HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1956-05-31, Page 2A1Vl�f 1 -FIRST,
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"Dear Anne Hirst : For a
number of years my husband
has been a steady drinker; it
has caused nee a great deal of
trouble, and even despair, When
I've asked him about quitting
or joining Alcoholics Anony-
mous, he laughs as if it were a
big joke 1 The longest time he
ever quit was about a month,
and then he would be miserable
and make me miserable, too.
'For years he would have an
affair every so oaten and stay
away from home.
"He does work, and I con-
sider him intelligent, but he
doesn't seem to WANT to do
right. What can I do that I
haven't done? If he. doesn't
straighten up, I believe I will
have to leave for good. Any
help you could give me would
be greatly appreciated.
MRS. T. M."
WHAT CHANCE?
* The trained minds of brit-
* liant specialists have con-
* sidered this grave condition
* for years; their opinion seems
* to be that unless the victim
* wants to stop drinking, there
* is little hope that he will. In
* any applied treatment he
* must BELIEVE that he can
* be cured, and collaborate
* with his physician or advisor
* with all his physical and
* spiritual strength.
* Your husband's efforts have
* not lasted more than a month
* at a time. I give. a layman's
Young Charmers
4852
SIZES
2-10
(TAM:. 41444
TWO pretty parts to this sum-
mer fashion — a cool sundress,
a cute overblouse to add in
"separates" effect! Prize-win-
ning combination for the little
miss; with a grownup styling
she'll love! Sew -easy; you'll
want to make several mix -
match sets!
Pattern 4852: ChiIdren's Sizes
2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6 dress. 2i4
yards •35 -inch; overblouse, ''i4
yard.
This pattern easy to use, sim-
ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has
completed illustrated instruc-
tions.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted —
use postal note for safety) for
this pattern. Print plainly SIZE,
NAME, A D I) R E S S, STYLE
NUMBER,
Send your order to Anne
Adams Patterns, 123 Eighteenth
Street, New Toronto, Ont.
* opinion based on observation :
* If he had persisted a little
* longer (exercising his will
* power and faith from day to
* day) he might have joined the
* throngs who have endured the
* suffering that sometimes ac-
* companies total abstinence,
* and come through without
* even the desire to 'take a '
* drink. Can he find the moral
* stamina to try once more?
* You could bear being as mis-
* erable as he, if you felt that
* final victory might be his.
* Before you think of leav-
* ing, ask him if he will make
* this effort for your sake;
* without your understanding
* and spiritual support, it seems
* doubtful he will overcome
the habit. Surely if you are
* willing to stand by, he should
* accept the challenge. Why not
* talk it over with your family
* phyisician and see what hope
* he holds?
* It boils down to the clues-
* tion' of how you can make
* your husband want to live
* without alcohol. When he
* learns that you will not stay
* with him through repeated
* periods of alcoholic inconti-
* nence, he should recognize
* the gravity of his situation,
* take his final chance to be
* the man he can be, and save
* his marriage, too.
* *
A WORTHLESS MALE
"Dear Anne Hirst : After five
years of living with a drunken
husband, who also gambled, got
in trouble with the law, and
was cruel to my little son and
me, I have left.
''But I still. am not convinced
I did the right thing. We are
taught there is good in us all.
Am I deserting a weakling when
he needs me? Will it drive him
faster down the wrong road? I
am so confused 1 appeal to you,
whose work I honor, to set me
straight.
MARY"
* I urge you to stop senti-
* mentalizing, • and face the
* facts of your marriage as
* your letter revealed them.
* Your husband is irrespons-
* ible, dishonest, brutal. He
* made it necessary for you to
* move from one little place to
* another, while. he continued
* his drinking and various of-
* fences that humiliated you so
* much. He has had all the
*.chances he deserved, Living
* with such a creature can
* bring only misery to a per-
* son like you, and later to
* your little son.
* Go through with the div-'
* orce. You have succeeded in
* making an honest living for
* yourself and your child; you
* have found some measure of
* peace. Keep it that way.
* *
Anne Hirst does not pretend
to be a psychiatrist. Her down-
to-earth guidance and knowl-
edge are based on years of ob-
servation, experience and ap-
plied reading. Everyone who
writes her will understand her
wise counsel and common sense,
and she is always 'kind. Write
her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth
St., New Toronto, Ont.
MERRY MENAGERIE
"Nov, don't get impatient —
we've got a search party out for'
the honey?"
Sift 3 times, 21,i c. once -sifted pastry flour (or 2 c. once -
sifted all-purpose flour), 2;1 tsp. Magic Baking Powder, 1,s1
tsp. salt, 1,l tsps. cinnamon, Yi tsp. each of ground cloves,
ginger, allspice, neftmeg and mace; mix in 34 c. seedless
raisins and c. chopped walnuts. Cream ?i c. butter or
margarine and blend in 1 ( c, lightly -packed brown sugar;
beat in 3 well -beaten egg yolks and ; tsp. vanilla. Add dry
ingredients to creamed mixture alternately with e s c. milk;
spread batter in greased 9' square pan lined
in the bottom with greased paper. Beat stiff,
not dry, 3 egg whites and a few grains salt;
gradually beat hi 1 c. lightly -packed brown
sugar and spread over cake; sprinkle with
c. chopped walnuts. Bake in rather slow
overt, 325°, 1.51, to 1;1 hours; cover lightly
with brown paper for last half hour,
seeeese seems Always Dependable
' c �:,•�.r':'t:r:J.fiv:%::vsf>•.r,x..nv..;.,.:.n4 .a...r:li
THE CASE OF THE
ABSENT -BODIED PROFESSOR
The teacher's not even in school, but these.: physics stu,d,ents
carry on under his instruction°at Manchester College. A student
supervisor, Virgil Huber, right, keeps order and illustrates the
lectures of Dr. Charles S. Morris as they. . .
. come over thetwo-way intercom installed by his students
between his bedroom and the classroom. Prof. Morris is con-
fined to his bed by a heart attack. But he delivers his lectures
over the intercom and conducts class discussions just as if he
were in.the physsics room.
Modern
Etiquette...
By Robert Lee
Q. Just what is proper when
meeting on the street,. for the
man or the woman to speak
first?
A. Formerl, it was always
"the lady" who spoke .firs'. But
today,- if they are good friends,
there is nothing at all wrong
with the man speaking first.
Unusual Crochet
594
CravtAW6624
Crochet a graceful bowl to
hold fruit and flowers — lovely
matching doily beneath!
They're worked together -- in
gay contrast colors!
Pattern 594: Doily -bowl com-
bination, or 17 -inch doily alone;
quick crochet in heavy jiffy cot-
ton! Starch bowl for stiffness.
Our gift to you — two won-
derful patterns for yourself,
your home --- printed in our
Laura Wheeler Needlecraft book
for 1956! Dozens of other new
designs to order -- crochet,
knitting, embrodery, iron -ons,
novelties, Send 25 cents for
your copy of this book NOW —
with gift patterns printed in it!
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted —
use postal note for safety) for
this pattern. Print plainly rAT.
'.CERN NUMBER, your NAME
and ADDRESS.
Send your Order to Laura
Wheelet^ Patterns,123 Eighteenth
Street, New Toronto, Ont.
this pattern.
Q. Is it obligatory to reply to
letters of condolence?
A. Yes; send a brief note of
thanks to everyone who has
sent flowers or personal let-
ters.
* * *
Q. Does it matter in which
direction serving dishes are
passed around the dinner. table?
A. It is most practical to pass
ttsege dishes towards the right,
or counter -clockwise.
* * *
Q. Is it proper to state on the
invitation the length of time
the guests are expected to stay
at a wedding reception?
A. The hours are never stipu-
lated on reception invitations.
Guests are expected to leave as
soon as possible following the
departure of the bride and
bridegroom.
It is such a bright, sunny
morning it just makes you feel
glad to be alive. And yet it is
Bold — ten above by our two
thermometers — so we still feel
as if we are definitely in the
grip of winter. But it doesn't
seem to matter -- it can't last
too much lodger. The birds
know it and to do the trees and
shrubs. The willow branches
are getting a yellowish colour
and the dogwoods a little red-
der every day. Crows are fly-
ing, not just one now and then,
but by twos and threes they
are leaving the woods exploring
the fields and coming closer to
the buildings. Watching nature's
reawakening just before the
spring is beautiful and inspir-
ing. It is so big, so very big, that
all our man-made plans seem
small and insignificant by com•
-
parison. Each generation has
its span and is gone but the
natural forces of nature go on,,
century after century, changing
only as the seasons change.
Even now, as our thoughts
turn to spring, we look around
'and- see more snow than we
-have had all winter. Actually,
there hasn't been a day this
winter when our lane • has really
beef, blocked. So different from
conditions existing in other
parts of the Continent. And we
don't have to go many miles
from home either to notice the
difference. Last Thursday a
friend and I went to Guelph to
visit a convalescing patient. The
weather was just grand when
we left here but ten miles from
home it was another story —
snowflurries swirling across the
fields and along the highway.
We wondered what we were
heading into but we went on
our way. And then, coming back,
we found good weather again as,
as we crossed the invisible
boundary.
I was also in Toronto last
week on the only other good
day that we had. My time was
taken - up with business mat -
eters ,until two -thirty and then
I• was free to visit with Daugh-
ter and David. Dave, I am glad
AO say, was full of life and
-mischief, very different from
the little boy we kneyv a couple
of months ago. Children are up •
and down so quickly. We get
so worried about them and then
first thing you know they are.
back to normal. Too bad older
people haven't the same bounce!
I wish that particularly just
now because so many of our
friends have 'been seriously ill
this winter. Maybe when the
buds are swelling, birds sing-
ing and spring flowers peeking
up ;through the soil, everyone
will feel better. I sincerely
hope so anyway.
I expect all farm folk who
take a genuine interest in
farming as a way of living —
and in conservation and re-
forestation — will learn with
* * *
Q. When attending a large
dinner is it necessary to wait
until all the other guests have
,been served before one begins
to eat? •
A. No; one should not be re-
quired to wait until one's food
has cooled, if there are a great
number of guests to be served.
* * *
Q. Is it proper to address the
envelope of a letter to a man
without using the titles "Mr.,
Miss, or Mrs.?"
• A. Never.
* * *
Q. One of my neighbors peri
sists in stopping in at my house
frequently while I'm in the .
midst of my kousewerk. Would
it be rude of me to continue
worlcing while talking with
her? \
A. Not at all, This might even
serve as the "gentle hint" your
neighbor evidently needs.
* *.
Q. What amount should be
given as a fee to a clergyman
for a house christening?
A, This, like the fee for wed-
ding, is determined by the
means of the parents.
* * *
Q. Is it proper for a married
woman: to send a gift hi her
name only to a bride, especially
if the bride is not known by her
husband?
A. Never; her husband's
name should always be includ-
ed.
* * *
Q. How soon after receiving
an invitation to a large dinner
party should one send one's ac-
ceptance or regret?
A. Immediately. Nothing is
more inconsiderate or ill-bred
than to keep a hostess waiting
for a reply, since she must have
the time to invite substitute
guests:
On The Job
Running up to a policeman, a
middle-aged man shouted, "Of-
ficer, Officer, somebody just
stole my car --but 1 got the ti -
cense number."
ISSUE' •— 1954
regret :of the Beeth of Louie
Bromfield in Ole at the age
of fifty-nine. He .Fad been such
an active man all his life, and,
had contributed so much to ag-
riculture in both a practical and
literary way'e that one imagined.
him to:: be; ;considerably older
than h vas: Not everyone
agreed with °his viewpoints but
there is little doubt that any-
one who could arouse interest
to the point of controversy cer-
tainly contributed a great deal
to agriculture.
Well, there .doesn't seem to
be any Tet -up in the rabies
scare. It seems a downright
shame so 'many dogs and cats
are being needlessly destroyed.
It lust proves that the owners
had little real affection for their
pets. Either that or they didn't
want the bother of, looking af-
ter them or the expense of hav-
ing them treated. In homes
where there is probably only
one dog, or possibly a cat, and
immunity from the disease so
easy to procure, it seems like
wanton destruction of animal
life However if that is the at-
titude of the owners perhaps
the trusting little creatures are
better off dead than alive. I
wish the problem could be as
easily dealt with on a farm or
that an overall , charge would
cover all the cats and dogs. Af-
ter all, in districts where a free
clinic has not been established,
inoculation sbould at least be
cheaper;.:igy the dozen! Then of
course there is the problem of
catching the cats. With home-
grown pets that's easy but when
two stray cats come along and
take up residence, as they have
done here, it is like trying to
catch a bird by putting salt on
its tail. However, according to
Dr. McKinnon Phillips, there is
no need to get into a panic over
the situation. Up to the present
time there have been only fif-
ty-two known cases of rabid
animals in the entire province.
He advises that the necessary
precautions be taken but says
the Wholesale destruction of
household pets is entirely un-
warranted. I am beginning to
wonder whether our cats and
dogs know that something un-
usual is in the wind. I never
knew them to be so full of life
and energy. Rusty and Robbie
are chasing around after each
other all the morning but the
cats devote their energy to eat-
ing and sleeping, both of which
they are doing to excess. Speak-
ing of eating . — I must fly
otherwise Partner will come in
to find a bare table instead, of
dinner waiting for him. A man
will put up with many things
but dinner -time is dinner -time.
And that's that.
SHALLOW REMARK
One afternoon Lefty Gomel
turned around and saw JOe Di
Maggio playing an excessively
shallow centerfield. With Rudy
York corning up, Gomez blanch
ed and waved ' DiMag back. M
ter the game, he asked Joe why
he had moved in so close.
"I'm supposed to make peopb
forget Tris Speaker," DiMag said
with a grin -
"If you play in for guys lila
Ybrk, you'll make then forge
Gomez," retorted. Lefty.
Lusc.i.ous ttONEY BUNI RING
Quick
to make
with the new
Active Dry Yeast
• Hot goodies come puffin' from
your oven in quick time with new
kleischmann's Active Dry Yeast! No
more spoiled cakes of yeast! No more
last-minute trips — this new form of
Fleischmann's Yeast keeps in your cup-
board! Order a month's supply.
>•, HONEY -BUN RING
• Scald 34 c..milk,1/ c. granulated
sugar, 1% tsps. salt and % c.
shortening; cool to lukewarm.
liefeanwhilc, measure into a large
bowl / c. lukewarm water, 1 tsp.
granulated sugar; stir until sug-
ar ,is dissolved. Sprinkle with 1
eneelope Flcischmann's Active
Dry Yeast. Let stand 10 mins.,
THEN stir well,
Add cooled milk mixture and
stir in 1 well -beaten egg and 1 tsp.
grated lemon rind. Stir in 2 c,
once -sifted bread flour; beat un-
til smooth. 'York in 2 c, (about)
once -sifted bread flour. knead
on lightly -floured board until
smooth and clastic, Place in
greased bowl and grease top of
dough. Cover and set in warm
place, free from draught. Let rise
until doubled in bull... Punch
down dough and roll out into au
oblong about 9" wide and 24"
long; loosen dough. Combine /
e. lightly -packed brown sugar
and % c. liquid honey; spread
over dough and sprinkle with 34.
c. broken walnuts, Beginning at
a long side, loosoly roll tip like a
jelly roll. Lift carefully into a
greased Ws". . tube pan and join
ends of dough to form a ring.
Brush top with 'melted butter.
C
in bulk, Hake in moderately hot
over and let rise until doubled
oven, 375°, 45-50 minutes Brush
top with honey and sprinkle With
chopped walnuts,