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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1950-09-14, Page 10of After all is said and dom, how aloes it to ste in A cvtP ? That is what ca.�un is 1.. ffs IKI AL 'A" D `, SAG yieid the Perfect flavour. AN 'NE. "Dear Acme Hirst: I really tkink I need your advice. I'm 29, and have been going ts^ith a girl for some time. Almost at �w _iye once, she hinted at marriage. I was already in love, so one =� night. I propos- wand she ac- cepted. But how tbings h a v e Av� . changed! "I did every- thing for her I could. ' I bought her everything I could think of, And then suddenly she refused to go out with me 1 'Slee has been going with another plan, but she tells nae lie means nothing to her. I' can get other ,girls, but I'd feel guilty if she would see me, "titre both come from respected faunl cs and go to the same church. Her mother always .has told me to conte often. "I have a- lot --&�ec.nfideigce -in . Feu. Please help nae now. WORRIED" 11 14 1 R S T �'utttcvrd,�e FICKLE GIRL? * Girls and young leen some- times share the same reactions. You have read how often I've warned girls not to be too easy * to get, to let the boy friend earn * friendship and love against all * competition. It works both ways. * It may be this girl is by nature 4' fickle. She wants only to try * her skill. When you followed her obvious lead and proposed, * it is -possible that she was no lon- ger interested. If that is true, * she only desired the fun of win- ning. And, like many a mail, having wort, she was through. Like most men in love, you made no secret of your devotion. * You did everything she asked you to do - took her places she wanted to go, brought her gifts, smothered her with attention, If * she is really fickle, that was all * she wanted - the knowledge that she could have you. * Unless you know any other It reason she has changed her mind, '1 I suggest you give her the same a` medicine. It Don.'t call her. Don't write. Just stay away, And, to be real- ly smart, let her see you w'th another girl now and then. If * her true attitude: is dog -in -the - manger, she -will be after you soots enough. It is not easy to play such a * role, when one is really in love, particularly. with a girl 28 years old, Her character should be fix- ed now. Most men would be pretty ` thoroughly disgusted tYith her a adolescent attics. Yet, to be hon- * est, I have known girls that ac- ted like congenital flirts who, once married, made excellent i` wives. Use your o-wn judgment. A, 4: The way of a girl with a man is often beyond understanding. Aline Hirst knows more about both sexes than either can know of themselves - so ask for her opinion. Address her at j_ ( Just For Stinging People Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., twelve rooms to be convened, at a don there is a house which by day New Toronto, Out, looks little different from any of its living quarters for the bees. The neighbours, But at night one of the tG:i's �..... HOW BIG IS AN :ATOM? . house in Surrey, where she lives What goes on inside that room r - Atom a s s rata molecule, play a iWiktC4 prominent part in today's—and to ---news, and to the Iay- Fitted with an air - conditioning ntan they represent all exclusive Designs you homemakers will source of delight—to the scientist. love! Kitchen towels in outline Some ilea of the size of a mole - and cross-stitch are colorful as rule can be gauged from the fact v:ell as useful, Mahe a set nowl that if a drop of water could be For Daughter's first needlework enlarged to the size of the earth get Pattern 542. Has transfer of (nearly 8,000 miles diameter), then six motifs about 4/ x 7/ inches, the molecules of which the drop was Laura Wheeler's improved pat- composed would be no larger than 'tern makes needlework: so simple golf balls. with its charts, photos and con- And if a molecule could be en- cise directions. larged to the size of the earth its Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS atoms would be about the size of in coins . (stamps cannot be ac- golf balls. cepted) for this pattern to:- - Box 1, 123 -Eighteenth Street, "You came from a teetotal vil- New Toronto, Ontario, lage. didn't you:" Print plainly pattern number, your "Teetotal? �Vliy, they,wc•n't even Flame and address, let the carpenters use spirit levels." from Switzerland, The name and 10, Capital of 33. )! uss necessary quantity of these herbs Norway old card gams, IiJ � CROSSWORD H. 12. Equal "8. Lmmet PUZZLE 10, Makes Inco 40. 7nsoct 43. Girl's name 20. Constantly ^ 44. Struck father until after his death, t c, to he c (poet.) •ill. Young sheep - — _ ACROSS 4 Ring's, 23. ISe the matter 46, l acchanals' 24, Thing (lave) shout 1, Surmounting 6. I•iawallan food W, deal golf G Pyiblic notice 26, Weaken 49, Those in favor 26. Collection of 60. Ponce de - 8, Cease 77 l alk, as a, ,12, Fury horse (Scot.) facts 51. Medieval 27, Imagine Italian family 13. Poem R. 1:Iarden 14. Scotch -Irish 9. Negotiate 30. Black liquid 53. Animal's home 31. Indefinite one m 14eavens f 15, Originative 11. Yarn 18. Ancient Greek: I milepost 19. Inhabitant of (suffix) 21. And not '29. Car acco- sorics 26, Indian 28, Take a chat, 29. Lasso 82. small wild 84. Edge 26. book over 37. Himalaya., animal I9,17roop 1, Attempt 42. Censures 45. American general 47. Gentleman cf, '48. Abundant '52.V ager 54, Gives bat*- 56, Change posi- tion 91, Writing fluid 68. Whistle blast 64: Pgpatl "to iso' f11, Slavo DOWN L13OWN z Sour 3: z��aldt)g OWy `EAR THIS 'I'lle kitlkly «with the wide ear -spreads is "Sir Edward," a eliatilpiott 1lltrli5ll I..ap, whose tloptiers ineasure 27 illelles Whell fulls, spread. Lop-eared Eddie, ;eeii with Mann Deanne Carter, is cin exhibit at tlke Cottnty Fair. .Bees That Are Cu.1tivated Just For Stinging People In a quiet street in North Lon- twelve rooms to be convened, at a don there is a house which by day cost of thousands of pounds, into looks little different from any of its living quarters for the bees. The neighbours, But at night one of the other eleven are in Alas. Owen's curtained windows is always dark, . house in Surrey, where she lives What goes on inside that room tvitll her husband, a retired naval where the blinds are never 'drawn ofStder, and their nine-year-old son. and the windows never,opened? A": Fitted with an air - conditioning hundred inspired guesses would plant and lined with layers of cork, bring you nowhere near the truth. the "living" rooms are kept at a It is a beehive. In that room live temperature only a few degrees some of the 20 million bees owned. above freezing - point, and the b3' one of the biggest bee -keepers in breeding - rooms at 55 degrees Far - the country. enheit. They a"re not ordinary bees. They Secret Handed Down don't make honey. Their greatest;.. This is the heat of a normal value is in their least attractive summer day and it enables .the bees quality - their sting. to. breed all the year round -unlike Every day, sometimes twice a day . the honey bee, which only breeds in Airs, Joan Owen ' , who has cultiva= the early, spring. ted this mammoth hive, enters the Suspended .from the ceilings of dnrlceued room and catches about the rooms are zinc cages, each about one hundred of the bees that swarm the size of a small refrigerator, in oil the cork - lined walls or buzz which the bees live. through the specialty cooled air. She They feed oil a mixture of honey puts them into siizall glass jars. atld poison extracted from kerbs Their Last Act from Switzerland, The name and They leave the room with only a; . necessary quantity of these herbs few more hours to live. But before is, a "trade" secret which Airs. Ow - they die'tley twill have helped to ' en did not learn frotu he; grand - relieve pain by stinging sufferers father until after his death, t c, to he c from rheumatism, arthritis, fibrosi- he left her this knowledge in his tss, and neuritis. trill. She herself will reveal it only These glass jars are all that this to' her son in the same way. y -small, r- grey hah•ed woman in her But she makes no secret of the early forties, a doctor in her native tray in which the food is prepared. Huligan', takes on her strange . `rounds." She takes a quantity of the herbs Airs. Owen, one of a large -family -- which, in the form of hay, are kept for six months to mature at a of doctors, learnt about the bees at temperature of 17 degrees below a clinic run by her grandfather zero �- licixes tlzeixl with a- pint of Shortlybefore, file war she started rater and two pounds of honey to breed them in Great Britain. She and boils them, IS now established as. what is per- "I Do Not Flinch" haps the first and only Bee Venom Therapist in'England` Whenthe mixtlrre has cooled she There may be some controversy pours it into afeeding-tube, twitch in the orthodox medical �voapy, has to be specialiv made to a length lila value of Bee Venom Therapy, of eight feet to enable her to reach ' and not all the results of this treat- he bees' u(•, toto tcages. ages. m,ent tray' be as successful as they While she is the bees' room have been for Mr, James Char- Mrs. Owen sometimes has as many nnan, of Dartford. With Mrs. Owen as 1,000 of then•[ crawling over her and twelve jars of bees a reporter at a time. But she is never stung went to visit this star patient. Here unless they get into her hair. They in his story as he told it. do not sting rate bemuse I do not Now He Walks frighten a bee - and when it is . Since 1942, when at the age of 43 frightened it will sting." tic first developed osteo -arthritis, 1 When ell asked what happened to Air. Charman has consulted more any bees left in the jars at the end than ten doctors, attended six hos- of the clay, pitals, and had eleven different•kinds "I take them to bed tvitll ane," of treatment. At first only his left sbe said. "If I put them back into knee was affected, but before he the hive they would fight with the began the bee treatment last November ice was practically bed- others." nta•en knows that many ridden and in great pain. herr patients atients are warned by their t When I sate 111111 lie was walking friends that theyare toasting their round hs garden with the. ai,i of money. This does not worry her. a stick. On being asked about the They're "Rogues' bee stings, and he showed the diary "Caring rheumatism by bee stings lie has kept throughout his treat. is looked upon as an old wives, went. He had his first s`rtig•s on tale," she says, "And so il. is - if November 21st, 1949, you use honey bees. Most people "Five stings across the should- don't, or won't, understand that Illy ells," reads the diary. "Not very bees are not honey bees. Honey painful," And then, a week later, bees won't cure anything. The pol- ,xhen he had had a few stings each len they gather destroys hunnan (lay: "Woke feeling rotten, Stek tissue. all day, sweating and shivering, Se. "Aly bees never leave their rooms, Yen stings on right foot and three but even if they did they wouldnot on right shoulcler." gather t)ollcn. They would live on Mr. Charman felt "rotten" for flies and ladybirds, not flowers. They nvarly a week. Then, after an in- may be `rogue' bees, but I have creasing number of stings cacti day, a great affection for them," ho noted in his diary oil December 7th a slight movement in his left MOST CHURCHES NEED ONE toot. He had %lot been ahle- to move. for nearly a year, "I got EOttlethtflg here that -willit Altogether he has hart 1 - or 2.000 solve this church's financial stings. He stated that in the early troubles," "What is it," asked the preacher sessions they (lid not hurt much, slut hopefully?" that as soon as lie started to feel became more better each treatmentbox. " C, it's patent contribution painful, . Coins falll ihrough slots of dif-. The reporter felt how a sting sting ferent sizes, Dollars, half dollars and quarters fall oil velvet, can Burt even a [lou -ria when he rashly volunteered to be nickels and penfiiec drop on a hell! stung myself. Mrs. Owell took ane of the jars from inside her blouse, tvilere they are kept For c��e a next to her skill to give the bees the warmth t from her body. She openers the jar 'and alifted i Skin Troubles quickly out a bee with her forceps, Holding it oil tris wrist, she waited until his yelp of pain matte up sour mind today that you are going to give vour sldn a real chance to told that the bee had done its v(clrk, bet We)), Go to any good drug store and Each treatment tastes a Consider- get an original bottle of 6foono's Minerald oil -.it lasts many days berauso it it= 1,lghly able time. For this reason, and to cover the cost of the lipkeep of the enncentrated. The very first applicntlon Will give you reltof-•-the itching Lezenia bees, the fees are not light. Ellor- of is quic%dy stopped --eruptions dry u0 and scale off in Molls overhead expenses Vire invbl• a The innlo isof ingery Toesrand^sP el, narivesrue %tel. )Salt ved its the running of the beehive, Rheum, skill troubles, Brei originally from wild African Remember that moone's 1:inerald Ol) is a elonts, newerful, penetrating Antiseptic Oil bees, 'these special bees can 0111v live that does not stain or leave a greasy resi. and breed at certain 'collmant field- due' Complete satipfttnlion or money back. r,eratares, The roost in the-lVorth -nn(1off [louse is tite most recent of tasup, 38 - 1950 Another thing 1 spedally wanted to set* tvas a demonstration of the Rorke method of Needle -w easing. /i ```� ` '� ^'" • Ladles, believe rate, that is really something, In needle -weaving you can mance anything from slippem %li i� to berets; handbags to suits. Tlae ?t I time will collie when, if you don't jW Gwendol-Ime. P ClC161e know how to .)eedle-weave you won't know anything. It is s!nlple, - inexpensive slid quick. After D d you. nimmlage a trill to the Exhibition Mr, and Mrs. Rorke Canadian National Exhibition? I opening a shop on Yonge Sir hope you did -and that you en- Better ruts with the crowd anti joyed it. 1Each of us took in the out all about it. However, ;t w Big Fair but all on different days, be necessary to buy anything A•t one time it us,d to be a fancily their store unless you want t affair but now we find it suits us the thing is to see how tate w better to play a lone hand as what is done and then it i- more ill interests, one doesn't 'interest the likely you will have just the ri other, incidentally, when v e team kind of needle, net and wool arot LIP we waste so much time trying home and can go right to w to figure out what we think the At least you call practise with w other person would like to do that you have at Moine. we get more itred than we sho•.tld a: * * 4o. 'Tile first one to visit the Fair Ah, 1 hear footsteps! We h was Partner. He went by bus each lead "three smart girls" stay way and arrived home' after acid here this week -now they are night. I expected hint to be half ting ready to catch the bus dead ... but no, lie said he had home, Our last batch of sut.l been. sitting down a good part of visitors. the time, listening to the band and watching events along the water- front and was quite well satisfied Cautious with what he had seen and done. Not only that but he didn't have to He was rather small, and worry about the farm since the been used to sleeping with a nig rest of us were !tome looking after light in his room, but his pare it. •Which was lucky because one had decided that, he must s time a truck came in and the driver sleeping in the dark. When left the yard gate wide open when mother put out the light lie ask he went out. If I hadn't noticed' it plaintively: '"Must I sleep in there would have been nothing to dark tonight, Mummy?" stop our cows from wandering . darling," teas the rep down to the highway. One wonders "you are getting a big boy oo what some folk think gates are for. vil, [nay 1 say my prayers o t: again -more carefully?" The next day 1 got a ride to Toronto with some friends and went to the Press Luncheon. That j\ 1 ria,..^!��s�i•`:ii`i ::. is always worthwhile because one ; ng t meets so many interesting people --and of course, any affair with Airs. Date Aitken at the' head of it is bound to be a success. Two v 1 very special y 1 ec 1 guests on Press Day were Jimmy Casson, 12, and Robin Barron, 11, co-editors and publi- shers of the Fonthill Bugle, airs. :? Aitken interviewed them at the luncheon table and their replies to ' 'n ; f <•`' ' Iter questions bsou ht forth t t I g gales .-• -. of laughter from the assembled guests, Asked if coming to tate Press luncheon and meeting so '<': ''•`'?`<'•�<:•. many ladies wasn't 3 e t as i t swell worth the trip one of the boys re lied -"Olt r?> i% 3' p #;. I dutnto ... maybe!' That just L... about brought 'down the house, Their paper has a weekly circula- tion of 250 and is printed on a ditto >'� #r. machine. The boys take it turn �`��� J %". about to cover the news, sports and .. , ,•, advertising: but they "don't have no " ''And the editorials!" One wonders what is RELIEF IS LASTING ahead for these two enterprising youngsters. To all appearances they For fast, prolonged relief from are just two nice, averagb school- headache get"INSTANTINE. This boys -but -you never can tell, prescription -like tablet contains not Twenty years from noir they may just one, but three proven medical be the men of the hoar, ingredients that ease the pain fast. And the relief is, in most cases, lasting. Previous to the lunch racy friend Tr3r,I4,5TAVTlNE just once for pairs and I set out to find Queen Mary's relief 1 i ' y' fa'il'say as thousands duo carpet. I hope none of you ladies that there's one thing for headache: missed it. It was really marvellous. a • •it's INSTANTINEI The blending of the colours was And try INSTANTINE for other truly a work of art. At first, in loot:- aches, too ... for neuritic or neuralgic ing at it, I was conscious of a little pain ... or for the pains and aches disappointment because the back- that accompany a cold. A single tablet usually brtn s ground of the carpet was by no g means uniform in colour -one prompt relief, block being light fawn and -the , next several shades darker. Then set lnstantina todayand ; g a.piece keep itways handy &Nft�'` I realized I was loolcln at of work that was t ypical of the entire British people. during those dark days of the war a people staking the best of what'they had-. and still doing a mighty good. job. Iftistantione At * �` 1 J-T(I et Fin 25 . Imagine anyone with such a good €conomic 1-•4 -Tablet Bottle 69li eye for colour as Otleetl hfary -...� having to be satisfied with wool that d:dn't utatch for the back- ground ack( t ground of her work, How many other women would have given up in despair? You and I would prob- ably have said -"It's no use . , .1 3 o 1 N `l .g n p W I can't get the wool I want so 9S 3 b 4 'I A y it's no good starting the job." But b W not Queen Mary, And see what she S N W 3 has accomplished, and, see what b s b S b d N d d her carpet is still doing for the d 11 b O N b British people, That unmatched V b i b 1. 1 g 0 b background°should go down in his- b 3 y b l 9 tory as a symbol of the Queen 2t O N y 3 y j 9 Mother's courage and tenacity; of g V d ;3 �, 1 1 fy 3 a � her deterntiu ttion to do something g a d I to licit) the people she to -es. s9 O 1 S 21 b d d O °°Scruffy Shapes deserve a SHINER'S 7tj Polish off dirty souf€y shoes with Nugget give them a big, bright shirte that lasts all clay. Nugget Shoe Polish beeps all leathers In tip-top condition .. . [makes shoes last longer. OX-13LOOD, MACE ARD AM ✓ IJADts or B$O'Wti 4-30 the arc. eet, lied on't oaf, ork an gbi inti or1r, hat ave ing get - for neer had ' hi rats tars; his ed, -lie u, « vee