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Zurich Herald, 1951-02-01, Page 6The taste's the test for teal Canadians buy more Sam than any other brand.- Dear Anne Hirst: l am a widow with four childrei:, two still in their teens. For over a year .1 have been dating a widower steadily. His children are all married, and he lives alone in kis *01411 Itonte. itis'`?„ °'1 need your help, "1 have intro- duced hint to all my family and my friends. When I asked him the other day to take ire to meet his peo- plr, he told nue he 'wasn't ready!' All holidays he spends with his ow it family, "He has never mentioned mar- riage. "Do you think i should make a change? Or Iwai: and ace what happen,: I reallt love ]rim, BEA" 982 414•01.t'a1fy. Hot -stun -beware: (lave these new potholders handy to protect you• Easy spider -web crochet, and rot only safe -but decorative; Simple crocheted potholders, each in 2 colours and 2 sections. .Vattern 982; directions for three, Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins (stamps cannot be ac- cepted) for this pattern to L'ox 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME a n d ADDRESS. Send Twenty -fie Cents more (in coins) for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book, Illustrations of patterns for crochet, embroidery, knitting, • household acc_ssories, dolls, toys , many Bobby and et ideas. A free pattern is printed the boon, USE YOUR HEAD * It is time to 'apply the sound * law of supply and demand to * this problem of yours. It will * soon show you just where you '''' stand in this man's future plans. *. I expect that through all these months you have given hitt all x' your leisure time. Giving hien 't' every date he asked for, having • hint for dinner, placating his * moods, and in other ways mak- * ing ]him feel that you are happier with him than you might be. c'• with any other ratan. * That is natural to a woman who is in love. * But it often spoils the znan to * such a degree that he believes * he can treat • her as he likes- " Accept everything she offers, and *• refrain from committing himself e in any way. In other words, he * takes her for granted. • -Until he find out there is * competition for her favours. It is especially true of this • tR friend of yours. Ile has his own * comfortable home, which is prob- ably well-managed. He has his children to visit When he 'wants * to see them. Ile has Son to en- ' tertaiit him when he will, Ile is very comfortable as things are, • thank you, He had better find out show ;: comfortable he VI Could be if he ,,< could not see you at all. Then he will know whether you are a reaIly necessary to his complete happiness --or whether he can '' get along very well alone. No natter what he decides, 1 think you would be more cont- * fortable, too. relieved of this tut• :.: certainty, Wouldn't you? e If you have other then friends. start- seeing theta now. If you * have not. visit your woman * friends, go out with them, or e simply tell hint you are occupied somehow. Make any excuse you want -but don't see hint every tine he wants to come. .ff he " is used to dropping in Without *' notice, tell hits wirer] he arrives * that you are sorry. but you're busy tonight. Let hint wonder * where, and with whom. * Men of twiddle age are often * too complacent. They are self- * satisfied and deliberate. They * dislike changing their accustomed routine. and, unless they are forced into a decision, they put *' it off as long as possible,- All *' of which is unfair to the women e in their lives. "t'his man's excuse that lie "isn't ready" to introduce you to `I' his family gives you ample reason to hasten . his courtship-- if that >,: is what you want. * Go ahead, At least. yctu will : know where you stand. (By the way. are y'ont children fond of '' him, and be of them: This is an important angle to he cot,. sidered., It does not always do to be too Easily available. Often a man does- n't know how much he wants a woman until he finds her hard to get . . Write your .problems to Anne Hirst, at Box 1, 123 Eigh- teenth Street, New Toronto, Ont. 4. t,xtst CROSSWOR' 7.3 eo bol .tor . 3 Printings 9..Pes•taining to largest con ti- _- nettt -. 10, nett dow ACROSS $6. 1:'er iniac deit. Tartlet I. Regulation posit of loam. l6, l;otiy of Water 4. Level 07. Pignen 1.3, :tietiwl 9, Nlgh moun. rain DOWN 20, Mental image 1, Sntall boy 21, 'Wander t2. Turkish conn• 2. Grow old 22, Angry tnander 3, Indented 24. Behind 13. :flaying' organs batter cakes 2n-, Dried •'at°onut of hearittg 4, Tsind of fruit mea t 14. Ocean 6, Afterward 26. Come in IS. Let the air out of 17. ramous Meek elide 12, Passage money 20.11enus of the Virginia willow 'r 3. Kind of fabric 1.'Vivid bright - bass Cornered •tolloq.) 9. Vandal estate in. Forward :!1. oriental ship captain tt lealble pa.lr, slam (va'r.t 1. Iii t;ely • 1i,13t It eleti Steeple 1 1)e 1 reennasc tit, Onrse of anOire ancient race t, cot of Adan•. 4,. Robber 10. Moat hank.- 01, Dinad 30, IMO *iv SA. Isla irle41,410stS +•'E"u sl c uOtiir PUZZLE 3 4 S e 7 5 23. ierrlbte 33. sing 1sh musician without purpose 06. Pintail dtti'k s. lata 40, leaves milt,• Al. Stories (collotf.1 95, Trit•IIOs 44. Leverage 97. owned 48, Golf term 49. Take a seat 00. Plades,vor 00. Italian river 10 11 39 25 ao 1111.14111 50 Answer Elsewhere On T ziy Pa m FAIR COMMENT A religious speaker was expound.. ing on the great work of the church; to a !motley crowd in Hyde Park. Some of his remarks infuriated ci grimy proletarian who worked his way to the front. Loolcing co a- tentptuously at the speaker, be snarled: "Tete church is supposed to have existed for two thousan4 years and yet look at the state o the world." The speaker looked intefitly 'at his interrupter and said, quietly. "Water has existed for two million years, yet look at the state of yotor face!" .Bells Tolled For Young And Old--Cttpid recently nu -notched two arrows in an apparent at- tempt to prove that age shields no heart from his missiles of love. The roguish archer chalked up one direct hit on two Londoners, 78 -year-old Mrs. Mary Marshall and Richard White, age 70. Only a few days after the bride, a widow With 11 grandchildren and seven great-grand- children, walked down the aisle of London's Church of the Sacred Heart with her hubby, 12 -year-old Virginia Pennell announced her marriage to 19 -year-old Donald Gray. Mrs. Gray was a sixth grade student before Cupid took ai111, ttit t %Ate, �j .,--t . 1;. ', 7 ' `� t1 NitiES ��e +>lo t . :r tii• c'./ Guiond.oiit,.n. P Ctr.-\t>lr ''.'here is an early nloruiiig pro- cession at Ginger Farm that is really funny to see. If Partner is a bit late coming in for break- fast 1 naturally watch for him from the kitchen door or witzdow. And this is what 1 often see and Bear. First, although /hey are still of sight, 1 hear the dogs bark This. indicates .Partner has left barn. '"lett through the little g which separates the barnyard fr the garden 1 see Black Joe Cont racing along, tail in the air, sl eclat shining in the suit. OI through the gate lie stops a waits. The reason, is obvious almost immediately Tippy a Honey come along;;. barking a tamping around .each other wearly morning etuberance. Tit there is a clanging of pails Partner is making Itis: way throu tate little gate while the dogs g in his way as he walks, a fact which neither he nor.'the :clog's p third attention. toe still traits at the ga watching tate anti e'; of t dogs with teary eyes. Now Partn and the dogs are almost at tl house, ft's safer now -Joe cote on the run, a black streak leapin along the ground -so Joe is airead there when Partner and his pail reach the woodshed door. Now th dogs stop their fun in anticipatio of being let into the house. Th outside door opens -followed b absolute pandemonium in the wood shed. Then the kitchen door open --and in rome dogs, cat, Partite and the pails. Invariably Partner says. "Well, we're in!" As if •h ' had to tell me. Eventually they ge sorted out -Tip under the table Honey on her mat by the stove, foe in the pantry exploring her feed dish, and Partner at the siuk getting wasihed up for breakfast. For awhile there is peace and quiet- nesa. We have breakfast, talk and listen to the news -and generally the news is the sounding gong .for our breakfast conversation. And so it goes. We have more or less made of our breakfast hour a time of leisure. The early scorning chores are over . the work of the day not yet begun , . so we take this time for ourselves knowing, there are not likely to be any interrup- tions, I3ttt as the day wears on -- well, ort a farts you never can tell. There might be a sick cow, or a new calf, or a mineral -selling agent, or maybe a neighbour drops in -to say nothing of telephone calls. Perhaps this etoh.v of our break- fast hour sounds as if Partner and I live a very leisurely life. Actually we don't -but we do try to' live an "unhurried" life, As you know there is Such a thing ars snaking haste slowly. '.Chest day s the eutpihaelo is ort speed and short working ]lours. Under such conditions it is ilnpos-, sible to snake haste slowly, You can't crate 12 hours work into an 8 -Motu' day Without hurrying ot• without suffering physical and men- tal reactions. There is far too mucic hurry, too much anxiety; to get done with the day's work and off for a good time, And since that good time oftec results in late hours and over -taxed nerves those who thus indulge get insuffteicnt rest to prepare e tet p ern 9Cl• we s for even t:It tllc eight-hour day that follows. No wonder people get high blood pres- sure and nervous digestion. Of course, many of the younger folk like this get-done-gtiick way of working and can take it up to out Mg. the ate 0111 ing eel: Ice nd as nd nd ith en gh et to ay te, he er le es g • y s e n e s r e t ISSUE 5 --- 1051 a point, Bat eventually the laws of nature catch up with them and they are faced with the alternative of "cracking, up" or slowing down. It is bad enough for young people but when older folk try to keep pace with the tinges they are surely courting disaster. Reserve strength can't last for ever. And Yet how difficult it is to avoid the stress and strain of being hurried. Now that stores and of- fices close so early those who would do business with them must hurry with their work, 'whether their business is at the bank, a parcel to snail or meat for dinner tomorrow. "Time and tide wait for no than" -neither do shops and offices. Actually this craze for short working hours creates a paradox, People are so busy trying to get all their work done in an eight-hour day they work harder thanever before. Remember the time when the small-town storekeeper had time to chat with his customers? He doesn't now --too busy, getting them served. Time marches on. Marches? Olt, no . , , to march is to maintain a steads', unhurried 'pace. Time has forgotten how to march, ft rushes -it's out -of -step. It isn't a march any longer . . . it's a rout] "That woman sings tt-ith a deal of feeling." "Well, I hope she isn't feeling as bad as she sounds," great Here's Speedy Relief For Tender, ch n , Hurning Feet Pour feet may be Nb o and named that you tltlnl: youu can't go art outerif hflestYouel atolr all over with the pain and torture; sIve itin; vrod gior throeanytnpp1iwtttonsttogot Ofrelict, Moona'r ttmorald Oil and in a few minutes the pain and soreness disaPPssiA• boon, matter Have discouraged O7tner'athaw, then you have something to learn. Ctet a hottte today wherever dugs aro sole. 5IMPLICITY There is a simplicity about the resting world of winter that is nei- ther stark nor colorless, once the eye has accustomed itself to the season. It is elemental and direct, and tints has its own clean beauty, which is enchanced by winter it- self, by the long shadows and the temperate highlights. But it is so different from the full color of autumn and from the burgeoning npring our togreedismisssof sit as a tithatngeit of is dull greyshabit and lusterless browns. What it costes down to is ele- mental forte. A tree in winter is so obviously a tree, skeletonized to its very branch and twig. You can see every inch of it, every ridge of its bark and every bud -knob. Yet there it stands, firmly rooted, strong iii its upthrusting trunk, purposefully branched to withstand the storm and at the saute time to spread its leaves to the sun in a proper season. The sante is trite of the hills tltemtelves. There they stand, their skeleton of rock substantial against the weather. The znarlc of cen- turies is upon them, the gouge of ice and the knifing of swift water; but they rise above the valleys in clean ridges that direct the winds and breast the storms. And the streams which flow at their feet are brooks and rivers, the flown of win- ter waters, unshaded, unshoaled . except by the ice of winter itself, their sole purpose to drain the land before the floods of spring. Even the snow on such a land- scape las this same simplicity, carved and shaped though it is by the Wind. Is there anything more beautiful, in the purely esthetic sense, than a snowdrift curled in the shape of the storm's breath? In its cold, clean way it seems to sum up the direct, unembellished beauty of our icy months, And the RELIEF IS LASTING For fast, prolonged relief frons headache get INSTANTINE. This prescription -like tablet contains not just one, but three proven medical ingredients that ease the pain fast. And the relief is, in most cases, lasting,. Try INSTANTINE just once for pairs relief and you'll say as thousands dry that there's one thing for headache s :. it's INSTANTINEI And try INSTANTINE for other aches, too ... for neuritic or neuralgic pain . .. or for the pains and aches that accompany a cold. A single tablet usually brings prompt relief. Get lnstaniino today and always keep it handy 12 -Tablet Tin 25¢ (Economical 48 -Tablet Bottle 691i Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking Ft: with Modern eC 7th cling DRY Yeast! £ A H TA Measure into large bowl, / c. luicewarrn water, 1 tsp. granu- lated sugar; stir until sugar is dissolved. Sprinkle stow], with 1 envelope laleiscluttann'. Roya Fast Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10 min., THEN sti. well. Scald 1 c. milk and stir :r. tbs. granulated sugar, 2 tsps. sag; cool to lulcewarut. Add to yeast mixture end stir in 1/2 cup lukewarm water. Beat itt 3 c, once -sifted bread flour; bent well. Lent in 4 tbs, melted shortening. Work itt 3 c, more once -sifted bread fiottr. Knead until smooth and elastic; place in greased bowl and brush top with melted butter or shortening. Corer and set in. warm place, free from. draught. Let rise until doubled in bulk. l'tutch down dough in bowl, grease top and .let rise. again until' nearly doubled. Punch down dough and roll out, half at a- tithe, into a rectangle. a scant 1/4" thiclt; lift dough, cover with cloth and let rest 5 mini Brush with melted butter or sltorteuing; out into strips 11/2» wide, rile 7 strips together; cut into VW pieces. Place cut -side up its greased muffin pans; separate slices a little at top. Cover and let rise until doubled its hulls, 11x1.• its hot oven, 400°, 15.20 loin. ae Always .running short of yeast because it spoils so quickly? ]ind this nuisance --- switch to modern Eleischtnann's ;past DRY `Yeast! Keeps full strength gtll and fast -acting right in your cupboard -• no refrigeration! No new recipes --- one package equals one cake perishable yeast in any recipe. rRYS Dior A r.° CTSkgtl do ondr STAYS Sr Get mewatAt ,t4x30/)' ... ..... iii 11.i.r,i.M.. .owepawsm.a.4,.MIMdr,xWuiwm...,w i..,eree,mgp.rq:.pµjyiy 6