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Show o nil i 1 i o 3) in Edwaid Haws Heir 4 His "The Wonderful World of CookinfC (Simon O Schuster, Inc., N.Y. 20) combines excellent seasonal recipes with anecdotes. i J5 Marion Holmes Asks: Did you ever see well-writt- en ' tlnHO Urn. It. iMJWtJ- - . A .11 ll SAtAAJt VJKI M VIA , JoL Kxidl. uhlMs UWs 7.. - Iff f Iff . m 4&wp AMU;. r A day-drea- A - Tony Lane This game is like tag m? except each player has three chances during the game to escape the player who is It. He can hang on to a fence, a tree branch, or anything else above the ground. The first player tagged when his feet are ON the ground is then It. This is fun! floor-mo- p? A A finger-bow- l? brain-wav- e? fire-fl- y? A p FTr!iTiTinft"n! nSPAGHETT Hang It! dog-fis- h? A home-run- ? A bed-sprin- g? fi An A cake-wal- ear-rin- g? k? 1 i mti&i Bach By A Musical Puzzle Wrfteor EDWARD HARRIS HETH'S Pizza recipe for Quick and ' Easy x-- - A dish that invariably brings forth expressions of delight from family and guests. Write also for other recipes using La wry 's Seasoned Salt, Carlic 3 Spread, and Dressings for Salads. Lawry's Foods, Inc., Dept. FW65, I J i I r3C J: M 1 YOU'RE ...much more than you know Living' p iJHjji.)Y.iri, m rTrr pretty well cushioned nowaday by people you never see thousand ami thousand of L Look who work U 31 EE i 11 your comfort, lighten your labors, brighten your morale, sharpen your appetite, polish up your looks, and 3EC Formula for pleamnt living: uUok th ad in thin magazine. I? J"STlTn I'.Hi 0S ntOFIT fOUCMWSM. FOUNDATION 3J KKJSJ SHEET, NEWYOU . 1. tWH - ' 1"('V w your friends in a circle. J 1 m, Around the World Serapbook Frances for Twenty Cents a table, or they can be the arms and legs of a person who is dancing or running. The clay is rolled into little balls, each about the size of a pea. These balls of clay are the man's knee and elbow joints, and they are also the joints for the legs of a table or a chair. In fact, you make most of the furniture for a doll's house with toothpicks and clay. XH M3T See what we mean? on-a- box of toothpicks will cost a dime, and a stick of modeling clay may be only five cents. The picks can easily be broken to give you a piece of wood of any length. The clay should be worked with your fingers until it is soft. The picks are the legs of a chair or narn boost your egn. vi. W. D: Hambly in ... -- cap, or pebble, have them Dass it from one to the other as fast as they can, until you (or someone chosen as leader) call Stop! Whoever is holding the penny is "poisoned." Continue playing, but each time the penny reaches anyone who is "poisoned," he must pass it under one leg before handing it on to the next player. If one is unlucky enough to be caught twice, he must pass the penny under the other leg, or around his neck, or under one arm and remember these motions every time the coin comes to him, or he's out. By the time several players are going through all these contortions each time they get the penny, the game is quite hilarious. After playing for a limited time, anyone who has avoided being "poisoned" is the winner. 4 32 employed by brand name manufacturers to win your favor. for you all the time! arm ie of scientists, doctors and chemists; dietician, cosmeticians and stylists; enjrineers. and researchers. And all to all protect you from inferiority to safeguard your health, promote , eat Fun H in product development, mtu Poisoned Penny Anne Faulkner Oberndorfer. Can you read your musical notes? If so, you can read this story which substitutes notes for letters. The first word, for example is one because the musical note is "e." P.O. Box 2572, Los Angeles 54, Calif. 2ufr6D(3 aaiiasiv Hamilton For the latest fun fad, buy a plain serapbook. Collect a stack of picture post cards, Christmas cards, etc., from different parts of the world. On tne front of the book, letter the words: "Around ." the world with Fill in the blank with your name. Mount the cards on the inside pages, and under each card write a little paragraph about where the card came from, the date, and perhaps, the sender. Write any- .thing you'd like to have in such a serapbook. Be the first in your school with a Hound the World serapbook! At the Ball Game Ragna Esltil Fill in the empty spaces with three- - and four-lett- er words that begin and end with the same letter; for example, BOB and ADA. When Bob called for Ada at on Saturday to take her to the ball game, he had a huge r for her. She put it on and they went to the game where they sat with the rest of their in their class section. They all had horns -- . to The opposing team's off vas a , and their side 'a out . Whenever there let was a they drank some Their team won and they all said, " ! What a game!" moav 4dod 'npi 'jboj 'pnp, '3oi oo '2ue3 'uinui 'uoou :sj3Avsuy What Do You See? Nancy Clinton ' iJ,l'i"VJJljJl.g"'P' (Can roa itad row imicil aotw? an if yoa caa nad du Vr? ake a coin and examine it very closely for two minutes. Now put it out of sight and take a pencil and jot ""down the things you remember jseeing on that coinMf you play-th- is with others, anything forgotten must be paid for with a forfeit. Try it. It's fun! ' patient back to normal. But all reluctantly concede that the best they can do under present circumstances is to pick a few of the "most promising" patients, and concentrate their efforts on them. . The rest the overwhelming majority must "snap out of it" on their own, or else find themselves condemned to life imprisonment in the locked wards for the "crime" of contracting an illness that is as common and unavoidable as mumps or measles. There simply aren't enough doctors, nurses, therapists, psychologists, social workers, and attendants on the hospital staffs to provide personalized treatment for every patient. And personalized treatment is the most effective cure for mental illness. LJ ow can it be provided? Experts including directors themselves are convinced that state hospitals alone can't provide the answer. The only solution is to have general hospitals expand their scope to include treatment of mental ailments and to attack each case with the same sense of urgency and determination to cure with which accident victims are received. Is it fair to give immediate curative treatment to a person with a broken arm or leg, but to shuffle his neighbor with an equally unavoidable and possibly more crippling,, broken mind off to potential life imprisonment in an unpleasant locked ward? Life imprisonment is the fate of hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children with sick minds who are, filed and forgotten in institutions, without facilities or personnel to cure them. One patient, a feeble, white-hairgrandmother, is a typical example. She was admitted to Ohio's Cleveland State Hospital on Sept 9, 1890. According to her medical record "Patient does nothing, sits all day." She has sat and stared blankly mental-instituti- on ed through two world wars, the revolutionary development of autos and airplanes, the dawn of the atomic age, and the advent of radio and television. Her hospital file records a wide variety of physical ailments cared for, Jnit makes no mention of any treatment for the hallucinations and sick mind that brought her to the hospital 68 years ago. MI suppose they had the same problem back in 1890,'r explains Dr. William L. Grover, the medical superintendent 'Too many patients, not enough doctors and staff for an effective treatment program. . ." This patient has pathetic counterparts in California's Stockton State Hospital, Georgia's Milledge-vill- e, Pennsylvania's Byberry, New York's Rockland, Illinois' Manteno. Every state has its houses of horror where the pitiful, helpless victims of sick minds and man's inhumanity to man huddle in lonely sorrow, locked out of sight of communities that shun them. All states have records of recurring attacks of conscience which spark sporadic campaigns to replace a few firetrap mental hospitals, hire a few more doctors and nurses, slap a coat of paint on dilapidated walls, and improve meager menus. Each campaign leaves some lasting improvements and rescues a few fortunate patient from the islands of misery. But the basic picture remains unchanged for most of the mentally ill. It must be changed if the nation is to cope with what the VS. Public Health Service brands "America's No. 1 public health problem." This dubious distinction is applied to mental illness because the complex corps of brain aberrations is estimated to affect 17 million Americans. Someday, statistics indicate, one out of every ten' persons will require the services of a mental institution. The gentle-voicspokesman of a new crusade to assure them real treatment aimed at early cur-e43-pa- ge ed rather than a lost lifetime of "custodial care" is Dr. Harry C. Solomon, courtly professor emeritus of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and past president of the American Psychiatric Association. "Let's face the facts " this elder statesman of psychiatry tells his coIleagues."Our present mental hospital system is antiquated, outmoded, and obsolete. We can still build big mental hospitals, but we can't staff them well enough to give every patient the benefit of . all that modern medical science knows about their ailments. We cannot'make true hospitals of these institutions. We must try something else." That "something else" must shatter the locked-do- or thinking that differentiates between victims of mental illness and sufferers from physical ailments. Let each community on the local level provide facilities in its own hospitals to cure sick minds, just as it provides the means to repair sick bodies. Perhaps a state or Federal subsidy will be required to get the program rolling. The cost will be great but mental illness already costs the nation four billion dollars a year, mostly for state "hospital building and operating costs. The investment would return rich dividends in salvaged lives and happy homes rescued from misery and despair. Eventually, much of the four billion dollars a year now washing down the drainpipe of neglect would be saved, too. Some scattered general hospitals have already recognized their responsibility and added mental treatment units. Which ones will be next? It's up to the medical staff and public in each ? community to provide the ultimate answer. No one can foretell when the absence or presence of such a facility will suddenly become a matter of crucial personal concern, rather than a remote academic problem. WANT FHKrrgCTlOWT PATMONI2K TMC DEALER .. WHO PWOVIDC YOUR FAVOfMTC BRANDS 20 Family Wetkly, September 2iriK8 Tmmai Weekly, September 1$, mt is |