hands in seep-and - water is one ofthebest sefeluerls we have " against many common diseases. The hands and fingernails should be kept as clean as possible at all .' times, murparticuler eere should be taken towash up before meals and after some the toilet. Re- member most germs enter the body through the mouth. many of them via thehands: ms Cool For Health On these cold" winter evenings, lots.of us like to, take-in a flood movie. It's hard to beat ‘for com- fortable; inexpensive entertainment. But because" some people dislike holding-heavy clothing in their ‘ arms. they keep their coats on’ in, the theatre. As a result, they e» are uncomfortably warm and fall easy ‘ 'prey=to colds" in.the frostyvair out- side. Take your coat off in‘ the the- atrwyowll need it when you go out. _ A-flsppy Childhood “Manon health begins in the Ahapw home life is the best guarantee for a ' normal, -weil- ' adjusted adult life. To feel secure and haPPY- a child needs to"feel loved and wanted by his parents. At the.same time, fathers and mothers should avoid being too possessive or tiff: child may grow ‘up unable to "cope with life's pro- blems. . - Color And Appetite The color of the food on your dinner table has an effect on your family's appetitef If the food is properly prepared and shows its normal coloring to advantage your meal will be more successful. Over- cooking frequently injures the ap- pearancc of the food as well as destroying some of its flavor, tex- tureand nutritive value. ‘_ In The Home The largest occupational group to be admitted to Canada's tubercu-- losis hospitals in the last year for which figures are available was the homemakers. ' Canada cannot spare mothers to tuberculosis. Early de- tection of TB-rneans lives saved and needless suffering prevented. Mobile x-ray equipment detects TB beforethe symptoms are apparent. Have a chest x-ray today. A Needless Waste ',"1l‘l £1947 a total of 360 Canadians. practically all of them children. died from diphtheria and whooping cough. Many of these victims could ‘have been saved by~immunization. Child health authorities are in ac- cord regarding the protection af- forded by immunization. This ser- terelement in the town. (To continued) 1i. ‘i ‘ A i"'.'iY~.'."l-l. vice is free. Have your children immunized" today. ' r0 m" ea eeeelacresslag gnbliudemend. production of the _'G-B electric kettle has reached an all-time high. ‘ibis-greatly increased volume has made possible the use of new andmose eficieatmanufscsuriag equipment lid mulling‘ a lower ooes of production. a 5 ‘In with onfbssicTpolicy of reducing prices t "beams rat-ibis. we are mung; 14% reduction in u» price of theiretsleefiective immediaoelyJSimilsr, although "V1980 h!" Iflldepoflible reductions in the price of the was!» Pilfllflfweight non. the o-s Heating r-a and the famous ‘G-EAUNIVH-ldi Blankets. KETTLE $l4.50....now $1259 IJEATHERWEIGHT lRON....was I2.95....now 12,50 "asshole-ran..........,.......wa- AUTOMATIC "mums Twirl-bed, -l ; control... . . mo: a Doublebed. ~l control was 90039-555) 2 controls was cragrea’ o is t ammo inset-am cvous oerisiui. l l-SIIVIBI. a etscmc arms" Ohiirletietevisn V 4 nu IRIUM ii that makes the difference ‘Became I d1enged\i0 PEPSODENTWTiiIIfiIJm i” . ' ' ‘V’ _ Why? Because only Pepsodeat contains Irium, the marvelous _ occlusive ingredient that gives you the _, eves“ offered. ' Pepsodsat gets rid of every trace of dull 1 ‘ film. That's why New Pepsodeog with lrium gets you teeth cleanses-and when they're cleanest they're ='- . whitest" . ask for Pepsodent Dental Cream nodayl ' Mo» Iyaarabstt swam m.» mbyfisii/ Persona... h. w n-Esrieeih f cleansing sccZFi-P Ellen's Diary (Continued from Page g) awaited the sheaves, the teams must carry from the stack. Then it is that one makes haste to add a stick to the kitchen fire and to in- apect a cooking supper dish which though left mostly to itself sur- Prisingly turns out to be a food su- preme when the time corfies to par- take of it. "God‘s fresh air and sunshine, with a good bit of work thrown in" one of olir hired men was wont to remark with a mean "Rickie. "helps many a woman to 88in l load reputation for her cooking!" I O Q ‘ The repaired engine drove the gear today with fine regularity and without concern and as it pulsed, Hindi!!! an abundance of straw by way of the blower to the lofts, and grain to the basket, there were moments to observe through the wide-open doorway, billowing white clouds afloat on the blue above a white hill. Near at hand, and most . 9.50....now 42.50. ..<.now 37,50 39,50 v 454.50....now 49,50 n GENERAL nscruc c-o no ~ Heed Ofllee: Toronto - Soles Ofllces Coast to Coos? Toomlss a Music" "Qeoee Kent Street alert Pard sat awaiting the cue 8.95 that would allowvhim to lead off again to the stack and near at hand Tabby and others of our extensive feline family watched intently, eag- er to pounce at the slightest sign of a desperate mouse. "Here's one for you!" Rob laughed-he was feeding the mill—holding up _a "wee sleekit creature" by the tail so that I~ might not escape the purely feminine thrill the like ef- fords, when bewildered it had em- erged from a sheaf. C O O A treasure enclosed in todayfs letter from a sister and her hus- band holidaying in the sunny South was "an orange blossom for you, Ellen. picked fresh from a tree in t e yard." It-remains rich- ly scents with a fragrance much some oncfinds on June lawns on the Island, though naturally more fascinatlmr, because o the senti- ment wits which on ,' associates these. "We are having a lovely holldly." she wrote,."the weather yet. the glass is at 78. We enioy like that of the mock orange blos- ‘ is hot-this morning. rather early . many excursions. from here. Lllt week we went over to Tampa to a Fair. The fruit exhibit was natub ally bewildering. and of the ‘this mall I admired most the Palomino ponies and” (harkening back to the Island doubtless) - “Armoui-s’ ‘If: matched Ciydesdales." " ‘ eee" These would return recollecfldll of Summery days, when her Mile ma: was bounded by torso-sis and azuunmatched delight We] I ride the knowing old-mareaflll as the brook to water her, II- ii deed, the bewltching mile. be shore. Nor would the lmalljirl,‘ alone astride this fine con but seated confidently _ i - at her back, would be -one pr ah other of the youngsters of tlsii ily and not forgotten were-the 3'1 “IIOI-kldl" nearby, the villsgees- ' blessed with the rare. delight ~- ewning an esteemed oldnsaree .1 "m ten o'clock, Elien says, putting away his ‘s A . .,, ‘olgggllmtgrtnfrrow .= m . Dias! g d! _A f‘ Pianos, Jiodios, rims Appliance, Mosul-Mosul» ' i i6? Queen .- oosnmm, r. t. I., -=.¢_-"e~—- -- "aw: v 5i? 5,»: .