HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1954-9-29, Page 44-4,
"SALADA,
TEA COFFEE
141IRST
,--14(00A tamitay apf...4.vgart
"Dear Anne Hist; I cannot
go on this way! If you will 44:1-
. vise me, P11 try to do as you
say. I am 24, very much in love
with a man 80, and we've been
engaged over a year. Because
of the housing situation he must
live in a small house with his
sister, a widow with four child-
ren under 16, He expectsme
to live there when we mem. I
have thought it out over and
over again, and 1 an convinced
it won't work.
"He supports her children as
though they were his own, and
I expect he will want to con-
. tinue helping out. They do as
they please, and the younger
ones dren't even kept clean;
their mother is a lazy house-
keepee, too. I am the quiet,
home -loving type; I don't care
for parties or the good times
other girls expert,
"I have thought of breaking
'Sew -Easy
Sep,araies
SIZES
4545 2-io
07-41/01.4. 4444
Busy mom, whip up these
wardrobe wonders in a jiffy I
Minimum of pattern parts, no
fitting worries - this was de-
signed for beginners! Princess
Jumper. box jacket, blouse offer
many changes for Monday.to.
Sunday variety.
'Pattern 4545; Childree's• Sizes
2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6 blouse 1 yard
35 -inch; jumper 14. yards 05-
ioeh nap; jacket 116 yaxels..
This pattern easy to use, .sim
pie to sew, 'is tested for fit, Has
eqmplete illustrated instructions.
• Send THIRTY-FIVE DENTS
Mei in coins (stamps cannot be
accepted t for this pattern. Print
plainly SIZE, NAME. ADDRESS.
Send order to Box 1, 123 Edell
teenth Si,, New lemmata. Oro.
our engagement, but 1 love him
terribly and it would hurt me
deeply. What do you suggest?
R. T."
A HOME OF HER OWN
* You two are not adoles-
• cents, and probably you could
* meet almost any hurdle Intel-
▪ ligently; but it is foolhardy to
walk open-eyed into circuit-
"' stances se fraught with risks
* as this one :promises. Your
* finance's sister is already Tins-
* tress of the only home he
" knows. There would be fric-
*,,,jion,. even if you admired each
4 other warmly. You cannot
* admire her. and it is notan-
" likely she resents the very
idea of your Marriage.
*, The housing situation . its
*: easing up, Prn told but, it bas
• postponed many a marriage, .
* Yet where there's a will, etc.
* If your fiance is convinced
you will not marry him until
* he can provide a place for the
* two of you, he will stir his
• *
stumps with more vigor and
find one. •
* Most men are not so smut•
' tive rear imaginative as wo-
* men, and yon may have dif-
* Denny in persuading your
fiance to see thing your way.
4 But he, too, must have done a
•*•little thinking about the shear'
* tion; he should realize that
4* eerily' PagenCen-90491-0K1Mtlf
* renewed efforts to find living
4' quarters, can make the mar-
• riage
Rernirilaim 4a you Will
be- conten to atart modestly
and live Thnt -way until condi*
* lions improve, If pee are not.
* working, perhapsyou can find
* a part-time position. That
• will occupy your Mind, and
* provide a nest -egg for the
* future -which is always wel-
• come no matter how well off
• the man is.
* Why consider breaking the
* engagement? Talk thin g s
* over, and inspire each other
* by your mutual love and faith.
* Meeting the facts -head-oe, to-
* gether, should make you both
* admire the other more.
WHAT A RISK:.
"Dear Anne Hirst: Four
months ago I met a man who
had just got his divorce from
his third wife; they had been
married only a short time. 1
feel in love, and he claims he
loves, me. He has take)) me
everywhere, and . brought me
lovely gifts. (I hear he is dat•
ing another girl, but he denies
this.) •
"I have been married and
divorced, and
Shall I take thi
hatre a baby.
s man seriously,
or 'look the field over?'UNDECIDED
* To marry man who has
* had three wives and faifed to
* hold one, .is reason enough of
* itself to wond
with him. It
er what is wrong
* -certainly does
* not reeornmend him as a bus -
band.
• To marry aryone whom'you
• have known only a few
*' Months* is a terrible chance, to
take. How can you posSibly
* know whether you two are
tt•ell stnted?
* 1 m afraid you are, letting..
• ;our heart rule your thinking.
* You tell in love with your,
• hitehmet. 'et; ,enildn't got
,
FftAE THE CLYDE TAE THE ST. LAWRENCP-This new 22,00C1
ton Cunard liner Sdxonia oes Ihrotigh hei- paces during her
recent trials in the r'irmuth of the Firth of the Clyde, Scotland...,
The -00xonia,Arergest Cnnbrder ever uilt for the 51.• tavvrenc&
river service.' ••
. ,
•
•
• MEMO WINNER - Lee Ann Moriwether of San Francisco
• weeps tears of joy after winning the "Miss America" contest in
Atlantic City, Hed vital statistics ore, bust 34'Vi inches, waist 22
inches, hips 35 inches,
* along with him; this time you
• want to be very sure the man
* is responsible and will not let
* you down. From what you
* have already heard about this
* one, you should surely heal-
* tate to take him seriously. •
Where love and faith obtain;
there is always hope for haplil-
ness. .11: circumstances delay
your -;marriage for instance, face
them fearlessly and work things
out together. Anne Hirst can be
helpful, if you write her at llox
1, 123 Eighteenth St., New To- •
How Can I ?
Lty ROBERTA LEE
Q; flow can I 'keep the Raver
and vitamins in • vegetables
Mien cooking them?
•AL. Do eat cook them in too
. much water.Cauliflower, cab
bage, spinach, and string beans
need no more then a fourth to
a half a cup of water to start
•.steaming and releasing their
JU3ces.
Q. How San I clean rusty
A. Leave them In a saucer
4,3titehtaining kercisen for several
days. The rust willbe loosened
by the oil and willIthen rub off
easily.
Q. How. can 1 remove white
spats from a tabic caused by
tkeot?
applying!, in order
' Kerosene, nlcohol, and
linseed or sweet MI. A different
cloth should be used for each
treatment. Keep rubbing in the
Ifnseed ' oil until the spot dis-
appears.
• Q'111-trw47elin 1 make a remedy
for- falling hair?
l.; 0 LOU 4f;ffR'ASVfl
In June. 1854, two baby boys
were born in Suva, in the South
Pacific. They were next-door
neighbours a n d firm friends.
They toll ,.:Serce „eisjers ant
each We' tibo' -hrld
girls'ere *A 1 i
the tem jnilittp •
twentreftruti houIia.ofSeagIt'other.-4,
Three :Weeks agb 'one Of 'the
widowers was found dead. His
old i'iend was "inforrhed,t
Six months ago, in January,
shook his head, then dosed his
eyes. Ten minutes later one of
his sons came to call him for
lunch; but he was dead, sitting
in the chair where he had re-
ceived the news.
Scraps -Into -Apron
iny c4401.41tAl
A. A suggested retneclav is to
• rub salt into the • scalp, then
massage until the scalp tingles.
Also add salt to the water when
washing the hair.
Q. How can I open an envel.
ope that 'is sealed and one
thinks of some forgotten en
closure to add?
•
A. Take the pen holder and
„
• insert it under one end of the.
flap, roll it carefully across and
the mucilage will yield readily.
., Q. How Can I care for potted
geranituns so that they will
bloom?
A.. They should not be kept
• • too warm or watered too much
for winter blooming. Keep them
just wet enough so that the
groned looks dry most of the
time:- -end they do • best in full
t
, sunligh• '
Q. 'What:can Ise done to win-
dow cords so that it will be easy
to open and close the windows?
A. Paraffin rubbed on this
cords of a stubborn windoW,'
.•
thatis hard to raise and lower,
will Week wonders.
•, HIT can I make 11 easier
• to polish knives?
A. Try dipping the knives- in
• holing water, drying them, and
. then, applying the pplish at once
• while the metal is :viarm.
Q. How can I make a solution
for cleaning woodwork?
A. Mix 1 cup of vinegar, 1 sop
of kerosene, and 2 enps of
warm water. This is excellent
for washing enameled oe paint-
ed woodwork or furniture, go -
636 Ing over a small portion at a
time, then drying with a soft
cloth, It will remove grease and
• diet, leeving, a nice glossy stir,'
• '• face: DO not nee on varnisned
what you'ebeen saw
log those ,dolourfur scraps fort
• This gay apron - bright with
lazy -daisy embroidery design-
ed to ahem; up gihnres. Cinch to
• sew, embroideri! ' • -
Make a half apron or a whole
one. Psfitern 686:has tissue pat-
tern and embroidery transfers.
• Send 'ilYiENTII-PFVE DENTS
in coins- (starnpe cannot 'be ac-
cepted) for this pattern to BMX
1, 120 Eighteenth St„, New Tor-
onto, OM Print plainly PAT-
TEITTY N131VIRER0 your NAME
and ADDRESS.
Ddn't mieS our Laura Wheeler
1064 Needleciafil Catatognel 19
embroidery, crochet, color-trans-
lor and embroidery patterns to
tend for plus 4•complete pet -
terns whited in book. Send A5
ciente for ybur cock tocieyi Ideas
dor gifts, bezaer sellers, fashinns,
•
14ERRY, 114.14A j
'Ittirry up and .01110, One's cont.
,
Avg to phone:the exterminatorlr
itorgitts. •
NtlikEE,ALkti
Tina, is queer Witte. On a
Saturday don't you often lOok
back and wonder where the
Week bas gone to? Other times
the beginning of the week
seems such a long way, off, But
still, fast or slow, tune ,is eel
teinly moving on. The Exhibi
Hot is over, fall fairs are cone
ing lip, children are badh to
school, days are getting shorter
and all the hundeed• and one -
extra jobs we hope to get done
before the leaves fall are '
crowding in on us. Isn't that
the way you feel? But cheer up
- that sort of feeling is inevit•
able . with the early days of
autumn, and yet we altvays do
get through, don't we?
But what .is it makes one
week seem longer or shorter
than another? You know hew
it is -'-sometimes we. pleb to
do this and , that, and then, at
the end of 'the week, because
of unforseen interruptions, we
find we have accomplished lit-
_tle more than ordinary every-
day chores. Isn't it on such oc,
casions that time seems to have
slipped away? On the other
hand we occasionally • • and 1
do mean • occasionally -- get
done even more than we had
Maimed, and then It is we can
hardly believe that only a week,
has gone by. Thai is what hap-
pened around here last week. -
but it was more lee. luck' than
good management. Monday of •
last week was Labour •Day. We
were not expecting. company so.
since we were detve to our last
Ititclien towel and teadoth,
got ready for a big wash. I was
busily,sortiug the first lot ready
„rn.
for the:achtrie.,whee.
blew in and announced that he".
'Wanted to thresh field of
oats that 'day tile field that
he had sown on our farm.,Could
. I feed four or five extra men
for dinner? Could I? For a few
minutes was - in a dither. :
Stores were closed . . . had I
enough fOod in the house to..
',teed setten • people for chimer?
Yes. • I know some farmer'e
have that many and pos-
sibly more, to feed every day,
But at least you are prepared .
for it But when there is gfam-
ily• of two, tripling up on a meal
isn't so easy, especially with -the
stores closed. However, told
Johnny to gb ahead, 1 would
manage somehow. And I did -
and- Everyone. got enough to
eat I also got my washing done,
and the ironing -• thanks to
Partner 'helping me out in the ,
morning. '
It seemed stranger to have a
threshing machine on the- farm
again after .a. tepee of. feur
years. More strange still to see
horses at work - there were
four teams 'drawing in. When
Johnny first mentioned thresh-
ing- we- thought the oats. would
be too tough but he turned out
some of the stooks -ahead of
time and they went through the
machine all right. By five
o'clock the oats were threshed •
and the machine 00 its way out,
For the -next hour Partner and
Johnny were bagging up the
screenings in the barnyard be-
fore the cows could get. a
A ,
chait•e IN gorge ,theillgelire4!1
17 994s1PY digustrOus
Tuesday and Wednesday were
hot, wet and humid. But 1111.1/;F•
day Was a red letter clay. It was
our local W. I. meeting and w
had as guest spealter, Miss SSybil
Bennett,' Federal member of
perlitunent fete Hattori County.
Allti a my able lawyer. Miss
Bennett Is well-known to many
of the members 01 our 'branch,
and we also knew her as an
excellent speaker, Her subject
was the making of a will, "parti•
culasly in regard to taste Wk.
Naturally she stressed the lin
portanee of both busbiltad and
wife making a will, but she also
touched On the ahnOst, equally
•Imatter of titling In
• m
e e tax returns, and explain-
ed now the settlement of azs
• estate can be complicated in
any case where such returns
14 had not been made. "If you .are
• not filing returns," said Miss
Bennett, '4don't think you are
•getting away with. anything just•
1 because the government doesn't
cheek up 'ba you and r'equest
.1 you to do.so, The government
has 'how
tired of sending out
re,quests ond warnings, Now it
lets the Olattar ride ',until on
estate' has •to settled, Then tlio
goverturterksteps 'in WI if re•
turns havA hot' bMi 'made each
Year then goOrrunent may
dethand income tax , returns,
Possibly for the past ten year0."
Miss Bennett • explained the
worry and Writ work Ole
bringe to the widow and the
executors -- work and worry
that can easily be avoided it
efivnenrgy ifnacrommecr mtaaxite:etaavpasoinetaaOhf
year, as required by law
even though your NET income
Titian themay nkoana•wtaXambaitst
binblicktheb-te.egovernment doesn't un-
less you make rehires to prove
it.
It was all very good advice
but I am afraid we forgot all
about wills and succession du-
• ties in our excitement oyer the
marvellous achievement. of that
delightf*1 little girl, ;IVIarilyin
• Bell. We admired her riot only
for her courage and endurance
in otimpleting the swim but fer
her ,fine character and person-
ality,
1-11 CC .5
( feci
5trenjt to it c
onij moderation
jives it carm.
the Pouffe'
.`' . lean Pau(Ric!ter
Men whe think 4( imorroto modeeattoir today
SCISOI
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