The Seaforth News, 1949-05-26, Page 7As the Girls Go --2000 A. D.
How Girls Wi11 •'Loolk In 2000 A.D.—Maybe—Guitar-ell-um-
Ming
.D:Maybe—Guitar-Strum-
Ming French Amazons parade through the Place Masecna
•daring the famous Carnival of Nice. This was a gay time in
Southern France aid costume designers, called upon for a
peels at the year 2000, treated merrymakers to weird erten s of
the future.
AN NE 141S
"DEAR ANNE HIRST: You
have' helped so many couples, *ease
fell me what to dol I .am 20, married
to .a man 15
years ,older. We
hove .a little boy
two years old.
My husband is
very good to
me. He buys
me almost any-
thing I want,
though he does
•throw it tip to
5rte the newt day. He wants to sit
home night after night, and he
never takes nae anywhere but to a
show .and hon'te again.
"Seven weeks ago, my girl friend
and I went out dancing. I met a
boy of 24, and we both fell in love.
We have been seeing each other
dour or five times a week, and
every time we meet our love grows
stronger. I can't sleep without see-
. ling him in my dreams, and I can't
eat without seeing him across the
'table. We want the same things in
life. Please help mel
AN UNHAPPY PERSON.
PASSION vs. LOYALTY
YOU MUST INDEED be an
* unhappy person. You are deceiv-
* ing a husband who trusts you,
• you are betraying the sanctity of
* marriage—how can any girl with
'tea a•conscience expect to be happy?
* And that conscience will continue
* to make you miserable until you
• put an end to this folly.
You say you and this boy want
* the same things in life. What are
* they? Possession of each other
* first, I expect, and a life made up
* of dancing and good times. Your
* cannot love anyone you have
known for such a short time; you
* are only "in love," which is a
* very different state. No nice
*' young man eau respect a girl who
'* double-crosses her husband, and
* you, in your right mind, would
* not trust a boy who sees a mar-
* ried woman regularly.
* You were wrong, in the first
* place, to go to a public dance hall
▪ with another girl; such an act
* invites pick -tips. Nice girls don't
* dance with boys they don't know.
▪ Of course this boy flattered you
* properly; :and when he saw you
* fell for it, he pursued his course
* to its present wicked stage. You,
* being a married woman and a
* mother, are as mach to blatne, if
* not more. Now you see where
* your weakness has led you.
* You are . married to, a man of
* quiet tastes. He married you be-
* cause he loved you, because he
wanted a home to relax in, a
family to enjoy. What has he
today? A. wife who steps out on
How To Figure
Rope Strength
How nneuly fanners know how
to figure the "working strength" of
rope? How many know how to
figure the "breaking" or tensile
strength of rope?
The breaking strength of• rope
Averages about 23 times its "safe"
or working strength. This is the
"'factor of safety" employed by engi-
neers, which is as low aS two for
• some things slid is43 for Common
Here is, the . setae, or working
strength, formula for rope:
Square the diameter of the rope
In inches and multiply by 200. For
a %-inch rope, this would be
u/
,x200, vi'{0 peunde. FM- 0 s-
,uy�, In952uu, or 200. photuria.
The breaking strength of Yrie
14 -inch rope would be 23x50, or
about 1,150 pounds, The breaking
strength of the 1 -inch rope would
tee 200x23, or 4,600 pounds,
This formula applies to voltam,
manila or hemp ropes.
* him, who violates his faith 'n her;
* You are going to be foui d out,
of course. Then what? Ho v can
* you defend your conduct? I'm
* afraid trouble, and grave 1 ouble,
* is just around the corner.
* Your husband is good to yon.
* If he mentions his gifts, perhaps
* it is because you have not shown
* you appreciate his generosity. or
* because you immediately asked
* for something else. You complain
* that he takes you to a show "and
* home," You want a night club or
* a few hours of dancing. I expect.
* Well, he is tired, and that is not
* his idea of relaxation. If you
* could know about other wives
* who never go out anywhere for
* months at a time, you might
* know how lucky you are.
* I cannot help you unless you
* help yourself, too.
* Do not see this boy again, un-
* der any circumstances. Use your
* excess energy to study your bus-
* band, and make up to him for this
* deceit you have practiced, Re-
* member you are a mother, too--
*
oo—* don't you realize that responsibil-
* ity either? You cannot be a good
* mother if you stoop to evil,,
* things; you cannot guide your
* child properly if you yield to
* temptation yourself.
* You have everything to make a
* good :Marriage. Bring your
* heart back home where it be-
* longs, and so wipe out the stain
* of these escapades.
The road to temptation is smooth
and tempting. But it ends in tragedy
if one follbws it. If you, are tempt-
ed, ask Anne Hirst's opinion first.
Write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth
St., New Toronto, Ontario.
NWMDPAINS Of
gri
;0
efHERE,s
And the
RELIEF IS LASTING
There's one thing for the headache
the muscular aches andmains
that often accompany a cold .
INSTANTIN>;. INSTANTNE brings really
fast relief from pain and the relief
is prolonged!
So get INSTANTINB and get quick
comfort. INSTANTi'NE 18 compounded
like a doctor's prescription of three
proven medical ingredients. You can
depend on its fast action in getting
relief from every day aches and pains,
headache, rheumatic pain, for nen
-
rill* re neuralgic
pain,
bet Insisetee lodsy
gad stweya
Mee 5 Way
Festival of Britain
Vernon Bartlett, Independent
TJentber,of Parliament for Bridge-
water in Somerset, journalist, writer,
spoke recently about the great
Festival of Britain that is to be
held in London in 1951, a Festival
to which it is hoped that thousands
upon thousands of foreigners will
.00015. .
There is plenty for visitors to see
in Britain, Festival or no Festival,
and Bartlett said: "Wheh foreigners
come to London I like to show them
two things" about which they' read
nothing in the guide books: T take,
them to the Duke of York's 'steps
at about one o'clock to let them
see the real rulers of Britain — all
the senior Civil Servants, dressed in
black jackets and pie -stripe trousers
and carrying their neatly rolled um-
brellas, on their way from their
Government departments in White-
hall to hunch at their clubs in Pali
Mall.. Then 1 show them, nn the;
South Bank of the river, just near
the County Hall from which .Lon-
don is governed, an immense grey
mound, perhaps one hundred and
fifty feet long and sixty feet high.
It's one of the dumps to which
rubble is brought from the blitzed
homes of London, The pile changes
in size and shape, because some rub-
bish is taken away by sea and there's
still plenty more to take its place.
But in the process of preparing the
ground for this e' h;bition a new
wall is to be built iyhich wilt narrow
the river by about one kundred feet,
This reclaimed land will bid filled in,
and will ultimately give Londoners
more than four acres of new gardens
along the South Ranh.
8 ta.rtin g
Soon....
A Thrilling New Serial
EST
Of The
SUN
by
JOSEPH LEWIS
CHADWICK
The Wet was young, it was
wild, it was lawless, violent,
hard. In the eighties it was no
place for a young eastern girl—
but Virginia Ames could see no
alternative, Her fiance Phil
Lawrence had written her; his
letter had been strange, cryptic,
urgent. By rail and stage and
horseback she crossed the raw
frontier . , , meeting soldiers,
Apaches, gamblers, the riff -raft
of the West. And finding at the
end of the long trail a love that
was older than she knew,
LOOK FOR THE
FIRST INSTALMENT
COMING SOON
You Won't Want To Miss
A Single Chapter
SALLY'S SALLIES
' But we can't transfer part o
roto from one place to another.'
RHEUMATIC
PAINS, STIFFNESS
°oleo sager the stabbing torture or rhea•
otic veins another dor. rice 5u5kter'o
Stainless White Rob. lite 7 medloated o0o
meet oenetrete faster ... bring Quicker re-
lief or double roar money bock. 500 end 00„.
CROSSW RD
PUZZLE
ACROSS Outer
1, Corroded . 4.' Indian
4. Winglike• mull/owl,
s, Marone ash 6. Cut
13, Flower lug 6, Salutatiee
plant 7. Turmeric,
34, Island of the S. Sea
50, 11arIn
t.dtes P. Slow
16. Serene
10. Bob bine'.
20, Float
21. Peruse
22. Light brown
59. (Greek letter
26: Alder tree
(Scot)
22. •"otton cloth'
30. 1Vrtte
91. Greenland
32, Faint
5?, Finish
;49, YYindu cyrnbale
36. Fast
97. BIvieloti of an
Tgorot town
W.', Bone
au, Wire
measurement 34
40 Wild--. animal
42 f•ttereC
44,British
country
97 Per is in with
51. Split
6!. Ileraldlc
bearing
CIL • r.ightning
protector
6K. Malt liquor
50, Methods
67. Before
1. T)lalO N
! Calor anallt,i
l2
73
10. Bridge support 30. Condensedt
33, Mao,'s nioitttse.
nickname. Id%Jelahop'sl
*5, Strong wine headdrgab
iron 49. aria 05
loot ifIniq0g K
Intricate�g90. Conon
,.YInrasten •46,Style
tiery .
eingtng-voiea 47. SLv ei,t
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ands iron 64.'i47eatricot.
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A
Answer-eisewliere in this issue
k 'EOM SCHOOL
By Reverend Barclay Warren
Turning Toward The Cross,
Mar 8:27-34; Luke 9:28-35.
Golden Text: Whosoever will come
after me, let !nim > deny himself,
and take up his cross, and follow
rite. Mark 8:34,
Jesus had entered upon the third
and final year of his ministry. The
popular acclaim accorded him in
the second year was beginning to
wane. Jesus knew that the strength-
ening opposition would culminate
in his being crucified. He must
prepare the disciples for the shock.
IFirst he elicited from Peter the
great confession, "'Thou art the
Christ." Then the disciples had
grasped that truth he began to
teach them of his death and ressur-
ection. Peter would have none of
it but Jesus sternly rebuked him
saying, "Get the behind me, Satan;
for thou savourest not the things
that be of God; but the things that
be of men.” Jesus not only bravely
faced the cross himself but said,
"Whosoever will come after me,
let him 'deny himself, and take ,pp
his cross, and follow me." The
natural man revolts from the cross
but he who has been changed or
reborn through faith in the Christ
of the cross finds himself chal-
lenged by the example of Christ.
By God's grace he, too, would bear
his cross.
About eight days later Peter,
James and 3 Sn saw Jesus trans-
figured as he conversed with Moses
and Elijah. This glorious scene and
the voice from ]leaven strengthened
the disciples in the belief that Jesus
was the Son of God. This depened
the 'leaning of the cross. The
Son of God would allow
himself to be put to death by cruel
men, But in his death and resur-
rection he would open the way to
eternal life and to heaven. Well
might we sing: "When I survey
the wonderous cross on which the
Prince of Glory died, My richest
gain f count but loss. And pour
contempt on 'all my pride.
Were rhe whole realm of nature
mine, That were a present r ta.I
email; Love so amazing, so di-
vine, Demands my soul, my life,
my all,"
HELPFUL HINT$ POR
BUSY HOUSEWIVES
Stale loaves may be made quite
palatable by wrapping in a. wet
cloth' for half a Minute. Take' the
cloth off, thenbake in a slow oven
for half an hour.
SEQUIN . JEiiWEIRY CRAFT
Hive co user, needle end thread, you can make
unusual sequin jewelry. We've assembled a kit with
everytbtne you need. Contains sequins, beede,tar
memo, Pleb eke ch i0, cement andcomplete
In t ,soon, Wer the latest thing in jewelry,
Make matching eh t hive and eaainge. Brighten
your dmeel Olve handmade gifts your friends will
femme.. write for telt No 1 $1.00, ponpefd,
Send today to your nearest store. Limited stack,
don't wait, write today: Lewin Craft Supailte
Ltd,, Branch storm: 38 Water 5t,, 34ist. John;
N.B.; 695 Yong' St., Toronto; 425 Gahm:
Avenue, Winnipeg.
ES YO
BACK C E
Sitting in a draft—working in a damp
place—wet feet—there are dozens of
things which may cause a backache!
But there's one way thousands of
Canadians have found to help relieve
this condition—Dr. Chase's Kidney -
Liver Pills. This effective remedy tones
up both the kidneys and the liver—
and brings welcome relief from pains
in the small of the back caused by
"cold" in the kidneys. So insist on this
reliable remedy—proven by over half.
a -century's use—Dr, Chase's Kidney-
Liver Pills. At all drug counters. I v
sweet Swedish Tea Ring
0
0
Recipe
Measure into large bowl, f c. luke-
warm. water, 1 tbs. granulated auger;
stir until sugar Is dissolved, Sprinkle
with 9 envelopes Fleiechmana'a Royal
Feat Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10
minutes. THEN stir well. Scald 3r c.
milk and stir in 3,r a, granulated sugar,
131 taps. salt, 0 tbs. shortening; cool to
lukewarm. Add to yeast mixture and
stir in 3 well -beaten eggs. Stir in 9 c,
once -„uteri bread Sour; beat well.
Work in 3 c, more sifted bread flour.
Knead until smooth and elastic; place
in greased bowl and brush top with
melted butter or shortening. Cover
and yet in warm place, free from
draught. Let rise until doubled In bulk.
Punch down dough and divide into 2
equal portions; form into smooth balls.
Roll each piece into a 3a” thick ob-
long; loosen dough. Cream 31 c. butter
or margarine and mix in 1 c. brown
sugar (lightly pressed down), 2 tape.
cinnamon. Spread this mixture on
dough and eprialde with 1 c. raisins or
currants. Beginning at a long edge,
roll each piece up like a jelly roll; place
each roll on a greeted large baking
sheet and shape into a ring, sealing
ends together. Grease tope. Cut 1"
slices almost through to centre with
Motion and turn eooh slice partly on
Ito side. Cover and let -rine until
doubled in bulk. Brush with 1 egg yolk
beaten with 2 tbs. milk. Bake in
moderate oven, 3600, 26-90 min. I£
desired, spread tops with a plain
icing. Serve hot, with butter.
NEW FAST -ACTING DRY
YEAST NEEDS NO
REFRIGERATION!
Stays fresh and full-strength in your
pantry for weeks! Here's all you do:
Ina small amount (usually specified) of lukewarm water, ails-
solve thoroughly 1 teaspoon sugar for each envelope of yeasts
Sprinkle with dry yeast. Let stand 10 minutes,
THEN stir well. (The water used with the yeast counts as
part of the total liquid called for in your recipe.)
Gee. a ss , t /
/,Wsos
I I
different d&
i 1
xxxxxxk)1
11
!I r
Who would envy the early -Victorian house
wife? Up with the lark to cook a heavy break-
fast I Today's favorite breakfast dish is ready-
t0.eat, easy.to•digest Post's Grape -Nuts Flakes.
Pour a bowlful with milk (add fruit if you wish)
and presto! . , , there's a eimply,scretneptiotrs
start to the day.
Post's GrapeNuts Flakes are made from TWO
grains—wheat and barley—to give ion the un-
beatable Grape -Nuts flavor . , in delicious,
boneygoldein flakes. They supply useful quanti-
ties of carbohydrates, proteins, phosphorus, iron
and other food essentials to set you up for Norte
or piny, Ery Boat's Grape -Nests Flakes tomorrow.
6F•142
er "1
$£adSTICK 't-sla UP/
ryf G'G•GOT YOU
C•C•COYERNO/
By Arthur Pointer,
stantine
12 -Tablet Tin 20
Economical 48 -Tablet look
k51
MI6
Yr* APE LISTENING To
THE MIDNIGHT MURDER
PROGRAM OVER STATION.:
)11