By Eleanor. Reosevelt > =© Webster Groves, Mo., l(ondiy-â€"'l‘lh weck end with Pro(utant W Bishop of Missouri, Dr. Willlam lett, and Mrs. scurleumavm pleasant interlude for ma. * After a n:ce, quiet lubcheon on ‘Mgtâ€" urday there was a press conferente, but the prous seemed to consist mairily of youngsters: The few members of ‘the working press on hand were Jowed up in the sea of young ‘Tho Leazue of Wemen Voters awo a delegation present. Certain questions seem to come up over and aver again, such as,â€"for.inâ€" st_nce, :questions about. theâ€" Atlantic pact. ‘These, of..course, 4. eannot anâ€" swer, because the substance of the security alllance has not . yet . been published and I don‘t know : wht ‘the pact contains. Slmilarly. the: Mï¬n on whether Molotot!s re vishinsky will make a change in U.B WOÂ¥ 'lwu I did a short recorfltpg Tor: a A ipeeï¬l broadcast. that is to. be ‘made= soon and then I went with Mr. Smb ot th:â€" Jefferson Memorial® Commitéee: to see the model of the new netional shringe at the art. museum This conâ€" ccption _ of. the memorial tbat com memorates: our‘ territorial â€" of carly19th century is ‘véry, Interestâ€" ing and ‘I‘m sure the devewped area will bo very <effective> and\ striking We dgrove from the art: museum toâ€" the courthouse where . the. Freda Boott ‘case was tricd, and we cven drove, aslong §.R. policy is anotl;er ne answer. Untll W¢ acmally hapfths, nobody will khow. Â¥ S P P o _/ C â€"v o oo 44@ ¢ 0 46 4 ¢3DBD0 0 00 000 0006060 400 «. «:. a SE _ + a o o w o o ct o ce caoqsr c cor oc ooo s o o o o .« : § o a lllfl!“l W 84 V ; “v ’V ““q ,"f" ‘apncas, uobody will | know..,.;_.' _ When. the interviewsâ€"rwere‘ enda ie t nc sn ut hanie c o+ 2t 9i t th Skm y men,wm gain 5, 10, 15 Ibs. Foc. free© roo{ inspection and ndvlc’e just‘cah 4000 and oux‘ ‘ reo experts â€"at NO och'rmN 2s me o wm nmpcct your rool â€"â€" givyg you lreo advicq Imt an esflmlte on ~the .,‘ ,‘ ..e».w 7 Phone 187‘6 M _‘.“ .F R E E ROOFING SMITH ACT NOW! Phone 4000 ) *necessary ï¬ï¬% o Minor . Aueuunm ‘Counters, SMWQ Bookcases® and‘ Built Inf Cn;ï¬urdh 143 werlude ftcr meo. 1:ce, quiet luhchem.on'“t- e was a press conferente, : :s seemed to consist ers: The® few members o( g press on hand were in the sea of young e of Wemen Voters also B ‘0- t"‘ f‘ #W .\,‘ 4P . ||â€" Remove spots bcfore storing crisp i ~]|| ant leafy vefectables These should be placed in a crisper or wet bag in the refrigerator. . y Gid and new milk should not be mixâ€" ed unless you use it immediately. Don‘t leave milk on the sunny dcorstep. Bacâ€" ‘Teria develops easily if it is keot in d watn place and the milk may lose its B vitamins, too.. . Qereal foods and baking powder nec 'qul dry place for storage. Coffee, Ctaâ€" iï¬d spices need airâ€"tight conâ€" ‘mflht«l sugar should be kept dry so it doesn‘t become lumpy. Brown M to be kept moist, preferably In arn airâ€"tight container with a slice of qrange.. or apple~placed on a piece “"?"â€"’" to add moisture to it. the waterfront to get a better idea 6f how the shrine will really look. 1J ecan remember when my husband and 3 along the waterfront when fhe W‘h was in its very first stages, but most of the buildings that stood. thero are all torn s4o0wn and it 18 easier to see where â€"trees will be Thé ‘Bishop‘s house in St. Louis is a deii htm; home flooded with sunâ€" shfl‘le "and ‘with pleasant grounds ayround it.. Everything was covered with Ircch snow on Sunday morning ‘but ‘by ‘afternoon it was about gone. The‘Searlett ‘dog had a gay time in -thc yard, and she is always running -frdm doodr to door begeging to be let in again almost as soon as ‘she is ‘let"out, which shows proper affection for . her family. | planted.. : Therse are two buildings still stnding that will remain in the argeaâ€"â€"tlie charming old church and the old Astor furâ€"trading post. CAt: 6 15 Iâ€"was taken off by my lecâ€" ture sponsors to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Well for a.â€"small reception, after whibh mnner was served. Later in the‘evening I spoke on the Universal Déclaration of Human Rights. s bn the ‘wholo, this was a peaceful week end, ‘and as I look back over this entm trip I have been rather fortunate ‘in not being tco hurricd \too busy on the Sundays. for . er family. 3 ~visitors who are really catered to, : however. are the birds. They havo houses and feeding stations all around, and I saw a lovely red cardâ€" inal pecking around while we were eating ‘lunch. Mrs. Scarlett tells me tbat they spend the winter here, as dos mtny ‘otherâ€" varieties of birds. ‘~Turn cut melon or citrus fruits cut gidq-down ‘on . plate in the refrigâ€" F1 * 4 o egétable shortening and lard should [bé ’keï¬f in a cool place. All other § faï¬s must e â€"refrigerated to keep them tufning rancid. + BMoft: cheese must be keot covered tightly to prevent it from spoiling. Hard cheese should be wrapped in _ waxed paper or tinfoil to keep. Store At.covered so it idoes not absorb odors rom other food. RECIPE OF THE WEEK Sunda,y Supper Salad ' Serves 4 h lcbp chopped, cookel chicken $ oup finely chopped patsley cup finely chopped sweet pickles < i# cup salad dressing â€"‘B@alt and;pepper * 8 a $ ‘ 'ro keep .best, grapes, apples, pears anï¬ péaches ‘should be placed in . covâ€" _‘brb:l pontainers in the . refrigerator. ____________ CDII sauce bine chicken, celery, pickels and salad dressing . Season to taste with salt and pepper.. Spread chicken mixâ€" ure on toast. Top with slice of cheese rge enough to cover toast. Bake in hot (400°F) oven.or broil until cheese is mélted. Garnish with a lot of chili s Glasg Stoppers Parsnips, rutabagas, potatoes, winter squash and onicns should be stored in vegetable bin, kept in a cool, dry â€"~When a‘ glass stopper chas becorne h’t. pour a little glycering aâ€" Household Hints hy KELEN HALE and let Brinz the casserole in which this Lcâ€"iten eggâ€"cheese dish is cooked diâ€" . rect to the table to serve it at its , piping hot tCest as well as to save dishwashing. The family will find the combination of golden and white . eggs baked in ncits of crispy cheese | cornflakes bcoth tempting to the eye ard wonderful eating. It is a differâ€" cnt flavour and texture combination Eggs and Cheese Combinc In Linten Supper Casseroles S:tisfying supper combinations of ezgs and cheese are hitâ€"theâ€"spot for quick and casy service during lent ard fyequent repsat service throughâ€" out the year. Since most of these combinations are particularly suited ts casscorole service direct from the range to the table, they are your opâ€" portunity to save on dish washing while showing off your prettiest bakâ€" inz dishes and fancy skillet. The t;7e appealing service ofâ€" these foods trought bubbling to the table will deâ€" light the family as much as the wonâ€" derful flavcur of the eggs and cheese. A LENTEN â€" SUPPER CASSEROLE Low heat is cssential for egg aMd cheese cookery, whether these foods are served alonc or in combination. Low temperatures produce tender, yet firmlyâ€" â€"cocked egg whites and yolks which make the moest of the delicate 11avdu1 In the case of cheese, low hcat is the means of avmdmg a rubâ€" tery product which results from tooâ€" high temperatures. As we all know, cgss cook in a short time and cheese nozds only to be melted, so there is little cooking time involved in egg and chcese casseroles. s Selection of the cheese for a Ccassâ€" erole dish will depend in many cases cn your family preference for the mild or the sharper, zippier flavours. In buying bicth eggs and cheese, let the famous name, on the carton or package be your guide to quality. No. 2524 is cut in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 36, 23, 40, 42, 44 46 and 48. Size 36 dress requxres 34 yds. 39â€"in.; bolero 1% yds. 39â€"in. t to 3002 iss cut 18, 20, 36. 4 26, 1%,. yds. HerE- are â€" two tempting Lenten fls Po/f Martra Logan THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTAR1IO er,, which you will waut to repeat often Lier in the year as well a during the preâ€"Easiter si.ascn. dishes. One »is the favourite opgâ€" chees2 combination in a supper skillet wicth cornijlakos. The other is a flaâ€" veurful fpmato variation to the everâ€" pbecpuler rarebit. Eggs and Cheess Crunshies (yigcld: 4â€"5 servings) 1 to 2 cups grated nippy cherse 1 to 2 cups cornflakes 1 teaspoon dry mustard 1 teaspoon paprika 5 eggS Method: Mix lis htl,z cheese, cornâ€" flakes paprika ands mr; ,L-mi. ~â€"Put cheese and comflnk mixture â€" into 9â€"inch riund L,akmn p in. Make nests for eggs in cornfiske mixture and plaze in moderalte oven (350°F) for 15 minutes. Brcik esgs into "nests". Bake in moderate oven (350°F) for 15 to 20 minutes ofr until ezgs are done. Serve with garnish of spiced peaches and watercress. § To preyare, lighlly. mix cornflakes, gratc1 chees> paprika and mustard and bake in a moderate oven for 15 minutes, Break e«g3s into nests in the mixw‘e and finish baking for 15 to 230 m;nutea + uxml thc eggs are dchs." "Gave s "garnish of spiced peaches andi teg\spoon salt ,qs,h cayenne peppor Melt the butter, in a heavy frying pan. Add cheose., Epiinkle the fleur over.the cheese. the pan. Cook very,,slowly until cheese imelts and bubble, ~up through the flour. Stir in the â€"milk slowly.. Blend thoroughly. Add scda to tomatoes.. Stir initp cheese, melts anl bubbles up through the, flour. Stir in the milk slowly. Blend.â€"thoroughly. Add soda to tomâ€" atoges. into chcose mixture. Seaâ€" sâ€"n. Simmer a few minutes to blend. Do. not cverâ€"ccck.. Serve on cmckels tcast.â€"or cooked rice. Hunjans Need Plenty ofâ€" Sugar Starch Amount of carbohydrate present in "he body at one time is exceedingly small. In a normal man, there is not nnough blood sugar in the circulatory system, nor enough stored in the form of glycogen in the muscles and liverx, to last for a day. Unless relativeiy large amounts of carbhohydrates are Tis ues of the body constantly reâ€" quire and use barbohydrates (sugars and starches) under all physiological conditions.. Any temporary decrease in blood sugar is accompanied by serâ€" ious disability. [3E Tomatqg]{ arebit CYÂ¥ield 5224; . cups) 1..cup grated pipmy. cheese, STRAWBERRY valuable in vegetabit¢, frut â€"6or fNloweéer garden, borders, etc. A showy pot plant too. Though smaller than commercial scrawberries Mont Rosa is the largest fruitâ€" ing of any variety we know from seed, surâ€" naing popular solemacher and simiâ€" types. Its unique bush form and cxâ€" quisite favor place it in a class by itsclf Fruits from mad the first year: casily n. Bush form, about one o runners.. Hardy perenaial. Bears abundantly from carly summer ull killing frost. Has an intense luscious Bavor and frost. Has an intense lusCcious havor and aroma like that of wild strawberry; _ rich and juicy. Neat compact bushy growth s it highly ornammental as well as EVERBEARING RUNNERLESS DWARKE BUSH Miscellaneous Childrcn thrive on praise. _ Judiâ€" cicusly used, it is a far better method to sccure desirable behaviour than blame or punishment. All of us, adult nnd child alike, want to be approved. We want to feel that the things we do are appreciated. Normaily, however, praise in modâ€" ~cation is most effective. / A quiet word of recommnedation, a pat on the back or a smile that shows apâ€" proval is usually more effective than ‘hc more showy kind of praise. But there can be too much of even a good thing. Sometimes parents or teachers, realizing how effective praise is lxkcly to be, "put it on too thick." For the slightcst thing, they give lavâ€" ish praiss. When this happens, youngâ€" sters soon detect the false note and sre antagcnized rather than spurred "1}or encsuraged. ind aga‘n, a child has been so starved for p,.cval that he "eats up" any of praise. In such instances it is wis2 ts be more geoumerous with p:aise and approval until the time when he no longer hungetrs for it. : Maore than almost any other thing, chi:iren appreciate honesty in those raround them. Sinece overpraise is a ind of dishonesty, it is disliked. Now ta‘ke»n in regularly, the body must conâ€" vor‘ other foodstuffs to meet its fuel needs. . When d@ough carbohydrates aie ingcsted at frequent intervals to maintain adequate suppliecs for musâ€" ctuilzr expenditure, the body is spared the work of making its fuel fro other sources. es en mt o is c itc ie ts ies es e io: Cl nc tm cont Family Scrapbook During the past 15 years 9,567 persons have been killed and 170,000 injured in motor vehicle accidents in Ontario. j If the present rate continues it is estimated that the same number will be killed and quite as many injured in accidents on our streets and highways within the next 15 years. The Department of Highways, the police and other organizations and agencies are working to reduce this needless waste of life, health and property. But the final solution of this problem is Yoursâ€"the drivers and the pedestrians, YOU AND ONLY YOU CAN STOP ACCIDENTS. j e Accept your responsibility as a citizen and do your part each day to make highway conditions safe. ; WILL 179,567 MORE BE KILLED OR INJURED? Whatisyour honest rating on the Following test? DO YOU ALWAYSâ€" 4 Make sure the road is clear ahead before passing? 3 Stay in your traffic line? 4 Keep alert for what other drivers or pedestrians may do? j 5 Come to a full stop at a through street? DRIVE AS Y0UV WOULD MAVE OTNHERS DRIVE 1 Exercise good judgment when driving? CHECK YOUR DRIVING TODAY C C e s ~ â€" F No matter how outraged you map feel at having your husband‘s temper turned on you, it doesn‘t help to lose your temper tco. One is quite likely to discover before marriage whether or not a man is given to rage. Having accepted this trait when you n}arried him you have no right to feel sorry for yourself when something sets it off Instead, make it your job to discover the real source of his anger, which may be far removed from the immedâ€" iate cause of a flareâ€"up. Little by little as you learn about his home backâ€" ground and the hurts he may have suffered as a boy, or the selfâ€" indulgence he was allowed, you can find his vulâ€" nerable spots and steer clear of them. A rather simplificd example is that of a friend of mine whose husband would flatly refuse to keep any engageâ€" ment she might make for the two of them. Naturally, she aggrieved at this lack of cooperation in making their social life pleasant and this lead to many quarrels.. ; Eventually, however. she discovered that her husband had been madle to fetch and carry for his younger sister when hne was a boy. He might prefer a Friday night basketball game. but his sister wanted to go to the movies he had to take her. When the wife finally realized that her husband‘s unwillingness to have his evenings planned for him was an instinctive defense against being domâ€" inated, and was not surliness toward her, she made up her mind not to arrango for any of â€"his time. This might mean refusing invitations when he was not available to consult, but this was better than having to invent ecxcuses to a disappointed hostess. ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS Lad "d ECSE C3 cxcuses to a disappointed hostess. Now you are probably saying, "But why should I have to accept another person‘s weakness?" For the sake of sparing your children, so far as posâ€" sible, those unhappy hours when the The white collars of shirts will reâ€" main as white as when new if a table spoon of borax is added td ‘the water in which the collars are washed. _ It will take away that ugly:yellow tinge that is so difficult to remove,;;; ONTARIO® 7 Signal when stopping or turning? 8 Approach intersections cauâ€" tiously? Q Avoid passing on curves and hills? 1Q Take extra cate in the presâ€" ence of pedestrians? 6 Keep your mind on your driving? _ Another responsibility â€" ‘of Yours is to try to avoid having the pattern of uncontrollable temper repeated in a child. A child in a: true,.kage (not one that is faked to get his,own way ‘about something) feels sick,, gpd helpâ€" less. Help him to see that anger is normalâ€"not sinfulâ€"and thqt if he tries, it can be controlled. ‘Always hold up that goal and make=him feel your faith in his being able :to reach it. Don‘t paint anger as being any worse a fault, for example. than his sister‘s tendcncy to ~cry ‘ over disâ€" appointments. Then, insist that the child accept respcnsibility for his tcmper. t o P OA s air is full of tension antsthreats of violence which they don‘t: yiylerstand. But even more for the gake, of helping your husband . learn . to contml his temper. just as he may be helping you outgrow childish rcers or some other infantile trait. «a» It helps too, to give A chil‘d"flarmless ways of venting his angerâ€"such as jumping up and down and yelling. He will outgrow the need for a noisy outlet, but even an adult often needs to walk off his anger. Check up on the child‘s physical condition, too, and be sure there are plenty of the B vitâ€" amins in his diet for nmaintaining sound nerves. C % j We nced plenty of anger<in the world to help us fight injulstice But control of it should be taught in childâ€" hood, just as you train the ‘hnind t master other strong Jmpulses White Collars "\ i # *21 1 .1 y(’r!. *4 a 1 €3 4 1i)