Vi id W. FABRIC TRENDS 'I'un of the spring fabrics trends Hill a major style feature now be- ing reported from Parts are all iiiiisiiatcil in this Montreal fash- ion. already available in Canad- ian stores. Paris decrees the re- fllln of crepe and polka dot prints. lllr iwn t'anadlan fabrics used in this style in addition the hlpllne detail of the peg top.skirt is said gLg5&s sass New Colorful Whenever there is a furniture show that features fine pieces in; the best traditional manner. there; is one young mother we know who manages to spend an hour or so there. it is such a change from her modern ranch-type place and furnishings. p Recently. we took her to one display that really did epitomisel the lovely surrounding for which she longs. USE OF COLOR Color was beautifully used. the furniture played up the late lath century. with some Italian Direc- toire and French Empire pieces. . accessories were antique. The Oriental influence is creep- ing into this type of interior. too. Just as it has pervaded the mod- em. and the mixture is most in- teresting. Here. the lesson to be carried away was the utter ab- sence of the fussy. the cluttery. the cute or toopretentious. COOK'S CORNER 0 MINUTE PARKER ltI0l'SE ROLL! 2 cakes yeast I V4 cup warm water 1 cups milk it. tablespoons sugar Ira teaspoon salt Va cup butter 41-; to 5 cups sifted flour Dissolve yeast in water. Put milk. sugar. salt and ti butter into saucepan and heat until lukewarm. Add yeast and flour. Cover and let rise is minutes. Turn on flour- ed board and pat to M: inch thick- ness. Cut with 2" cutter. Brush with remaining butter and fold dough over. Let rise on Irelicd baking sheet for is minutes- Bake in hot oven M50 degrees) an important new trend. 'KEEP IN TRIM One's Figure In IDA JEAN KAIN Vatiii-is girdle is capable of keeping one's figure in good shape for a lifetime. But let the inter- lacing middle muscles lose tone. and the dreaded middle spread is on - regardless of weight. While the overweight recognizes that deposits of excess fat contribute in the spread. the normal weight I! morr apt to be puzzled and aiarnied at this figure change. I rcadcr sends i.iiis request: "vii-asp do a column for us slim lii'IS who. over the years. have deiclopcd protuding iummies. We don't need to reduce except in thi;- one arra. There are several in my neighborhood-some who arr lI"I')' young mothers -- who also lament this figure problem." Tiirre is not much wrong with ftinsl normal weight figures that 'flllIfIn'l be fixed by the return of hrartiig tone to the muscles which rrtmprisr nature's girdle. This trio 0' exercises is designed to Itrcngtiicn the importapt figure controlling rnusclea. I"usiii0rl: Lying on back on floor Iith legs together. liovement: Making the abdom- inal muscles take the action. slowly move right leg out to the side. keeping heel on floor. Return to position. Repeat 0 times. ai- Isys making the middle muscles In the work. Repeat routlaa with for 10 minutes. Yield 2 dozen rolls. Girdle is Good To Keep in Shape ileft leg. Now move legs apart slowly. keeping heels on floor. . . then return to starting position. concenn-ate on woi-kins the ID- dominai uscies forcibly. FOR SID FRONT To tone the side-front muscles. Position: Lying on back. knees bent. soles of feet flat on floor. Movement: Drop left knee down sideways toward floor as far as it will go without strain. leaving foot in place but turning it on its side. Slowly raise knee again to first position. Repeat 10 times. ai- ternating legs. The third exercise is more dif- ficult. but powerfully effective in tuning the side and front muscles. Position: Lying on back. arms extended overhead. legs straight down. Movement: sit up. swl nil In it arms forward and to the left. At the same time. lift left knee to- ward right sh o uid er. twisting trunk to the left. arms in back of left knee. Return to starting posi- tion. Then repeat fn opposite side. lifting right knee to left shoulder. Repeat routine 6 to at times. ai- tornating sides. (Note: trunk should start twisting as soon as the back is lifted off the floor. While the one knee is lifted to shoulder. the other leg should re- main on Jloor with the knee straight.) t.!."l'HBlIDGli.- Aita. (CPI .. On: aama perhaps more than any other means the theatre in Al- Ileria-Qtw Illtchall of Cglggry, tttectar-of Calgary Workshop It. Burbs the 10 yuan linen Al- berta regional drama festivals 3:! times. Winner t year was the Medicine tilt Civic Theatre um. ltslaa 17. And drama directors who but lots Mitchell "have to be good.” said Mrs. E. L. Chrfstsuaan d sttiling. president of the Alberta Drama League. "No other pae- son has dons as much for drama- 'tt llh-rta as Hefty Mitchell. By I'"""'l'ng a high standard of com- wttion among theatre groups at Dfovlncial festivals she has raised Ilie level of all production in the Innual festivals. ' Wtfcmonnl theatre." They include oaarsa nah. new "mitts known as the "WC who starred "rival of 15. 3” "mail! 'f1'mers Wk "'iRonsarussI.waoiiupuru Ntheteievtstu rttutlua .l'!'WhIch sauauntau inmost t , ma while a mum at the 'Il:'lfI'!IIy of fl: .3: "main 5:1: uses -can Calgary, .. T . N mg.Itl:rfI::,I. .f. Tboriassa G” loan can .5 it t From Her Drama Workshop ,TIiey Made A Name in Theatre years on a Rockefeller fellowship awndad for her contribution to drama on her return. a group of the high school alumni got together with Miss Mitchell and Workshop it was born. It was so named because the gross first worked in out wing 14 in an I'l!IIoIII. actress but Miss 11713! for III! tov Dominica Drama but play. year aha and Workshop 14 luia. "Like all creative ust be work to achieve said. "But it one on- no more reward- ii i. 'E:!E3 '1! II V H m as E d In 1! VI ea”: 5'5” g Shows Fine Features Wholesale Price Index Advances OTTAWA tr!” --t'anada's gau- erai wholesale price indea rose .0 . per cent in January to 23.1 from I 23.! in December. the bureau of! statistics said Thursday. . The January figure also was sat Decor If is soothing lust to look at a beige and chaacoal living room. with its black-fringed facile ml "4 Wm, in am ping. 30m 33;" per cent higher than the size lug buck ,mp,d uphomg , in; recorded in the corresponding used for a handsome Regency month last year. The index in acts. Loden green and pink chintz MR6 0!! 1935-39 Brit" HIIIIIIIHI drgperieg are pretty you here the 100. flbflf-' WI-I HD9395 9" ""0 '3h5I"-l Increases were registered In Atiua blue and olive sreen WlS'.'".nuary in semi of the right the piquanf color combination coynmnfnf K.-nun... M... . (,.,.rm,,. used in a most attractive dining "mm, H, 9,, .,,.i,- mm, to ,i,.i room. where walls and run; ”l'""IcIine. in aqua and green was used smartly as I IllCE580;Y Erxtloir. l"'""'””' ” '”” ET I Color was expertly an e . too. in a gracious bedroom which show . that charcoal and cream color. set I all M. "M rm "V ml, my hug. off by touches of brilliant peavcocky hand is 0'' nu”, ma" uh" ",9; blue and cocoa brown. arenf at kissed my- all out of place for a bedrooms "Am yn'" Mam” or mmpmn. The charcoal and white wallpaper in dn”e.,.. had a classic Empire pattern and .. ' i was finished with deep swags circ- --m---vv--' ting the ceiling. the curve of the STAYING IN BELGIUM swag smartly repeated in the ADELAIDE. Australia tReii- headboard of the French walnutl bed. tersl-Group Capt. Peter Towns- At the foot of the bed as hlueIend. former suitor of Princess silk upholstered bench repeatedthfargaret. said Monday. ”My the peacock blue of the rug andthome is in Belgium I started my the swag setting off the beautiful world) tour there. i shall go back white draperies. there to iive.' Wants Bushels Exchanged For Pounds In Canadian Business WINNIPEG lCP'-II will mean a car of grain he must ueigh II in a lot of work and expense. says pounds. convert it to husliels for IC9Mdian Wheat man. I0 L his shipping report. and record statistics and records from bush- Lhg weight figure in pounds for a- eis to pounds, but he says it will railway but of Iading, bneadworth it to see the change COMPUCM-ED WORK "T." b y . At the terminal cicvalor grain, ' ' '9 "sh" ” MI " ".""'mI',:rIocumenis are issued in biislicltl " rm Vmum" " m” V””"' lfrclghl bills are calculatnrl in Only Money U. 5. Treasury Hus floxpayers Have Put There Iy IOGER GREENE . WASHINGTON (AP - After four years as boss of the u.s.1 money bags. Treasury Secretary, George Humphrey is an anguishedl authority on what he calls lh myth of ”ihe great money well." "We haven't any v.ell of free money." he said. "The only money we have is the money we take away from the people anti -'1 after adding some overhead to H-9 pass it back to them." Testifying in Congress. the big. ruddy-faced cabinet official wa" eipiaining why he is appalled at. the enormity of federal spending -7. and why he belivi-ii it must be. curbcd or eventually the country will suffer "a depression that viii curl your hair.” RECORD SPENDING lie was being called lift in cx-. plain why the Eisenhower admin- American -goods and services. I quire a fax bite of 5422 for EVPTVI pounds and more conversions arr' still required when the terminal' ships out grain. The local elevator man when cleaning grain converts from bushels to pounds for, weigiiinu. in local sales another conversion for weighing. then back again to complete the invoice. I To farmers and iced moo a change will mean simplification of price and cost calculations andi easicr comparisons of IONI ratios and cost. All feed transactions are in huntiredwr-ights but they grains are still measured in hush- s. Support for the change has been given by the four western grain- handling co-operatives. the North-' West Line Elevators Association. the Canadian Feed Manufacturers Association. the Canadian Millrrsi Association and tho (ianndiani whonl board. and district farm i-rs. Istration in asking flotllrero for' 8'll.IlI.flII.flIL-the biggest peace-p time budget in history-for fi"!III IIM. Humphrey's prediction that no- ' abated federal spending could on- leash a hair-curling slump has Ianwed one ol the hottest cou- troversies in years. F-esident Eisenhower and IIiim- phrey agree that ihc trend is due in ever - increasing demands for federal assistance from a fast growing population. But they dif- fer on where to hold the line TAKE ONE-SIXTH Among other things. the storm has posed these questions: I. How great a share of total ".5. income can the governmcnt exact in taxes without plunging ihr country into hankrupicy'! lThe new budget would take more than one-sixth of the entire S4i2.000.000.000 annual out put of It would re- man. woman and child in the United States. compared with S3? in fiscal I938 on the eve of the war I 2. How long can the ll..l go mt jacking tip the world: economy vii. muiti-hiliinn-dollar foreign aid programs” Since the end of the nor. for-I eign military and uoiiomic and has reached a staggering total of nr-arly S6fI.fl)0.000.00fl dollars, or morc than one-fifth of the national drhi I .'l (inn the UN afford to i-:iI tlmrn on military expenriitiircs. at the risk of weakening its do- fcncos'.' WEAPON POSTS SOAR lDefence Secretary Wilson say: military spending will probably go up, not down. over the next few yrars. The old Pentagon slogan of "more bang for a hurls" has just about disappeared as r:-i-nltiiion- ary new weapons scnri defence tanstssnartsgi Economy-minded -nnrv-so-sv-at Elders have rontemiod for -.-an that Soviet Russia coitlri tiring ill: Us to its knees. without -aar atmplv by committing II in a colossal military huilrfup in the East-West arms race. Have defence-plus-aid outlay- pegged at M5.3lJ.0(I).0fIi in thr- Ilatost budget-already grougiit the- U. .5. to the eco n om ic dangcr point? Ask a dozen persons ami you '39! a dozen different answers to I these questions. iN0 FEAR OF BUST l "I don't think we're r.-innit-I). lelose to I hust." fr-sfifirs (Willi- Imerce Secretary Sinclair We:-ks. p "At the rate the federal gnvnrn lmrnt is spending money. wPt'v going to hell in a Cadillac." roun- ters Chairman Harry Rvrd of th- Senote finance committee. I Sr-nalor Paul Douglas of Illi r.ois. vice-rhairman of tlir 3':-iiaia. 'IIOiIIsP economic f'0lnIfIIlIPl-' and a Iformer professor of err-nomu-:. lllrl: I "Wc'rc not going broke. That. I cry has been going up for Ill years while income and produr-timi have been rising all the time." But former president llttrlu-rt lllonwr. recalling the tint: i.m.m- . and-husf while he was in tiir White House, said: "lily hair has airrally I'H'".I curled once. and i think I ii;-im-i the signs again." Humphrey is devoii-div limit to Eisenhower. and the two are I-nu nidercd good friends. But ihc soc- retary is said to rcaiizr hr- has fought a losing traffic in his rrll saric for government or-mu-un Eisenhower told reporter; sniiir time ago: "As IIHIK Its the Alllflltlfll people demand and. in mv our lion. deserve the kind of Sf'l'kIf'( this budget provides. we hale lit to spend this kind of mnnry." ' Humphrey obviously if n i- s n' I agree. 100 per cent. "A country i-:m'i gu nil iuil spending ifsclf imiriinilcli an. more than a man can." he :Ri's Would limit Urban Building On Good Land U'l"l'iW.l III'- A Mrfilll L'ui- ersify Dr0l1N.xlIf suggested Thurs- da) thc time has come in (janada for s't)m(' dircction to curb the lim- mits of urban extension to halt the f'alIl1('llfm of agricultural land and priurlc grt-alt-r national se- curiix Pl'IIfP&xfII' H. .l, spl'Ilf'ft'5aIllS fold the Sitrmti-'s &IM'f'InI nonunif- IN on land um that the ll'fIIPIi'IIN of urban Pk'D:'lllKlftlI alI'f':Ifl)' hair- marl; grant inroads on sumo uf rlir heat nzririilliiiai latui in the coins try ' ”Ms- raiumi go llll IIMIIE pin-lu. cimir. nmi up raiirritt gin utl lining- things in an input irm." Iii ..'li4I What was nt-r-rlc-rl was (mine ma- I"IlIIIf'f'Y in r-um'rliu;rie ihv grout tlvtnarids on tho rniintry .'1t'1-Jilrai ass-ct. its Ianri. l'rlian expansion was hard to stop IIIII ”I flunk iie nrny have in iii-tct'tninc sonic liin- ifs in the cxfcnsion of urban (IP- voltipmcnt whcrc our alzririiliiirnl soil is nffcrlcd." SURVEY OF LANDS Ile .ilIEL'I'.sll"fl ihr ii-rlcral KtHf'l'll- siinulri laiiuili a lanil plas- mont sificalioo siiru-y ill flauatia. "an invcnfnrv of wII.'it yi'e've got." AIIPV flint tilt-re should be ztepa LIFE NOT WORTH LIVING? Tlwn walks! up Ihe Iiu-rl Van Lnma that mm, u.nt,r..,....,.,...4t tp.i.,,,-I it mav hr r-"mt Iw lhr liver If in... live. doesn't pun: out up in tun pints of tut: a ifax ynur fnori may not ti...-u properly. (I! sin... IID your stomach and mu feel that Inc's uni not worth living. Tlsails when the Iliff need- mild gentle Carter's Little Liver Pills Thur famous . pills to-In slimillitt its: aim nflivrr hilt hnun vnuriiigrxlirm lllfll fiimlinn ml nlnnrilv and vnu lcct that ham-v rfan an hen agairI' llnn I .... .... mnli. .41....” imp Caner'sl.iiiic Lu-er Pilli on hand. iWvd,. V-rili I3. "357 Irlw .-.mrrIi4in P:-gr 9 to art on .r I.'uIrI iitrliratimi a; wow or insulin it unn.pnlitu-al hrvli iIi.'ti iumiil Inuit lIii- rmlfldi-in-o ut Kllbvillllliliils anti Iirlp flicui II' plmliiiii; the ii-r ttf lailri Dr.CIiuse's 'IE!!E.I.22” "it- When you fewl irr-.I. iinvmssi. irrital.i- little things I-other you -rm-s pile up. is the trust to lake Itr. (Ilia:-rig Nerve l"n-ul. The lai.umrs RI and Blood Ilusltliiig Iran in Dr. Ch1w'u ht-rvr Fowl wnrb log-Qhg pg IlflplllllldllllwrlilfEFlJ0flIb6I.lth - In-Ip xmyfr:-I rrIasPlI. at cage, llllr to firrcrl you ever lmd i I . IIl.tI gun will gt-ml health. Ilclplt ii-ti in-I In low inch Iyfp . rimit-I--nt -vilrrg-fir--ready In ruin-v your family. yawn wt-rl. hvtlf in-ml-L 'I'hr so-uivr Wm at art. Hp Qexygpg you tum fr.-I lIN' benefits of ski ;rII-muiiil tunic. I9! l7.n'snnsny si1.r 32.13 llasrn you 44d. nu. cs-Iasrs uanvz I-oon..,.,, he said in an interview. "and the sooner a change is brought about. the better." Giving added weight to the pro- posal is a parallel move in the United States. A special investi- gating committee of the U.S. de- partment of agriculture and u.s. iced organizations have already adopted the slogan ”thr. hundred- weight by Mr. Baxter said. "Perhaps we will not meet the 1958 dateline but It don't think we'll be far behind. A change in the United states will speed any change in Canada and they should be made together." Supporting the plan. W. G. Mai- aher. director of the research de- partment of the Searie Grain Company Ltd. wrote recently in his grain market features letter: "The bushel as a unit of grain measure is cumbersome and out- of-date." The bushel was never exactly defincd but is essentially a Uflll. of volume. in Canada the stand- ard buahel used is the imperial bushel of 2219.6 cubic inches.- Bulk handling of Canadian grain resulted in the measure...-ii. of grain by weight rather than vol- time. To establish a workable stand- ard of quality and volume the Canada Grain Act requires each volume bushel of grain to meet a minimum weight in pounds. VAKYING WEIGHTS The weight of a bushel nf wheat is set at 60 pounds. rye and flax 56, barley 48 and oats 34. This maintains a measure of quality but only an approximate mea- sure of volume. for today it good quality bushcl of ants weighs about .18 to 40 pounds. A change to the hundredwcight aystcm would not interfere with quality standards. But a change would mean the elimination of numerous convcr slon calculations from pounds to bushels and biisbt-ls in pounds as grain moves from farm to, final market. When I farmer delivers his grain to an elevator iris weighed in pounds and converted to hush- els in order to issue a storage re- ceipt or cash ticket. , When the elevator agent shim Jet Ages .liii'ers "'9' II! an we all awn tn-M Insanity? The tempo of ma. ll IIVIIII calls for a -we hlanud outlook and a '1"!- saiom lessening of fen-ion. an the aspects. How to uimvs I0 I07! Of I -on restful life Is outlined In I special nrfifli 57 Howard Whitman in Us ' Standard this weali. Get TVII Itandard-ea sale now. Iota- lku vb Illusion. I1-page and ad I pass. of moles. only ten unto. Chcststtiiarii I ' on sat: Now "saw no lure... Artliritic, , Rheumatic Pain Without Pills , Ghlliillhollulsaaaveaahpaaouatoadnp. spssdsIowalfroah.sialsbIasdineusnanaa. I I-In-drtvti awaypda-in&gpnaaiiro. useiisv-tact-.;.i.e."..-tut. E mania-oaa..m. . i First call for ba. hewing. Your favourite store rite now. way to Introduce eggs to baby ovan no lint or arnamsn AND JUNIOR wears uavcssuu.sraaisuasoamonooos.rsmnussoscms - I . is Now. baby can start the day just as tinrlrly does-with a delicious. nourishing egg and bacon breakfast made specially for baby to agree with his young system. And there's no mono convenient way for lmbv to get. his daily quota of iron-rich eggs than in Heinz Egg and Bacon Breakfast. He'll love the delicious bacon-y taste too-and it's so easy for you. Heinz Strained Egg and Bacon Breakfast. is so smooth even a little baby can swallow it. Later, try Heinz Junior Egg and Bacon Breakfast- tha right feature to encourage c has both-now. S byis breakfast NOW! an egg and bacon breakfast specially made for. your baby! x I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I t I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I V mus follrl V, .” ', "KIN! Pie-loolrsid Cough IIHNZ Sfrcload Moofl IIIINI Strained Pm! Nine IIIINI Strained load! i offerl than only oomplolo line of food for habitat and i. chock mom . . . have you tried them all? RI-a Carnal Ftnlnad ClIcIC O Vad U It:-land Ovsuga Jrdd O Stvaluotl Arvplo Join G-rvtno'Vea-t-Mas Green Beans Was Beans U Mind Vtltfabld C has cl swim-I -Wviaah . S-wt Prwatul lash ('av-nut! Peas aad Cums: 9:1-in-ah and Carrot '1 onsate Soup Vegetable Soup C Rico and Chaaan C. Rat-on Omelett: E V-trfable OIIIFIDWD C Fin A Farm Fvoalrfsal if Rod and Farina re Rnaf 'u....4i. L rhwhlfl Rm r I'M. law Vrvvlla E r-.... .-is gs.-my r; i',;...si.. n...r ",1 U", f v-no-i-l-I-. rt.-rt:-u and Fa.-IQ If V g-tablet and Lluaab A......... and M-rtr HIVIVC HIHIVIII ( stir-A rmlt 5 .....,. r.....--I .4 7' re... : .m..4 ugnu Jumnr Ma an .7 mu (3 Hal H-art if livtv 5 Bacon :3 FM:-inn L Veal rt rules.” 0 IIIINI Junior Foods ii 1 mod ran.” it flu-vim Vet-in-in ri Rt-or f'Matn-1 E I. Q o ? 1 I . I'M:-has an-I V-e-tau. I-up - r1...s.n No-VII. runner H... in Tftnt-rev I'r-1-med Diced Vpgptahfd ? i Veibfahle Forty! Split. Pu -and Ham "inst For-on TWIIIDV ii 3? I --uh L I my Imm-O 3 iii? 1 i I--Isasnaufaaslsj xOi:iDt'.1tJaUf:tt'.t""”Wa".n:7"'t'tt'i"f:1r"tt'i"7l ;::, I if