The Brussels Post, 1959-10-22, Page 6fe
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HRONICL
INGE p FAR
GwendoLinz P. CletAz
Simply the Smartest
PRINTED PATTERN
4906
SIZES
10-18
BALANCE OF POWER — Farm tractor apparently balanced on
ohe huge, finger awes visitors to a Munich, West Germany,
agricultural show, The fair is part of the 'country's famous
October Festival.
"Dear Anne Hirst:. I admit
right here that I was largely to
blame for my wife's divorcing
me two years ago. After the first
year I took to drinking and tel-
l:10M stayed at home because she
had grown lazy and careless,
didn't keep the house clean nor
take proper care of our baby son,
Finally she applied for a divorce,
which I didn't want because of
the baby,, but since she Was
admanant, she got it. At first I
was terribly lonesome for my
son, but these past months have
reconciled me to that loss,
"Now I have met a, delightful
young woman whom I have
come to love deeply, She is four
years older than I, and insists
that the age-difference is im-
portant. We get along wonder-
fully, and understand each other
better all the time. Each hour
I spend with her only increases
my love, and I am certain if I
were her age she would not hesi-
tate to become my wife.
"As for me, I am not afraid to
marry again, I have learned so
well what marriage demands. I
Smart School-Set
ty Ca444.*INEtekez
One bright set for school, one
flower-trimmed for dates with
Dad! Fun, thrifty to make.
Whip up cozy cap 'n' mitten
set in wool, cotton, felt. Pattern
586: directions; pattern pieces
for small, medium, large size;
transfer of lazy-daisy flowers,
Send THIRTY - FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box
1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Tor-
onto, Ont, Print plainly PAT-
TERN NUMBER, your NAME
and ADDRESS.
Send for a copy of 1959 Laura
Wheeler Needlecraft Book. It
has lovely designs to order:
embroidery, crochet, knitting,
weaving, quilting, toys. In the
book, a special surprise to make
a little girl happy — a cut-out
doll, clothes to color. Send 25
cents for this book.
knew I had to find a new life to
live, and the only way was
through will power. I have been
Promoted to a responsiNg posi-
tion, I now stay away from tav-
erns, and drink almost nothing,
This experience, I know, has
aged Me.
"How can I convince this love-
ly young woman that I am as
old as she is, if not even more
mature? I don't see how I can go
along without her now.
BILL L."
FINALLY MATURE
* Your letter (which I had to
* shorten) defines your coming-
' of-age. These lonely years of
* self-discipline have not been
* wasted, you saw the folly of
* your former ways and cast off
* those habits that weakened
* your character. Now you are
* ready to practice the true es-
* sentials that make for a good
• marriage. It is not how many
* years one has lived, it is hew
* one has learned to master him-
* self that determines his value
* as a worth-while' citizen in all
* its varied relationship's. Actu-
* ally, in my opinion you are
* older than the usual „ man of
• your years.
truth, coupled with the
* love and understanding you
• have developed for this young
* woman, should be sufficient
* proof that you have achieved
* the appreciation, the tolerance
• and the will to be hey sympa-
• thetic companion.
• I hope she will not weigh
* the calendar, but recognize the
• man you are now. If she will
• read what I say today (and I
* have concluded my opinion
* from your revealing letter) she
* will no longer count the differ-
* ence in years but appreciate
• the manner of man you have
.• grown to be, and gladly give
* her future into your keeping . * without a single doubt.
* Tell her, for me, that one of
o my best friends married a man
• 10 years younger, and those'
• who don't know her history
* believe they are the same age.
* s s
DANGEROUS SITUATION
"Dear Anne Hirst: I am a
widow 48, with five children
home and five married. Some
time ago I met a man who
though married is getting a div-
orce. He says he loves me, and
I really love him.
"He is at present in the hospi-
tal .sick. I have tried to break
off with him, but I have no de-
sire for any other man .Please
advise me. — M.C."
* If this man is getting a„div.
orce, you are treading on den-
* gerous ground to keep on visit-
* ing him. Until he is free he
' has no right to be seeing an-
* other woman, and his wife
* could make the situation very
* unpleasant for you i fyou keep
* this- up.
* Tell him in all kindness that,
* for both your sakes, you will
• have to cease these visits now.
• When he can ask you to marry
* him, you will consider it.
* Meanwhile, stay clear of
trouble, if only for the sake of
* your children. * *
It is not one's age, but self-
discipline one ohas .practiced that
determines his fitness for mar-
riage. If you are in doubt, write
Anne Hirst about it and receive
her honest opinion. Address her
at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
Toronto, Ont.
Bathe To 010 Days
Of Al Capone
Little Augie Plana started his..
• underworld career es • a trigger.
man for Scarfeee Al Capone in
the 1929's.. He. did so well .that
he moved up to Brooklyn rackets.
czar, associate of New York mob-
sters Jee Adonis, Frank Costel-
lo, and Albert. Anastasia, and to.
a place of power in the national
crime syndicate, •
Like most gangland; charac-
ters, Little Augie liked to spend
big, ride in big cars, and be seen .
with beautiful women, One of
his Ireqnent companions recent-
ly was Janice Drake, hard-jawed
blond wife of night-club com-
edian Allan Drake.
But few doubted he was living
on borrowed time. One night last
month, Little Augie and Janice
Drake drove in his 1959 Cadillac
for dinner at a restaurant near
New York's LaGuardia. airport.
While they were inside, two men
crawled into the back of Little
Angie's car, lay down, and wait-
ed. After the couple came out
and rode a short distance, the
gunmen shot each in the head.
Few mourned Little Angie
Pitano; but people did feel tor-
ry for Janice Drake. A beauty-
contest winner, she had been
dancing since she was 16 in!.
chorus lines of New York's Latin'
Quarter and other night clubs,
Friends used to warn her about
going out with the mobsters..
"Oh," she would • -say, "I can
take care of myself." She was..
30 when she died:.
Now TV Invades
The Supermarkets
In the supermarket J. Fred.
Muggs, a chimp with a mission,
gazed from the TV screen, pop
bottle in hand. "Now," sighed a
mother, "my son will probably
want' me to buy him some
soda . . ."
With television invading the
supermarkets, it seemed there
were few places left to hide. Big
Brother was not only watching
-you; he was,selling you.
Muggs was starring on a new
TV gimmick called "Stere-
vision." It involves installing TV
sets in strategic corners. of a gro-
cery and then hitting the eu.sto-.
mers with a thin salad of special
programming peppered wai
commercials.
The mother was one of hund-
reds., of shoppers subjected to a.
recent three-day, closed-circuit
TV trial at •a Bayonne, N.J., store
where. Storevision was tested.
The, success of this dry run
led the New York area station
WNTA-TV into budgeting $600,-
000 to install 3,200 TV sets in 400
supermarkets and 300 launder-
mats beginning in early Novem-
ber. This Storevision will not be
closed circuit. The station will
revamp its daytime schedule to
ki..oadeast 54 hours a week of
one-minute program s, inter-
spersed with profitable 10- to
20-second commercials. So a
typical segment might run: News
(plug), weather (plug), house-
hold hints (plug), J. Fred Muggs
(plug). Eventually, local Store-
vision may be sold in eight other
cities — Milwaukee, Dallas, Los
Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco,
Philadelphia, Boston and Hart-
ford.
These Fish Are
Really Dangerous
Fishermen in America have
decided that the most danger-
ous fish in the world is not the
shark, as is generally believed,
but the barracuda — a large,
savage pike-like fish found' in
tropical seas.
The barracuda frequently at-
tacks human beings, sometimes
causes death and occasionally the
loss of limbs. It is recognized by
natives of the Caribbean Gulf
region as more apt to attack man
than is the fiercest shark.
It grows to a length of six or
seven feet°, and has "knife-like
teeth and the ferocity of a
tiger," reported a scientist who
encountered a barracuda off the
Florida Reef.
Natives take this fierce fish by
spearing it with a three-pronged
spear. One caught in this way
was placed alive some time ago
in the well of a sloop. One of the
crew going down into the well,
and for the moment forgetting its
deadly occupant, Wet seia,ecr by
the barracuda, which bit hint
through the thigh, laming hint
for life.
Another' "wolf" Of the waters
is the swordfish, which hat an
enormous dorsal fin rising four
or five feet above its back. It hat
been known to ttitii on a beat
when harpooned and, dashing
upon it like a shet frail a Cata-
pult, Wreak it iri an instant.
A boat was once found drift.
big in dahresten Bay, Tekat. in
it were a deed tarpon and a dead
angler. The tarpon, in one Of its
wild leaps, had fallen upon its
would-lie captor, breaking hit
back.
I bought a ,hat! Actually I
bought, a fall suit and •a top
coat first. They met with fam-
. ily approval; Then Partner said
"But what about a hat — you've
got to have a new hat to - go
with that outfit," So I went to
town — alone — and, as I say,
I bought a hat, It's about as
modern as tomorrow! Really,
it's a lovely number — velour
felt with a high crown and
scoop brim in a soft beige col-
our. I wore it home and you
should have heard the com-
ments. I'll give you a few sam-
ples:
Partner: "Holy smoke, what
have you got on your head?"
Dee: It's a lovely hat but it's
so different. I'm not sure that
I like it."
Arthur: "What are you talk-
ing about — your mother looks
very nice in that hat — it' suits
her."
Bob: "The coat's all right but
I don't think tnudh of the hat."
Joy: "Oh, is that ever pretty
—so new and so soft and nice.
I LIKE IT."
Various friends: "Really
smart .. . not quite your colour
. wish I could wear a hat like
that . . .ny word,, are we ever
modern . . . you're not going to
wear THAT'— it's a joke!"
So there you are -- just a
few of the comments, for and
against, one poor little hat when
Mother goes shopping, A crea-
tion, I must admit, that isn't
quite so conservative as I've
been used to wearing. What
does it matter anyway, just so
long as it stirs up a little in-
terest? After all it IS perfectly
plain no' flowers or' feathers
Its only claim to smartness is
its simplicity and shape. Thirty
years ago the same style of
headgear was very much the
fashion. I can prove it by Old
family photographs.
Nof for a little matter that is
probably of, more vital interest
to readers of this column than
my new hat. And that ie Bonus
Stamps! Are you for or 'against
them? The Canadian Consumers
Association is very much
against them. Heads of chain.
stores using statript say their
customers just I ove ,then.
wonder!
Well, I must admit Most wont-
eh like the idea of getting a
bargain, They love that "some-
thing for nothing" feeling. The
fly in the ointment is that no
one ever gets anything tot
nothing. We never have done.
But open he newspapers and
v hat do you see? Double-page
advertisements giving all the
details atwut the beaus gifts
your tr er. ; ins will bring
you. Who do you think is pay-
ing for all that advertising? We
are, naturally. Chain stores soon
coyer the initial cost by an ex-.
tra cent here and there on what
we- buy — and we are so used
to prices going up we hardly
notice 'the difference. Now just
multiply those few odd cents by
the thousands in returns to the
retail distributors and it be-
'comes quite obvious they are
having a field day, trading on
the gullible nature of the aver-
age housewife.
Everyone knows the cost of
living is sky - high. Retailers
know it too. How much better
it would be, and what a great
service to the public at large,
if retailers got togethei and
agreed to cut out all this "come-
on" nonsense 'and instead ad-
vertised they were offering
goods 'to their customers at low-
er prices, in proportion to 'the
amount that is now spent on
trading stamps and give-away
bonuses. Sure, there are occa-
sional genuine price reductidns
-- known as weekly "loss,
leaders" — 150 lesson 10 pounds
of sugar; or two cans of this
and that for the price of one.
But look around'the shelves that
same, week and you'll probably
find a mark-up on quite a num-
ber of items— just to make'up
the difference. Robbing Peter to
pay Paul, so to speak.
Let Chain store officials say
what they will, ALL women are
not in favour of trading stamps.
Many think just as I do that
they are nothing but a nuisance
and increase the cost of living.
For those who do collect them
they are often traded in for
something the person neither
wants nor needs — just accept-
ed to make use of the stamps..
For little extras that are really
needed fifty cents set aside
every, shopping day, and spent
through t h e regular channels
would bring the same results:
'Well, having let loose on the
subjects Of hats and trading
stamps I'll now tome doWn to
earth and get my jars of newly
Made mustard' pickles labelled
ready for Storage in the base-
ment, Six pint and six half.pint
jars arid the house smells
like a pickle faetoty! After that
is done I must go out and get
whet May well be our last pick-
ing of mushrooms. Bob and
Joy were here yesterday' and
we had a big feed of mush-
rooms foa slipper and there
Were atilt plenty left for them
to take home, They think the
Wild rhushrooms have far mote
flavour than the ones on taie
in the store. 1 wouldn't know.—
we 'either eat what we tied
Or go Without,
The Big Fight Over
"Featherbedding"
In New York, four stand-by
musicians draw about $70 a "per,
formance" for listening to the
two• pianists who actually play
the accompaniment to Broad-
way's "Billy Barnes Revue."
Across the country in San Fran^
cisco, a bunch of brawny Teams-
ters helpers collect a' total ,of
about $1,000 a day for watching
fork-lifts unload trucks for them
mechanically. And throughout
the nation, railroads Pay out
hundreds f millions of dollars
to employes they don't want and
can't use, It all, falls under the
name of feather-bedding, the
"make work" curse that costs
American industry (end; in the
long run, the American consum-
er) an estimated total of $2 bil-
lion a year.
Last month, with featherbed-
ding the big issue in labor nego-
tiations or outright strikes in-
volving nearly 2 millions work-
ers, the economic fat was in the
fire. Bolstered by steel's un-
yielding stand, company after
company was girding itself for
the showdown battle. After a
quarter-century of giving in to
labor demands, American indus-
try was showing labor that the
boss is still really the boss.
"The basic question," says
John. E. Swearingen, president
of Standard Oil of Indiana, "is
whether management or union is
to determine how many people
are to be employed and at what
work." Wayne A. Johnston,
down-to-earth president of the
Illinois Cefitral Railroad, puts it
this way: "There is no desire on
the part of management to rule
with an iron hand . . . to be
cruel. But featherbedding is
wrong and destroys the funda-
mental principles by which a
man makes his living."
No one doubts that rank-and-
file unionists are ready to fight,
as in the case of steel, to pro-
tect their time-hallowed work
practices. Employers, in many
cases, must take, the risk of a
lengthy strike for the simple
reason that they can't afford not
to. Inflation is boosting costs at
the same time that foreign com-
petition is growing, cutting into
sales. Then there is automation.
Companies find All too often that
new automatic equipment fails
to produce the expected savings
because union rules keep extra
men on the payroll.
"We have no alternative,".says
Daniel P.' Loomis, president of
the Association of American
Railroads. "The million men and
women who work in this indus-
try can no. longer tolerate the
bloodletting imposed by feather-
bedding." "When times were
good," observes a West Coast
businessman, "it was too easy to
give in to union demands. But
last year, many companies •found
their responsibilities had been
whittled away to the point, where
they couldn't discharge their
duties. Now, they're trying to
remedy the situation."
Railroads probably suffer the
most. Industry spokesmen fig-
ure the cost of "make work" on.
the rails at more than $500 mil-
lion a year, roughly 10 per cent
of the railroad's total payroll and
about 5 per cent of all revenues,
"What hurts most," notes one,
railroad observer, "is the fact
that 23 states :have laws legaliz-
ing featherbed _practices, and
sixteen even contribute to fea
therbedding via ' 'excess crew'
laws requiring unneeded person-
nel on trains."
Clair M. 'Roddewig, president
of the 'Association of. Western
Railways, says that the ,rail
heads "have known ever since
diesels started sending steam
locomotives to the scrap yards
About ten years ago that sooner
Or later, they would have to
come to grips with the 'problem.
With the industry's three-year
Moratorium on changes in work-
ing rules ending Oct, 31, at the
same time' that present work
contracts expire, Roddewig and
the nation's other railroad lead-
ers figure the time to redraw the.
line is now.
The Association of • American
Railroads has, already !.announced
it Will try; (1) To end the. anti-
queted rule that 1.00. miles Of
freight travel or 100, to 1.00 miles
gn a passenger train is day's
work; the rule eras .set 40 years.
ago, when 12.14 miles an hour
was the average speed (connt.,
ing atopt) of a freight. train and
20 Miles, an. hour of a passenger
train; (2) to eliminate DOPeCe5.,
aarz firemen from diesel engines
and to :eliminate station agents
or telegraphers in situations.
where their services are no long,
er needed; (3) to eliminate juris,
dictional 'work separations • --,
rules that ban road crews, fen
instance, from working in yards
.and forbid, train crews from
crossing district. or seniority
boundaries. To bolster its case,
the AAR has asked. President
Eisenhower to set up a special
commission to study feather-
bedding,
In the meantime, railway rules
are still full of "arbitraries," the
term used. to describe a bonus.
for doing extra jobs not consid-
ered part of a regular job. In
the peat, "arbitreries". have been
Gases, paid in some weird ms, One,.
in the .files of the National Rail-
way Adjustment Board, involved
two maintenance men paid to
operate a . construction machine
on a track in a railroad' yard.
Because the machine used steam
and moved' around, an engineer
and firemen were assigned to
the job to. sit by and watch.
When one of the maintenance
men failed to report for Work
one day, the firemen was- attign-
ed to, fire up the Machine. He
got two days' pay—one for doing
the job, and one for not doing
it. From NEWSWEEK.
Fashion's shapely sheath in a
beginner-easy version — no
waist seams. Versatile for any
hour, jersey, or fluid crepe. Vicar
it with or without a belt.
Printed Pattern 4906: Misses'
Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16
takes 2 3/a yards of 54-inch fabric.
Printed directions on each pat-
tern part. Easier, accurate.
Send FIFTY CENTS (stamps
cannot be accepted, use postal
note for safety) for this pattern,
Please print plainly SIZ E.
NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NUMBER.
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
Toronto, Ont,
ISSUE 43 -- 1959
ANNE 1-FIRST
ROMAN HOLIDAY Swedish act-tett Anita Ekberg chid Italidn
fashion' designer Eniilio Schuberth smile if bpi In kienea talya
Scene was an award party In which he received recognition
faShiCarit Credited 'fdt television show:.
NoW- H2A1 fFlis Every employe at InVtilides, Are Terminal
Odrit, eltieete§' 'oil 'of these tiny reteisiets whith, sounds- 'ofF
with a &Street 'bethp,, Lidep-rt when' The Iseottee..4 paged, He
ildad only plead. it to. lilt ear listen fe,'• theatindatage. No
wires involved •and wailing ptissengers dre tritted, titorisitint
cd;is 'Owe thd- ICi1J6150Obil<6`fi