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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1950-03-02, Page 7.rA TABLE TALKS Muffins and Jam Strawberry Rhubarb Conserve 2 cups (/ pound) prepared rhubarb 1 cup seedless raisins 2 cups sugar 1 cup corn syrup 1 large orange 4 cups (1% pounds) prepared strawberries cup blanched walnuts, coarsely chopped To prepare rhubarb, wash and cut into Y2 -inch pieces. Place in deep kettle. Add raisins, sugar and corn syrup. Remove peel . from orange and cut away' one-half of Inner white Bart. Chop peel and add to rhubarb. Cut Orange pulp, entirely free from membrane, into small pieces and add to rhubarb. Meanwhile, wash about 1% quarts fully ripe strawberries. Drain and bull. Add to rhubarb mixture. Bring to a boil, stirring occasionally. Re- duce heat; simmer, stirring occa- sionally until thick, about 30 to 35 minutes. Remove from heat and cool about 5 minutes. Blanch wal- nuts by covering with boiling water for ab ut 3 minutes, then drain and cover with cold water. Drain; chop and acid to rhubarb mixture. Pour Conserve into hot sterilized glasses. Paraffin. Makes 7 glasses. (6 fluid ounces each). Serve with: Breakfast Muffins 1Y2 cups sifted flour 3 teaspoons double-acting baking powder teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons sugar 1 egg, well beaten 1 cup milk - 3 tablespoons melted shortkning 3A cup wheat flakes Sift flour once, measure, add bak- ing powder, salt, and sugar, and sift again.. Combine egg and milk and add all at once to flour mixture; add shortening. To mix, draw spoon from side of bowl toward center (is times), turning bowl gradually. Chop spoon through batter (10 times). Add cereal and mix (about 5 strokes). Turn into greased muf- fin pans, filling each about Y3 full, Bake in hot oven (425 degrees F.) 22 minutes, or until done. Makes 9 large muffins. MOSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 6. Size of coal 1. Cultivators 7, Metal A. Likely 8, Ski race 9. Lath 0. passenger 12. First man steamer 13. Boundless expanse 14. Vesicle 1s. Noon 17. Presently 18. Beverage 19. Aptitude 21. verdant 24. 'Work 26. Manners 26. Fye of a. bean 27. Toward 29. Record 30. Pirst appear- ance iii.1,abel $2. By 33. Train of wives 84. Not any tis. Wall painting 36. Sudden thrust 87. Cutting tool 89. ship's boat 40. Residue 41. Depute 46, 1ltuaatan city 47. Bather than 48. Vice 49, 3ftisted 56 Noise Si. Look after DOWN 1. Son of Noah Poem Attontlor. 4. Strikes 11. Continent ...THE GREE By Gordo With so much to be done out- doors right now, it is very easy to forget about your house plants. But many fascin- ating kinds - in o varieties Is o m e- L`� times hard to get from a florist - can readily be grown from seed, - y • which should be sown now, so that they w i I I have time to develop into blooming size by the autumn. Flowering maple, a favorite of grandmother's era, has been much improved by recent hybridizers. Pendant, bell-shaped floweFs one to three inches long come in deli- cate shades of yellow, red, pink, salmon, orange and white -some with light veinings of contrasting color. Patience plant, another old fa- vorite, blooms all year round. Those that have flowered indoors during the winter may be set out in a shady spot to bloom through the summer. Because they grow so readily from cuttings and are so easy to grow from seed, such plants are often hard to buy and you will be amazed at the results from a packet of mixed • hybrid seeds. But don't forget the one great require- ment of these ever. -blooming flow- ers -plenty of water. Begonia senlperflorens is another ever -blooming candidate for a sun- ny spot in your window. Christmas Cheer, with its scarlet -crimson blossoms above (lark green foliage and Christmas Pink, with bright pink bloom and lighter green foli- age, are also well worth while. Seeds of begonias are so tiny that it is best to plant them in very finely -sifted soil, and just barely covered. With all such seedlings, watering should be done with great care. 'The soil should never be al- lowed to (try out entirely, as the drying of the tiny root -hairs is fatal. Geraniums, often grown from cuttings, are also easy to raise from seed. Bnt don't disturb the flat in which the seeds are planted, as IU, l:..gliah rt,•er 31. LTnitofship il. Canvas lodge capacity 16. Private room 33. Burry 20. Border 94. Lump of metal 21., Festival 36. Skinflint 22. nisorder 16. Recline 28, Work unit 37. Bird 24, Printed 3s. Present defamation 39. Dingle 26. Proclaimed 42. Worm 27, Strong taste 43. ITail 28, Molding 44. Metal 30. Venture 4G. Olden timed N THUMB... n L. Smith some seedlings may appear within. two weeks while others may take four times that long before in g. Periwinkle is a charming annual which makes an exceptionally good house plant because it endures heat well. It develops slowly into a 12 -inch plant with pholx-like flow- ers and waxy green foliage. Prim- roses take six to eight months from seed and require cool growing con- ditions; although there is one vari- ety, with sal.mgn pink bloom, which is supposed to be quicker, and flow- ers within four months after seed- ing, , Seeds sown in shallow bulb pans or flats are easier to care for than those in open ground. Fine seeds should be pressed very carefully into finely sifted soil; covered very lightly with soil or sand, and the container soaked until the surface looks damp. Glass or newspaper should be placed over the top,, un- til• the sprouts appear. Once 'up, they require sunshine and a con- stant supply of moisture. Your seedlings .hculd be moved ,1 Public Talks geed " Private Practice All of us are called on at one time or another to make a speech - to make a presLntation, to acknowl- edge a gift, to welcome a visitor. Do you get tongue-tied when it's your turd? Suppose your club is having a debate and you feel strongly on the subject; are you able to express your opinion? Think out your first sentence word-perfect and scribble a few phrases to help you make your point. Let's say the topic is "Inadequate Schooling." Your first sentence would have to be a bombshell. "Every .,clay, tiventy-five harried teachers try to control AND teach over 1500 students. That's 60 of our children for one person to handle." You go°on, reminding them how into small pots, or later on into hard it is to handle two or three larger ones, only when the roots children ]'ii the ]ionic. You give begin to crowd. Grown outdoors statistics on teacher's salaries and all summer, carefully watered and I then offer a possible solution, one fed, they should develop into bus- 1 that the group can act on. ky plants for your fall and winter There are so many situations that windoly garden. you call meet with confidence and poise once you know the ins and About 10 per cent of the total f 11'c c --kin See our area of the Philippines is under cultivation for ripe, Just F or Fun "Mose" said the Southern Col- onel to his colored holrse-?1an, "I'm going to have guests for l dinner on Sunday and I want you to get a nice turkey. But be sure it's a tame turkey - not a wild one like you served last time as my guests are Northerners and might not like the gamey flavor of the wild kind." Sunday dinner arrived, and a noble -looking turkey adorned the board, sure enough. But when lie was halfway through his por- tion, the Colonel angrily stnn- moned his houseman. "dose," he said, "I thought I told you to be sure and get a TAME turkey l" "And dat's what I sho enough dict, Boss,I) was the reply. ' "Then how do you account for these - two buckshot I bit out of the slice I'm eating?" "bat's a tame bird all right, Boss, I wouldn't tell you no lie. De fac' of de matter is, dem buck- shot was meant for MI;, not for; de turkey)" a C,059 1" GLAD I FOUND T1415 OLD STEEL TRAP OF POPS. Well. Q SETO T JTI MERE outs o pu i i p g• R adcr Service booklet No. 83 for various speech samples, parliamen- tary procedure and voice improve- ment. Send THIRTY CENTS in coins for "Self -Instruction Ill Public Speaking" • to Rcader Service, Room 604, 371 Bay Street, Toronto. Print name, addre- c, booklet title and No. Hoer Chinese Da It Since my arrival in this country - wrote a Chinese visitor to London -I hav, observed with dismay the English tray of making tea. In time of, shortage it is unnecessarily ex-. travagant and I have been able to convince friends here they can save nearly a third of their ration by mak- ing tea properly. After warming the teapot only one and a half teaspoons of tea are required for an ordinary -sized pot. The tea is only just barely covered with boiling water and is allowed to stand half a minute. A little more water is then added and allowed to stand; this is repeated until the pot is filled. The pot must never be completely emptied before adding the water for a second pouring. Koreans developed moveable type 50 years before Gutenberg printed the Bible. And then what of the newcom- ers to the country -the man from the city who suddenly decides farming is the life for himl Some- times I wonder . . . perhaps that type too, keep their feelings to themselves. "The simple life" is often eulogised through lack of ac- tual experience. Personally my heart aches -and my indignation rises - when I hear of a middle-aged man, quitting his job, putting his money into a hundred -acre farm and ex- pecting his wife and family to ad- just themselves to an entirely dif- ferent way of life, possibly without the conveniences to which they have always been accustomed. For them "the simple life" very soon becomes mighty complicated. Of course, a few acres with a com- fortable home, that's something else again. I can think of nothing bet- ter in these days of over -crowded living quarters. But r hundred acres -oh no! Not if you haven't been used to farming. Then there are those who think of farming, with a stable full of COWS, as a part-time job - quite possible if properly organized) Usually there comes a rude awa- Make It Stick Putty applied to barewood is likely to "unstick" and fall away after a few months. That is why craftsmen recommend that a prim- ing coat of paint be applied to the wood beforehand so that the putty can adhere better. It is not neces- sary for the paint to be thoroughly dry before the putty is applied. Painting over the putty after the job is done also helps the filler to "Stay Put" while at the same time masking the puttying job. 'GINGER FARM ie P. Clarke )(ening; enthusiasm wanes -and an- other farm is up for sale, e .But the newcomers that I think we all welcome, and who should be given every encouragement, are the young couples setting up for them- selves. You just sort of go along with them, sensing their courage, their energy and their ambition - and you hope to heaven life will not deal too "harshly with them. Disillusionment can be a bitter ex.• perienee for those who cannot rise above it, but a challenge to those who can. Sure, these young farmers will make mistakes, sometimes cost- ly ones -they are young yet in experience. But what they lack in experience they make up for in initiative. Most of them are pro- gressive -the chances are they will give that "new look to farming - and their wives, if they are the right kind, will be right there with them. The future of agriculture lies in the hands of these young people. They probably will not be required to face the physical hardships that their grandparents knew, at the same time every age has its prob- lems. So we say, more power to the younger generation. The world needs you -your strength, your vi- tality, and your brighter outlook. Answer To Thic Week's Puzzle Soothe their) with 1 LI N ISE 094 T ®. Rub on freely, and note 35c quick relief. �Qr,easeiesa. LARGE ECONOMICAL Fast -drying. No � strong s IZE 65C Odor. 18-4e ES 10 N WALLOP YON BELOW EBELT? Help Your Forgotten "28" For The Kind Of Relief That Helps Make You Rarin' To Go More than half of your digestion is done below the belt -in your 28 feet of bowels. So when indigestion strikes, try something that helps digestion in the stomach AND below the belt. What you may need is Carter's Little Liver Pills to give needed help to that "forgotten 28 feet" of bowels. Take one Carter's Little Liver Pill before and one after meals. Take them according to directions. They help wake up a larger flow of the 3 wain digestive juices in your stomach AND bowels -help you digest what you have - eaten in Nature's own way. Then most folks got the kind of relief that makes you feel better from your head to your toes. Just be sure you get the genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills from your druagLgt-355; PONT SPEAK'TO Mtn I INE LADIES AID CLUB _WILL HEAR ABOUT THIS 11 CALL A TAXI CALL A" �p8AN0 HE'fi CARRv 04V? The answer to thh puziele 1N e10w11046 00 acts pogo. m Everyone seems to be fed 'lap K 1 1 �'• qx. f& , y with the weather -rain, ,wind, cold, S '' thunderstorms still arioxe raid. Water, water, eve rywhedle.°r;,,dt is too bad for the farmers who have ,.�`,'� .t'�;'�. . _ � not yet finished' seeding -but there is not one thing anyone can do about it. We were watching the skies anxiously ourselves towards the end of last week but thank x, �Y goodness we weye just able to get V 9 • through before the rain carne. We usi- were so glad. It is a tiring busi- > ness-toori n s to ay nothing of the y es - s no i when seeding drags on through the g ,:5,;•,,: <•,.:.. ' "' ` � „ �� � �*� ;j. 4' weeks. It must be particularly dis• V s couraging to those who have re. f 0 �< ceptry taken up fanning -we old- timers are more or less hardened to the vicissitudes ofsfarm lifel ?i I wonder if this unusually active 2 period of buying and selling farm :.: s lands is general. throughout the t r 1 ? h h province? a the years we have inc In 11 been here we have never known " so many farms change hands in such a short time, In this district f. a 1' ' t doesn't seen long since we rated C 1, as "newcomers." Now, by compari- �t son, we can almost be classed as a. }ort]-timers" as, one by one, neigh- hors pull stakes and move into town. I wonder how many will be contented? Often we hear of re- tired farmers who are so lone- : some in their town homes they « y., �js. �:. hard]. know wha4 to do with t he m- +,r„�:. ,trrd�4.^•'N!� ,y:. t• :`k'it•. 's?rr. .R: r x . >+�, r�� ;i• �.p>;�^ :.t .sn•< '� ,,6:> .;;1. �� x..� .��•�<>: rt,:, ,a ��o.`z A '�,n. 5",a�„��'.,'siv':;.y": ;�;:s`��� ic' 3.., 5 K. '+fix k s +t^'3 •. �,,.w . �... ..� �.'f ��• x 5' t:::s.::f.' �,.... ��•i £ s.E '�a''.'[ $y k �✓' 1 the women settle selves. Probably y . iiy+o>�.. ;'r;', .><?>r'•� .� v'kv4t!<... :.»? >" f sS;e;'>: :i' E,:•:.'4:,yuQ 3r e*'iw6 `Yh ..r tC 's.:} " r.• ....... .: .... : .:,. �,.'<.::`.. >., ,: :..z..:_`;_.,..:. `• u•h'r F,�,, '�' ?�:'"r:.: >",vr M" y?' r':', Yt ':;<y� ';.. ^:s:.; :t, ;�, <53.t:� ,;s+ �.. s k�' �. ; e''c ):, '.SSD. +.-f'E%r >. "q•:r 'u, ,�s' . .tit : � ' `-s...�:.:�,:w.+..>;:eTMoa.:+,.�..,,..Lx1�,,.;.:;. .....>s„ .-.r,�:x:.a� .#..... K<Yw�.v down more happily than the men pP Y ,. ,�,;�, Students Learn Horticulture -Nineteen young men -are attending the Niagara Parks Commission training school just -below y g g g � l -glad of the opportunity to give more time and thought to their the Whirlpool. In three years they learn enough horticulture, floriculture and aboriculture to fit them for top jobs. Director homes without the interruptions in - of the school is J. B. Liddell (left), who came to Ontario from the Royal Botanical Gardens at Edinburgh. hew students cidentai to farm life. They like to anywhere have as pleasant surroundings ('right) for their classes. Requirements. for entry are three successful years of high be able to step out, do their own school and, preferably some practical knowledge of horticulture. shopping and then walk home again, If they have nostalgic yearn- ings very,few admit it. TABLE TALKS Muffins and Jam Strawberry Rhubarb Conserve 2 cups (/ pound) prepared rhubarb 1 cup seedless raisins 2 cups sugar 1 cup corn syrup 1 large orange 4 cups (1% pounds) prepared strawberries cup blanched walnuts, coarsely chopped To prepare rhubarb, wash and cut into Y2 -inch pieces. Place in deep kettle. Add raisins, sugar and corn syrup. Remove peel . from orange and cut away' one-half of Inner white Bart. Chop peel and add to rhubarb. Cut Orange pulp, entirely free from membrane, into small pieces and add to rhubarb. Meanwhile, wash about 1% quarts fully ripe strawberries. Drain and bull. Add to rhubarb mixture. Bring to a boil, stirring occasionally. Re- duce heat; simmer, stirring occa- sionally until thick, about 30 to 35 minutes. Remove from heat and cool about 5 minutes. Blanch wal- nuts by covering with boiling water for ab ut 3 minutes, then drain and cover with cold water. Drain; chop and acid to rhubarb mixture. Pour Conserve into hot sterilized glasses. Paraffin. Makes 7 glasses. (6 fluid ounces each). Serve with: Breakfast Muffins 1Y2 cups sifted flour 3 teaspoons double-acting baking powder teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons sugar 1 egg, well beaten 1 cup milk - 3 tablespoons melted shortkning 3A cup wheat flakes Sift flour once, measure, add bak- ing powder, salt, and sugar, and sift again.. Combine egg and milk and add all at once to flour mixture; add shortening. To mix, draw spoon from side of bowl toward center (is times), turning bowl gradually. Chop spoon through batter (10 times). Add cereal and mix (about 5 strokes). Turn into greased muf- fin pans, filling each about Y3 full, Bake in hot oven (425 degrees F.) 22 minutes, or until done. Makes 9 large muffins. MOSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 6. Size of coal 1. Cultivators 7, Metal A. Likely 8, Ski race 9. Lath 0. passenger 12. First man steamer 13. Boundless expanse 14. Vesicle 1s. Noon 17. Presently 18. Beverage 19. Aptitude 21. verdant 24. 'Work 26. Manners 26. Fye of a. bean 27. Toward 29. Record 30. Pirst appear- ance iii.1,abel $2. By 33. Train of wives 84. Not any tis. Wall painting 36. Sudden thrust 87. Cutting tool 89. ship's boat 40. Residue 41. Depute 46, 1ltuaatan city 47. Bather than 48. Vice 49, 3ftisted 56 Noise Si. Look after DOWN 1. Son of Noah Poem Attontlor. 4. Strikes 11. Continent ...THE GREE By Gordo With so much to be done out- doors right now, it is very easy to forget about your house plants. But many fascin- ating kinds - in o varieties Is o m e- L`� times hard to get from a florist - can readily be grown from seed, - y • which should be sown now, so that they w i I I have time to develop into blooming size by the autumn. Flowering maple, a favorite of grandmother's era, has been much improved by recent hybridizers. Pendant, bell-shaped floweFs one to three inches long come in deli- cate shades of yellow, red, pink, salmon, orange and white -some with light veinings of contrasting color. Patience plant, another old fa- vorite, blooms all year round. Those that have flowered indoors during the winter may be set out in a shady spot to bloom through the summer. Because they grow so readily from cuttings and are so easy to grow from seed, such plants are often hard to buy and you will be amazed at the results from a packet of mixed • hybrid seeds. But don't forget the one great require- ment of these ever. -blooming flow- ers -plenty of water. Begonia senlperflorens is another ever -blooming candidate for a sun- ny spot in your window. Christmas Cheer, with its scarlet -crimson blossoms above (lark green foliage and Christmas Pink, with bright pink bloom and lighter green foli- age, are also well worth while. Seeds of begonias are so tiny that it is best to plant them in very finely -sifted soil, and just barely covered. With all such seedlings, watering should be done with great care. 'The soil should never be al- lowed to (try out entirely, as the drying of the tiny root -hairs is fatal. Geraniums, often grown from cuttings, are also easy to raise from seed. Bnt don't disturb the flat in which the seeds are planted, as IU, l:..gliah rt,•er 31. LTnitofship il. Canvas lodge capacity 16. Private room 33. Burry 20. Border 94. Lump of metal 21., Festival 36. Skinflint 22. nisorder 16. Recline 28, Work unit 37. Bird 24, Printed 3s. Present defamation 39. Dingle 26. Proclaimed 42. Worm 27, Strong taste 43. ITail 28, Molding 44. Metal 30. Venture 4G. Olden timed N THUMB... n L. Smith some seedlings may appear within. two weeks while others may take four times that long before in g. Periwinkle is a charming annual which makes an exceptionally good house plant because it endures heat well. It develops slowly into a 12 -inch plant with pholx-like flow- ers and waxy green foliage. Prim- roses take six to eight months from seed and require cool growing con- ditions; although there is one vari- ety, with sal.mgn pink bloom, which is supposed to be quicker, and flow- ers within four months after seed- ing, , Seeds sown in shallow bulb pans or flats are easier to care for than those in open ground. Fine seeds should be pressed very carefully into finely sifted soil; covered very lightly with soil or sand, and the container soaked until the surface looks damp. Glass or newspaper should be placed over the top,, un- til• the sprouts appear. Once 'up, they require sunshine and a con- stant supply of moisture. Your seedlings .hculd be moved ,1 Public Talks geed " Private Practice All of us are called on at one time or another to make a speech - to make a presLntation, to acknowl- edge a gift, to welcome a visitor. Do you get tongue-tied when it's your turd? Suppose your club is having a debate and you feel strongly on the subject; are you able to express your opinion? Think out your first sentence word-perfect and scribble a few phrases to help you make your point. Let's say the topic is "Inadequate Schooling." Your first sentence would have to be a bombshell. "Every .,clay, tiventy-five harried teachers try to control AND teach over 1500 students. That's 60 of our children for one person to handle." You go°on, reminding them how into small pots, or later on into hard it is to handle two or three larger ones, only when the roots children ]'ii the ]ionic. You give begin to crowd. Grown outdoors statistics on teacher's salaries and all summer, carefully watered and I then offer a possible solution, one fed, they should develop into bus- 1 that the group can act on. ky plants for your fall and winter There are so many situations that windoly garden. you call meet with confidence and poise once you know the ins and About 10 per cent of the total f 11'c c --kin See our area of the Philippines is under cultivation for ripe, Just F or Fun "Mose" said the Southern Col- onel to his colored holrse-?1an, "I'm going to have guests for l dinner on Sunday and I want you to get a nice turkey. But be sure it's a tame turkey - not a wild one like you served last time as my guests are Northerners and might not like the gamey flavor of the wild kind." Sunday dinner arrived, and a noble -looking turkey adorned the board, sure enough. But when lie was halfway through his por- tion, the Colonel angrily stnn- moned his houseman. "dose," he said, "I thought I told you to be sure and get a TAME turkey l" "And dat's what I sho enough dict, Boss,I) was the reply. ' "Then how do you account for these - two buckshot I bit out of the slice I'm eating?" "bat's a tame bird all right, Boss, I wouldn't tell you no lie. De fac' of de matter is, dem buck- shot was meant for MI;, not for; de turkey)" a C,059 1" GLAD I FOUND T1415 OLD STEEL TRAP OF POPS. Well. Q SETO T JTI MERE outs o pu i i p g• R adcr Service booklet No. 83 for various speech samples, parliamen- tary procedure and voice improve- ment. Send THIRTY CENTS in coins for "Self -Instruction Ill Public Speaking" • to Rcader Service, Room 604, 371 Bay Street, Toronto. Print name, addre- c, booklet title and No. Hoer Chinese Da It Since my arrival in this country - wrote a Chinese visitor to London -I hav, observed with dismay the English tray of making tea. In time of, shortage it is unnecessarily ex-. travagant and I have been able to convince friends here they can save nearly a third of their ration by mak- ing tea properly. After warming the teapot only one and a half teaspoons of tea are required for an ordinary -sized pot. The tea is only just barely covered with boiling water and is allowed to stand half a minute. A little more water is then added and allowed to stand; this is repeated until the pot is filled. The pot must never be completely emptied before adding the water for a second pouring. Koreans developed moveable type 50 years before Gutenberg printed the Bible. And then what of the newcom- ers to the country -the man from the city who suddenly decides farming is the life for himl Some- times I wonder . . . perhaps that type too, keep their feelings to themselves. "The simple life" is often eulogised through lack of ac- tual experience. Personally my heart aches -and my indignation rises - when I hear of a middle-aged man, quitting his job, putting his money into a hundred -acre farm and ex- pecting his wife and family to ad- just themselves to an entirely dif- ferent way of life, possibly without the conveniences to which they have always been accustomed. For them "the simple life" very soon becomes mighty complicated. Of course, a few acres with a com- fortable home, that's something else again. I can think of nothing bet- ter in these days of over -crowded living quarters. But r hundred acres -oh no! Not if you haven't been used to farming. Then there are those who think of farming, with a stable full of COWS, as a part-time job - quite possible if properly organized) Usually there comes a rude awa- Make It Stick Putty applied to barewood is likely to "unstick" and fall away after a few months. That is why craftsmen recommend that a prim- ing coat of paint be applied to the wood beforehand so that the putty can adhere better. It is not neces- sary for the paint to be thoroughly dry before the putty is applied. Painting over the putty after the job is done also helps the filler to "Stay Put" while at the same time masking the puttying job. 'GINGER FARM ie P. Clarke )(ening; enthusiasm wanes -and an- other farm is up for sale, e .But the newcomers that I think we all welcome, and who should be given every encouragement, are the young couples setting up for them- selves. You just sort of go along with them, sensing their courage, their energy and their ambition - and you hope to heaven life will not deal too "harshly with them. Disillusionment can be a bitter ex.• perienee for those who cannot rise above it, but a challenge to those who can. Sure, these young farmers will make mistakes, sometimes cost- ly ones -they are young yet in experience. But what they lack in experience they make up for in initiative. Most of them are pro- gressive -the chances are they will give that "new look to farming - and their wives, if they are the right kind, will be right there with them. The future of agriculture lies in the hands of these young people. They probably will not be required to face the physical hardships that their grandparents knew, at the same time every age has its prob- lems. So we say, more power to the younger generation. The world needs you -your strength, your vi- tality, and your brighter outlook. Answer To Thic Week's Puzzle Soothe their) with 1 LI N ISE 094 T ®. Rub on freely, and note 35c quick relief. �Qr,easeiesa. LARGE ECONOMICAL Fast -drying. No � strong s IZE 65C Odor. 18-4e ES 10 N WALLOP YON BELOW EBELT? Help Your Forgotten "28" For The Kind Of Relief That Helps Make You Rarin' To Go More than half of your digestion is done below the belt -in your 28 feet of bowels. So when indigestion strikes, try something that helps digestion in the stomach AND below the belt. What you may need is Carter's Little Liver Pills to give needed help to that "forgotten 28 feet" of bowels. Take one Carter's Little Liver Pill before and one after meals. Take them according to directions. They help wake up a larger flow of the 3 wain digestive juices in your stomach AND bowels -help you digest what you have - eaten in Nature's own way. Then most folks got the kind of relief that makes you feel better from your head to your toes. Just be sure you get the genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills from your druagLgt-355; PONT SPEAK'TO Mtn I INE LADIES AID CLUB _WILL HEAR ABOUT THIS 11 CALL A TAXI CALL A" �p8AN0 HE'fi CARRv 04V? The answer to thh puziele 1N e10w11046 00 acts pogo.