HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1957-02-21, Page 6rq
COVE. 1-111RST
"Dear ''_Ann Hirst: Where are
the men,like our fathers, who
• married and expected her to
stay home and raise a family?
I've been working since I was 19,
and when we got married my
husband suggested I stay with.
the job. We didn't. need the
money,: but he thought I'dbe
happier. He also wanted chil
dren, and when I had our baby
three months ago of course I
expected to take care of her.
But I didn't know my husband;
he took itfor granted I'd keep
en at the office and he employed
a young nurse. I was furious but
1 consented. Now I ,wish I
hadn't.
"I resent every hour I' am not
with my baby, and I'm at the
point of giving up my position
and taking over at home. I think
every mother wants to look af-
ter her children; nobody else
can do it so well. I expect a bat-
tle
with niy' husband. But
haven't I done my part? Now
I want to be all -wife and moth-
er. What do you think?
SORRY MOTHER."
I think you should take
* over at home. With men corn-
* plaining these days that wives
* neglect their children to have
* good times themselves your
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•
ISSUE 7 — 1957
* husband.•should be proud that
* you want to fulfill: your nor-
* mal role. Modern physicians
* agree that 'babies thrive on e
► mother's love; deprived of it,
* they do ,not develp as they
* should. For a man to deny hie
* wife her natural . destiny
" stamps him as heartless; .his.
* child will suffer for it later
* on, and you and I know who
* will be blamed.
* The average man expects to
* support his wife and is proud
* to. Many of them who mar-
* Tied business girls find their
* wives insist on working; they
*'find the field more exciting
* than household routine. They
a neglect their homes, feed their
* men makeshift meals and' (re-
* versing'the normal habit) their
*:conversation deals large)y
* with what happened down-
* town today. The men mar-
* ried the girls because they
* loved them, and they have the,
* right to expect a well -rum.'
* home and children. The busi
* ness wife who, deliberately
* denies theta these expecte
tions is going to pay more
* dearly thaln she thinks.
* The nobl'eest reason that a'
* wife wants to stay home is to
* give her child a ' mother's
4' loving care. Your husband
* seems so devoid of parental
* feelings that he denies his off-
* spring the best advantage that
" nature offers.
* Take your stand and stick
* to it. Remind the man you
* can budget household needs
* within the reduced income;
* that is the least important an-
* gle. If he still hesitates, sug-
* gest he talk this over with
4' your physician. He seems to
* require the facts of life set
* before him so he will under-
* stand how essential to your
* happiness and spiritual peace
* itis that you perform the ma-
* ternal role to its fullest. You
* have my sympathy, but also
* my conviction that your bus-
* band's objections will melt
'* beneath your arguments.
* * *
NO MARRIAGE MART
"Dear Ann Hirst: I had begun
to think all women are alike,
but one or two who have writ-
ten you have changed my mind.
They seem like real Iadies, and
I'd' appreciate it if you could
tell me how I can get in touch
with them.
"I've been wronged by one
woman, and divorced her two
years ago. (Women are so un-
predictable these days, and men
are too.) I am very lonely. I
stay home every night, have
a good job, don't drink or play
the horses.
"I'd like to meet a nice wo-
man who is in the same situa-
tion. Could you help two of us
find happiness? I've tried every-
thing else. T. R."
* This column, I must re-
* mind new readers, is not a
* marriage mart. I cannot re-
* veal the identity of anyone to
* another.
* Are you sure you have ex-
* hausted all the customary
* sources of friendship? Does
* your minister know how lone-
* ly you are? Your co-workers?
* Tell them, if you haven't, and
* ask their aid. I am sure they
* will look around and intro-
* duce you to a few eligible
* lonesome young women.
* * e
Problems of every kind flow in
to Anne Hirst from readers of
all ages. . Her long experience
t.nd human sympathy give her
an understanding that has kept
many a family together ... If
you are troubled, too, write her
at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St.
New Torono, Ont.
-PACHED WITH POWER — Speed's lacking, but there's plenty of
power for this one -elephant open sleigh. Going along for the
ride is seven-year-old Walter Theisinger, of Hamburg, Germany.
The plodding pachyderm is 65 -year-old "Mennie", resident at
the local zoo. Walter's father is the zoo keeper, thus explaining
the special privilege.
W -W -W -WELCOME B -B -B -BACK, JOE — Old time vaudeville fans,
veterans of the Roaring Twenties, will* hail the news that
Stuttering Joe Frisco, one ,of theall-time greats of show business,
• is making a comeback in a couple- of forthcoming Hollywood
moyies. Of late years the 68 -year-old former headliner has
been in a state of suspended animation inside a racing form.
Here's Joe today, complete with cigar and racing magazine,
telling folks: "1 w -w -was 1-1-luckyat the t -t -track today. I got
a r -r -ride home."
HRONICLES
¶i1NGERFARMGo
We are just coming out of the
deep freeze — which we did not
like oe bit. The ,temperature
around here for a whole week
ranged all the way from ten
above zero to twenty below, of-
ten with a strong wind blowing.
Of course the, cold weather
brought with it complications;
the house was hard to heat and
the car wouldn't start, but thank
goodness we didn't have trouble
with the plumbing. Last Tues-
day we had business to attend
to down town and the easiest
way was to call a taxi. That
time everything was fine. But
on Friday I had to go down
town again — this time to shop.
Another trip by taxi - but the
result wasn't so good. In fact
it practically amounted to a
comedy of errors. I got together
what I wanted from the grocer's
and asked to have my order sent
over to the taxi call office. Went
up the street and did the rest of
my shopping, calling at the'but-
chers, the drugstore, the bake- -
shop and the dairy, carrying
most of the stuff with me. The
same taxi was available and
ready to go so I thought all we
had to do was stop at the dairy
and pick up my order. We got
home and Partner was waiting
to take everything into the
house from the back seat of the
car. Without actually checking I
knew something was missing.
"The groceries where's my
box of groceries?" I asked the
driver.
"Groceries? I never saw no
groceries."
"Well, for goodness sake —
weren't they sent over?"
"No ma'am, else they'd have
been here."
The taxi driver drove off and
I came into the house and
headed straight for the tele-
phone . "sure the groceries
were sent over, almost as soon
as you left the store." A tele-
phone to the taxi office ... "the
store tells me my order was sent
over."
"I'm sorry, but nothingcame
here for any Mrs. Clarke."
"Are you sure? There should
have been a box of groceries
and a small bag of potatoes."
"Oh, that order! Yes, I re-
member it coming in but the
boy said it was for "Mrs. Currie".
The taxi is away now — with
Mrs. Currie and the groceries!"
"For goodness sake! Well, I
wonder if you can phone Mrs.
Currie's place and see whatyou
can do about it. If you can 10-
cate the groceries have the taxi
bring them in sometime during
the day."
The call -lady was most oblig-
ing and a little while she phoned
back, told me everything had
been straightened out and the
groceries would arrive before
long—which they did. A pretty
fine example of the .advantage
of living in a country district.
I suppose everyone was more
or less at fault — I for not mak-
ing sure the box wasin the car
the delivery boy for not giving
the right name; the taxi-drever
for not making sure he had the
right box for the right person.
And i,p each case it was excus-
able. Being Friday afternoon the
stores, and the taxis busy and I,
being used to my own car and
picking up my own parcels,
didn't keep my wits about me.
It could be they were partially
frozen! However, all's well that
ends well. In spite of difficulties
we now have enough of every-
thing to keep us fed for another
week, supposing we either get
frozen in or snowed in, As for
the car it hasn't been out of the
garage for over a week. During
rough weather it can stay there
so far as I am concerned. What
we pay for a taxi we save on
gas, so what's the difference?
The cold weather had its
drawbacks for us but the four -
legged creatures seemed to like
it. Our neighbour's horses were
racing around in the pastures
having a grand time. Our few
cattle were equally active in
the barnyard. As for Rusty he
was full of beans and Mitchie-
White played around like a kit-
ten. Two big grey squirrels
chased each other up, down, and
around the poplar tree in front
of the house and one day we
saw a huge hawk resting on the
branches of a nearby oak tree.
In fact it looked too big to be a
hawk. Perhaps it was some kind
of owl. We couldn't tell from
the house and to go out
bird -watching didn't appeal to
us in zero weather.
Well, we got word from Eng-
land this week that Partner has
lost two aunts and an uncle
since Christmas and the young-
est of the three was 85 — Aunt
Lottie. I went to see 'her when
I was in England and founda.
bright, active little woman, liv-
ing alone in a big house and do-
ing most of her own work. The
other one — Aunt Mary —, was
around 90, and had been ill for
some time. As for Uncles Will,
Partner thinks he was crowd-
ing a hundred. The whole fam-
ily has been noted for its lon-
gevity. The mother — Partner's
maternal grandmother — died
Woman' Proposes
A gold many young women
don't bother to wait for leap
year before they do the pro-
posing. In Queen Victoria's case,
of course, she was more: or less
forced to take the initiative. It
wouldn't have been possible for
a relatively unimportant prince.
to propose to a reigning mon-
arch.
So one day she sent for Albert
and sathim beside her on the
sofa. As he told his grandmother
later, "She declared to me in a
genuine outburst of love and af-
fection that I had gained her
whole heart and would make her
intensely happy if I would make
her the sacrifice of sharing her••
life with her."
Barbara Kelly was only seven-
teen when she proposed to Ber-
nard Braden. They were in Ca-
nada at the time, riding in his
convertible.
Suddenly she announced, "I
want to get married and I think
it had better be you."
Apparently he held out for a
month or so, but as the whole
world knows, they >. are now a
very happily married couple.
A very forward minxwas
painter Jean-Baptiste.-Greuze's•'
model. Without the slightest en-
couragement, she asked him`' to
marry her,
Finding it difficult to be dis-
courteous to a woman, he agreed,
but had to be pushed before he
would decide on the date. They
were eventually married two
years later.
Modern misses aren't at all
backward in making the run-
ning. A few years ago, when a
bus conductor put a ticket into
the hand of one of his passen-
gers, she said, "When will you
give me a ring instead of just
a ticket?"
She was his girl friend, whom
he hadn't really noticed in the
rush of selling tickets; now she's
his wife.
In Manchester a young couple
were saying good -night and she
was upset because she'd been
taken to task by her mother for
not washing the dishes.
"If you don't marry me soon
I'll kill myself," she cried, so her
boy friend obligingly saved her
life.
In the film world it seems al-
most normal for the usual situa-
tion to be reversed. An actor re-
ported that a film star asked him
to marry her. "It wasn't the
other way round," he added
tactlessly.
Of course, when there's a for-
tune to be gained, women are
rarely backward in coming for-
ward.
In 1953, bachelor Ned Eng -
some years ago at the age of
103! She directed her two un-
married daughters in their
housekeeping duties until two
weeks before her death. She
might have stepped straight
from the pages of Jalna — ex-
cept that Jalna wasn't even
written then.
lists, a '75 -year-old from isilfin-
ane, County Limerick, was left
a 210,000 legacy • by his brother.
More than forty women, be-
tween the ages of twenty-nint
and fifty, wrote saying .that
they'd love to become his wife.
THAT'S DIFFERJ!NT
"A little overweight, dear?
queried a timid husband of hL
forbidding -wife, as she weighed
herself.
"No," she replied, "but etc -
cording to my chart I should b*
six inches taller."
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TOP AWARDS — Actress Ingrid Bergman, left, smiles at actor
Kirk .Douglas as they are presented the New York Film Critics
Award for 1956 by Irene Thirer at a party intheir honor in
Manhattan. Miss Bergman had flown over from Paris to spend.
just 36 hours- in this country and receive the award for her
performance in "Anastasia". ,Douglas received his for his work
in "Lust For Life".
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PICTURES DON'T, LIE ON MATTRESSES Even when it comes to sleeping, the Russians seem
to be far behind the. Western world. Above, at the Merchandise Mart model Dee Taloe lies
on an American mattress and compares it with a Russian one. The two -inch -thick Soviet
mattress
mattress was bought in Moscow by Jahn Hubbell, vice president of a leading mattress firn4
After paying the equivalent of $42 for it, he literally carried it out of the Soviet Union under
his arm.