HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1951-02-15, Page 2After all is said and done,
how does it taste in the
cup? That is what counts!
tag' tw
.alc� E
aer the per
ect flavour.
"I? ear At Hiret: I've been
going with a young man since
Itlarch. We had planned to marry
as soon as 1 got
my teach er's
certificate. I did,
but since then he
I1as kept puttiug
me off.
And today 1
am jiited!
"This young
plan c a 01 e to
board with us.
.A month later he lost his job.
Because 1 loved hint, my brother
got hint another, and he has made
out wonderfully there.
"It was a night job. I got u:, at
midnight to cook him a hot meal.
I fixed his breakfast, packed his
lunch. I did all his laundry.
"He bought a secondhand car,
and took me ever.: pi„ce—until
three weeks age..
"Then he moved from onr house,
And today he friend cavi to
tell me -.e's getting married i::
two weeks!
"Shall 1 v. f.. .tor Or try to
forget? I a.,...il' c. r at,otnt i a.
E. E. P,”
END OF A CAD
* There is no use in waiting for
• a young roan ..who tells you he's
marrying somebody else, i s
there? I:.ven iI he changes his
• naiad, you could not trust hien
• :again.
I-ou were everything, to hien.
except a wife. Yon took care of
him like a mother or sister; you
exhauted yourself in homely
' services; you worried about him,
yearned over him, and loved
him more and more for all you
did for him.
'" He probably convinced you
that he appreciated it, too.
Yet how has he repaid you?
• By throwing you over, .ending
e all your dreams, and by double-
s crossing you. He must have
been seeing the other girl long
enough to win her love. you
• know. And he had not even the
* decency to break the rte -,vs
s himself.
r:
Ii lore zt c•re arca blind, von
aright have saved yawl -sell .his
last shock. When he kept post
potting the mareage. that should
' Lave warned you. it didn't, for
you were in love; and if any-
one eise had told you be was
seeing another girl you would
hare laughed at them.
You are well rid of hint, how-
ever you may doubt it today.
As your husband, he would have
been jus, as unfaithful, and then
you would have had to escape
front the agco ie, you would
endure.
Bury yourself in your teaching
now, and accept this blow like
the lady you are. Don't fore-
swear your other friends. for
sympathy and affectiou will
help you through.
We eanno. direct the course
of our love. We can, however,
seal our memories of the past,
and go on, chin-up to some
happiness that awaits as.
TO "A BROiRENHEAR'T-
ED HUSBAND": I do not
wonder that you are so distress-
ed. The wife whom you have
loved so dearly announces that
she is in love with another man,
and has applied for a divorce.
She would take the children
with her, and rob you of the
family life on which you had
counted so much.
You got into trouble. yes.
But yon paid the cost, and you
have returned home a changed
man. Through the years you
were away your wife stood by,
and implied that she and the
children were only waiting for •
your return to start life all over
again.
And now, when you have re-
habilitated yourself,, landed a
good position, and only want the
chance to rebuild your life, she
is determined to leave you!
Can you persuade your wife
to talk things over with her
minister, or with an old friend
of the family One who has
knows Iter, and understands her
tet*tuertt,1i.0t, -nal be aide to
• (see, lace her how unfair site I:,
• to desert you at this crucial hour.
Site may- feel that she dial` her
duty to stand by you through
your great trial, and -tow is en-
titled to find a different happi-
ness of iter owns Yet if she
could be persuaded to give you
this chance you yearn for --if
only for e year—surely she
-would be doing a Christian deed.
however things turned out be-
tween you, at least she could
not reproach herself laser on.
Who knows but that year to-
gether again might be only the
beginning of a finer and richer
* lite for you all!
1 pray that she will relent.
You have my deep sympathy
If you fell in love with a rascal,
thank your stars you found it out
before you married him, .. - Anne
Hirst's sympathy and wisdom will
help you through the dark days
ahead. Write her at Box 1, 123
Eighteenth St. New Toronto, Ont.
BOW CAN 1?
By Anne Ashley
Q. .Flow can I thoroughly dis-
guise the taste of castor oil?
A. Squeeze the juice of half' a
lemon into a tall glass; then pour
in the dose of castor oil.. Addy a
pinch of ground ginger, then the
juice from the rest of the lemon.
Now add 34 -teaspoon bicarbonate
of soda and• stir briskly. This so-
lution will foam like soda water,
breaking the oil into tiny granules,
so small that they cannot be no-
ticed. Drink while it is efferves-
cing.
Q, How can I remove a fresh
ink stain from a rug?
A. Pour milk on tate spot and
press it with a blotting paper until
it is all absorbed. This has to be
done immediately or it will not
-work.
Q. How can I separate postage
stamps that have become stuck to-
gether?
A. Lay a thin paper over them
and run a hot iron over the paper.
They will conte apart easily.
Q. How can I make a lotion
for whitening the skin?
A. Mix two tablespoonfuls of
oatnleaI, teaspoonful of pow-
dered borax, and ,-pint of rose-
water. Let stand for two or three
days, then strain well and add i -
ounce of alcohol.
Q. How can I treat silk stock-
ings to make them last longer?
A. Before wearing for the first
time, put r%z teaspoonful of alum'
into one quart of water and rinse
the stockings in this. Repeat this
process after each wearing,
Q. How 'can I avoid wringing
cloths used for hot applications?
A. When hot cloths are needed
for application to relieve pain, put
thein in the upper part of a steamer
with the water boiling underneath.
This method will eliminate wring-
ing out the cloths.
Today's heifer calf is your future milk
producer. Lost growth and develop-
ment through improper care and
feeding can never be regained later. To
be a good milk producer, a cow needs
to be of GOOD SIZE. Good depth
and width of body are essentials for
proper feed capacity and full milk
production.
Here's Wry The
CALF FEED!,
PROGRAM
'k The BEST You Can Use!
Calves grow faster, with stronger legs,
strong straight tops and greater depth
of ribs.
a* Calves are larger and more rugged„
with plenty of dairy temperament, and
no excess fat or thickness.
C. Calves have greater resistance to disease,
I Eyes are brighter and in better condition,
( Appetites are keener.
Q! Hid
pliable—hair has more bloom.
Hid
es are softer and more
Sea for
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"GROW tGTROW BETTER IETER° RII'LACEMEN"I19'•,
Your Name. - , , r
Quaker
LO'tP
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a.
Jascha Watches Jay Play—L'iolin virtuosi-, faseha Heifetz and
his wife, Frances, beamed ‘vith pride when their curly -headed
son, Tay, sat down in their horne to improvise on the piano.
Maybe, when jay grows older and his feet can reach the
piano's pedals, he'll accompany his famous father.
NIC
k !`
INGER PI
cy Garetl.dott1 e P. C1 t'1s.e
There have been many times
during the last few months when
one plight have called this a "win-
terless winter". But not now—not
with the temperature hovering
around the zero mark at night and
about ten in the daytime. Actually,
it is good weather for getting
around-- cold -weather, without
wind or storms is easy to take, If
only there were a little more snow 1
Just enough to give a protective
covering to wheat and clover. These
are the days when the farmer loons
worriedly across his fields and won-
ders , . will the wheat be winter -
killed? And what about the pas-
tures, and those fields newly seeded
down to clover last year? No won-
der farmers are anxious. A hun-
dred dollars spent on seed last year
—or several hundred—according to
the size of the faun, and it can all
be lost so easily in unfavourable
weather -that is, hard frost without
a coating of snow .to pcoteet the
tender young roots of wheat and
grass. However, we are entirely
at the mercy of the weather; there
is nothing that any farmer can do
about it except wait and see—and
hope for the best,
But while we wait for the winter
weather to make or break us we are
certainly thankful for the small
mercies . . , we are glad the house
is easy to heat in clear, cold
weather. Sure, we might have quite
a good time counting our blessings
except that every time we feel
thankful for being warm and com-
fortable we remember others who
are not so blessed. Perhaps it is
because wc, ourselves, have known
what it is to have a cold house
.in .winter that we cannot now en-
joy our comfort without rememnber-
".ing those who may not be so fort-
unate, We hate, for instance, to
' think of the coal shortage in Eng-
land—to say nothing of their mea-
gre meat ration, a whole week's
ration wouldn't be enough to give
a hungry man even one decent meal.
That poor little 'island is certainly
having a long-term aus.erity pro-
gram. And yet last week I had a
letter from my brother in Cam-
bridge and he didn't mention food,
or coal, or even the "flu". He was
writing about the pleasure they got
front their television set but com-
plained about the time they had
trying to get help for the house
but were now so thankful because
they hacl at last succeeded in get-
ting a girl three days a week!
Strange what habit can do. Be-
cause my brother and his wife have
always had a maid, it now seems
a major catastrophe if they are
without one. To us, in Canada,
knowing what they have suffered
over there in bombings and other
hardships, it doesn't seem reason-
able that anyone should look upon
shortage of domestic help as a prob- -
Ienn, Tt roust be that having been
away front England so long their
conservative outlook now seems
strange to us. I suppose in a
younger country, we naturally ac-
quire a different set of values, which
have come down to us from pioneer
days, Where there are, theoreti-
cally, no class distinctions, no Ivan
minds working with his hands and
most housewives are quite content
to do their own -work and run their
own homes,
There is much talk these days
about maintaining a high standard •
of living. But what do we mean
by a "high standard"? It is cer-
tainly a relative term just as a
loaf of bread is a good meal to a
Starving person. We have come to
set too high a value on material
things and leo. c lost the.-enjoyent
we, once had in simple ltieasmures,
TSCW 7 — lOSI
i dread to think what influence
television will have on our rising
generation, Youngsters, I am
afraid, will want to leave their
healthy, outdoor games to sit in
darkened rooms to -watch their
favourite comics on 1'.V.
1`he other day I was in an elec-
trician's shop where they were try-
ing out a television set that had
just come in. A little girl came
into the store, saw what was hap-
pening and rushed out again. In a
few minutes she was back again
—and three or four more children
with her. But the electrician was
wise to them and had to shut off
the set. Poor kids—I was sorry
for them in a way—they were ex-
cited, and then so let down. But
I understood the man's viewpoint
when he explained—"I hate to be
mean but if I kept this thing going
the shop would be over -run with
kids half the time,"
And here is something in con-
nection with the CBC which struck
Inc as rather funny, Like a good
many other folic I don't think much
of CBC daytime progratnnnes so the --
other day I turned on short-wave
and there was a grand orchestra
playing. "Now if only we could
get something like that!" I thought,
I waited until it was over and then
heard the announcer say—"This is
the Canadian Broadcasting Corpor-
ation to the BBC in London," I
turned back to CBL ... soap opera!
A film star arrived at a friend's
house to spend a few dais. He
drove up in a very dilapidated car,
with shredded side curtains and
flapping mudguards.
Staring down at the wreck, the
host demanded: "What in the world
is that?"
"Oh," the star replied loftily,
"this is my town car,"
. "What town?" demanded his
outraged host. "Pompeii?"
Want Help To. Sae
Capt Kidd's
Treasure
:Emir rugged young men are
needed to help search for X300,0091
worth of pirate gold somewhere
in the China Seas.
All they' will have to aid them
a pile of maps left behind by Capt.
William Kidd, 17th century pirate
who was hanged without disclosing
the hiding place of his loot.
The search is being led by ship-
builder James ]3rownl'ie, of Rye,.
England, who plans to take ten men
to the South Seas in the Relc Rap,
a 5 ft, motor trawler 'now being
fitted here. He has found five fd-
low explorers so far.
"Che volunteers must. be ready trs,
face any hardship. and they must
also put some money into the
expedition.
Originally tfr. Brnwulie lllauned
a pleasure cruise to the South Seas,
Then a friend, Mrs. Elizabeth Dick,
produced. the Kidd neaps, left to her
by a collector of ancient trophies.
The Kele Rap, probably will be
carried as freight o11 a steamer as far
as Singapore. The expedition is ex••
pected to cost about $21000,
Schoolboy definition: Ice is wa-
ter that went to sleep in the cold,
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Cream 3/q c. shortening; gradually
blend in 1 c. granulated sugar, 2 tsps,
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beat ill 2 well -beaten eggs. Stir in
t/2 tsn. lemon extract, t/2 C. milk which
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once -sifted bread flour; beat until
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