MRA EN REA a Tet fe a re Rad REE ER BEd Ae (Re " ANNE RST) "Dear Anne Hirst: I am & widow in my 40's. For ten months I have been dating a widower the same age. He - is a perfect gentleman, a won- derful father to his married children, - and . everybody who knows him respects him. But though I love him deeply (and he knows it) he hes never said in so many words that he cares for me. He is always here when 1 want him, he takes me any- where I'm in the mood to go, end 1 suppose I've been fooling myself in thinking he returns my affection. "Now he thinks he is in love with another woman who has moved here lately! I understand he is even planning to marry her some time. I still see him but [ have no peace, fearing 1 may really lose him. "Shall I let him go? Or keep praying he will come to love me? Maybe he does and doesn't know it? STILL HOPING. * It is not only teen-agers who * to a love-starved woman! | * do sympathize. * If you have heard that he * intends to marry this new * friend, he has not been keep- * ing his plans secret. What can * you do but let him go? * If, however, you do not date * him again he may wonder why * and (unless he has committed * himself)- he may 'suddenly * realize he misses you more * than he dreamed; that you * have become an essential part * of his contentment. You will * not be in doubt long. # * It is a chance, of course, but * I think you will agree it is * more dignified than continu- ~ ®ing to receive a man to whom * you are playing second fiddle, * * * "Dear Anne Hirst: I was married four months ago, and after a grand honey- moon I was completely happy. . But now my husband has lost his position through drinking, and he won't look for work-- "And I find I am pregnant. "We are living with my . mother, who is very kind to him. But I am shocked and dis- " TA Rs Rock Island's Old No. 9 is duplicated in vivid colors on 3x5' rug. Painting With Rags-- : Mrs, Sue Rutledge can really cut a rug. A retired nurse, whose husband is a traveling freight agent for the Rock Island Railroad, she turned to rug making as a pastime--afd because rugs were the most badly needed item in the Rutledge home, A thorough- going person, she enrolled in a course in making hand-hooked rugs, before starting off on her own. Mrs. Rutledge calls her hobby "painting- with rags," for the reason that she dyes all the wool material that goes into her rugs. The wool scraps she cuts into very fine strips--3/32 of an inch--in order to get all the shadings in. A peach, for instance, will have as many as 8 to 10 shades year, In 1958 there will be only 50. Why? One explanation 'is © the decrease of double-feature programming, which used 'car- toons to break the monotony of iwo Westerns, or two horror movies, The best explanation, however, is, as usual, financial. It now costs $70,000 to make a seven-minute cartoon,- which is '4wice as much as a decade ago, But the rental charges--payment from the. distributor -- haven't changed at all. The cartoon people say it now takes four or five years for them to get their investment back. ; : ISSUE 30 -- 1058 dr ---- ---------------- Pretty Baby * show their cards too soon, : : he n an i r- of color. The strips are hooked in the. pattern stamped burla; * Many a woman like you, lone- gn ; 03 Eysiealty Milian or monk's cloth aii and the loops of LEW are pulled throug * some and loving, offers her do TROUBLED about %-inch high. All the loops must be even to give a needle-_ : LER 2: * heart before she is sure it is ) : ' point effect. Her rugs have been widely exhibited and all of them & Ps EN * welcome, Undoubtedly, the * You must indeed be sick have won blue ribbons. : Lirs. Rutledge with prize rug. Garland of fruits on ivory ground. . iv 3 * man has been taking you for ¢ with apprehension. How your i i. ad wf {IAL « ¢ granted; he found in your a * man has let you down! Te : B XP 4EH 98 + sympathetic contemporary ai- * Unless he is ill physically or -- Cartoons Out : Eh * ways ready to listen and un- + mentally, he had better start > * derstand, and did not believe * to be responsible. Your mo- , [> : & : . * that your affection obligated. * ther is tempted, 1 am sure, ov: | 3 a. Movie: catiobn = once the i Li } ' Y 3 Me ; pillar of the Saturday matinee him. Apparently you did not - to suggest he go to his parents ALD SETA 0 Lo hee £ SA and often better appreciated b * stir his emotions, either, only ? home until he straightens him- vr -- coodey 5, 214 adult audiances he End * now and then he was grateful * self out in more ways than one. i . ih features they went to see - is cel- * --but how empty is gratitude * When that happens, you two ebrating oy 50th anniversary * can start all over again, and this year, unfortunately in an . . . I haze you will, hardh ' ) , atmosphere of gloom. In 1908, a Half-Size Playsuit is may seem harsh treat- 2 . | French illustrator named Emile | > he. 1679 brand new bushand, : : Cohl combined film with drawing PRINTED PATTERN 3 but to me it seems that any and produced shorts he called | ~ : 4 : other course is futile.. I am so INGER ARM "dreams with a pencil," a series WY bine Al Half-sizers! Modesty plus fig- ure-flattery -- deftly designed just for you who are shorter. fuller, Note bra-concealing straps, built-up bodice, An easy- to-sew Printed Pattern. Printed Pattern 4776; Halt Sizes 141%, 16%, 18%, 201%, 22%, 24%. Size 16% requires 2% yards 35-inch fabric. Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate. Send FORTY CENTS (40¢) (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern.--Please--print--plainly -- SIZE, NAME, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Box 1,7123 Eighteenth St. New Toronto, Ont, ADDRESS, sorry! ' . If a rival appears on the scene, sometimes jt is smart to-with- draw and leave the field to her. Anne Hirst is a safe confidante in such situations, and her sym- pathy and wisdom can guide you through, Write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ontarlo. Fallen Red Star Edouard (Edik) Streltsov was "a Russian version of Frank Mer- riwell. A handsome lad, he didn't smoke, he didn't drink, and his wizardry on the All-Star soccer team made him a nation- al idol. The trouble began, said Kom- somolskaya Pravda, Moscow's Communist youth-league news- paper, when Edik's "patrons" became too enthusiastic. They with a fancy car and a new apartment. They fed him vodka and cigarettes, let him loaf on his job, and infected him with "the star disease." The paper chonicled the "rev- olting acts" in the rake's pro- gress. He (1) repeatedly got drunk, (2) beat up a factory worker and a policeman, (3) broke into a house and smashed up the kitchen, (4) deserted his wife and baby, (5) assaulted a passer-by on the Moscow sub- way, (6) raped a girl during a party in his honor at a country villa. For most of these peccadilloes, influential fans kept getting Edik reprieved But the rape was too much. Last month, Edik, now 21, was off the All-Stars and in jail. It happened just before the June World Cup matches in Stockholm, where Russia lost out in the quarter finals. Czechoslovakia's Communists also were complaining about "bourgeois - attitudes" toward sports, specifically "nationalistic outbursts" in games with the pampered the "amateur" athlete - wl DRYING OFF -- laurie Naimo gets an assist from the wind as she dries off between dips at Hampton Beach. 7 Should Doctors Use Hypnosis? While the American Medical Assoclation's governing! body still officially frowns on the use of hypnosis as an "entertainment stunt," it agreed unanimously ast month that "general practi- toners, medical specialists, and dentists might find hypnosis val- uable as a therapeutic adjunct." "Active participation in high- level research," it added, "is to be encouraged." This stand could be attributed at least partly to the work of . one man: Dr. Milton J. Marner of Beverly Hills, Calit,, an anes- thesia specialist who for several months has been using hypnosis to kill pain during surgery. Last week Dr. Marmer described for the first time the use of medical nypnosis for major operations inside the heart. Such operatioris, possible .with the new heart-lung machines which take over the U.S.SR. When a Czech hockey player collided with a Russian in a game last spring, one paper complained, the Czech derisively made a sign of the: cross over the unconscious Russian. job of pumping blood while the -- heart is open, still have their dangers: Because normal circu- lutions is stopped, the patient may suffer permanent brain da- mage. One way to prevent such | Gwendoline P.Clarke Every day last week Partner was away from home working at the haying . .. working hard but enjoying it. Probably he would have enjoyed it even more had there been more hay to cut. With so much dry weather the hay was terribly short and of poor quality. Hardly worth cute ting, really, yet it had to be done, it for no other reason than to get rid of the weeds and give the second crop of hay a chance to grow. = - We had just one wet day last: week and' of course that was the very day I had arranged to visit a friend in Toronto. But I went just the same, Caught an early bus and arrived in Forest Hill before nine o'clock, Thanks to the subway. For my mofiey that subway is the grandest thing, When the east-west line is con- structed I can't see why anyone You want to drive to the city at all. Speaking of cars, it is a good ) thing we have a mechanic in the family. Here was I driving around quite happily thinking our: car was in good running order until one day when Bob nad occasion to drive it. Almost at once he said--*"There's some- thing wrong here--I think you need a valve job, Haven't you noticed it beingi a little hard to start?" True, I had, but I always thought it was probably my fault, that more than likely I had {flooded it. Anyway Bob took the car down to Milton and at the garage he found it needed not one buf. four new valves. I haven't had the bill yet! I am "telling you this because 1 think that if a person driving a car knows little or nothing about the mechanism of the thing it is important that he--or more especially she--should have a | --service-man-who cam be relied on to check over the essential parts every time the car is in the garage for minor repairs. And who is better qualified than a dealer for whatever make of car you happen to drive? That is ~~ 'was soon burning hotly. .know * stones were laid on the garage floor on which a charcoal fire the 45-pound lamb was tied and skewered to an electric spit which had been hired or borrow- "ed. The lamb was salted and spiced and basted every little - while with fat, - Yugoslavian smoked bacon. It took five and a half hours to barbecue the lam. We were given a piece of it next day and it was good. Before the company arrived I - was. invited over.to watch the proceedings, in which, of course, 1 was naturally quite interested. Highly spiced, oil-cooked food 'Is not generally to our liking. It seems indigestible to us but most people from central Europe and the Balkan States seem to thrive on it and manage to 'keep free . from stomach ulcers. Anyway, iike it or not, it is itneresting to sample the various dishes and something about their native foods and drinks. How- ever, there are times when we have to tread warily for fear of giving offence. Native wines are always on hand and are a nor- mal part of their hospitality. Refusal to take a drink is some- times misunderstood. However, now we have got to know each --other better wine js no longer brought out every time we step inside a person's house. Not that we have anything against their wine or when they drink -- it is as much a native custom as tea and - coffee is 'to us." We just happen to prefer our tea ard. 'coffee, - especially in the middie of the day, and that's all there is to it." = } Well, summer has come at last --88 "degrees yestérday and 92 right now. Bob and family have gone north, Dee and Art are very "much at home waiting for pos- Then of fantasies full of simple linear figures in motion, such as a man running with his coattails flying. Despite the technical strides in film 'animation since Cohl's ex- periments, the cartoon industry is not, a bit, happy about its cur- rent situation. Its work is rapidly - being squeezed out of movie houses, and only a few of the cartoonists have been able to transfer their talents to the TV commercials. After playing cat and mouse with 'its bank account, M-G-M' finally stopped making "Tom 'end Jerry" cartoons a year ago after building up a two-year backlog. - Warner: Bros, which 'produces the "Merrie Melodies" cartoons, made 40 during 1946, a peak year, and only twenty this year. Having branched out ong ago into feature-length animated movies and more re- cently 'into TV, Walt Disney np songer makes -one-reel shorts. - Donald Duck now quacks his vackety-yack only on television, and Mickey Mouse, the world's most famous cartoon figure, was shelved five years ago. : "Ten years ago Hollywood car- toonists made. 198 new shorts a Baby faces -- and some dar- © ling expressions of young char- mers! Fun-to-do embroidery for a crib cover; or use. two faces for nursery pictures, Ideal baby gift. Pattern 832: transfer of nine baby heads about 6 x 61% inches; directions for cover, pictures. , Send * THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1, 123- Eighteenth St. New Tor- onto, Ont. Print plainly PAT- TERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS, As a bonus, TWO complete patterns, are printed right in our LAURA WHEELER Needle- craft Book. Dozens of other de- signs you'll want to order -- easy fascinating. handwork for yourself, your home, gifts, ba- zaar items. Send 25 cents for «your copy of this book today. ~ --August 21 to Sept. 1. and furnishings. See You At The "EX" DANNY KAYE. World-famed star of stage & screen head. lines the lavish C.N.E. Grandstand Spectacular every night at 8.00 p.m. with top entertainers, dancers, singers . . . climaxed by a gigantic fireworks display. ORDER YOUR TICKETS NOW MAIL ORDER NOW OPEN --, CLOSES AUGUST 16, 1958 SWENSON THRILLCADE -- Daring drivers perform suicide { stunts with cars at the exciting Afternoon Granditand Show WORLD OF WOMEN -- Cooking schools, fashion shows in ~~ the new Queen Elizabeth building with 1,350 seat theatre. Give-awty home, musle, flowers 'and the latest appliances INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITS -- Famed products fromm countries IY a =+--sible tenants" for -their upper duplex. As for us.we have. dis- covered how to keep the house reasonably cool and are quite content to stay home and enjoy - it. all over the world, In the Coliseum. ; WORLD'S LARGEST AGRICULTURAL BUILDING -- Canada's prize-winning livestock, dairy 'products, poultry, fruit, grain and vegettibles on display « .. . dog shows, cat shows. "NATIONAL HORSE SHOW -- Aug. 21, 22, 23, 25, 26 27 " : : 2 BE ! SPORTS GALORE -- World Champion Aquatic stars, track Modern Eti vette and field meets ~ plus Canada's Olympic training plan. 1q - 3 isi Canada's Sports Hall of Fame and New - Hockey by Roberta Lee : Hall of Fame. » a . MILE OF MIDWAY -- New rides, new shows, new games. FOOD PRODUCTS BUMDING -- Centre of attraction for almost three million "people. \ ROYAL CANADIAN AiR FORCE BAND -- Stirring music by the men In airforce blue daily In the Bandshell. OLD MACDONALD'S FARM ~-- A display of young farm - eninials especially for children, * N an emergency, Dr. Marmer the-- orized, is to "awaken" a hypno- tized patient while he is in a Feart-lung machine Dr. Marmer tried the tech- nique on two teen-age patients, both born with heart defects. One was a 13-year-old boy, who under hypnosis was successfully operated on with "complete ab- sence of pain." The second pa- tient, a 14-year-old girl, was why Bob looked after the car for me as he was able to take it to the man who had serviced it. | ever since it came off the as- sembly line. The repair bill may ' be costly but I look at it this ways A person cannot afford to drive a 'car at all unless he, or the, can also afford to keep it _1n good: repair before: it breaks down on the road. Even that is no guarantee against accidents Q. Are silver crumb scrapers still in good use? . \ A. Yes, if the tablecloth is of plain. damask. But they are not too practical on lage or embroid- ery. One may fold a napkin to the thickness of a pot-holder for this purpose, . 5 ¥ A hypnotized on the morning of : 2 : ft ™ Lio gle pM Mo a is at least a guard against | _ yg it really considered good INTERNATIONAL AIR SHOW -- Breathtaking two hour 7 a small amount of an anesthetic Hi op tell vou about that manners to use the handkerchief '| show Sigheita} 3 and 6 only. 14s, in the operating room. When she v y while at the dinner table? .. Visit this '350-acre wonderland of fun, fancy and .excite- i : unexpected view we had from - " - ment , . , [oin the 3,000000 visitors who are expected at SSE Yas hs the eps June agyiny our bedroom window last week -- - A Good [harness pedlly do Thin yore. am, the : 's greatest and biggest annua) 1 oe wenn po Td ol an the window, incidentally, faces ro Berssit a ried] exhibifiont - "' Fra : diately," he related, "and then : led. jel ret SL we lutely has to use a handkerchief, CANADIAN ey she moved her hel to indicate the house across the way. \All | ¢ne should try to 'do so as in- A : RX rk that she could hear me." The i d conspicuously and quietly as pos- i A ] d 7 4 girl then slept through the rest | 118 fans Setuin (WAGs 00 | ibe SBR NATIONAL | 3 " be * g i 4 3 f £7 bg op a Wo ying house to the garage -- aftér the | _- Q. Who goes first down the Pap gny AY It was s ? car had; been backed out on to aisle of a motion picture theater, E XH (| BIT] (0) N ed Was, the driveway. It wasn't long be~ the man or the woman? y ! : ' 8 . 2 Hypnosis, Dr. Marmer con: fore one of the children came A. The woman precedes. Aud TORONTO, CANADA : 3 ~ % \ cluded is particular.y applicable | gyer and excitedly told (is what | unless she is with her husband, og ; SD Ha WAN to Files Between. sha. S5ts of was going on. A 'Yugoslavian | fiance -or someone she knows OPENS WEDNESDAY THIS YEAR in ; : : 'FRIDAY' TAKES A BRIDE -- Jack Webb, better known to TV - "helghtened rinhe of imagina- Sol hration him fo. Ara fete Teal lh aha Should Sehr This 'AUG. 20 - SE ® ¢ ; viewers as | ant Friday, dnd his bride, Jackie Loughery, a tion." a lot ne Y Tan, Not IF gives him a chance -- should he Sai iy bh i Se former Miss A., smile happily at their wedding reception wea |. just a {eg of lamb but a whole be near or farsighted, to suggest. FRED T. WALSH, HIRAM B, McCALLUM, 3 n Hollywood. It was Webb's third marriage, and the second lam, as there were nineteen a seat that Is closer or farther Prosident Gensral Manager. a for Miss Loughery. DRIVE WITH CARE! coming for the feast. away, = : & " i LR Fad : . ; A t .