HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1952-01-31, Page 61
TIP 1
Perfect tea is so easy
to' make with
99
"Dear Anne Hirst: I'rn skipping
a lot of preliminary details to tell
you that—
"A friend of
my ser, 20 years
younger than
rny'se1f, has
fallen in love
with me. And 1
with him.
"I know it
sounds fantas-
tic. But we are
so niuch alike!
We both love
music, and
sports, and our ideals are the same.
I've tried to drop out of his life
spiritually and mentally. He will not
hear of it.
":lien marry younger women,
Anne Hirst, and biologically that's
_That Good Casual
SIZES
4595 12-20
30—f22
414fl4
YOU WANT these good lines
and handsome details! Here's your
winter casual — step-in style and
smart enough to step out any-
where. Those sleeves are cut in one
with side bodice — interesting de-
sign lines and such easier sewing!
Pattern R4595 in sizes 12, 14, 16,
18, 20; 3t, 32, 34, 36..35, 40, 42,
Size 16 takes 35g yards. 39 -inch;
34 yard 35 -inch nap contrast.
This pattern easy to use, sim-
ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has
complete illustrated instructions,
Sende THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(35c) in •coins (stamps cannot be
accepted) for this pattern. Print
plainly SIZE, NAME ADDRESS,
STYLE NUMBER.
Send order to Boa 1, 123 Eigl!-
:email St., New Toronto: Ont.: ,
all right—if she is alive as he is,
and exquisitely happy with hien.
What does it matter that she Is
older?
R, Y."
Fundamental Truths
* You will not like what I am
• going to say.
* Something stronger than the
* forces of convention is opposing
* yon. Nature demands that nteu
* marry women about their own
* age. If they do not, sooner or
* later they will be attracted to a
woman who is. It has to do with
* the chemistry of huinan beings.
* To ignore it is to ignore one of
* life's fundamental. truths,
* Stop seeing this lad now, today,
* make him hate you if he will
* When he is older and wiser, he
'• will understand and bless you for
* it.
* You will cry, What about pie?
* You will find another love, and
* inspiration and understanding
* elsewhere.
* Look about you for friends of
* your own generation and tempera-
* ment. Take up interests that will
* throw you with such people,
^' those who have weathered the
* same storms that you have fought.
* You will be amazed how cote-
* panionabie and sympathetic they
* will be, once you show a spark
* of interest in their direction.
* No matter how determined this
at young.man is to marry you. send
* hint off. There can be no peace
* for either one of you in such a
* union.
One Man's Tribute
"Dear Anne Hirst: A few years
ago, I wrote you for advice. You
didn't offer any easy solution to my
problem, nor did you distort the
situation as so many alleged coun-
selors do.
"I have lived according to ...the,
guidance you gave pie. It ,hasn't
been easy, but your advice has
strengthened and sustained me,
When 1 falter, .Tread again what
you wrote, and it gives site the
courage to carry on,
"Prior to my trouble, I would
have scored any tVoman's Page
column.
"Now, all 1 can humbly say is,
God bless you!
BILL"
Many "fan" letters hate conte to
me lately, and all are welcome.
Yours has warmed my heart, and
I thank you deeply for it.
a' *
Troubled people write to Anne
Hirst because they need a wise
friend they can trust—and because
she never betrays a confidence. She
makes their problems her own, and
has helped thousands to find a
better life, Address her at Box 1,
123 Eighteenth St.. New Toronto.
Ont.
The scene was a modern laundret-
te and customers were watching
through the windows of the
machines their washing being churn.,
ed round.
Two somewhat. intoxicated sten
strayed in by mistake. Said one:
"What awful tripe then isms on the
I ieh't-isine these days."
7. SAuttlo
CROSSWORD S' t Top
a i the
PUZZLE
ACROSS DOWN
1. Corded fabric 1. Bellow
4. Cleansing• 2. City in
process PennsyIvanlit
2. Scrutinize 2. Private
12, Native metal (.$ottom of the.
18. Japanese cave hull
14, Central part 6. Presently
15. Ventilate 8. Dependable
12. N'oley
17. Feminine
name
18. Glvee up
20. Fastener
21. Poem
22. Snare
24. Numerous
t6. Strong
alkaline
solutions
27. Swine
30. Inability to
speak '
82. American
Indian
34. Crony
35.'Gem
37. Gaelic
38. Fashions
39. Rocity
40. Crimi•
nal
43. Notlee fa
advance
47. Forebodini
d6. ktabblt
411. June bug
50. Baseball team
58. Silkworm
52. Soft drinks
58. Three -spot
34, .Animal food
55, I,ecent1 v
a cquirt4
9, Ti'opiaal'nut
10. Weapons
1.1,,I.4w tide
19. Pastoral nnern
20. Container
23. Depend
24 :Chart
26, Wing
20.1Pratse
37. Shrcwiea
woman
28. Goddess or
the harvest
5 7
31, Press
33, (las of tats at,
30. Take Care
38. Cash
29, iIandie
ID. Type
assortmc
41. Turkish
eonitnal
49. Unaep!,,
44. Soto
42. Nodu,e
40. Waxed
48. Rage of a
garment
14
ty
/0 rr
lx
28
29
r 3'
A nswe
Filfiete ,err cin ('t is Pear
46
1
ha,
IINDAY SCfIOOL
LESSOK
Folding Door—Modern homebuilders have discovered a new
space -sayer which can be used in every room of the house. It's
a door which opens and closes like an accordion, instead of swing-
ing into a room. Every hinged door needs about eight square feet
of floor space to open -a big consideration when arranging furn-
iture in today's small houses and compact apartments. An accord.
ion -type steel frame is covered with a plastic -coated fabric which
withstands a Aifetime of flexing and can be kept clean with soap
and water. Colors harmonize with decorating schemes. The new
Folding doors con be installed in any doorway and cost approx-
imately the same as an ordinary wooden door.
k.
H ONICLES
264 INGERFAR
Cseeen Sr,lv. D OA rise
Of Cour; a it is just nay. imagin-
ation but it just seems. to: pie that
we haven't had any really short
days this winter. It could be that
with so many dull days,. and having
to turn on the' lights so often, the
change between daylight `arid dark
hasn't been so noticeable,
What a difference hydro makes!
Looking back through :the years
I remember how we used to• dread
•t the short days -flow we hated hay-
ing to light the coal oil: 0tps "be-
for supper. And what a chore it
i was if w,e needed something'. from
upstairs or clown ill the cellar to
' have to carry a lamp or flashlight
around with us, And doing chores
at the barn' with only the dint light
of a lantern to see by. 0r going
to and from the barn in a high wind,
keeping the lantern on the lee -side
so the sound wouldn't blow ; it out.
How we ever got along as well as
we did is a marvel, We still com-
plain when wehave a lot :of drill
weather but wli.en the stop to re-
member those pre -hydro days our
complaints ease off a bit. "'
Sometimes wlu•ti 1 speak in
praise of hydro 1 cronder if there
are any homes in which this column
is read where hydro has not yet
conte along. 1'f so, I hope no one
will think I .tan "rubbing it in,"
If hydro is not available -,well,
there isn't much you can do about
it until the line conies through. If
it is at'ailable, and you don't take
advantage' of it, then that is just
plain foolislrnesc. Perhaps you may
say—"That's all very well, but we
can't afford to have the hydro put
in. '1'ti that I would an>iiver —
"You just can't afford NOT to have
it!" Install it and you have the
use of it as long as you need it.
List your farm for sale and hydro•
helps sell it, These days, who do
i you think will buys a farm if .elec-
tricity is not alr'eaily hooked up
and ready to rise'
But even with hydro whiter still
has its problems, and chief among
then is snow, Alter a storm snow-
ploughs are busy day and' night
clearing the highways and byways.
And making 'a wonderful job of it
too ... especially at the entrance
to farm lanes! But there- are still
those• faun lames to contend with,
There are a few' little-trsec; lanes' -
around here that have been im-
passable since November. It sects
to Inc keeping farm lanes obeli is
a problem that will have to be
solved sooner or later,. How well
a farm lane has been kept open
up to the present 'has depended
upon the amount of traffic Corning
its and out, the length and lay of
the laze • • and ' what means have
been taken to keep•' it open, An
elevated lace does not. fill in as
quickly as one that is level with the ! ;1t
land. A short Jane can be shoo- sears
elled withoilt • too much trembles I tures
..But a long lane needs a shelter to , t
belt or snow feece against the pre- Scrip
veiling winds, Many farmers have 110 s
hired snowploughs to clear their 1',30C11
,140
s;anis
front experience that the lane fills
in worse than ever. Snowploughing
to be effective has to be continuous
for lanes as well as roads.
But how is that possible? Seems
to me that is a question that might
well be 'discussed by radio farm
forums, Perhaps there is an op-
portunity hege for co-operative
enterprise. Or perhaps each town-
ship night have one or more
ploughs specifically for clearing
farm lanes, especially where such
lanes run' out to provincial high-
ways or country roads. Naturally
such an undertaking costs money—
and if We want, extra service we
have to pay for it—a condition
which we are sometimes inclined to
overlook. But some means of keep-
ing lanai lanes open would save
wear on. cars and trucks; it would
eliminate :the need and expense of
tow -truck or tractor, and.' save
many man-hours' of shovelling.
It night even save lives • when
a doctor is needed in a hurry or an
emergency 'arises necessitating the
removal of a patient' to hospital.
Well, maybe I haven't come up
with the right answer—and I know
the problem is a difficult one to
solve—but I still feel that some
organized effort should he made
to keep faun lanes open in winter.
Last week saiv another improve-
ment in this district . , , our party
telephone line was literalir cut in
two. Now we have only ten on our
line, three of whom hardly use the
telephone at a11. Before the change •
-
c ver the phone was ringing all the
time and it was almost impossible
to use the line without interruption.
Now the bells hardly ring at all.
Now we shall have a little peace--
un'til more houses are Guilt and more
telephones are added to our party
line,
Two Great Orator's
Who Once Stuttered
New British M.Ihs are discover-
ing that speaking in the Coronions
- is something of an ordeal, but if
they have 'something worth saying
the `louse will listen attentively.
Members dislike r' etoric; they will
not be , talked down to.
Mr.- Churchill and• Mr. Aneurin
• Bevan are two of the most com-
pelling speakers in the House.
Both were bad speakers early in'
13otli stuttered and,were ner-
vous.
The Prime Minister mastered his
handican by taking ithnease care in
the preparation of his speeches and
learning them by heart. He used
to write. each one . out, and even
to -day he learns entire passages.
Bevan s stutter—he still stutters
—is due to fact that he is a shifted
sinistral—that is, a left-hander Who '
was• forced to write with the other
hand at school. His memory was
developed by wide reading and
memorizing of long passages from
Shakespeare, so that to -day he can
deliver a ..peech lasting two hours
packed with facts and figures,
DEEP LIFE
ter a six-month world tour to
In of new forms of marine crcw»
Dr. Claude 11, Zobell returns
Ise University of California's
ps Institute avith the news that
cooped tip live bacteria from
is Ocean nittd at a depth of
8 feet. So it isn't true that or -
ms cannot live tinder a prey
of tons to the square inch --"the•
urc that prevails in the deepest
of the ocean, Wherever Dr
1l fished for life Ile found it.
lanes•- only to have then till
out's, which, to say the least, i1
discouraging. A. small plough! .does
a good job but if it is followed b
SlrC1
press
more drifting snow farriers know robe
$y
ev, R. BARCLAY WARREN
B. A., B. D,
A Pharisee and a Repentant
Woman,
Luke 7: 36-50.
Memory Selection If we. con.
fess our•''sins, He is faithful and just
to forgive us our sins, and to
cleanse ua from all unrighteousness,
I John 1 ; 9. -_
Here are two stories in one.
Jesus who did not hesitate to eat
with Publicans and sinners was
dining at the home of a proud
Pharisee. It was common practise
for spectators to be present on such
occasions. As woman known as a
sinner stood at His feet behind Him
weeping.. With her tears she wash-
ed His feet and proceeded to wipe
thein with the hairs of her head.
Then she aunointed thein from an
alabaster box of ointment, The
Pharisee was disgusted.
Certainly Jesus was no prophet or
He would have kn'otvl>,, what kind
of a woman she was. .Then Jesus
told the story of the two debtors
When neither could pay, the credit -
tor forgave. The one whose debt
was greater, loved most, Thus he
upheld the action of the woman,
Moreover, He forgave the woman
and said, "Thy faith hath saved
thee; go in peace." Jesus was
not minimizing the sin of the
Pharisee but He was accepting
his viewpoint that the woman was
the greater sinner in order to put
across His point that the woman
was repentant. Since the Pharisee'
showed no evidence of affection,
perhaps he was not forgiven at a11, -
Though he required forgiveness, he
was not yet conscious of that need.
Jesus was not teaching that the
greater that one sins, the better
Christian he will become, if he
becomes one at all. Paul .said,
"Shall we continue in sin that grace
abound? God forbid", No, sin does
not pay good dividends, "Remem-
ber now thy Creator in the days of
thy youth," Sin never helped any-
one. Confess your sins and God
will forgive and cleanse you from
all nrn•ighteousnes,s.
"Creeping" Killer
J'Iie man was 'working in his own
garage with the motor running and
with the garage door open for pur-
aposes of ventilation. Apparently the
door blew shut for it was ultimately
found that way.,l'resuinably lie dict
riot iidtice• that: the dcso had"blovvu "'
shut, or he did not take timto
e I
open it again, thinking that he I
would take only a few minutes to
finish the job. FIe never did open
the garage door; he ,never did finish i
the job; he never drove ale car I
again, for when the family \Veit el
took for Irian he had been kiiled by
carbon monoxide
Carbon ionto:. de is (ea.—Ili—less
and odourless. it is perhaps slow iii
its action but unless the victini is ;'
taken out into the fresh air in time '
it is certain in its action. Carbon '
nnorioxide is still "The Creeping
Biller."
1
VULNERABLE
After preaching a powerful see.
ntou against betting, the vicar WAS
displayed to learn that one of his
wardens was a heavy gambler, and
at once hurried round to apologize.
"Oh, don't worry ahoiit if " said
the warden. "After stilt. it's, a shear
sermon that doesn't hit me sone.
• where."
■qpain
a 8, h�1��eH• ..,
And site `.
RELIEF is `: :':'":{' LASTING
Nobody knows the cause of rheuma»
tism but we do know there's ono
thing to ease the pain , , . it's
INSTANTINE.
And when you take INSTANTrnr31
the relief is prolonged because
INSTANTINE contains not one, but
three proven medical ingredients.
These three ingredients work together
to bring you not only fast relief but
more prolonged relief. •
Take INSTANT/NE for fast headache
relief too . . or for the pains of
neuritis or neuralgia and the aches and
pains that often
accompany a cold.
Get Instantlne today
and always
keep It handy
•
t tine
12,Toblet Tin 250
if,conomica] 41? -Tablet' B'dttle 75c
To All, a Good Night.. In Mil-
ford, Mass., not a creature was
stirring in the Red Shutter Res-
taurant,- except someone who jour-
neyed to its Nativity scene, made
off with a cantle, two angels, a pair
of camels,,two Wise Men.
Up'ideiloLvn to Prevent Reeking
ISSUE 5 — 1952
They're5 amazing good
Made with Amazing . New Fast DRYa Yeas!
JELLY. BUNS
tate tsux-e •into snail bowl 1 c.
lukewarm, water-, 2 tsps, granu-
lated su• sti
r ar r sotto sti tr
is dissolved. Sprinkle with 2
etiveloues I+l.eischhnaon's 13'i
fiisrn Dry Yeast Let stand
10'niin.THEN stir'we•]l. Cream
3/4 c. shortening; gradually blend
in 1 c. granulated sugar,2 tsps. salt,
1 tsp. grated nutmeg. Gradually beat
in 2 well -beaten eggs. Stir in t/x asp,
lemons extract, t% 'Cy .'Stalk• wliir•lt
has been scalded a'ncl cooled to Juke.
warm+ ppdyeast mixture, Llano 3 c.
once -kilted' :bread ilotie;'be* until
smooth, Work, lit 3 c. mord• once -
sifted bread dour. Titiead'utrtil'stuootil
anti elastic; place in greased: bowl
and brush top with melted bi1tter or
shortening'. Cover and set iii -warn.
place, free from draught. net rise
until doubled in bulk, I'inoclt• drawl,
dough and cru itit$76 'gnsl;Portionts;
knead into suiooflti halls. Brits$ with
melted butter pr matglln;itte, roll in
,, fins: -' ranu}at•`G<9 ,stlg3r and arrange
t/x" apart on '•krettsed' baking pans.
Cover ;Indict rise ,until doubled in
bulk.' T'ivfstt elle, Iliadic of a knife
in the top of each roll to forth an
'indentatio*; Aill with jelly. Cover and
let rise IS min. lodger. Bake in moder-
ately hog: oven,'' 375'2;altottt 18 mitt.
��EIS�N�IA�NS
uccisr¢nvo
•Conor. ei ua �����
DRY YEWS'
ACTS FAST I
57AYS PIiMI
a.hs.o41.4
MM.I„ei• west*•Wlnnlp! v nte,v.r
* No incise disappointments
because the yeast has spoiled! '
• t pleiscitniatin"s DRY Yeast
replaces old-fashioned perishable
yeast'because it keeps fresh and
full strength- right in your
cupboard! For fast -rising dough
and grand oven results get
.Pleiscluli3ntes Past DRY
Yeast today!
C1/11'/" ra' mooas‘ 1,0 /