Loading...
Zurich Herald, 1951-06-07, Page 2This superb tea guarantees the favour of every cup 41t aned024dot "ityear Antic Hirst: For a long time. I've been trying to get up courage to write you .. , \Vhen I was 17 (eight years ago) I fell in love with a young Ivan who I thought was all I desired. He en- listed, and when he came back he seemed so changed, "He got in- volved with a married woman, and had a child by her, whom he has to support. When I learned this, I would not see him again, "Meanwhile, I met another man with whom I've gone steadily for three years. Iiia is• wonderful. and vrants to. marry toe. "But recently I ran into my first irieud. He told hie he is sorry for everything, and wants me to be LAURA \\HEF'.1.1' 1• Eea:ey's swat bye -'eye outfit is so darling! Easy to knit - rap and jacket are each st gi t pieces.. Use sport yarn. Drop stitch at garter ;titch make jiffy knitti: m', Baby -set Pat- tern 798. i vitt tela directions. Laura Wheeler's improved pat- tern makes crochet and knitting so simple with its charts, photos and ckenciee directions. S -d TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Ia Coin (stamps Can.iot he ac- cepted i for this pattern to Box 1, 123 Eighteenth Street, New Tor- onto. Ont. Print plainly PAT- TERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. Send Twenty-five Cents more (in coins) for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book, Illustrations of patterns for crochet, embroidery, knitting. household accessories. dosis. toys . many hobby and gift ideas. .\ free pattern is printed in the book. his wife. eI told my boy f:lead, and he said it was up to rate. "I'sn afraid I will never care for anybody as I did for the first boy. I know he has done wrong, and if I go back with him I will ruin my reputation. Can you help me? "Sometimes I wonder if being a nice girl is enough? I have hurt my boy friend, and most of all. myself. When I was younger, I could always face a problem. Now, at 25. I could just ran our on it all! ANONYMOUS" WHY TAKE THE RISK? * Above all else, an intelligent * girl must marry a man she can * be proud of. • That means that he is honest • and upright, Iran earned the re- * spect of all who know hint: it * means that he honours goodness, * and avoids evil. Can you say any * one of these things about the * boy you used to love: Could you marry hien ,and go through life * defending hint: More than that. could you ever really trust him • again? You would come to bate " him. and yourself too, • Saying that he is sorry for * what he did, is a weak apology * for his sins. It does not guarantee * he will not repeat them. Always * you would live in fear, wondering " how long he wonid be trite to • you. " You are luckier than most ,: girls who have been heartbroken. >F You have a choice. -A wonder- *: fol young man who has all the virtues you admire. who sin- * cerely loves you.' who for three long years has prayed his deco- " tion. 'Why throw away such ": a chance? You mar never have * another. * Charm and passion have their place. But, as 1 have said be- • fore. it is character we have to * lite with. Tir If the boy you loved turned out wrong. put him out of your life. And if you are fortunate enough to find a better man,. hold on to him . . . Anne Hirst's counsel is safe to follow. Write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. RETURNED WITH INTEREST .a ic>_ left the fart;: and got a jet, in the city. He wrote a letter to his brother, who elected to stick to the farm telling the ioys of city life. it which he said: "Thursday we auto'd out to the: country club where we golfed anti` dark. Then we motored to tite ieeacb tor the week -end. - The brother on the far: -a wee:, bank. "Yesterday we car -ed to town and has'eualled all the afternoon. Then we went to Ned's, pokered until morning. Today we muled and trac- tored out to the cornfield and ge- hawed and hummed and roared un• til sundown, Then we suppered and then we piped for a while. After that we staircased up to our room and bedteaded until the clock deed.' CROSSWOR PUZZLE ACT:OSS •'. Nocturna'' 3. ,.`,ax 4. Move aside 5. For 4. Sea eagle 1. neerGynoe mother 1. Vere n-;irm 4. nob a. Dk_tart 12, Be Indet,ted 13. Poorer 14. T,at eraate 12. (oat wit*. met37 17. Snuggled 12. Answer tire p Irpose 31. 22. Ann up•rering 24..1.•icslan 25.8,r,reer: eta.e tab.) 28, } epatrer 28. Creak tetter SI. Danish terri- terial div!'i�.ta 33, Performed 34. On the ocean 35. Affi••ma'.:ve 36. Soft 33, TZ=a r 33. Stix 41, $nitash :&'.'- '1 43. Oli or rase Petals 42, Short '16, ittyAvp 43, Apo: oa.: he= 57.'I 'Err 52.'1 Tail; 24. Payable 25. 1' ,c ttry Ti •7.,:4 u�t 24.l'• •i:4ted Si. rljw ver nowt,/ S. Sump S. Mn..;• Hesita.'es 15. Opposite to area th e r 11. flevott:>.1�r,ists 14. Aben 114% 14. t'rcitin 22,KF: Hal: 24. Irl ., 'ere 27. Ciamo 23. Choi 32. P.eisl.irb 34. Stant 35. rang. abusir. speech 37. Merited 40. Fiat cap 42. Prepared 43. Part ell. ehurcch .Precise 43, Look after 47. Number 42. btedn a .a' t..'1.3, 30. Plaei tae. symbol for eel en esh i 2 3 ),,t; °,..;e01111111111 Id:, t6 1111 jf Ar 20 6 17 7 °f,, :$ 24 03111r. Illierf Z1 18 9 14 10 1i 12. 15 • )g J' ? ; za 23 . •f :44/•••0: , - 25 '+' 26 27 y 28 29 0 31 32 • 83 ;,:. 34'. 36 36^ 37 .• f fifj' 98 >. 39 40 i;e3;4t •42 43 44 5 ''✓',•:;17 ' 46 47 445 49 50 51 52 63 '„ 4 56 ,,,, 57 Answer Elsewhere on This Page How To Keep Them Down On The Form -Model Mickey Moser, putting it briefly, is enlivening milking chores for Stanley Lichten- walmer while from his tractor Horace Kirby beams .approval. Mickey's visit to the Kirby farm serves to illustrate the latest merchandising method, bringing fashions to the farm. .A3NICLES I.. F =.' 1 r --- Well. here we are once more. out in the garden. busy with paper and pencil again. Last week the country was lovely but this tree'.; it is beyond descriptio:i. Cherry and apple trees, and Iilac bushee are in fell Moons. and flowering almond and japonica gay with blossom. Besides that, everywhere you look there is a host -not of riatiodils- but a host of golden dandelions. And they are as bright and cheery as anything one could wish to see: Little green and yellow canaries are back with us again. singing their tuneful song. Tulips are out but daffodils and narcissi arcc, oast their best. •-!4- This hi: year 1 am eoin, to try a new method in dealing with my bulbs -at least it is new te. inc. Until now 1 had thought that spring -flowering bulbs had to be let undisturbed unti the green tops had died down. [recently I have learned that better method is to dig up the bulbs. heel them into a trench already prepared and leave them until the tops have l i- thered away. Then dii. up the bulbs again and spread them in a shady place until ream. to plant itt the fall. That method eves you .i chance to clean up your borders and get in a few annuals where the burn; a ere lifted. '.:c t er tl, e, i rim 41,1 1e. re• port is the fact that we have tin. ished seeding,. (ohnny came home and helped Partner eet it done- :-. that is one less thing to worry about. The next tying is to get the fence: Fixed and ti-: cows out to pasture. 1 should say "the next big thin," because there are ump- teen little ado. atitl S'::i'ti'te to be dove_ Last1 ac.day 1 stent to Guelph -antics, against my will -as my sole ! urpose was to buy a hat, and there is nothing I dislike so much as that. However a friend in the - city helped Inc over the ordeal, al- though we had to visit four stores before finding anything that would suit me. There wer: plenty of hats that the milliners would have been happy to sell me but few that 1 would have been happy to wear . , . and I had to have something as one of our nieces is being mar-, ried next Saturday. Lend me your sympathy, oh my deal readers for fussy affairs have never been to my liking. Maybe I shouldn't call this a fussy affair as it is supposed to be only a small quiet wedding In whicin rase deliver in iron' u. big one! It is irony to re:ne IJ:a 1.::, .,•,vn wedding , . , Partner ..nd 1 were married in a church that was prac- tically empty and the martial tread of Partner's army tcots echoed to the rafters. We were even late for the event as in London was got into some kind of a mix-up with train schedules and had to send a wire asking the rector to postpone the ceremony for one hour, We finally trade it -and it was a beau- tiful wedding, in our estimation. After it was over my mother had a wonderful lunch waiting fcr us --Gold haat, salad and deet, apple pie! At short notice it was all that war -time rations would permit. And it was short notice as Partner ar- ISSUE 23 -• 1951 rived home ou leave front Europe almost ae soon as the wire which announced id- creatine:. * But I digress . . . let's get back to Guelph. Naturally before we could start hat -hunting we had to park the car -by a parking meter of course. \\ e were outside a fur- rier's shop where my friend was taking her coat for storage. While we were in there I asked the clerk if she would wind dropping a nickel into the steel contraption when the hour was up. "That is, if we are not Lack." added my friend. "Back!". 1 exclaimed. "Look. I'm slimming for a hat -can you pos- sible- imagine that it's going to take less titan an hour:" Well, the park- ing. ran into 1$c altogether -and one violation at that. But no ticket, thank goodness. Of course it was- r't a'l the het -we got our lunch out of it and a bit more shopping as well -and there was the time it took run,ting back and forth to the meter to fill it up again. Next eveni> g I was out to a eoc a} even'ng to which I had Leen invited and everything was most enjoyable. The sun was setting as 1 drove up the mountain and the country waa so beautiful it almost took one's breath away, It was rice coning home, too . saan- p frogs singing in the moonlight trees and hedges silhouetted against :r suiutr..•rish sky. 1 enjoyed every minute of my evening out. Only one thought di turbo, arc . . . so much peace and beauty -and yet how t a-i1y it could all be spoilt by a few stray bombs -or even one bomb if it happened tt, be of- the atomic variety. Why. oh why, shquld such tilings he? Women Have More Fat in Their Heads Baldness has intrigued nom for centuries.. Even Charles Dickens offered a solution. He theorised that as shaving tended to thicken the hair nn the chin (a belies since scientifically disproved) Nature replied b4 taking 't away irctnt the head. Science. how eeer, has sought something sounder than this be• lief, which still has some prevalence --one research urker attacked the problem from the female side. He worked from the basis that, as wooden are less prone to bald- ness than men. they must have some special physical .quality. His research showed that women have more subcutaneous fat under the scalp than men. When, in the case of Hien, this fat disappears with the passage of time, the scalp presses more firmly against the skull and strangles the tiny glands through vhictt the hair emerges Study in Skulls This happens less frequently to vvomell, so the theory goes, because their thicker layer of subcutaneous fat lasts then) until late in life. This theory provoked one rude chap to remark that, anyway, it '.pas always known that women were more fatheaded than meni The theory, however, is closely related to the discovery of Dr. Frederick Hoelzel, of the Univer- sity of Illinois Medical SSchooi, who trade a study of eighty skulls. He found that in cases of bald - Mete an extension of the bone strut• tore of the skull (called calcifica- tion) had cut off the blood supply to the scalp. Furthermore, the de. gree of baldness was pt'oportionate- ly related to the amount of calcifica- tion. One other theory on natural bald• nets holds that it is simply a mit- tet' of heredity, being based on, hot ou4 frOw :A bald inti,r•r, l,u1 110114 aQ mother. You Can't Stop It Women, -though not perhaps bald tionnselves, are tapable of trans- mitting baldness. since it is a rere,4, characteristic with them and a dominant ntale characteristic. Though dermatologists may !tot be united in then' views on tate twist of common baldness, they are agreed on one point ---that nothing can be done to repel it if :Nature has decreed otherwise. 1 fow ever, the inevitable may be postponed by careful attention to the fundamental rules of hygiene, 't'lie hair roots depend for their life Ott the nutrition coming from the bloodstream, which depends in tarn upon the body's general condi- tion. If that essential is absent, the life blood of the hair is affected. And the owner may become one more in a mounting company of over 100,000 who have applied to the •National Health Service --for wige. Millions Of Marbles Schoolboys bought 50,000,0.10 new marbles last year. Fine glass mar- bles arc being made in Britain for the first time, using a secret mix- ture which blends the glass and pig- itteIits. Until 1914 the world's manufac- turing centre was near Nuremberg, German, though the game came to England, not froth Germany but from Rome. Et was introduced here by Ro- man legionnaires, wito used round, water -worn pebbles that could be easily bowled along the smooth - tiled courts of tiae villa; they built it; Britain. Demand for marbles is constantly increasing, for they are not only used by- schoolboys. During the war skilled mechanics perfected the lit- tle glass halls to such a degree that they could be substituted for cer- tain steel bearings. Teats of glass marbles go to li- thographers and engravers to be used it: smoothing tile surface of copper printing plates. Special marbles are made kr this purpose to withstand the wear and tear of being roiled bade and forth °mot the metal surfaces. .tary are made for inclusion in the game called C?tittee Checkers, w I'tc,l requires sixty ,.> liv_ for ea::.il game. tett cense of. six differ- ent colour$. Ir: the dlceids of Texas and the :fieldie Eas: ..-ilii:ons of marbles are used as filters ani •condensers. Fish hatcher -lee rase then on the bottom of "reeding tanks. claiming better results dieing the spawning season. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking a; 30N3 S'e, 3 A ?r 3S.__.,. 3V'1d 0 Mt 3 MO 1(S 1-014 Etiquette In The Good Old Days "If you get dr tuk often, you'll -be (h rraccd." S14111 was the ad vire given h, yotutte gide in the fif- teenth Centuvy . Standards r>f cx» pccted behaviour !uret' changed amusingly flurinp the last fete hmt- di'erl years. One of the (11/1101 knower books on etiquette Was pebliSlted before the Norman Conquest, Its author named llardicanute, admonished: "t:lense not thy teethe, at mete with l: nyfe, stik, or waude, or drink with food in thy tnouthe. After mete, when thou shalt vvasshe, cpitt hot ill the basin," • Good table manners must have biers the exception rather than lite rule, for in the thirteenth century a gentleman called Robert de Blois recommended that tablecloths should not be users for wiping the eves or the nose. Mind Your Tongue Feminine characteristics scent to have clanged little since those days, Ir was unbecoming in a lady, he said, to talk too touch or to boast about the attentions paid to her by the opposite sex. In 1430 a book called, "How the Good Wife Taught her Daughter," rendered this advice for young girls: "In walking, don't toss your head and wriggle about your shoul- ders. Don't swear. Tn town dot 'If gad about or get drunk on your clothe. money. Take no gifts; they're the ruin of many a true woman." Thirty years later it was the turn of young men to come in for a little attention, when the Marshal, of Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, told them, "Do not cough or spit or retch too loud. Do not lick a dish with your tongue." Bones, he added might be gnawed, but never thrown on the floor. That Etiquette 'When we get to the nineteenth century we find complete prudish- ness and an elaborate code of be- haviour which it is social suicide to transgress. The women's magazines were full of helpfuls"hints, "Pcachblossom,' for instance, is advised not to at- tempt the clinching of stiles in a crinoline. If she suffers too touch front the comments of vulgar little boys, con- tinues the editor, it would he better, • in a high wind, to retrain indoors. A paper for girls 'says: "It is not merely a breach of etiquette for a girl to take a country walk alone. - it is absolutely unseemly and dan- gerous. There is alivays a chance of meeting tramps or drunken.men." A book of etiquette published in the first year of Queen Victoria's reign reflects most accurately the current artificiality of behaviour. Ladies are told exactly how to cut an undesirable acquaintance, and how to treat insinuating or ambigu- ous remarks. They must appear not even to hear them! In Ogden, Utah, a man was asked to step up on a platform and draw the whining ticket in a $1.000 pond raffle. He reached into the box and incredibly and gleefully drew his own number, Me kept the bond), Luht 9Fi'ne,-texfured 4U Y, S So easy $o make with new fast DRY Yeast! 1 Here, at last, is fast acting yeast that keeps -stays full-strength without refrigeration till the moment you use it! No more spoiled yeast - no store slow yeast! Get a month's supply of the new Fleischntann's Fast Risiog Dry Yeast!! 0 Combine c. 'tater, 3 tbs. gran- ulated sugar, 1 tsp. salt and tai. c. shortening; Heat, stirring constant- ly, until sugar and salt are dissolved and shortening melted; cool to luke- warm. Meanehilc, measure into a large bowl is c. lukewarm water, 1 tsp, granulated sugar; stir until sugar is dissolved. Sprinkle with 1 envelope Fleischmatut's Fast Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10 minutes, THEN stir well, Add cooled sugar -shortening mix.. lure and stir to 1 well -beaten egg and 1 Usm lemon juice, Sift together FEATHER BANS twice 2 C. once -sifted tread flour and ?:j, Isps ground mace. Stir igta yeast mixture; beat until smooth, Work in 1 c. once -sifted bread flour to make a very soft clougli. Grease top of dough. Cover and set in warm place, free from draught. Let rise until doubled in bulk. hutch down dough and cut out rounded spoonful:. of dough with a tablespoon and drop into greased muffin pans, tilling each pan about halt -full, Green tops. Cover and let rise until doubled in bulk. Bake itt a loot oven, 425°, about 20 minutes. Yield -.20 medium-sized buns,