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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1954-11-25, Page 2it Rort4 eat, 3.1( ,4741 a- • "Dear Anne Hirst: If you an- swered my question before, I missed it ... Why do old men make fools of themselves? Two dear friends of mine have been married 42 years. The wife is a lovely woman — good-look- ing, mature, dignified, and a .fine person all around. Her hus- band, though sweet (and smart in every other way) is appar- ently growing childish. Instead of being attentive and appreci- ative of his wife he calls her his `old woman' — and much to her embarrassment he ogles, chortles and even whistles at girls young enough to be his granddaughters! "Naturally, they laugh, but I believe he actually imagines they return his enthusiasm "This fine Christian woman understands her husband's prob- lem. She loves him d earl y, knowing that under all his foolishness he really loves her. Two -Part Story 10 -20 Two -parts perfect? The more you wear this two-piecer — the snore you love it! Accent is on e nipped -in waist — see how the curving in -and -out midriff minimizes the inches around! Contrast collar, bow add crisp charm, Pattern 4898: Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, le, 20. Size 13 takes 33z yards 45 -inch fabric; Ye yard 35 -inch contrast. This pattern easy to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated instructions, Send THIRTYY-FIVE CENTS (354) in coins (stamps cannot be !accepted) for this pattern. Print Sfainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, TYLE NUMBER. Send order to Box 1, 123 ighteenth St, New Toronto, Ont. But she asks me to write you, hoping you can advise her how to get him in line to protect him from making such a spec- . tacle of himself, A Friend" * Many an aging man feels * the years creeping upon him * and seeks out young girls in * the futile hope he can forestall * old age. He revels in their * youth, and misinterprets their * smiles for encouragement. For, he argues, "if a man is as * young as he feels, here is * where I belong." * Of course, he could not be * more wrong. * These girls are amused by * his antics. They smile — but * they also laugh behind his * back. One day a girl will * laugh in his face and call him r` Grandpa, or the boy with her * will tell hien off. That will be * 'the end, and the old gentle-- * man will crawl back home in * shame and remorse. * Meantime, his wife can only * bear with him -- after all, "' she cannot lock him up. Arid if she worries about what * their friends think, she will * remember they have seen this * happen before. They respect * and love her, and she has * their unspoken sympathy. * If any of my readers have * other ideas, I hope they will • send them to ole. * r: * Parents Oppose Marriage "Dear Anne Hirst: I have been going with a wonderful man for over a year. We plan on getting married, but both his people and mine are against it. He is 28, I am 18, and we are both mature enough to know what we want. "r don't want to hurt :my people nor his, and I could not bear to hurt him. Please advise me. Beulah" * Why didn't you tell me why * both families oppose y o u r * marriage? If you will, I may * be able to be more helpful. * . . . Perhaps they all think * you are too young to be sure * of yourself? Then it would be * worthwhile waiting for a year, * dating other boys, too, to * prove to them (and yourself) * that you really prefer him to r' all others. * Marriage is more of a fain- * ily affair than many young e" people understand. To start * right, it should have the * wholehearted blessing of all * four parents. Young people e have a hard time, particularly * these days, during the first * few years of marriage, and if * they have flouted their fam- * flies' wishes they will miss * the moral support which mar- * riage needs so badly, The * handicap is greater than you * realize. * * )lf your aged. husband ogles at young girls and mortifies you by his antics, comfort yourself with the fact that his conduct will not be permanent, He will get his come-uppanee, and from the girls themselves . , . In time of concern, write to Aline Hirst for sympathy and wise counsel. Address her at Box 1 123 Eighteenth St, New Tor- onto. 11OLLAPSIBLE WORLb—Folded for storage, this inexpensive globe the world is exhibited by cartographer Charles e. Riddiford, who developed what he hopes will be the low,,cost answer to problem of supplying an up-to-date world map for the . vorage man. the Nati'ortai Geographic Society employee says at moss production could make it available for dollar or lest. i•i• MAMIE'S CHAPEAUS TOP 'EM ALL—Like any other well-dressed lady, Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower will be wearing new hats this season, This glamorous quartet,' was made for her by designer Sally Victor. Thered jersey. "four leaf clover," top left, is em- broidered in.yarn of red and .topped •by a red felt wing. The soft, dusty pink velvet, torp right, features a long side drape. Gem of the collection is the simple white mink breton, lower left. Small blue wool jersey toque, lower right, is embroidered With pink and blue yarn andtrimmed with a narrow strip of Persian :brocade.' dd Paints id C' stern" Etiy The Hale +d'ed "I'd like Old Masters for the walls — but I can't afford them." That chance remark, made to Mrs. Erna Fiehl by her son when she was helping him fur- nish his Paris flat just over two years ago, has led to the achiev- ing one of mankind's oldest dreams — the mass production of the world's art masterpieces in such perfection that copy and original are indistinguishable except to expert eyes. Mrs. Fiehl — born in Czecho- slovakia, now a naturalized Briton — saw in her son's prob- lem one that confronts young people all over the world, She decided to do something. She studied art and artists Then she bought a wooden printing' pra` for $50; but threw it away the next morning. ' Other presses went the same way; and she finally designed her own ma- - chine and had it built. Last .March, after spending over $15,000, Mrs. Fiehl achiev- ed her first perfect reproduction — a Toulouse Lautrec. And now, in her London studio -factory, she is turning out a range of the works of such artists as Van Gogh, Degas, Renoir, Cezanne, Da. Vinci, Vermeer, Monet, Gauguin — at the rate of 100 a day. Soon she will double that out- put, turning out every hour about twenty-five reproductions of, say, "Portrait of a Child" — perfect in every detail, even to brush marks and cracks — a painting which perhaps took Rubens years to complete. The revolutionary process is mainly secret, But reproductions are on canvas and are finished off by hand over -painting, giv- ing thele all the colour, depth, texture and vivacity of the ori- ginals. An eminent Q.C. has ad- vised that a red seal be placed on each in case unscrupulous buyers try to fob them off as the genuine article. No work of art is reproduced, of course, without the authority of the gallery or museum own- ing it, IT MAY yo LIVER if life's not worth living it may be your liver! uta a taut! it takes up to two pits!* eJ bier bifo'a day to keep your digestive tract in top chapel if your liver bile is cot flowing frt,ely your food may not digest . ace bloats up your stomach . yon feel constipated and all the foo and eparkfe go out of ills. That', stwhen you need mild !WIMP darter's Little imulsteiver �the Flowuofoliver biit'.. Soon you,, digestion starts functioning properly and you fool that happy days are herr atonal Don't ever tatty stunk Aftnc,ls keep f'arter's Littic liverPill.. An sunk... 276 et vresr deervint. B C, AS i.. r'�': May be arning ltacltache is often caused by lazy kidney action, When kidneys get out of order, excess acids and wastes remain in the aystern. Then backachk disturbed rest or that tired -out and heavy -headed feeling may soon follow That's the time to take Dedd's Kidney fills. Dodd's stitnelato the kidneys to normal action. Then you 44 better—sleep bettor...work hotter, R.0 Dodd's Kidney Pilh now, at ISSUE 48 1954 Kisses For Free In Paris, on St. Catharine's Day, all the girls who have at- tained the age of twenty-five who are not married don lace bonnets and come out on the • street. Anyone is entitled to kiss them without being asked or asking—to do sol In New Orleans during the Mardi Gras festival, girls from seventeen years up to about thirty invite kisses by wearing a rose or other flower in their hair. When Colonel Lindbergh re- turned to the United States after his epoch-making flight of thirty years ago, it was esti- inated that some 5,000 girls im- planted kisses on his cheeks and even on his lips—but he was by no means the "most <sed'.', hero in the world. .Distinction for that goes to. Richard Pearson Hobson, hero of the sinking of the Merrimac during the Spanish-American War. He was kissed by 10,000 girls! It started at a reception in Chicago when two entrancingly beautiful cousins of his came forward and demurely kissed him. Other girls at the recep- tion, not -aware of the relation- ship between the hero and the girls, took this as a signal for a concerted rush to. kiss Hobson. For nearly an hour Lieutenant Hobson stood his ground as brunettes and redheads and blondes filed past kissing him at the rate of six kisses a min- ute. Newspapers got wind of it and ran stories ori the kissing of Iiodson. When he went on tour, he• was forced to stand and be. kissed by every girl at every function he attended. d1toY r( .` t MOLESfiR 1d I;. C1r'l,.r19,.¢ In spring, as we all know, there, is a freshness and vigor that comes to us as we get ready to usher in a new growing sea - seri, It is a feeling that cannot be matched at any other time of the year. But yet, getting ready for winter has its pleasures too. On a dull day, when the world outside looks cold and dreary, we appreciate the com- forts of home. We look out — the few leaves left on the trees look seared and yellow. Birds ... only the bluejays and spar• rows fly jauntily from bush to tree. Squirrels keep continually on the move, fearful lest winter catch them unprepared. The cows come down from the pas- ture early in the afternoon re- membering the shelter and warmth that awaits them in the stable or barnyard. And we too, change our work according to the weather. Slips that were pot- ted early on must' be brought into the house. Ferns and plants removed from summer quarters to sunny windows for the win- tery days ahead. We look over our wardrobe try on our fall coat , . . oh no, surely we haven't got to move those buttons again! Conies the first fall of slushy snow and we go hunting for rub- bers. But the rubbers are not there! Now when and where was 'the last time. we wore them? Yes, it must have been at the convention. It was raining when we went and dry when we left, so of course we forgot our rub- bers. Too late to do anything about it now — so that means a new pair of rubbers. And then there's the furnace pipes. Perhaps there has been. a sort of sooty smell and the Man of the House has been saying he must clean the pipes. We try to agree with a good grace but if there is one job a woman hates having done it is the stove or furnace pipes, especially when she is likely to be called upon for assistance. However, none of us want the house burnt down -- and that could easily happen with dirty pipes — 50 we make the best' of a bad job and go to it, At least that is the way it is around ,our place. Even Mitchie-White changes with the changing season. All summer he came in and out only when he wanted something to eat or drink. At night he stayed out by preference. Now he cont_ es in for a sleep during the morning; hunts in the afternoon and comes -in for comfortable sleeping quarters at night. That is all to the good because he makes a wonderful alarm clock. Punctually at five in the morn- ing he either jumps on my bed or raises his unmelodious voice until either Partner or I get up to let him out.. Other four -footed creatures, but decidedly less welcome, are also " preparing for winter, I mean 'rats and mice. We sudden. ly found our pantry over -run with mice — but we got rid of therm. Caught seven in two nights. A widowed friend of ours down town is not so fortunate, She has a rat who is really mak- ink himself at home. This friend bought two bushels of apples, They were left out in the back kitchen. She heard queer noises during the evening and went out to investigate, It was obvious the rat had been after the apples. She followed his trail and found no less than nine big ap- ples! The next night he got into the warming oven of her range.. ette and really made a mess of some pies that were there for storage, A neighbour came along and set three steel traps. Two of them the wily rodent didn't look at, the third he sprung, but not on himself. I have been trying to persuade my friend to use warfarin but she is so afraid of parison of any kind. But after all, warfarin is quite harmless if used. according to directions. There is one thing, however, the directions do not emphasize. The need for obliterating all trace of the human touch. Partner was using warfarin in the henhouse, Last year, with the bait carefully covered. Every morning he look• ed to see if it had been disturb- ed. It hadn't. After two weeks he figured the stuff was no good and stopped looking. In anoth- er two weeks he was picking up dead rats. The reason was ob- vious — the box, bait and boards were minus the smell of the hu- man touch. So — a word to the wise. Anyway, get rid of those unwelcome boarders somehow. And there is no better time than the present. A couple of • rats caught now is as good as twenty later on. Another thing that requires st little forethought is winter shop- ping. Is your cupboard for re- ' serve supplies well -stocked? If a big snowstorm came up and blocked the sideroads how long could you ride along without do- ing any shopping? At one time farm wives went in for 'bulk - buying' now the tendency is to buy from week to week — one packet of this, two cans of that, 10 lbs. of sugar, 7 lbs. of flour • and so on. Then comes a storm and we are out of supplies in no time. So a certain amount '9of bulk -buying is still a good idea. Sugar is cheaper by the hun- dred; canned goods will keep in- definitely; yeast packets are dat- ed and may save the day if the baker cannot make his rounds. Don't get alarmed, folks, but these thoughts have come to me as I heard a rumour that this may be the coldest winter we have had for some time, Subtle. 'Per fumes from the Far East We have been supplying these fine perfumes for 26 years. The merest touch of this concentrate ensures a full and lasting fragrance, We guarantee satisfaction 1X Dram vial attractively safeguarded in a wooden case Postal M.O. $.1.25 Postpaid Anther Lilac Arabian Night Lily of the Carnation Valley Etryk etterr°a Dream N rciissus pdan Oriental Charm BoquGarde°t 3 nd niiaalwood Reilotrope Sweet Pea Jasmin Violet S. J. ALIMAN 23 Grenville St., Toronto 5 Ontario, Canada A. great soul prefers moderation S ($ B.C.- AD, 65 g the j-touse of Seararn 4 e • 4 4 * • M 0 Men who o think of tomorrow practice moderation today