Loading...
The Brussels Post, 1953-7-15, Page 6A14I1ST : "]Jeer Anne Hirst: My Prob- ie inns intimate mate and I am either too dense sacral y.1,,1 going to fend a suitable solution. I met a young man my Own age, 20. We are both divorced. I have two children., .1le is ereee than kind to urns blit 'sista that I don't date anyone e1e. I had been soe%erg another matt,_too, and botn seemed so,sxicethat. i' ., couldn't decide between them. "This young man somehow swept me off my feet; d find, ,no excuse for myselft Now he 'in- sists that I BELONG to him! I fee) caught. I cane figure out," nor understand" how things got • like this. Wm agapin in any vu • setae "r*rti8artsl ,flee ' 'uch •`•dad ' as to ilxr@a en o . Io remember ext au Y tea kY our rep * tation and your word are mit", * good as his. Ii. gold And kiiresele ,deel5ite`ti , thing those '0 who new yolt' bah.. * To avoid further corn/slice- tions, dQFt tsee.T�r' eseet Mae either, for gpo long while * —until this decadent character * is, convinced you,,, axe eitx'p}rih * with flim; 'a -rid i:or''gootl,' Ybu eau send word to the other * that you hgve broken, off, but *' you 'need a ,period q# . sbiitude * to regain your piece of mind. FRIGHTENED * I believe he will understand; and not intrude until y'du:scan 'The mad 'knows I value my '1' think clearly again. reputation; we belong to the This is the only way to es- samehu •r•h c i It 1 quit him, cape from the degrading might tell. L get scared to death situ ation In which you find your - when I think of it! * self. Once you do. •vou can "1'he other man, who has * brush the mull ofl,.youry skirts never asked anything of rue, " and feels lefin ed agains'i hopes I'll stop seeing this, one. I don't want to marry anybody, I BEREFT MOTHER MOURNS 1 am too upset . , . I neect' your "Dear ,Anne ilrrlate lefty can't help, Anne Hirst, `j I take my sans death bravely, as so many other war -mothers do? He was killed some months ago. I still cannot orient myself into any routine that he) BEWILDERED' Thu only way to break up a * situation so fraught with fear * is to end it—abruptly and fin- a11y. Yew. may, find; Tourse .e"'Hfs'"bxothet 'ittiank - ,G ii, is * married to this possessive, ar-safely back home, and steel a * rogant young male, and that 1 comfort! * would be a disastrous finale, ! "1 have tried to ,how interest * You would grow to despise ! in my friends and in my church * him, and to hate yourself',— t work, but my heart is not in it. * What would that do to your Cart you help? " children? GRIEVING;" Tell him you will not see There is no solace like that e which come, from helping * others. Why don't you consult the nearest Red Cross center and * see where they can use you? * Or visit a veterans' hospital? * Sick lads need the motherly * touch that you can give, and * comforting them will relieve your anguish. Maybe boys * from your own -church are hos-' pitalized, too; how they would * appreciate your conning! Aek * your minister about it. Cheering up other mother's * sons will bring you more con- ! * solation than you know. And * you have one boy left; rejoice * in him, as. t rejoice with you. If you are caught iu a deplor- able Situation, act quickly and ,,finally. Free yourself of en- tanglements and make a iresb start, .•. .' Anne 17irst syinpa- i , tbfzes, and will bring you sew I I courage., Waite her. at • Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St,, . New Ter- ' °enter Ont. Easy -Sew, Iron 41114014-024A M — Pinafore: Sundress! Pop it on your sewing machine— no fitting Problems bow cinches waist!. No ironing prob- lems — opens flat. Sew it now. k cr Use remnants. Pattern rn 554• Sizes 2. 4, brordery transfer: tissue pattern. State r size. . Send TW13NTY-FIVE CENTS In h, coins (stamps ^areot be aa;- 3• ceptedr for this pattern to p,,ox 1. 123 Eighteenth St Nee Toronto. Ont. NUMBER aid. cIZE PATTERN 'NAME h and ADDPE$s. EXCITr?1- en Le TEN Nor e -iF� to ere - eh see : e �. tt - t — pr r n i 3 II,airre • W ea �L ad r ak Many ..r- �_-«... ..r €4rr :Teen r,,.., r 'Complexions for Sale Women frequently- called on Professor C,eorge ,Burcbett, the London tattooist who flied soma !, weekg hack, to ask him: "Please • make -'me more beautiful." He once -stated: "Hundreds of women have come to me for their complexions,. I redden their lips, shade their eyes and renovate their eyebrows. i have put roses in cheeks that•have never known a -.blush, and the tan'of an ARV d xng than cut or in bales, can explorer- on the skin of a and only a few. colds had been 'ty bank clerk," cleared Spring crop -- Bent and Patchy, o' i p s me of His artit in enabledhes. him . ntod Corn turn in ma red no n case res white and white cheeks y s only a few ed He did all this iii addition • inches above the ground Gar - o ordinary tattooing—the frac- dens ,— fair,. Trees, shrubs and g a? d?.eigns upon the human hedges — luxuriant growth. • Mr. Rurchett once received a visit' from' a Man who had his ame and addreass tattooed on is legs in no fewer than Rorty Fashion forecasts a brilliant season ahead for taw e. ce See ber's design in "Peau de sole," a rich all -acetate fabric, ih d down with' more of the virus slim torso line is emphasized by gathered fullness of the skirt an trimmed with tiny rhinestone buttons. i e'ep x olfng wirnmors Opt Of Daaag r fit the July issue of "Jittttteir Y,iving" Andra,,,I'kntaine hall? se article entitiedy'tlteep S'wimmera Out Of D n a r rt Danger—an an ak oI s. 'timely anti With such useful article that we're reprinting it, in p a r t, without waiting for permission from Mr, Fontaine, or the Dominion Stores who control the distribution of the makaz"inei After all, courtesy is one thing —hut not so -important as the possibility of preventing a foto unnecessary tragedies. Every time your child swims in your local pool hislifemay be endangered, Precisely how great the danger is, scientists do not know, Though polluted water often contains polio virus, test after test in the laboratory has failed td pxovo •wiAhorn' a fraction of doubt-7,thin children with polio were: ix�feq¢terq"lyby. swimming'-in'unclean Wirige, 16 fact there is room fox the suspr clan that,:gwinlmfrzg .lues'' ndtilpgr to do with .the viral; h'sferende, Recent research lythe American Public Health Assdcra!tiokr;states that swimming polaa are .not a inajor public health 'menace, but that the danger in pools should be watched and curbed to an ab- solute minimum. For years ail ments have been traced to bath- ing places—a 'very few cases of typhoid, many sinus infections, cases of the skin diseases, impe- tigo and athlete's foot, Doctors - have also tracked to this source dysentery, occasional mastoid and bone infections and, in Wisconsin and Michigan, a local ailment called "swimmer's itch," caused by worm larvae, The effectsl :.bf ' underwater swimming on human 'subjects were studied by the U.S. Public - Health aServic and a .prepara- tory school in Wee, England, The U.S.P.H.S, study: .centered in three test at•¢as=Long Island Sound, Lake eieltigan and the houldn't River, ermg+ ocean, lake, and river waters—places where people have bathed for many generations -without a second thought.• The conclusion reached was startling and simple. People t who go in swimming are siel: 1' oftener than those who don't, s regardless of the purity of the f water. The New .England study, o condo erode y ,Ar. ,Roswell t;ai- ch lagher -showed •that ,the 'boy who' e i swam in the school pool comes a used currently, despite the quan- tity the water is less irritating to the eyes and skin of swiin- mers than a under the old Method. Mood's new process had its trial dip at the Hartford pool. Measuring the average bacteria of samples of water taken during the afternoon's peak, the count which once had totaled 2,000, was now 1, High -gree residual chlorination, the newly discovered Yale puri- fication process, is so new that it was announced to Mood's fellow scientists only a few months ago, ExperiinOntal tests conducted over a period of two years at the Smith college pool never re- vealed any drawbaclrs. Swim- ming pools across, the- country probably will adopt this new purification measure this year; 1f yours hasn't, urge it, Other'liangers, ether defenses But aside from water pollu- tied, 'there's' fe other' dangers' its swimming that you ought to know about. Several of these were summed up' by Dr. H. Mar- shall Taylor: in the Tournal of the American Medical Assoeia- tion when he pointed out that "man,�is not normally a water animal." He's not equipped with adi?quate' protection for keeping water out of eyes, nose, ears and sinuses; nor has he inherited a satisfactory system for maintain- ing normal body temperatures in cold water. Consequently, says Dr. Taylor, "unless he takes cog- nizance obthe limitations nature has placed on flim, he subjects himself to the likelihood of con- tracting the infections that fre- quently beset swimmers." All experts agree that the num- ber one thing to avoid is chilling. When your child becomes chill- ed, his resistance is lowered and he's lair game for any bacteria or virus. This ,means you s let him wear his suit n the pgol and horn again; he should 'change as: soon as he omes out of the water. Also it's atter if he doesn't stay in too ong. Whether "too long" is fir- ed.) minutes or three hours de - ends on the child. Some young- ters have an insulating layer of at that protecjajitbans for hours; thers have none and may get filled .na da • 2fwl riedri utes. Guarding gaansjr• 1± ru, , nd Ear Ti'onble Protection of eyes, ears. nose nd sinuses again varies' from, :�„ .; tion had inoreas,d to 3,277, T .- �` first Presbyterian Church was' eti built in 1822 on a form owned HRONJCL�, i o*tGilbert ure-•tedo. The fust Met ! const church was built soon 1' terwarde. The' Reverend Eger 1NGER. :M ministers to preach in this d r tee,el ': 'n r io, trirf, The southern part of N son township was the scene many a hard fought battle b Yesterday four of us took a tween the Indiana and the fin run around the country', with- homesteaders. Many of the ear in a ten -mile radius of home. settlers also took part in tit What we saw probably .describes battle of 1812, no doubt fighti of central Ontario': farm for strategic poeilion3 along tit lands.- Wheat — excellent, Hay escarpment, — in abundance but more of it From the top of the hills. Tool st nd' ing down to the valley; acro the still heavily wooded slope it is not too difficult to visuali the life of the hardy v' d mun' . 1 tall g who settled here, defying tit Indians, making a clearf among the heavy timber, an at long last, harvesting goo crops from the fertile soil. 0 mail boxes along the. road, q reads familiar names, •dire descendants of the early settler - Without a doubt many of thes farmers treasure the Crow -deed to their property -- as w do ours. Many of 'the industry lumber and grist mills have dis appeared but others have take their place. One of -the larges gravel pits in Ontexio, aloe with all the 'bull -dozers, ston crushers, power shovels end al such equipment, le situated a stockpiles nothing to Midget — he chat- , crushed stone repount Nemo. laces the Wood- ' lenged the big dog with undis ed acres of days gone by Near- , gulled fury, When we were by Loweville is a favourite haunt ready to leave the park we asked of artists and authors. who find little boy and his mother to plenty of inspirational materia, look after Midget until we were amid such beautiful surround - out of sight, although Arthur ings, One of the loveliest home- ' would lov-._la•have brought the owned gardens 1 have ever seen weer- dog home with Wim is at the residence adjoining the We left the park and travelled LOwville feed mill. To give an airing gravel roads- until we Were instance — can you imagine any - on top of the escarpment, from thing more striking than trim- , there. we had a magnificent view son ramblers against. a back - of the county for mites around. ground of blue spruce? I wonder , . i? there anything There aro some wonderful • awn *a/c -inviting than beau- houses too •—. houses over a hun- t tifei .tren<ery" It sort of doer dred years old, and, by contrast. aomnthing to you that vou can't there also fine, modern dwel- explain. Yesterday I realized flags aurid landscaped• grounds. how this bountiful wooded dis- One doesn't need to ga into these w ,t tries must have cheered the early hortses to know they are equip- rrtiler, trekking through Onto- ped and styled like magazine 1 rio im search of suitable sites for models of what interior decora- their future homes. This south- ton's think a home should be. ern part of Nelson Township was But back to Ginger Farm . , r tine first part of ;!Japan,. county ,, . the smell of new mown hay is t0• see white settlers. The Hates being wafted to me through the ,iamkly, in 1800 Were the' first open window. It is thick and Settlers, and Augustus l3atcs, the heavy with sap and Partner is Are white baby. of Halton Coun-worrying over the problem of ti, was born in Nelson Township, getting it dry, particularly if the •"it must have been a lonely . or-. weather remains as catchy at it deal for the Bates family as the has been for weeks On •end. ;township' made little progress fill chie-White is Walking heek towards settlement until 1807 seed fork pini my typewriter° When 5 few more families tnOre4l. '�11etr makes it St geed , *thee fe in: However, be" 1990 the popndta- tial $lbttdbyrft mail we nsegt again, • Crow - • ' diseases, 'likernumpsand measles ._• ,a than the boy: who stayed out of the water.: ire se to 5t.se.?rf,r, oµr.,.cbild- files quent" sinus infections, it cold probably be wisest if he dyed ::.away from" diving or mping into the water --ane of ae qt p efsl ,r vats of . forcing. aver 1n o ilio sinuses. A nose might be a safeguard. If he'' s had ear infections, he prob ly should wear ear plugs. etch your child's eyes for signs inflammation because water ashes away the protective fluid. at normally guards the eyes. Do • permit him to swim if he anybody else at a pool has ghly contagious pink eye. ; There are other ailments that r e thein• attack at pools, notab- athlete's foot and impetigo petigo is traneenitted . most quently," says Professor Mood, y use of the common towel;" sure your child has h' to is own wet and a7 that lief sn'tgener- ously sharing itwith:liis•pals. I he But try and keep any child in- w b3' side the house when it's 102° in st b- the shade. Swimming is a lot of 'u fun and wonderful exercise—it's t af- the only exercise which calls w' Egerton • Ryerson was one of the fin all the muscles into play with- cep rat out strain, and with coordination. ha es- r We've come to realize that a child ab el- is in danger from the time he W eR gets out of bed in the morning; of •st ; he might step on a marble, . fall w i and bre tit ly, break an arm. So the com- e mon-sense question is: What are D ng the dancers and what will pro- or • The day . was hot. and sultry but at the county park, at Low- vilie — which we passed ,o,e our , way — "kiddies and -grown-ups ton' were—having 'a grand trine different languages. The reason" by. the ..shady Twelve • Mile for his visit? He wanted his name creek. We bought ice-cream at tattooed -r: English en his right the booth and Arthur gave some.. lag: of his to a Tittle wee terrier Tae max, a world -traveller, that came around. That' did it! Laid trim he was determined to The little dog promptly and followed be Identified—in case he died us wherever we went and we • r a Tole o Part of the world— couldn't find out to whom it be-, wi ., . ehaneed to grid his longed, The only time it left pe eery s-- was when a big German Shep- • herd hove in sight. :Size meant Leet your child against them? hi No hazard is greater than pel- t- luted water. Most swimming Stag ss pools take a precaution against Y s - bacteria in the water by adding elm germ-killing chlorine. Health de- fre ze art b meet P _ s, which .keep a p safety is e eye on these paces, require that Be ne criough'dlsemical chlorine be used to hold the bacteria count down d to a count of 200 bacteria per n milliliter .of .water. This, up un- on til.recently,.,has'been thought of ct as a low danger point and is the 5 figure specified by the • Ameri- can Public Health Association Pool water is sampled -every day er or on a two-day frequency to es, make sure the count goes no higher. n The big "if" factor is the time this sample is taken. This test was tried on a pool in Hartford, Connecticut, by several scientists Prot» the Yale School of Public t Health, If, for example, the safe- r ty count was taken in the morn- ing, the ratio of bacteria to water ranged around 200, meaning the water was quite safe. If the samples were taken in the after - Aeon, when the largest number of people attended the pool, the count hit 2,000 or over --.water so clear. you could see bottom, with all the dangers of a murky polluted pond. Here was an above-average pool, meeting every requiremept of the health Uepartheenl,' that admitted to a soaring bat:Meet count when most swimmers were in the water. Unfortunately this has been the common and un- questioned danger of every swim- ming pool, Nothing could be, done about this health danger iigna) --until now, New Cleansing i.'roeeei ' ' A pioneering group of scien- tists from Yale, headed by °Pro- fessor Eric Moecle havo„aworked out a neW process of waeer puri. fieation Whic)i'"lidtst"airyone'step further, along- the road''ts Whrd stopping disease before it starts.'- Called in science+,,louexaalgsi• irel.. free residual chlorination," • it means to those who enjoy the swimming spbrt,•that pool water, can be made free of gets/me—mid 'ltept that way, This is done by chlor pun nto tte he eenty water thanryre is ' Comfortable I•itsr!,trff.-s5sMPi if can irO etvifb'rfit/htll d'rjdlfahi a freed anti-Red.�Niorth tcroan vier prietanar,- tehatff,Ttil's *coned to het' htsrniii in Pyran, l'ilia.pr'hoert'er; eieitl'£dmlet23;O110' others, wore recently 'eteoteefrom )Fftpriaoh• tfmpe'iArtesi Orders of the South Koro n President, Mi r of tiryr,have lacca' gr6i7tffd ea haven by Smith'. Knott!)"families, reducing, Uh•f rrkatttoc'of • recapturing theme,' ,. ,; ISSUE 29. — ,1953 Rawly flints For ''noir e-Go�ero Stat't"your picnic Ore : Wi4ir twine or rope lengths that you've to sa rated in melted paraffin. BOY and safe to carry * * Weight down the plan %c covey' for the picnic tabid Slip meta rods, such as extension curtain - rods, intO hems at each end off cover, For handy carrying stat " smooth storing, roll cover. on one of the rods. Attach a wail -type can 'Opener to the under side of the trunk lid of your car. There's room, there to mount a bottle opener, too. Then you'll always have these articles tyitir you on a pic- niC or vacation tour. * * * Make white or yellow crayons• part of your family's picnic equipment. Show the children how to "blaze trail" with crayon signs on trees, Then your explor- ers won't get lost in the woods! —they can follow their trail back to camp, Itret Four-Vlb Wardrobe! /teen her 'well-dressed all summer, Mo. ' titer! Midriff -top, shorts, skirt— and a''shirt, that., -doubles as—a— jacket! All easy sewing for you! Choose sturdy ,cation for hard playing, quicli washing, easy iron Ing! Pattern 4707: Children's, Sizer -t 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, Bin 0, bra, skirt, 13fi yards 35-tnfih; shit(, 11e emelt 1, -shorts, lis Yard ;s . This patfern eiisy;to u.,n, ami '.`plc to sew•,':3s tested for -fit. complete illustrated ihstrrictionteeSt; Send THIRTY j -FIVE L OE• �xs 85c ' ( m c cin ss ( tam s sxnot be s. accpted) for thio pittern Print . . plainly SIZ AilIE, AD3')1t1=,S STYLE N1J T it, s Send ordeil). to Box 1 12 1 Eigti kit . l N i4 r rsioCito it rtt i'{ r (living .the 8ricie Away -Pretty polio victim, Lucille Ruggles, was li orally carried awtl r,',ul' her weddlli .1$oona;ehove in the wine of her father, Wiliaam kuggies, she„was carried d wn'the'taislei,' o the church, Her bridegraom,..Rabert Spaugh, svwepi her up mi4 cot tied her to :her new home after the ceremony. i' 1