_PA_G_E-E_ ._ __._,_\,. VAGIM PAOGD . lunoouecom 18m. Add yeast and mix well. Gndually add sifted flour until dough l; well-blended and soft. Roll out on floured board to ii inch thickness. Then outwith Iii-i inch cutter. Place on baking sheet which has been sprinkled with 1 or 2 tablespoons o! cornmeal. Dust tops of muffins with additional l or 2 tablespoons of cornmeal. Set to rise in a warm place (80 to B5 F.) until light. about 1 hour. Bake on hot, ungreased or slightly greased griddle, reducing heat when muf- fins begin to brown. Bake about ‘l minutes an each side. Split muf- nns, toast and spread with butter. Makes 8 muffins. 1 cup milk l ‘.1 cu-p shortening ,. 2 teaspoons salt ;~ 1 tablespoon light corn syrup . 1 package yeast (compressed or granular) I 3 cups sifted flour lficald milk and combine with ortening. salt and com syrup. 10w mixture to cool till luke- Dishes Shine -even Without Wiping N0 ‘wt-us’ N0 $tI<-iii\-.' film to polish nwuy . Draft ll-nvvrs no soup Evvn lln- niluhwwilvv r...-|~. ./.-.m.-. .,..,~.,..-/...u MILDER TO _ COLORS! I uncut-sauna mun lee blokes end b. '_W0man’$ Realm /S0cia| a nus ouaaoram uvNK- \<\<\\ CHARI-orrsrowv. c~~co~4.'~4.~<.v<.\.~c-.~c t. |L\. .1 o... SPRING ' For, lo, the winter is past The rain is over and gone, The flowers appear on the earth; The time of the singing of buds is come. And the voice of the turtle-dove is heard in our land. —Song of Solomon. Get some small flower pots end wash them well. Fill glass cups with chocolate pudding and place in the pots. Stick a single flower in the top ot‘ each. Children will love these tricky desserts, Dried figs may be sliced into sliv- m lnr‘wlr,:a 1 unt on e s ers with kitchen scissors and the! added to hot, cooked oatmeal or farina. If the figs are very dry they are easily softened by steam- ing in a strainer over boiling water. Dental authorities see a new hope for prevention of caries in the teeth by the mechanical infiltration of fluorine into drinking water. The right amount of fluorine in water one part in 1,000,000. can cut tooth decay by 6O per cent. If you are annoyed with ‘the corks coming out of the bottoms of the salt and pepper shakers at- \ giNVi OIIASI JUST SIIMS IO VANISH l-IKI MAGIC! . Procter 8 Gamble’: Patented Suds iluoveryu _ LivinglStLeisure /.T_HE womasrs REALM ' for filling. place a piece of adhe- sive tape or a heavy paper preseyy. in! label over the cork. connecting hi: chins and the cork on each e. i —-—i---_..._ CLEAN BUGS Wirlter is nard on rugs which are trampled by boots, overshoes and Juniors flrc engine. Before summer rugs should be sent. out for a thorough cleaning and 8M3]. ed during the hot months. HOW MUCH FEED WILL 1'1‘ TAKE? ' 100 chicks will eat l0 pounds of feed the first week. 100 chicks will eat 20 pounds of feed the second week. 100 chicks will eat 3O pounds o: feed the third week, 100 chicks will eat 40 pounds of feed the fourth week. I00 chicks will eat 100 lbs. in the first 4 weeks. 100 chicks will eat 360 lbs. in the first 12 weeks. I00 chicks will eat 1,256 lbs. in the first 16 weeks. 100 chicks will eat 1,% lbs. in the first 20 weeks. 100 chicks will eat 2,475 lbs. in the first 24 weeks. GIFT - HOT 0R (OI-D! IO HANDS‘ Duh centohu no alkali $01 eon redden hondu _ last bit of slumber song one may ~c~<.~<.~<;~.~.~c~<. C€w~¢<n<n<i€£¥ cw. <. Cane s‘. <. <;<;~<:<.<.'<.v.v.'~<»<.~<:"cv><.w.v.-; . XLYY; Impatient Yoda} Participants In Young Marriages Ara In For llo Little Woes Ift is characteristic of youth that it Zach the patience to wait for the orderly fulfillment of its desires. It wants what it wants and it wants it now, as a spoiled brat once said to me, and it is too ignorant and ilwxilerienced to knorw how often our dearest wishes turn into the hoomerangs that slay us. For it is one of the sad truths of life that our appetites, our’ tastes and our cravings are never static. They change with our growth, with our age, with circumstances, so that the things that we broke cu: hearts in longing for when we were kids, we no more want when we are grownup than we do an all-day sucker or silttle red wagon. And this is just as true of what happens to the relationships of people as it is of their attitude to- wards thinss. and it is what makes youthful man]. fixes such risky experiments. A buy and girl ment- ' ally and“ emotionally undeveloped and with no idea uhat sort of a man and woman they are going to turn into themselves, m‘ WW Qualities they will want in a rmte, decide that. they are in lnvg and that ihey must marry. I The)’ have no money. The boy has no way of making a living. They h“! t0 55601119 Dflrlwites upon their parents and go to live with tkfieig till-laws who don't want them and who resent the imposition ° B" 18 to suPPWt- Msmies husband, or John's wife, and the re. sultant babies. IND IN DIVOBCEB that take place before either the bride or the them that fill the divorce courts with dis. Continued on page 11 ‘I II Ill!‘ IUDIY Wile Of Your: 3! 1IlI-IIIII,“I- It is these marriages brldesraom is ready for "Mast?" James asked, then add. ed drowsiiy “how would 1 know?” This was in reply to an excited query of mine, voiced at the stair- foot door a few minutes ago. It is near the one which had given me entrance to the kitchen, that I had closed with a udsy jar. An exlremely strange experience I have just had which leaves me ra- ther breathless and my hand un- steady. Betweenlenefis end where I got‘ down from a neighbor's ca: and our own door-step, it happen- ed, and in numberless comings and goings, as I said to James when telling of it “the like nev r happen- ed before." Savlng my st shoes as best I could from the sticky clay there by the elders, I made my way across the gang-way bridge. walk- ing slowly to admire the May stars which in a bright bevy are mirrored tonight in the placid wat- er of the pond beside. Up the stream too, there were bright reflections and near me ripples broke the sur- face to show the flow of its waters, as it entered the pond. A soft mur- mur like that of grand-daughter's BUN!) ANDBODY 1i M's-s lhouaht mum; World War I and found true m wand w" 11 m" hidh-ctrunt emotional men and wurnen were more likely to develop stomach and intestinal ulcers and other ailments of the . s stomach and tine than those with e calm disposition Wm? "my o! u: do not realize is thelt lust as emotional disturb- BMBB calraffect the stomach and intestines in nervoug and motions] indlvlduolls, so can they affect the Stomach and intestine; in nor-mg] or heal“, individuals if these dis- turbencrs are severe or prolonged. Thus. I have mentioned before a StWMIY-built. buoyant patient of mine. never ill. who developed a stomach ulcer during on, mgrket crash. Because he was healthy and buoyant he had to meet the aus- tomers of his brokerage office’ who had lost their money. Within six months he developed o. 5mm“), X11083‘. T0 811F903 this fact that healthy normal individuals can develop ulcer of stomach and s-znaid intes- tine, Dr. H. L. Boclnus. Philadel- rrihia. in the "Journal of the Ameri- 08m Medical Association" quotes Dr. E. Weiss: “ ychosoma-tic (mind or emotions a fecting the Organs and processes of the body) disturbances of the stomach and intestines occur in healthy people undergoing emotional stress!" Also hear there on the stillest day or night, if one but chooses to listen. I U O The stars and the light and dark shadows there, denied by Winter. lent e. charming touch to the scene, enhanced I thought by the stillness that comes to remote coun- try places nearing the dead of night I walked confidently. neith- er lonely nor afraid but enloying much the delight of the moment; coming to grace as it were, the end quomqi 15 m, Walter Alvarez, Mayo of a perfect day. Then as I enter- clinic, who states that every stom- ed the laneway. past the bfldw- Hoen and intestine specialist should spied a small animal padding ahead be learning g1; h‘ can 8pm,; my. in the semi-gloom. A smallish crea- iqhlggg-y of m, gppgmnqy ‘an!’ ture. dark. m" Wm‘ willie marl». The thought. then u that when lngs that were noticeable in the symptoms point to disturbance; of darkness. "Ohl" I exclaimed and the stomach and intestine. and X. the sound of my voice must have ray, test; meal; and other methods carried to Pard at the house. or ‘of examination zlhows no organic it may have been that he was n- lrouble. the patients mental and ware of my approach Ufore this _flrnotlunal life should be investigat- for he barked, but strangely en- , ed as fer es possible. ' ough did not come as usual to meet e The Plychiotrist will need to be me. Quickly leaving the laneway trained in internal medicine and I climbed to the greening. and now the internist in psychiatry if the damp meadow above, to lend some ipatient suffering with symptoms in distance to'my company, and_con- ‘the stomach, intestine. and“ other tinned wgrily towards home. IIIOTZB-IIS-JIQIPC. liver. gall the prom? had gala: w‘ n,‘ 1:15:13; skin-ls to be helped. l pace sea o s PPM! l1 ibzervsls w survey me. I should "WW5" _ have been here in the lamp-light before this. m one of its pausesi Neural: —-_be1lcvhie you have a a question I hm an” "Md “mo IillYIlfiOOIIbIIV-Iilbivfllm mire eplsts fsrmwives about to set off frothy-la _ mifltgd nerellglly "i201".- our Aid meeting at the old Kirk ot_ P1911’ 5:114 l?! ‘f0!’ $153 b0": the comer that nlsht. came to "H011"! ‘Y! b°vkl°u°fl l" l" mimL The“, w”, m, “on: ‘h, entited Neurosts. To obtain lté “um; spruce Grove w“ whlch m, just send 10 cen s and s. 3-oerl _ stamp. to cover cost of hutdllng " " "m "f"? i” u“ “m” land mailing to the sen emu-m, in MN 0f fihll flQWllil-Dfil’, Pflb Of- "AM m“ w“ "‘ "I “mmm” flee Box so. Station o. New York "w a u" a a i ‘bfivgbxegrlf of inborn, blbw goxrle 19' N- Y" “d Q m‘ 7°“ “PM from the community replied laugh- , p . in: “we're not Int"? l" ° W" mmoemei m um world - except I skunk‘ ' h Id Home o illilulisiill‘wiu'“ll“il it‘. 2X21‘; Scrapbook I1 leberh Lee tent to been who alone the was way es we are. But if we're meet- ing one. well that milht put s no scent on the situation!" With ec-, celersted hurt-beets too l recall-i ed James‘ advice to me. “Ellen. if, you're ever ololyto a sunk. dent; let him face you!" And ‘Tim Oil!’ Continued en pile 11 lpnMti furniture To remove white shim from fur- niture. dip a cloth in gerooense oil eadnubthelpotwdi. Teomuoh aiodtol will Genny the varnish. Then moisten e. third cloth in fur- nltuN polish and rub lliorowhly. Anfivealllnl m Wes-o‘ heat- ruins» . wont ouloklyifefterthe. gee bus-non --- ha‘ been burning for about two from». who had not neennainleslheoveadoor isopened elm other uriivo rem, dlooovu- just or e second. to let the moist Id uoh bad been Illflld during._li.s eecloe. rllfi“ i y It lolm more than than lfloeop e man happy! If you want your man always to be proud you...i! flu want clulaya to look younguat, ' , And IOVGHBI . . .you mustwatclsyourdbt! And, in any diet to gain a lovely figure, you should eat certain special foodl h of their vital “pmtectiuf? qualities. Tlusl le why Kellogg's AII-Bmn in includedineclentific ‘glut-control menus. All-Ema is made only from _ ‘MAY. .13. 194s _ s... ,_.,__‘_‘__ ature m2‘- -.-. _ . tbewhrlayero ottba wheat groin.- Tbialotlsoviiolpertlorichinireu and certain other “protective? food, elements your body must have. Not only is All-Bron a “protective” food but it is guaranteed, on g double-ymir-mbnoy-back basis, to, keep you regular naturally. Such natuml regularity is always advior able, diet or no diet. " Melneupyowgnindtetakebettc are ofyouualf. Start eating Ul- Brun today. ' I roninsoucauo .D.|E_T$ i mawzxv“ 771a Stars Say-- By Genevieve Kemble l For filthy, May 1G A PRDMPT and clever grasp of unusual opportunities in which there may behldden factors or un- dercover lncitornents. may canine-1- nate in very progressive and con- structive performance. Tlhe mental- ity is versatile, receptive and fer- tile, yet finer aspects of imagina- tion, foresight and intuition Elhould heighten the prospect of accom- plishment. Change, new contacts. perhaps with unusual persons or propositions. may be to t-lv-“ad- vantage. giving pleasure and prob- ably exciting intrigues. If It h Your Birthday Those whose birthday it is, are assured of a year of definite prom- ise for important operations prob- ably in new fields, on fresh proposi- tions or projects, and in associa- tion witm strange persons or or- ganisations, who may prove en- chanting, intriguing and thrilling. The men-ts} slan will be keen. ver- satile and fruitf l. enhanced b7 l capacity for far vision, a deft jumping at conclusions. although imaginative pAOCESSQ5~ hill’! 14951! or stimulated creative urges may spring from hidden or secret ln- spiration. Alli matters should 110111’- ish, giving new scope and oppor- tunity for welcrme chan/ZB- new environs and pleasant relation- ships. intriguing and gar‘. A child born on this day should be richly endowed with a fertile mentality. quick to EH15!) Iimkiilfl‘ opportunities, in which hidden creative fiicultlsc and forces give success and happiness. a VERSDXTILI! ~ 1. JUMPEB "er-mapper Iii with the newenug bodice end til-- lowing gklfl’. . . . i: wonderful ‘.0 wear s; a sun-beck star! And it lhas its own round collared blouse to cover up in for the street. No. 2419 is "cut in sites 10. 13. ll. i6, 18 and 30. Bile 15 ill-TYPE!‘ W‘ quires 2% yards 39-inch; blouse. 1% yards 39-inch. send 20o for each Pattern. which includes complete sewinl N14?- Print your Name. Address end Style Number plainly. Be sure in uni: or cone umber in your ed- drel ' The Cherlozt-town Guardian. Pattern No. 241s ...__.__.._________._'._.. mm address _ . . 5.1g, ‘ Province Peronlpe are one _ef\.the. m“ economical of the root jrlletablee generally available. if the! l?‘ boiled and then candied in r wit; gum on be removed mo» still i?“ muztgimmlvinlg an???‘ ." _,you're_ - " ' ~~ e .e so livlrr." rim moaned soremrfully. . »_ and erenie iuice they m 0N \v:'l liked. _' . stat: size you want. Include P°¢fli' n. Address Pattern Delhi-MM. mike," ture of brown sugar. melted but"? Bett English Otwlllillnl 1. What is wrong with this em- tence? “He borrowed it off oi Tom." 2. ill/int is the correct pronucw iation-of ‘bnonireim? 3. Which one of the“ Word-s 3i misspelled? Bigsmnue, bleniai, bll- I V let-doux. 44. What does the word “sour mensmate" mean? s. what is a word beginnim with co that means "huge; 11¢- mendous"? ANSWERS 1. Sm, "He borrowed itfron Tom." 2. Pronounce mllfld-{ZM- I o; in up, accent first syllable. '3 Biennial. 4. Adequate. "John: sal- ary was not commensurate wit-l his needs." 5. Colossal. Q, How Can‘! N! g l; Anne Aoblq Q. Human 1 nakeewbb" hot-water bottle lust longer? A. It will last twice as long il the stemrn is pressed out before in- serting the stopper. If it ls never filled more than ' two-thirds. and never with boiling water. and all" not in use, the w; is nuns will opening downwards. Q. How can I remove paper ill-ii has stuck to the polished surface , of a table? a. Rub the paper really with I cloth moistened with a few "W" of sweet oil. ' d Q. How can I treat a cuvbm‘ that isfiialrtp‘! . A. Place a box of qllkklil“? m the cupboard for n few (i155 i" absorb the moisture. fNeedlecraftf /FOR_ THE_ HOME!