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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1951-2-14, Page 6After all is said and done, how does it taste in the cup? That is what counts! �S ltiIll yield the perfect f lctvoaar. . ANNE 41 pawl�n "Dear Anne Hirst: I've been going with a young man since \larch, We had planned to marry as soon as I got my teach ais certificate. I did, but since then be has kept !nutting me off. "And today I am jilted! "This young. man c anis c w hoard with us. .A month later he lost his job. Because I loved hien, my brother got hint atir, l.'er, and he has made out wonderfully there. "It was a night jobs I got up at midnight to cook lino a hot ureal. fixed his breakfast, packed his lunch. I did all his laundry. • "He bought a secondhand car, and toed; me every place—until three weeks ago. ; "Then he moved front our !rouse, And today he had a friend call to tell me he's getting married in two weeks! "Shall 1 trait for hint? Or try to forget? 1 am still crazy about him. E. E. P." END OFA CAD '.there is no use in waiting for a young man who tells you he's marrying somebody else, is * there? Even if he changes his mind, you could not tru±t b'nt • again. • You were everything to him• except a wife, You took care of " hint like a mother or sister; you exhauted yourself in homely • services: you worried about lint, yearned over hien. aitd loved • him more and more for all you ▪ did for hmt, * He probably convinced you that he appreciated it too. Yet how has he repaid you? By throwing you over, ending all your dreams. and by double- crossing you. He must have " been seeing the other girl long enough to win her love, you • know. \» d he had not even the " decency to break the -news • himself. • love were not so blind, you might have saved yourself this last shock, 'When ire kept post- poning the lnarr:age, that should have warned yon. It didn't, for you were in love; and if any- one else had told you he was seeing another girl you would hat e laughed at then:. You are well rid of hint,how- ever you may doubt it today. As your husband, he would have been jus. as unfaithful, and then you would have had to escape from the agonies you would endure. Bury vourseli in your teaching now, and accept this blow like the lady you are. Don't fore- swear your other Tr'euds, for sympathy and affection will help you through. 1\'e cannot direct the course of our love. We can, however, seal our memories of the past, and go on, chin-up to some happiness that awaits us. TO "A BROI1ENIiEART- ED HUSBAND": I do not wonder that you are so d'stress- ed. The wife whom you have loved so dearly announces that she is in love with another man, and has applied for a divorce. She would take the children with her, and rob you td the fanny life 00 which you had counted so much. You got into trouble, yes. But you paid the cost, and you have returned home a changed man. Through the years you were away your wife stood by, and implied that she and the children were only waiting for your return to star; life all over again. And now, when you have re- habilitated yourself, lauded a good position, and only want the chance to rebuild your life, she is determined to leave you! Can you persuade your wife to talk. things over with her minister, or with an old friend of the family One who has knows her, and understands her teem...r:n :cut, may be able to convince her Law unfair slit is to desert you al this crucial hour. She may Wel that she did her duty to stand 1.3 3 011 tiu'onglt Soul' great ,tial, and now is en- titled to find a different happi- ness of her own. Vet if she could he persuaded to give you this chance you yearn for ---if only for a year ---surely site would hr doing a Christian decd. however things turned out be- Iw.'elt you, at least she could not reproach herself la.er on. Who knows but that year to- gether again might be only the beginning of a litter and richer life for you all! I pray that site will releu,t. You have u11• deep sympathy t If you fell in love with a rascal, thank your stars you found it out 'before you. married him.... Anne Hirst's sympathy and wisdom will help you through the dark days ahead. Write her at Box 1. 123 Eighteenth St, New Toronto. Ont. :OQW' CAN 1? By Anne Ashley Q. How can I thoroughly dis- guise the taste of castor -oil? A. Squeeze the juice of half a lemon into a tall glass; then pour in the dose of castor oil. Add.- a pinch of ground ginger, then the juice froth the rest of the lemon. Now add :t4 -teaspoon bicarbonate of soda and stir briskly. This so- lution will feast like soda water, breaking the el into tiny granules, so small that they cannot be no- ticed. Drink white it is efferves- cing. Q. How can I remove a fresh ink stain from a rug? A. four milk on the spot and press it with a blotting paper until •1 is all absorbed. This has to be done immediately or it will r.ot tt•orlt. C'. How can I separate postage stamps tht,t have become stuck to- gether: A, Lay a thin paper over theist and ruts a hot iron over the paper. They will corse apart easily. Q. How can I- make a lotion for whitening the skin? A. Stix two tablespoonfuls o1 oatmeal, t teasponuful of pow- dered borax, and '/j -pint of roe - water. Let stand for two or three days, then stra'n well and add omae of alcohol.. Q. How can I treat silk stock- ings to make thein last longer? A. Before wearing for the first time, putt .`'e teaspoonful of alum into one quart of water and rinse the stockings in this. Repeat this process after each wearing. Q. How can I avoid wringing cloths used for bot applications? A. When hot cloths are needed foe, application to relieve pale, put them in the upper' part of a steamer with the water boiling underneath. This method will eliminate wring- ing out the cloths. IT'S TIlE WAY YOU FUP R CAiF TH1T CDONT$I Today's heifer calf is your future milk producer. Lost growthand develop- ment through improper care and feeding can never be regained later. To be a good milk producer, a cow needs to be of GOOD SIZE. Good depth and width of body are essentials for proper feed capacity and full milk production. Here's Why The FUL-D-PEP CALF FEEDING PROGRAM 1s The BEST You Can Use! strong straight tops with greater depr th of ribs. ed. * with plenves ty of Clairyy temperament, ger and more and no excess fat or thickness. sl Calves have greater resistance to disease. • Eyes are brighter and in better condition, * Appetites are keener. Se Bides are softer and more pliable ---hair has more bloom lit 111 11 Send for FREE BOOKLET" Nlail coupon today for your free copy of the booklet "GROW BE'.l""l'14R HERD REPLACEMENTS". CLIP THIS COUPON A 'Tent. in" Tet Peed Service Division. The Quaker Oats Company of Canada Limited, Peterborough, Ontario. at Please mail me my free copy of the helpful and informative booklet "G'PIOW 'BE TER (HERD 1p.1PIACi!MJB'dI'S". ND MAiL PROMPTLY Your Name Your Address Pro! Your Peeler's Name dddreas iiiiiii 1,••444 O. Jascha Watches Jay Play—Violin virtuoso Jascha El.eif2•t, and his wife. prances, beamed with pride when their curly -h 'acted son, Jay, sat clown in their home to improvise on the piano. Maybe, ts'Itett ,jay grows older and his feet can reach the piano's pedals, he'll accompany his fatuous father: HRONICLES C itliNGERFARmt ;.,,nDClt�.elte There have been matte tinges during the last few montlis when one alight have caked this a "win - toeless winter". But not now—not with the te,nperatut•c hovering around the zero marls at night and - about ten in the daytime. Actually, it is good weather for getting around-- cold weather, without wind at .storms is easy to take. If ouly there were a little more snow! Just enough to give, a protective covering to wheat and clover. These are the days when the fanner looks worriedly across his fields and won - ,de s . will the wheat be whiter - killed? And what about the pas- tures, and those fields newly seeded down to clover Inst year? No won- der farmers are anxious. A hun- dred dollars spent on seed last year —or several hundred ---according to the size of the farm, and it can all be los. so easily in unfavourable weather -that is, hard frost without a coating of snow to protect the tender yonug- roots of wheat and grass, Flowerer, we are entirely at the mercy of the weather: there is nothing that any farmer can do about it except wait and SCC 15nd hope for the best. But while tee wait for the winter weather 10 make or l,ccak 115 we are cer.ainly thunkfttl for the small Mercies ... we 'are glad the house is •easy to heat in clear, cold weather. Sure, we !night have quite a good time counting our blessings except that every time we feel titaukfill for bciug warm and com- fortable we remember others who are not so blessed. Perhaps it is because we, ourselves, have known what it is to !nave :t cold house in winter that we cannot now dn= joy our comfort without remember- ing those who may not be so fort- unate, We Bate, for instance, to think of the coal shortage i11 Eng- land—to say -nothing of their mea- gre pleat ration.• a whole week's ration wouldn't be enough to give a lumgry man even one decent meal. That poor little island is certainly having a long -terns austerity pro- gram. And yet last week 1 had a letter from my brother in Cam- bridge and he didn't mention 'food,. or coal, of even tile "flu". He was writing about the pleasure they got from their television set but com- plained about the time they had trying to get help for the honsc but were now so thankful because they had at last succeeded in get- ting a girl three days a week! Strange what habit can do. Be- cause my brother and leis wife have always !tad a maid, it now seems a major catastrophe if they are without one. To us, in Canada, knowing what they have suffered over there in bombings and other hardships, it doesn't seem reason- able that anyone' should look upon shortage of domestic help as a prob- lem. It must be that having been away from England so long their conservative outlook now seems strange to its. I suppose in a younger country, we naturally ac- gtuire a different set of values, which -have come down to us from pioneer days, Where' there are, theoreti- cally, tt0 class distinctions, no Ulan ?Minds working with Itis hands and most housewives are quite content to (10 their own work and rin their own- homes. There is much talk these days about_ maintaining a high standard of living, But what do we mean by a "high standard"? It is cer- tainly a relative term just as a loaf of bread is s good meal to a starving person, We have conte to set too high a value on material things and have lost the enjoyment we once had in simple pleasures, I dread to think tvltat inflteenee television will have on our rising gettereli0u. Youngsters, 1 xttt le/1111 , 4899 WAIST 24"--30" ANNE .ADAMS Thrifty—ONE YARD of 54 -inch for each given size! Easy --ONE main pattern part, NO side scants! Slim lines, with buttoned fake - pocket flaps and smart back- placket! ackplacket! Goes with classic or dressy blouses, jackets. Pattern 4899; waist sizes 24, 25. 26, 28, 30. This pattern, easy to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated instructions. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (25c) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern, P01111 plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. • Send order to 13 0 x 1, 123 Eighteenth St. New Toronto, C1nf. Send Twenty-five Cents iu coins for our Anne Aditus Pattern Book! See the smart accessory dresses, separates and classics, the special easy -sew styles for all ages, the gift pages, Printed in Book is a free Pattern $or making child's dress from man's shirt. afraid, will tenet 16 leave their healthy, outdoor games to sit in darkened 1001115 to watch their favourite comics on T.V. The other day I was in an elec- trician's shop where they were try- ing out a television set that had just conte in, A little girl cause into the store, saw what was hap- pening and rushed out again, In a few minutes she was back again —and three o1' four more children with her. But the electrician was wise to them and had to shut oft the set, Poor ]rids -1 was sorry for them in a way—they were ex- cited, and theft so let down, - But I understood the luau's viewpoint when he explained -=".I hate to be mean but if I !rept this thing going the shop world be over -run with tads half the tinge." And here is something in con- nection with the CBC which struck me as rather funny. Like a good many other folk I don't think tnttch of CBC daytime programmes so the other day 1 turned on short-wave and there was a 'grand orchestra playing, "Now if only we could get something like that!" i thought, I waited until it was over and then heard the announcer say --"'Tia fs the Canadian Broadcasting Corpor- ation to the BBC in London." 1 turned back to CBE . , soap opora At the cigar stores "These cigars are rattier strong, madam," "That's ail right, My husband bites then: terribly." ISS3IE 7 — 1951 UNDA SCi'OOL LESSON by Rev. it, B', Warren, B.A., BOB; ,!esus the Clnist---.'.+lark viii:27-37 Memory Selection: Thou alt the Christ, the Son of flit Living God. Matthew sei:l6h. Peter'., memory will always be honoured for his great confession, "Thou art the Christ." Today there are malty professed Christians 15110 do not share Peter's view. They speak of Jesus as a vt ry good man but deny that Ile is- God's Sou. Hence they scoff at the idea of His miracles. To them Ile is only a good example but not a Saviour, They treat with scorn the thought of (lis blood -atoning for our sins. Bence they du not sec the Saviour's power Manifest in their widst. 'filen and women are not delivered from the consciousness of guilt and sinful habits. The devils of pride, anger and jealousy are .-gt cast out, What is wrong with the Unwell? A. large portion of it is telling about Jesus, the kind, good man, but not pre- senting Him as Christ, the Son of the Living God, Paul said, "I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the 'power of God unto salvation to everyone that believ- et10--Romans 1:26. Any other teaching is anaemic and weak. Only one who raw from God can save tits today. e * L'etcr was slow to comprehend the fact that jesus Christ must suffer and die before He could save ns. I Lowe 11e was rebuked be- cause he advocated an easier way for the Master. But the Master died on a CROSS. If we would be His disciples we must deny ourselves, take up our cross and follow Him. It isn't cheap to become a Chris- tian. It costs everything, But it is profitable in this life and in that which is to come. What solemn words were those, '`What shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" 'l'lte way the Cross leads Home. Blind Drivers Car manufacturers have gone to special pia* and considerable ex- pense to give the motorist the greatest visibility of he road ahead and behind. Not only have they provided larger windows, but they have made these of clear, strong, shatterproof glass. All these safety efforts are com- pletely wasted, ]however, if the driver permits these windows to fog over or get covered with ice or snow. Yet many of them do, as any short winter drive almost anywhere in Canada will confirm. Rather than take a few seconds to brash away show 00 mist, or wait a few minutes to permit de- frosters to work, these reckless peo- ple will get out on the street or highway and hope that others will keep out of their path. In driving blind like this they are just as great a menace as the night traveller without lights and they should get the same treatment tont the author- ities. Want Help To Seek Capt. Kidd's Treasure I+our rugged young men are needed to help search for 5300,000 worth of pirate gold somewhere in the China Seas. All they will have to aid theist is a pile of maps ieft behind by Capt. 'William Kidd, flit* century pirate tvho was banged without disclosing the hiding place of his lout. The search is being led by ship- builder James Bromine, of Rye, 'England, who plans to take ten then to the South Seas iu the Rek Rap, a S ft. motor trawler 'now being fitted here, He ihas found five fel- low explorers so far, The volunteers must be ready to 'face any hardship and they must also put some money into the expedition. Originally Mr. Brow,llie planned a pleasure cruise to the South Seas, Then a friend, Mrs. Elizabeth Dick, produced' the Kidd maps, left to her by a collector of aucic,lt trophies. The Rek !tap- probably will be carried as freight on a steamer as far as Singapore, The expedition is ex- pected to cost shout $20.000. Schoolboy definition: Ice is wa ter that went to sleep in; the cold:. RELIEVED j}And the FYI RELIEF IS LASTING For fast relief from headache get INSTANTINE. For real relief get INBTANTINE. For prolonged relief get INSTANTINE( Yes, more people every day are finding that INSTANTINE is one thing to ease 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. INSTANTINE is made like a pres- cription of three proven medical ingredients. A single tablet usually beings fast relief. Get lestsntine today and always lisip It bandy 1 12 Tablet Tin 251 Economical .4e -Tablet Bottle 159{ They're amazing good (Made with Amazing New Fast DRY Yeast! JELLY BUNS Measure into small howl. 1 c. lukewarm water, 2 tsps, granu- lated sugar; stir until sugar is dissolved. Sprinkle with 2 en- velopes Flelschmann's Royal Fast Rising Dee Yeast. Let stand 10 min., TITE13 stir well, Cronin 0/.t c. shortening; gradually blend in 1 c. granulated amain, 2 taps. salt, 1 tsps grated 11111t11eg: Eirndunliy beat in 2 well -beaten eggs, Stit in Vs air. lemon extract, to c. milkwhich has been scalded and cooled to luke- warm, emd yeast mixture. Slit in 3 c, once: -sifted bread flour; beat :until smooth. \Vork in 3 c, more once: sifted bread flout. I(nead until smooth and elastic; plate in greased bowl and brush top with melted butter or shortening. Cover and get in warm place, tree from drntlebt. Let rise mall doubled in bulk..l'uneb down dough and cut into 36 mud portions; luiead into smooth halls, 21,110ll \vitt, incited buttes or margarine, roll in fine granulated seam and arraagc Ye apart on greased baking P.M. (lover and let rise 1111111 doubled in bulk, Twist the handle of a knife in the top of each roll to form an ititlentation; fill with jelly. 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