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Zurich Herald, 1950-09-28, Page 2B 11 M 1 HOW CAN I By Anne Ashley � ,� Y •. �� � , T Q. How can I prevent moths in -rugs? �' � � '��'�� ,, ,,,: �` • ` A. If the rugs are sw•clal occa- r. sionaliy with a broom dipped in water, to which a little turpentilze has been added, tlicy will not only a CN k p ])right and cleatl, but moths �--- i� F Sc ill tlot infest them. ........ ,�••'� � � '>. � �,..:� �. ` a i. �•�* * 4: ............... Q. How can I make tinware rust- proof? A. Rub every part of it with i r frZ.91i lard; then heat it thoroughly ITS ��% � before using. It will never rust, 't'RAGR ANC � '� ,s.t' / no matter how much it i:: left in ��aCo1� �E....>X . w '�,� water. IS SEALED ANNE rt KH,@sT otstt -T__a#ni4 Cou4nheiat "Dear Anne Hirst: I am in great 4 budget. Then their husbands call worry. We have three children and *.see ex•'actly where the money ME - .>u. ' are expecting another. My husband * goes and better appreciate how POW'S Mop -At Puson, South. Korea, two 1�orth Korean (who is much older) has turned * economical they have been. Army nurses, prisoners of war, 'scrub floors at their Prisoner so cold toward me! 4: Start today keeping track of Of War'Caml) r "No one longs for love and af- fection. more than a woman yr t in the condition I'm in. He never takes me any - i where, says he 4 cant afford It. 1 I need. some amusement, but I am not getting any. I don't nag, though it's hard 'to resist some- times. "He seems willing to, provide for us, but he doesn't understand that the children are not getting the proper diet for their ages. He thinks things are too high. Yet he spends every 'idle moment in the pool room, or fishing or at halt games. I have a little business place of my own. It doesn't bring in much, but every bit I make I spend for groceries. The children and I need many things we should have, but we can't get them. Whenever he does give me money it is not suffi- cient. AT TURNING POINT "I just don't know what to do. "Sometimes I even wonder whe- ther he is finding love somewhere else? He has a car and could be with others often. I never watch hhn, though. "Maybe your advice will awaken biro -if he over intends to awaken. A LO:\EtY WIFE" * Such a husband • as yours • behaves so selfishly be- • cause he is thoughtless. He would * not plan to deprive you and the * children of necessities; he just * doesn't realize the high cost of * living these days. To wives in * your situation I have time and * again suggested thew keep a _An444,*0; Here's tlhat it takes to give your separates new chic[ A stem -slim skirt with walk -easy pleats. A snatching cloche. Wear them with alt types of blouses and jacketst Pattern 4776: waist sizes 24, 26; 26, 30, 32, Hat, one size, Size 26 skirt and hat, 2 yards 54 -inch. This Mattern, easy to use, simple "to sew, is tested for Bt, Has com- plete illustrated instructions, Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (25c) in coins (stamps Cannot be dcccp, d i for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMB9R. Send order to Box, 1, 1.23 Eigh- teenth Street, New Toronto, Ont. every cent you spend. Show it * to ilium at the end of the week 4' and tali: things over. You o : ; '� t but you cat it anyway. So what? should be given a sum of money .A Farmers know every day's work is I * regularly to cover householdy more. or less of a gamble. But ��-F, alae t: expenses and he should save 1° j farmers haven't a priority on worry. x< some (however little) toward ��,�NiCLIi S Every calling has its on -type of clothes and the other needs • of worry -although most, of us like * his family. to think we have more than the It is not fair that you should [ IMMARM other fellow. Nobody has to eat * have to spend all the little. you 4"e GwerLdol.i.n.e. D Ct.e„t`1,e what they know will giver them * make for food. How mould lie indigestion -there is more than ones: * manage if your business failed - kind of food available, And nobody * some day? fart of your income ,_ has to be a farmer, or a salesman, 4' suggest All is safely gathered in' and a bank -clerk or a Iabourer if he I * ggest you put aside for how gladly we 'sing the song of thinks same other o1 4. amusement -take the children to harvest home!" After so -many him better. job will suit a movie when you can, or for weeks of changeable weather; so a boat -ride or some other ,sliver- a many times when we expected our * sion. Your Husband, too, ought second threshing would be either * to arrange to take you out a tomorrow or the next day. So many But if you are a woman -and 4: couple of evenings a week, to nights when we wakened to hear a farmer's wife -there isn't much relieve the monotony of your rain beating on the roof, saw in- you can do about; changing your routine Too .many men ,do not job, is there? And why should you cessant lightning and heard .the * understand that if they expect g g want to anyway? To do a good rumUle of thunder -anal rxmenn- their wives to stay yoeu.g and tiered that some of our grain was lob as a farmer's wife is about •as attractive they must supply ire- high a calling as anyone could out in the field still waitingorning to be * quent changes of scene a threshed. There was one msk for. And what a difference it makes to the farzrier. Some farms Your life is bound up ut the when Partner looked out across the 4: children and in your work. Yousaid---"One alozig tivith their owners, have gone sodden fields and more * need, now more than ever, recre- day of rain and what's left of the to pieces because the woman in * ation to keep up your spirits and crop won't be worth threshing." the case- didn't keep tier end *up. A * your Health. If lie gives this a But it did rain -and rained again. bachelor farmer call Makea better * little thought, he must know Partner was wrong -the grain 'was gb of things than a married pian * how important. it is. He needs still worth threshing. And now- n4an with an un -cooperative wife. change, too; but he surely could "all is safel at isn't, experience that counts in y gathered in. We t early stages, save here and there on his per- threshed again last.. Wedngsday- ges, but _the the.. to 4` sonal expenditures so you.,could our final thresh ng dor the year- twat k. 'Experience will come with share the. pastimes that make and all the bins are full and half the years if a genuine interest is you laugh together and become the granary floor. The crop turned there to begin with. Heaven help closer companions. out far better than we dared to the young farmer whose wife "lives You need, too, daily espres• hope for. oil the farm but takes no interest * sions of his affection and con- in crops, stock or the weather. cera. A pregnant womali has * periods of depression and alarm, This year's harvest has certainly which only hair husband's affec- been a very worrying time for those Generally speaking the farm is tion, attentions and cheerfulness dependent on the outcome. Lack of' not the place for playing a lone * can relieve. If her husband would help induced so many farmers to hand. There is all inescapable inter- * only use his imagination and put stools -thresh instead of putting dependence all along the line -not himself in his wife's place, tie their stuff in the barn. And when only in the farm family but also would give more freely of his too many farmers get that same idea as regards stock and machinery, 4` thought 'and time to be again threshing machines cannot get Experts claim that a farm cannot * the devoted, articulate lover his around fast enough to keep every- be worked successfully without ' wife thought she married. one satsfied, Even those who coni- cattle to fertilize the ground. Crops * Laughter and having fun to- bined their crops were up against cannot be sown or Harvested with- * gether should not cease when the the same trouble -not enough out machinery. Trucks that will days of courtship end. They combines in the district to meet the " not start depend on tractors to pull 4` keep us young. they give us demand. Those who put their them until the spark catches, Yet fresh courage. They are the hest grain crops in the baric also had tractors themselves often have to investment any husband can make the weather to contend with -a rely on the trusty team when 4° toward keeping his marriage few nice days with a drying wind engines get balky in cold weather. * glowing and permanent. . one day drawing in -and then Poultry being fattened for market * I. hope your husband reads rain again. Last week we had good would often be stolen if it were not this today, and plans deliberately weather most of the time. It would, for the sharp ears of the farmer's x from now on to lighten your I hope, give most farmers a chance watch -dog. Bins would be over- * heavy load. I believe all he needs to get their harvest work cleaned run with grain -nibbling rates and is a reminder. up. mice if it were not for the barn - 4: yard cats. And the poor cows Husbands can find meat in Anne And of course it all be ins would get iio exercise for their tails g if it were not for the barnyard Hirst's column and come to better again -sowing fall wheat -and (ties! understanding and appreciate all with it next year's harvest worries. their wives do for them. Many a Come to think of it, farming is husband has been awakened to his something like eating things that real place in the home, and has you know will bring on an after - changed accordingly . ^ Write math of indigestion. You eat some - Anne Hirst at Bos 1, 12S Eigh- thing you specially like knowing teenth St., New Torortto, Ont. full well what the result will be- -- - - 9. Count 32. Sun Q CROSSWO` D IL thread 34. Tiresome �00� ales 1L Celestial body 37. persons btat 1 -g 16. Malicious 40. Garments P W Am AIE burning 41. Rescues 13. Candto 43. Condiment ACROSS 3. Swamp °0. Serpents 21. Town in Maine 44, According to fact 1. Side piece A. Fish 4. Bewilder 22. Worts out 4G, nutlet S. Cries like a cat 5. Vocal solos G. Lartye vulture 24. Boy 26. Thong 43, might moisture 49. Mahe leather 12. Language 7, Female sheep 20. English school 50. Self 13. In a line g• Finc art 30. Saucy 51. Simpleton 14. Single thing 16. Publication + 2 3 M4 5 6 7 M8 s' 10 11 17, Korea chap t e r 12. Peruse _ 21. Auto engine 13 14 part 20. City in Iowa g 16 17 La. Console 25, Rodder alta 2i, Knock t8 19 °3. R(bbcd fabric 31. Vegetable organtnms 21 22 23 33. Formal discussionTh T 2II i9 30 36, Weep "8. Staf, ^3. Moving part tis 39, Ecclesiastical aC3rfA 35 _ .. 38 .. 37 38 92. Hire ,_ 43. Itaxcr _ sharponor 33 40 41 92 45, laot wildly 47, Desert nomad 48. :Dispossessed 45 44 45 4 58. Old musical instrument 7 48 49 50Sl 53. Smooth 54, Turkish title 52 s 1-- 55. Golf nags ss,ALroction _..._ _ i 57. Ln's:nodtaterq I 110 RP N 1, >3de monlltnln tiinswet eisew'here on this page. So there you have it, friends ... - all down the line farming is a cooperative business. DOUBTFUL A doctor, attending an. old man, lead instructed the butler in the art of taking his temperature. One morning on arriving at the house, the doctor ran into the but- ler. "I� hope," he said, "that your master's temperature is no high- er?" . "I was just hoping that myself," said the butler, solemnly. "He died an hoar STUDY AT HDME GRADE X 1I With the expert help of Wolsey Hall Correspondence Courses, you can now prepare for Senior Alatriculation in your own home in leisure time while continuing day-tinne employment. Personal attention assured by a stag of 100 qualified teachers, Low fees, payable• by instalments. Pros• Pectus from G 'L.• Clarke, B.A.. Director of Studies, Dept. OWIJl WOLSEY MALL, HAMILTON ISSUE 39 .- 1950 s Q. How can I remove rouge and lipstick stains from a towel or hand- Iterchief ? A. If the stains do not wash out. try soaking the spots in milk. Q. How can I relieve tired feet? A. When the feet are over -tired, try exercising them, using a little cold cream as un unguent. Bend tine toes, move the ankle, and rub the foot under the arch. This treat- ment will be very beneficial. 4, Q. How can I remove watermelon stains from linen? A. By applying pure glycerin to the spot, allowing it to remain for a few minutes, then washing. 4: x: Q. How can I treat the seams of a garment that are shiny after ironing? A. Touch the seams lightly with 2. piece of cheesecloth wrung out of tepid water. Q. How can I store quinces? A. Place quinces carefully in a barrel, using only perfectly sound fruit. Fill the barrel with water, fasten on the head of the barrel, and put in a cool place. If done properly, the quinces will keep all winter. Q. Trow can I remove screws that are obstinate or rusty? A'Apply a heated poker to the heads of the screws, When the, screws have become hot, they can be removed very easily, * 4= x: Q. How can I impart an added good taste to mashed potatoes? A. Try adding the Swell -beaten white of an egg to the potatoes while whipping them. 4+ # 4< Q. How can I prevent -white Ic :» :s''.-- stcokings from turning yellow when washing? A. Place a few drops of turpea- tine it) the water and it will prevent this. Q. How can I preserve cut flowers -for a longer time? A. Add a little camphor to the water in which they stand. tJ , 1,•a�aamr h . ... � '..� And the .' RELIEF is `'> LASTING Nobody knows the cause of rheuma- tism but we do know there's one thing to ease the pain . . . it's INSTANTINE. And when you take INSTANTINnE the relief is prolonged because INSTANTINE contains not one, but three proven medical ingredients. These three ingredients work together to bring you not only fast relief but more prolonged relief. • Take INSTANTINE for fast headache relief too .. . , or for the pains of neuritis or neuralgia and the aches and pains that often accompany a cold. Get Instantine today and always t titi,,�• keep It handy A 12-Tabtet Tin 250 (Economical 48-Toblet Bottle 691E Upside down to prevent pe^_rang. s Crown Broad Recipes nEE. yethe Canada 5farohi company Limited, 29,-Monfreal, P Q. c9 24 Ow. OR