HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1959-07-02, Page 2INFORMAL PORTRAIT -- Standing by an ancient cannon on tha
East Terrace of Windsor Castle, the. Royal Family poses for an
informal portrait.
HRONICLE
1NGERF.ARM
emmdoltne P Cloxice
Smart Exit Line
PRINTED PATTERN
4692
SIZES
12-20
liditSE OF A DiFFERENt POWER— theyy might tide iiiuddeet,
liar ibtkeyS no longer htiVe 16 plod through - Mud at the beittolt
*ate ebtlete, i-lOrSep6Wet of btiottiiit sent pulls *e'en t6
addo& th the de iUX4 ledger, Saddlei tend tackle •MOW ei
frilcitectiori.
END OF ABLE — Holding the limp forth of: •itf spe0 Monkey Able" on a table at the Fart
Kpox j ICY'., Environmen t a l Meditine L•a bOra tory,.. TharneiS A,Hbetvis it...,abbut to. breath'
eir 'IMO, the monkey's stilled Toh..gs, efforts ,eind the tin' ariterial, Who denied into
Spate' arid '.back again in the need teee- Jupiter MAW. tiled Neve/ efidth.p-totiete 4Abie".
will! he- 'staled Lind displayed ref Th.4 trriitlito ItiStifutibit,
°Dear Arnie }first: If I talk
again with my mother about this
She Will stop my going with my
boy friend altogether, so I've got
to ask your advice.. . I am only
l0, but he and. I have dated over
a year and we are very much
In 'eve. We get a kick out of just
being together, and I'm so at
borne with him that I can talk
about anything without feeling
relf-conecious. I went with three
others before I met him, so I
:pink know'myself now,
"We want to plan our marriage
when I am 18, and Mom and Dad
poet hear of it, (For modern
parents, they are very old-
fashioned.) They like the boy
And his family, but they object
to my wearing his ring. He is
tensible and insists I finish
school, but he. does want to be
:ngeged right away.
"Shall I wear his ring or not?
tfy sister, who got married
when she was my age, says I can
Always give it back, I just want
everybody to know we belong to
each other, but my family think I
am going too young to give that
lmpresseion. What do you say?
CONFUSED"
PARENTS KNOW BEST
* If you wear the ring it an-
* nounces to your friends that
you two have promised to mar-
o ry some day; that is its only
• significance, If you do not wear
• it you will still feel the same
* toward him, won't you? Since
* your mother opposes the idea,
o why not be agreeable?
o I do no doubt that you love
* the lad. What I do doubt is
Read The. Stars
(Pri reaysesWkdia.
Stars tell all. Every fact that
family and friends want to know
and remember about baby!
Easy embroidery! Delight more
with this sampler she'll hang in
baby's room for all to admire.
Pattern 574: transfer 12 x 16 inch
panel; 60 names; chart.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern to LAURA WHEELER,
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
Toronto, Ont, Print plainly PAT-
TERN NUMBER, your NAME
and ADDRESS.
Send for a copy of 1959 Laura
Wheeler Needlecraft Book. It has
lovely designs to order: embroi-
dery, crochet, knitting, weaving,
quilting, toys. In the book, a spe-
cial Surprise to make a little girl
happy — a cut-out doll, clothes to
color. Send 25 cents for this book,
* bow long you would be happy
* with him it you marry him
4' even two years from now,
Teen years are crucial years
* in One's development. Today
* you and he are entirely con-
* genial; but who can predict
a` that in four or five years you
* will be the same person with
* the same ideals, opinions and
* ambitions? If you develop nor-
* mally, you will mature and
* change in many ways, The boy
* is older, and may remain as he
* is now. In that case, you might
* find yourself married to a
a stranger — and how you would
* wish you had waited longer!
* The fact that your sister
'I` married so young may be one
* reason why your mother oh-
* jecte to your being engaged
* now. It is not that she doubts_
* you love the boy, but she
* knows that marriage is for
* grownups, and she wants you
* to be a much wiser girl before
* you set your heart on any boy.
* You say that if you do
* change your mind you can al-
* ways give the ring back. Too
many girls marry with the
* 'same reservation: "If anything
* happens I can always get a
* divorce." Your mother wants
* your marriage to last for the
a rest of your life, and I am sure
• you do too, Why not do as
* she asks, and play safe?
*Planning it all now will tie
* you to this lad and set your
* mind in a plaster cast, so to
* speak, which precludes any
* possibility that one day you
* will change it. I urge you to
* swing along with your moth-
* er's opinon, You will not be
* sorry.
*
HIS JEALOUSY HURTS
"Dear Anne Hirst: Our mar-
riage is being spoiled by my hus-
band's crazy jealousy. That
causes our only differences, but
the quarrels it arouses are bitter
and they end in horrible accusa-
tions which he knows are base-
less.
"When he is upset he tells me
to leave, But I have worked hard
for our home, and I don't intend
to leave it nor our little son. It
does look to me as though he is
searching for a reason to divorce
me and can't find one. I suppose.
I do love him, but sometimes I
despise him.
"Our boy is beginning to feel
the effect of these scenes. I hope
you can help me, for I am real-
ly—
DISTRES SED"
• A jealous man is a miserable
• creature, Obsessed by an in-
* feriority feeling, he cannot be-
* lieve that any woman can stay
• faithful to him. It is almost
possible to cure such a man —
* unless he is threatened with
* his wife's leaving him.
* When these scenes occur,
* there is one thing you can do;
* Walk out of the room or out
* of the house; he will get lit-
,* tie satisfaction screaming at
• four walls, If he resumes when
• you return, don't answer; go
*about your work as though he
* were not there.
* Can you appeal to him
'" through his love for his son?
• Exposing him to these quer-
* rels is sheer cruelty, his nature
• is being warped; for his sake,
* your husband should control
-* himself. Every child deserves
• a home life based on security
4' of love, and faith, and when
* parents deny him this, they are
* not fit to be parents. * *
Mothers understand first love
better than their teen-agers
think; they also know their
daughters better than the girls
know themselves. When it comes
to love affairs, it is safe to accept
your parents' opinion: ...If.this
problem is yours today, write
Anne Hirst about it at -- Box to
123 Eighteenth. St. New Toronto,
Ont.
Trust" A Cobra..
As Far As He Can Spit
Snakes. alive! That's one of the
hazards which a certain man. has
to face in his everyday work as
an electrician over a .500,sq.uare,
mile area in Southern Rhodesia,:
Ife sent a photograph to his par-
ants recently of a six-foOt..eobra
which he found curled round a
tranSfOrnter he was working on.
Cobras are among the dead-
liest snakes on eath and the king
cobra, or hatnadryacl, is not: only
one of the most venomous but he
is probably the most ferocious
and aggressive serpent in exist,
enee. His bite is so poisonous. that
death often follows within two
hours.
There is also the spitting cobra
which is able to eject his poison,
always aiming at the face. His
object is to hit the victim's eyes,
for the poison is quite harmless.
to the skin,
Even a small quantity entering
the eye can cause permanent
blindness. Zoo keepers have
often worn motoring goggles
when feeding a spitting cobra.
Some yeers ago the largest
specimen of a king cobra that
had ever been seen in Great
Britain arrived at London Zoo.
Ten feet long, this dangerous
snake almost invariably attacked
when disturbed and could strike.
to a distance almost equal to its
length.
"Even now that it is safely in-
stalled in its cage there is a great
risk to the keeper opening the
elevated door at feeding times.
so the aperture has been special-
ly covered with a wire netting,"
said a Zoo official,
Salmon Hate The
Smell Of Humans
The canny Scots, long cele-
brated for their uncanny skill at
angling have an old saying: "No
fish today, if the maid wilt
wade." Now this bit of piscato-
rial ' folklore has been proved
right by Canada's Pacific. Fish-
eries Experimental Station in
Vancouver, B.C. After six years
of experiments, biochemists D. R.
Idler and .1. R. Brett reported
recently that salmon running up-
river in a determined ,rush to
spawn will turn downstream
when a human,puts hand or foot
in the water.
"It may be found that a fisher-
man should not even touch his
bait or his line," Idler warned. In
their experiments, the scientists
soaked their hands for two min-
utes in about a quart of water,
then threw the rinse into British
Columbia's Skeena River. It was
enough to keep the salmon
downstream for from five to ten
minute s. Chemical analysis
showed that the repelling sub-
stance was serine, a simple
amino acid found in human
sweat. "The smell," said Idler,
'literally makes the salmon
swim in circles,"
This highly developed sense of
smell eventually may solve the
problem of leading more salmon
up the ladders and fishways of
big hydroelectric power dams in ,
the Norhwest U.S. and Canada.•
"By using attractants as well as
repellents," Dr. Idler suggested,
"the fish might be diverted past
man-made obstructions, in which
they now are trapped, and lured
to new spawning grounds."
This sense of smell, Dr. Idler
predicted, may also explain how
a spawning salmon, after a life-
time in the ocean finds its Way to
the very stream and pool in
which it was hatched, If so, the
biochemist said, "one of the old-
est mysteries of nature" finally
will have been solved,
4AW, ritil4AW1''r -- Picture of re-
signed ditappoititnient it Gene
Sdedieti, missing a putt at Bat-
hitrol, N.J., cou'ntr'y club. The
tWa-tittle Oiled champ failed
for this year's Nation.
at Tournament.
We have survived the first
heatwave of the summer and we
hope it will be some time before
we have another like it. A vain
hope probably. Isn't it strange
how the weather can go. to such
extremes? Last' night we were
glad to have the furnace on --
after suffering nights and nights
of sweltering heat and humidity,
It just doesn't make sense. Dur-
ing the hot spell I spent most of
the time in the basement — on a
clean-up job. It needed doing and
it was a good time to do it.
Last Thursday, of course, was
a hot day in more ways than one.
Ontario went to the polls to elect
a new. government. If one can
call it a new government with
so few oyerall changes. However
the people had a chance to elect
the men of their choice and
that's what really counts. We
phoned Art early in the evening
to express our "sympathy" as his
man was one of those when went
down to defeat. Art had been
worrying hard for two weeks
electioneering. Saturday he got
away feorn it all by taking his
family — and Partner — up to
the cottage. I hope they don't all
freeze to death or sit up all
night stoking fires. I don't sup-
pose they would have gone had
they known it was going to turn
so cold . . ..,,and Windy! I didn't
want to go anyway. A premorie
ition, perhaps,
Well, to get on to another sub-
ject, fashion changes, even in
fences: It used to be a well-
known saying that poor fences
make bad neighbours. We should
know! During our early farming
days we had one neighbour in
particular who made no attempt
to keep his half of the line -
fence in repair. So we periodi-
cally had his horses in our
wheat field; his Holstein cows in
our pasture and pigs and geese
in our oats:And most of the ani-
mals seemed to be of a' belliger-
ent nature. One thee Bob was
chasing an old sow out of" our
oats and it ended up with the
so* chasing Bob. He just got
over the fence in time. And there
was one morning I went to get
the cows and found a huge bull
pawing and. bellowing in our
barnyard. Partner used to e.et at
mad as a hornet but it did lit-
tle good. Generally he fiaaiahe
up by fixing our neWlibour'S
fence himeelf. — especially after
one Of our Avrshire heifers gave
birth to.a Holstein calf.
As the years went by many
fences alongside the toad disap-
peered. Traffic' increased and
farmers preferred keeping their
livestock at the back of the farm
away from the highway, If they
did not need a fence to keep
their cattle in the law did not
requite' theni to build a fence to *
keep their neighbors° cattle out
and so there ,are now many open
fields along the highway. Fences
have changed toe, The old pic-
turesque sturtip felled has almost
disappeared, along with the
snake-rail fences. 11/4tOW it is
woven wire or two strands of
Wire carrying an eleetric charge.
Either' gives a cleanC, more ef-
ficient ebneatetice to farm fields
but provide little shelter fat
birds. etinitrele and chinrounks,
There are et-e teseiHri levee in
connection fe,"es in sub-
divisions and built up areas. It
is just as well for home-owners
to find out what is permitted in
their locality before putting up
any kind of fence on their prop-
erty. All districts don't follow
"'the same pattern. Sometimes
fence laws are written into an
agreement between subdividers
and purchasers. Sometimes not.
One district had agreed that no
fences should be allowed — that
gardens and yards be left open
like parkland. But apparently it
was just "a gentleman's agree-
ment".
This was discovered when one
property owner fenced his gar-
den at the back with cedar posts
and woven wire —, to keep dogs,
rabbits and children off his
property. Inquiries by irate
neighbours revealed the fact that
it was permissible to build any
kind of a fence other than barb-
ed wire or a six-foot board
fence.
In the subdivision where Bob
lives fences are many and var-
ied. Bob has a link fence all
around his backyard to keep Ross
off the road and away from the
deep pools contractors have
made over on the next road. Af-
ter all the safety of children has
to be considered before the ap-
pearance of the property — al-
though one can often be combin-
ed with the other. All this has
come to mind because our next-
door neighbour is at the moment
fencing his property. We don't
mind but some the neighbours
are not taking too kindly to the
idea, it being the only fencg in
the community.
Monday: Partner got home
about eleven o'clock' last /night '
tired out after two days',
work at the cottager His 'ideas
about summer cottages for re-
laxation are likely to receive a
little revision! "Later on when
things are fixed up for the 'sum-
mer it will be ...different but at
the moment there it plenty of
work to be done,
How Can 1?
q. Jow can remedy some
Shallow scratcher On any furni-
ture?
A, You can remove shallow
scratches or hairline cracks by
softening the finish so it runs to,
gather, Flow on some turpentine
(for varnish) or denatured alco-
hol (for shellac). Let this dry for
48 hours, .then rub smooth with
rettenstorie, clean, and wax.
Q. How can Jlvash an electric
blanket?
A. The best and safest way of
doing this is to wash them by
hand In detergents or soap, be-
cause dry-cleaning fluids damage
the insulating materials on the
fine electric wires in the blanket,
Q. How can I soften shoe polish
that has dried and hardened in
its container?
A, Try adding a few drops of
turpentine to the polish,
Q. What is an easy way of
adding life to nay window
screens?
A, Equal parts of spar varnish
and turpentine, well mixed, will
give protection to the screens
that'll often outlast paint. Apply
this with a well-cleaned old
blackboard eraser.
Q. How can I make a glass
cement?
A. Just melt some common
alum in a glass spoon — and
you'll have a very efficient ce-
ment for mending glass, china, or
metal objects.
Q. How can I improvise a
"magnetic" hammer for driving
carpet tacks?
A. Rub the striking face of
your hammer over a cake of bar
soap, and your tacks will cling
to it as they do to the regular
magnetic hammen:
Q. How can I eliminate some
ant hills in my yard and garden?
A. One good way is to place
a flower pot over the ant hill,
and then pour in about a tea-
spoonful of carbon tetrachloride.
The fumes from this liquid will
sink to the ground and cut off
the insects' oxygen.
Q. What is an easy way to re-
wind the spring inside a window
shade roller?
A. Stick the flat end of the
roller into a keyhole and give it
a few turns. Then replace the
roller on its window brackets.
Q. How can I clean some soil-
ed spots on my wallpaper'N
A. Dip a cloth into powdered
borax, and rub this over the soil-
ed areas.
Q. How c an I remove Some
mildew stains from books which
have been stored away for some
time?
A. These stains can be removed
(and prevented in the future) by
sponging with some denatured
alcohol and placing the books in
the sunlight.
SALESMANSHIP
The cub salesman asked his
boss if he could refund the
Money to an irate customer who
discovered that the lot he had
bought was under water.
"What kind of a salesman are
you?" demanded the boss. "Go
out there and sell him a motor
boat."
'If they Want a college man
for the job, dear; you must
look the part."
ISSUE 27 — 1959
Craft That Takes
Long. To, ..koara
dust About the thinnest thing
in the world to-day have a.
.guess! It's gold leaf,. the stuff that
glistens from the great cross 411:
the dome of. St Paul's Cathedral,
and brightens the railings of
i4olcinghem
This. mere Alm of precious
metal, hammered out until it is,
Almost invisible and ..only one
250,00fith of an inch .thick, is tha
work of experts who are mere-
hers of a never-changing .craft„
The golclbeaters of Britain
who. hammer the film of gold.
through sheets of skin are the
finest M. the world, One silvery
haired creftmen who retired re-
cently spent more than seventy
years handling the precious..
metal and beating gold from
large bars to little squares of
tissue thickness.
Pure gold leaf is practically
unaffected by the atmosphere
and every shower washes, it more
or less clean.
Between the gold leaf that
decorated the tomb of the Egyp-
tian king Tutankhamen and the
leaf that is beaten to-day there
are only minor differences. For
economy, the gold leaf of to-
day is beaten thinner and mod-.
ern craftsmen use steel hammers
(some weighing 20. lb.) for the
beating instead of the bronze of
the ancients,
The delicacy required in mani-
pulating the gold-beating ham-
mers • comes only after years of
practice. A boy who starts to
learn the craft at the age of
fourteen will be twenty-six be-
fore he can be trusted to beat
properly.
IYAktte. 44444
Turn your back to show the
surprise plunge of the neckline--
fashion's most glamorous way to
keep cool, High seaming, in front
shapes a slender midriff. Choose
cotton, shantung, linen.
Printed Pattern 4692: MisSee
Sizes 12, 14, 16, /8, 20. Size 16
takes 3 yards 35-inch fabric.'
Printed directions on each pat-
'tern part. Easier, accurate.
Send FIFTY CENTS (50#)
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern. Please print plainly sag, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NUMBER.
Send order to ANNE. ADAMS.
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St. New
Toronto, Ont.