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The Seaforth News, 1952-06-19, Page 2ANN*: 14IRST 11, tirondy atm/144A, --d "Dear Anne Hiret: • We've- been fttarried a Year, and I'm bored with toy 'husband, • We went together 011 through school. Now I don't kat w whether I love: !rim or not. "We both work, and 11'ove my job ... Re- cently a young IIl A n Cantle to work there. and I can't get him rut esf aty iltind, IIe is single and has no girl, lie !nom t anode a pass at nae, hut I'm nervous, and I can- not sleep for thinking of hint, "1 know say 11tt6':antdl l.,sce ale dearly, This would; crush Iaim. He Is handsome and popidar; I'm at- tractive, and we ti4 have good times. "I've always had good t!mrs•- and ally own was, Laately, I want this ratan near me. Don't tell ine to give up my job --1 won't. "Can you analyze my feelings? - Please .try, R, G," PLAYING AT MARRIAGE? * Isn't it time you grew up.' * \•tau are not a girl any more. * You are a wife. married to a * man who i, devoted to you. Be _` an honest wife, * Loyalty is the ars; require- * stent in marriage. - Wanting to * he with another man is not be- • ing loyal, and this or.e.• you do * not even know. What you feel • i$ physical attlaetion—ani that It's Smart/ R4816 ShES / 12-20 'y- . 44.4 YOU \CANT that tiny -waited look—and here is the dress to give it to you! Bodice -back wraps to front, a smart feature and an easy - to -fit detail Shirred bodice, grace- fully pleated flared ekirt 1 Fabric suggestions: eali.i color or printed —cottone or rayons. .Patters: R4Slri Mis Sizes 13 14, 16,- d6, 2O. Size 16 takes 47s yards 35 -inch .s:'ries This pattern easy to use, sins - pie ee ^ -tlr ft. Has cit., ructions. Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS 1n coins cannot be acce tc-: f^t1:is eattere. Print ntainly SIZE. NAME, ADDRESS STYLE NUMBER. BOCK 1, 123 Eigh• truth -Ne..• 1t'-,... „ Ont. ecus be enervated away from hint. * It you- refuse to leave your job, theft tontine yottr eotiver- "` satiotls strictly to business, But * don't he deceived. Exposing • one's self to temptation is not * safe fur a spoiled girl who has * always had her own way. * This is pro?aatbly .only a pose- * ing infatuation. But ask your- self these questions: * How much does your marriage * nteatt to you: Have you no. * thought if not in deed; This is * your first temptation, I expect * and !tope. !Beware how you * meet it. * Your husband may not be as exciting to you as he was, but * he could be thrilling again, if you renumber your courtship. days and exert your charms- instead of iuduiging hi impious fancies of another Tran. Hasn't it occurred to you that Marriage is not p r ins • ea h y for one's own 'happiness? It • means living for somebody else, trying to please him, being 'twill- ing to make any sacrifice to keep hint contented. So far, you haven't had to stake- any, have you: Suppose your husband told you tonight that- he had fallen " for another girl , Dare you tribe with his devotion? HALL THEY MARRY Dear Anne Hirst. For nine mottle( I've been going regularly with a tine man. I sin deeply in ave. I'm convinced he loves me; to livets'nearby, and never goes vith anyone else, Anti he shows tow '''e feels in other ways, too. "He is 44, I'm 220. Friend, tell no he is too old for tile. "1 can't agree. I've gone with loyt my age, but I never did get long with Breda, He and I have sever had a funs yet. [le says I'm asy to get along with, and would lake a man a good wife, (I trope '11 turn out. to be his,! by keeping '•\Chat do you think: li the roan. has not proposed, * why the rush to decide:—Unless, ii on intend to refuse hitn, you want to stop dating him now, His generalities are all very fiat- " tering. but it may be that you * have become a halals, and a colt• t•enient habit with hint. As to your ages las 1've said ' _' 50 often! a good marriage de- • pends largely on habits and tem- * perantenu• You are obviously " mature for your years, he may be young for lu;. It is smart to re- • nemher, however, that when you -are in your prime he will be a slowing down, and not enjoy- * ing lift as actively as you w•iil • want t4. If you, a married woman, are at- tracted by another man, keep out of his way. Be wise—avoid temp- tation. Anne Hirst will tell you how, if you write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St„ New Toronto, Ont. Legendary Bird The goat -sucker. or nightjar, is a bird around which a number cd legends hat e been woven. The ancient; believed it sacked goats at night; afterward:, the goats dried np at:„i lost their sight. The narwhal is called "sea 0nth corn” because of the Iong spiral and ered tusk that gorws from its upper jaw. This is sometimes as long as ten feet. It purpose has never iecen determined. Ironically, the tusk is often fashioned into a harpoon used in the hunting of these s,.a animals, The physical conformation of a calf :noose makes it almost imaos- sible for hint to eat off the ground (without 1 r.eelieg down. CROSSWORD PUZZL ACItoss 1, In behalf c' 4. Masculine 8. Pretense 12, Devoured 18, Ac)<noar'edxe. 14, Stern 7 a, Prnneun 16. Agreeable 17. Toward shelter IS Le rn2 room 20. tar, -,nosh Iree serrettp Ireland 27.Sttteh tad 27. Thiel: 30 Turn 7nhrluit 18. Anndvit 84..0 lrmehyir fuel 8s. Dillverni 87, Slllaai.;a:r 39, Seen 40. Buyer r[:, 1 40. }Titter 48 rimed f7 Spring t 44.3-), t:' Met wren a9 i ,S^ hum min :;blr4 DD. a og::Alt s1 fdae'i. n8 Secure 52, Pinta!". dock 64, Tide - 55 Pathe - !Farr Power 1. Ita.,a, r Masculine came 8. r17:es book 4. Iiearrnlp fee -, t.rcenp 6. Plac- F_rrale steer :4. Piece cut t 87re .-51 i_ten 5. 14 unat _ y1. 'Jr, O:(. ). F.,,I. as y Anuenduge 15 1i2, rte ^er",.^-1.. Par: of to- . 1'aer?-ewe: un tP*' 39. Rent ;in ! w t _ O.Pu e9- 24. urge 41, b7atall bit .o Ore ot DAY1.41 I 42. Vex • et rnm-'s 44. 'lab eland f of cat ton 45. At any t !! gauze 48 Trorira: 22. r'e-,i• eel -ion of trslt • ornocro. 48. sang renal 2 3 4 e i 6 9 0 11. 14 15 8 Ai 17 20 lk 25 30 34 a 7 4t 1d 18 41 53 53 3' 41 3s 33 e 44 27 25 19 .49 4. 51. 5 Answer Elsew (ere on This Page Sink Saves Steps—This kitchen sink, located In the middle of the room, will save many steps for the housewife, say its sponsors. Central location of the sink leaves more room for other kitchen appliances, and provides a centrally located work -table, On dis- play at a plumbing convention, it has already been tested in actual home use. RON ICLES IN6ER FAR r ,vo!,,lcr;,- ' D Cle,rke 1 had been listening to the radio and heard that oat in the west there was snow, Snow , . at the end Of May , , , impossible. It was 70 degrees around here. Then I -looked out of the door. Scattered snowflakes were drifting :by. At the edge of Our gravelled drive, where green grass held it in check. there was definitely a thin bank of Snow. "This is ridiculous" 1 thought, as I stepped out to get the car. Anil then the mystery was explained. Tic ridge of snow on the ground was dully - white down from the dandelions, The falling bakes were snore down, driven by a stilt west wind. Seen from the house no one would have believed it wasn't snow. I have never seen anything like it before. I called Partner's attention to it -- it was also his first experience with thio type [ t 'snow". 1 am quite sure it would have startled and deceived anyone who saw it as we saw it, The dandelion crop has been extra heavy this year, or per- haps atmospheric conditions nad something to do with the way the light doe,n stayed around. It is still there on the drive but not as noticeable as it was at first. In one way it has been quite a nuisance. As sure 115 i start working with green paint the wind gets up and hefore I know it my green pain is decorated with dandelion fluff. I ant leaving the final coat until all the down- has drifted away. \Verb the cow- are out to pas- ture. Such bawling you never heard. We have a small piece of good pasture at the back of the house which Partner thought would suit our bossier very nicely until their feet acre used to outside con- ditions. Itut the rows thought otherwise. This wasn't their pas- ture field—not this pokey little piece of ground! So every time they saw Partner cross ti:c yard they started to bawl. After two days of it Partner was somewhat annoyed. "R -ell;' he said to the cows, "if ycu don't know good pas- ture when you see- it. get up in the back field and stay there:" So he opened the back gate and let then go. Now the cows are }sap- py—but not so the one heifer that is with then!. Last year .this heifer was running with the young cattle who graze on different pasture. A few weeks ago, after having her first calf, Dora was promoted to the company of the cows. Fitt - Ltora doesn't want to he with the old eo;:s—she warts to he with the youngsters and have fun. So she roams along the fever a11 by her- self and gazes longer!, over to- ward- the other - sturc atal bawls ' In:-tiiy 10 itrr olti error -::'alts. But they'• n,: we-rying- They still hr: r:- • i of corn; an . So t.00r. ton fk� Laor. Rawls and bawls, and her b: -wiling goes - unheeded, So -there. naw friends. you have a ,a,n- - pie of bovine psychology. Well, Partner and 1 l''4v4 lust come home after ria' ng a rros.s- counn•y tour of r'1 pee.tion We can't warn our own crops -grow this ye ar, 8111ce w•e i.,irell't any, so we hawe 1.14 get 0.111 1.. see what the re,ct of tiid Fart....rst e (!Sing. \\C tra'.lied the h,.41Ioays ark'; -byways in three tow::—laps, 0e. ' one toad ( ( Ind ringMttlrt rl _-.ire pi.easmt ht.. p•;iLa fam sttiu he- t roba aft r•t_ed1 rdl ,arnI \e t 44411' crop, 410 were stood i and ,11te that were not 1, rd,o - on low-lying laud t: car yellow through excessive moisture. Hay crops were not too promising; wheat fair to average. But of... course. with the country so green everything looked beautiful. R e both like to get around the country in this way. We like to watch the changes that different ownership has made to various afrnts. We passed the home -farm of a young fellow who is very mach in the news these days and the noticed a group of young people looking over his cattle. We saw the old farmhouse where we lived for one summmer. when we first came to Ontario. It has been remodelled since then and all the old trees in the orchard have been cleared away. 'I'o us the house and its surroundings looked very bare. but now the place is less wooded the new owners probably won't find snakes in their bedrooms as eve did occasionally. Snake,, in the bedroom didn't exactly appeal to me '51 any time but after all you have to sacrifice a few prejut'ices if you want a truly rustic old-world setting. The creek. was still there—different owuersltip hasn't changed it at all. Ever -lowing streams rarely change unless the hand of man diverts their course. I watch the sparkling water gurgling over the stoney creek -bed and- I thought of Tennyson's "Brook"—"Men may come and men may go, but I go on forever," And to, apparently. does the Twelve Mile Creek. A Unique Church ltniqur among all the old meet- inghouse:, and churches of (Massa- chusetts is tide First Parish Meet- inghouse, commonly called the "Old Ship," at Hingham. The Old Ship is the oldest church building in New England; the oldest wooden one and the oldest in continual use in the United States. Architecturally it stands: alone, the one example of this primitive type which has been restored to its Original condi- tion, , The Old Ship, the second meet- inghouse built by the First I'arisli in Hingham, stands on the slope of the hill above Main Street, - Reasons for the name would seem to be sufficiently obvious. It was built by ship carpenters, and the heavy knees and other curved timbers of tide roof certainly sug- gest the frame of an old wooden :hip. Trees were felled near by, by members of the parish, and in addition some of the timbers in the first little building were used in the new one. The original structure was built in 1651. In 1730 the extension for the west gallery was made, and in 1755 that on the opposite sidle, It was at this tine that the remark- ably high pulpit and the first box pews were built, in place of the crude wooden benches used for the first 75 :cats, We suppose it was for use on this pulpit that the "red relt•et pulpit-cnchion and case" :;ere obtained from the "New Brick" meetinghouse (the "Cock- erel") in Boston, • in exchange for six -cords of woo•l during the hard winter of 1772 , , . The first English visitor to Hing- ham, as far as is known, teas Cap- tain John Smith. After taking part in the Jamestown settlement, - be had returned to England; and in. 1614—six years before the Set Clement of Plymouth --he wet cho- ten by a company of London mer - ants to h,'ii tin expedition to New England. I4,,aclting laud with his .hips ntnr gonhegan Island, ? the Maine coast,tte followed the shor` - southward with eight "tett in a small -boat and entered Cohasset herhoetr,--From "Clulr- cites of Old New England," by George Fronds Marlowe. i'isose Musk Oxen - DON'T Smell Musky I The -tusk ox is not an ux and there is nothing musky about it, "it smells good." This -informa- tion which rests on the authority of Mr, John J. Teal, might at first glance seem to be of value only to a prospective contestant on a radio quiz show, but 51 r. Teal Itas a much more serious interest 113 tete matter. hluslc oxen, he is almost sure, can be domesticated. He is planning an expedition to Ellesmere Island to bring back eight calves and prove his theory on 'what Toynbee would call the challenging terrain of the New England states. Mr, Teal is an American anthro- pologist and arctic explorer, and he is trot alone in his belief that the musk ox may 60111e day be -led into its stall, Vilhjabnur Stefans- son, in his "Arctic Manual,' coat - siders domestication to be at the very least an attractive possibility. Stefansson quotes Peary, who tray be sure to have been quite hungry at the time, as saying that musk ox meat tasted better than tloincs- tic beef, The flesh of an old bull musk ox may taste a bit musky, but •this, according to Stefautsson, is also true of old seals, old car- ibou and old domestic sheep. Musk ox milk is of about the consistency of commercial light cream 'and -has a flavor similar to that of Jersey milk, .Even in its wild state the musk ox has an un- usually large uti11< yield and is po- tentially an excellent dairy animal. On these two counts then, meat and milk, the musk ox, if anion - able to reason, could rival the cow. But it could go further 111511 that. The word mink ox is a ntisounlcr, the animal is really half way be- tween the COW and the sheep. Like the sheep it yields an abundance of fide textured wool. This tutex- ploited natural wealth is shed in the spring and rifts idly over the tundra of Canada's Arctic Islands, But the musk ox may not take too kindly to the experiments. 1t has already been tried with un- certain success by the Norwegian Government at Spitzbergen and by the United States Government on 111nnivak Island in the Arctic, Musk oxen haze very good reason to fear human beings; against al- most any other animal they are practically invulnerable. Unfor- tunately for it the musk ox had perfected its means of defence be- fore its ingenious neighbor invent- ed the bow and arrow. The animals form a sort of Maginot Line, or rather circle, The great bulls face outward, shoulder to shoulder and the weaker members of the herd find adequate security in the centre. Protected by their shaggy manes, their low slung horns and their powerful forelegs the bulls can make short work of their four -legged enemies. But they present a standing target to the hunter and only strictly en- forced laws have saved then from extinction. This Maginot mentality- might sem to indicate that musk oxen are none too adaptable to a chang- ing environment, But Mr, Teal is convinced that he can win them over to domesticity and if he does it may well he as he says "the greatest contribution to agricult- ural economy since the tasting of the cow," - Waggling Bees 11r, Kan'l von I'riseh, professor at the University of Munich in (lerinany said: "Bees talk, Idialt smell as well as hear." The professor paused to let this sink in, 'Then he enlarged on the subject, "!lees 110 not speak, of course," he said, ""They waggle. They have different waggles for different things. They have two bane topics of conversation: One is foot. When a bee locates nectar, by- a r'ecta'l number of waggles per minute, it tell, the home folks exactly. hoiv far They will have to travel 1 t also waggles in the direc- tion of the nectar." The professor then talked about fish. "`They smell food in the water,' he said, 'They elm hear, too, Once we pttt a student in an aquarium tante and played a violin. He didn't hear it, but the fish did, There is one species of t•rsh, tete knurrhalul, that almost talks. The male makes. a soft growl. it's a signal. The female ldnurritalut hears it and comes to . hints -Then he stops growling.' to Fully. Installed ,n your own, home or cottage, a complete Sewe9e Disposal System for rural districts elo running water required Moderoye Cost, budget terms Write or coil fee tree folde. and oil information ingrown i lees iga.Us Man /1s renevea pain metanh9- tum rornavhn merowit porion of nail le a rrw apnliearone 1116 WART FIX Guaranteed romrd% r„- trot N:,re tut children. :Se CORN FIX Removes cures and entnue,e It It' mitt uteri tanarllllleed Rvmedx. 75c. At your druauinl or sent umtimid ns - F. THOMPSON 1 ORCHARD CRESCENT TORONTO 18 ONTARIO siftwarlirm SEDICIN tablets taken according to directions is a safe way to induce sleep or quiet the nerves when tense. $1.00 Dru • Stores onl 1 or Seddon Toronto 2, Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking ISSUE 25 — 1952 e707,424,e4/ vaanwor Raised light and tender with new feast DRY Yeast! -. * There's a new twist in doughnuts — a new thrill in all your baking! Say goodbye to perishable yeast — Fleischmaun's Fast Rising Dry 'Yeast keeps hill strength:ieidl you.use it—fast-acting when you use it. Get a dozen packages — it keeps in your cupboard! D Scald i2 c. milk, % c, grtunt- latedd sugar, 1t%1 tsps. salt audd 1•st c, shortening; cool to lokeu•artn. Meantwhile, measure into a large bowl 1!1 c, lukewarm water, 1 tsps granulated sugar; stir until sugar is dissolved. Sprinkle with 1 en- velope Fleischntann's Fast Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10 minutes, THEN stir well, Add cooled milk mixture and stir ing well -beaten eggs tuu11 tsp. vanilla. Stir in 2 c, once -sifted bread flout; beat until 51000411, 'Work in 21/4 e, (about) once -sifted bread flour, Knead on lightly - floured board until smooth and elastic, Place its greased bowl and grease top of dough, Cover and set m a warns plate; free from draught, Let .rise until doubled in bulk, Punch down dough nod roll out lute a rectangle 1 ,thiel.; loosen dough; roll spin to t,” thickness, Cut into scraps 7" )(Mg and 1.," wide Vold strips i11 halt trust, then pinch ends tout hrl Arrange, DOUGHNUT TWISTS well apart, on lightly -floured cookie sheets; grease tops, Cover and let rise until doubled in bulk, Carefully lift, a fete at a time, into shortening that has been heated! to 365'1— hot. enough to brown a cube or clayoldl bread in 60 seconds, When under•sidles are browned, turn and cook second sidles. Care- fully lift front fat and drain on absorbent paper. Coat with a mix- titre of fruit sugar and cinnamon or brush hot. doughnuts Ivitit the following syrup: Ifeat, stirring until the sugar dissolves, 1 1. granu- lated sugar, 1.•s c. butter (11 mar- garine end to c, water; simmer 15 mins., thus stir in 1 asp, vanilla; keep hot over boiling water if syrup hewers too sugary, stir in a little boiling water and ]scat to boiling point. Yield -9 toren dolighnnla, Noir: 17nn•'?1 tool, be Cut with nit orthodox douglonsl cutter; fry the dau3;.hntrts and 1111! "hoWA", erenetreater eeaa9 Mereareermmbraapeterrat A' p66¢yr e.,