The Seaforth News, 1957-10-24, Page 6AN NNE 141PST
favi Cvunaeeot,_:
HASTY BRIDE OFFENDS—
HER HUSISAND LEAVES.
'Dear Anne Hirst;. My hus-
band and 'I have been separated
for the past few weeks, and.
we've only been married a short
time! One day while I was out,
he packed his things and went
home. We dated a whole year
before we married, and now I
know I made many mistakes
bellore and after. From what he
says, my greatest offense was
to say at different times that
I didn't really need him.
"Believe me, I'd rather have
bitten my tongue out, I spoke in
anger but he denies that, and
insists I meant it. I am sure hs
was in love when he left; how
could he stop loving me in a
Sew weeks' time?
I have begged him to come
home, and he flies into a rage.
(He flatly refuses to go to a
Jumper - Dress
PRINTED PATTERN
4846
SIZES
10--20
-Ane..rrp.L.s
Jumper with companion blouse
or figure - flattering dress!
love the versatlity of this
PRINTED Pattern! Note its
*art double - breasted effect;
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Printed Pattern 4846: Misses'
Xizes.10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size
)6 jumper 2% yards 54 -inch nap;
blouse l% yards 39 -inch fabric.
Printed directions on each pat-
tern part. Easier, accurate.
Send FORTY CENTS (40¢)
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern. Please print plainly
SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NU\er2'ER.
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
Bo.. 1, 123 Eighteenth Street,
Nes. Toronto, Ontario,
ISSUE 42 — 1957
marriage counselor or our min-
ister,) I am a high-strung and
emotional person, but I'' love
him so much and I do need him.
Heis really a very fine person.
We are both. over 21, and sup=
posedly mature. Thank you for
your advice..
HELP NEEDED"
ANOTHER CHANCE?
• What you said was almost
*,unforgivable, and a new hus-
band could take it as an in-
* sult, You offended your man
* cruelly, Your careless re-
* marksthat you did not need
* him came like a stab in the
* heart; they confused him ut-
* terly, made him feel Made--
*
ade* quite and unwanted. He must
' ` have felt he had received a
* mortal wound, and from his
bride of a few weeks.
• Time is the only remedy for
* the state he is in. It is almost
* inconceivable that when his
* anger cools and he can ration-
* aline things, he will not accept
* your explanation. Even the
* most arrogant male should
* not refuse to listen to a wife
* who is sincerely repentent,
* If you feel you must keep
in touch, write him a letter
* assuring him of your deep
* remorse and your humiliation
* that you offended him so. Tell
* him you realize now how
* much you do need him, and if
* he will come home you will
* prove it.
* The first year of marriage it
* said to be the hardest. The
* necessary adjustments are
* emotionally wracking; cruel
* words are spoken, and imme-
* diately regretted. Yet no mat-
* ter how great the offense, not
* one of us has the right to deny
* another the opportunity. to
* make a fresh start.
* * *
CONFESS HER AGE?
"Dear Anne Hirst: I am very
unhappy, for I had to lie about
my age and said I was two years
older. Now I have found some-
one I like, and I don't know
how to tell him; I'm so afraid
one of my friends will! Two
weeks ago he said he'd call me
some time, but he didn't.
"I was over to see his mother,
and I guess he was uneasy with
me there, for he went out. His
mother and I are good friends,
but even she doesn't know how
old I am. I am afraid to tell him.
Please answer my problem.
UNHAPPY ONE"
* Only during the teen years
* mount importance; later on,
* does one's age seem of para-
* you will smile at your anxiety
* now. But meantime the lie
* you told on your conscience,
* and I do not believe you will
* be at peace with yourself un-
* til the lad you like learns the
* truth.
* This is the only reason I
* suggest that you tel] him now.
Relate the circumstances, so
* he will know you thought they
* justified the misrepresenta-
* tion; that much is due your-
* self. Perhaps he is wise
* enough to smile and dismiss
* the matter as trifling; let's
* hope he will,
* * *
The greatest human need is to
be appreciated. Never let 'tie
one who loves you doubt how
precious he is to your content-
ment. Anne Hirst's understand-
ing can be helpful in time of
need. Write her at Box I, 123
Eighteenth St., New Toronto,
Ont.
YOU'RE TICKLING! — The decorative sprite getting a brush-
ing from Rene Simourd of Ottawa, Ont, looks as though he's
being tickled. Sprite is in a chamber of Perliament-
"YOU THERE?"—These fencers in' Paris, Prance, seem to be trying to make sure each is there.
Or maybe it's a staring match. If so, man on left should have switched his gaze tohis stock-
ings, which apparently got tired of it all.
tmo
HRONIC
INGERFAIZM
Gvzndotime P. Cte.eke
Today, this column might more
properly be called "the joys of
being a grandmother". Or may-
be I should say grandparents
as Partner is having his share
too in looking after seventeen -
months -old Eddie, who is stay-
ing with us awaiting the arrival
of a baby sister — we hope!
David, when the time comes,
will be going to stay with Aunt
Joy and Uncle Bob. We were
only too willing to have Eddie
here but we were also a little
apprehensive as he had never
been away from his mother at
all, not even for a day, so we
wondered how well he would
adjust. However he has accepted
grandma as a fairly good substi-
tute for mother and so far we
have managed to get along quite
well. He is naturally a happy
little fellow, reminding us very
much of his mother when she
was the same age,
Of course the house is already
looking a bit of a shambles;
small toys rolling into unex-
pected places, waiting to trip
the unwary. The kitchen floor
is somewhat patchy where milk
has been spilt and hastily wiped
up. There are smears and smud-
ges on the picture windows and
the television screen. Door
handles are apt to be a trifle
sticky, all of whichare minor
details, easily remedied. Just
so Iong as our little fellow stays
well, happy and reasonably good
we shall be more than satisfied.
Saturday was the day he came
to stay but before his arrival
Partner and I managed to get
to Milton Fair, It was a perfect
day and the attendance was
g:•3d. Apparently there were
more en`ries of every kind than
ever before and there was some -
going on all the time,.
t.ther on the track or in the
r ; rims. The Fair was offi-
'-.Iy opened by Jean Peterson,
ret.e:.tiy crowned Dairy Queen
Ontario. This capable and
attractive young lady was given
a great ovation -- which was
curly natural at she came from
a farm at Hornby, just a few
miles from Milton. We were
very pleased with the demon-
strations and the display of live-
stock for which the 4-H Clubs
and the Junior Farmers had
been responsible. It is nice to
know so many young girls and
boys are taking such a keen in-
terest in farming activities. We
hear and see sa much about in-
du:itrial concerns that at times
we almost feel as if agriculture
i:. taking a back seat. But then
go to the Coliseum, or the
revr.1 Winter Fair,or maybe no
.evu than our own local fairs
sail we come away reassured
t ..l agriculture is still very
ret. -11 alive. Different, certainly,
tr..m what it used to be but
v,: ry much in line with all the
recent advances made in science,
industry and commerce. And
that, of course, is as it should
be. Agriculture must keep pace
with the times. And yet, for
those who have a yen . for old-
time farming, there is nothing
to stop anyone buying a place
m the country and stocking it
with' a few horses, cows and
other livestock, just for the joy
of farming that is, if they
can afford it, Farming can be
an expensive hobby, A genert-
tton ago hobby farmers were
not exactly welcome. Today they
are less of a detriment to the
country than the owners of un-
occupied land who allow weeds
to flourish and spread all around
the neighbourhood.
Speaking of weeds, we were
up to Ginger Farm earlier in
the week. Our previously well -
kept farm lane is now little
more than a track through a
wilderness of weeds. As for the
garden . the less said the
better. There are tenants in the
house at present but neutrally
they are not doing too much
around the place as they never
know when the Department of
Highways might come along and
serve them with a notice to
vacate the premises. Work has
already started on an overpass
at the C.N.R. tracks just back
of our old farm. It will be in-
teresting to go back from t]me
to time to see how the work is
progressing. Construction work
will be easier to look at than
a forest of weeds.
Well, 2 thought I was going
to get this typing done before
young Eddie woke up. But it
was not to be. Either he was
less tired or maybe the tapping
of the typewriter woke him, Be
that as it may he had to be
changed, cuddled, given a drink
of milk and then put out in
his playpen with his toys and
a bunch of clothes' pegs. He
didn't think too much of the
idea until a little neighbour girl
came across and started playing
with him. Now Partner has coma
to the rescue so I imagine this
column will finally get done and
into the mail. How do mothers
with two or three young chil-
dren ever get their work done?
It makes me wonder. And yet
I did it too years ago — and,
farm chores too. Come to think
of it young mothers accomplish
an awful lot of work in their
waking hours and yet they seem
to take it all in their stride.
And I think most of them are
quite thankful if there is a gran-
nie or Aunt Mary around — they
come in pretty useful sometimes!
Religion And
Auto Driving
John T. Kenna of Chicago, di-
rector of the new church safety
activities division of the National
Safety Council, said in Portland
.recently thatniotorists ought to
chive as though "God is in the
front seat with you."
We have ridden with people
who drive that way,• only they
figure that with God on hand,
nothing can happen.to them no
matter what they do.
This, of course, is not what
Kenna meant, If one sense$ the
presence of God, his manners and:
behavior will be different than
if God is out of mind. Manners
and behavior behind automobile
wheels have a lot to do with
whether thousands of people live
or die every year.
Kenna and his division of the
NSC are working on the moral
approach to safety. "We want
people to take their religious con-
victions, whether they be Catho-
lic, Protestant or Jew, and apply
them to driving behavior at
work and even walking."
They are trying to enlist the
religious leadersnii of the nation' I
in such a crusade, believing that
it can cut accidents and deaths
as much as one third. "Anything
that hds to do with human be-
havior is a moral consideration
and quite properly belongs to the
churches," says Kenna.
There ought to be a fertile
field here, for we have not noticed
that persons who have high stan-
dards of conduct on most mat-
ters apply these standards to
automobile driving. Included am-
ong those who fail on this score
are at least some ministers, who
feel that their tight schedules
impel them to step on the gas.
And there is the lay "pillar" of
the church who quietly tells
about having tried out his new
car on a straight stretch, getting
the needle up to 100 miles an
hour.
Unfortunate,y, many "solid ci-
tizens," including those who are
faithful in religious matters, fail
to see that religion and morality
have anything to do with auto-
mobile driving. But religion
ought to have a bearing on every
facet of life. It ought to make a
difference in how people behave
under all circumstances. This
should include automobile driv-
ing and, as we said before, this
can have a lot to do with whether
thousands live or die. — Oregon
Journal
SALLY'S SALLIES
PERFUMES'
EYP
"I don't know what my hus-
band likes, but I always buy
his perfumes."
•
Modern Etiquette
by ItoLerta Leo
Q. Is it the man's or the we-•
man's place to make the move to
stop for conversation when they
meet on the street?
A. Either one may do this.
Q. Is it all right to eat cus-
tards with the fork?
A. No; these are "spoon" dish-
es.
Q. If' a young man is accom-
panying two girls to the theater,
is it all right for him to sit be-
tween them?
A. Yes, unless there is an
aisle seat, Then, of course, he
must sit next to the aisle.
Q. Is a hostess obligated to
shake hands with all her gueste
A. A well-bred hostess always
does this.
'lama Doll
Just a pair of man's socks—
o few scraps of fabric, make
these cutest 'jama dells! Boys
and girls—all children love them.
Patterns 736: pattern for 12 -
inch dolls and pajamas: pattern
of faces. Dolls made of man's
size 12 socks and scraps.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box
Y, 123 Eighteenth St., New To-
ronto, Ont. Print plainly ,PAT
TERN NUMBER, your NAME
and ADDRESS.
Two FREE Patterns as a gift
to our readers—printed right in
our 1957 Laura Wheeler Needle-
craft Book. Dozens of other de-
signs you'll want to order—easy
fascinating handwork for your-
self, your home, gifts, bazaar
items. Send 25 cents for your
copy of this book today!
Drive With Care
�aa
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