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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1950-05-04, Page 2elle ANNE o "'DEAR AX, -\:E 1're neer ,going with a young ntan for niiie anonths, ant! e. -e vthing was nr.e, We went every- where together. �. IN never even a argued. Neither of our parents objected - until lately. "Now ray par- ents have told 5` the tales about him which I know are not true. And they don't aecm even to :rust mel "His mother and nine got to- gether. They decided we were see- ing; too tnuch of each other, and that it is best for us to break up. His parent went on vacation a month ago, and lie had to go along. I believe they did this so he would forget me. Fie didn't. "We love each other. Please tell sale what to do I am sick worry- ing over it. ••b%°ORRIED." Rt WHEN two people are in love, e it is maddening to find that others e object to it. Our personal hap- • piness is so supreme that our minds are blinded to reason, and e we feel that any opposition is to unfounded and actually wicked. s Why can't parents let us alone? 's One reason is that parents s have a duty to their children. y If they see them falling in love P before they are old enough to P realize the meaning, parents are bound to recommend that they 9 take time out to think objectively. That isn't possible when the two 01'are constantly together, dating Ge' .only each other. Perhaps this boy has been neg- IP lecting hia studies, or his job, P Perhaps you have been forgetting '3 your friends, failing in your other responsibilities. Perhaps you two are in the remote and passionate e snood where you feel that the world's well lost for love. You P tell me so little'. dil4 " 1. a,.*$5 l owl nr,t ti,irtdr, <-! %•lust iw potrtam style of the year . , . new ertsit r„ llar and ruff's, smart inside Pockets. Best of all, it's all easy-- Sei • Ifo N'Ftisthnc seatl,! Pattcru 4811; sires 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, nine 16 4•8* yard!, .i --inch: s/4 yard con- trast. This pattern, easy to use, simple 50 yew, is tested for fit, 'Has com plete illustrated ianstructions. Scurf twenty-five cents (25c) in twins (stamps cannot 1?e accepted) for this pattern, Print plainly bine, nallie, address, style number, :Send order to Box 1, 123 'eighteenth St., J!+ ou Toronto. Gilt, lotus is — lose 141 R S ""' T * Why don't you show your * parents that you are both more * mature than they think? Co-op- * erste with thent, instead of re- * belling. Admit they may be * right, but you are so sure that * you are, that you are willing to * date this boy often, and go around * with other young men too. If * you consent to this, pleasantly, * I think your parents will not * insist that you give hien up en- * tirely. * I don't entirety, agree with the * tactics which your parents have * employed to change your feeling * toward the lad, but maybe they * see that you are too emotionally * involved to respond to any * others. * If they Insist that you give him * up entirely, even do that, for, say, * a year. If your love and his are * as deeply rooted as you believe, *.You will not change, and your * parents will finally have to be * convinced. * Meanwhile you will be wise to me crazy! And I haven't got enough a play along with them—not re- courage to try the Spartan cure * sentfuily, but cheerfully. More which some folk advocate—to run * than anything else, this attitude barefoot through the snow. * will show thein that you are Every time we get a cold spell * wiser than they thought, better I wonder why so many farm houses * able to control your emotions, are built with maid door opening * and worthy of their complete directly into the diningroom or kit - * trust and affection. 1 * Whatever comes tater, thia a front door, opening on to a hall * of confusion must not alienate but in the country no one uses the * you from your family. Guide front door anyway. Fven so, the * yourself accordingly, hall eventually leads to one of the Parents may seem objection- main rooms. Now why couldn't the able people occasionally, but in hallway lead right through from the long run, they are usually the front door to the back door, right. Play along with theta, with rooms opening out from either even when it hurts, Anne Hirst side of the hall? That way direct will help you see why, if you draughts would be eliminated as it Eight write her at .Boa: 1, 123 Eight- would not be necessary to- have one— eenth Street, New Toronto, Ont. eenth room lead into another as they do ties will have to do is to consult now. (We have six doors in our Why Protect These diningrooml) Imagine rooms with arin ful Pes ts? only one door—no draughts blow - are interested in reforestation, fruit Ing through at all, For conveniece I+ar-aners, gardeners, fruit grow- there could be an extra outlet from 1 srs and tree planters will not be C Interpret 81, Fastener very happy about the proposal of (archaic) gs. Land :oes t1MC Priscilla Pops Out on TV—A1 Vermeer, right, who draws the popular comic.strip, "Priscilla's Pop," found that his mischiev- ous little heroine behaved very well when she made her first television appearance. Vermeer was guest artist otm a cartoonist show. %NGF,RFARM Gwort.dOUrL e P. Ctat`l�,e Last week we were colder in the house than we had been in years. Day after day icy winds battered themselves against our doors and windows, penetrating the house even against storm doors and window protections. What it would nave been like without them, dear only knows. It is at such titres that I wonder how people in pioneer days ever came through the win- ters. It isn't much good trying' to describe it—only experience can malce anyone realize what a stormy day in the country is really like. Even at that memory' is short- ived. For instance, one of our neighbours was in town looking after an ailing sister. It was a day when visibility was reduced to 100 feet, and, this neighbour, although she knew it was storming, had no I what it was, really alike t0`61 she gut home at supper time and found her way blocked from the garage to the house by huge drifts across the lawn. But now the weather has chang- e ad—a waren wind has been blowing ll day. Snow is packing and little rivulets are running under and through the snow. The house is draughty but reasonably warm, .so we can forget all about the stormy weather until the- next big blow. Ex- cept that I can't forget it quite so easily—not with a batch of chil- blains that are just about driving the Ontario Government to limit me crazy! And I haven't got enough the game bag oil cottontails. To courage to try the Spartan cure the hundreds of thousands of people which some folk advocate—to run who come in any of the classes barefoot through the snow. mentioned, rabbits are regarded as Every time we get a cold spell a serious pest, about in the same I wonder why so many farm houses category as field trice. They do are built with maid door opening enormous damage and if not kept directly into the diningroom or kit - down by continuous hunting they chen. Of course there is generally will do still more, a front door, opening on to a hall Almost every whiter literally mil- but in the country no one uses the lions of young trees and shrubs are front door anyway. Fven so, the destroyed by these pests despite con- hall eventually leads to one of the siderable money and time spent on main rooms. Now why couldn't the special measures. Even on the out- hallway lead right through from skirts of our large cities they do a the front door to the back door, lot of damage. with rooms opening out from either No exhaustive and expensive sur- side of the hall? That way direct vey is necessary to determine the draughts would be eliminated as it destructiveness of the common wild would not be necessary to- have one— rabbit. All that the game authori- room lead into another as they do ties will have to do is to consult now. (We have six doors in our their colleagues in those branches diningrooml) Imagine rooms with of the government service which only one door—no draughts blow - are interested in reforestation, fruit Ing through at all, For conveniece growing, agriculture or gardening. there could be an extra outlet from 1 _ C Interpret 81, Fastener l ORD (archaic) gs. Land :oes t1MC 10. Ftghtepectta- ocean "PLE tor's thrill 34, Horsos 111Beetlal 36. Pagers AC CTS 9. ArtificialIt. That In to nr' 97. Lodger 17. Assistant as: Steps g Worgivt Ianggt1affe i.ten TvrillghC Us 3. s0. Judgment 41, Color 44. Lrook ov lir ®. Excite Simple naw 4. Small sun. plznot R8. Portions 46. Let it stand 95.'T'rigono»BaoRai- 0. potential roundinx ciratd • Gama p'nayov. Iii, Ancient on a board cal rdatiata metal Vis, portagnin , 4 leo. Japanese coin lilgyptlata eittbl s• Metric M."d Sl one's hir 32 Italian river 7 Ra•vinsr it W..lnz measure Exist tb, Nothitna• lis. Rebrew letter 157. RirtlaYanp g 1 5 0 �t - tD II ! malady X. Dickens ohwr- �* � seter Char{n sFaixsltp 1A. 6 1� .Region Gla Africa 11. Long Or& stupid 9A. Irate d4 $J, Dasebaail t ss. tJs¢YormetRC� �rnape iutso le°snoo' erorosure,r . D"herc(I ' . Phlllpplao peaaettnt 011. commit thoW 14 3S df, wegativw d7S. gw. dsRE14M �q 49. Pronoun dill. POT4100 a � Of, Per fmft plr 44 tmtsA,D Ba 41o'nofte'Ad gA: I14 mloafnoti, gi Ltsa+re, :; ltd... Mors prefoano,, yp m.. 0e. $eWsia Gtf. c amen on t7ip sYtald'e 5Ef D6,wta atm* hat 1 li'an'a t iATtcmx Anljvyft 01nifwhato oil this page. the kitchen, and maybe French windows from the living -room oft to a sunporch; and an outlet from. the back of the hall to a back porch. Several outlets have to be consider- ed as fire escapes. Well, there you are—there's my dream house. How do you like it? Partner says my plan requires too much ground space. Maybe, so, but on a farm we at least have plenty of ground space. Now I think of it, that type of house is the exact opposite to a new bungalow I was in the other day, This house had a small front entry which led to the living -room on one side and the dining -room on the other. They in turn opened on to the kitchen, bedrooms and bath- room. There were archways, but no doors to the living or dining room. It was very nice, but it seems to vie there is very little' privacy in modern homes. As for instance, a girl I know who took her steady boy friend home to her parents' new bungalow. So that she and her boy might have a little time to themselves the rest of the family went to bed early every night! Even at that privacy would be dif- ficult if the living -room had one of these large, picture windows. -Pic- ture windows look very nice, but without blinds I always think of them as on a par with these two- piece bathing suits—so revealing that they leave little to the imagin- ation. Let's see, I had a quilting story to tell you, left over from last week, didn't I? Well, you see it was a sort of winter -week special. I set up the quilt all right and two neighbours were coming in to help me, but the weatherman decreed otherwise. So there was I with a F ti RWI _, Music on Tape i^iist coinineteial, tape recordings for Norte rise claimed by firm of- fering, eight reels of .popular, sc:ini- claisical music, by mail order; each reel plays one hour, includes 16 to 20 numbers; used on home model recorder running at 7%. in. sec., dual track. New Heating Mode Radiant heat by electric panels is to be introduced in Canada. Method, developed in Britain; uses portable screen panel, in decorative design, for supplementary heating of living rooms, bathrooms, porches, cot- tages, garages, etc. Also adaptable to drying, heating pottery, paint, Blas;,, etc., crop drying, seeding beds, heating stock tanks, brooders, greenhouses, etc, Supplying heat from 70 deg. to 1,000 deg. F., panels come in variety of models; temper- ature control by therutostat in each room, Plastic Harmonica Plastic mouth urkan from U.K. designed as toy is precision -made, with eight reeds, slid claimed cote - parable to standard instrunient�z. t. Three -Ply Pots Household utensils in Rosslyn :metal said to transfer heat quickly, evenly to all points inside; resists corrosion, durable, is claim. "Ross- lyn metal" describes two layers of stainless steel with copper core. 41 Plastic Groan Box Plastic saxop',one with Dialcon body said to give improved de- flection of sound waves, has noise- less key mechanism more easily re- placeable if damaged, floating pads secured to key cups with deflectors, says British maker. Owl Game Tenite plastic "Wise Owl" game, rings bell if right answer given to question chosen from accompanying book. Questions are multiple-choice whole quilt all to myself. However, quite often Partner would say— "If you want to get on with your quilt, go ahead—I'll do the dishes." So you see why I refer to my better - half as "Partner." And I did get my quilt finished. It was very thick so the stitches were none too small, but the quilting was fairly close so I don't think I did too bad to get it out of the frames by, the end of the fourth day. Well, I have just come up from the barn. Today Bob was away at chore time for the first time since .we got the milling machine so Partner had the fun of trying it out for ourselves. We got along fine but Partner says it takes a strong man to handle the tiling because everything about it is sp heavy. Perhaps the day will come when someone will put a milker on the market made of light weight metal that anyone can handle— like the feather -weight chairs that seem so strong and durable. answer, player drops metal. ball 10'i one of four numbered • boles repre- senting .answer he Believes' right, Iiountaiv"Pen Stapler 1)(1eket stapler for salesman, bill collectors ,insurance ni•en, students, office • and home use, looks like fountain pen with chrome cap ovdlr plastic barrel, fits iu Locket; 5 1111;, long, weighs 11 ui., fastens. is Sheets of paper, says d6irihutor. Fountain Pen Oiler Lubricator, shaped like tuuntaist pen, dispenses one drop of oil at time through needle-like nozzle, gets at hard -to -reach parts, . says Chicago maker. For Home Sodas Socia dispenser inalces ire -cream sodas, drillkS at home. Cowbinatiott cap and siphon, fits on top of bottle, dispenses or seals any car- bonated drink. Canadian distributor 'says. Mottle is shaken, up-endeI toga pressed. I FOR QUICKRELIEF BEYOND BELIEF..,, s �• r b •rs o E'or relief from the pain of ARTHRITIS, RHEUMATISM, NEURITIS, or SCIATICA .. get a bottle of DOLCIN Tablets today. DOLCIN has relieved the pains of thousands of sufferers, DOLCIN Tablets are not harmful, easy -to -take, reasonable in cost -100 tablets for $2.39-200 tablets for $3.93. Also available is bottles of 300 tablets, DOLCIN may be i purchased at any drug store. DOLCIN LIMITED. To. mato, Ont, DOLCIN TABL®TS i'atented 1940, DOLCIN is tLe TM. imtered trndemank of this product. Upside down to prevent peeking. 3 M A O 3d3 e7 .e 0 5 :_/ W53 9 b®1 S' S3! 'T lON 7 31 S' O H b3 37/ �1t P71 �` •3 � A7 313 /1 b' Q3'7dao.3'S° 7®fit/ -7 /'?® tl 'DO Canada Now In Midst of Great Ohl Deyelopments ¢ , x n - •..,un s,.i. �'!/.•i r'e}�p „11•'•1'1 t' L^�ti a dn" Do •ate., p..,,, i 9 t Y.3►dR a,.,a.—,.. .r.+w � o �9ZK,SfLId ! 11'4 .Cwe,n„nn R WITH an estimated oil reserve of 1,100 million barrels and re- serves 5,000 billion cubic feet of natural gas in the Province of Al- berta, Canada is in the midst of the greatest oil and natural gas de- velopment in her history, according to S. W. Fairweather, vice president of research and development of the Canadian National Railways. The Alberta district, Mr. Fair• weathersays, is today one of the most active areas of oil exploration in the western hemisphere, with Edmonton the "oil oapltal" o4 north- western North America. A concise, chronologleat report on the Canadian oil development, Complet® with Wraps and eharts has just been issued by the Canadian National Railways. in OThe Gleog- taphy o! Oil and Gas In Western Canada," Mr. .Fairweather traces the development from the first oil discovery In the Turner, Valley in 1914 up to the present unprece- -Mr. Pairweather fixes the be - of the present Canadian oil to the discovery of light ail near, Leduc, 18 miles south .of Edmonton, in 1844. In less than a year, developments shoved the presence of a armor oil field ex- tendingfrom Leduc across, the North, Saskatellewan !overt to the •Woodbend distract. 1114 to the end of 194'8, drilling in 'thla dold alone has lodloot#4 4 reserve of 650 sem O*% 0 biarrels of oil and 500 billion cubic feet of natural gas. Since the Leduc discovery, the railway economist declares, oil of a similar quality has been Round "almost all around Edmonton"; at Joseph Lake, Whitemud, Golden Spike, Barrhead, Bon Accord and 1R;edwater. 'eche golden Spike dis- covery well Is remarkable for a thickness of oil-bearing formation that exceeds 500 feet. The Red - water field, with an indicated re- serve of $00 91 barrels, is the largest oil pool yet discovered in Canada. Pincher Creek, south of Calgary, has the deepest successful well over drilled in Canada. It was re• oently brought Into production at 11r,4f00 feet with a record potential Of 83 million euble feet of wet gas "Ir day: the Lloydminster field, situate4l astride tete Alborta-Saskatchewan boundary, which came into produc- tion In 1949, stili constitutes the largest known reserves of heavy oil tit Canada. 9xploratlon Is now spreading into the sedimentary areas of Brit. ish Columbia, Saskatchewan, Maill• toba, and northern Alberta, NVir. Vairweather says, Oil In quantity WAS recently discovered by Imperial 011, Ltd. at ►7ormandville, 90 miles. south of Peace River and 210 miles 11011th of Edmonton. °,ldl`Its oil dliielop>atents of the past', three years have saturated the oil market of western Canada and out- lots utlets :lust now be found tarthat afield, Mr. Fairweather dechtre w To this end, lie says, a pipe Bili* % being; built laid from Edmontona to Reginu and this line will be ex- tended to Superior, •Wlsc.; at the Mend of the 'Great hal;.pw. a