you have given Chiropractic a fair chance. Published in the interests of public health. . In other @'Er(i.sâ€",â€"â€"}rt;ï¬â€œl;ave not done everything possible, if you are one of these sufferers, until we are the only healing science that is doing all its.research out of its own pocket. Despite this, there is more than enough eviâ€" dence available now, proving our success with most of the crippling chronic conditions that have bafâ€" fled science for centuries. Chiropractic has proven that it can correct or arrest the progress of this condition. More research centres are clearly needed, but The work of this group of reâ€" searchers was first focused on this condition as it affected women in the forty to sixty group. Here, outstanding progress has been made in the control of this cripâ€" pler. At this phase of life certain definite changes are obtained that make the woman more susceptâ€" ible; and if not effectively and correctly treated this condition can easily cause the loss of moâ€" bility of a limb, or it may proâ€" duce a form of permanent immoâ€" bility of some other member of the body. _ _ Almost every day some publiâ€" cation carries a vague promise of a miracle drug or some new apâ€" proach concerning this disease. Because of this, the Chiropractic arthritis research group is relucâ€" tant to release a highly enthusiasâ€" tic type of information; but statisâ€" tics compiled thus far are beyond the theory stage. s’ Neil 8. Harris, D.C.__ Chiropractic Doctor of Chiropractic research scientists have been making pheâ€" nomenal progress in the underâ€" standing and control of this maâ€" lady. From the results of this coâ€" operative research, information has been gathered that promises to revolutionize the entire apâ€" proach to this dreaded crippler. . ARTHRITIS ... . . . in Women Here are some hints from the home economists on the types of herbs commonly used ‘by famous chefs to add pungency and zest to seed condiments probably best known are mustard, celery, and anise seeds. When it comes to herbs we find there is quite an arâ€" ray, each with its own special aznï¬c flavor, which we should lefrn to make use of in our coOkâ€" seasonings â€" spices, seeds and herbs. Among the spices are the old kitchen favourites â€" pepï¬r, ginger, cloves and cinnamon. The to use them Wm Let them contribute an ind ble, elusive something to a dish without anyâ€" one being able to pick out just what it is. Condiments will come in handy when planning those extra special Christmas meals. Incidentally, the term "condiment‘ may be a little confusing. It is the general term which covers three types of seeins to taste rather flat and un are the magic wand that lifts a plein stew or meat pie from the ordinary into the sublime. For the novice at using spices and herbs one good rule to follow, is to use them sparingly. Let them Â¥ )24 5 \)â€"< t § e ; Arthritis is a condition that al-E tacks both sexes with almost equal regularity; but recent! research has brought | forth m uc h | 5 encouraging | results in its control a n d correction. A very select mepeeeima eames _ group o [ MENU PLANNING Are you sometimes discouraged News Of Interest To Women By Neil S. Harris, D.C. & Santa Claus %:%_ may be puzzled, (Advt.) But no little boy who has seen the display at you have Beaupre‘s Wallpaper & Paint Store is in any doubt as to what he or she wants the old gentleman to bring on Christmas Eve. . Pumpkin Soup . % cup strained pumpkin 1 can cream chicken soup 1% cups milk Salt and pepper Combine cooked pumpkin, conâ€" densed chicken soup, milk and seasoning. Heat to steaming point. Serves 7. m Be prepared for a "chinwag" and plan gow to prepare tradiâ€" tional Thanksgiving foods. Our suggestions are quick and easy dishes such as Pumpkin soup, Roast cured ham, Apple prune dressing, Brow ned potatoes, Mashed turnips, Jellied carrot salad, Mincemeat pie and Tea or Coffee. Cheery beverages are a must at most Christmas parties and mint is a refreshing addition to many cold drinks. _* HYDRO HOMEMAKERS‘ CLUB Company Dinner When _ Americans â€" visit . our homes during the weekâ€"end they will revive many election inciâ€" dents. They may also recall that the President of the U.S. proâ€" claimed the first Thanksgiving on November 27, in 1789. by adding herbs to the spread or to the butter. For example, mix a little basil in the butter for egg sandwiches or add sage to cheese spreads for a different tang. Mint and parsley are good with cheese spreads, too. Party sandwiches or canapes can be given a tantalizing flavor For Christmas â€" entertaining, whether it be a treeâ€"decorating party or an informal supper, a cassero‘le, of chicken and mushâ€" room, will be much enjoyed. Marjoram, used sparingly, adds much to a chicken casserole as does tarragon, while rosemary is delightful in fricassée. Dill is usually thought of in connection with pickles, but it is also good with chicken, particularly with creamed chicken. _ The home economists suggest that you make your Christmas meals not only festive but outâ€" standing by using various herbs. Savory is probably the most comâ€" mon one to put in the stuffing for the Christmas turkey. While sage is particularly good with goose. Parsley, either fresh or dried, may also be added to dressings. Thyme and marjoram have quite strong flavors so guide yourself accordingly when using them. By the way the poultry dressing sold in the shops is a combination of several herbs. The French "Bouquet garni‘ is really three herbs in one. Three or four sprigs of parsley, the same of thyme and one bay leaf are put together and the little "Bouquet" with the thyme on the outside is tied with thread. It is often adâ€" ded to soups and stews but it should be remembered that both thyme and bay leaf are strong flavored so the "Bouquet" should not be left in the soup or stew too long. Chervil is pernm not as well kpown as some of other herbs. It has a flavor something like a nalsturtmm leaf and is ‘wdand with salads, soups, sauces eggs Mint is usually aasocti,:ted with lamb and green , but try adâ€" ding a little d.riege!:’ï¬m to cooked beets or onions for a different flavor. Horseradish is frequently used with roast beef or in apple sauce for roast pork. that the woman is the master of the house. Whether this is authentic or not rosemary is a popular herb, for it is also fine to use with roast beef, lamb, pork or some like to add occasionally to potatoes, caulifiower or turnip as they are cooking. There is a stoâ€" when it is grown indoors it shows ashed turnips, Jellied carrot| Answer: Top 1% cups diced ilad, Mincemeat pie and Tea or|chicken add 1 tsp. lemon juice, ‘% offee. cup diced raw celery, 1 tbsp. Pumpkin Soup minged browned almonds, 1 tsp. % cup strained pumpkin slivered ripe olives, % tsp. accent 1 can cream chicken soup and !4 cup mayonnaise. (It is 1% cups milk {mono sodium â€" glutamate â€" and Salt and pepper \ makes good chicken taste better Combine cooked pumpkin, conâ€" | without addiw@#® any additional rnsed chicken soup, milk and‘flavog) asoning. Heat to steaming point. Mrs. W. W. asks: Have you a rves 7. e recipe for Hasenpfeffer? Appieâ€"Prune Dressing _ _Answer: We believe hasen~ 3 cups diced bread ipfefler is ground black pepper. ‘4 cup melted butter However since there have been 112 King 8. WATERLOO WALLPAPER & PAINTS Mrs. C. D. asks: How can we perk up the flavor of cold chicken as a salad? Answer: Use a tin of cranberâ€" ry jelly. Crush with a fork and sprinkle % tsp. of curry over it. Beat well and chill. Answer: Store in a covered cookie jar with two cubes of suâ€" | gar beside them. Keep in a cool| place. They may be crisped by | placing a few on a pie plate in a warm oven for 3 or 4 mins. Answer: Place paper cups in zinc jar bands on a cookie sheet before pouring cake mix into them. Miss M. P. asks: How can we keep crunchy cookies crisp for a week or more? bake cake mixes inwpépe‘rf cupé without losing their shape? â€" Answer: Brush the glaze on fruit cake when the cake is abâ€" solutely cold. Add icing immediâ€" ately. Mrs. L. R. asks: How can we ~ THE QUESTION BOX Mrs. J. K. asks: When do you put the glaze on top of fruit cakes so the icing will stick? 1. cup grated carrot lightly sprinkled with salt. t Apple Mincemeat Pic | 2% cups thick applesauce | 1 2/3 cup canned mincemeat | | 14 cup brown sugar f 2 tbsps. butter Pastry dough Combine applesauce, minceâ€"| meat, sugar and ‘butter. Line a 9| inch pie plate with pastry and . fill with mixture. Roll out reâ€"| maining dough, design and top over moistened edge of lower pasâ€" try. Press edges together with fork. Bake in electric oven of 425 degs of 35 mins. | Cook matchâ€"size pieces of _tur-\ nip in saited water for 25 mins. Drain and mash. For 6 or 7 servâ€" | ings add 1 thsp. flour, 1 tbsp. butâ€" | ter, 1 thap. brown sugar and 1 tsp.| finely grated orange rind. Beat.; Reheat over hot water. Serve. _ | Jellied Carrot Salad | Dissolve a package of pineapple | favored gelatine with 1 cug hot| water and 1 cup cold watet. Stir in 1 tsp. lemon juice and set to jell. When partly thickened add | 3 ues memnda memmiet D Senl 1 cup diced apples % cup diced prunes 4 cup nuts 1 top salt 1 tosp. lemon juice Combine and bake in greased custard cups for 20 mins. during baking period for roast pork. ® Felt stuffed with coiton is used to make this ncinï¬ horse. The colors are gay, right in tune with the holiday spirit. (,J-reen felt is recommended for fï¬e horse while the mane, tail, ears and eyes are made in white. He has a red saddle with black su'rrul;(ls. If you would like to have a leaflet with lirections for making FRISKY THE HORSE, send a stamped, selfâ€" wldresed envelove to the Needlework Department of this paper requesting Leaflet No. Eâ€"2089. boo‘omiuh nndM es more more popuâ€" .. __jt) lar with crochet fans. It enables 5%{ women to create truly beautiful _ %°_J and lifeâ€"like d-etTr that wilt blend with the combinaâ€" tions of rooms. One of the most popular fashions in crochet is the floral doily worked in contrasting colors. He color range in crochet cottons is wide so that you‘ll be able to match or contrast them with the color scheme of your room. Why not surprise & frieed with a doily or scarf that you‘ve made for her home? In the fashion line there are many small accessory items that you can make. Vests are easy to make, and you‘ll find patterns for thein if any of the {nllwn catalogs. You can make them in eorduroy, velveteen or plaid woolâ€"very smart fabries for this season. Belts are other popular fashion items. You can feel assured that the gift of a belt will be appreciated because a girl can‘t have too many of them. m‘l‘A.IIAl'lwmw-ohumm"-ph- M rmairk nere Y oeai ie h es ukne n g uiss bte » ayoa:o-tnuumlhrimnotï¬nmu hnh-otomï¬_-bdm the big day. A few suggestions might welcome, in favt, they might e the solution to your ptm. For children â€"there are probâ€" list ' m&t lt â€" w g“_hnb’l;_&_:&ed.fln!l:'hw Needlecraft News 1â€"1128 by Pll)lflioy THEWAa*tunrLoo several requests for Sweet and Sour Rabbit, we are sending you the method of making the delicaâ€" cy known as: 1 raboit or hare Vinegar Water » 3 slices onion 1 dozen whole cloves 3 bay leaves . Salt and black pepper 3 tablespoons lard 1 cup heavy sour cream Fried bread triangles Heart and flower motif with 3 Happiness Diamonds Lady Margaret Happiness Diamond 100.00 0"/"'%‘ DIAMOND MERCHANTs ~ Jewellers for Over 50 Years Lady Shirley * Happiness Diamond W M ons 002 It‘s time to go a hinting for Christâ€" Prvwe d gieye u:. > iihlligennniet mas gift suggestions â€" and you will <lg., 5 â€" PBA olsn find the gift that will bring the most pleasure to the recipients on your gift list is a wonderful gift of jewellery. . . . YOUNG‘S incomparable selection of radiant HAPPINESS DIAMONf)S. dependable timepieces and other fine jewellery pieces will meet with your immediate approval â€" so when you begin your éhristmas shopping visit Young‘s first. 8 King St. East Sparkling favorite . . . 3 Happiness Diamonds Hasenpfeffer 150.00 Stewed prunes or other fruit Skin, clean, wipe, and cut up the rabbit or hare. Place in a bow! and cover with vinegar and water in equal parts Add the onion, cloves, bay leaves and seaâ€" sonings. Marinate (steep) for two days, turning the meat freâ€" quently but keeping it entirely covered with the liquid. Lift out the meat, pat dry, sear on all sides in the hot lard, drain off the fat and add enough of the maâ€" rinade to cover the pieces of meat. Cover and simmer until tender, about half an hour. Just beiore‘ serving, add the sour cream, bring to a rapid boil, discard bay leaves, pour the sauce over, and serve on a hot platter, garnished‘ with the bread triangles. Serve the fruit separately. 4 Wong Su-l..intf’ewas born on the last night of Chinese lunar year corresponding to 1918, in the inner courtyard of a wealthy Chinese gentry home. Except that she escaped having her feet bound, her upbringing as "girl number seven" would have been many centuries " earlier. . Her grandmother, mincing from room to room on bound feet, her arms Wong Suâ€"Ling and Earl Herbert Mh.-vdohmfl !theunivorn' the deep forest of darkest Africa, of the two huge old bult elephants and their venâ€" ;enc.loahhauervhohn‘m wounded one of them. It is story of living Leviathans and the haronoeï¬eonfl;‘nd)nh-tu; ten calls elville‘s great cmuym Not since Kipting has anyone lore with such passion and knowâ€" Three large Happiness Diaâ€" monds sparkle majestically from the elegant setting to make this a perfect gift for a special someone. J Cressy: "DAUGHTER QF CON FUCIUS", N.Y., Farrat, Straw and Young, 1952. Princess Elizabeth Happiness Diamonds Weekly Book Review KITCHENER CHRONICLE 100.00 As supplied by the Waterloo Public Library. By MARGARET McCUILOUGH. Librarian " mart: _ "YHE CUBRVE|resting on the shoulders of two HE TUSK", Besten,|slave girls, ruled the houschoid t, 195%. _ _ |of fiftyâ€"one persons. And they, in A girl with less courage would have quailed at the hardahi})s and dangers and utter lack of conâ€" ventions in that untrammeled world. But Rosamund loved even the dangerous trip to Fox Island when the outboard motor failed and ice started to close in on their small canoe, and the overnight trip without equipment to an isoâ€" lated cabin where she saw her first ~aretic wolf and Barren Ground caribou, Stanwellâ€"Fietcher, Theodora C.; "THE TUNDRA WORLD", Bosâ€" ton, Little, Brown and Co., 1952. The many thousands of readers who delighted in Mrs. Stanwellâ€" Fleu:her‘i Driftwood Valley will be ually enthusiastic over her newelook, based on the author‘s experiences in one of the lut‘ frontier of the worldâ€"the edge of the arctic tundra. } Mrs. â€" Stanwellâ€"Fletcher â€" tells how, late one June, Rosamund Reeve, reached the west coast of Hudson Bay and the frontier setâ€" tlement of Churchil â€" the last outpost of civilization before the vast and littleâ€"known expanse of me e e e en ooey the Barrenlands. From a shelterâ€" ed New England home, Rosamund had come alone to join a fellow frnduate student and three proâ€" essors in a study of the bird and plant life of a subarctic tundra family into the modern wor recdhkennexdtin‘npnl_,.& therecderbdmavivsdfl:tuu of the elite ctaas which al ways been the real carrier of Chiâ€" nese oulture. of three thousand. The reader is carried behind the bamboo curtain of her Confuâ€" mnbtmebw;v]im-.m;;l; dom seen estern eyes. mdwmam nwcmmdih,hdnng that thrust Wong Suâ€"ling and he: Buy for Christmas NOW on our LAYAWAY PLAN Lady Claire Happiness Diamond Lady Lyn Exquisite creation sparkâ€" ling with 50 Happiness diamonds. Happiness Diamond to a powerful clan TERMS Choose a dainty Gruen for her. Noted for its reliaâ€" bility ... "Bt Co 75 Apt for a province which boasts the Canadian Rockies, British Coâ€" lumbia has as its motto, "Splenâ€" dor Without Diminishment". Houghton, Miffiin, 1952. The choice df Dixon Wecter as editor of the Mark Twain Estate was a wise one. A brilliant hisâ€" torian wfho hamme- 'l:)m‘ddgex- panse of previ red materiel, he uncovered many new facts, correcting existing errors, and Aled in many gape. Sam Chmemnd mton, his parentsâ€"Jane a MarshgH â€"his brothers and sisters, the jJoy and melancholy of school, girls, the gang, the River, work as a printer‘s devil, his first clwn:{, high goodâ€"humored literary â€" forts, all are woven into this rich Weeter, Dixon: "SAM CLEMENS BULOVA WATCHES (for Men and Women) The gift of a lifetime â€" created to give you the accurate service you demand ... GRUEN WATCHES (for Men and Women) Please him with a Gr dependable movement BETTER VISION GLASSES 17 King St. West Walper Hotel Block SEE YOUNG, LOOK YOUNG C. R. NIMMO 331 Serving the Kitchenerâ€"W aterloo public for the past 11 years with YÂ¥ OUNG‘S ubkod for offenes? T CEA O ptometrist Attractively styled 15â€"jewel watches in a choice of modâ€" elsâ€"all guaranteed reliable â€"an excellent gift â€"inexâ€" pensive too. For the fincst in performâ€" ance â€" chose a Cyma Taâ€" vannes. Several styles for men and women. Reliable CYMA TAVANNES 2. Ottawa employed 46,106 civil servants in 1939. What is toâ€" day‘s figure? © 3. What is Canada‘s single most valuable natural resource? 4. Is most of Canada drained by rivers flowing to the Atlantic, the Pacific, or Hudson Bay and the Arctic Ocean? 5. Labor income in 1989 averaged _ §$215 million monthly. What is _ it today? ANSWERS: 5. For July, 1952, it was $905 million; 3. The forests; 1. Calgary, Alta., over 3,400 feet above sea level; 4. By rivers flowâ€" ing north to Hudson Bay and the Arctic Ocean; 2. 131,646 (not inâ€" cluding about 37,000 civil servants classed as casual employees). Which of Canada‘s dn‘u at the greatest elevation e sea QUICK CANADIAN QuUrz 37"*. 337 29!; Dial 2â€"1971