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Port Perry Star (1907-), 16 Mar 1950, p. 6

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Bian EoNAR SON IRE E84 ¥ SEA El re 5 ha pi ) EA LEE ! r h [53 } . 5 i Help The we Red Cross " rs - arr a i EOS = -- ph al "Dear Sune Haase: 1 oan with a x deeply man who His backgrongd is all that not "Aly neve i love young ences from wo hme fonily LM mine 18 wdther Wise mar She had Children, cach wily a if- ferent father d'or the past 10 has rid three years, she no-good man who her. When she calls on lived with a lazy, drinks and mistreats she rims ont of morrey, ne. "1 owas the ushed around so much that at 16 { ran and lived with a family' I worked for. Now, by hard work and put myself through school with ne help from only girl I was away, saving, I have 4 anybody I now have a good job - and a good homes [ have bettered myself, and have benefitted by my mother's mistakes "Tam so ashamed! 1 am atraid to tell this boy? Whit should 1 do - ri Ss asia perio A ---- Truth Is Best # If this fine young man has al- * ready told you he loves you and * wants to.marry you, that was the * moment to tell him the truth. If * you did not, then tell Nim when * he does propose... * If he is a man of character, he you {eel so deeply is not own, but ydur mother's. has the right-stuff in_him, only admire you more for the struggle you have made to tise above your inheritance. He will love you even better-because you have suffered so much, and he will do all a husband can to pro- tect you from any hippie ss in the future. It is a high tribute to your in- nate decency 'and standards of thinking and living that you have' arrived where voit are today. [n spite of vour mother's ioose liy- ing, vou have mide yourself a person whom any right-thinking man or woman should proudly "welcome "into the family, "There are no illegitimate chil- dren; there are only illegitimate your If he he can vidi bola lb el abe ghana tl | ae EN, Tas SSN Ne of A 3 a pi } 1 | y { SES "ot we SN rr ~ eat TS Fw ; ' PATTERN 4523 sizes 12m 2 Alarms Most versatil Tyo Can Mnd! Use it as your prettiest house- and-go-to-market dress; or, depend- on yoiir fabrie¢, it can be a Luin some spectator sport! Pattern 4523 comes wn sixes 13, M, 16, 18, 20, Size 16 takes 3% yards 89-inch fabric. es " Pak =v TEs erm This pattern, easy to use, simple - 0 sew, Is tested for At. .Has com- HERS plate illustrated instructions. - gy t Send twenty-five cents (25c) ia ¥. : ns (stamps dary 10t-be-accepted) : this pattern. Print plainly sise, re : "mame, tdictay, " fe number, Bend : ; to Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St, wr Toronto, Ont, : ISAUE M ~ 1080 Hi ouraged." . wit wderstand Tat the disgrace AC ll i: ois Talis ie OF oil i ~* be shocked into complying with | « 2 pss poe AN NE HIRST Youn Family HRST | that. Fath- and tell this parcits! Remenibes er up your courage, young Tiuan the story. No matter what happens, you will have the consolation. of knowing you could not stoop to deceit. * . Ww hole *2'e & 4 ee» lo "Jean": 1 think the time has conte to tell your husband that unless he stays home more, - and takes you out regularly, you will leave him again. And this time vou will not come back until he has found a place for vou two to live alone. When you consented to hive with his mother," he made all sorts of promises. You two would be alone together most of the time; she "would mind! her own affairs and never interfere, etc. The opposite, you have found, is the rule. He is.almost never at home, and his mother not only criticizes everything you do, she is entirely too curious about how you spend your money, and she. has driven away almost all your friends. What is your life now? Works "ing in an office all "day, commg home to do housework alone, waiting for your husband to wan- der in late at night... And you have been married less than a 'year! Ny If you two took: a small apart- ment and furnished it, you wauld be content to wait for a house-- _* 30 long as you wese-alone. If all - * your words have not convinced * your husband of the justice of * such a plan, then he will have to * hh If there in» aisioton. in your family closet, keep it to yourself until there is a reason-to reveal-it-~ Then tell the truth. Anne Hirst will help you find the courage, if you write her at Box 123, Eighteenth "Street, New Toronto. Ont. 'poison, ~ buttons, For Sale--1 Stomach An S---- Japiise wants to sell his stomach for $2,000. He declares .it is three times normal size and that he can swallow rat broke: glass, nails and needles. - He'll have to give better value--- than that for the fioney, I'm afraid. A soldier who joined a Guards regi- ment in Londom swalled a 1034- inch-long table knife, two boot studs, two collar studs, 16 trouser | one 3-inch_ bodkin, two, large needles and a tooth brush. All were removed during a 03 minute. . operation. A French medical journal tells of a man who swallows corks. While being attended at « Paris hotel, he stole. the doctor's watch, chain and seals---and swallowed -them! Brunel, the scientist, inhaled a . half-sovereign while playing with children. After doctors had failed to extract it with specially made forceps, Brunel had himself whirled around on a centrifigal table built , to his own design. The spinning produced convulsive coughing--and up came the coin. are the "im coins About Open Fires - . Sone day we suppose the head lines and the radio will scream that a hydrogen-powered rocket ship has bee to the moon and back. On that somebody has made a bomb T0000 Gin és ore "potent thaw the hydrogen boinh. Or that a mechan- ical brain has been invented which solves international -ssies at the |, push of a button. 2 « And the - disappointing thing about it will be that none of us will feel truly astonished or com ° pletely only. vaguely amazed on troubled. Bor sithpg hy an fireplace oi" a mine evening we come, and witha sense of end less surprise, oper upon an age-old won der. Physicists cannot "explain it. Students or other sciences can only guess at it "What 51s it about an open- fice makes even nuclear research seein fundamentally icrelevant? Whar is it that reaches back mio time and forward nto an eternity, asserting something unchangeable, someting sure, - satisiving, and altogether blessed ar the core of himan exis tence? The warmth of an open hearth scems somehow a purric: of in tellect,. michting the pride and the fear the human mind carns with ite own achievements, and letting the certainties wiich age: bevond its own 'creation shine through the Even Dr." Johnsou, to whom books -were as vital as our modern gadgets are to us, observes: "Books that you may carry to the fire, and hold readily in the hand, mostaseful after all" It is as if we approached a more reliable critevion for .judgiag our affairs, and for separating. the more important from the less naportant, as we catch the overtones from-the fire's crackle and hum. and let the eye seck out glowing implications. Can .it be, we ask ourselves, after the first hali hour has passed, tha: we hesitated to commit ourselves to an open fire this evening, gaug- ing the trouble of bringing in the logs, of placing papers and sticks dross. " is fondled by his mother, London, England, Zoo." ies Sir, That's My Baby' '--A 3-month- old bear ol Brumas, Ivy, diiring daily sunning at the. The cub's name was coined from the names of his keepers, Bruce and Sam. --and-bark--to-eateh~a-quick- Rares a "We did der we never can explain. - ee Ww Ww ww You'll have the sweetest--neatest little girll. Just cover her frock with this pansy pinafore.. Can be a cool sundress too! z Easy to make Pinafore Pattimn 879 has bonnet (not shown); trans- fer; cutting chart sizes 2, 4, 6. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS "(stamps cannot be ac- cepted) for ioe fom to 'Box 1, 128 Righteenth St.,. New Toronto, Ont., Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and AD- DRESS. : em ms ~ CROSSWORD "1 el Ck 1 5 ood | 4 IE aE , Do [2 tal Renter HH Bar Mie . i Exits on Teeny ". Afectionsss MW. Btn Si oa. Rxolamation #6. Oelental dish - #1. Hardon #8, Serpent toads Rs Jibtnttonion Instruments) - 88, Take dinner ". Southwest wind Ee Seower H Er ie ' Reson Dense . Ward = .N Arvest rad | Bierion river a -- Rr : Lake hee gi He Marries " abber 1. Neavy and that is another won- | _-- Soiree weeks go by as quiet and uneventiul-as drifting clouds "on-a summer day. . But not last week-- ~anything but! There was™filenty doing both at home and abroad-- "the British election; our belated Canadian winter; wmstallation of a milking machine and my one-wom- ait quilting hee. come first to the British election-- because what happens in Britain, either politically - or economically, certainly affects Ginger Farm and the rest of Owtario. Like most people we went to bed Thursday party would be returned to power with a good majority. And we "were a little fearful--fearful that the Socialist Government, in its headlong = nationalization ott on & limib,'in a way so far re- moved from British was hard to imagine that it could be a success. But first thing Fri- day morning * the trend = showed signs of a change, and by noon-- well,- you know the story. When Partner came in to dinner, I turned - on. the radio. "Listen," 1 said, "list- en to the néws!" Partner listened --with growing incredulity. 'But was in with a big majority?" And what did happen? what everyone would like to know. In fact, for quite a while, the rest --o1 the world will be watching the British political crisis with in- creasing interest. Well, while British. [sles were getting "hot," Canada was getting cold, ~ with its first pro- longed spell of winter weather, It snowed and it snowed; the wind blew and the mercury almost lost itself at the base of thie thermome- ter. Highways were blocked; side roads impassable, and most farm --lanes plugged as-tight-as could be: Then as we started watching our "coal bing, the news of the coal miners' strike in the U.S. did not make us feel any warmer. Our lane filled in, along with the rest; and the st--the road. But when the wind dropped, he borrowed a snow plow ~that is a tractor with a blade at- _tached tor the front of it--and kt did a real geod job of plowing out the A ow we can drive In and out with the greatest of ease--at "least you can If you want to be out driving--which 1 donit, And it's thankful I am to have someone at home who ean get the bread, pick up the groceries and bring. in- the mail, : Last week was also eventful at the barn.' into the history of Ginger Farm-- the installation of a milking ma- chine, no less! This, of course, is entirely Bob's venture and only after plenty of eonsideration, pro, and oon. We heard all kinds of stories , . . a milking machine pro- on t00 long, they draw blood; some "eows won't let their milk down at - farmers who -had bought milking machines and after a while, ne back to hand milking. Granted all these instancés were true, Bob fig: wed they were la the minority; aN Dealing with these events by _ virtue of theif -importance rather than their natural sequence, we night expecting the British Labour ~ plans - --would_hé& taking the people too far traditions {it _ That is And the end of the story is not yet.' --Bob was obliged to leave tlie car Another ehapter- written -- duces mastitis; if the sups are loft "district, Guendoline P. c larhe there were, on the other hand, hun- dreds of farmers, even some In this where milking machines were 'used to advantage, and-with- out injury to the cows. "what happened--I thought Labour al sll, dnd we also heard of several = - was used for the first time. -- the pi Ee i 1 was just itching to go down to the barn, but concluded the less there were around the better. So-I stayed-in "the. house, waiting and wondering. Since not one of our cows had ever "seen one of these mechanical con- traptions, there was no: telling what their reaction would be and -T knew the nervous tension would be hard on Partner. At long last, the men came in for supper, in- "cluding the agent from whom Bob bought the machine. And every- thing was wonderfull Not one of the cows offered to kick at all, and one cow which had always done - plenty of stepping around stood as _ quiet as .a Jamb and gave more _ milk than usual. I thought every- thing was fine. But during the eve- ning, Partner got.déathly white. He was cold and his stomach became upset. I was alarmed until Bob figured out that it wae- a case of mild shock. Partner had been more "keyed up than he or any of us realized; watching the cows, ready to 'deal with them should they: be- conte obstreporous. And then noth- ing happened! letdown -and the reaction prodiiced condition I have described. Bob said he had seen the same thing happen dozens of times dur- ing the war. - So Partner went to bed aqd in the morning, he was his usual self. 'Since then, everything has been all/™ right. Of course, it is Bob who . runs the milker, but I suppose the time will come when Partuer will 'want to have a go at it, too. Space all gone--guess my quilt story must wait. until next week. mt tt rennet Stepping Out "eWell, Mary, "now that we Wav struck oll, I want you to have some decent clothes," Farmer Brown said, handing his wife a big roll of bills. "Bill Brown, I'll have you know "that I've worn decent clothes all' my life," Mrs." Brown replied. "Now "Pm going to dress like other women." Oe Fone ohio i from Macon Pie Hold in tube with perforated pipe for: bloaton, 250 Numb 02 for arernal , Plies" Br ar, 780,. Order by number from a aad Two kinds --Number 1 for protrud- MECCA PILE REMEDIES PRE WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE-- 'Without Calomel And Outed Bela ty CE not A ai iredy> 1 the digentive trad Lee our, You get sonr, Sodas and ¢ world £51 {| mild, gentle Carter's Little Li $0 get these 2 pinta of bile flow. be to mak bile be dog eed 13k or C4 {] you fo feel "ap and up.' A Effective in metic. or Carter's Little 145 It-was 'a complete | Easter Food Drive Launched by UEFB ee Following urgent and repeated requests from its British Advisory Council, the United Emergency Food Fund 'foc Britain is conduct- ing a canipaigi. through the Om- tario committee; .under the joint chairmanship of Mrs. J. A. R. Ma- son and Charles E. Rea, M.P.P;, to meet the. demands for. food and clothing for .the: needy 'in Great Britain. The Easter drive .is con- tinuing to the end of March with a concerted collection' cifore in' To-" ronto, set for Wed i ay, Mirch: 22, Ha All. Ontario "citizens are being' asked to contribute tinned foods. Clothing is also. being sought, but it is urged. that apparel donated be . clean and in condition. to wear. Most © municipal councils have agreed to co-operate with local committes so that contributions may be left at fire halls. Otherwise, citizens are requested to forward their parcels direct to the Ontario headquarters of the U.E.F.B. in Toronto, at Melita and Rains Ave. A "large number of parcels have been received at the warehouse in Toronto where the tinned "food shipments coming in are broken down and re-packed in eight-pound cartons," When these arrive over- seas at the London depot, they will be dispatched to families in genu- ine. need from a' list of the most worthy, compiled by the umpartial British Advisory, Council, of which H.R.H. Princess Alice is president. The British continue to subsist on a marginal and monotonous 'diet that works particular hardships on the infirm and aged pensioners, UE.F\B. officials declare. It is ex- pected that through the generosity of Canadians; in this land of plenty, those in moré, unfortunate eircum- stances in Britain will enjoy this | Easter gift, one that will do much to bind more closely the' ties be- tween the people of these two countries. A = COME OUT FROM UNDER THE: SHADOW OF PAIN * Try DOLCIN Tublets for prompt relief - 'kom ARTHRITIC and RHEUMATIC pala +++ Bec a bottle of DOLCIN tablets from your druggist TODAY and jola the thousands of relieved sufferers who by taking DOLCIN -have come out from under the shadow of: pain, DOLCIN is available at all drug stores --100 tablets for $2.39-200 rn tablets for $3.95 --also avail- able in bottles of 500 tablets, DOLCIN LIMITED, Toron- to 10, Canada. . DOLCIN TABLATS Patented 1949, DOLCIN Is the vegistorsd trode. mark of this product, . 4 : Upside down to prevent peeking. I STV TI SLIM Tlf EINES] BIEICURE, | IRIN LITEM O1 | IH Vid] d| Breit WeIAN INITTI0N] TOLL TTYL FYoWI 115 CMVId "By the year A.D, 410 Britain was 'a Christian eountry. : Jane Ashley 's Crown Brand Recipes FREE Write Jane Ashley, The Canada Starch Company Limited, - P. O. Box 129, Montreal, P. Q. CR1é fullness functional monthly disturbances? Does -« this make you suffer from pain; feel 80 + timea? Then do try famous Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptomal Pinkham's Compound has proved re- markably helpful to women troubled this way. You owe it to Yourself to try it. Pinkham's Compound is a very effec- tive uterine sedative. It bas a grand soothing effect on one of woman's most NN important organs, Lydia E. Pinkham's VEGETABLE COMPOUND i | Are you troubled by distress of fomale nervous, restless, cranky, weak---at such i xi regularly nkham"s Com- pound helps build up resistance against® .wuch distress. Also a great stomachic tonic! NOTE: Or yon may prefer Lydia E. Pinkham's TABLETS with added iror El Sa

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