Zurich Herald, 1957-05-09, Page 2•
'Dear Anne Hirst: I am, and
certainly other readers are,
alarmed by the number of girls
who lately have asked for your
advice because they are in love
with married men, They all give
the same excuse: `Ours isn't a
chew affair, our love is too
beautiful to give up!' I'm won-
dering whether the experience
of a dear friend of mine will
make them realize that all such
affairs are cheap:
"She married a man who
• turned out to be a congenital
drunkard, After two years of
misery she took a position,
largely I think to take her mind
off her troubles. A married man
employed her, and soon be-
gan shooting the same old line:
His wife didn't love him enough,
but how he could reward a girl
who did! He entertained my
friend elaborately, enticed her
into a new world of lavish liv-
ing, and finally promised he'd
get a divorce if she would.
"It was all settled fast. They
got married, and it didn't last
three years. He lived his own life
and hers, too. They went only
where he wanted to go, and
only his old friends were wel-
come in their home; he wettldn't
even receive her family. All too
soon he was dating other girls.
"She divorced him, and got
another job.
"Her first husband married a
sweet girl; he stopped drinking,
and they already have two
babies.
"My friend feels Iike her life
is over. She is a miserable crea-
ture, and already looks like an
old woman.
"Perhaps, some of these fool-
ish girls who tell. you their.
affair Ls different will see in this
true story one more proof that
as married man who will cheat
one wife will cheat the next.
ONLOOKER"
* Two generations of react .s
* have followed this column
• since I started it many years
# ago. Yet for all my warnings
* the same old sins recur, and
le the girls of today follow their
* hearts as foolishly and will
e not heed. "I can't be happy
* unless I am with him," they
* cry, "and if he doesn't love
te his wife any more why should
»i':.he stay with her?"
!is' They forget that he vowed
• to :cling to that wife as he
;vows to be faithtul to his r!ext.:,w;.
;. one. They refuse to see him as
* a low character who pursues
* a single girl with no concern
* for her reputation. They fall
* for the oldest • line in the
* world, "You understand me,
* she doesn't," and how proud
* they are to hear those words!
* To the wife whose man they
* steal, they give not one
* thought, nor what is even
'" worse do they think of the
* children whose father they
would take from them.
* As you say, a man who is
* not true to one wife will not
* be true to another. Your friend
* found this through heart-
* break and despair and how
* she must regret it now!
* Thank you for writing as
* you did. You and I can hope
* that present-day readers,
* caught in the same web, will
* read and believe and turn
* back to the right while there
* is still time:
* * *
Readers with problems often
find the same situation quoted
in this column, and ' benefit by
another woman's experience. If
your trouble gets you down,
write it to Anne Hirst and let
her guide you safely through.
Address her at Box 1, 123 Eigh-
teenth St., New Toronto, Ont.
Lefthanders Are
Handy People
Today there are more left-
handed people than there were
thirty years ago. Exactly why
this is so is a mystery, but in
1927•about six per cent. of people
were left-handed. Now the pro-
portion is nearly ten per cent.
What causes left-handedness?
It is concerned with brain devel-
opment, according to a doctor.
In the right-hander the leftside
of the brain is bigger, and in the
left-hander the right side.
Marshal Foch signed the first
world war armistice with the
left hand;, Lord Baden-Powell,
who founded the Boy Scout
movement, was left -handed;
Leonardo da Vinci painted his
masterpieceswith his left hand.
Whether you are right- or
left-handed is largely a matter
of heredity, according to recent
reseavh into the subject, but if
necessary a person can learn to
use his left hand as expertly as
his_ right
FASHION NEWS ABOUT
PRINTE I*° PATTERN 4514
Here is the season's favorite silhouette, a sculptured sheath
with gently bloused cover-up jacket that s so easy to make from
our Anne Adams Printed Pattern 4314.
Shown here in smooth textured linen with beige, tan, 'and
brown color tones, the ensemble has the new print and plain look
we all admire. The' sheath is designed with wide shoulder straps,
four darts in front and an extra long 18 -inch crown zipper in
back give it beautifully slim lines and perfect fit, Note the draw-
string at waist of jacket and its pretty bow.
This costume takes only a short time to cut, sew and fit.
Directions for sewing are printed on the pattern so that you can
read what to do every step of the way. The jacket pattern is an
two pieces. . The sleeve and bodice are in one easy -sew piece
making a perfect dolman sleeve.
Our pattern features two different necklines, one plain round
jewel neckline, and neat square shown here. Our Pattern De-
bigner used Coats 8s Clark color matched zipper and thread to
lend with the fabric and to obtain the extra length for the
heath closure.
This Printed Pattern comes in Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16 and
8. Size 16 sheath dress requires 2% yards of 35 -inch fabric and
the jacket requires 24 yards.
To order Anne Adams Printed Pattern 4514, just send FIFTY
CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted; use postal note for safety).
Fend to Anne Adams, :Sox 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont.
PRESENTED TO QUEEN—Air-Vice Marshal H. B. Godwin of Montreal, Air Officer Commanding
the RCAF's NATO Air Division overseas, is presented to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth at a
reception during her recent Royal State Visit to France L. Dana Wilgress, Canadian Ambas-
sador to NATO, makes the presentation while HRH Prince Phillip looks on:
HRONIC
INGERFARM
ev¢ndolit,.e P. CLd,rk¢
Well, I may as well come out
in the open and tell you what
you have probably already
guessed. We are on the move!
At least we shall be in less
than two weeks.
This old homestead that has
.been farmed almost continu-
ously sizice • 1822 now belongs to
the Department of Highways.
What will happen to .it now is
anyone's guess: Of course we
know to a certain extent. We
know where the stakes are;
where the cloverleaf will be
and how close the .house, 'w41 e
be To the road. e could have
kept the house and part of the
land but we would have been
only 125' from the highway.
Too close. In fact it was our
closeness to the road that was
the deciding factor last Septem-
ber when we came to terms
with the Deaprtment. And let
me say this: There are many
complaints about the Depart-
ment --- they don't pay enough;
they take your land whether or
not' you want to sell; they cut
down trees, break fences, walk
through your farm when they
feel like it. We haven't any
complaint on any of those
scores: All we objected to was
the dangerously hidden iron
stakes. The surveyors have al-
ways been most courteous even
if they do comp in when they
feel like it. The amount of de-
struction has been kept to a
minimum. As for the finan-
cial settlement — we have been
well satisfied. We were paid
according to land values in this
immediate vicinity, and what
more could anyone ask? Pay-
ment to start with was a little
slow in coming but an inquiry
directed to the Property Office
very soon brought satisfactory
results. So — no complaints --
and very few regrets.
People expect us to feel
badly at leaving the farm. They
look surprised when they find
we are not. If we were selling
to another farmer that would
be a 'different matter. If it
were still a farm we would want
at be here ourselves — not see
somone cese plowing our fields;
some other farmer's cows in
our barn; some other family in
our house. We, wouldn't like
it at all. But the way things
are now it wduld be no
pleasure to stay in the house
and watch bulldozers rooting
out trees and dirt -movers tear-
ing up the fields. It would be
like watching a slow death ---
watching
watching living, productive
fields slowly turned into con-
crete and then eventually see
hundreds of cars every hour
speeding by where once cows
had peacefully grazed.
There is yet another way of
looking at it. For thirty-four
years Ginger 1?arx has provid-
ed us with a living. We've had
aur lips and downs; struggled
through the depression; had
good crops and poor -- but
mostly good; we raised two
children and now they are mar-
ried with children of their own.
Not only that my husband and
I started out, as Partners — and
now, in the twilight of our
years, we are partners still. We
should indeed be ungrateful to
a anerciful. Providence if we ut-
tered one word of complaint —
especially as neither of us is
physically able to keep up with -
the hard work necessary in
farming,
And now, if you are interest-
ed at all you will be curious
about where we are going. Be-
lieve ine, that has been quite
a problem. For years we had
our eye on one particular cor-
ner of the farm' where we in-
t04e.z itobuild when the tune.;
cmele 16'' retire.Highway; re-
quirements queered that idea,
east, west, north and south,
So we , started house -hunting --
from Guelph to Oakville and
across country. We knew what
we wanted - a newish house,
not top small, near a bus route,
with a large lot — but definite-
ly not in a'sub-division. Sounds
easy, doesn't it? It wasn't. We
looked at plenty of nice houses,
but the houses we liked were
always in the wrong places. Big
houses on small lots or small
houses on big lots, with excess
acreage that was too big for
hand -tools and too small for
a tractor — and couldn't be
sold because of zoning restric-
tions. We found one ideal
house — the man built it for his
family and then ,his wife
wouldn't live there. I didn't
blame her — the nearest neighs.
bour was almost a mile away.
Another place, just as nice, was
quite close to a barn. We nev-
er had an odour from our barn
that was equal to what met us
on that trip. Too bad — the
view was out of this world. We
were very taken with another
house — good location, wonder-
ful landscaping but the house
needed a new heating system,
storms and screens and new
flooring in the kitchen. None
of these things was taken into
consideration on the price. So
we passed that one up. We
were almost in despair. AND
THEN WE FOUND IT!
Roomy house a year old, in a
small village, on an acre of land
— plenty of room for the grand-
children to run five minutes
the other way and we'll be
right in the country. We might
have hunted a lot farther and
not found anything that so near-
ly met our requirements — a
rural setting, halfway between
town and country; halfway be-
tween out,. two .children and
their . children; halfway between
Toronto ' and our old 'home. ; ` In
fact Partner is already calling
it "Halfway House".
So there you have it. I
thought making a .move would
write "finis" to these Chron-
icles but your editor says no.
So, in a few weeks you will be
reading what might well be
called "Sequel to Ginger Farm".
Wish us luck, will you folks
— we may,. need your good
wishes.
"It says in the paper that the
average woman • has a vocabu-
lary of only 500 words," said a
wife.
"It's certainly a small stock,"
remarked her husband, " but
just think of the turnover."
Modern
Etiq ette
by Roberta Lee
Q. Whose privilege is it to se -
beet the music for the wedding?
A. This is entirely the privi-
lege of the bride.
Q. Does a woman EVER rise
from her chair when a man
stops to speak whirl her?
A. Only if she is a hostess, but
not otherwise, unless the man
is an important personage or
very elderly.
Q. Do ladies and gentlemen
ever chew gum in public places?
A, Certainly, but they take
pains to do it quietly and incon-
spicuously. Nothing is more ob-
noxious than open-mouthed or
audible chewing of gum.
SUGAl, PITRET
tJ. krthG Mp
Daughter looks ' s -o -o pretty in
this whirl -skirted pinafore, with
colorful embroidery to trim the
sweet scoop neck! Button front
— she can dress all by herself!
Pattern 866: Children's Sizes
2,4, 6,'.8 included. Pattern, em-
broidery . transfer, directions.
Send - THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot" be accept, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box
1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Tor-
onto, Ont. Print plainly PAT-
TERN NUMBER, your NAME
and ADDRESS.
Our gift to you — two won-
derful patterns for yourself,
your home -- printed in Laura
Wheeler Needlecraft Book .
Plus dozens of other new de-
signs to order — crochet, knit-
ting, embroidery, iron -ons, nov-
elties. Send 25 cents for your
copy of this book NOW—. with
gift patterns printed in it!
ISSUE 19 -- 1957
Corn Starch Makes Tastier Entrees!"
CREAMED SALMON
2 tablespoons MAZOLA Salad Oil
r/x medium onion, chopped
4 tablespoons BENSON'S or CANADA
Corn Starch
1 teaspoon salt
t/a teaspoon pepper tional)
+/s tease' paprika top
t/a teaspoon Weatestershire saute
2 cups milk
1/2 cup fish stock
21 cups cooked salmon, cut in
large pieces
2/3 cup cooked peas
HEAT MAZOLA Salad Oil in saucepan.
ADD onion and cook over medium heat until tender'
but not brown. add BENSON'S or CANADA
9t�MOV� from heat;
Corn Starch and seasonings• gradually; blend well. ray
STIR in milk and fish stock ging constantly, until
COOK over medium heat, bait.
mixture thickens and Comes to a
ADD salmon and peas; serve immediately,,or keep hot.
SERVE on toast or in tort shells or ie toasted
bread cases.
- YIELD: 6 to 8 servings.
Por free folder of other
delicious recipes, write to:
Jane Ashley,
Home Service Department,
THE CANADA STARCH COMPANY
r IMITEle
P.O rax 1: 4 t or real. Pee.