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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1952-11-06, Page 6�.y "Deer Anna Hirst: I hope you can !':3;,p tae, for I'm all nixed up. 1: have filed for a divorce, and w don't want to get it. "Is::,:e husband and I have been married four years, and now we've been separa- rated for eight months. I still love him fiery much, and he says he loves me. But I am not sure of him. He is 24, I'm "Ids s 11as been going with a girl :tom's he's supposed to marl: when our divorce is final. "Re se he tells hie it is me he want F Whenever he grew tired of i, e. he would find someone else.. What shall I do? "UNDECIDED" A i<ri LEAF * reedit now, while your hus- * be •:, wants to come home * are eeu would snatch at any * ch,=eee to have hien stay, why "` dog.': you turn a new Ieaf in yr'•"- r marriage book and start "' all. e r again?? * `.LI two loved each other o:: e. True, you were both 3rr •ee to marry, • and you * mege me;mistakes. Today you * ars better equipped to make ag . of it. Make a pact, and * tr . " T_:1 your husband you will " teen. him back, for a reason- * ai,:: period, with one proviso: * Dig this trial, he is not to * dues any other girl. If he ag- resd. ask your lawyer if he * eel. halt the proceedings. • em really begin to live * tc ;• :her again, each deter- ' mte:ed to make the best of th%::s, * First, recall the joys of your " fig:_ : year of marriage. Re- * telereber how you used to * speed your evenings together * —•':.ere you went, how you * hip.= most fun, the sports, mov- "' ic:., dances you enjoyed, or " je e being alone at home-- * al 17. repeat the program. Put : ef your mind the months * o': separation and the dis- * ti;:.:: ed period that preceded thee .. Try to see each other the eyes of love. * 1v new faith in yourselves. * L : ou are equally sincere, edit find yourselves prac- * ti a new tolerance and pa- * ti ' and diseoverin • a * tie ,goy in embarking on the et;.. turn., * ill ta,lzi. imagination of " a high order, For your part, " you will play the bride again * —that girl who took such pride in her house, who served " the dishes her new husband preferred, who listened with *•' such breathless enthusiasm to * his plans for the future, who inspired him to work harder * than he knew he could. You " will stay dainty and desir- "' able, as you used to be, and * charm him with those sweet r, ways and gayety he used to knew. * If he enter into the idea at all, he well do his best, * too. Ile will come straight ,, home from business, he will "' .be attentive and affectionate ". again, and, forsaking his " loose habits, save all his " thought and interest for this "' attractive wife who waits for him. * It will be a mutual plan to carry out together, and bind you closer from the day it starts, * If it fails, you have lost * nothing. Should it •succeed, you eel; both thank your stars that you found each other again, and had the cour- age (and the character) to re- new your faith. it is never too late to save a marriage —. if the two will make a pact and stick to it. Panne Hirst has ideas that will help. Write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, On t. Straighte'niTag i. resaeci Eyes Crossed eyes slioul• be treat- ed before the age of 4. AIthough they can be straightened in old- er children and even in adults, it may be too late then to im- prove eyesight. Because a cross- eyed child sees double images, he eventually gives up trying to use both eyes se that one becomes weakened from disuse. Early treatment can prevent this. Four methods are now generally used to correct cross- ed eves. Glasses alone work in some cases. In othere a patch over the. good eye makes the youngster use his weakone. Eye- nntscle exercise are also help- ful. And while surgery is nec- essary in many cases, the op- eration is a relatively minor one and not dangerous. .. .... ........... ... ...... ............n, } ....r:i�:�:'.r...... ...... ........ stir r.4'•:.:..v........v.. a/0.4i daelier, a‘fre,0 Yre \bG' P ;'!l4' f �' ' ta . •ii. 5 ,�� f,, ern,�y"'d•�r Now in effect ---special Thrift -Season rates on all sailings to Britain and Europe .. , with arrival of a convenient English, french or Irish port., Frequent sailings also available from New York, ONE WAY RATES TO BRITISH 'PORTS First Class from $200 Tourist Class $140 tint] $150 From Guabec "FRANCONIA" Nov.22 From Montreal "ASCANIA" Nov. 12 From Halifax "ASCANIA" Dec. G, Mar. 27 From Quoboc "SAMARIA" Nov. 5, Nov. From Halifax "SCYTHIA" .Dec, t3, Jan. 9, Feb. From Halifax "SAMARIA" Doc. 27 To tiverpaol 29) To ftavre 6iorad )Southampton 5' To Cobh and `tiverpool from Halifax "FRANCONiA" Doc, 21, Jan. 18, Feb. 1 from Halifax "ASCANIA" Jon. 5, "Mar, 1 from 'Halifax "SAMARIA" Jan, 25, Mor. 15 "To Cobh, Havre and Southampton. C{Stt010'71°14 ei!mc J1 chance of a tif w,tnCs tr of the he iP1e^4ouCar arm', Pans NQ jt•' make Yovr lading P' AKS fuilow ihn nun with Curvet , • • toMediterranean a Sauth America aribbenand e st the Indiest Oleos* your today i Sailhsps and reties an application. ll• GOO your renal Agent—p o ane can serve you better. mare Corner Bay & Wellington Sts., Toronto, 1 Wedding Bells—Lord Ogilvy, Scotland's most eligible bachelor and once Princess Margaret's best beau, stands with 19•year-old Amer - lead heiress, Virginia fortune Ryan, whom he wed in England's I biggest wedding of the year, i. ; ? .•'- y O NI H DCele "Too much good farm land is being used for housing pro- jects:" That is what is being said in some quarters -- and not without reason. But then, how i can it be otherwise. New houses I are definitely needed, and they I can't be built in slid -air. But it is not only for houses that land I is required. Each new commun- i its that is opened up must also have roads', stores, schools, gas - stations, parks, theatres and last but not least, churches. I However, farm acreage taken over for such projects cannot be inearly as great as that which is sacrificed for the erection of huge industrial plants, and for the construction of super -high- ways. It has worried us for some time. Travel the new Barrie highway for instance. How much farm land was taken over for its ' construction? Or the new Ford plant — taking in some of the best farms in the district. Now chain stores are building on the outskirts of many cities -- big stores, complete with parking lots. Almost every city is push- ing its outskirts farther out in- to the country. Real estate agents are having a field day among nearby farmers, who, attracted by good, cash offers, and having in mind the decline in farm produce prices, are usually ready to make a deal. Of course, if farm property is re- quired by the Department of Highways, ' the farmer doesn't have much say in it anyway. And think of the land that must be taken over where a clover- leaf is necessary! Modern highways follow a straight line, insofar as that is possible, so there can be little choice as to what farm land is taken over once a survey is completed. But such is not the case with industrial plants. They can be here, or they can be here -- according to the best ntcrests of the company. Whe- her the land required is highly reductive or not makes little iflerence. But I wonder . . couldn't here be some form of control overning the sale of agricul-. ural land for industrial pur- oses? Surely there is plenty f waste land that might be used good advantage instead of eine left to grow weeds. That uch productive land has al - adv been sold to industry is lit- e short of a cringe. Can't some- ing be done to put the brake before it is ton late — before e wake up end wonder what peened to all our good high - y farms? Not only purchased land is ected; grading and building hways indirectly affects other vin land, still in production — anging the natural drainage the land on either side of the d. As a private enterprise m ponds have proved thom- ves, as very satisfactory uldn't it also be possible, as onservation measure, for the eartment of Highways, in co - ration with the Department Lands and Forests, to con.. uct artificial ponds in low- tg areas directly attribut- e to highway construction? se unsightly bare spots may seen on many farms border.. every' new highway in the vince, n the other hand, another is perfectly obvious as one es through the country. In of modern machinery some s are not as productive as • were at one time .--our. included. A man whose . takes him to many places us that most of the farms sits arc owned and operat- y ansa over 70. In other t p d p 0 to b an re t1 th on w ha wa aft hig fa ch of roe far sel Wo ac De ope of str lyit abl The be ing pro 0 fact driv spite farm they own work told he vi ed b cases younger men are holding down jobs and trying to farm at the same time. But even these farms should not be sacrificed to the bulldozer. The fertltity is there, and should the time ever conte — and with increased population it well may — when farm produce is more urgently needed, then these farms can be put into peak production once again — if help is available and returns for farm produce make it possible. Well, having got that off my. chest I'll go out and find out how production has been going on around here. We imported 60 pullets last week. For the first few weeks looking after them is fun. Gathering eggs is quite an event — we couldn't be more excited if they were laying golden eggs. Two more today than yesterday, And the size ... soon they will be Grade A. Large! The hens, of course, are .moulting and falling off, But now they supply us with meat, poor dears. What a mercy geese, chickens, turkeys and the like., have leo realization of the fate that awaits them. They 1 ne have a short but happy life - get or do they? I can't think that turkeys, raised on wire, can be happy. I wouldn't want to raise turkeys for that same reason, "Baby-,gtt ng" Hell Three summers Nato startling things began to happen in R. D. i\ronlack's dairy down in Mis- souri, A New Hampshire hen had a nest in an unused feed bin, And she was trying to "set", al- though she didn't have any eggs tinder her. The Wonxacks had eaten the eggs as fast as she laid them. One day the barn cat slipped into the darkened feed room, jumped into a bin next to the hen's, and gave birth to four kittens. The hen peeped over the partition, saw what had happen- ed, and decided that if she couldn't have chicks to mother she'd take cats. She moved over into the nursery bin, The here and the mother cat battled for custody of the babies. First one would win, then the otleer. So, in time, they worked out a compromise, They'd both mother the kittens. It worked out nicely for the mother cat. She had a perma- nent baby-sitter, and was free to hunt mice and prowl around. The arrangement also suited mother hen. The kittens seemed to love her more than they did their real mother --except, of course, at mealtimes. She cover- ed then with her wings at night and sometimes she covered them and the' mother cat while they nursed. It all worked out so satisffac- torily, in fact, that the next time the cat had kittens they repeated the relationship. And the an- other time after that—three tinges in all, twice within one year, Now the hen is at it again, nothing her f o u r t h litter. The old cat, however, has passed on, and a new cat has taken her place. These kittens are her first --only two. Since this new cat didn't know just what the old hen was up to, there was another hot battle, It as tough on the kittens until the cat and the hen signed a truce and decided to be friends instead of enemies. Now mother cat can visit the bin and feed the babies any time she thinks the ed nourishment. They get along fine. A voter in allavi ge near Bom- bay, India, who thought his bal- lot was a bread coupon and took it home, was chagrined when police retrieved it, THE LEGAL MIND Once a ranch hand was up for trial for horse thieving, and they couldn't find twelve jurors wiling to give him a fair shake in court. The judge roared, "There'll be no hanging in this town while I represent law and order! Round up twelve lawyers and herd'em into the jury box." By combing the surrounding country they managed to find twelve men with law degrees of sorts, and the long-delayed trial got under way. The townsfolk expected a quick verdict of "guilty," and so did the judge, but the twelve lawyers stayed locked 1n the jury room for eight solid hours. Finally the judge summoned them and de- manded, "Haven't you danged fools decided on a verdict yet?" "Heck, Judge,," demurred one of the jurors, "we got our verdict in three minutes. What we can't seem to agree on is a foreman." jvi 'aiO1tE USEFUL Scna'i.% Ed Ford describes a visit to a friend who rather fancied hrtnself as a big -game hunter. On the floor was a fine bear rug, and when the host saw Ford looking at it, he expanded his chest and boasted, "I shot that bear myself, He came upota nee unawares in the forest. .The fight raged for an hour. Obvi- ously, it was a struggle for sur- vival ---either the bear or me!" Senator Ford nodded and said, "I think the bear makes a mucid better rug." *AURES AND POS OF And the RELIEF IS LASTING There's one thing that brings really fast relief from the discomfort . , , the headache , . , the muscular aches and Pains that often accompany a cold - INSTANTXNE. And the relief is prolonged! So get INSTANTiN5 and get quick comfort. INSTANTINE is compounded like a prescription of three proven medical ingredients. You can depend on its fast action in getting relief from everyday aches and pains, headache„ rheumatic pain, neuritic and neu- ralgic pain. Bet lnstantine today and always keep It handy 12 -Tablet Tin 250 Economical 48 -Tablet Bottle 75 flOYMMIlsensifteariva SSH- 1952 Short and Sweet Bake it with lir WIC,. MACE & ORANGE SWEET BREAD Mix and sift 3 tithes, 234 c. once -sifted pastry flour (or 23 c, once -sifted hard -wheat flour), 33- tsps. Magic Baking Powder, X tsp. salt, 34 is ground mace. Cream 3.3 c. butter or margarine and blend in i3 c. fine granulated sugar; beat in 1�well-beaten egg, 1 tsp, grated orange rind and tsp. vanilla. Add dry ingredients to creamed mixture alternately with is c. milk. Turn batter into a its THE WHI7F9n 11 loaf pan (4; i" x 8W1) which has been greased and lined with greased 335 ° paper. about Bake hour. moderate llow loaf to cool in pan. Spread sliced cold bread with butter or margarine for serving, r✓ St.44ra (C -4q) T H I -•t. HOUSE,: OF SEAGi b V 0 THINE OF TO111)n1j. 14�,r➢y : 1411111 i.ci Ill., I`fjD. ' d0.,M,,:unux..r ..mvgY.in++,MrnrxMn».rr5d, ti �5