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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1952-4-30, Page 2LAD mrx".. QL itraffia,atum-seArtj "Dear Anne Hirst; Since the first year of our marriage, my hus- band has made me miserable by drinking' • and going .with other women. Now we have been separated since last June -- and I find myself more. unhappy every day. 1 • have, the children, of wl om. 1 am very proud, but I am alinos crazy. "I have never had much plea. sure, 1 can't remember my husband ever asking me to go out with him . . . 1 have always tried to live as near a Christian life as 1 could. "Have you any advice for me?" E.J." Day by Day 1 wish•ou y- had let me print * all of your letter. It would con-. TOPS everythingll In denim or print cotton, '••ars alt apron or smock. In a rayon fabric it's an overblouse or jerkin, And do make it in terrycloth as a beach -coat. A wonderful idea. and easy to sew -no waist seams. Ties to fit, opens out flat to fro I a 9Y Pattern i��$4 Lithse ' Sqz a ural?'• 10, 12; me 8i ' i4':, 1(; 1ergd 18. 20. Medium, a Os 135- ncl This pattern easy litoi usik 1 lrri ple to sew. is est gd Vol 6 i Rias. complete iliustralgdj in trilege ts. 44 Send THIRT FIVE CNTS (35c) in coins (stamps cannot be, accepted) t,,or.itltig.¢atteerr„aPrint plainly S1.4'ly,T'A1v1p APPrrirtla.. STYLE NUMBER Send orrcr ' & Btrlft1I."-f231TL1'gh'• teenth Sta,Ntiv ''P rdn•fg i One, to .t ,, * vince many an unhappy wife how * lucky she is in comparison to .*.what you have- endured ever * since you married this man, * Your letter revealed the real * cause of your leaving him. If * only for the children's sakes, 1 * don't sae how you could have * done less. For that sante reason * you dare not, I should say, ex- * pose them again to his inhuman * cruelties. When your spirit .fal- * ters, remember these terrible *days, and be thankful you can * protect them now. * Living a day at a time is one * of the best prescriptions for one * in your State. As evening comes, * remind yourself, "Cell, 1 got * through today. I'll not think of * tomorrow+.",Keep youraeif so oe- * copied with your church work, * the children, your home and your * friends, that every waking hour * briars with wholesome activity. • Pray for strength to overcome * these moods which attack you, * fur they diminish your self -con- * trol and can make you physically * i'l. You have . too many bur- * i ens to carry these days to take * sue)i a risk. * I -wish I could comfort you * with the belief that your bus- * band will change. But you have * to face the sad , truth that, in • * my opinion, such a miracle is * unlikely, He has betrayed and * mistreated you ever since you * married him; his shameful fam- * ily history does not encourage * hope for his future. * Live in, and for, these fine * children you have, and console * yourself with the knowledge that * as; they mature, they will recant- * pease you with increasing affect- * ion and honor, • * You have my deepest syzn- * pathy. S * 5 -* * To "CHERRY"; Compati- * bility is necessary for any good * miarriage. -But there 'must be * love, too. * X3efore ,you '-make up your * mind that. you don't love your * fiance; try to analyze what love * means to you. Because you * aren't thrilled every time he * glans/as at you or touches your * hand need not mean that you t., are not in love. Even though you * are 24, you can still be euro- * tionally immature. Some people * d'onit respond as early as others: * When a boy'and girl have•been * dating as long as you two have, * sometimes they get into a .rot ' *'Just as married folks do...Jiave *you tried doing something t- * citing together? Cad you shit- * denly change your plans for; he evening andgo somewhere yeas * haven't been? Try it. * Force.. of habit often diislinis - * ed our interest in people•.iye a e * acii Ilyr trfer1,;tglb2fakh ' each * other 'Id�granted, bored with * doing the stole old things week after Reek, cart, wear a friendship 1 ** nth:sur"'Titfry a.silttil1r3(q g •ety and see what happens. 'Must my life always be like + tri ?" If that fear tortures you, 1i just for today -and know that as you progress in spiritual de- vc4c0P154the •wa' will be easier It helps fo Tell Anne Hirst '' abe• rni'"Four'liroublekA' alta her at .$$x 111yri712,&IEigh,teent11r't$i., New 5 Wen-masiteWedyk `alr1ek 4 �, ;rej , woman 1. Penile wheel i "`I.3f' .Venerable as. Teethed of a fide >rau rY a-5)(;# S orlring n 32. Withstood .,;4i Ul2ZLE11n t.' off: Icalaan. vee y� - `{10U oto.-1i~�t•� �. ,.,�• ,i� b. , , e arae n •c �i.OSS 6 Fene'In I�Sv� it tN�''gg rteratd e1. Box ;� 6. Narrow. '1 .sows t>,8.. inerai i,. opening . o 2. Dr r ," Steri 9h. 9. PronOdtt girl ?ar, v�J�b,sau i* ,, r r tit �. Ptli'Ylnelt 1 td&�eas s. 5,.4 E'S";P kx 9f F. , • arty.• 'tk' 12, Story. 13. Circle vlrtl'l"{ti "' 14. Regret etpy , 15. filtrh carde 10. Peculiarities 18. Episcopal parsonage QtAcadow •, ierthl es* 13 -Spt dr! t,.1 ST. ti istic fneetlopif,s' 22. Bstra part 28. Auto 0,I'Ikalilcefish"" ,s ;30. Putted apart . .� 'al. Xavisattonat" • hazard 32, IaWide-mot:tiled 33. Not at hem$. 34. Oilttlt 36. charm 30,: Tan 38. 'Policeman (slang) 25.�ttult the shape 4 Toner.. x e Q Y 44.7Coles ° AT, Rescue 43. •Varnish 4'5. Can ortltnnt 60. T7nr:1t'5 niton; sl. Strong lima - lino aeration vie t era , rt '•1. Revolve • 35. Weep bitterly 37. r>. cups' a' halt .4a: St4cla $Td ion i 40. S'�n1oat Akii7exen-aho •4w' ,roam i •,4tr3'ag49' :t4 fi,rls• n oes I b le, I;f 40.'rffe Answer Elsewhere on This Page Wear Sensible Shoes For Better Health A sound foundation is quite as necessary to the building of good looks as it is to any other sort of construction, Few parents would quarrel with this. Yet many unknowingly titss derinine their children's fiance ap- pearance by poor choice of shoes for their youngsters. Payticularly.-is this true in sum- mer, when mothers and fathers tend to relax the rigid rules they, en- forced during the school terra. Sometimes cotnprontise is neces- sary. If you've a miniature cow- boy in your home, your little range rider may consider the possession of fancy boots the height of hap- piness. You, looking at high tops, high. heels and barrow toes of boots, may consider them somewhat less than desirable. You can turn down boots as too hot for summer and too unnatur- ally shapedto allow the contours` of a growing young foot, and -still make your cowboy happy with Western- footwear. Sturdy leather- soled battle strap oxfords offer enough tooling and, saddle detail's to satisfy small gun-brandishers. Sneakers or lost -cut tennis shoes are also favored by many boys for summer wear, possibly because they are prepared at a minute's notice without a lot of changes, to go into action on courts or dia- mond. It's a mistake,however, to en- courage young atheletes in this bit of laziness. Rubber soles and tion -arch sdppnrling canvas are not your best het for growing feet When worn for prolonged periods of time. Teach your child to re- gard t'sem as special sports equip- ment, just as he does bats and rackets. A good choice for boys' play - hours are the substantially -built halt light oxfords with good quality leather uppers and soles which al- low, his feet to "breathe" through their Mires. Unlined shoes are best for summer. For girls and small boys, san- dals offer summer coolness. Even when purchasing this type shoe, however, parents should cheek to make certain there is sufficient sup- port. In too -bare sandals, foot -sup- port is often lacking. Oxfords provide excellent. pro- •, Lection for the feet of children who who particularly active or for those whose holidays will be spent Fits" rough terrain, • But the experts discourage pur- chase of "best" shoes. Sufi shoes are often outgrown before they are worn out, and some parents make'. the error of insisting these foot - squeezers: not he discarded until the youngsters have gotten the money's worth out of them. Transfer Designs in 3 colors Int rel vA.li,fa ?r'1"IliFifY..1. •Ort .est„motifs! Excellent, valuetThese stru-Yrs-life° colors flea -rose' lid siStt green' are lovely to decorate .'bed -linens, ouitaid3r ttrw-elsltf t ab lnesl o Otos! blonses, .-apnoes.' , Wa•iliatihie , toot. Transfer the motifs,: in joss} a few ,.seconds - no eipbrmdery1 3 -color" designs -Bartter» 6001alr32 motifs; eight each of four different mollies t x 2;r m A'.:r is 514 inches. S T - N 1.1 .E. EN S v end � � c �f Sir ri {nv coign (stamps raiptot be ac- cepted) for this pattern to fox'1; 123 llighteentli''sL, Neve Tofbtno:, O1Tt. '4'lfnf ptaidly't•IpATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and.,4 , DRESS SpeJ1 a ,?,colorful• routldup of llgndiwork ideas! Send ttvedty-five cents now tot out'5f-atn'a Wheeler NeedTcbraft"Catalog,' Choose your patterns from our gaily illustrated •toys, dolls household and pc Stinal 3ocessgtiee A,•pattersl,,for z hand- bag is printed right in the` hat ,n- GROWS ON YOU . •t In the Columbia •Faculty. Club, •, Carlton J. 11.1 Hayes marie�, this deathless observation; "The arti- choke is the'Ednly vegetable yob have thore'of wiled you - finish'eat indg it than you had. When you start- s With Her Hero -Husband -Singer Jane Froman stands a1 the bed- side of her husband, Capt. John C, Burn at a San Juan hospital. Burn piloted the airliner that crashed dt sea off Puerto Rico, kill- ing 52 persons, and was one of the 17 survivors of the tragedy. Miss Froman, who married Burn after he saved her life in a Lisbon plane crash in 1943, reached her husband's side after a fear -filled flight from New York. fir- SNICL S IN6ERF 'Y .6snts.doLttse P ClA.elte This has, been the ,wettest and most disappointing Easter that I remember,'Most of us, I think, look for$'ard to •fine, bright weiathedtat Easter as symbolic. of the renewed hope that Easter always brings to a world that is ,now so, often per- plexed and frustrated in its think- ing. 'instinctively, everyone wants - to be happy at ??aster -"and hap - s pincss conies more easily in nice , weather than, as it was this weelc- end, with rain falling steadily from daylight to dark. But at least we can be 'thankful that the Easter message is far brighter than the weather that accompanied it. For us it has been a disappointing„ weekend all „round- We expected;; daughter and niece Betty Thursday night, but Betty dislocated her shoulder and something carne up so that daughter did •not get here either. At fust we were -disappoint- ed -but not after it turned so wet. '1'lfere were pro Easter- bunnies aromtd Here either-but•i$e did have an Easter calf. • I' wonder why it is that Easter, more than. any other season, 'recalls memories of home.. Before 1 got up this morning I. was thinking . back to other days, to my home in England'even 'before World' War 1. We'rseemed' to have an accepted pattern -,for Easter 'weekend ,in those days,which hardly varied at all. front one year to another, Those who were array carne home, some- times'bringing•a [fiend br friends. Friday morning we went to a ser- vice,,.which as •gllildren we, always , loved -"The Stations of the Cross." Good 1; ridgy was also the day when country folk iikcd'fo plant' tliefr potatoes, so Vie day •i as a"mixturs of .sol'ahinity- and relaxation. • On='Easter Shnday we generally' ' started the day by .going to. the.;: early morning servtce,•After break,- fa,st.,pur f maty, of flop. would set out for lig traditional Eas'tfer Sun;''• ddly wall,"(7hr ntotife' dik1 iBt care tab much*fpNrou!•,long-,wlalks•so•shes; would say -to us-"You,gp on mow,. aptj„}save .must walk ar}ll I'll have d' ner waiting when you get'back So vve'llatt'e8 on obr'eross-,bobntry'' tramp that would be anywhere• froi5P sevens to; ten•.:miles. Oqn favppj`itc .wa1..y(as ,gym •[,ane-a,,r moss -c vered : patlIj; through 'the 'Wood?, where trectlrbrahclSNas nsef' over our heads,"atilf'fblrtfl2'tf k-leafyrr arcades And.it was'Sherb ,that we' Were ragre .fp` fin dirthe.,fires, print- ., *Ms ,pf,•,tJier sepson as,0iy l as•,. sweet -'scented 'violets. Lar th`e' woods would be fPa'gd55i"tffwft'hblue%"" bellsr'We also•tt4a'tntted•:4or thb,little English .,robiep naugiteefF144pr,: than its Canadian namesake. And how delighted we were if we heard a cuckoo. From Ryes Lane, which was about three miles long, we cause to the top of a steep hill from which there was a marvellous view of the' wooded country for miles around. Homeward bound we pass- ed Ballingdon Hall where Queen Elizabeth 1. had often stayed. On through the Village of -of Balling- dop-cum-L'rundon, past the old Bull Inn, which features int Dickens' "Pickwick Paper," Through' the churchyard of All Saints Church, built in 1450, although early history mentions the Chapel at Ballingdon as early as 1154. In the church Mere is a beautiful octagonal fifteenth century pulpit, saved from destruction during the.: 'Mrs by' • being boarded up and hidden from view until , discovered by aceident in t850., Tired, hungry and often very dusty, we arrived house, quite ready to do justice to mother's dinner of roast beef, Yorkshire pudding and light dessert. After dinner we more or less lazed away the afternoon. Tea was at fire o'clock. , After tea some of us -generally went to evening ser - i vice ,with my soother, while those who were More energetic went to some church other' than our own- maybe to as nearby Village -which meant, another ,.walk l. Easter Monday was observed as. a holiday and I suppose we.amused ourselves in various ways as I don't - rcfneisiber" any particular family affair. I wonder what Easter week- ends are like in England today? No ' doubt long, country walks are out • of fashion. Times, change, but of one thing I am certain -Ryes Lane is-s-t?ll in''ezi5tetfce; where prim- roses bloom and robins sing; This weekend, while we. were -being de- luged with rain, the English coun- tryside was bathed in warmth and , sunshine. That mucic I know from the radio. It is nice .t4 ,know that somewhere the sun was shining. • Not,. that, we :have anything to grumble about -wet though it is. we are not quite flooded out; as they `are in nsady parts of the United States.. ' 'Jtlat .5. mipute,.5Neddie • dear! VPas Ityour black suit you want; ed preseed 7" *Pa , •,tn -..Drumstick Factory "Tippy,'•"bantam chick .with four legs, is ad- , mined.,by Margaret. Martinez, who says,she's never encountered .t•such.a birrl, before„in ail. her yearsofchiclfpn-•raising. Tippy, who,, Is.ih.,answer to a.tjrun sflck-lavers dream, uses three of his legs to navigate with, aid saves one for a "spare.' •r Robbie Burns SP1,U91114e The Great Love "I wish I: could And a lassie tae lo'e me as well as my dog doea," With thin remark Robert Barna kicked his dog out 'Of the room in which lie was dancing and iota': which the dog had followed hftn. "i rtiinang a reel by getting- amongst; the' feet of the daacet% "4Vet1, Isae ye found the lassie tae lo'e ye as weel as your dog?" asked attractive, gay Jean Armour to hint as she saw him in the Gelds next day. The result was, inevitable. Burns WAS , at once launched upon one of his tempestuous, all -absorbing love affairs. Scotland's national poet certainly, believed love to be 'fisc first of human joys, our chiefest pleasure here below." And by love he meant no vague and general affection, but the love of man for maid, and maid for man in the full flood of youthful ardour. - Amorous !Adventures Lille many another gay compan- ionable "man's man" in masculine tavern society he was the "woman's man" of his age and immediate surroundings. He adored the whole sex -and most of that sex to whom he paid address found hips irresis- tible Robert Burns, as all the world knows, was a ploughman. He was brought up in poor and arduous circumstances. But he exercised over women of all classes and ages a truly astonishing fascination- In that fascination. there was nothing of the ugpleasant .slinking gltality of the professional 'seducer; 'writes • Moray McLaren' in !'Answers.",. Burns' appeal to the female•esex ,.was based on sheer masculine open- hearted admiration, coupled with a boyishly romantic • temperament, ' and a tongue that could speak ' 'poetry that no Scot before or since hes surpassed._ ' Poetic, romantic, highly' sensitive though he inay have been, Robert Clarinda, Ile called, !limpet( ,Syl- Burns did not confine his love- wester. making to the spiritual plane, in Walter Scott described the cor• 'deed,, the freedom, be allowed"him- respondence as "the, most..? ex self in physical love has long be- traordinary mixture of sense and come a part 61 the "Burns Legend." nonsense, anal of love, human and It was a freedom which, as is divine, that was .ever exposed, to well known, often had unfortunate the eye of ,the ,world." results. ,Jean Ars ogr,,,vh9,evemoally be - Burns was one of those hien who Larne Burns' wife,; Ilea her own seem by nature to be unusually fer mystery attached to her; and it is tile. The same Jean Armour who a very simple one -why did Burns eventually became his wife actually marry her? • bore him with startling rapidity After the episode of the dog and two sets of twins before the the dance Burns not only made marriage. love to her but went through a Apart for this pre -nuptial •adven- Scotsformof marriage with her. tore there were many other amorous r He was then young and unknown, adventures with the lassies of Ayr- and Jean's parents {despite the fact shire and Edinburgh, which ended that a set of twins' were on the in the same way. way) destroyed the evidence of the Amongst all his female admirers marriage by t r ick e r y, deeply there were, however, three who wounding the poet's pride, were pre-eminent. Between them Burns then went to Edinburgh, they occupied by far the most im- became famous, and ppon ,his re - portant hart in the love -fife of turn to Ayrshire proceeded in the ' Robert Burns: They were Highland most casual manner to "give Jean Mary, Mrs. Agnes McLehose, and another set of twins, but he clearly Jean Armour, whom be eventually despised her and • had outgrown married. All three have a certain her. mystery or at least fantasy attach- Then, to everyone's - astonisb- ,ed to their relationship with Scot- stent, he, who had now as large an land's greatest poet. experience of. love as is granted to The mystery is 'deepest . about most men, married this cast-off Highland Mary. That there -was a • whose family had once so grossly woman who cause from just across .. insulted him, It was to his friends the highland line into Ayslsire and at the time an inexplicable action, into Burgs' life, and that this wo- and remains inexplicable to us to - 'man' profoundly 'affected Burns, day, There was very little allure - and left in him one of the few really thent left and l am afraid that one deep sensations of ,remorse • from - must exclude the element of which ,he coffered, there .can be no ,chivalry " ` doubt. •,,L. tAmong t& Lasses". But astonislnnply'little It known however0t.ABvrpa,.did,anarry.,her A abotft her; so that at the endtof the and aft,cr„a. fashion. shet,made 'him, `last tentutytsense' pcopld•suggtsted 'not a had wife. ^ ! ''thatfshe was,rno more than a.poctic. .4 Many have censured Burns for f sney+ 1rr , his indiscriminate and wide love- Tltis is n oi e n s e tiighlanil t making. Indeed, it is difficult to , Mary; whatever s'he w'as like; Was defend his, utter lack of discipline a real -Milan 'AO'disturbed the ' "'When "amahg the' lasses' 0," but emdfiodit of Blirnsr,to their depths: ',there was. about his, amorousness a ,said little• abonL her at the, ,,,kind of gay healthiness which, as I time,,,It is,Jcnown drat. he pledged have said, far removes' it from that Isis troth with her io the old a�of the slinkinlg,seducer •-nd. Scottish fashion" tend' a"'signer At any rate, reptehehsle or not, Wife is'CVfdentc'rifsit exid'ts). Bift "burns' Iove,r1Rr., the ,lasses, of his in they complications of his'life at • ',native land produced' a wealth of ' t t^ thedimprnand..as a result 9f„the... .lyric poetry which has spread his . loon old SCottipls,� marine con-,, „name alt over, time world. . venttons, Burns 'may well have There is ntl Comity inttvhieh the feared that he was committing' ''lines beginning "My, IQRe la like a red red blnose" are not known. No Atanyrate, poor Mary. it ' is Scotsman is more internationally • now certain, returned*to her parents famous, . Arnie. i11•a11r,Crtjt,; Britain ., and died of a fever while giving only two other ppeta have, be birth to a child- probably '•Bucgs'- more translated? Shakcspeard 'asidd Those, who believe this support Byron -'add' inci'dentally':Byrona0 their claim r by the overt'_ of a Awas half a; ,Scot•, „ 1 = habb;,.j lcto9ffin, itj ,Mart'= tomb'when si e it wa1 o(Senetl up 11i lfl'fU'' la'' WAN'tpr fyDVlbi ItEI8. M41-.mh f ll'55 a very 14 '1 Will Cuppy once reported the ferent woman .She came from, -high ? it receipt of a letter from a faithful socigty to •Edlnhergh,hut had }teen , ., fan that reads, "Please send me desei'tedl]y1a ralcalls, husband. She 114 made 'a dean set fit ?°lards *hen the ploughman poet was being r' lionised in the Scottish -capital It- was a new cxperiente for '1 Burns to be mulls love •tesso open- by.o.twount in her and nari num was,ipltzzied.1ShrtISOgltviou G4 ar ent,,l - ©© Eon noun Emma ly worshipped vet her con. i ©MOBUBMBE©O soieii1h ce" would not let" that Worshipi dpd conirivaion",whfetrhe had•, ammann' ©RIS uptNa1i1r1tilthea fnuntl muarialalc• lin• hi* ,.., MOM ®[*7UI D10 relationships au ��®0® ©�� ©©E7 "f The resultwiih was ivoameprolonged..,, A JIJ �IIU UD�U5•: elr<t119rate, •and,.fantgsltr„roryespon• Ei010 MEM DMME] lienee (conducted between them Q izzoo ®- e ttti wfidnt they were •livlhq 4n the.- mamma sante smell' town C ritfr then was). a woo l,t..Was a-cpyrespondenvr of love ©©E a `W'I2[J 0 ii et er filen was 9pe, Yet it was pQ�':•t i I : MIC0 rtitldnrti'i"bi'the rrallit of ikh arti- •'t t are, like a name ,She called herself :14 t_--"- And the RELIEF iS LASTING For fast relief from headache get INSTANT;NE• For real relief get INaTANTINE, For prolonged relief get IleaTANTINEI Yes, more people every day are finding that XNSTANTINE iS one thin& to case pain fast. For headache, for rheumatic pain, aches and pains of colds, for neuritic or neuralgic pain you can depend on INSTANTINE to bring you quick comfort; TNSTANTINE is made like a pres. cription of three proven medical ingredients. A single, tablet usuallybringa fgst ef. Gat irelinstsntine lodsy and always keep It handy hstantrne 12 -Tablet Tlas25d Economical:48C'Tablet Bottle 75c the nettld;pf so(ge good book on;' personal hygiene. I think rite got -i'" it." a.--71 Upsidedotta.4o $reven:tukfek t(i;'r: ° ISSUE 18 1952 , E: ' E �1 WINrN a s. is ,,� 1 4 /® Y. IS t®_ �,� ppytyy,��•yy ,v , t I7 .:1 '. an 'a 11� r ' `ir 111211 p � Aef aroma M1 qad um ,imam 25 ,, illE. 27 28 29 11.®.. 6.0 11111 .■ 111111 • 1121E 1111111" ENV "Mr 111.fir 4a W.N4t MI 5l 1111,4111111 Eill111111 Answer Elsewhere on This Page Wear Sensible Shoes For Better Health A sound foundation is quite as necessary to the building of good looks as it is to any other sort of construction, Few parents would quarrel with this. Yet many unknowingly titss derinine their children's fiance ap- pearance by poor choice of shoes for their youngsters. Payticularly.-is this true in sum- mer, when mothers and fathers tend to relax the rigid rules they, en- forced during the school terra. Sometimes cotnprontise is neces- sary. If you've a miniature cow- boy in your home, your little range rider may consider the possession of fancy boots the height of hap- piness. You, looking at high tops, high. heels and barrow toes of boots, may consider them somewhat less than desirable. You can turn down boots as too hot for summer and too unnatur- ally shapedto allow the contours` of a growing young foot, and -still make your cowboy happy with Western- footwear. Sturdy leather- soled battle strap oxfords offer enough tooling and, saddle detail's to satisfy small gun-brandishers. Sneakers or lost -cut tennis shoes are also favored by many boys for summer wear, possibly because they are prepared at a minute's notice without a lot of changes, to go into action on courts or dia- mond. It's a mistake,however, to en- courage young atheletes in this bit of laziness. Rubber soles and tion -arch sdppnrling canvas are not your best het for growing feet When worn for prolonged periods of time. Teach your child to re- gard t'sem as special sports equip- ment, just as he does bats and rackets. A good choice for boys' play - hours are the substantially -built halt light oxfords with good quality leather uppers and soles which al- low, his feet to "breathe" through their Mires. Unlined shoes are best for summer. For girls and small boys, san- dals offer summer coolness. Even when purchasing this type shoe, however, parents should cheek to make certain there is sufficient sup- port. In too -bare sandals, foot -sup- port is often lacking. Oxfords provide excellent. pro- •, Lection for the feet of children who who particularly active or for those whose holidays will be spent Fits" rough terrain, • But the experts discourage pur- chase of "best" shoes. Sufi shoes are often outgrown before they are worn out, and some parents make'. the error of insisting these foot - squeezers: not he discarded until the youngsters have gotten the money's worth out of them. Transfer Designs in 3 colors Int rel vA.li,fa ?r'1"IliFifY..1. •Ort .est„motifs! Excellent, valuetThese stru-Yrs-life° colors flea -rose' lid siStt green' are lovely to decorate .'bed -linens, ouitaid3r ttrw-elsltf t ab lnesl o Otos! blonses, .-apnoes.' , Wa•iliatihie , toot. Transfer the motifs,: in joss} a few ,.seconds - no eipbrmdery1 3 -color" designs -Bartter» 6001alr32 motifs; eight each of four different mollies t x 2;r m A'.:r is 514 inches. S T - N 1.1 .E. EN S v end � � c �f Sir ri {nv coign (stamps raiptot be ac- cepted) for this pattern to fox'1; 123 llighteentli''sL, Neve Tofbtno:, O1Tt. '4'lfnf ptaidly't•IpATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and.,4 , DRESS SpeJ1 a ,?,colorful• routldup of llgndiwork ideas! Send ttvedty-five cents now tot out'5f-atn'a Wheeler NeedTcbraft"Catalog,' Choose your patterns from our gaily illustrated •toys, dolls household and pc Stinal 3ocessgtiee A,•pattersl,,for z hand- bag is printed right in the` hat ,n- GROWS ON YOU . •t In the Columbia •Faculty. Club, •, Carlton J. 11.1 Hayes marie�, this deathless observation; "The arti- choke is the'Ednly vegetable yob have thore'of wiled you - finish'eat indg it than you had. When you start- s With Her Hero -Husband -Singer Jane Froman stands a1 the bed- side of her husband, Capt. John C, Burn at a San Juan hospital. Burn piloted the airliner that crashed dt sea off Puerto Rico, kill- ing 52 persons, and was one of the 17 survivors of the tragedy. Miss Froman, who married Burn after he saved her life in a Lisbon plane crash in 1943, reached her husband's side after a fear -filled flight from New York. fir- SNICL S IN6ERF 'Y .6snts.doLttse P ClA.elte This has, been the ,wettest and most disappointing Easter that I remember,'Most of us, I think, look for$'ard to •fine, bright weiathedtat Easter as symbolic. of the renewed hope that Easter always brings to a world that is ,now so, often per- plexed and frustrated in its think- ing. 'instinctively, everyone wants - to be happy at ??aster -"and hap - s pincss conies more easily in nice , weather than, as it was this weelc- end, with rain falling steadily from daylight to dark. But at least we can be 'thankful that the Easter message is far brighter than the weather that accompanied it. For us it has been a disappointing„ weekend all „round- We expected;; daughter and niece Betty Thursday night, but Betty dislocated her shoulder and something carne up so that daughter did •not get here either. At fust we were -disappoint- ed -but not after it turned so wet. '1'lfere were pro Easter- bunnies aromtd Here either-but•i$e did have an Easter calf. • I' wonder why it is that Easter, more than. any other season, 'recalls memories of home.. Before 1 got up this morning I. was thinking . back to other days, to my home in England'even 'before World' War 1. We'rseemed' to have an accepted pattern -,for Easter 'weekend ,in those days,which hardly varied at all. front one year to another, Those who were array carne home, some- times'bringing•a [fiend br friends. Friday morning we went to a ser- vice,,.which as •gllildren we, always , loved -"The Stations of the Cross." Good 1; ridgy was also the day when country folk iikcd'fo plant' tliefr potatoes, so Vie day •i as a"mixturs of .sol'ahinity- and relaxation. • On='Easter Shnday we generally' ' started the day by .going to. the.;: early morning servtce,•After break,- fa,st.,pur f maty, of flop. would set out for lig traditional Eas'tfer Sun;''• ddly wall,"(7hr ntotife' dik1 iBt care tab much*fpNrou!•,long-,wlalks•so•shes; would say -to us-"You,gp on mow,. aptj„}save .must walk ar}ll I'll have d' ner waiting when you get'back So vve'llatt'e8 on obr'eross-,bobntry'' tramp that would be anywhere• froi5P sevens to; ten•.:miles. Oqn favppj`itc .wa1..y(as ,gym •[,ane-a,,r moss -c vered : patlIj; through 'the 'Wood?, where trectlrbrahclSNas nsef' over our heads,"atilf'fblrtfl2'tf k-leafyrr arcades And.it was'Sherb ,that we' Were ragre .fp` fin dirthe.,fires, print- ., *Ms ,pf,•,tJier sepson as,0iy l as•,. sweet -'scented 'violets. Lar th`e' woods would be fPa'gd55i"tffwft'hblue%"" bellsr'We also•tt4a'tntted•:4or thb,little English .,robiep naugiteefF144pr,: than its Canadian namesake. And how delighted we were if we heard a cuckoo. From Ryes Lane, which was about three miles long, we cause to the top of a steep hill from which there was a marvellous view of the' wooded country for miles around. Homeward bound we pass- ed Ballingdon Hall where Queen Elizabeth 1. had often stayed. On through the Village of -of Balling- dop-cum-L'rundon, past the old Bull Inn, which features int Dickens' "Pickwick Paper," Through' the churchyard of All Saints Church, built in 1450, although early history mentions the Chapel at Ballingdon as early as 1154. In the church Mere is a beautiful octagonal fifteenth century pulpit, saved from destruction during the.: 'Mrs by' • being boarded up and hidden from view until , discovered by aceident in t850., Tired, hungry and often very dusty, we arrived house, quite ready to do justice to mother's dinner of roast beef, Yorkshire pudding and light dessert. After dinner we more or less lazed away the afternoon. Tea was at fire o'clock. , After tea some of us -generally went to evening ser - i vice ,with my soother, while those who were More energetic went to some church other' than our own- maybe to as nearby Village -which meant, another ,.walk l. Easter Monday was observed as. a holiday and I suppose we.amused ourselves in various ways as I don't - rcfneisiber" any particular family affair. I wonder what Easter week- ends are like in England today? No ' doubt long, country walks are out • of fashion. Times, change, but of one thing I am certain -Ryes Lane is-s-t?ll in''ezi5tetfce; where prim- roses bloom and robins sing; This weekend, while we. were -being de- luged with rain, the English coun- tryside was bathed in warmth and , sunshine. That mucic I know from the radio. It is nice .t4 ,know that somewhere the sun was shining. • Not,. that, we :have anything to grumble about -wet though it is. we are not quite flooded out; as they `are in nsady parts of the United States.. ' 'Jtlat .5. mipute,.5Neddie • dear! VPas Ityour black suit you want; ed preseed 7" *Pa , •,tn -..Drumstick Factory "Tippy,'•"bantam chick .with four legs, is ad- , mined.,by Margaret. Martinez, who says,she's never encountered .t•such.a birrl, before„in ail. her yearsofchiclfpn-•raising. Tippy, who,, Is.ih.,answer to a.tjrun sflck-lavers dream, uses three of his legs to navigate with, aid saves one for a "spare.' •r Robbie Burns SP1,U91114e The Great Love "I wish I: could And a lassie tae lo'e me as well as my dog doea," With thin remark Robert Barna kicked his dog out 'Of the room in which lie was dancing and iota': which the dog had followed hftn. "i rtiinang a reel by getting- amongst; the' feet of the daacet% "4Vet1, Isae ye found the lassie tae lo'e ye as weel as your dog?" asked attractive, gay Jean Armour to hint as she saw him in the Gelds next day. The result was, inevitable. Burns WAS , at once launched upon one of his tempestuous, all -absorbing love affairs. Scotland's national poet certainly, believed love to be 'fisc first of human joys, our chiefest pleasure here below." And by love he meant no vague and general affection, but the love of man for maid, and maid for man in the full flood of youthful ardour. - Amorous !Adventures Lille many another gay compan- ionable "man's man" in masculine tavern society he was the "woman's man" of his age and immediate surroundings. He adored the whole sex -and most of that sex to whom he paid address found hips irresis- tible Robert Burns, as all the world knows, was a ploughman. He was brought up in poor and arduous circumstances. But he exercised over women of all classes and ages a truly astonishing fascination- In that fascination. there was nothing of the ugpleasant .slinking gltality of the professional 'seducer; 'writes • Moray McLaren' in !'Answers.",. Burns' appeal to the female•esex ,.was based on sheer masculine open- hearted admiration, coupled with a boyishly romantic • temperament, ' and a tongue that could speak ' 'poetry that no Scot before or since hes surpassed._ ' Poetic, romantic, highly' sensitive though he inay have been, Robert Clarinda, Ile called, !limpet( ,Syl- Burns did not confine his love- wester. making to the spiritual plane, in Walter Scott described the cor• 'deed,, the freedom, be allowed"him- respondence as "the, most..? ex self in physical love has long be- traordinary mixture of sense and come a part 61 the "Burns Legend." nonsense, anal of love, human and It was a freedom which, as is divine, that was .ever exposed, to well known, often had unfortunate the eye of ,the ,world." results. ,Jean Ars ogr,,,vh9,evemoally be - Burns was one of those hien who Larne Burns' wife,; Ilea her own seem by nature to be unusually fer mystery attached to her; and it is tile. The same Jean Armour who a very simple one -why did Burns eventually became his wife actually marry her? • bore him with startling rapidity After the episode of the dog and two sets of twins before the the dance Burns not only made marriage. love to her but went through a Apart for this pre -nuptial •adven- Scotsformof marriage with her. tore there were many other amorous r He was then young and unknown, adventures with the lassies of Ayr- and Jean's parents {despite the fact shire and Edinburgh, which ended that a set of twins' were on the in the same way. way) destroyed the evidence of the Amongst all his female admirers marriage by t r ick e r y, deeply there were, however, three who wounding the poet's pride, were pre-eminent. Between them Burns then went to Edinburgh, they occupied by far the most im- became famous, and ppon ,his re - portant hart in the love -fife of turn to Ayrshire proceeded in the ' Robert Burns: They were Highland most casual manner to "give Jean Mary, Mrs. Agnes McLehose, and another set of twins, but he clearly Jean Armour, whom be eventually despised her and • had outgrown married. All three have a certain her. mystery or at least fantasy attach- Then, to everyone's - astonisb- ,ed to their relationship with Scot- stent, he, who had now as large an land's greatest poet. experience of. love as is granted to The mystery is 'deepest . about most men, married this cast-off Highland Mary. That there -was a • whose family had once so grossly woman who cause from just across .. insulted him, It was to his friends the highland line into Ayslsire and at the time an inexplicable action, into Burgs' life, and that this wo- and remains inexplicable to us to - 'man' profoundly 'affected Burns, day, There was very little allure - and left in him one of the few really thent left and l am afraid that one deep sensations of ,remorse • from - must exclude the element of which ,he coffered, there .can be no ,chivalry " ` doubt. •,,L. tAmong t& Lasses". But astonislnnply'little It known however0t.ABvrpa,.did,anarry.,her A abotft her; so that at the endtof the and aft,cr„a. fashion. shet,made 'him, `last tentutytsense' pcopld•suggtsted 'not a had wife. ^ ! ''thatfshe was,rno more than a.poctic. .4 Many have censured Burns for f sney+ 1rr , his indiscriminate and wide love- Tltis is n oi e n s e tiighlanil t making. Indeed, it is difficult to , Mary; whatever s'he w'as like; Was defend his, utter lack of discipline a real -Milan 'AO'disturbed the ' "'When "amahg the' lasses' 0," but emdfiodit of Blirnsr,to their depths: ',there was. about his, amorousness a ,said little• abonL her at the, ,,,kind of gay healthiness which, as I time,,,It is,Jcnown drat. he pledged have said, far removes' it from that Isis troth with her io the old a�of the slinkinlg,seducer •-nd. Scottish fashion" tend' a"'signer At any rate, reptehehsle or not, Wife is'CVfdentc'rifsit exid'ts). Bift "burns' Iove,r1Rr., the ,lasses, of his in they complications of his'life at • ',native land produced' a wealth of ' t t^ thedimprnand..as a result 9f„the... .lyric poetry which has spread his . loon old SCottipls,� marine con-,, „name alt over, time world. . venttons, Burns 'may well have There is ntl Comity inttvhieh the feared that he was committing' ''lines beginning "My, IQRe la like a red red blnose" are not known. No Atanyrate, poor Mary. it ' is Scotsman is more internationally • now certain, returned*to her parents famous, . Arnie. i11•a11r,Crtjt,; Britain ., and died of a fever while giving only two other ppeta have, be birth to a child- probably '•Bucgs'- more translated? Shakcspeard 'asidd Those, who believe this support Byron -'add' inci'dentally':Byrona0 their claim r by the overt'_ of a Awas half a; ,Scot•, „ 1 = habb;,.j lcto9ffin, itj ,Mart'= tomb'when si e it wa1 o(Senetl up 11i lfl'fU'' la'' WAN'tpr fyDVlbi ItEI8. M41-.mh f ll'55 a very 14 '1 Will Cuppy once reported the ferent woman .She came from, -high ? it receipt of a letter from a faithful socigty to •Edlnhergh,hut had }teen , ., fan that reads, "Please send me desei'tedl]y1a ralcalls, husband. She 114 made 'a dean set fit ?°lards *hen the ploughman poet was being r' lionised in the Scottish -capital It- was a new cxperiente for '1 Burns to be mulls love •tesso open- by.o.twount in her and nari num was,ipltzzied.1ShrtISOgltviou G4 ar ent,,l - ©© Eon noun Emma ly worshipped vet her con. i ©MOBUBMBE©O soieii1h ce" would not let" that Worshipi dpd conirivaion",whfetrhe had•, ammann' ©RIS uptNa1i1r1tilthea fnuntl muarialalc• lin• hi* ,.., MOM ®[*7UI D10 relationships au ��®0® ©�� ©©E7 "f The resultwiih was ivoameprolonged..,, A JIJ �IIU UD�U5•: elr<t119rate, •and,.fantgsltr„roryespon• Ei010 MEM DMME] lienee (conducted between them Q izzoo ®- e ttti wfidnt they were •livlhq 4n the.- mamma sante smell' town C ritfr then was). a woo l,t..Was a-cpyrespondenvr of love ©©E a `W'I2[J 0 ii et er filen was 9pe, Yet it was pQ�':•t i I : MIC0 rtitldnrti'i"bi'the rrallit of ikh arti- •'t t are, like a name ,She called herself :14 t_--"- And the RELIEF iS LASTING For fast relief from headache get INSTANT;NE• For real relief get INaTANTINE, For prolonged relief get IleaTANTINEI Yes, more people every day are finding that XNSTANTINE iS one thin& to case pain fast. For headache, for rheumatic pain, aches and pains of colds, for neuritic or neuralgic pain you can depend on INSTANTINE to bring you quick comfort; TNSTANTINE is made like a pres. cription of three proven medical ingredients. A single, tablet usuallybringa fgst ef. Gat irelinstsntine lodsy and always keep It handy hstantrne 12 -Tablet Tlas25d Economical:48C'Tablet Bottle 75c the nettld;pf so(ge good book on;' personal hygiene. I think rite got -i'" it." a.--71 Upsidedotta.4o $reven:tukfek t(i;'r: ° ISSUE 18 1952 ,