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The Seaforth News, 1953-05-07, Page 2ANM€ 4'PST i -Fatni4 Oo4e "Dear Anne Hirst: The mar- ried man I've been dating for three years means everything to me. He has an invalid wife. I am beginning to question whether' he loves me as he claims; if he does, why doesn't he get a divorce so we can mar- ry? "I am from a good family, and he has made a tramp out of me, I could go home, I guess, but that town would be so dull! "So far, the man's wife does not know about us. He lies to her, and she believes him. "I can't stand this suspense much longer. Shall I go to see her and ask her to divorce him? DOUBTING" INCREDIBLE CRUELTY * Are you really serious? It Magic Collar! ADD TWO dresses to her ward- robe! Sew only ONE! This prin- cess su..dress for your hard•play- ing little pet becomes an angelic Sunday frock in a jiffy. Just but- ton on that frilly collar. Pattern for bonnet too ! They're sew - easy Pattern 4762: Children's Sires 2, 4, 6, S, 10. Size 6 frock, 151, yards 33 -inch: as yard contrast; bonnet. -le yard: le; yard contrast. This pattern easy to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested tor fit. Has complete illustrated instructions. Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (350 in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME. ADDRF 4S, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to Box 1, 123 Eigh- teenth St., New Toronto. Ont. '' is dilhcult to believe that any * woman can be so hardened. * Picture the man's wife as * she is. Stricken beyond cure, she lies helpless, bereft of tic- s tive living. Her one happiness * lies in the belief that her bus- * band still loves her. Would * you destroy that faith? If you * try, I believe the man, in spite * of his deceit, would never * look you in the face again. ✓ Perhaps he is not divorcing " her because he has no grounds; * or beneath his sense of guilt, * he has not the heart to deal * her such a blow. Why should he? You have been a wilting * partner in his duplicity. For * him, the situation is well in ° hand, • Many a reader charges hie " with blaming the other woman '` in an affair, and excusing the " man; but alter all, when a "' man suggests an illicit alliance, ": the decision is the woman's. You went into this with your • eyes wide open and, loving hien, 1 can understand you be- ' lieved in his promises of mere ° riage. But when three long years have passed with no sc- • tion, you should be smart enough to sec where you " stand. " Tell him that you know it ' now, and you ere through ° waiting. You may Fuld life back home • as dull as you expect. But at " least you will not know the shame of destroying another °' woman's faith. WHY NOT, PARENTS? "Dear Anne Hirst; 1 will soon be 15. The school prom is com- ing up, any my mother promises I can go if I am asked. My problem is, no one knows this but a couple of • the girls. One got me a date for' -Sunday night, but my folks won't let Inc keep it. "Don't you think it would be okay if I had a couple of double dates before the prom? A. L." Your chances of being asked to the prom will be greater, ° ei course, if you are seen on a * few double dates beforehand * with boys your parents ap- * prove. Otherwise, how can * the boys know you'll be avail - 1' able? "' Put it to Your parents this ''` way, and I expect they will * consent. In the circumstances, * a few weeks' difference in * making your "debut" seems unimportant, K' If they refuse, though, ask the girls to spread the word 'for you. There is no substitute f or goodness; it brings an inner peace that the wicked cannot know . , . If you have the chance to turn back to the good fife, take it while you can. Anne Hirst will help you find the cour- age. Write her at Box 1, Eight- eenth 5t., New Toronto, Ont. Ile is a fool who cannot be angry; but he is a wise nun who will not. -.01d Proved,. 6.4,v -au Cpp.!!�i'L ;°c970,e, . tvif; �a6r CA"t tali SOUR CREAM BUNS e It auci, a thrill to make twit* )c.t,t tree ---nota you haven't to wrap about yeast that stales and weakens; FIeitchmann's Yeast keeps hall strength, fast -acting without refrigeration. Get a months supply. SOUR CREAM BUNS S,;ald .it', t, mill:. 1 t, warm land co gar, 2 tsps salt and 1, 1. buttes or maraca Met Chun 10 1111,1 - warm. tSPrauwirlc, amateur: iut0 a large bond 1 it. ltd:cwarin water, 1 tip. granulated sugar; stir until sugar li dissolved. Sprinkle with 1 cm elope Fle!sthmann's Fast Rising Dry Yeast. het stand 10 minutes, 1'11t V stir tcel1. Sit t e 1,t, C. enld mashed potato anti ter, in 2 rnbralen egg yolks and 1 , c, thick sour gram; slit into yeast mixture and stir in lukewarm mill: mites re Stir in 31/7 r., once - silted beead flout; brat until stroeth, Work in 3 c. (about) once - sifted bread. flour to make a soft dough; grease top, Cover and set in a in arm place, free tient dmrgltt, Let gist 1111111 (10111.1,11 i" buil.. Punch (neon dnnrlt glrasc top. 8011.1 and again 1,1. ikf. unitl doubled in lntlk. Plinth dues: dough and turn MI on lightly - /Joined boar roll to 1,L" t111,know and cut into 31,'" 1ouiitls and place, troll apart, on greased cookie streets, using It floored thimble, make n deer, demotsion in the centre of melt bun. Baal) retinas of dough with mixture of 1 slightly - beaten egg ivhile and t tbs. water; sprinkle gi,nrrnusly with gratin. Ivied sugar. Cover and let rise until. doubled in balk. Deepen depres- sions in hens and fill With thick laspherty jinn, Bale le hot oven, 42`,", about DL minutes. S'ieh1- 3 (Mien large hens. When It's Tulip Time In , , , Ottowa—Some of the 750,000 tulips which visitors are being invited to enjoy at Ottawa's Canadian Tulip Festival from May 16 to 24 this year. These are on Par- liament Hill, Other magnificent beds are planted on the Capital City's Driveways, the Dominion Experimental Farm, beside main roads and in many parks. Sponsored by the Ottawa Board of Trude, the Tulip Festival is designed to bring Canadians from other parts of the country to see their capital city as well as its unmatched beauty. -Maio by Malak achieve eye-catching designs. In- stead of dispersing the effect through many small beds the main tulip beds are larger and are built around e few strong colors tt'itlt other lesser colors to provide accent. The effect achieved is so striking that it has caught the eye of everyone who has visited the capital city dur- ing tulip time, The Canadian who visits Ottawa during tulip time can see approximately 200 varieties of tulips, some in beds of 70,000, set against the background of Ottawa's famecl parkways, pub- lic buildings and pack.s, The Canadian 'Tulip L'estivid has been started this year be- cause the Ottawa Board of Trade feels that the eily's magnificent tulip displar belongs to all Can- adians, It is expected that. through the years, the Tulip Fes- tival will become as famous as the Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington. Tulip Festival • Magnificent Sight Th)., hast annual Canadian 'Tu- lip Festival is to be held at Ot- tawa this year, May 16 to 24. With 750,000 bulbs to provide a magnificent display—unpara- Heled on the North American continent — the citizens of the capital city want Canadians from far auci near to share in the en- joyment of this unique floral spectacle. It 1S not only the number of tulips on display that make Ot- tawa's showing unique, but also their setting in Canada's capital city and the method by which they are displayed. This meth- od., as used by the Capital's Fed- eral District Commission, is veil- ed a "fiowiug mass display," All the fundamental principles of design -> harmony, contrast, repetition, sequence and balance — are brought into play to H RON ,16'"✓ LES INGE,R _FARM Oa'eted.otit,e G Clary.¢ Last wet'k 1 heti a kg. ler from a friend that ended this way -- "Why does everything happen to • us?" The writer had good reason for asking that qac/tion as her fancily 8eeln8 to have more than its share of trouble of various kinds. hung after I had read lie letter the query elm had raised remained in 111) Mind ant. I wondered Ilett many of ur. in our own time. have asked the Mune Ihing--and generally in connection with family problems, from 88181,11 none of n:: escapes-- Sic•lates•.. aer'idetlts, (Mandel iicullie . or quite often 0 00111- bintttion of all three, for it W011 Id seem that trouble never curates singly. Often it 18 enc thing after another and tee think. even if we don't sac it "Why does everything happt.n to us?'' -Isn't that right, friend:'., haven't you, mors•. Lhru, ot1r,:, had occasion to ask 1110 very syn' urine" But supposing Lady Luck has surlcd epee or--.:upposiog the thing, w eourod about never happened the hived one who wae ill made t ic.nwr, ibl ueove.tt: the luck n Form help was. euddeat- 1y solved L•.• the rotten of a man who iled worked fur tent : ape: Oe 110t3'"ine 'tet unodsttic n 88118et relieved iv] a a 11rac ulotts way by an ober to those who shared uul' )lone Art nut tvpec'ted legacy might ,s •n have come .our way --or I,. l haps, we hit it lucky en a 11(11i,1 prograrrune' Or it could be that same member of our lam • - Ily eseapxd unhurt in an at.!it - mobile accident. Now 1 w011080, when good, hien ad of bad luck, corms our way, do we atilt say to oureeives_ r Wily does ever.e- thing happen to tier 1 venture to mime that few of us even tllinlc of asking such a question under those conditions We talo.- it all for granted and go merrily on 1(111' way", Such illogical creatures as moat of LIS are! But then, we aro aro mere in- consietent than the weather. T'tt:re we ani, alter an almost snowless winter. •that is, in Ontario's ba- nana belt -.ready and anxious to get on with oto• outdoor spriug chores, and what sort of weather do we get? Snow, of all things . and alrong, told, north -wast ISS'[IE 19 --- 1953 winds, Too cold and roughs to work outside with any degree of pleauu e --or even inside with- out files or furnace. In fact we might well say with Samuel Cole- ridge --"The spring comes slowly up this way', Or is it that we are a little previous. in our an- ticipation of its corning? Most of us looked for an early spring. but. as so often happens, our expec- tations tell short, Yesterday, for iuntattce.-.such a cold, miserable day—not much chance of visitors, we thought. But, by three o'clock we had a party of four. and, while I was. getting tea for there, three more arrived, Today, Monday, we have ex- tra jobs to do. Right now, a mart is at the barn dehorning a couple of heifers. Ayrshire cattle grow such wicked horns. You would think, after years of domesticity, cattle would stop growing horns —like the Polled Angus. horns are not only a menace to farmers but also a menace to the cattle themselves. A cow, nearing calv- ing lime, can receive injury by a bossy stable -plate, a little too busy with her horns. And what those same horns can do to a fence hell funny. Sonu'litrles we et) vlupµthe 31/048111 of 11001: when tlse calves at'e little and some- times we (will. if WC have a fun of ee vera) bull calve In 8111198• 81011 WO Ilitett lost the habil by the time a heifer calf comes along. Another ,lob on hand for today is an eloetrical checkup, We find that switch boxes down the barn gradually get choked with dust and chaff, and when this becomes damp, through humidity. or by repeated freezing and thawing, a short eircuit will sometimes result eo we try to get ahead of the game if we can, 11; is often quite a job to find an electrician who isn't too busy for these small jobs so when we do get a man here I generally have a job or twit lined up for him myself. This time it is an outlet in my little office --at present I have ex- tension cords trailing across the floor because my room is the back half of what was one big room when the hoose was wired. I re- member when the wiring was done the electrician said --"Don't ever be afraid of having too many outlets—and 1'11 guarantee that no matter how many T put in you will still find, as -time goes on, that you haven't enough." the was right, there were 45 outlets to sj,art with—and we are still adding to that number., Some people do little odd electrical jobs like that themselves- but in our. family no one feels he knows enough about the work to do a safe job. For which I am very thankful, t would rather we paid to have a job done by an expert than have it bungled by an ama- teur. Far better to be sate than sorry, HIS FUNNIEST Jimmy "Schnozzolti" Durante thinks that the funniest line he ever had in a show was from a scene of "Jumbo," the Rodgers - Hart - Hecht extravaganza that Billy .Rose produced in the Hip- podrome in 1936, Durante ap- peared upon the stage with a mammoth elephant in tow, sup- posedly stolen from a circus owner who was holding out on 'Jimmy's back salary. A constable stopped h i m and demanded, "Where did you get that ele- phant??" Durante, the picture of outraged innocence, answered, "What elephant?" "That was such a wonderful line," recalls Jimmy, "that even the elephant busted out laughin' a couple time a week,' Al. one performance the ele- phant. named Tuffy, forgot that 11e had been house-broken. Dur - ante sent the audience into hy- sterics by exclaiming. "Hey, Tuffy, no ad Jibbing." Ok"I' IN THE S'.t'IS,1.X Nit;f'J,' Al the University of Wwl's'ushu, three scientists 111Sisi00 they heard core growing Cite warm, quiet night in August. in the middle of a 100 -acre : urnlleld owned by the university they set up equipment to meaty: c the wind and temperature and then started recording all sourds on a tape recorder. Later. they played the record back. Be iden- tifying all other sounds picked up by the recorder, the scientists —an agronomist, a meteorologist and a science editor — picked out the sound made by growing corn, Couldn't be anything else. Experts say corn grows mostly at night, sometimes as much as two to five inches a night. And, apparently, with a snapping, crackling sound. SPLITTIN1 And the RELIEF iS LASTING For fast relief from headache get INSTANTINE- For real relief get INSTANTINE. For prolonged relief get INsl'ANTINEI 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 INsraa'nNE to bring you quick comfort. INsTANTINS is made like a pres- cription or three proven medical ingredients. A single tablet usually brings fast ;ellen Get Instantine today and always keep 11 handy n 12 -Tablet Tin 2.3{ Economical 48 -Tablet Bottle 750 NOIC Another, Success re -f Ire frau JAM UPSIDE-I2OWN SHORTCAKES Combine 1. tbs. sold batter, 1 f c. thick jam, i. tbs. lepton juice and, if desired, !;; c. broken nut- meats and divide between 6 greased individual baking dishes. Mix and sift twice, then sift into a bowl, 1.?t2 c, once -sifted pastry flour (or Li;j c. once -sifted hard -wheat flour), 3 tsps. Magic Bak- ing Powder, ? tsp. salt, le' tsp. grated nutmeg and ?; e. fine granulated sugar. Cut in finely 5 tbs. chilled shortening. Combine 1 well -beaten egg, rz c. mill: and ,I/2s tsp. vanilla. Make a well in dry ingredients and add liquids; mix lightly. Two-thirds fill prepared dishes with batter, Bake Ina moderately hot oven, 375°, about 20 minutes. Tuan out and serve hot with sauce or cream. Yield -.6 servings, • tett r6tGRA3tr attaeratCldFa]vPeZtrEx-Otatl: ~'•'—� here: a new tate i 1.111 for you.-,itot try cur N S A I cORN SYRUP „t tt on your cereal nm-m!Gooc , 'Oa Nriql: !: d 11111A1..: rZ;1 k"A /rigs/,r l 1 .1 .1 i eeee