A Vvome-n's realm : PAGE TWO 1'!!! GUARDIAN MARCH 10. 195! Houses of the Future to be Planned For International Competition MONTREAL. (CP) for Canadian houses of the future drawing are taking shape on Design boards in Europe and Canada. The plans are being drawn by architects competing in an inter- national house competition spon- University's by McGill of sored school architecture. and prizes totalling 512,000 are of- fered by a distillery. For A Family Of 5 Competitors were asked to de- sign a house for a family of five children were and The -two adults urder 15. without being three architects asked to submit plans for houses that would be in good taste, sim- ple in detail and pleasant in color, impractical Award maintain or too cnstlv to build. Already 624 architects have noti- to s mid-May will be Prof. Erie Arth- ur. University of Toronto; Hum- phrey Carver, chairman of the research committee. Centralt Mort- gage and Housing Corporation, Ottawa, and Gio Pontl, editor of the architectural magazine "Dom- us" of Milan. Italy. 35,000 First: Prise The winning entry will receive an international award and S5.- 000. Exciusive of this, the best Canadian entry will receive a Canadian award and 52.500. The best European entry, excluding the international award winner, will receive a European award and 52.500. There will be l0 honorable men- tions. each with an honorarium of 3K)0. 5 been taken f.ed McGlll of their intention to 5m0k9 Wllll'l' lm-5 dggign men 3 dyapllinzl European only into the mouth makes the pnmpemm-3 Outnumbpr ganadian; benzoi fliioresce iyitli a deep blue by about three pt-tition officials. lf)0 The breakdown of applications for Austria, aria ll-8: Denmark. entry forms' Britain. 190; Greece, 35: Ireland. H; 119. 29; BPlEllll'f1. 24; Finland, 9" France, 31; Germany. 44, Great Holland. 20; Nor- 4: Italy, say com- llt Can 0. 19. submissions about way. 3: Portuirnl. l'l: Spain Sweden. 23. and Switmrland, Judging the Hints Collected by (Mother of 5) March is here . . . bringing promises of another lovely spring. But weather is still fickle! So when you're frmh-airing baby, take an extra sweater or blanket in case the temperature top- ples. A siuable square of sheet plastic, tucked in carriage or stroller makes an excellent "protector" if sudden showers surprise you. 0 Weather change catch you short of drying space? Just turn baby's play pen on its side for extra rack room. 0 I Vttarnln C . . . easy as 1-2-3. No psquetzing. no straining to give baby the precious Vitamin C he needs every day. Gerbcris Strained Orange Juice is - specially processed for babies. It's made from tree-ripened oranges. selected for unifonn Vitamin Cwntent and the mild. fresh-fruit flavor tykcs take to. Carefully pasteurized and finely strained so it can be fed from bottle. cup or spoon. e 0 Cover-upl If you do not use all the orange juice. or any baby foods, at one feeding, leave the remainder right in the container. Just cover well before placing in your refrigerator. if you don't have Gerberls handy can covers, a bit of wax paper and a rubber band will serve nicely. , O 0 Five to gel Gcrhcr's five famous Baby Cereals are all pre-cooked and ready to serve. Simply add milk, formula or other liquids to get a smooth. easy-to- Iwallow texture. Each one has a deli- cate, but distinctive flavor pleasing to unawakened taste buds. And all five are enriched with blood-building imn, bone-building calcium and the impor- tant B-Vitamins baby's growin&.body needs. For variety, rotate: Rice, rloy, Oatmeal, Wheat, and Mixed Cereal. Important! When first introducing cereal to your eager little eater, try a eoupy mixture at first so the texture will seem more familiar. Increase the thick- ness of the cereal gradually as your baby learns to swallow. color under the lllll'rl-YlOlEl light. But smoke which has been haled causes very little fluorescence in a flask of benzol. The substance removed by in- halinlz might be a hydrocarbon, a cheniical combining hydrogen and carbon. Many chemicals known In be able to cause cancer are hydrocarbons. regard? METRAZOL HELPS ELDERLY PATIENTS WHO ARE NOT MENTAL CASES There are three methods of shock treatment. all of which have clear- Better English Dy 1). 0. Williams 1. sentence? attend church on Sunday.' What is wrong with this "We generally always 2. What is the correct pro- nunclation of "steverlore"? 3. Which one of these word is misspelled? Loquarious, longitudinal, Lorelei. lorgnete. 4. What does the word "presci- ent" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with do that means "disposed to be taught; tractable"? ANSWERS 1. say. "We usual'y attend church on Sunday." 2. Pronounce steev-e-dor three not steev-dor. 3. Lorgnette. 4. Having knowledge of coming events; foreseeing. "His words seem almost prescient in their meaning." syllables: and 5. Docile. CHOCOLATE CAKE Ml cupe flour ll: cups white sugar Vi cup butter or shortening Vs cup sweet milk 2 eggs K teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 squares chocolate (malted) W. teaspoons cream tartar 1 teaspoon aoda '14 cup boiling water Method: Cream butter and add sugar gradually. craaming until fluffy. Add melted chocolate, then beaten eggs. Sift flour, salt and cream tartar together 3 or 4 times and add alternately with the milk. Add vanilla. Lastly add the boiling water in which the soda has been dissolved. Bake in layer pans in a moder- ate oven, 300 degrees. -Mrs. John Myer-ii. Oarlotnn Siding W. .. aiciiaiio iiuonur soc cam: SHAMPOO migimnpiim eoouoioui lietr want And mama Nudnut Egg C'ff"9 5l"0"'P00 brings out all the natural, alw-mo beauty of your own hair. to contain; real egg-o natural hair beavtifier. This 90'5" W500 shampoo cleanses quickly, rinses out completely, leaves your hair dondrutf-free . . .cloon, beautiful and shining like btldal sotinl Then, as e fragrant beauty tlnlsti after each Illumpoo-5 quick ringg wam Richard Hudnut Creme Rinee. o iiuimur I u 1.2: 2.09 SHAMPOO A C3585. ed up mental disturbances in many These methods are insulin, metrazol and electric shock. That the drug, metrazol, is helpful in other physical disturbances in the elderly is stated by Dr. Joseph 0. Smigel. Lawrence A. Serhus, and Samuel Barmak in the Journal of the Medical Society of New Jersey. "The problem of loss of appetite in the aged becomes a serious one. especially in large institutions where menus cannot be individualized. The care of older people is further complicated by states of apathy. apprehension. disorientation, and fatigue so often found in such a group." Metrazol proved beneflcal in improving the appetite. blood pic- ture. and general condition in a group of 20 patients in a chronic disease sanatorium. This drug stimulates breathing and circula- tion of the blood and thus reduces the "gone" feeling due to lack of ozygen in the blood and increases the general well-being of the pat- ient. Metraml is stable, non-toxic (not poisonous) and does not ac- cumulate in the system even when given for a considerable length of time. The absorption of metrazol, . whether given by mouth or injec- tion. is good. "Metrazol is administered in a dose of 0.2 gms. four times a day. Under such management almost all patients showed improved appetite. Hemoglobin (iron), red. and also white cell count rose. The dis- orientation (loss of knowledge of his whereabouts) disnppeares. Pati- ents who had lost control of their bowel and bladder frequently re- gained this control by use of metrszol. Another favorable re- sponse to its use it that the blood pressure falls significantly, especial- ly in those who have high blood pressure." "Many patients previously bed- ridden become able to walk about and are able to care for their own needs." This being able to walk about and look after their own needs means much to physic- alns, nurses and attendants in an institution where the patients are all "chronlcs," many of them bed- ridden. A few years ago it was found that lnsulln,, used to give shock treatment to mental patients, not only increased the appetite of mental patients but slso increased the appetite in children and adults who were not mental patients. It may be that electric treatment may also help these mental patt- cnts by increasing appetite. in- dreaalng circulation and lowering the blood pressure as it may the general well-being of non-mental patients. Man Ofglhevilvlomenl UflBSSOlfilVO Youth Wonder: Why Girls Linger Only A While DEAR M135 DIX: I want to know if I'm too lenient. with the girls I &.te. My friends say I am. I date a girl for a while and she seems to like me. But then, suddenly I am dropped. The girl I go with is I8: I13 10. I buy her a coraage for every dance that comes along: I never l nssmmc. of he, mnrigd dnugh- argue with her. although sometimes I am inclined to when I-think ahele , ,9, Lo”. luck .33, .. mmy as wrong. Yin so afraid I may say something to hurt her, for thenigw, 1,551,. .; . time she'll turn all my other frtanda against me. I'feel that she's not as i cnudrenu Aid Society. interested in me now ae when we first dated. How can I keep herl Continued, on 7 page 9 Gene , HIS CONCERN T00 OBVIOUS ANSWER: You try altogether: we hard, Gone, to keep your young ladies. Most girls like a boy whole easy to talk to. You make your con- cern so obvious that the girls become disinterested. Instead of try- ing to impress the young lady with your desire to give her every last. word. learn to be yourself, and argue when nececsaary. Now, that doesn't mean biclaerlng, but simply helping to create intelligent conversation. When one party of a duo is a died-in-the-wool yea-man, conversation is impossible. Good talk takes two. each with opinions. He will aware of the social amenities expected of a. young man. Modern Etiqueft I1Iobor(valAo Q. Is it always proper to smoke in another person's home? A. Not always. It is still con- sidered bad manners to light a cigarette. cigar or pipe in the home of another when no one else is smoking A and especially at the table when there is no provision made for smoking. 1 Q. hold the arm of the man with whom she is walking on the street? A. If she is walking in high- heeled shoes on a suppery. my street, it is all right. Otherwise. she should walk beside him un- aided. Q. Is it considered proper for a woman to use scented stationery. and how may she best produce this scent? A. This is perfectly all right. and the best. way to do it is to put a sachet. bag in the drawer or box with the stationary. For Tomorrow HOME and family matters should prosper now, so, in this connection. make plans for the immediate fut- ure and be prepared to take advan- tage of unusual opportunities which will be offered soon. It is also a fine period for replacing worn-out ap- pliances. puttlng household affairs in order and disposing of accumu- lated trivia. During the afternoon and eve- ning hours, take time out to work at a hobby or any other recreational activity that will keep both mind and hands active. Emotional stress should be avoided at. all costs. Plans for travel are favored now and per- sonal relatlonahlps should prove stimulating. For the Birthday If bomorrow is your birthday. your prospects for the year ahead are excellent. Your ideas and plans for the future should meet with unusual success. but it would be well to clear up present duties be- fore embarklng on new projects which may require more time, and energy than you anticipate. During July you may be tempted to indulge in some extravagant whim, but the use of will power will save you many a headache later. Consider your budget and be practical, Travel is favored during the early fall, and domestic and roman- tic matters are under extremely beneflcent. aspect. During Novem- ber, be alert to new opportunities since year's end does not mean the end of this prosperous cycle in your life. Keep looking ahead and plan for still greater expansion in 1955. A child born on this day will be intelligent. and versatile, but in- cllned toward moodinesa at times. HALF-SIZE STYLE TWO-PIEOER in Half Sizes! Here it is - your new Spring-to summe Dress! That narrow seal- loped neckline is very new, very face-flattering too. This is the size range designed for the fu1ler.ahort- er figure. No alteration worries! book taller and allmrnal Pattern 4592: Half-Blue 1484. 1616. 1m. 2056. 22Ve. 2411:. also Iva takes 434 yards 39-inch, This pettern can to use, elmple to ear. te tested for fit. I-Ina oom- plete illuarrated lnatmctlona. Send Thirty-five oente (350 in coins (stamps cannot be mocqned) for this pettern. Print plainly Bile. Name. Addre-, style Number. Send order to ANN! ADAMS, elo The Guardian, 00 Front street Welt. Toronto. Ontario. H0 VII Very cantankerous and was being extremely difficult. He had found fault with every dish placed before him. and eventually said to the now wear" waiter: "Have you any wild duck?" "No. sir." enapped i;i- wetter. "but we can set a tame one and irritate it for you." DDC Wllr Matted as If chart with broken P aelfshntewerebetnl twleted n In Don't euiter aeedlauly from race: erabhlgg value. Geltyfut relief with T-R-C e. U eucze-tu thousands for quick relief of Sdetlc. " matte or N"'J!'l(lC pain. Aleo Ldinbago. Neuraleie. A - '0' Tfmvletoae I-D.-C'e. ost. 81.33 at drug oouatera. 143. I l Anne Adams Patterns " .500 Babies Ia it proper for a girl toll Cared For In 13 Years TORONTO. (CP) - Toronto's top foster mother, Mrs. Frank Mitchell. has cared for 500 babies in the last 13 years. She doesn't' run a nursery school or an infants' home. She and her husband, with part-time for the Most of the babies are found- .llngs or lllegltlmate wards of the ;society. They come to her home .for care until they are ready for adoption. After about three months the baby is ready for A new home with a family that's been on the waiting list. Ono Of Three Mrs. Mitchell is one of three foster mothers in the Toronto ,aiea who have gone over the i500-mark in babies. the society 'says. Her own daughter was seven when she and her husband decid- ;ei to adopt a baby son. lnqulry showed they might have to wait ail long as two years. but the Children's Aid Society asked them if they would consider looking after a baby on a temporary basis. The first infant arrived amid rejoicing. but was adopted a month later by a couple who had priority on the list. To lighten the gloom, they took another baby. and they've been taking them ever since. Mrs. Mitchell has looked after children of all races. sometimes as many as six at once with a convalescing mother besides. They ave six baby carriages and as many cribs and cupboards of baby clothes. Mrs. Mitchell says a firm sched- ule is the secret of handling hubies. When they first come lthey are usually emotionally up- ;set and need regulated care and .3 great deal of loving attention iBy about the third night they are sleeping "like little lambs." ! "I won't give in to their opin- lion of the best schedule," she issys. "They soon adjust to mine." "Our babies have kept us young beyond our years," says Mrs. Mit- chell. "Babies should happen to exerybody." usehld S 0 Bottle! Deodorizing Use black mustard need In I bottle deodorizer. Pour a little of this seed. with lukewarm water, into the bottlef then rinse it thoroughly. Repeat the process if necessary. Bread Crumbs Bread crumbs will not scatter when running bread through the fopd chopper if a. paper has 15 fastened over the opening of the chopper with a rubber band. Sore Lips For some lips. mix 1 ounce of glycerin. l dram of borax. and 1 pint of water. Apply this solution to the lips. ......n-,4, contract Bridge M Josephine Culbertnon - I N0 GRATATUDE ll South's reaction to the opening lead in the following hand was decidely a case of looking a gift horse in the mouth. Southdesler. Both sides vulnerable. i giuoo Q1086 QAQJQI 4.AK as gr QK15 N QAJD 43 K532 .101 WSE 3765 aono 42 I3 AAQJ80542 VQI 086 AD Thebtddillr. South West North Ian! 44 Peel 0. Pan Pase Pue , If West had been in our happy position. as spectators. he natural- ly would have led a heart agslnet the slain contract and defeated it on the spot, but, unfortunately for hlmaelf. West. had been dealt a more attractive club opening. and he selected the queen of that suit. It. must: be presumed that when South saw the dummy. with tie dire heart weakness. he felt that he had been given a reprieve from sudden "death" - but he certainly did not take advantage of his good luck. He drew one round of tnimpe, discarded a heart on the othar club honor. and than reente hie hand with a trump and hope- fully took a diamond fineaaa. when East. produced the diamond king and very proouitly laid down the ace of hearts, South, after the manner of mortals, muttered some- thing uncompllmenta y about the goddess of luck. . Actually, of course, the goddess was very nice to South in this case. since she had beguiled West. from leading a heart. and South should have been duly grateful. Hie been discard at durnmy'e aeo- oud club was nothing abort of awful! The markedly correct tn- dieoard was a diamond. '.I1ten it would be ehlld'l play so can the diamond ace and rat! a low diamond. and repeat this until the diamond king was ruffed out. Dir my'.q I211-cs spade entries would be ar:.':le for title simple plan. EI.LEll'S DIARY a; An bleed. .. riim le Itlx-lhlne ronighif from their fascinating courses this host of the heavens guards now the quiet of the farmlands. Dim are the fields. and dark the wood- lands thatrlla on'the slopes of our valley. Reeling there, not yet ready. despite the continued mild- ness of the weather to allow that winter is over And over all is a deep but not uhbroken ellenoe. We know. because not long ago when the dark had gathered in from their several interest; the members of this household-Gage to go weary to his bed and Jamie to finish ends of his homework of school-we walked through the exquisite night-shadows to pick up the mail from the box at lanes end. I-low black at first was the night into which we stepped from the light! But soon only pleasantly dim. And now still! Nothing mov- ed. No creature was abroad at the moment, nothing in all the neigh- borhood but this farmwlfe who kept to the short-cut of winter mad in the front meadow. Yet how serenely beautiful the night was, a fitting close to a day of weather which had been, sttagreed, perfect. 0 O 0 And yet in all the solitude were we alone? Not. altogether. The call of an owl. a hollow. mysterious sound lingered in the silence. We smiled as we listened with bated breath so we might not miss one note of it, recalling the query which had been put to us today. "Can you tell me which of all the birds on this laland-or I guess in all the world. is the wisest?" a little led had questioned. Well, there in the shadowed reaches of the night was the wanted reply though to our mind each feathered creature that files, that fashions an lnlmltabl nest, feeds faithfully its young and attends to the round of its living-and migrations is exceedingly wise. We wished the lad had been with us to hear the hunting call of that prowler of the night. And suddenly in a strange for- lorn bark from the direction of "the other farm” came the high eerie yelp of a fox. For the sake of the peace of mind of the farm- folk about we hoped there would be no response. But there it. 'was a second voice reaching out over the fields. "Just listen to that, will you Ellen!" James commented with some dismay on a recent night.- prowl together. "And I thought, so many foxes were shot and trapped last year that they were pretty well cleared away from the farms hereabput. But there they are again-to be a nuisance. and a hazard when the flock of sheep with their little lambs go out to pasture." O A pair of ewes. pets of s neigh- boring farm browsed on a hillside this afternoon-loving the spell in the open, the sun's warmth and the sweet. breath of the gentle wind that blew. "Toast-would you like?" we hear Jamie ask. "There: a lovely bed of coals." g "I believe that's just what I've been wishing for" James chuckles. "Down with the teapot! You and I'll lunch on toast and tea." Until tomorrow - Dlaiy ----Good-night”... SCENIC FALLS one of the scenic wonders of Basutoland in South Africa is the 550-foot Maletsunyane waterfall. . lemon. 4 4 1 WHEN You're Lenten Meditation ..., nouuneoiumuonaorinu; r......... caara-nan surmsx since the seventeenth century there has been intermittent con- troversy arising from the Christian claim that the first day of the week is to be regarded as essential- ly different from the other sls. and recent social change have led to s rlvlval of such controversies. For-thlereeeonltmaybeueeful to consider the matter against e wider historical background. The New Testament provides evidence that.sbout 30 years after the Crucifixion the Christian com- munities were in the habit of meet- ing for their distinctive worship on the first day of the week, and as this was a working day it must be assumed that they met either early in the morning or at night. This state of affairs continued until the famous decree of Constantine. which ordered that the "day of the sun" should be kept as a day of rest. This tradition oontlnued through the Middle Ages, and it was not until the Reformation brought into existence communities anxious to order the whole of their lives by direct reference to the Bible that ideas belonging to the Jewish Sabbath were directly ap- plied to the Christian Sunday. This led in sharp controversy in Caroline times as to whether sports should be allowed .on village greens on Sunday efternoons. In the course of centuries cus- tom 'eatabllshed the particularly English tradition of the Victorian Sunday. The greater freedom which now prevails in this country has arisen, it must. be admitted, from the demands of those who are far less committed to the de- mands of the Christian anc- lety than were their predecessors. though it has been reinforced by strong Christian insistence on the differences between the Christian Alice Brooks Designs Bundly and the Jewish Sabbath How "should modern Christian; think of Sunday? First and lore. mollo. Il."tho Lord's Day," to us, the name given to it by 5;, John the Beer. It is the day which der- ives its significance from the res. rection of the Lord on the 1," Easter Day. and which is set ..,f for the thankful ramembrnnc. this event and of what has .. l0Wed from it. This remefiibra. finds its natural expression - worship with the Christian coin. muinty. but this does not exhiiu,-I its meaning. The Christian sun. day' provides for those hum” needs of rest and relaxation to, which the Jewish Sabbath pm. vided, and this is particularly im. portant in these days of rush and clatter. The note of quiet and pen, which has been traditionally ,5. sociated with the English Sunday in contrast to its Continents; counterptut, is something not ligm, ly to be jettisoned. Modern Christian piety tnay wet extend the range of those end, which pro legitimately in be sought on. the Lord's Day. As it is his day the world which he has created. with all its beauty and interest and those human achievement. which most clearly reflect the div. the beauty are legitimate aources of enjoyment. But such a loosening of traditional limitations should not obscure the essential element: of the Christian Sunday. The" are a special concentration 0,, gm things of the spirit, the setting apart of time for joining with the Christian society in worship, and if possible, some effort in Christ. inn service. To achieve all this some shutting out of secular claim. will be necessary. not on ground, of primeval commandment. but because the good must not be .1. lowed to obscure the best. IIERES A QUICK!!! Jiffy Pinaforel sundresal- Per fect for the sandbox set. Buttons' down the back A opens flat for easy ironing. That cute duck erqbrold- ery makes it party-pretty. Pattern 7028: Child's Sizes 2, 4, 6. 8 .10. Tissue pattern, embroidery transfer State size. Send Twenty-nib Cents in coins (or this pattern (stamps cannot be tccepted) to ALICE BROOKS De- signs cfo The Guardian. 50 Front Street West, Toronto, Ontario. Please print plainly Name. Address and Pattern Number. peui-ance to cake icing? ! A. If butter is an ingredient in the icing for the cake, ice the cake and then put. it in the oven for is few minutes with the door open. The frosting will have a smooth, shiny appearance. i Q. How can I make it easy toi remove basting threads from a dress? A. when basting a garment. place the knots of the thread on the right side of the material. They will be much easier to remove when the article is finished. . I ,,. -.ir 1”! ck. I I kg? up, .5" .. 7028 SIZES I-l Q I . , ) it -91 ---n Ham's n-rl ssrsvsazodeeeertonsbusydsy.Yoncenprepuedie tiliing in minutes! And the flavor is pure fruit from real lemons. .You get the smoothest consistency you ever let melt in your mouth. lell-O Lemon Pie Filling is never too thick, never too thin Try Jell-O Lemon Pie Filling soon. Not a lemon jelly. 0:110 in a registered trademark, owned in Canada by General Foods, Limited.) JEll:'0 PIE FILLINGS Coconut Cream JUSYNY nut Cream Pie, 95"" I i Lil