ow) bode ¢ "i a wv > iii i wiyt + » -- --r-sooR--to--Fise--on--one--of the city's ' ' ., authorities, : [& ! : i % om ss ws ---- : a Memorial To Boy Asked if fertilizer would stimu Who Held Back Sea The Girl Guide Movement, |e Can ans aco ae b | 1 In the Dutch coastal town ol How It Started and Crew I never been able to understand Haarlein, a fictional hero's 'statue, dikes, will. symbolize the very real battle which the: people of the Netherlands have unceasingly wag- "ed against the sea. The statue. is that of the rave Jiplad in Mary Mapes Dodge's world- famous tale, "Hans Brinker," who held back the flood waters from .'¢-Haarlem' by" keeping his: finger in a leak 'in the dike. « The Eye Polder .D. ke ot 'Haar- lem, where the boy's figure will be placéd, is one of- the Nethet- land's oldest- walls faised against - the salt water, notes the -National . Geographic Society! It 'was built in the, catly 1600's, When the Dutch". were just getting under" way their - long-term program hy w hich dikes, windmills; and dra'nage canals were to turn swampy lowlands into productive polders, as the reclaimed tracts are called. The rescue of land in Holland, however, is an old story beginning at least 2,000 years ago. When Roman scholar Pliny the Elder vis- ted this North Sea region around: 50 A.D, he wrote that the natives, . a marsh people known*as Frisians, lived in coastal wastes protected by 4 erude man-made mounds. For centuries, storms aud tides of the. sea intermittently devoured the water-soaked lands, villages and livestock of these people. It was probably not until deep in the Mid- --dle-Ages-that Holland buil#its first" real. dikes, usually in the form of: dams made of willow mattresses - and clay mixed with straw. Today, dikes and other works Suard -millions of acres of Nether- ands sojl. © Destruction of the pumping system, now operated largely with steam-powered and Diesel-driven pumps instead of by windmills, - would mean ruin for much of the country. Since about a quarter of the nation's territory Hes below sea level, this reclaimed nd protected land. represents a ma-.- - jor factor in agricultural production and support of population. : She Can Swim Too!--Lizabeth Scott likes to have her picture taken against the palisades of .the Pacific near her Hollywood home. When she goes to the "beach, however, she does more than pose. Lizabeth is one of the few bathing beauties who really can swim: First "Egg Trick" ~ - It seems, *according to Italian that Christopher Co- lumbus was not the original per- petrator of the famous "egg trick," but thay the honor belongs to a resourceful architect who lived a little in adgance of . the great ex- plorer, To "Florence, as the story goes, were summoned the leading. archi- tects of Europe to show their plans for a cupola like that of the Panthe- on of Rome. Into their midst eame an Italian named Brunelleschi, who proudly proclaimed that he had re- 'discovereds the mode of erecting cupolas which had been lost since the time of the Romans. But he refused to show his model built "upon its. simple principles, propos- ing rather, "Let the man who can stand an egg on end on a marble base have the contract." All the other architects failed .in the attempt, whereupon - Brunel- lesclii~ tapped 'an egg lightly upon its eid and stood" it up. His eom- ~ petitors "angrily protested that any one could do the same, to which Brunelleschi rejoined, "Yes; if they 'had seen my model, they would have i known how to build the cupolal" : The resourceful architect was given the contract to build the great edifice, and. triumphant Suid out his commission. St. Peter's in Rome. and St. Paol's ia London - were construeted on . the Lod model. | Pr) Polio Mother sees triplets--Seated in her wheelchair. Mrs. Elizabeth Warnke, 30, gots "her first look at the triplet girls born to her in a Long Branch hospital, still under treatment for polio, said she was "flabbergasted." The mother, who is Jj TABLE TALKS dane Andrews: With Lent upon LE RO ~how-the weeks speed pasti=a few -- fish recipes might be appropriate, I think, Nowadays, with the speedy delivery, fast freezing, and other modern improvements, more and more families are making fish a regular part of the family menu, , and" not only on Friday. The firet one calls for Halibut, but any other lean white fish wil do Just as well, BAKED HALIBUT . WITH CHEESE 2 Pounds Halibut Steak or 3 Cup chopped celery - 4.Tablespoons nrelted butter - or margarine : 4 Tablespoons flour "1 Teaspoon salt ¥% Teaspoon pepper . 2 Cups} hot milk : 2 Cups grated sharp chore +34 Cup buttered bread crumbs Methéd--Place fish- ina -greased - baking dish. Sauté celery in melted butter. Add flour, salt and_ pepper. . Pour in milk gradually, and cook" over low heat until thickened, stir- ring. constantly, Add grated .sharp cheese and stir until melted. Pour cheese sauce over fish. Top with buttered bread crumbs. Bake in a moderate oven (350. degrees F.) 30 to 35 minites, of until fish is tender and sauce is brown and bubbly. This recipe makes 6 serv- ngs, : . * c FEE A The next recipe -is a bit fancier; but the fillets, cooked in muffin pans, look so _- tempting. when. -- brought to the table that they're well worth the little extra bother. |. -- STUFFED FISH 8 Long figh fillets Lemon juice 2 Tablespoons butter or . margarine : ~. 34 Cup soft bread crumbs % Cup milk © 1 Egg, separated 34 Teaspoon salt © 34 Teaspoon pepper 34 Cup pimiento, chopped 2 Tablespoons minced parsely , Method--If fish' is frozen, thaw before cooking. Sprinkle fish fillets wih lemon juice and coil around in- vide- of greased muffin pans. Melt butter, add soft bread crumbs and stir until well blended. Then add milk, while. stirring constantly, _ Cook until thickened' Beat--egg yolk, and combine with a little of the cream sauce. Then return egg - mixture to cream sauce and cook a minute longer. | "other lean white fish Bi Remove from stove and add salt, --pepper, chopped pimiento and minced parsley. Beat the egg white until stiff but not dry and fold into cream sauce, Fill coiled fillets with mixture and bake 20 minutes in a moderately hot oven (375 degrees F.). Makes 6 to 8 servings. * * LJ 4 { The following recipe calls for . cod fish of the shredded, packaged kind, But you'll know, of 'course, 'that a 'similar amount of any sort of dried fish flakes will do thie "trick. =f z CODFISH PIE 1 Package shredded codfish 6 Medium potatoes, 1 Large carrot 1 Large onion . 234 Cups water © 14 Teaspoon thyme 14 teaspoon pepper "1-Cup sifted flour 14 teaspoon salt % Cup lard 5 " Method--Freshen eodfish second; ing to directions 'on package and cook with sliced vegetables in water. until vegetables are tender. Add thyme and pepper; pour into 2: quart casserole. Make pastry. with flour, salt, lard and 1%-tablespoons water. Roll out to fit casseerole; cut a few gashes to let .out steam. Put pastry over mixture in cas- "serole. Bake in hot oven, 425 de- grees F. about 25 minutes or until brown. » * * fish for a moment," The lady from whom this recipe originally came 'made the comment, "Mother's 'frosted - ginger creams. just can't be beaten, and are a treat at any time." So here's the recipe for: 2 FROSTED GINGER CREAMS _ 1 Cup sugar : 1 Cup molasses = 14 Cup butter 14 Cup' lard "+=1" Cup hot water ~i 1" Teaspoon ginger. - 1-Teaspoon ,cinnamon 1 Teaspoon nutmeg 3 Teaspoons ¢&a dissolved in a little water 3 Egg yolks . 14 Teaspoon salt Method--Beat egg yolks in "bowl and stir in all the rest of the in- 'gredients. Stir_in. about six cups of . flour, or enough to make a stiff enough dough to roll out easily, Roll out on a floured board and bake in a moderate oven. i 3 . Handy Bruck BY INSERTING THE - SHANK OF A BOTTLE ° ISH INTO "THE END or BROOM HANDLE, YOU --~CAN-MAKE-YOURSELF A. HANDY GADGET FOR = SWEEPING OUT CORNERS, "until. the mixture Now, let's get away from_the _ Use the egg whites for the frost. ing. Pout about one-fourth cup of water on two and one-half cups sugar and cook over a low heat threads. Then pour this slowly over the whites of thé eggs, which have been: well beaten, Beat until it. begins to harden; add a teaspoon, of flavor= ing and spread on the bottom of the- baked cookies." High -Roller:! -- "The "lovelier__ half of the team of Gaynor and Ross, a breath - taking roller skating act, who will be par- ticipating. in the stage and tank show twice daily during the" third annual Canadian National = Sportsmen's Show in the*Coli- seum, Toronto, from March 17 "to 25th. Recognized as Amer- ica's finest springtime exhibi- tion, this year's Sportsmen's, Show will have hundreds of ex- hibits of the latest sports, camp- ing and travel equipment, boats cars and dozens of thrilling fea- 'tures and attractions. = 'Reading This May Save Your Life . Almost every day, according. to safety specialists, people nrake the mistake described in this true-to- life incident, often with fatal results, "Max, you turn the cows out. Be sure there's water in the shed tank. "I'll get the tractor ready to grind + gome feed." John Henderson issued orders to his son back from the table. "Are you out of ground grain again already?" askéd his wife, "Those steers have already eaten more than they're worth." "Just. don't you worry about those steers--they'll come "out -all right," said John, as he headed out into the brisk winter morning. He felt fine. Always did when as he pushed --he had good "steeds on feed==and doing well. But he wished Jane would quit worrying about them, And about the price of feeders, or whether the market would break. "Max| Get those cows out" John _ hollered at the house as he opened the machine shed door." He was getting a little peeved now. That oy always daw over meals. He started t AL mes drove out of the sh then hopped off close to the doot, That's when the tractor died. John\muttered to him- . self: Wouldn't you know it? A dawdling kid, a wife who didn't trust his feeding ability, now a balky tractor He stepped on the starter. The tractor started, then coughed and - quit again. The starter ground more slowly now. "Start," you old so-and-so!" ex- claimed John. Finally, it did, and he raced the motor to be sure it wouldn't stop again, "You won't get another chance to stall today," he promised the tractor as he drove over to the red - as tank, safely ,aet out from the ulldings to protect them from fire," He adjusted the throttle "to keep the tractor running, then started $0. 1ill_the tank. Next thing John knew, the whole actor was ablaze, His clothes, too, ¢ dropped the hose and rolled. on the ground, That probably saved his fife. He wasn't even burned severely. But "the tractor was a complete loss. John stayed alive by doing. the .corréct thing after .the fire started. - But why didn't he keep the fire from starting in the first place? . Tee "Lady Baden owl is she World - Chief Guide and as' such, has the greatest influence 'tHroughout this world-wide movement which she herself has reared from its start. In (Y recént radio talk, she spoke of the way: in which she began her career of public service. - She was un- trained for organizational work of "any kind, but had hardly married' before she | huaband's 'side in the many associ- ations to which he gave his time and energy. He had founded the "Boy Scout movement in 1908, in- venting this unique system of char- acter training, and thinking out every detail of its activities and ideals. The movement 'was accept- ed and ardently taken up by-thou- sands of boys; their sisters refused to. be left behind and in 1910, the Girl _Guide movement was estab- Mshed. © Guiding began in Britain because the desire for it came from _the hearts of the children. They. saw in it so many interesting ideas and so much for them to do. The value of this great movement was seen after the First World War. Here: was a world-wide fel- lawship of thousands of young people of many nations, drawn and held together by the same ideals and all caring for one another as friends. ning," said Lady Baden Powell, "has come this great-influence for good in international relationships and the furtherance of true under- standing and goodwill between peo- ples the whole world over." "It comes naturally to children to band together to do things; it--is--the grown-ups who make the divisions "and the barriers. "Here, in the Guide and in the- Scout movement," said the World Chief Guide, "we find a binding force, bestriding the artificial barriers-of race, creed and. nationality,-and bringing a spirit of friendliness and unity that crics loudly for these things." She spoke of the many functions of the movement and the way in 'which' it helps sick and erippled girls. Guiding is strongly recom-' mended in many hospitals' as. giv- ing an impétus to the girls' wish to get well, so that they may join more fully in Guide activities. It --brings them new-intereste# and. oc- .cupations and- helps them to bear their sufferings. This feeling of being undaunted by circumstance , and uplifted by the thought of "friendship with millions of children _ all over the" world has been a great "help to countless numbers of girls in schools - for. the blind, hospitals and' leper colonjes, : Whilst = girls gain so much through belonging to the Guide movement, they also learn to give of their best. A great deal is ex- pected from them: They should be "helpful and courteous, take the Guide Law with them schools and family circles and be willing, efficient and energetic in their routine tasks. This law. re- Spring' Is Already On The Bough The readiness of the world for spring is probably nowhere better demonstgated. than on a branch from a. Sspring-flowering shrub brought indoors for a few days at this time of year. Give it a drink, warmth, and here come the blos- soms. Forsythia is probably _the most eager of all; it will burst bud and provide 4 spray of golden bloom---with a minimum. of encour- agement. ' But 'if you examiné- such a branch before bringing it indoors, it reveals only small buds, and they as tightly furled ds a man's over- coat --on a frosty. morning. Yet within these Duds everything is ready to celebrate spring.- The flowers are there, waiting: only a proper time of sufficient encourage- ment to, burst forth. And sof is on all the bushes and afl the trees. place, the flowers stowed and the leaves folded--Dbuds, that are ready for spring--1'he preparatory work is done. It has been" going on all fall and winter, while the dormant sca- san, as we. call® itt Tay upon the land. And as with so many mir- . acles, when: the magic of spring .bursts upon us, it will not. come #t will be nowhere in sight; the next-day it will be here, surround- Ing ys. The miracle will have hap- pened, but-it will be a miracle long and even leisurely in.the making. There it i§' now, waiting, on the bough of the dogwood, and on the slim, ruddy. twigs of the maple, and on the apple tree, and the peach and plum and ¢ time, waiting out' the lengthening days and: the chilly nights: spring Is there, upon the bough, even now in February, ready for the summons.~New York Times. THAT'S DIFFERENT County constable: "Pardon, miss, but swimming sin't allowed in this Jake. " - . Cit miss: "Why didn't you tell me: be fpre I got undressed?" ' Couiity "constable: "Well, there ot any Jaw agin undressing." |r laced herself at her; - "From this small begin-" in a world B into their a place in the sun and a touch of - "The packages are in. - overnight. ' It will seem to spring unheralded from the bough and | root. We shall look one day and rry. Waiting its - For ; Ti aR a tbh MELE mem fr my wary ssp rm Quire wines Girl Cer to be rift, hrift as Lady Baden Powell pointed out, is not only the saving of money; there are other posses- sions susceptible to - waste; food, clothes and particularly time. "If 1 am to 'give any special message through this talk," she said, "I would like to stress that matter of the care of one's. time and the dan« ger of frittering it away with things that do not matter and 'are of no lasting vahie into the: future. ~ Let us bear in mind that as we get oldél, we want to look. back "with great content on what we did when' "we were young, to be satisfied that we gnade the most of what ave had, and that as we lived and worked and spoke, we did no unkind things and said no unkind words. The unguarded tongues that wag with even unintentional ill will need to .be curbed and to give to the world their benefits and not their harm, ° The Guide world is large," she con= cluded. "You have over 2,000,000 sister Guides, and what every one of you does matters and counts in the advancement of the whole more than we may ever know." __- Special Privilege? A afews ATELY shows Vice- President Alben W. Barkley sitting comfortably in the. kitchen while Mrs. Barkley washes the dishes on the maid's mght out. Some will notice that at the mo- ment, the camera shutter clicked it was Mrs. Barkley who was talking and the "Veep" was dding an at- tentive and respectful job of list- ening. Quite a few wives and 'perhaps an equal number of husbands will. feel, nevertheless, that Mr. getting away with something at the expense of his recent bride. In the foreground of the picture are a couple of tea towels=hung over the back of a chair. How about it, Mr. Vice-Presi- dent? . We rise to a point of order. The VP may even be a VIP, but who does he think he is that he doesn't have to dry Christian Science Motor. Barkley is. dishes?--The whether the stuff actually stimu- _Jutes the pl nts or whether it's just "550 down) try to 'grow py from it." And the RELIEF IS LASTING For remarkably fast relief from head. ache get' INSTANTINE, For real relief get INSTANTINE. For prolonged relief get INSTANTINEL 3 finding that INSTANTINE is one thing to case pain fast. For headache, for rheumatic pain, aches and pains of colds, for neuritic or neuralgic pain 1D can depend on INSTANTINE to ng you quick comfort, INSTANTINE is made like a doctor's prescription of three. proven Medic - ingredients. A single tablet usually brings fast relief. Oot Instantine today ond slways ; ___hespithendy 12-Tablet Tin 25¢ Rconomical 48-Tablet Bottle 17] Do You Suffer Distress From "PERIOOIC" A which makes you so nervous several days before? Do female functional monthly ailments make Yiu suffer painful distress, make . you feel 80 nervous, so strangely rest- , less, tired and weak --at such times (or -- ~H}--a few--days just-before your-period)? 'hen start taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. No other medicine of this type for women has such along record of success. Pinkham's Compound not only relieves this monthly pain but also pre-period . nervous tension and cross, Irritable emotions of this nature. It has such a comforting anti-spasmodic action on one- of woman's most important organs. 'Regular use helps build up 'resistance againat such female Hatvose, Truly the woman's friend! NOTE: Or you niay p prefer < Lydia E. Pinkham's TABLETS with added iron. 'Ss LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S Vegetable Compound 12 Groat Fouturas- Hundreds of Exhibits of America's Finast Springtime Exhibition £ Demaond for seals is exception. ally heavy, ! but good'seats : are still available NRE LY ROK Mall this coupon NOW -- Save disappointment lat~r, Conadion Netanal Sportimen's Show, Neoum, Toronto, ~ Deer Sens . . h . Box Seal I Rateernd | dia JOT PRG 0 SPE i wel | " Matines : feed} for he Evening 1 inthe ° Seal TL IRIE Sr RN TPE MAT JE Day Dete alternative day ond dole cheque x ] Enclosed pleate find my money ofder OF $i. arr pene n payment for these tickets Address smsmasanmencsedtos i 4.50 "please print) PRICES -- Evenings and Saturday Metiness --= All Seals' Réserved S Pte Bax Seats $2.00 - Week day Malines -- Other seats rush -- Adults $1 00 -.Reterved Seats $1.50 Reverend Box Seats Mr - - Children 50¢ - All Prices Include Admission to Buildings. . «r H } treputsive RAF-They ; SPuTTING ras Yes, more people every day are lhstantine % ver. - ¥ Pn mn Be mn pu A oe a