The Seaforth News, 1950-01-12, Page 6A.9k 7,01,0 Mewls
to afternoon tea
ANN€ ttwT
"ihar Aute Hirst: My problem
is difiet•ent. 1'nt 20 years old, and 1
am interested in marrying. I make
friends easily,
but when I ash
girls for a date
they begin utak.
ing excuses.
"Put six feet
tall: with blue
eyes, wavy black
hair, and (not
r o nn pliuteuting
Myself) older
people say 1'tn nice -looking. I have
no bad habits, 1 have a fairly good
job. I've a good personally and love
to [take friends. and most of all, 1
lute to buy nice illrnhshiugs for lay
home. ,:
"l)f cmnr,e there are alttays some
girl: waiting for the question, But
I ant very particular about the girls
1 choose to gr, out with. I want m
ge married,. 1402 waste Illy time on
8,m4e silly girl,
... -7101A roe;
"om„thing really .pe td': alar!
:x',•11 new canal has a wirk wide
foliar, and duen 1
hl utg np runs .I'ite
skirl i, a beauty too, w 'Ili a .,t,',•.
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pi dinstratc.I ir,strurli,ul..`
TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
I startle,. [1111.'101 he
R..,t,fr,l' for this pattern. Print
plainly SIZE, NAME. ADDRESS,
STYLE NUMBER Ir, H,,, f. 123
l.;• t..,. ;n1I, , 9,rn 'I "cont., pat.
m
"What's you answer?
BLUE }YES."
C71RC'l:
* I am sorra' that I cannot give
* personal interviews any mora, or
* it might be easy to answer your
problem,
* Something is wrong with your
" approach to the girls you want to
* date. It obviously is not your ap-
* pearance--unless you are one of
* these modern yolutgsters who
think it smart to forget g'arter's,
* leave their shirt -collars open, and
* 4o without ties. Or whose clothes,
* however smart, are not properly
* pressed, nor shoes shined to a
* high polish,—Or whose skin, hair
a and hands show neglect.
• Where can the (rouble lie?
* Are you careless in your speech?
* Think it's sophisticated to swear
* now and then? (Nice girls will
shun you) Do you swagger about
a bit? \\'ith all these physical and
* economic[ advantages, that world
* be a temptation.
Are yon the kind of lad whom
• girls would be proud to introduce
* to their parents?
• I)o yen! boast about who eau
• are, or your job.
* Do yen love, to talk about sour -
self
* Do con air your .opinions un-
* asked?
* Are 301) a good da 'Wel.?
* Du you ask for date as a favor,
* Err make thegildsfeel you think
* you are God's gift to wadleu?
" Are you popular with other
* boys, or do yott feel yourself
superior and assume alt arrogant
* manner( I \\ Ity don't yon ask one
* of the boys (here he thinks you
" fail s ith the girls?i
* ('heck each of these questions.
".If you are honest with yourself,
" you ata., find the answer.
" Remember that girls like to be
deferred to. They expect good
* manners in a young man. They
* like to Lr consulted as to places
* T11.1.1. wail to go. '(het' enjoy
` rollplintent•. but they expect
' thein to be sincere. Petting on
short arquamtau,e offends them:
* kisses are prerimn6 and saved for
* tried and true friends.
* h take it for granted that you
' attend church. That you are not
* a "wolf." That you don't try to
* pick up strange girls. .\nd .that
* }on show in everything inn say
-
d
and do, that yon think gals are
• worth all Sour thought aneffort
" to please Them.
* Ponder on these farts, and yon-
* y on will not be lonely long.
* duct yourself accordingly, 1 think
1
" (Me warning: Don't rush into
' marriage. 1 'ew young men marry
I their first swlethea2l. (late a girl
J* for 1l m lis or a year Or so before
* inn propose: it tales a long while
l '' to know- a }'oung woman well
eunngh Inbe .sure she i, for yon,
a
We all want to be popular, If we
analyze our faults and correct them,
there's no reason to fail, . Anne
Iiirst has dozens of ideas that will
help, Write her at Box 1, 123 Eigh-
teenth St.. New Toronto, Ont.
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
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Same Boy! Did You Help Save Him?—The horribly starved
European youngster at left above is a living demonstration of
what outside aid means 10 war's >1111oce111 victims'. The chubby,
bright -faced child at right is the same boy fire months after
he was given special care by an agency of the United Nations
International Children's Emergency. (Fund, At first, hoch'- -
building fluids were injected directly into hit; bloodstre3Itu; -
later be was pelt on a carefully -controlled protein and calcitun
diet. Almost 6,000,000 such children have been helped by the
UNICEF, but there are still [Millions who treed aid,
!CIES
RJXRfl
! w adoLin.e P. Ctot,.t k,e
\Veil, by the time this gets into
print C'hrist311110 and New Year's
will be -1 hope --just another hating'
memory, added to those which have
gone before. And, until 1 get myself
organzied so that 1 can pclsunally
acknowledge the letters and cards
which carte to me through the hind
thought of 8011l2 of the readers of
this column, will you please accent
nth sincere appreciation for your
good wishes. \\'Ilea each of you has
your Own Circle of friends io re-
member 1 du appreciate your kind
thought in thinking of oto at all. It
t•ertaiuly gites nm' a mice warm
feeling to know t!' at yyr Kaye reach-
ed this friendly footing.
1133e you got all those Itoely
greeting 'cards- gathered up ready
to put away --or have Son ;mother
use for thou` Perhaps y'rin do as 1
(10 --take time out after the rush and
hustle of the festive season to look
trent over 01322 again and really
enjoy them, 1t seems to me some
loll: get far more out of greeting
cards than others. Fur instance, one
elderly, lady to whom 1 ahyays send
a card, studies every detail in every
card She gels. -so I naturally choose
a card for her very carefully. Afu'r_
wards I always get a "'Phank you"
non', giving me her interpretation of
the design and the greeting, She is
a person with time on her hands
and 1 imagine her Christmas cards
are a real joy to her for several
weeks every year.
Did you know that the very first
Christmas card was produced as far
back as /840? It appears that a cer-
tain l:n i'.I
t. [man b • the name n'
g } d to . t
Henry ('ole tlater, he was knighted)
Wanted some original way to con-
vey greetings to his many friends,
so he commissioned an artist friend
fly the name or Horsley to elesigrl
a special card for hint. It was that
lithographed and printed, and then
coloured by Mand. 't'liis first order
for 1 hi'istmas cards was far a
thousand cards! First of all people
thought it was a crazy notion but
gradually the idea "caught on" and
90011 developed into good business
for some people, as, of coarse; the
cards were very expensive, How-
ever, greeting cards 51(044 beeattle
19,8 elaborate and more popular as
time went 014, although, as you may
latae noticed, fashions change, even
in rands In the Victorian era cards
were very ornate, even to silk fring-
es and ribbons. 'l'llen male the
"frosted caul, -the frost effect be-
ing 530dnrrd by crushed glass __re.
member thein:Front England the
idea- of sending greeting cards
spread to the Rnropeau continent
blrthy that time thequality of the
cards had deteriorated considerably,
In 1874 a Boston manufacturing
company started the Christmas ea•d
industry in the 1'.S,A,.-bringing out
cards with a high artistic quality
but with scenes that often had noth-
ing to do with Christmas, However,
soon after the turn of the century,
t'hrfstnnes cards became really
Christ Massy •--• with show scenes,
Nativity pictures and holly attd
evergreen designs. It is also to the,
1 •S,A, that we have to say thank
3011 for picturing the cherry p0ins
set1ia es typical of the Ynlctidgj
season, Another` American i,mala*1
ti0u Was the matching envelope roc
each card, which is just ab0nt the
handiest thing that ever was ,
with that you will agree if y ntt.
have ever had the experience of buy:
lug cards and then hunting envoi••
o4lao, ea kaiak than• Disk as I va
nleur0er w c had to d0 not 40 very
many years 5,'511,
Another thing which probably. did
a lot to popularize the exchange of
greeting card, at least, in the Old
t 13iitr:—was the adoption of the
Penny Post in Great Britain which
first came into force on the birth-
day at the .Prince of Peace in 1855,
Sending' ('lu•lsunas cards must hare
been at expensive business previous
to thin date.
So there y1,11 are, friends,—that,
briefly, is the ,tory of tihe origin of
the Christmas greeting card, And
I am sure if you think of it when
)un are putting away 3011)' cards,
cin will he grateful to Sir henry
'ole, for in soda;: snob a - goad way
of speeding oar the,sagcs of afier-
linll and gl.,ot;)' ill from one 10 art-
othor,
Maybe some.,nc Irk( a brlfn•vtare
im re'.ard to calenda0's—snore of the
calendars are so pretty. I also like
the algtcarancc of this year's calen-
dars for another reason, 1950 looks
s„ laugh better (ham 1949! 1l is not
rnily 11ie beginning of a now year,
it is also the closing y ear of a hall
romnry that has brought us two
world a ars and, let us hope, will
eventually . bring 91)010 the end of
once,+ that 1010uwe4 in their wake,
:The very figures -1950" have a
finisher( look if you know what I
Mean, whereas 19413 tool.* odd and
rangerh, or maybe like a blind road
that leads nowhere. 1 never did like
a grotto of iignres that was tot -
(1t01 ible by a digit maybe just
a Hangover from the Clays when 1
had tr
orb
lei
w Ili arithmetic,
Holy Year
•fn 1300 A.D, the Chutth was let
difficult 411021s. The temporal power
of the Pope was threatened by local
rulers. '('there was a struggle with
the Ring of France over taxation of
ekrh's, 111 that ,year Pope- Boldface
VII I proclaimed the first 'holy
Year of Jubilee, and pilgrims flock-
ed to Rome for prayer and indul-
gences. Holy Years, Boniface said,
were to be held every 100 years;
later Popes shortened the interval,
until in 147-0 Paul 11setit to twenty-
five years,
In Rome, all the morning of De-
cember 241h, the bells of 500 church-
es pealed together. Pope Flus 1'11,
before an audience of Vatican offi-
cials anti distinguished guests, tap_
ped three times on the_Floly Door
of St. Peter's Basilica, The Holy
Year or 1950—tile twenty -filth was
officially begun,
The impart of the 3 ear is to be
primarily spiritnitl-'-a year of re-
dedication and strengthening for the
Church. But it has political over-
tone's, horn of the political struggle
between communism and Roman
Catholicism. In an address on the
Holy Year, .Pope Plus cit11ec1 for a
"return" to the Church of Rome to
oppose "the united front of 011111ant.
atheism," The Jubilee will also show
important ecoflonli2 results. Close
t0 a million pilgrims are expected
in the .11ol}' City.--nhany of whom
will spend dollars,
Frogmen
A new way of making motion pic-
tures of submerged wrecks, subma-
rines, parts of ships, fish and other
fortis of marine life has been devel-
oped by the British Admiralty,
"Frogmen," as they are palled, wear
self-contained breathing apparatus
and weblilco rubber shoes, used fn
the war, and awful like fish without
stirring up mud, so that fish clan be
stalked with cameras, The Frogmen
have taken good moving pictures by
daylight or artificial light deep in
reasonably clear waters
They Argue Over
Clotted Cream
'there's an age-old argument be
twre44 Devon and Cornwall as to
whirl' of the two counties first pro
duced the delicacy known as clotted
cream.
Devonshire claim, the honour, but
Cornwall denies ir, alleging that
Devo mans sninggicd the recipe ac-
ross the River 'Tamar from (orn-
wall 117 the first place.
1ven if this is true C'ornwalI's
e1131311 is not altogether substantiated.
for Cornishmen were taught the
sect els 01 ntakiog scalded cream by
the old merchant adventurers of
\('est Africa who journeyed from
Carthage to buy Cornish tin long
before the Romans came to Britton,
To -day the method of staking it
are essentially,the sante as those that
have been used by the peasants of
North Africa for the past two thous•
and years.
lit the Shallow Pan system -im-
mediately the milk has been re-
moved from the cowshed, and while
it is still Warn!, ft is strained and
heft undisturbed its a cool Place un-
til the cream has risen—for eight to
twelve flours according to the rich-
ness of the creast and the time of
the year.
The milk is tI1en scalded. Simplest
method of doing this is by using two
pans of differest sizes, Thes m 1
alar
pat containing the. cream is stood in
'the larger one and surrounded by
wa ter,
1h1 water is healed 10 a tempera•
tore of 180-190 degrees F. in Witter,
or 185-195 in summmer. This takes
about 35-50 minute;, the length of
the scald being sufficient to cause
the cream to break away slightly
from the sides of the pan.
10 insufficient time is allowed for
the scalding the cream does not ac-
quire the characteristic "Devonshire"
flavour or show the desired crinkled
appearance:
`\'hen the correct temperattre has
been reached, tine pan is left stand-
ing in the hot water for 15-20 min-
utes before being taken to the dairy
to cool,
The time during which the pan
should stand before the steam ie
skimmed off varies with the season
of the year. In summer, sldmming
takes place the, morning after scald-
ing, while in winter the pan can
stand for as long as 36 hours,
The result is a delicacy which,
added to West Country strawberries,
was world-famous before the war,
To visit Devon or Cornwall without
regaling oneself with lashings" of
delicious scalded cream Was un-
thinkable.
(tpr,k+0 ,noun to prevent necking,
No Has -Been — Admirers of
Rosemary ..La Planehe, who
tt:as elected Miss America in
lt)r11, are of She opinion that she
has lost none of her eitartns
,ince than and could still win
''anybody's beauty contest at the
age of 26, ,Standing at poolsida
in Las Vegas, Rosemary flashes
her winningest smile,
By The Rev. R. Barclay Warren
FELLOWSHIP IN THE
EARLY CIIURCH
Acts 2:42.47; 4:31-33 -
°olden Text: "And the multitude
of then[ that believed were of one
heart and of one soul: neither ,;lid
any of them that ought of the
things whist[ he possessed was his
own; but they had all things cunt
mon." Arts 4:32.
No, it hasn't Communism; i.e., 03
Wasn't the brand that is in vogue
in Eastern Europe. It differed in
several importune respects. 'These
people were believers. 'l'Iley had
turned front silt and believed on the
Lord Jesus Christ as their lord and
Saviour. '1'hey worshipped 11iu1.
Moreover, there was no 1oi;isca-
tion in this instance. All siring to
the CW11111011 eattse was purely of.
that'[, - Peer said to Ananias
'Whiles it remained, teas it ilut
thine 0511? Attd alter it (2118 st.dd,
Was it not in thine own power?"
Acts 5:4. Ananias and Sapphila
died, not at the hands of the Christ-
ians, but at the band of Circ. Ole
was angry because they acted as
hypocrites, lying and saying that
they were giving all when They
were withholding a part. They were
the first on record to mat' the beau-
tiful fellowship existing among tire.
believers who had received the
Moly Spirit, sent by the Father.
This sacrificial giving was an in-
tense expression of the warm fel.
lowship of the earl)' Christians.
here was Divine love one for an-
other. But it is important to tote
that there is no command nt Scrip-
ture that this order should be dupii- -
sated today, Believers are to clue
for one another and indeed 'ur- do
good works in behalf of all; to
feed the hungry and clothe the
naked, Bnt it is not evil to pos-
sess property.
The disposing of property 411 -
turned oat for the best. A great
persecution fell upon the disciples
after the death of Stephen and they
were scattered abroad. "('heir laud,
had been sold and the money turned
into good use. The temptation to
deny their Lord was lessened fo>'
they had already made the break.
Spiritual interests were more Portant than material. It should be
that way with us all,
WAKE OP YOUR
LIVERBILE—
Without Calomel—Mid You'll Jump Out e`1
Bed in the Morning Ravin' to Go
The liver should pour out about 2 pints ed
bile !nice into your digestive tract every day„
If Chia bits ie not flowing freely, your food mat'
not digest. It may lust decay m the digestive
tract. Than sea blunts up your demo's.You
get constipated. You feel sour, sunk anthe
world looks punk,
It takes those mrd, gentle Carter's Little
Livor Tills to got these 2 pints of bile flow
eye freely to make you Peel "up and u 't
re[ a paokago today, faft,t tve_W p
bila Jiow freely. A.�k Por Cartm''e Lit(Zen Ltvrt4-
Pala. 302(7 at any drugoWee,
ANIS AM Mir OF
ff E ff E's
,omFoiiQuicif
And oh,
RELIEF iS LASTING
There's ono thing for She headache
> , . the musoufar aches and palma
that often a000mpany a cold - .
I6e9TANTu'30. INa5ANTEN21 bring@ really
fast relief from pain and the relief
he prolonged!
±)o got Ister4Nx(N;x and get quick
comfort. INOTANTlN1t is compounded
3(14 a doctor's preitoription of three
proven medical ingredients. Yens 1003
depend on its fast action in getting
relief from ovary day aches and (pains,
headache, rheumatic pain, for neu-
ritic or neuralgic
pair(.
an nastiness' today
.04 always
hasp 11 handy
stantme
I2•Tablet Tin 25I
Economical 46 -Tablet Bottle 6S9yt
. ?Tr Ur: 2 --.. 1950