Zurich Herald, 1953-02-26, Page 6"-:..._.441ott.4
ANNE 4-coterAptheicit
FIRST
- "Dear Anne Hirst: I'd like to .
dive you my opinion oVeeth
ttance whose intended wife•;* v,
nntinue working after they xai:
y, He's the one who insists' that
she help pay for their horaie; •
"Any husband can suggest that
his wife help save for that, but
to say she must — well, he's not
much of a man. He harries her
to give her a home and provide
for her—not for her to help sup-
port herself. I think a man is
cheap to expect his wife to con-
tinue working after marriage. As
you say. he should be proud to
support her, not take from her.
"And her clothes? It's all right
for her to pay for some of them,
but he should provide her with
an outfit part of the time.
"My husband doesn't think a
wife should work at all.
"He says a home isn't a home
unless it is beautiful and clean
all the time; then if unexpected
guests drop in, you don't have to
excuse dust on the furniture. And
you know as well as I do, Anne
Hirst, you can't keep your house
looking like it should, and have
those homemade pies and cakes,
if you're out working all day!
A STEADY READER" •
" Many a reader, man and
" woman, will agree with • you,
J" Most men take pride in sup-
* porting a wife, and some feel
* it a reflection on their capa-
• bilities if she takes an outside
* job. They can both do without
" some luxuries and manage to
* get along on his income. .A
man's pride is precious to hien,
* and it should not be offended.
" In many cases today, the two
• could not possibly live on the
* man's income. The wife is as
* anxious for marriage as he, so
* she is glad and proud to pay
* her share of their common ex-
penses.
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r4evte.1661124
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copy!
" Another important Angie to
this question is the fact that a
,career girl, or one that has been
successful in business for a
long time, is not content to
settle down as a homemaker.
* She has too many talents that
* will lie 'fallow, and she would
* be restless and bored with
* household routine. That is why
* some wives of well-to-do men
* prefer to continue in business,
and hire domestic help to keep
* the home running smoothly.
* T agree with your point that
* the man's attitude is vital in
* settling the problem. He may -
"
ay" ask her if she prefers to go on
• working; but to demand that
R' she earn extra money to help
▪ pay for the house and its up-
" keep, and to buy her own
" clothes, is a very different in-
* terpretation of the marriage
* partnership.
* Each couple must settle the
* matter between them. I do
* think. however, that any girl
' contemplating marriage should
" have some profitable talent to
* fall back on, in case of emer-
• gencies.
*
• To "CON YUS1 D": Like so
* many young girls, you are flat-
" eyed when a boy asks you not
* to date anyone else. You think
it means he is serious about
marrying you—when usually it
only indicates his selfishness and
his lack of confidence in you
•" You should not promise any-
°' one that you'll confine your
" dates to him, or have to tell
* him when you see anyone else.
• Unless two people are engage
" ed, they have no right to make
* such a demand. Suppose either
^' one finds another person more
" attractive? You are left alone
and when a girl has been dat-
ing only one boy, it takes quite
a time to find another escort.
Play fair. Let both these boys
know you see the other one
(or write him) and refuse to
bind yourself to any . agree-
ment.
• Why do you allow any lad
to break dates? Don't you see
how that cheapens you, makes
*.him think he can treat you as
^•' he pleases? You should have
" more respect for yourself •
—
* or he will not have any for
a,
a
you.
" The young man to cultivate
A, is the one who wants you to
- enjoy • yourself (even with
• somebody else) anti is willing
* to take. his chances that you
" will decide you .like him more.
If your husband disapproves
of your working, cut your bud-
get to ft his income—and do it
cheerfully . s sine iiirst is glad
r,o discuss enconomic problems
ae well as emotional difficulties.
lSeeit, yours to her at .Sox 1. 123
Eighteenth Si., New Toronto,
Ont,
X -Ray Treatments.
May Be Harmful
X-ray treatment may endan-
ger the growth of children's
bones, according to a report
published in Radiology. Their
studies were paid for by grants
from the Atomic Energy Com-
mission and the Playtex Park
Research Institute. The children
examined had received X-ray
treatment for cancer. A follow-
up thirteen years after treat-
ment showed definite effects on
the growth of the spine. A re-
lationship between the X-ray
dosage and the effect on the
growth was demonstrated and
the limits of safe dosage deter-.
mined.Though only the spine
was studied, the findings are
just as applicable to other bones
of the body. The inference is
obvious: Treatment with X-ray
must be supervised be• experts.
Folks sure favor
MAGIC ca ke
SELF -ICED
SPICE CAKE
Mix anti sift 3 times, 234 c. once -sifted pastry flour
(or. 2 c. once -sifted hard-wheatflour), 2 Wits. Magic
Baking Powder, 34 tsp. salt, 134 tsps,.ground cinna-
mon, ;f tsp. each of ground cloves, ginger, allspice,
nutmeg and :mace; mix in, j c. washed and dried
seedless raisins and 3„f, c. chopped walnuts. Cream
ri c. butter' or margarine and blend in 134 c: lightly -
packed brown sugar; beat in 3 well -beaten egg yolks
and 4 lap. vanilla. Add dry ingredients to creamed,
mixture alternately with ;i c. milk and spread bat-
ter, in 9," square pan, which has been greased and
the bottom lined with greased paper. Beat stiff, not
dry, 3 egg whites and a few grains salt; gradually
beat in 1 c. lightly -packed brown sugar and spread
' over cake; sprinkle with ;4' c. chopped walnuts and
bake in a rattib slow oven, 326°,1 to 134 hours;
cover lightly with brown paper for last half hour,
3•�x��F�}�'•,
* 6;
4
Gun -Manning Girls—Guarding the ancient "Pillars of Hercules"
for Great Britain, these pretty English girls are among the first
ever assigned to fighting duties overseas. Stationed at Gibraltar
to "man" an aircraft predictor are, from left to right: Lance Cpl.
Grieg, and Privates Bull and Taylor. Members of the 46th Heavy
Anti -Aircraft Regiment, they are "top men," according to com-
rades in her Majesty's service.
.RONICLES
6INGER
64)92nd,o1ir,r D C'tca,>;13.G'
As 1 was finishing this column
last week news was just coming
in of the disastrous floods in
England and Holland. At the time
I did not quite realize the lo-
cation of the floods, then, as
more details were broadcast I
found it was Last Anglia they
were talking about—the district
in which Partner and I both lived.
before coming to Canada. Yar-
mouth — where I spent many a
summer holiday with Aunt Lot-
tie . . . Clacton, Felixstowe --
popular
popular seaside resorts for all
East Anglians — and all well
fortified with seawalls and break-
waters. Partner and I remember
very rough seas in all these
places but never flooding ,to 'any
serious extent. The location
doesn't make the disaster any
better or worse but it always
seems worse when one knows the
places that are spoken of. Along
the east coast the sea has been-
encroaching
eenencroaching for years; cliffs'have
crumbled into the sea, houses
have had to be demolished or
moved back for safety; now this
terrible tidal wave will weaken
still further the seawall defences
of many a coastal town.
Someone said to me -- "Well,
1 don't suppose people who have
lived in those places will ever
want to go back again." Oh, but
they will. In time, when the de-
bris has been removed, and the
immediate danger has passed,
the people of East Anglia ,will
return and build their homes
anew. Inconveniences, to Eng-.
lish country folk, are always re-
garded as of a temporary na-
ture. Near our home, on the
banks of the River Stour, there
were many cottages. Every spring
the Stour would overflow its
banks. Every spring these cot-
tages would be flooded and peo-
ple rescued by boat from the
bedrooms. And every spring, as
soon as the floods had subsided,
these people would return to
their river -Washed homes. Yes,
the English are a stubborn race.:
Happily, all news last week:
was not depressing. I wonder
how many people thrilled with
delight as the Captain, without
the aid off tugs, docked the
mighty Queen Mary at New York
harbour. That would have beep
wonderful to see. I expect the
people on deck were far too ex-
cited to even think or being ner-
vous. •
Of course our Canadian weath-
er is also in the news again,
Today
"it
mightht
as well
be
spring."
But we hate tothiek what
this changeable weather is do-
ing to the wheat end clover.
However, time will tell — and
no amount of worrying will af-
feet the result.
Of greater concern at the It:o-•
most are the changes taking
place in U.S. Governmental pol-
icy, which can affect us to a
greater extent than most of tie
probably realize. It is rather
like an occasion when two great
doctors disagree. One . says "op-
erate"; the other says "don't ope
YOU CAN DEPEND
When kidneys fail to
remove excess aoido
nod wastes, [mak.
aoho, tired feeling,
disturbed rest bftcu
follow, Dodee
TCidney PtI1b atimu•
Into kidneys to
normal duty. You
tool bettor --steep
boner �porkSbetter,
Get )loggia at any
drug store. YOU
depend on Dodd n
%.
orate." Meanwhile friends of the
patient are bewildered, not know-
ing which doctor. is right.
But eve don't need to cross the
Border — or the Atlantic — in
search of , problems. We do have
a few of our own — what with
the weather, labour trouble, de-
cline in farm prices and contro-
versial government reports. Even
nearby cities have their troubles,
more than the country if we did
but know it. At any rate we don't
expect to. be compelled to drink
fluorinated water. Come on out.
to the country, folks, where we
have fresh, spring water. Fine,
until the well gives out. At such
times we are ready to accept any
kind of • water, fluorinated or
otherwise.
And now may I be forgiven if
T touch on a more personal mat-
ter. February 6 is a date for us
to remember. On that date, a
year ago King George VI died.
Two years ago our sister-in-law
passed away while here on a
visit. Eight years ago it was the
wedding day for two friends of
ours. Thirty-five years ago Part-
ner and I were married. And this "
year we lost a very close friend
who lived in Guelph. So you see
we have plenty of reason to re-
member February 6.
it could hardly be said that
Partner and I celebrated our
thirty-fifth wedding anniversary
—we don't go in for celebrations
very much. — but we did have
cards, letters, phone calls and
some beautiful red carnations —
flowers which have a special sig-
nificance for us. We also experi-
enced a great feeling of thank-
fulness. A married couple who
are able to 'observe their 35th
wedding anniversary TOGETHER
have a very real cause for re-
joicing, don't you think? So many
have far less — more's the pity. •
REALLY TOUGH
One of the most successful
writers of gangster scripts on the
Coast learned angles in the hard
school of experience. The neigh-
borhood in which he grew up, he
explains, was so tough that when-
ever a cat stalked down the
street with ears and a tail,
everybody knew it was a tour-
ist. A hardboiled kid who lived
next door to hint poured a pan
of water on a passerby, and
shouted a number of interesting
four-letter words as an accom-
paniment: The infuriated passer-
by yelled, "Come down here and
I'll beat the tar out of you."
"Conte down?" repeated the of-
fending brat. "You're nuts. I can't
even walk yet."
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p
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Your usual drug counter can
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of PINEX CONCENTRATE. Pour
this into a 16'ounce bottle and fail
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no cooking needed, and it takes but
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•
ECOI4GMICAl
unix
6
a
Their &az ve
Cale Too Soon
The man who discovered one
of the world's first formulas for
plastics—a cey.,iiivention which
made millions di'e d' the other
day and left;otyl * ;s4•* In his old
age Francis 14aDiS had sought
humble employnjeilt•as a hospital
storekeeper on the outskirts of
London - . and now his white-
haired widow bas to go out to
work.
Yet we live in the plastics age.
In every electric switch, every
radio set, every telephone and
fountain -pen, Francis Maries fac-
ed a constant remainder of his
bitter misfortune.
Thirty years ago, while experi-
menting with baby foods in his
kitchen, he discovered the milk
plastics formula that opened -
glowing vistas of fortune. In a
converted stable, he and a part-
ner turned out plastic door plates,
cutlery handles, ashtrays and.
other articles.
Howe Sold Up
But Maries' bright idea won no
support—or money. The business
crashed. Even his little home had
to be sold up. Until relatives
came to the rescue, he and his
wife had to sleep on bare floor-
boards. Maries lived to see others
reap the fruits of an invention
similar to his casein formula. His
failure broke his health,
It so often happens. Not long
ago Walt Disney was decorated
with the Legion of Honour at a
stately French Embassy gather-
ing, and in his speech of thanks
he mentioned the animated car-
toons had been invented by a
Frenchman, Emile Cohl. What
Disney didn't know was that
Coh.! was still living—on a pit-
tance of seven shillings a week
relief!
Strangely enough, the discov-
ery of Emile Cohl's plight turned
up another old-timer, who was
found lying ill and in need in a
flat only a street or two away.
Francis Michaux invented the
bicycle pedal. Ultimately the
French Cyclists' Touring Club
had to open a subscription fund
on his behalf. Nikola Tesla, too,
died in New York with barely
enough in the bank to pay his
hotel bill.
Every electric lamp marked
"A.C," pays indirect tribute —
but rio cash tribute!—to Tesla.
Back in the 'nineties he sold his
new system of alternating cur-
rent for a million dollars cash.
But in the course of a long life
he.e spent_ .,so . much .: money on •
laboratory experiments • on new
electrical inventions—and so oft-
en dreamily failed to take out
paten ts—that the net profit was
nil.
It is an amazing fact that Alex- -
ander Fleming and his colleagues
made no attempt to patent their
discovery of penicillin. As scien-
tists, they intended their medical
discovery to be bequeathed to the
world.
On the other hand, when Dr.
Selman W aksman, a Russian -
born American, discovered that
other wonder drug, streptomycin,
he patented it and made over the
proceeds to the Rutg'e)'s, Univer•
sity Research Foundatio..'
Dishwasher's 'Olion;'e
When last report fid it Inset
made nearly $3,000,000 on a 2 pee
cent royalty. In actual fact, it is
understood that Dr. Waksman
takes 10 per cent of this—a neat
total of $300,000 — 'and other
shares and bonuses are distribut-
ed among a score of others. Even
the widow of the laboratory dish-
washer gets a share!
A recommendation that British
doctors, too, should patent their
medical discoveries has been
made to the British Medical As-
sociation. If a basic discovery 6x
not patented, developments of fit
may otherwise be patented else-
where. As things are, for in-
stance, the British are in the de-
plorable position of having to pay
royalties to American firms for
pencillin manufactured in Brit-
ain!
PLITTI1
And the
RELIEF IS LASTING
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h stantine
12 -Tablet Tin 250
€eononsical 48 -Tablet Bottle 'Me
Light fine—textured (. IJ S
So easy to make with
new fast DRY Yeast
Kn.
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 Inose slow
yeast !• Get a month's supply
of the new Fleischnaann's Past
Rising Dry Yeast!
Combine % c. water, 3 tbs. gran-
ulated sugar, 1 tsp. salt and 3a c.
shortening; heat,- stirring constant-
ly, until sugar and salt are dissolved
and shortening melted; cool to luke- •
warm. Meanwhile, measure into a'
Large bowl / c. lukewarm water,
1 tsp. granulated sugar; stir until
sugar is dissolved. Sprinkle with
1 envelope Fleiscltmann's Fast
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Minutes, THEN Stir well.
Add cooled sugar shortening mix-
ture and stir. in 1, well -beaten egg
and 1 tsp. lemon juice. Sift together
FEATHER BUNS
•
twice 2 c. once -sifted bread flour
and X tsp, ground mace. Stir into
yeast mixture,. beat until smooth.
Work in 1 c, once -sifted bread flour
to make a very- soft dough, Grease
top of dough Cover end, set in warns
place, free fro;}t draught, Let rise
until doubled in bulk. Punch down
dough and cut out rounded spoonfuls
of dough,with a tablespoon and drop
into greased muffin pans, filling each
pan about half -cull, Grease tops.
Cover acid let rise until doubled
in bulk. Bake in a hot oven, 41°,
about 20 minutes., Yield --20
medium-sized buns.