THE DAILY TIMES-CGAZETTE | SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1947 | [ BEAUTY FOR YOU-- Beware Of Lucky is the woman who is doing of work she wants to do. keep within finger touch th, beca gets ahead, she _ makes progress, she ig alert to what " ing On. The hcme-body who housework regards her with of her as a free agent. the wrong attitude. 23% i HH Ai Eres § £3 i gt i i ; ight possibly en- able. They their work careful ly. ay has its special job. Even the sink full of dirty dishes does not dismay them. They stack the dishes neatly, throw in the soap flakes and say to themselves, "We have to eat. If we eat, we have dishes to wash, After all, I rather like sloshing around in soapy wa- ter. It is a satisfaction when all the clean dishes are on the table, ready to be put away. Often I get through them in fifteen minutes." The capable housewife keeps her- self looking neat and pretty to boost morale. She can clean basement without getting a speck of dirt on herself. First thing in the morning she arranges her hair. She knows that to look scrubby is to feel scrubby. Now we will consider the woman whose feelings about domestic life are quite different. Dishes in the sink get her down, That is because she waits until the last minute to wash them. Every time she glances at them they rebuke her. She frowns, assumes the expression of a martyr. Families must have homes, homes must be taken care of. Why doesn't she think of that? Also that homemaking is the noblest job of the | plain, we would Dishwashing Complex BY HELEN JAMESON Dutrtbumnd by King Pestown Spades, bas. She knows that to look scrubby is to feel scrubby. * +e all? Many a woman who is making her own way in the world would gladly exchange places with her-- scrubbing, dishwashing and all. To women who grumble and com- suggest that they stop hitching their wagons to stars and hitch them to the baby car- riage. Get rid of the dishwashing complex. Start the day with interest and energy; the various duties will soon be out of the way. After all, it isn't work that tires one and tor- ments one, it is one's thoughts about it. Pind time every day for a little pleasant reading. Prowl around the public library; youll find many books to amuse you, to strengthen you, to instruct you. Play with the kids. Keep close to their interests. They are riches be- yond gold and rubies, and don't ever forget it. Guide News BROWN OWLS' CLUB Lead are reminded of the election of officers to be held in the library of Adelaide House on Tuesday next. Mrs, Don Fox, commissioner, will be in the chair, and it is hoped that everyone will try to be present and make it a good meeting. LS oe, 6TH BROWNIE PACK A good attendance marked the first meeting of dancing and the program. Gelkie each passed knot-tying. At pow-wow, 8 Singsong was held, and the Brownies were told about the mother and daughter banquet to be held at Christ Church on Monday, Jan, 20. Will all Brownies try to have somplete uniform by this date, please? LS A. 12TH BROWNIE PACK The Pack 2 d a new T J stool Keeper. New sixers and seconds were given a chance to show how well they could accept their responsibilities. The Elves, Anne Wallace, sixer, George, second; Hicks, sixer, Edwina King, second; the Pixies, Gloria Cook, sixer; the Sprites, Marilyn Cain, sixer. The Brownle Promisé was by Erla une sult Janice Hurst. 4TH OSHAWA x Patrol leaders, don't forget the Court of Honor meeting, 7:15 Monday night At Miss Flewwelling's, Urgent, please attend, What do you think of last week's meeting? We are hoping to see a lot of improvement next week. What that are always ab- sent, the ones that turn up not in uniform and the general annoyers. + Ant announcements next week, so how about having every Guide out in full uniform? The meeting will be until 9:30 next week. Don't nt, when you hear what 1s to be said, I think it will be okay by you. omit obuabva Plans are going ahead for the Brownie and Guide mother and daugh- ter banquet that 18 to be held in Christ Church on Janu 20. The meeting was well attended. Bongs were sung and a square dance took place. The horseshoe formation Was prac . Jean McFadyen pass- ed her cyclist and toymaker's test dur- ing the hol ale, + : EIGHTH OSHAWA At the meeting this week the four pa took part in a quiz on "Citizen ship" showing its benefits and duties. Canary Patrol won by giving answers based on the Guide Law and Promise for "Ten ways in which we can best help our country and the whole world." tests were passed: first aid, Mars Denapre and Patricia Duquette; knots, Lorraine Faucher. Games and singing were then oyed and plans made for & hike on and weather Hoa rg A The me closed wi the singing of "Tepe "ut chu 1TH OSHAWA After roll call, the girls divided into ups. Morse code, first ald, and food wore Shue. (Moms, Fao ise Any the Guide Prayer and 2] i forget to study" Morse this Week, girls! +» 13TH OSHAWA The meet! opened with God Save the Kin Ling the Guide Prayer. The Quide Tavs were repeated by all. Horseshoe formation was made and anice Hurst. Anne Wallace was chosen "Toad-. C.G.L.T. News CEDARDALE UNITED The Cedardale C.G.I.T. and Explorers met on Thursday evening. Mrs. Robert 's group 'was in charge of the worship service. Many items of business were dis- cussed. It Fas Secided to Dave a sleighing party in two weeks' me. Plans for the mother and daughter banquet were talked over. Games were played and the meet- closed with y rs. J. Norman's group will be in charge next week. Cosmetics in Egypt Only 5,000 YearsAgo How beautiful was the lady of 5000 years ago? Did 'she use make- up, wear jewelry, and furnish her home with finery to attract the eye of the visiting male?" Most of these questions are an- swered by a recent gift of Egyptian antiquities, donated to the Royal Ontario Museum by the late Sir Robert Mond, a former director of the International Nickel Company of Canada, Limited. Sir Robert, a subscriber to Egyptian expeditions of the museum. also built his own collection, composed of an amazing variety of priceless Egyptian trea- sures, : Among other items is a cosmetic pallette which was used to mix make-up pigments in approximately 3,000 B.C. Female figurines, pottery and stone vessels indicate the high level of art in ancient Egypt, and assed | funerary objects contribute to our present knowledge of burial customs of long ago. During the war, the British Mu- Seum stored the items in England. Received in Canada recently, they have just been put on permanent display. 15-Year-Old Romance Has Chapter Added The latest chapter of a 15-year- old romance y Taylor, of Bournemouth, was a boy when he met Lucille Greenham. She was then a child nursing her sick moth- er. They became sweethearts--and then ille had to go back home-- far away to Detroit, US.A. But the day before they parted they prom- to marry. . This week the Queen Elizabeth brought Iucille Greenham back to fulfil her child- hood promise. Waving on the South- ampton quayside was Leonard Tay- lor, now 30. No happier man in Eng- . . . The wedding took place at Bournemouth next day. Deaf Children Get New Ears Sydney, Australia, Jan. 9--(CP)-- Australian scientists carrying out acoustics research are experiment- ne With hearing aids for deaf chil- Children as young as three have been fitted with hearing aids in the hope that when they are of school age they will be able to at- tend classes for normal youngsters. Special lightweight aids were made for deaf children and their volume control was locked so they would not be tampered with. ill recelved her d Barbara Parkn! Announcements were : Pry to be in full uniform next week. !| ROOSEVELT FUND CLOSED 'The Franklin Roosevelt Memo- rial Fund, to provide a statue in Grosvenor - square, was closed after six days, all the money needed being subscribed, mostly in donations of five shillings each, Additional; contributions sent in will go to the fund for a chap- el to the American dead in St. Paul's Cathedral, To release ice eream or jell molds, fold a cloth wnmg " hot wa- and the mold and it will come out Week's Program Adelaide House SUNDAY Glee Club Practice After-Church Fireside' MONDAY Brownies Bowling (Teen Centre) Orchestra TUESDAY To Keep Fit Class Junior Girls' "YY" Club Bowling (Adelaide House) Tap Dancing . Intermediate Girls' "Y"' Club Sketching Club To Keep Fit Class Dramatic Club Brown Archery (Girls) Archery (Boys) Brownies Girl Guides Archery (Adults) Music Without Tears Camera Club THURSDAY Handicrafts (Ceramics) Rendezvous Club Handicrafts (Glove Making) Archery (Advanced Group) FRIDAY Junior Boys' "¥" Club Teen Centre SATURDAY Tap Dancing Over-20 Club Events Leading Up To An 'Agony' Ad The year 1900. Hansom cabs roll- ing through the London fog. Vic- toria still the Queen. The year young John Hills met Helen Hum- phreys. John was then a young Londoner. Helen was a parlourmaid in a big old house in Bedford-square. Their meetings were frequent. They became to be mar- ried. Life seemed full of promise. Then the blow fell. John was tak- en ill, and after weeks of pain and amnesia found himself living with friends near Liverpool. As his health returned his thoughts were again of Helen. He wrote to her hopefully. But back came the letters, "Gone away to the Midlands. Regret no address." The year 1007. po older, strong again. He had met another girl, mar- ried, and set out to seek his fortune in the New World. In the vigorous province of Saskatchewan he made good, first as a rancher, then as a storekeeper, a Bb & The year 1946. John Hills a wi- dower, prosperous, a respected citi- zen of Saskatoon. And the other day in a London newspaper appeared an "agony" ad- vertisement. It asked for Helen Humphreys, last heard of as a par- lourmaid in Bedford-square in 1900, or anyone knowing her where- abouts to communicate with John Hills in Saskatoon. . . Over the Viephons across the winter wastes of Canada Mr. Hills told me this story: "Helen?" he said. "I wonder where she is now, what she is doing. She must be over 70. I wonder. . , " Mr. Hills had mentioned Helen in letters to his niece in England, Mrs. Jay Wilson, of Corscombe Downs, Okehamirton, Devon. It was she who had inserted the advertisement. MISSING G.I.-BRIDE Ex-G.I. James Fox, 23-year-old electrical engineer, has arrived in Britain in search of his wife of whom nothing has been heard since she went to Liverpool in June to Sotlect her passport to go to Amer- ca. "I have spent practically all T had flying from the States," he said. "I have a good home ready for my wife and our son." Easy-To-Sew Charm \ . \ i IN Charming dinner blouse and skirt fo be made in "no time"... the blouse is cut FROM JUST ONE PIECE--plus back peplum! Skirt may be long or short; both smart. This pattern, easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Includes complete illustrated instructions. Pattern 4788: sizees 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Sizes 16, blouse, 1% yds. 39-in.; skirt, 2%2yards contrast. Send TWENTY CENTS in coins for this pattern (stamps cannot be accerted) to, Daily Timeas-Gaz- ette, Household Arts Dept., Osh- awa. Print plainly NAME, AD. DRESS, PATTERN NUMBER. Send your order to Daily Times- Gazette, Pattern Department, Osh- awa. : Glamorizing Choose A Graceful Hairdo By HELEN FOLLETT Make your hair a flattering frame for your portrait whether you are wearing a hat or not, Actress Marilyn Maxwell's hat and hair-do flatter each other, . + LJ SUCCESSFUL hair stylists know bow to fit hairdos to faces. That is why the cash customers make ap- rointments weeks ahead with fam- ous artists. The glorious mop should be a be- coming and flattering frame for the feminine portrait. The lines of the coiffure have a striking effect upon the features. The eyes, the profile, forehead, chin, especially the nose must be taken into consideration. When the nose is too large it is a mistake to wear the sleek back, up- pity arrangement. There should be soft waves, with fullness at the sides. Soft effects give relief to large features, have a way of shadowing them, sending them into semi-re- tirement. Accent Good Points If the colffure does not accent good points it is a failure, If the forehead. is smooth, eyebrows smartly outlined, the forward hair line graceful, then swing your tress- es back as smoothly as you like, but don't do it if time has placed little irrigation ditchés across the fore- * LJ head, if frown lines are prominent. With eyes in her head, it is sur- prising that the long-faced woman will wear a long, fairly straight bob. It is also surprising that the lady with the round, moon-shaped face will sport a wide, fuzzy arrange- ment. Can't they read the message in the looking glass? If not, they should seek professional help and advice, Look Equally Smart Hairdos should look equally smart with hats on or hats off. If you are thinking of indulging in a new style, take your new hat to the beauty parlor with you when you go there to do the presto-change act. You will have a wide range of styles from which to choose, crown to nape coils, the twisted chignon placed low at the back, the revived Grecian effect, the triple puff top- knot. To acquire some of these smart effects you may have to invest in scme demountable hair, now called "extra pleces." U.S. Denies Report Of Brides Mistreated New York, Jan 9 (AP)--"Tain't 80." That was the widespread re- action in the United States to Lon- don reports that British war brides were being ill-treated and neglected here. ' Mrs. Dorothy Geast Henn, the newcomer who recently gave birth to quadruplets, said in Baltimore: "Every one in America has been just the same to me--wonderfully kind. "Since the first day I arrived, when the GI's helped us with our luggage at the boat, I have felt welcome here and well looked after. Nothing has made me change my mind. "I think the London newspapers made a big splash about a few in- stances. The war brides I have talked to all seem happy." Gross Exaggeration "Gross exaggeration," exploded Daniel Green, director of the Home Service Department of the New York Red Cross chapter, when in- formed of a despatch of a London paper that hundreds of British , | brides were 'stranded and living in squalor, in New York, awaiting pas- sage home.' "We have not had occasion to help more than 30 women who were returning to British homes after leaving American husbands in the year that the brides have been coming over," Green said. Meanwhile, at Birmingham, Ala., Judge Robert J. Wheeler set aside a divorce decree granted last May 9 to Charles W. Vincent, whose statements in London after her re- turn there touched off the contro- || versy. Mrs. Vincent had said she arriv- ed here in August only to be told her marriage had been dissolved. She complained of her-treatment in the United States. Judge Wheeler said he granted the divorce on an allegation of abandonment "through an over- night on my part." He explained he mistakenly read the date of abandonment in the divorce peti- tion as March, 1945, although the petition read March, 1946. Alabama laws require abandonment to be of at least 12 months' duration before it may be used as grounds for di- vorce. Waiver Attached In filing the complaint Vincent attached a waiver bearing a signa- ture accepted by the court as Mrs. Vincent's, The waiver consented to the divorce but denied abandon- ment. One Red Cross official here, told that the London reports had quoted brides as saying they were ill-treat- ed in stores and restaurants, said that volunteer home service work-" ers had escorted some of the British girls on New York shopping trips. "The volunteer workers reported the brides were amazed at what they could buy and had the time of their lives," he said. A British consulate spokesman snapped "rubbish" when parts of ihe Lorion reports were read to her. A New York port of embarkation spokesman said about 54,000 war brides had been brought to the United States, the great majority | from Britain, Urns--Gravediggers at Col. chester unearthed two burial urns belived to have been interred by ancient Britons, The Movie Column By HELEN BANNERMAN Canadian Press Staff Writer Chips Rafferty, the lanky six- foot-six Australian cowboy star of "The Overlanders," whose real name is John Willlam Goffage, seated himself in a dainty chair in his suite at one of New York's lux- ury hotels, rolled himself a cigar- Sie and said of acting, his 42nd ob: "I was always broke so I worked at whatever came handiest." He was a carpenter when "a magician whose tricks were getting shabby" asked him to freshen them up. "I redid them for him. When it was all over I knew all his tricks; I started out as his stooge." Of his favorite job as a drover (Australian cowboy): "I don't sup- pose there's anything in the world that equals the pure exhilaration of getting on a horse in the early dawn light--the horse bucks a bit because it's built that way -- and Balloping along. You can't help yourself, you screech out loud." About Australia's west: "I should imagine our western country now is very much like the American West, say, 50 years ago, without all the shooting, and our: West is bigger. There's a station (cattle ranch) in Northern Territories that has 32,- 000 square miles" "What kind of songs did the stockmen sing in camp?" He grin- ned, "naughty songs, not 'Waltzing Matilda.' " This song was a genus ine Australian song about the bush, he added, but not rugged enough to suit the drovers. What made cattle stampede? "Cattle are like women. Anything will disturb them. Screeching cockatoos, a man coming on them too suddenly. One minute they're nice and peaceful, chewing their cud. Suddenly some noise will startle them and you have to race after them, find the leaders and turn them back, find out if you've lost any and go back and look for them." He now is on his way back to the peaceful life in Australia where he is happy with his present job with Britain's Ealing Studios, because he works only in action pictures. Katina Paxinou, who hasn't had a good role in Hollywood since her academy award-winning perform- ance as Pilar in "For Whom the Bell Tolls," has finally been signed to one worthy of her talents in "Mourning Becomes Electra," She will play Christine Mannon, oppo- site Raymond Massey, the role created on Broadway by the late Nazimova. Miss Paxinou now is in London for her part in the J. Ar- thur Rank picture, "Uncle Silas." Wife creservers Metal fixtures in the home, such as. door knobs, door hinges, metal racks and radiators can be cleaned easily with a stiff brush and hot, scapy water. Dry and polish with a clean cloth, ** ne pot ACen elo Club Calendar MONDAY Ritson Road Home and School Cedardale Home and School South, Simcoe Home and School Lyceum Club Pleasont Monday P.M. Club St. John Ambulance Brigade Lend-A-Hand Club ' TUESDAY Golden Links Class Christ Church W.A. Jr. Group King St. W.A. Ladies' Aux'y, Canadian Legion King Street Home and School S.A. Home League Holy Trinity Evening Guild WEDNESDAY C.G.I.T, Leaders' Council "Y" Dramatic Club Play Tth Oshawa Mothers' Aux'y Queen Mary L.O.B.A. THURSDAY "Y" Dramatic Club Play Centre Street W.A. St. Andrew's W.A. : Harvey Hunt Miss'y Aux'y Christ Church Evening Guild St. George's Afternoon W.A. 8t. Georges Evening W.A. Calvary Baptist Mission Circle Albert Street W.A. Oakleigh L.O.B.A. Simcoe St. United C.G.1.T. Mothers Kate McLaurin Mission Circle Arvilla McGregor Missy Aux'y Tried And True Aids In Asthmatic Spasms By HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D. WHILE: we have no very new or miraculous weapons against asthma, there are a good many tried and true measures which can be used with great benefit to the patient. An atack of asthma is character- ized by shortness of breath, a great deal of coughing and the bringing up of thick material from the lungs. Usually such atacks are mild and can readily be treated by the doc- tor with the patient at home. In some instances, however, the disease occurs in a more serious form. In such cases, according to Dr. Haddon M. Carryer and his co workers of the Mayo Clinic, the pa tient is best treated in the hospital and, preferably, in a private room. Nervous Factors Important This is necessary for several rea- sons. First, nervous factors are often important in making asthma worse. Patients who are panic-stricken be- cause of the shortness of breath and are in an atmosphere of anxiety caused by family and friends, often respond favorably to new surround- ings. Frequently this restores their confidence and hope. Second, the quiet hospital sur- roundings and prompt administra- tion of the pregper remedies as soon as they are needed help the nervous sufferer from asthma to react fav- orably. Third, hospital rooms can be cleared of rugs, drapes, and furni- ture and there are no animals with offending danders. The patient with asthma is often sensitive to these things. Pillows and Mattress Before the patient is brought to the hospital feather pillows and the pmattress can be made dust-proof with special covers. If it is not pos- sible to put the patient with severe asthma into a hospital, an attempt should be made to make his home surroundings like those of a hospi- tal room. In the treatment of the attack the breathing in of oxygen or an oxygen-helium mixture helps to re- lieve the shortness of breath. The mixture may be administered through a mask. An oxygen tent is not necessary. One drug which is most helpful in relieving the attack is epine- phrine. It is given by injection un- der the skin, As the patient im- proves, the epinephrine may be em- ployed as a spray into the mouth. Another drug which is helpful is aminophylline. It is given by injec- tion into a vein preferably in a su- gar solution. While these things do not cure the asthmatic patient, they may serve to tide him over a severe at- tack. You will welcome to your work- basket this easy crochet that turns into a lovely square. Newest mem- ber of the pineapple design family. Lacy design; join squares for scarfs, cloths, or spreads. Pattern 7865 has directions for square. Our improved pattern -- visual with easy-to-see charts and photos, and complete directions -- makes needlework easy. Send TWENTY CENTS (20¢) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE for. this pattern, Print lainly NUMBER. Fy For Next Week PAGE SEVEN Dear Mrs, Beeckman: Will you please tell me hat 2 proper concerning prizes given at a party honoring a bride-to- be? I have always been under the impression that all prizes should be opened and then presented to the guest of honor. Lately I was told that this is no longer NONE. ate It doesn't make sense that all the bridge prises should be given to the guest of honor. A prize should be given to the person who won it. And a self-respecting guest of hon- or would want this to be done. Of course if the winning players wish to hand over their prizes to the guest of honor, they may do so, but Hey shouldn't be "expected" to do this. I wonder if you may not be con- fusing the so-called "guest prize" (given in some communities) with the prizes given for high scores? If the hostess wishes to her guest of honor, she may pro- vide a "guest be prizes given for high scores, it is better for her to give this present (for it is a present, not a prize) either before the party, or put it at the guest of honor's place at table, Correct Forms for Names of Married Daughters Dear Mrs. Beeckman: Is there a definite rule about the form of name for married daugh- ters that should be used when a death notice of a mother or father is sent to newspapers? I have no- ticed that several forms are used, and I wonder which is correct. LS. W. When the names of the deceased's married daughters are given, either of two forms is correct. That is, the notice' may correctly read. . ."moth- er (or 'father') of Mrs, Arthur Lee, Mrs, John Thompson, and Mrs. George Ward," or "Katherine Wells Lee, Mary Wells Thompson, and Sara Wells Ward." In other words, if the title "Mrs." 4 WHAT SHOULD I DO ABOUT-- Prizes At A Special Party? " By MRS. CORNELIUS BEECKMAN . Beeckman : I have just received an invitation to the coming-out party of the daughter of a friend of mine. Is it ary fore he gives his own. Who is cor- . rect : i Marie B is right. When giving the two orders to the waiter, the host should give the guest's order first. ' How Are Your Home Manners If young pepple are allowed to make biting, sarcastic, or cruel re- marks at home, this mean perform- ance will inevitably become a habit, and the chances are that it will pop up at unexpected moments in their social life, causing damage to their popularity, Choice Luxury Goods In Swedish Stores By PATRICIA PALMER Stockholm, Jan. 9--What looked like Christmas glitter turns out to be real gold, Now that all the tinsel and evergreens are tom down Stockholm stores still have the pick of the world's luxury goods. Behind plate-glass windows and rainbows of neon there are hats fiom Paris, alligator bags from Argentina, shoes from Switzerland, cashmere swea- ters from Scotland, nylons from the United States, silver froin Denmark along with the best of Swedish steel kitohenware, glass and pottery. There are even some people who can afford to pay for them, but not many are Swedes. Want Swedish Money Visitors from every country Europe make for Stockholm to do their shopping if they can get their hands on a little Swedish money, most elusive and valued currency in Northern Burope. Swedes take dol- lars with reluctance, pounds grudg- ingly--they're only interested in And the way foreigners in Sweden buy these goods is an index of life in the countries they've come from. The jujdiciously named American Service at NK (pronounced enco), the Nordiska Kompaniet and the Macy's of Stockholm, does errands on an intermational scale. The facts of life in every country in Europe can be deduced just by watching the sales slips of news writers, dip- lomats, refugees, travellers who avail themselves of the services of its multilingual staff. Every One Speaks English You can get along there in six or seven languages and everybody speaks English since the office was opened during the war to take carer of the Canadian, American and English fliers interned or ma- rooned in Sweden. In one day the service completely outfitted an American expedition of 100 men with food and civillan ski equipment to go to Northern Swe- den with relief for Norway, accord- ne to Herbert Fischel, its director linguist, Knows Their Wants Nowdays he almost knows what people want to buy as soon as he finds out where they come from. "The English first ask for a gir- dle, then stockings, shoes, writing Dager and fountain pens, in that order." : British and American soldiers are the only travellers from Germany, and they take back nightgowns and stockings for their girls, chocolate, pullovers for themselves, and kit- chen equipment, like cooking uten- in sils and cutlery for wives who are joining them. French Shoppers The French don't bother with women's clothes, but want every- thing else, including perfume some- times, since all possible stocks are exported from France. Men want suits and shirts, shoes for the whole family, especially for the children. "Formerly soldiers on their way home used to come to Sweden to buy civilian clothing they had heard was scarce in the States, as well ag French perfumes, Swiss watches and cameras," Mr, silver foxes." Eastern Europeans, visitors from the Balkans and Italy, equip thems selves with the cheapest possible clothing from top to toe, since they need everything and it is almost impossible for them to get hold of Swedish crowns to with, All Countries ected But it's the embassies from Mos- cow to Oslo and on down south that reveal how deeply the war has eaten no ihe Taijonal eocliolny OF Svest parcel post, Helsingfors, sometimes by diploma- tic plane, the American Service sends shoelaces, beds, curtain rings, electric light bulbs, needles, working clothes for servants. every country. Visitors can take 15 kilos with them when they leave Sweden. Everybody takes food." Seeing the 15 kinds of cheese, canned pineapple, smoked salmon, nuts, chocolate, tropical fruit, it wasn't hard to understand. : HUNTING CALL Before ignorance, as Schiller sald, the Gods themselves are dumb, but no opportunity should be lost by hunting men and women of seeing that, at least, the truth is presented on every possible occasion. It would indeed be a tragedy if an insidious campaign, neglected through our idleness, should succeed in abolish ing a sport which is an integral part of an England for which so many of us fought.--The Field. LYCEUM MONDAY, JAN. 13 -- 4 PM, ST. ANDREW'S 8.8. Speaker HERBERT A. MOWAT VISITORS -- 50c every prescription. 33 Simcoe St. N. UA POWELL DRUG STORE DISPENSING CHEMISTS Ae call for and deliver: RELIABILITY! Is what the "R" with its cross bar on a prescrip- tion blank signifies to us, This applies not only to the integrity of your Doctor who prescribes the formula, you or a member of your family must follow in order to get well, but also des- cribes the superior ingredients we use in filling Phone 1360 ----_