Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 14 Feb 1952, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Ay (rity RADI BATTERY NO. 759 "Eveready', "Mini-Max", "Nine Lives" and the Cat Symbol are registered trade-marks of NATIONAL CARBON LIMITED MONTREAL ronownro WINNIPEG B8GFIX.51 NEW BIB Vinylite bib has a special pocket cnr pry 120 EO rrp, for paper handkerchiefs' to wipe »ff food that raisses haby's mouth. [ANNE HIRST } "Dear Anne Hirst: 1 have known sorrow in my tinie. But nothing like the sorrow I suffered when I over- heard 'a recent convergation the other day be- "tween my hus- band and a girl. I have not slept "since, © ¥--And he wants me to forget it! How can I? "During our 23 years of marriage, he has had plenty of affairs, but since he quit drinking some years ago I thought he had settled down, Today I am heartbroken, "We have grown daughters, and three grandchildren, whom he wor- ships. He is terribly ashamed now, and begs me not to tell them. May- be I'm wrong, but | have prayed vengeance on him and this girl ever since. "If these people that break up homes knew what hell the wife goes through, maybe they'd leave married «nen alone . If my husband's 'baby doll' (as he called her) reads this today, she will know low she stands in his sight. Heartbroken" "Vengeance Is Mine" You wrote me out of the bitter- ness of your heart. In that mood, it is natural that you would scek retaliation against these two. Yet in punishing them, yon destroy your children's faith in their father! If you yield to the temptation, you will never forgive yourself. ~ Your husband is already being punished through his present remorse, and the fear that his * children will find him out. This fear will stay with him. [ think * he will never offend again. And how he will appreciate your pro- tecting him! . Jible? "Ven- * ™ » * * Ld * . * . ™ « LJ * * ' ' * Remember your * geance is mine." Don't try "to play God. ¥ * Grandma Spoils "Dear Anne Hirst: Um having a time with my little boy and my mother-in-law. He has a delicate stomach, and she knows it; yet when he's there she allows him to have foods thit disagree with him. Of course he loves them! "I'd dislike very much to stop his visiting her for they love cach other. But_what else can [ do? tlis father agrees--but you know how men hate an argument! Anxious Mother" * Your mother-in-law probably ¢. brought up lier youngsters with the old-fashioned idea that what- ever foods they liked were good for them. Fortunately they surviv- ed. But your little son's condi tion requires a special diet, aed * though she admits it, she's too tenderhearted to refuse him. «1 expect he knows it, too.) Make out a new list of the foods he should not cat, and tell her that your doctor insists upon his following it. Remind her that you depend on her to resist his entreaties (as you have to at home) and stress your trust in her compliance PEE EEE EE This should turn the trick. [t it doesn't, then, you will have to forbid him to stay for meals at * her houlie. - a If one you love has offended you, don't swear vengeance. Evil brings its own- punishment -- and a more painful one than you could ad- minister . . , Tell your troubles to Anne Hirst. Address her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St, New Toronto, Ont. CROSSWORD PUZZLE DOWN 1. [dle talk Trouble . (100d looking t ACROSS : 1. Breach : ¢. Competent & Conflagration 12, Vontilats 13. Thin 14. Cut of meat 16. Baas 17. Period of light Broom (ab.) . Purpose . Aviator we STI ~n . Singing volce . Southern state 37 Forehoding 40 (ioddesr of 9 Pencock hut. terfly ons dawn 10, Cracks 43 Small nfgut 11. Grafted birds 18. Russlav secret 45 Mature soclety 46. Attend the #ick 18, Sour 48, Corrosion 21, Wayfarer 49. Brilliantly 23. Affirmative eolored fish 24. Stow-moving 51. Coarse grass animal stem 25. Relief 54. [lowever 21. French colin 56. Long fish 29, Fencing #v. ord 57, Spring month 22. Unaspirated 55. Note of the 33 Cast aidelong sonle lances 61. Smallest ntate 28. O14 horse (ah. : : . 19 Near ; = 20, Company of 123 actors ; * |S Jo |7 8 |9 [ro Ju 22. top nn n 4 24. Btone paving block 26. Woe 28. Thicknesa 30, 'arcel of ground 31. Measures of " : cloth 14. 35 Listless " 3s. Engineeting in 133 degrees (ab 29, Turn right 41. Equality 412, Ugly ola woman 44, Source . 47. Pitcher 18. Girl's nick. name 50. Wall painting 52. Higher 63. nop: 51 53 4 Buy. b Ack acure £0. Gaelle 58 0 £2, Bei nona © |b 6) 64 os a par Uk DE netlon 4 Bonnd 5 Crafty Answer Eisewlhere on This Page would - Human Heart An Amazing Mechanism If you live :t6. three -score- years and ten your heart will have per- formed about 3,000 million pump- ing actions--non- -stop! Between breakfast this morning and break- fast tomorrow morning it will have pumped about 2,500 gallons of blood round. your body, representing a dead weight of about nine tons! But that's only part of the story, for attached to the heart is a maze of veins and arteries which, if put "end to end, would stretch for 350,- 7/000 miles or fourteen times round the carth! And every inch of this network has to be provided with blood all the time. The amount of work your heart gets through in a day is nothing short. of amazing. In twenty-four hours, this tiny pump, no larger than your fist, has expended cnergy sufficient to lift two double-decker water-buses each weighing ten tons three feet in the air. Yet so eflicient is the heart as a meter that sik lumps of sugar evould provide it with sufficient task. Running upstairs throws one of the biggest strains on the heart, boosting the load to seven times the normal with "blood sluicing through it at the rate of five gallons _a minute instead of the normal five pints. Get up from your chair and set off walking at a brisk pace and you'll increase the load on your heart four times, while a sudden fright may send your pulse rocket- ing to 120 a minute. Yet so versatile is the heart that its adapts itself to this constant change of gear scores of times a day wihout the slightest protest, Some quite healthy people have a very slow pulse. Napoleon's was only 40 to the minute, which may have accounted for his icy calm in the heat of battle. But, compared with some of the smaller animals, our hearts are just ticking over. For instance, the sparrow's heart beats no less than 800 times a min- ute. A close second is the mouse third with 150. 'On the other hand, large animals have a slower pulse than ours, that of the elephant being about 30 a minute. New hope for comes with the "artiticial heart," heart suflerers vention of the a mechanical de- vice that takes over the job of pumping blog round the body while the surgeon operates on the living heart at his leisure. With this device and an amazing new drug, dicumerol, which pre- 'vents blood clots forming during an operation, surgeons have success- fully operated for certain forms of cart disease that only a few vears ago were considered Tmposcible. Sized to 50 Pie ioe HERE'S HOW to have plenty of triew lingerie! This is the easiest slip in the world to sew ~ only TWO pattern parts! Sew side: scams, hem, dagis--and WEAR It! Panties are casy-sew, too, Makes a set for you, one for a gift! Pattern 4858 in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50. Size 36 slip, requires 2¥4 yards 39-inch fabric; panties, 144. yards. This "pattern easy to use, ple to sew, is testéd for fit. complete illustrated instructions, Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35¢) in coins (stamps. cannot be accepted) tor this pattern. Print STYLE NUMBER, Send order to Box 1, 123 Kigh teenth St, New Toronto, Ont. fuel for performing this colossals with 600, 'while the rabbit is a poor. ~Partner and me. sim: 7 Has plainly SIZE, NAME ADDRESS, - Roman Plunge -- Climaxing the dress worn by his model, front rank Italian dress designer Alberto Fabiani clips a diamond pinwheel on the gown. Fashion buyer Hannah Troy, in Rome on a purchasing tour, looks on. daring low-decolletage evening er HRONICLES XGINGERFARM 4G Gwendoline D Clarke For nearly a week | have hardly known whether [ am living in the past: or the present. After a four- months visit to England and the Continent our nicce Joy has now returned and has been staying with us for awhile. She spent most of the time in England, visiting many people and places familiar to both And of course we wanted to know all about cvery- one and what this place and that place looked like now. [Fortunately Joy has a remarkably = retentive memory and was able to give satis- * fectory answers to most of our questions. She travelled down to Suffolk and visited the village and t. 1 vely old home where Partner had spent most of his younger days. The people who now own the house and store were most kind and were only too glad to let Joy wander all over the house so that she might get a mental picture to brin + back to her father and her two uncles in Canada. Yes, she tid, in answer to Partner's ques- tions, the old oak beams were still g in the living-room . . . no; the panel- ~ ling in the big front bedroom had been pepered over--she didn't know wey. The centuries-old Angel Inn was still there--An American tour- ist had wauted to buy the post with the carved angel on it but the own- er had refused to sell it because, as he put it, if the carving were gone the "Angel Inn" would then be "nothing but a name. Joy also visited my home town but could tell me very little as none of my folks live there now. But she did sce the church where Part- ner and | were married. Her headquarters were actually in Bournemouth, on the south coast and (rom there she made trips to London, Scotland, he Midlands, the Fens. and the West coast country. But of all the districts that she visited she liked best our own particular part of the country -- Last Anglia--it appealed to her as buing so old and restful, with a beauty all its own. And of course it is steeped in history. Yes, it was grand hearing about all these places but how much bet- ter it would be to SEE them, Now if only some enterprising magazine or weekly press would come up with the, suggestion that [ take a trip over to the Old" Country for the specific purpose of bringing back first hand stories of life as [ saw. it, how happy I.should be--=and what stories I would find! Where? Lon- don -- Westminister Abbey, the Tower of Londen? Oh no, you can read all you want to about those places in any travelogue or history book. I would leave the beaten track . . . get out on to the farms ~and talk to the country folk, to owners and labourers alike. Find how far and in what way British agriculture . has progressed -- aud how it is different from Canadian farming. It is in the villages that you find the real England. London isn't England and more than Tor- onto is Canada, ¢ But away with day-dreaming . During the lattek part of her trip Joy went to Switzerland, France and Italy. Her account of one trip of the passengers on a mountain tour from St. Moritz to Zurich. [t was early in November, suppos- edly too carly for snow of any ac- count, but soon after they started a freak storm caught up with them. Climbing the * mountain the bus stalled in the fresh, slippery snow. cut branches of evergreens and plac | under the wheels for trac- tio. Once on the move agam the driver said--"Now 1 think we can make it Hr we don't have to stop!" But alas around the next bend there were two stalled cars. The first thing that had to be done was to get the cars moving again, be- fore the bus started up again all passengers were ordered out--into several inches of snow and none of them with rubbers. There whs also a fierce wind blowing. But the --driver wasn't taking any chances --not wtih a sheer drop on one side of the pass--and the other side not much better. Eventually they were on their way again but according to slide sideways the driver have been powerless to stop it. Ap- parently Joy realized the danger more than most of the other pas- sengers as she was sitting right be- hind the. driver. After listening to Joy's account of her experience Partner remarked--"And THAT, A say was a pleasure trip!" Doesn't Affect Plants Are you one of the many who worry about the effects of water containing chorine on] house plants and cut flowers? Your fears are groundless--unless concentrations are much higher than commonly used in water sup- plies : \ Growing plants are nof injured when water or syringed with water . containing 50 parts or less of chlor ine per 1,000,000 parts of water. Short and Sweet flour (o taps. Wag und Et, Cream 1 well:beaten egg, cool in bread with butter or for serving. Bake it with MAGIC! MACE & ORANGE SWEET BREAD Miz and ry 3 times, 2! ¢. once-gifted hard-wheat t fous 3 e Baking Powder, 14 tap. sal gro 14 ec. butter or margarine and blend in 24 c. ine granulated sugar; beat in ke 1 tsp. grated orange rind and tsp. vanilla. Add dry ingred! crea mixture alternately' with 74 c. milk. Turn batter into a * loaf pan (4 x 814") been Pan Ray h pa r. Bake in moderate oven, °, about 1 hour, Allow loaf to pan, Spread sliced ny '¢. once-gifted pastry t, 14 tsp. ngredients which has: greased cold margarint almost left me dizzy. She was one . The men in the bus piled out and Joy if the bus. had ever started to | would | LESSON By Rev. R BARCLAY WARREN i. A. B.D, The Family at Bethany Luke 10:38-42; John 11:1-5, 24-27, Memory Selection: She said unto him, Yea, Lord: I believe that thou - art the Christ, the Son of God, which should come into the world. John 11:27. There are three stories concern ing the family at Bethany. In-the first we. find Martha troubled over * the preparation 'of the theal, while Mary sat at Jesus' feet and learned of Him, Jesus commended Mary for "her interest in the spiritual, saying, "One thing is needful; and Mary hath chosen that good part which shall not be taken away from her." Then trouble came. Lazarus took ill. They sent for Jesus. But Jesus continued where he was for two days. This must have been a sore trial to the sisters, When he: did come, Lazarus: had already been in the grave for four days. Then followed what was per- haps the greatest miracle except the resurrection of Jesus. At the word of Jesus he that was dead came forth. It is wonderful to have a friend on whom we can=call- in trouble. There is no friend like Jesus. : The final scene is a supper for Jesus, in the Bethany home. Lazarus sat at the table and Martha served. Mary showed her gratitude and her devotion to Jesus by anointing his feet with a pound of ointment of spikenard and wiping them with her hair. "The house was filled with the odour of the ointment." This gracious act has sent a fragrance into all the world. : Is Jesus Christ the head of your home? Do you sit at his feet and learn of Him? Then you can call on Him for hélp when trouble comes You can still show your gratitude to Him by ministering unto one of the least of His brethren. "Happy the home when there, And love fills ev'ry breast; Gad is "When oue their wish, and one their prayer, And one their heav'nly rest." Scottish Lassies Making Fine Lace ____Schoolgirls in a village in Scot- - land are learning to make fine lace and thus, it is hoped, will help to revive a village craft. The children, who are only 12 years of age, attend New Pitsligo School, Aberdeenshire, where the headmistress, Miss E. Findlay, is one of two women who have tried to keep the industry. alive in their own lromes , [t has been "a struggle, for al- though when Queen Victoria .wore dresses trimmed with lace from the village of New Pitsligo tlie place was known throughout the world, the demand gradually grew less as machine-made lace became' more popular. When the last of the -lace- makers died the craft was thought i The brother to have died with them. But now demands for the new Pitsligo lace are coming from overseas--recently an intricate pattern arrived at the school from the Union of South Africa with a request that it should be copied--and it is hoped that sufficient . orders will be reccived from people in other countsics who . like to wear and to use' this beauti- 2 ful handwork. The girls' themselves delight in their skill, and the idea has spread south to England where a school in the county of Essex has begun to teach lace-making. obs AND naw oF ool OMFo | And FORT, RELIEF IS LASTING " There's one thing for the headache it. « the muscular aches and pains that often accompany a cold . . « INSTANTINE. INSTANTINE brings really fast relief from pain and the relief is prolonged! So get INSTANTINE and get quick comfort. INSTANTINE is compounded like a prescription of three proven medical ingredients. You can depend on its fast action in getting relief from every day aches and pains, headache, rheumatic pain, for neuritic or neuralgic pain, ' Get Instantine today and always keep it handy 12-Tablet Tin 25¢ cconomica; 42-Tablet Bottle 75¢ Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking Al7[sa LINIVIHI LZ v|3L 3/d]V[s W|3 GEIL BEBE aMI2IWN[ 7|9[7(a]0 F(nlold ova 3] 39) 3 SNVI ISIN 0 AAV? : Al2]2[s FIFE] 3[SIV3[OMd|0]|03[L Ad vials Llv|z]? N70 7IINI YO ETI 33 I TM378]lVIS]V ISSUE 7 -- 1952 yummy! Chelsea Bun Loaf A treat you can make easily with new fast DRY Yeast Now you have Fleischmaan's Fast Dry Yeast, forget about the oldtime hazards of yeast baking! Always at hand -- 'always full-strength and fast rising! Keep a month's supply in your cupboard! Make this delicious Chelsea Bun Loaf -- cut in slices for buttering, or separate the buns, py id FE Ban ores CHELSEA BUN LOAF Make 3 pans of buns from this one recipe -- dough will kecp in refrigerator for a week. Scald 34 c. milk, ¥4 c. granulated sugar, 1% tsps. salt and ¥% c. shortening; cool to lukewarm. Meanwhile, measure into a large bowl ¥ c. likdwarm water, 1 tsp. granulated sugar; stir until sugar is dissolved. Sprinkle with 1 en- welope Fleischinann's Fast Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10 'mins, THEN stir well, Add cooled milk tute and stic in 1 well-Leat 5 Stir in ¢. once-sifted jeaten cer. beat until smooth, Work in 2V2 c. orice. ft ead flour, Knead on lightly- outed rd until smooth and elastic, Cut oft 35 of dough, knead into a smooth all, place in greased bowl, grease top, of , cover and store in, refrigerator Jranted, Shape remaining 13 of foun iat Jato asmooth ou place in greased warm Diack i rte gon. Gorer and 25 in £t e ti doubled oy Cream 3 the, butter - i do rile . blend { | ightly Dressed of 1 Va tops. this mixtiive 1 hot ton an 414% x 8Y2") and ih be pecan halves, Punch down sen dough. Spre dy or ais Sika mixtare And and ith n Looselr, roll roll up like 4 Je a ely fff a S ming, 25:30 miss Turing ott,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy