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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1951-5-23, Page 4Perfect tea is so easy to make with ST ANNE ¢ I Y "DEAR ANNE HIRST: Why am I like this? I am happily married, and satisfied with my husband and little son. But I guess I'm still a dirt. "I crave atten- tion from outer men. :I even go out with thein when given the chance. I don't do anything wrong. it's just o have a good time dancing with somebody who flatters vie. "The worst part about it is, 1 don't feel the least bit guilty! Can you explain it? "Confused." UNMORAL? * Are you one of those who are * called unmoral -having no sense • of right and wrong? LAURA WHEELER Snips and scraps arc what this puppy -dog pinny is made oft And, Mother, it's easy sewing -easy applique and embroidery too, Thrifty! Pinafore, sundress, or a gay skirt!' Pattern C904: trans. fer; cutting chart in sizes 2, 4, 6, Laura Wheeler's improved pat- tern makes crochet and knitting to simple with its charts, photos u:rl concise directions. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins (stamps cannot be ac- teoted) for this pattern to Box 1, 123 18th St.. New Toronto, Ont. .Print plainly PATTERN NUM- BER, your NAME and AD- DRESS. Send Twenty-five Cents more. (in coins) for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book. Illustrations of •patterns for crochet. embroidery, knitting. household accessories, dolls, toys , many hobby and gift ideas. A' free pattern t printed In the book, * --Or lust a silly girl who 4' married at 17, and feels she has * missed the good tinges she was entitled to? * Either reason could explain * your childish behaviour. * Suppose your husband did the same? -luras out night after 4' night, leaving you alone with 4' your baby, and defended hint- * self as yon do, "I'm not doing * anything wrong?" You would * put your foot down, even threat- * en to go house to another, ° wouldn't you? : What are your friends saying? • You must be utterly lacking in * self-respect to expose yourself • to the gossip your carryings -on invite. * Perhaps you are one of those * people (and they are not all * men) who should never have married. -Wanting only atten- tion and flattery, you flit from * man to ratan, playing up to each * until itis line bores you, and * then seeking a new playmate. * Have you any idea what these * 'nen think of your One of them may really frighten you some "-night. A married woman who dates other men cannot expect * any high regard front them. " It is what you think of your- " self that should concern you. * Your husband may be iudul- * gent, and smile at your adoles- • cent antics. But he would not be * human if he did not resent it. * How long do you think his pa- * tierce will endure? * You are playing with fire, my * friend. If you keep it up you will * get scorched, if not consumed. * I suggest that you sit down * today and read the marriage * service of your church. Weigh * especially the vow "forsaking * all others, cling only to him as * long as you both shall live." A vow is a solemn promise. !low * arc you living up to yours? * That you do not feel guilty * suggests lack of character, Try "' to see yourself as you would see * any friend of yours who is be- * having as you are today, Resolve * to put behind you these childish * ways, and don the dignity of a * wife and mother -before tragedy * overtakes you. * * Seeing herself as others see her, has made many a frivolous girl stop in her tracks. Anne Hirst will warn you where folly leads, Write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. NOT TOO HARD "I can't give nuthin'," an old negro told the pastor who'd called to request a contribution to the church funds, "I owes nearly everybody it, dis here town dis minute." "But don't you owe the ford something. ton?" inquired the pas- tor. "Course 1 does," admitted tate negro. "But Ile ain't pressing me like my other creditors." IF YOU .HAVE au open mind, chances are something worth while will drop into it.--l4olanci Record. CROSSWORD PUZZLE 7. Printers mese 3. Send,. 9. Resides 10. The maples It. Nulna/me 14, Period 19. !raking hatnber ACROSS DOWN 20. pops 1. Door fast".t11,g 1. Fey . etnd 21, gambling 5. wcalceu� Print juice game 2. t'omforted 21. gager 7. Ltd: to 4. Large feather? 92, Small reins 12. Tale god k. f.onic for 25. , Stetal threads 13. Ikeda et 0. finite In one Sit. Set of type 11. Chill sum 27. insects 14. Beguiled 17. Wanders 19. In h frenzied. manner 20. Amuse 21. Cut surface of a govt 23, Impose,, knot, 21, The birds 22. Broatden 20, EIualoal syllable 34, Clear 29, Cttrue Iruite 30, I'Ut on 31. Hypothetical. forgo 32. Necltes Intonnel3' 31. Deprossl on 34, Companions 34. Girdles 30. 110e193 33. Preserve 39, 21nau tie officer 40. t"l fire o1 nlleeeb 43. Poem 44, t'arched with heat 42, (tamp shelter 47. Loot-1t19.n part 43. Miley gallop 7. Whirlpool 29. 115001 30, Removed 32. 'Temp!.' 33. Dedicate 31. Wreak wale re 42. Cudgel 34, Arrest 37. \Invent est of the oeea n 33. 'rake the part of 10. t:dge 91. Terminate 42, Pigpen 44, International language IZ 15 21 2 3 4 r!; 5 6 7 8 9 10 It 13 14 16 17 18 24 28 3I 22. 19 20 23 25 26 27 2 30 93 36 37 f amiflY 27 Aok 35 39 43 47 41 42 i :Cf 44 48 45 46 Answer Elsewhere on This Page (14 UNDAY SCI1001, LSSON By Rev, R. BARCLAY WARREN B.A., B,D. Memory Selection: And ye shall seek me and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your heart. Jeremiah 29:13, Assyria continued 54 an imperial power for 116 years after Israel was destroyed. Nabapolassar, the founder of the new Babylonian Em- pire, destroyed Nineveh, Assyria's capital, in 606 B.C. In the sante year his son Nebuchadnezzar de- feated the Egyptians and made Judah tributary to Babylon. Some of the choicest young men, includ- ing Daniel and his companions were carried to Babylon. Another group of captives including Ezekiel the prophet were carried away in 597 B.C. Eleven years later, after a siege of eighteen months, Jerusa- lem, including the temple. was razed to the ground and many were taken to Babylon. Jeremiah prophesied in Judah for forty years before the destruction of Jerusalem, He was permitted to remain there. Later he withdrew with a group to Egypt. If the Babylonian governtnetlt had cen- sored Jeremiah's communication to the exiles, it would have found little to eliminate. Jeremiah urged them to settle down, make good citizens, seek the peace of the country in 44Melt Divine providence had forced thent to live. contribute to its prosperity and pay no atten- tion l0 any fanatical prophet who proposed to rebel against the gov- ernment, and who promised them the recovery- of their independence. Only after seventy years would God bring them back to their homeland. A young lawyer C. G. Finney was praying in tate woods, He heard a noise and quickly arose from his Knees, A squirrel was proving among the trees. Then he upbraided himself for being asham- ed to be seen praying. Today's memory selection carne to his mind. He sought earnestly and sooty was born into the kingdom of God. He became one of the greatest evangelists of the nineteenth cen- tury, It is still true that we will find God when we seek him with all the heart. JEALOUS "So Doris has gone back to livo with ler husband?" 'Yes: she couldn't bear to hear of hint hating such a gond tient•." its V4762 SIZES 2-10 ANNIE ADAMS - Add TWO dresses to her ward- robe! Sew only OHIO A princess sundress for a hard -playing little pet becomes a princess Sunday dress in a jiffy. ,lust add c:oliar. Scallopy bonnet is easy to leash! Pattern V4762 comes !a sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. 10, Size 6 frock, 1 if yards 35 -incl!; ?-f yard contrast. This pattern, easy to use. simple to sew, is tested for fit. lids com- plete illustrated instructions. Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35c) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print Mainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER, Send order to 11ox 1. l:a Eigh- teenth Si.. New Toronto, Ont, Place your order now Inc our Anne Adams Spring Pat:tcrn Cook! Send 'l'wetity-five cents for' this collection of the smartest new - season fashions for all ages and Sizes. There are one -yard patterns, one - pattern 0541 patterns and 1FIREE instructions to 1m114, a double•envclopc handbag! MODERN YOUNG MEN bre 11n1 so concerned with a girl's family tree as with the shape of the limbs thereon. ----Schleswig 1,cadcr, A Study In Blonde -Actress Alice Faye, wife of singer -bandleader Phil Harris, gets a pre -Mother's Day peck on each cheek from her pretty blonde daughters, Alice, left and Phyllis. The nearness of Mother's Day helped put the girls in an affectionate mood, but the new bicycles they received may have had something to do with it, too. H O ICLLS INGERFARM GoI¢t c' ol(t- a P Cleve ,.e • The house is pleasantly warm - hut not on account of the -weather. We had to fall back on furnace heat to give us May temperature. But we have had a wonderful week- . bright sunny days with just enough heat to stake outside chores a pleasure. And I make good use of it ... three days, rak- ing and cutting grass, trimming border edges, cutting dead wood out of shrubs, building bonfires, transplanting a few things here and there, putting in a bit of early gar- dening -and enjoying it all. For the last few years Partner has looked after the lawns but now we are alone he has plenty of other jobs to keep hits busy so I have taken over grass cutting operations again. Right away I felt a new mower was a necessity -Partner would probably have managed with the old one, There is something about a new mower - it sort of gives you enthusiasm you might not otherwise feel -and one needs enthusiasm for the grass there is to cut around here. How- ever, I don't do it all al once but. following Partner's advice, 1 spread it over a three or four day period, and then start all over again. 4' * * In between gardening and get- ting meals I manage a bit of read- ing, a bit of writing and keep one car tuned to the radio for the high- lights of the day, Sometimes I drop off to sleep m the middle of a broadcast -working outside sure makes you sleepy. Now don't let anyone suggest anything else . , of course it's the outside air that does it ... it couidn't be that I'm getting old. \'ells the coot 01 living 19 up another two cents -.-and this time the power. that be blame it on lot - ter, of :till things! I1ow could that be When anima 75% of the. 110131e are supposedly eating margarine? Better think that over again, Mr. Howe -it didn't sound like a very good gofer 00 its. * 4: Tins morning the dogs and I walked :round the farts -just to see what the pl'obs were for meet- • ing this increase d cost of living, The dogs had a great tittle. Once,. all I could see of Honey was her fat little rump sticking' out of a ground -hog's hole, 4, ' * 4, Well, the wheat teas looking good; one field' of clover not too bad 5111-1 another very poor, The ' fall ploughing is still far too !vet to work -although some of our neighbours are out on the land. At the barn there was a calf three ]lours old and a stable full of healthy looking cows. As long as the cows keep milking and our health and strength -such as it is -holds out, we shall probably lceep the wolf front the door. But you never can tell with animals -they are here today and gone tomor- row. One neighbour lost a fresh cow last Week -s$3.50 gone right off the bat. Sometimes f think it wouldn't be a bad idea if every family had a cow in its own backyard. We wouldn't ]Tear so much about the price of milk then. But rf course tht milk from your cow wouldn't be worth 20c a quart -just 4c the same as the farmer gets. And it wouldn't be pasteurized - unless you did it yourself, Out of every 4e it would take at least 3c to feed the cow. Then someone would have to milk her night and morn- ing; feed and water her, clean hes' stall and bed her down with straw. Probably you would soon discover that cleaning out even one stall is just as hard work as shovelling snow or fending a coal furnace. And of course, the whole family couldn't pile into the car and go off for the week -end, either sum- mer or winter. Someone nlnst stay home and look after the cow. Given proper care Bossie should milk for at least nine months --twice a day, night and morning, don't forget. During .that time you would have to get her bred or else have a board- er o11 your P31011, at the rad of her lactation period. * Well, :h1t'. !.Urbanite. how cru you like the idea- 1( cow in your gar- age instead of a car? You couldn't very well hare both. No milk to buy; an nulilnited supply for the children; eroal11 off the milk for your coffee; mother might evert save enough to make butter, 'Think of the advantages! Alt., that --just Inc an hour's ;work night and morn- ing. Of codi•se you would first have to pay out good, - 11at'd cash for your cow -and •then she 'Might get sick and die -and bang goes $300- 6500, according t0 whether she :vas a grade or pure-bred, But theta farmers take that risk, why not you? * * * Your cow would teach yeti a 1ot. You would understand what the farmer means when he says he is "tied to the cow's tail." After a few months you might even be glad to sell your cow and be only too thankful to get your milk by the bottle -at 25c a quart it neces- sary -and think it cheap at the price! Experience is a wonderful teacher. Laying Roll Roofing Therc's a right way and a wrong way to lay roll roofing to prevent leaks. The right way is all you need to know -roll it horizontally and apply it at a 45 -degree angle, You can also use this method when applying felt or any other building paper under shingles. YOU CAN'T go very far forward by leaning over backward -Lenox Time Table. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking d V VH ISSUE 21 - 1951 Created and signed by The House of Seagram, this advertisement, with appropriate copy for foreign lands, is appearing in magazines and news- papers printed in various languages and circulated throughout the world. /Sear= TELLS THE WORLD ABOUT Calltaaa 11118 advertisement was designed by The .House of Seagram to tell the people of other lands about Canada and things exclusively Canadian. Many people i11 Latin America, .Asia, Europe and other parts of the world are not fully aware of the richness of Canada's natural resources, wild life; scenic beauty and cultural traditions. The more the peoples of other lands know about out' country, the greater will be their interest in Canada and Canadian products. 71te .&louse of Seagram •, feels that flee horizon of it7dnstty docs not terminate at the boundary offs plants; i1 has a broader horizon, a,iari/ter view -a view dedicated to the development of Canada's stature in every land of the globe. h -- .ouse of Seagram