HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1952-02-28, Page 2v a ke
SADA
EA SAGS
"Dear Anne Hirst: My two lit -
Ale children are all that keep me
going. Since r married three
years ago, my
husband has
had one affair
after another.
The other day
he told me he
always weuldl
"He shows
me no affection
at all. When he'
gets angry, he
curses me horribly. He used to
strike me, even. when I was preg-
nant; but having him arrested put
a stop to that. He says the only
reason he stays married because
.of the children.
"I finally went to work, to try to
forget. But I've been laid off.
Now I realize I've lost all the love
I ever had for him.
Three One-Yarders
"I have been a faithful and con-
siderate wife, Anne Hirst, as much
of a companion as he would al-
low. I've done everything I know
to keep him true to me. 1 am not
unattractive, and could have had
other men. But all I want is a
straight and good life. What
would you do?
BROKEN-HEARTED"
UP TO HIM
* Why don't you tell your hus-
* band that if he persists in his
* continual infidelities, you will
* leave and take the children with
* you?
* If he is Honest in saying they
* are all that matters to him, this
* threat may really work.
* Every man has one vulnerable
* spot; this may be his. If he had
* any imagination, he would for-
* see the day these children will
* despise him.
* Tell him, too, that from now
* on you expect him to be kinder
* to you, and do his part toward
* making the house a real home
* for his wife and family. Remind
* him how much you have to put
* up with, and from now on he
* trust be different -or else.
* It must have been a tragic
* day for you when you found
* that the inan you loved was ac-
* tually a ruthless brute.
* Yet even then, you stayed with
* him, hoping he would change.
* You stayed loyal, too, through
* all his betrayals and your humil-
* iations, even when he used physi-
* cal violence against you. The
* courage, and the constant renew-
* al of faith which some wives
* show, is more than such a man.
* deserves.
* Well, you have had enough..
* Give him his choice -and add
* that the first time he fails to
* live up to his word, he will find
* himself alone.
* v *�
If your husband's cruelties have
gone too far, take a stand and stick
to it. Anne Hirst's ideas will be
useful. Write her at Box 1, 123
Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont.
EACH
ONE
YARD
39'
Three Blouses in one pattern!
And each blouse takes only one
yard of 39 -inch fabricl Here's real
economy. Just think -your suit -
blouse and two dressy blouses to
wear with your new bell -skirts.
Think of linen -like rayon for the
tailored blouse, spring-like sheers,
or crispy, faille for the other two.
Pattern R4597 comes in Misses'
sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18.
This pattern easy to use, simple
to sew, is tested for fit. Has conn
plete illustrated instructions.
Send THIRTY -FIVE CENTS
(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be
accepted) for this pattern. Print
plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,
STYLE NUMBER.
Send order to Box 1, 123 Eigh-
teenth St., New Toronto, Ont.
O». the Saskatchewan
By the end of the eighteenth cen-
tury, the Saskatchewan was very
much of a highway. Trading posts
mushroomed along its banks, usu-
ally at the mouth of some linking
stream. Each spring Canadian fur
brigades swept down for the two
weeks of good times and business
at Grand Portage. The midcontin-
mer, when the furs had been ex-
changed for trading goods and a
few gaudy luxuries, they toiled
west again. It was a masterpiece
of disciplined organization, that
annual trip to meet the proprietors
at Grand Portage. The iniscontin-
ent rendezvous cleared the news
for thousands of miles, news of
wars in Europe and America, of
fabulous fortunes in furs in the
Northwest and rumours of Russian
aggresion from Alaska .
Trade was the paramount traffic
au the hgihway. Seldom did a true
explorer stand out among his fel-
lows like the bright shirt of a voy-
ageur hoisted for a sail. -From
"The Saskatchewan." by Marjorie
Wilkins Campbell.
CROSSWOR
PUZZLE
ACROSS
1. Deprivation
5. Headpiece;
8. Chilled
12. Malian family
13. Feminine
name
14. Short letter
15. Hindu
garment
16. Period of
recreation
18. Conveyance
20. Flowerless
plants
21. Proper name
22. Operated
23. Swamp
25. Turning aside
80. Toward
shelter
22. River island
33. Greek portico
84. Those who
raise food
87. 'Unit of work
38. Overhead
railways
(colloq.)
39. Throe -handed
armadillo
41. Place of action
44, Beetles
47. Religious
garment
49. Auditory
60. Volcano
51.Tnsect
52. :Bristle
58. Stagger
64. Garden pot
65. E'araidlde
DOWN
1. For fear that
2. Chain of ridges
3. 'Unknown
person
4. Large net
3. Those not in
the service
6. Assyrian
sky god
7. Moccasin
8. Purposes
9, Coconut floe:
10. Short jacket
11. Lairs
17. At a distance
19. Unhappy
22. Took hack
23. Sack
24. Palm leaf
26. Contend
27. Said again
28. And not
29. Old joke
31. Toothless
35. Biblicai
country
36. Spring
40. went up
41. Declare
42. Nerve
network
43. Ancient
slave.
44.1 arge knife
45. Nip
46. E'eud
metr rally
48.1 low back
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Answer Elsewhere on This Page
Hemolphilia Helper -Famed *ger Hildegarde rehearses for the
benefit performance she'll ;!give for the Hemophilia Foundation.
Hemophilia is the dread disease in which the blood will not clot,
resulting in spontaneous internal bleeding and serious, sometimes
fatal, hemorrhages from otherwise superficial scratches or cuts.
Contributions to the Foundation are used to aid victims and to
further research.
NICL1 ai:RFARM
Ga,tert.doU.r e P CleDke
We have lost a King. In ;our
lifetime we have seen other kings
come and go. We also ditnly re-
member the death of Queen :Vic-
toria. But at no other time have
we been •quite so stunned and
grieved as we were last Wednes-
day when the tragic news came
over the radio that King George
VI had passed away in his sleep.
And yet if, as Mr. Churchill ssaid,
for the last few months the King
had "walked. with Death" then
'death finally came to him in`;'' its
most gentle and merciful guise. ' In
fact one might say that death dealt
with the King more kindly than
had Life.' As a monarch . King
George VI. had surely faced. ;:far
greater difficulties than had Bost
of his - predecessors....O.n
certain~ the .reaction of th
world •to the news of the 'Kin's
death 'should settle once and . for
all the controversial question as ;to'
whether of not the' British Throne
means anything at all=to the people
of tfie British Empire and to the
world beyond.
*
And now we have a Queen . .
a lovely and gracious young wife
and mother, who, for the sake of
her Empire, must now sacrifice all
hope of a carefree and happy life
as most young married w o m e n
know it. How glad we are that the
young Royal couple were able to
visit Canada before this heavy,, re-
sponsibility came upon them. Now
we know them not only as the
Queen and Prince Consort but- as
Elizabeth and Philip who won the.
hearts of Canadian people from.
coast to coast. The King is dead.
Long live the Queen. There is
something so ,significant in those ,
statements. Behind then' lies the
power, and the pageantry -and the
continuity of the 'British throne.
Down in this part of Ontario
we have been experiencing every
kind of weather -rain, snow, wind
and fog -but no extreme tempera
tures •for the last two weeks. And.
we have been anxiously watching
the coal -bin. Early in December.
I looked at our seven -ton coal pile
and wondered what we were going
to do with it all -up to that date
we had hardly used any at all,
the insulation had been so satis-
factory. But since then, because
we have had so much wind and
stormy weather the coal has van-
ished with amazing rapidity. Late-
ly we have known that we must
have more Boal brought in. But •
liow? That was the question, ,To
get to our cellar window the truck
must come over one of the fields.
When it could have got in we
didn't think we should need any
more coal. When we were sure we.
would need It then the snow was
piled high across the field to the
House. Eventually the snow went
away -and then the land was too
soft, the 'truck would have been
i
m red. Rat •one night last week
there 'was' a good frost. The next
night it was even sharper. The
following morning, after a con-
sultation with Partner, I ordered
a tori of coal -if it could delivered
that morning. It was in the bin
within the hour. That same night
it thawed .again. Were we lucky+
With the changeable weather we
get in Canada these days no one
can really afford to tape chances,
Last yeast becattse'of the mud, our
last ton -of coal had to be dumped
into the :driving -sliest. Carrying
coal across the yard by the scuttle-
ful wasn't Partner's idea of doing
things the easy wayl
• wart
Pupcycle-When Czechoslovakian
refugee Walter Fischer decided
to turn out his streamlined ver-
sion of the bicycle, he didn't for-
get to provide space for the
family pup. The dog's pretty
Berlin owner likes the innova-
tion, as it gives her more room
in which to put the family groc-
eries.
1INDAY 3IIOOL
LESSON
This winter I have managed to
get through a tremendous amount
of reading -possibly too much. Or
can one read• too much?
Here. are a few of the books I
have read just recently. "Children
of the Archbishop" by Norman
Collins. A good book to read and
a splendid choice to buy as a gift.
It has been described as "A
modern Dickens."
"Renny's Daughter"-Mazo de
la • Roche -typically Mazo style -
and that, of course, is good.
"The Voice of Asia" -not so
well written in a literary sense but
a most informative book in veiw
of developments in Asia at the
present time. Definitely a book to
read -and packed full of interest.
"The Unfulfilled" by W. G Har-
dy. A wonderful book -someone
should send a copy to the Con-
gressman who thinks the U.S.A.
should buy Canada! Towards the
end of the book one of the prin-
cipal characters says this -"What
would the Canadian' become? The
Anglo -Canadian, at least, was
taking shape. He was largely Am-
erican in talk and habits. But -
and this night be a saving grace
-there Was in hien also. a resis-
tance to and criticism of things
American. It might ie the pull to
Britain. At any rate a •Canadian
literature• was developing, present-
ing Canadians as they were."
Sex is dragged' in 'like a red
herring. The moral code which
supposedly governs decent -living
people is treated as outdated and
unnecessary. More's the pity.
Must loose -living be thus publicly
condoned?
HOW TO RULIEVIIV
MUSCULAR
P A I W S
Warm affected par*
kkub in warm oil.'Keep
covered with warm
IN515T ' flannel. At druggists'
N% for 85 years. 57.2
By Rev. R. B. 'Warren, B.A., B,D.
Our Beloved Barnabas
Acts 4:36-37; 9:2647; 11:19-26.
Memory Selection: He was a good
mart, and full of the Holy Ghost
and of faith. Acts 11:24.
Joses earned the name given to
him by the apostles. He was indeed
a son of consolation as his naive
Barnabas signified. In the early
days of the church he sold his land
in Cyprus and turned the money
over to the apostles. Then we find
hint consoling the new convert,
Saul. While the apostles suspected
Saul's sincerity Barnabas befriended
flim and won a place for him among
the leaders.
Later Barnabas was despatched
to Antioch the Gentile center, to
assist the new believers. Shortly
after his arrival he went to Tarsus
and secured Saul to assist him.
Then we find him heading a relief
mission to Judea where famine had
caused great need. But his work
of consolation was not completed.
He and Saul were despatched by the
Antioch Church under Divine guid-
ance to carry the Gospel to Cyprus
and Asia Minor. Before they had
left Cyprus the pair were no longer
known as Barnabas and Saul but
Paul and Barnabas. The man whom
Barnabas had befriended and guid-
ed now` became his superior.
Again we find Barnabas at Jeru-
salem. This time he along with
Paul contended with those who
would have brought the Gentile
Christians under the legalism of
Judiasm. They won in the cause of
Christian liberty. Then Paul and
Barnabas parted over the question
as to whether or not Mark, nephew
of Barnabas, who had deserted them
on the first journey should be per-
mitted to accompany them on the
second. We think that even in this
he was still "the son of consolation."
Mark made •good so that even Paul
called for him when imprisoned in
Rome. Barnabas was a good Irian.
Bury Wires,
Not Pilots!
- In any future war, small air-
ports and runways will play an im-
portant role in the defence of the
nation, and it would "seem like a
good idea while there' is yet time
to make them as safe as possible
by . removing all • nearby and sur-
rounding obstructions that 'might
add to the hazard of landing
wounded aircraft.
Despite existing regulations, there
is a type of obstruction that is
still all too prevalent, and one that
gives even veteran pilots the jit-
• ters on occasion. It is the over-
head wiring that is strung from
poles placed alongside , or around
even some major airports.
The seriousness of this problem
is illustrated by a U.S. report in-
volving collision with wires and
poles by aircraft owned or operated
by other than regular airlines. Dur-
ing one year there were 288 col-
lisions reported. These accidents
resulted in nine persons killed, 20
seriously injured, 72 aircraft de-
stroyed and the remainder substan-
tially damaged. 'What is more al-
arming is that about 60 of the col-
lisions occurred where you would
least likely expect them to hap-
pen - at established airports. Of
the total, 88 per cent happened dur-
ing the daylight hours.
Unless something is done, these
figures will grow with the increas-
ing use of air travel. The problem
was recognized some years . ago by
the Aircraft Owners and Pilots
Association of the United 'States.
The organization began a campaign
sparked by the slogan, "Bury the
wires instead of the pilot." • •
Unfortunately, it achieved very
little. The campaigners kept run-
ning into the excuse that it cost
SEDICIN tablets taken according to
directions is a safe way to induce sleep
or quiet the nerves when tense. $1.00
Dru • Storesonly! orSedicin Toeonto2.
too much to put the wires under-
ground. This is a debatable point.
Aircraft cost a lot of money, too,
and over the years the cumulative
loss in destroyed and damaged air-
craft, let alone the loss of life, will
eventually exceed the cost of bury-
ing the wires and removing the
poles.
Pilots of regular air • lines often
express concern, too. An example
of this was brought to light in Se-
attle two years ago when a twin-
engined C46 took off from Boeing
airfield and crashed into the ground
after hitting two sets of power
lines at the end of the runway.
Seven persons were killed and in
the investigations that followed it
was revealed that the Air Lines''
Pilots Association had long pro-
tested the presence of the overhead
wires and urged that something be
done about putting thein under-
ground,
Because there is less air travel
here, collisions in Canada between
aircraft and overhead wires do not
occur as often. But similar condi-
tions do exist in this country and
every so often a Canadian flier is
killed or a plane destroyed because
of an obstruction that can easily be
remedied. Those who are able to
think only in terms of` cost might
pause to remember that with the
growing use of costly jets, it will
be a good deal more economical in
the long run to bury the wires than
to go on burying pilots..
Radioactive. In Evanston, Ill., ar-
rested the third time for stealing
the same portable radio, Norwood
Hadley explained: "I just love that
radio."
And the
RELIEF is > LASTING
Nobody knows the cause of rheum6-
tism but we do know there's one
thing to ease the pain . . . it's
INSTANTINE.
And when you take INSTANTINE
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 INSTANTINE for fast headache
relief too .. or for the pains of
neuritis or neuralgia and the aches and
pains that often
accompany a cold.
Get instantine today
and always
keep it handy
nstantine
12 -Tablet Tin 25}t
Economical 48 -Tablet Bottle- 75c
•
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
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.ISSUE 9 -- 1952
Ring up another
for MAGIC! GINGERBREAD
-�'-� DESSERT RING
Mix and sift 3 tunes, 134 c. once -sifted
pastry flour (or 134 c. once -sifted hard -
wheat flour), 2 tsps. Magic Baking Pow-
der, X tsp. baking soda, 34 tsp. salt, 84
tsp. ground cinnamon, 34 tsp. ground
ginger, 34 tsp. grated nutmeg. Cream % c.
butter or margarine and blend in X c.
lightly -packed brown sugar; gradually
beat in 1 well -beaten egg and 34 c. molas-
ses. Combine l c. buttermilk and 34 tsp.
vanilla. Add, dry ingredients to creamed
mixture alternately with liquids and
spread batter in greased 840 angel calm
pan. Bake in rather slow oven, 325°.,
about 50 mins Serve with hard sawn
which has been flavored with ^rated
nrlltige rind. Yield: 0 Sal vie^a,