The Seaforth News, 1950-09-28, Page 6l/
'ITS
'FRAGRANCE
OS SEALED
9N
VACUUM
-47
"Dear Auu, lli in great
• wont We have ti,,: ciiildren and
are expecting :minket, My husband
(echo -is mock elect; has turned
so cold toward m:' -
•'1\ one longs
f r l,,re and rif-
f .etion snore
e woman
in tee condition
I'm in. Ile never
takes Inc any
t: heee. says he
can't afford it.
I 1'.. a ti some
msec stent, but
121 t not getting tee. I don't nag,
tletne11 ir•s hard to eeilet some-
:an:tee
SI . t mstt 1' ,r: vide for
!en .e doesn't -!'•defetand that
ci:i:.;ren tare :sot ;-'tting the
ro .er ,lief for ages,. I -le
'Minh,: things are - . Yet he
,Very idle ,!.‘11,•,.!,11. in the
20,1 , , . gym, or at hall
• 1 I; ^t e a lin place of
:u.' cera. It doesn't _ in much,
every hit I tab x^ .,pend for
.eroccrie, The c:•i'.,!: e ::ori 1 need
turmy things we sh-:i ;;ave, but
we get them tA ,,.!et•er he
docs give me 1:1„art suffi-
cient.
AT TURNING POINT
'•I hist don't i:r.,r; ,,at to do.
'Sometimes I etees e.eveler whe-
e:• he is fin i - ' ,emewhere
ITC has a e d could be
with others oft.t watch
h1tt1, tl : ll:1,
'Maybe your wk..; awakcit
he ever is:seeds t, ewaken.
A LO LL. 'WIFE”
,e Such a Im,"ecu l As yours
" behaves sof i s it l y be-
" souse he is tl:o,u;i'tioie. Ile would
'' not plan to deprive len and the
* children of neceseisie?; he just
* doesn't realize tee high cost of
* lit•ing these days. To wires in
* your situation I ;rine and
* again .4t221 keep a
SKIRT
HAT
4776
SIZES
your
separates m.-1 ,dtic steni-slim
Aria with t d1: r pleats. A
Matching cloche. Wear them with
all types of blots»c.., and jackets(
Pattern 4776: waist sizes 24, 26,
26, 30, 32. Hat, one size, Size 26
skirt and hat, 2 yard; 54 -inch.
This pattern, easy tr., nee, simple
to sett'15 tested for t'1 Iles coin.
plate illustrated met uctie,ns,
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
(23c) fa coins (sts:raps cannot he
accept rU for this pattern. Print
plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,
ST'SSLF', NUMBER..
Send order to Box, 1, 123 Eigh-
teenth Street, New Toronto, Ont.
budget. Then their !lesion( v can
*,see exactly where the 1toley
* gots and 'better appreciate how
4' economical they have bee t,
* Start today keeping track of
every cent you spend. Show it
* to him at the end of the week
* and talk things over. You
4'. should be given a auto of money
* regularly to cover household
expenses and he should save
* some (however Little) toward
* clothes and the other needs of
* his family.
It is not fair that you should
* have to spend all the little you
* stake for food. Haw would he
* manage if your Business failed
* some day' Part of your intone
"' I suggest you put aside for
* amusement—take the children to
a movie when you can, or kr
a Boat -ride or setae other diver-
* sion. Your- husband, too ought
* to -arrange to take you out a
4' couple of evenings a wcelte to
' relieve the monotony of your
* routine 1'1,42 ,many men do not
understand that if they expect
* their wives to stay year:; and
* attractive they must surpiy fre-
ts` quent changes of scene
Your life is bound up in the
* children and hi your work. You
"• need, now entre than ever, rese-
* atiete to keep up your spirit: and
* your health. 1f he gives this a
• little thought, Ire must knew
* how important it -is. He needs
cltanpe, toot but he surele could
save here and there on lis per-
" sonal expcail:turee so you could
share the pastimes that make
4' you laugh together and Iseeorne
* closer companion,.
You net too, daily I t
" cions of hi- affection ,tiee eon-
'" cera. A pregnant womae has
* periods of depression and warm,
* which only her husband's aitec-
* tion, attentions and cheerfulness
* can relieve. If her husband would
* only use his imagination and put
" himself in hie v:ife's p:ace. fie
* would give more freely of i
* thought and time to be 02214
• the devoted, articulate loner his
* wife thought site atarrie..
* Laughter and hav:1,t; fu:: tc-
* •° ter should not cease wnen the
" days of courtslti;J end. They -
"
,;hey" keep •os young. they give us
* fresh courage. They are the hest
* investment any husband tan make
* toward keeping his n•arr1aee
* glowing and permanent.
* 1 hope your husband reads
this today, and plans ,deliberately
" from now on to lighten your
* heavy load. I believe ail he steeds
* is a reminder,
* * r
Husbands can find meat in Anne
Birst's column and come to better
understanding and appreciate all
their wives do for them. Many a
husband has been awakened so his
real place in the home, and has
changed accordingly Write
Anne Hirst at Box 1, 123 Eigh-
teenth St., New Toronto, Ont.
POW'S Mop—At Pusan, South Korea, two North Korean
Army 'nurses. prisoners of war, scrub floors at their Prisoner
of War, Camp.
1 OAS' CLS
�1N�u
�t#1Gwertetol fnct D Ctctrkc
"All is safely gathered in"—and
how gladly we 'sing the song of
harvest home!" After so many
treks of changeable weather; so
many times when we expected our
second threshing would be either
tomorrow or the next day. So many
night, when we wakened to hear
rain beating on the roof, saw in-
cessant lightning and heard the
rumble of thunder—and remem-
bered that some of our grain was •
ant in the field still waiting to be
threshed. There was one morning
when Partner looker) out across the.
sodden fields and said --"One snore
day of rant and what's left of the
crop won't be worth threshing."
But it did rain—and 'rained again.
Partner was wrong—the grain was
still worth threshing, And now—
"all is safely gathered in," We
threshed again last -t1'eduesday—
our final threshing for the year—
end all the bins are full and half
the granary floor. The trop turned
our far better than we dared to
!lois,: for.
Thin year's harvest has certainly
bei: a very worrying time for those
dependent on the outcome. Lack of
•help induced so many farmers to
515100e -thresh -thresh instead of putting
their staff in the barn. And when
-roc. many 1'' farmers get that same idea
three:1i::g machines cannot get
are::::' fast enough to keep every-
one s :tided, Even those who com-
bined :heir crops were up against
tilt saute trouble—not enough
cin:hires in the district to meet the
detnend. Those who put their
grain crops in the barn also had
the r. eather to contend with—a
few. nice days with a drying wind
. one day drawing in—and then
rain again, Last week we' had good
weather most of the time. It would,
1 hope, give most farmers a chance
to get their harvest work cleaned
1,p.
4:
And, of course, it all begins
again — sowing fall wheat — and
with it next year's harvest worries.
Conte to think of it, farming is
something like eating things that
you know will bring on an after-
math of indigestion. You eat some-
thing you specially like knowing
full well what the result will be-
2,��� Count
"*�R n SWORD 10. Metal thread
11. Celestial lady
PUZZLE
IC. Malicious
burning
10. Canelo
3. Hwa
!'tt Q:';6Swamp 0.14crpn•nis
Li1e pit ae21, Town In Maine
1.5
4, Fish 4. Bewilder 2. Work out
8. Coca Macro a rat r,, vaeat solos 24.1iny
'2, E Language C, 7rl;c culture 24tin. non p;
11, Ina tine 7. remote ti,cep 20, lenniieh school
14. Single 11.151, 8' Fine ort 30, Nancy.
11, Publication
17, 15014(14 c11111 r.
11. Pnrnse
17. Auto regime
Vert
22. I;ity in lows
r. Fodder pits
e7, Knock.
?2. ittbhed fabric
31. Vegetable
organism,
23. Portant
llscurston
an. wenn
36. star
38. Moving part
21. Ecclesiastical
maria
42, hire
41. Mazar
sharpener
41, lot wndiy
47. Desert nomad
48. Dispossessed
52, Old musical
Instrument
53. Smooth
14, Turkloh title
12. Golf pegs
r8, Dlrectton
11, ltnnndttiNteli
1. logo
1. °ratan
mountain
33, Sun
14,
Th creme
persons
37. Mb to In
40, garments
41. nommen
OA900diment
44. According to
fact
4C, flatlet
42, Light moister
41. Blake leather •
0, Solt
1. Htmpneton
Answer elsewhere on this page,
but you eat it anyway. So what?
Farriers know every day's work is
more or less of a gamble. But
farmers haven't a priority on worry.
Every calling has its own type of
worry—although most of us like
to think we have more than the
other fellow. Nobody has to eat
what they know will give them
indigestion—there is more than one
kind of food available, And nobody
has to be a farmer, or a salesman,
a bank•elerlc or a labourer if he
thinks some other job will suit
hint better.
*
But if you are a woman—and
a farmer's wife—there isn't much
you can do about changing your
job, is there? And why should you
want to anyway? To do a good
job as a farmer's wife is about as
high a calling as anyone could
ask for. And what a difference it
makes to the farmer. Some farms,
along with their owners, have gone
to pieces because the woman in
the case didn't keep her end up. A
bachelor farmer can make a better
go of things than a married man
man with an un -cooperative wife.
It isn't experience that counts in
the early stages, but the will to
work. Experience will come with
the 3 -ears if a genuine interest is
there to begin with. Ifeaven help
the young farmer whose wife lives
on the farm but takes no interest
in crops, Mock or the, weather.
Generally speakilu: the farm is
not the place for playing a lone
hand. There is an inescapable inter-
dependence all along tate line—not
only in the farm family but also
as regards stock and tnachiuery.
Experts claim that a farm cannot
be worked successfully without
cattle to fertilize the ground. Crops
cannot be sown or harvested with-
out machinery. Trucks that will
not start depend on tractors to pull
them until tate spark catches. Yet
tractors themselves often have to
rely on the trusty team when
engines get balky in cold weather.
Poultry being fattened for market
would often be stolen if it were not
for the sharp ears of the farmer's
watch -dog. Bins would be over-
run with grain -nibbling rates and
mice if it were not for the barn-
yard cats. And the poor cows
would get no exercise for their tails
if it were not for the barnyard
flies!
4 1' 4
So there you have it, friends ...
all down the line fanning is a
cooperative business.
DOUBTF'U'L
A doe:tor, attending an old man,
toed -instructed the butler in the
art of taking his temperature.
One morning on arriving at the
house, the doctor ran into the but-
ler.
I hope," be said, "that your
master's temperature is no high-
er?"
"1 w•af just hoping that myself,'
said the butler, t,nl,•mnty, -"Ile died
an horn' nils,.••
STUDY AT HOME
GE DE 2011
With the expert help of Wolsey
Hall Caretspmtdencr• Comeau,
you can now prepare for Senior
Matriculation 10 your own hone
inleisure first while 54,1, tlnlnrtg
day -time employment Personal
attention aesurerl by a staff," of
100 qualified teachers. Low idea,
payable by instalments. Pros.
pectus facr1, fl 1. Clarke, 11,A.,
Director of 5:u'lrrs. ilept. O1i,-l.3
WOL51;Y HALL,
HAMILTON
ISSUE 39 — 1950
0W CAN 1?
Liv Anne A'thley
Q. How can I prevent moths in
my rugs?
A. If the rites are swept occa-
sionally. with a bro,44 dipped fn
welter, to which a little turpentine
has been added, they will not oily
keep bright told chem. but moths
will not infest them. •
*
Q. How can I make tinware rust-
proof?
A. Itub every part of. it with
fresh lard: then heat it thoroughly
before using. It will never rust,
no matter flow much it i<' left in
water.
g, * 4:
Q. How can 1 remove rouge and
lipstick stains from a towel or hand-
kerchief?
A. If the stains do not wash out,
try soaking the spots in milk.
• * 4.
Q. How can I relieve tirod feet?
A. When the 'feet are over -tired,
try exercising theist. tieing a little
cold cream as un ungurlt, hent
the toes, move the anile and rub
the foot under the arch This treat-
ment will be very beneficial.
• * 4.
Q. How can j remove watermelon
stains from linen?
A. By applying ptu-c glycerin to
the spot. allowing it to remain for
a few minutes, then washing.
4, '4 4'
Q. How can I treat the seams
of a garment that are shiny after
ironing?
A. Touch the setons lightly with
a piece of cheesecloth wrung out
cf tepid nater.
4. * *
Q. How can I store quinces?
A. Place quinces carefully in a
barrel, using only perfectly sound
fruit. rill the barrel with water,
fasten on the head of the barrel,
and put in a cool place. If• done
properly, the quinces will keep all
winter,
4: * 4:
Q. Flow can I remove screws
that are obstinate or rusty?
A. Apply a heated poker to the
heads of the screws. \Vhen the
screws have become hot. Lhey can
be removed very easily,
* * *
Q. How can I impart an added
good taste to mashed potatoes?
A. Try adding the well -beaten
white 'of an egg to the potatoes
while whipping them.
* * *
Q. How can I prevent white
str clangs front turning yellow
when washing?
A. Place a few drops of Wpm -
tine in the water ;utd it will prevent
nils,
u 4:
Q. How can I preserve cut
flowers for a longer time?'
A. Add a little cattipltoito the
water in which they stan,t.
Amigo 4§
,049-'S
3
1
01(%1
CO 0
And the
RELIEF is x LASTING
Nobody knows the cause of rheuma-
tism but we do know there's one
thing to case the pain . , . it's
INSTANxINE,
And when you take INSTAPITINE
the relief is prolonged because
INSTANTINE contains not one, but
three proven medical ingredients.
These three ingredients work together
to bring you not only fast relief but
more prolonged relief.
Take INSTANTINE for fast headache
relief too ... or for the pains of
neuritis or neuralgia and the aches and
pains that often
accompany a cold.
Get !intestine today
mad always
keep it handy
12 -Tablet Tin 2541
Economical 48 -Tablet Bottle 690
Upside down to prevent 10' ::ng.
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Answer elsewhere on this page,
but you eat it anyway. So what?
Farriers know every day's work is
more or less of a gamble. But
farmers haven't a priority on worry.
Every calling has its own type of
worry—although most of us like
to think we have more than the
other fellow. Nobody has to eat
what they know will give them
indigestion—there is more than one
kind of food available, And nobody
has to be a farmer, or a salesman,
a bank•elerlc or a labourer if he
thinks some other job will suit
hint better.
*
But if you are a woman—and
a farmer's wife—there isn't much
you can do about changing your
job, is there? And why should you
want to anyway? To do a good
job as a farmer's wife is about as
high a calling as anyone could
ask for. And what a difference it
makes to the farmer. Some farms,
along with their owners, have gone
to pieces because the woman in
the case didn't keep her end up. A
bachelor farmer can make a better
go of things than a married man
man with an un -cooperative wife.
It isn't experience that counts in
the early stages, but the will to
work. Experience will come with
the 3 -ears if a genuine interest is
there to begin with. Ifeaven help
the young farmer whose wife lives
on the farm but takes no interest
in crops, Mock or the, weather.
Generally speakilu: the farm is
not the place for playing a lone
hand. There is an inescapable inter-
dependence all along tate line—not
only in the farm family but also
as regards stock and tnachiuery.
Experts claim that a farm cannot
be worked successfully without
cattle to fertilize the ground. Crops
cannot be sown or harvested with-
out machinery. Trucks that will
not start depend on tractors to pull
them until tate spark catches. Yet
tractors themselves often have to
rely on the trusty team when
engines get balky in cold weather.
Poultry being fattened for market
would often be stolen if it were not
for the sharp ears of the farmer's
watch -dog. Bins would be over-
run with grain -nibbling rates and
mice if it were not for the barn-
yard cats. And the poor cows
would get no exercise for their tails
if it were not for the barnyard
flies!
4 1' 4
So there you have it, friends ...
all down the line fanning is a
cooperative business.
DOUBTF'U'L
A doe:tor, attending an old man,
toed -instructed the butler in the
art of taking his temperature.
One morning on arriving at the
house, the doctor ran into the but-
ler.
I hope," be said, "that your
master's temperature is no high-
er?"
"1 w•af just hoping that myself,'
said the butler, t,nl,•mnty, -"Ile died
an horn' nils,.••
STUDY AT HOME
GE DE 2011
With the expert help of Wolsey
Hall Caretspmtdencr• Comeau,
you can now prepare for Senior
Matriculation 10 your own hone
inleisure first while 54,1, tlnlnrtg
day -time employment Personal
attention aesurerl by a staff," of
100 qualified teachers. Low idea,
payable by instalments. Pros.
pectus facr1, fl 1. Clarke, 11,A.,
Director of 5:u'lrrs. ilept. O1i,-l.3
WOL51;Y HALL,
HAMILTON
ISSUE 39 — 1950
0W CAN 1?
Liv Anne A'thley
Q. How can I prevent moths in
my rugs?
A. If the rites are swept occa-
sionally. with a bro,44 dipped fn
welter, to which a little turpentine
has been added, they will not oily
keep bright told chem. but moths
will not infest them. •
*
Q. How can I make tinware rust-
proof?
A. Itub every part of. it with
fresh lard: then heat it thoroughly
before using. It will never rust,
no matter flow much it i<' left in
water.
g, * 4:
Q. How can 1 remove rouge and
lipstick stains from a towel or hand-
kerchief?
A. If the stains do not wash out,
try soaking the spots in milk.
• * 4.
Q. How can I relieve tirod feet?
A. When the 'feet are over -tired,
try exercising theist. tieing a little
cold cream as un ungurlt, hent
the toes, move the anile and rub
the foot under the arch This treat-
ment will be very beneficial.
• * 4.
Q. How can j remove watermelon
stains from linen?
A. By applying ptu-c glycerin to
the spot. allowing it to remain for
a few minutes, then washing.
4, '4 4'
Q. How can I treat the seams
of a garment that are shiny after
ironing?
A. Touch the setons lightly with
a piece of cheesecloth wrung out
cf tepid nater.
4. * *
Q. How can I store quinces?
A. Place quinces carefully in a
barrel, using only perfectly sound
fruit. rill the barrel with water,
fasten on the head of the barrel,
and put in a cool place. If• done
properly, the quinces will keep all
winter,
4: * 4:
Q. Flow can I remove screws
that are obstinate or rusty?
A. Apply a heated poker to the
heads of the screws. \Vhen the
screws have become hot. Lhey can
be removed very easily,
* * *
Q. How can I impart an added
good taste to mashed potatoes?
A. Try adding the well -beaten
white 'of an egg to the potatoes
while whipping them.
* * *
Q. How can I prevent white
str clangs front turning yellow
when washing?
A. Place a few drops of Wpm -
tine in the water ;utd it will prevent
nils,
u 4:
Q. How can I preserve cut
flowers for a longer time?'
A. Add a little cattipltoito the
water in which they stan,t.
Amigo 4§
,049-'S
3
1
01(%1
CO 0
And the
RELIEF is x LASTING
Nobody knows the cause of rheuma-
tism but we do know there's one
thing to case the pain . , . it's
INSTANxINE,
And when you take INSTAPITINE
the relief is prolonged because
INSTANTINE contains not one, but
three proven medical ingredients.
These three ingredients work together
to bring you not only fast relief but
more prolonged relief.
Take INSTANTINE for fast headache
relief too ... or for the pains of
neuritis or neuralgia and the aches and
pains that often
accompany a cold.
Get !intestine today
mad always
keep it handy
12 -Tablet Tin 2541
Economical 48 -Tablet Bottle 690
Upside down to prevent 10' ::ng.
At0II
V.itt•N21
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Jane Ashley's Crown Brand Recipes FREE
Wella Jane Ashley, The Canada Starch Company Limited,
`• I`. P, 0, Box 129, Montreal, P. Q. co 28