Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 24 Aug 1950, p. 6

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bs A - = ok -. EAR ey 2 eT a ---- ABE ABR pa A A oY Gu AA AACN ex % SY AN RAIRIGRI ARTA ICUE Shie IU ice", , ICED TEA Discover How Good Iced Tea Can Be! - Make tea double strength and while still hot pour into glasses filled with cracked - KF sugar and lemon to taste. "SALADA ashi "2 "Dear Anne Hirst: Three years I married a gicl 31. I'm 38 I've tried hard to make it work, be- cause both of us unhappily married before. azo were But now it look. like a divorcee, "I' do love my She has good points, ia and often she i very, very. good = wile. her to me. -But some- times she is very dificult especially when she has had a-tew beers. She hateful cannot Ss a Vs things,, and attacks me. | predict nor understand her moods. The last time, | slapped her, for which Pm awtutlhy sorry Now she says she hates me, and won't ever forgive me. . "1 am sick over #t 4 4914 izes uso Ane ns This is it! A simple shirtdress with the newest high-style touches --smart cuffed pockets, shoulder ticks, Saddle stitching and fake monogram and extra swank! Pattern 4914 sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 32, 44, 46, 48, 50. Size 36 takes 374 yds. 39-inch. ad I'his pattern,- easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions: Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (<tzmps cannot be cccepted) for this pattern. Print NamE, ADDRESS, (25¢) + ering Poway Olean, 'STYLE NUMBER. Send order to Box 1, 123 Eight- =enath St, New Toronto, Ont. We bought Transfer is includ- AN NE HIRST Your Family Counselor { | | | | I ; | J both love, car, We hotne whic we naying for our lose both . , . If she would co:operate 1 think we could including our mar- a litde and 'may only save everything, are riage. "Frankly, | think she needs a not a divorce. | have found sound. Please help doctor, vour Judgment mes A FRIEND" RESTRAINT AND PATIENCE te I can undestand how much you want to save your marriage. When had one has one un- * happy experience, he or she usu-. "ally that self-control and patience are first essential congenial living, and from then on resolve to. practice both with renewed determination. ¢ Why don't you persuade your wife to sit down' and talk things over, quietly anl without anger? learns a * # oa for losing irritated bring her You will apologize your temper when she vou, and that should regret Tor her own lack * control. * Make an agreement: Give up this drinking that aggravates your "quarrels, If you are unwilling to do that, then promise cach other, "x a "- * a are not to be cach other. times against charged - ~ It may .be that your nerves are not under control and that a doctor's opinion is in order. Often one's own will 'power, daily exercised, can prevent dis- agreements from becoming vio- ~tent- quarrels; humor can dispel resentment .be- before it grows dangerous. Why don't both of you make this pact, and do your best to live up to it? - Your pride, and your wife's, must recoil at .admitting another failure at marriage. If you will both forget this most recent scéne, you should be able to ga- ther new courage to try again, After all, you two are not in [OE SE SE SS i .- » be adults. Isn't this the time 'to act like it? . % » * . A second marriage is the real test of one's wisdom and restraint. If yours seems on the rocks, per- haps Anne' Hirst's long experience 'and understanding can prevent a crisis. Write her at Box_1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. AE EE JE JE TEE EE EE EE EE EE EY Television Doomed Among the families who won television sets, finds a University ol Southern California survey, read- ing is all but forgotten and conver- sation is off 50 per cent. (Lost arts, anyway.) Some 90 per cent listen less to the radio. (Well?) Nearly half attend fewer sports events, three-fourths go less often to the movies, all do less pleasure (driving and wives unanimously 'complain they don't get to go Bey. where any more. That settles it. It can't last. - s. Wheelless 29. Exist = vehicle 33, Either CROSSWORD 9. Extra parte 34. Supports 10. Ventilate 37. Mexican dish PUZZLE 11. Word of con. 4. Photograph sent instrument a "1S English letter $2. Roay ---- = ACROSS 3 Hiom Hi py ud 46. Tissue 1. Coarse hair Exchange 20. Burnt sugar 47. ¥or : ~~ 6, Concludes: member 21. Assume 48, Likely ed Caaf (. Was ambitious 23' Climbing 49 Horn- 12.1 les 5. Existence plants 60, Of the girl 13. Christmas 6. Negative 13. Bixtensive 51. Hang down 1 a osely- 1. Destroyaa 26. Burns _ -- §2. Bhip's rope = 15-Hangs loosely 26. The ankls . Myse 17. Evergreens large part of 19. Not-bright 20. Apple juice CI C2 EI 5 [6 [7 21 State © + 23. Old card game [12 | 24. Bird's home 2 . 27. Terrible 16 7 28. Street urchin 30. Ocean i 31. Ahead 32, Presents 35. Man's nick. name ' : 36. Favorite 38. City in Now 28 29 30 York State ; . 39. Pale brown ET) 3 35 i yormer tule y # : : 4 egal matter : 44, River in 36 37 38 9 y; 'Michigan 46. Fusible sub- 1 42 2 7 Mance 3 47. Male ¢ ; 48, Wreath 45 40 50. Upright' 63. Fencing 40 50 Citrus trate 64, Citrus fru 66. Heavy wagon [53 4 35 [J 67. English Totter 68. The maples 7 9 Lid Seaso MOIS sotod RTA . : 4 i Seer spike Answer elsewhere on this page. i to f~r-- of self-- that words _and "conduct at such | wife's, "amd a sense of | your teens. You are supposed to | ~is--sufficient for a number of Ww in- Modekn Etiquette By Roberta Lee Q. Is it goad form to dip a small piece of bread into the gravy that 1s left on one's plate? A. This is all right if the piece oi bread is put down in the gravy and then eaten with a fork. It is bad manners, however, to "wipe up" the gravy with a picce of the bread held in fingers. * . Q. Is a man ever privileged to remain seated -while being intro- dircan? ¢ 'No; he should alwiivs rise, Wt of whether tiie other person is a man or a woman, old OF young. * . . Q. If candles are not to be lighted, ic it all right to have them on' the table? A. Yes; candles are considered - ar. ornamental part of the dinner or supper table setting. = * * * Q. Is it all right to write the invitations to a wedding by hand? A. This is- perfectly all right, especially if the wedding is to be a small, informal one. But if the wedding is to be a large, formal one and the gu st list quite large. then the engraved invitations are ir order. + * EE J . Q. Is it correct to eat the olive or the cherry from the cocktail glass before or after drinking the __ contents of the glass? A. After drinking, if one wishes it at all. It- really is not necessary te eat it at all, unless desired. * + * Q. When should one tip. the porter on a train, at the beginning or at the end of a journey? A. The porter should receive his up at the end of the journey. Co Wher Thrifty doiliecs and €asy too! In heavy cotton they work up quickly, wear wonderfully. In fine cotton they're more delicate. Two doilies, ,19 and 13 inches in heavy cotton. Pattern 668 has cho- chet directions for two. Laura. Wheeler's improved pat- tern makes crochet and knitting so - simple with its charts, photos and concise directions. -- ter ~.Scnd TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins. (stamps cannot be ac- cepted) for this pattern to Box I, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and AD- DRESS. HOW CAN I? By Anne: EEARNY Q. How can Te soften putty in "a window frame? A. By stirring together two pounds of sal-soda, one-half pound lime, in one gallon of hot water. Apply while still warm to both sides of the glass and let it re- main for twelve hours. The glass can 'then be removed without cut- ting. The amount of solution given dows. : * * * Q. How can I economize in the' use of eggs when making custard? A. When the custard recipe calls for several eggs, one or more eggs may: be left out if one-half table spoon of cornstarch is added for cach cgg omitted, * * Q. How can I prevent colored handkerchiefs from fading? A. Soak the colored handkerchiefs in cold water containing a little salt before they are washed. roe * Q. How can I remove the dis- coloration on the inside of a bottle? A, Fill the bottle nearly full with buttermilk and potato parings letting it stand for several hours. Then empty, and rinse thoroughly with "clean hot' water. * * * Q. How can 1 wash small Ori: ental rugs? A. Rub them with a lather of . pure white soap. Rub off as much soap as you can and then rinse with cloths dipped in clear, cold water --. Dry "thoroughly, | is eating -less; every year due to their unappetis- "of the potato is im-the- eating. Re- Big Fish From The Maritimes--Ocean perch will be flown to from the Maritimes every morning of the Ex, the C.N.E. patrons of the Balcony Restaurant. women's director, Ruehie salmon with her dietician Maud McLennan. Fish Commission will also send sea herring, mackeral, halibut, trout and whitefish. Kate Aitken shown hére displaying Resti-- vg RG EL 9. ET AR poisons * useful crops, with the ex- ception of the date palm, which just ignores salt and fresh water coming up throngh this salted soil becomes salted in turn and useless for Arrangement was made by Maritimes cod; haddock, SE] NIELS 4 Gwendoline D Clarke Marvelious! two whole days without rain. We began to think the weather never would clear. Of course all the wheat is out in the field and sprouting: in the sheaves, 'And the oats couldn't be cut when they should have been because the field was too wet to take the trac- or-and binder in to cut it- But Part- ney says there is no need to worry --we have had seasons like this before and lived through it, and we can do it again. He says that but he still hasn't convinced me-he isn't worrying. However; a iow more days of fine weather and Ze shall all feel more optimistic. again "especially as yesterday we even managed to get the oats cut. And now Partner says the wheat is dry- ing out nicely and- will be ready to come in on Monday. So much wet weather has cer- tainly been a headache and upset evervone's work .schedule--to say nothing - of the vacations it. has -spoilt.--And;--oh--dear,-- the potato growers must be having quite a worrying time. [ am sure of it be- cause nearly every basket of pota- toes I have bought has had one or two rotten ones init. And speaking of potatoes, do you remember a few months ago 1 was complaining because we never seem to get nice mealy potatoes any more. So often they are green or waxy; go black or have ring-rot. Or cven if they have nothing the matter with them they still haven't any flavour. Apparently I am not the only onc complaining as last week the Canadian Countryman had "a long cditorial all about the poor cating quality of potatoes: which, they too, put down largely to the in- creased use -of commercial fertile izer--used, of course, to insure big- ger potatoes and a larger yield per acre. The editorial points out that while this may sound like a-good business practice, actually it is just the opposite-as the 'consumer public and less potatoes ing quality. As you know it is impossible. for anyone to know what kind of potatoes they are buying because most of those of- fered for sale look nice and are nearly always graded as to size, « Even those with ring-rot look per- fectly sound in the early stages-- "until they are cut in half--and somctimes not until they are cook-' ed. -- Just ac with cake--the proof member how we used to look for- ward to new potatoes? New pota-' toes and gréen peas were almost a meal in themselves--with butter, of course. Margarine wouldn't give them that certain flavour. But new potatoes are no-treat these days-- except the "ome-grown variety. The Canadian" Countryman thinks it is time growers started thinking-- | -- "about quality rather than quantity if they want to keep a good home market. Just think--wouldr't it be "nice if some of the big " growers advertized their product this way --"Our potatoes are mealy and a good flavour. Ou: soil has been tested "and the only commercial fertilizer we use is that recommend- ed for quality potatoes--not quan- tity." Wouldn't we beat a path to their door! Now is it Monday: and Partner has just come in with a few wheat heads in his hand -- and looking very discouraged, Some of the ker- nels "have sprouted and the rest' shell out direcctly you touch them. ° True, it has happened before but not with operating expenses as high as they are today. We hate to think what the tax bill will be when it comes. As for the cost of living . . « well, enough said. But it is really rather funny--so many people think it is only town and city folk who are affected by the high cost of living. And yet country folk, because of the very nature of their ~ work, are naturally very ers of coffee and toast and marmalade! way bu Hi have to start pulling them in 'again rather drastically--espec- ialy if r 4 older generation can do it--but we j who ti S urc and greater freedom--will they be as ready to tighten their belts? 1 won't realize the necessity until cir- C t t Ss have what. it takes. forced to slow up we do it, a u - will agree, is one thing we can be » Hank ul for. Here 8 A Boost For!!! Castor Oil! dren at any rate, has oniy one use, and that an 'unpleasant onc. Ritchie Calder, in a BBC Radio Program, Ss to which it may shortly be put. Calder, who is Science Editer of the visited the Negev Desert in Israel, At the Weizmann Institute at Re- hevot the Director, Dr. told him-that by fermenting castor oil plants they can provide the basis of a great plastics industry, includ- ing nylon,. which is at present pro- duced either coal by-products, the desert which interested Calder very nmiuch--that of combating the excessive saltiness of the ground, - --H¢ explained that desert springs contain a- small fraction of salt but under the intense sun evaporation - is so rapid that the salt is deposited and accumulates in the soil. out to work on a breakfast Well, I guess we have all -been etting out our belts a bit in every the last few years but now this Korean business gets cally out of hand. "We are sure the ust wonder if the younger crowd, have grown used to easier imes, better living ocnditions, - horter working hours, more pleas- doubt it -- for one thing they umsfances practically force them o it. In the end it may be a good hing. Adversity, not prosperity, hows if people, young and old, ' When we are just s the traffic is beginning to slow p on the highways. And that, you Castor oil, to many small cuil-. poke of new and much nicer uses'. "News Chronicle," recently Borgman, from petroleum or There was one usc for nylon in + oured of all women. --bret} tor-drinking or irrigation. Isracli. scientists are trying to discover a method of sweeting this salted water and one method. they are trying is to cover the brackish soil .with sheet nylon in the form of furrows. The sun's rays eévapor- ate the water through the nylon . and condence it on- the colder top surface of the material. The water then drips into the furrows and - there they can have fresh soll and ErOW Crops. Another problem that is iii tackled is the rapid evaporation of reservoir water. The 'scientists are "suggesting that tiny flakes of ny- lon should be used to float on and cover the surface of a reservoir to prevent evaporation for nylon can be used either to produce of retard evaporation. In tlie first case the transparent sheeting admits the heat rays, but in the second, the granules of nylon being pure white and opaque, they reflect the heat rays of the sun and so prevent evaporation from reservoirs, "All this is just to show you what you can do with the desert when you show some scientific imagination," said Calder. NDAY SCHOOL LESSON By Rev. R. B. Warren, B.A., B.D. . Mary, the Mother of Jesus Lukel:46-48; 2:42.51; Mark 3:31- 35; John 19.25-27; Acts y:14. Golden Text, My soul doth mag- nify the Lord, and my spirit, hath rejoiced in God my saviour,--Luke -1:46-47. Mary was the most highly hon- She conceived "of the Holy Ghost and bore the Divine-human child, Jesus. This child was the long awaited Messiah, "the cternal God, made in the like- ness of man. He. stands unique among all beings. At the age of 12, He understood something of His Divine mission. Mary did not un- derspand the full meaning of -His question, "Wist ye not that | be about my Father's business?" but her to the discipe John, whom He She was one of three women who stood by the cross. There, amidst His agony and pain, Jesus--demon---{-- strated the 'meaning' of honouring parenthood. As the oldest child, He provided for her keep. He entrusted ber to the disciple John, whom He greately loved. She was a devout woman, continuing in prayer and 'supplication with the disciples" 'after the resurrection. and ascension of Jesus. 3 : But Mary and the brother of Jesus. had to learn the lesson that He belonged to a bigger family _ than they represented. On one occa- sion they sent for Him. But he did not leave the needy multitude, but asked, "Who is my mother or my #2 And=He- looked round This" _ -come new about on. them which sat about Him, and' said, 'Behold my mother and my brethern'. For whosoever shall do the will of God, the same is my brother, and mg sister, and mother". The implication is obv- ious. If we turn from sin and be- creatures by faith in Christ Jesus, and thus proceed to do the will of God, then we enjoy . "close fellowship with the Savior. Those few who were of the family of Jesus according to the flesh have no priority over those®to-day who do the will of God. All who serve Him will consfitute Hjs bride at His second coming in glory. Every man is to be respected as an absolute end in himself; and it is a crime against the dignity that be- longs to him as 'a human being, to use him as a mere means for some external purpose. --Kant. " Burp-less Baby. -- A thumb- sucking- diaper-wetting, . face- contorting doll that does everything but burp was dis- played at the Guidance Ex- hibit. Mothering the child is five-year-old Louise Du Rona, who seems undisturbed by the childs life-sized cries. . This is no time for case and com- fort. It is the time to. dare and en- dure. - ~--Winston Churchill. RELIEF IS LASTING For fast, prolonged relief from headache get INSTANTINE. This prescription-like tablet contains 'not just one, but three proven: medical And the reliefis, in most cases, lasting. Try INSTANTINE just once for pain relief and you'll say as thousands do that there's one. thing for headache ss. it's INSTANTINE! And try INSTANTINE for othes aches, too. . . for neuritic or neuralgic pain . ..-or for the pains and aches that accompany a cold. A single tables usually brings prompt relief. Get Instantine today and always keep it handy © 12-Tablet Tin 25¢ Economical 48-Tablet Bottle 69¢ Upside down to prevent peeking. [1 ISSUE 34 -- 1950 hearty eaters. You don't find: farm- H! THE TTR NATIONAL DANCING . music MIDWAY AIRPLANES PARADES SPORTS ARTS a at id WIZ TORONTO EXHIBITION po 4 " DANNY KAYE romicH EXHIBITS ' | AUG, 25- seer. » | , TORONTO "kc berminsHAW President | #woop A HUGHES Goperel Movagw ingredients that-ease-the-pdin-fast:-- L ia «

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