Times & Guide (1909), 13 Oct 1955, p. 4

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" "ttu lather died recently. luv l' . um- but respanabllluu , _ .y than no twinned M, in I ”an." broum In: "urs C who no nun la school 3 "4 - III. (In! oblluuon u Li no. and um mother. and hen ’- . my her trom worrying , km than all Nut they no T r .- mop“. “dull, two-l te ig) . He make: I good income . . it tattes nearly Ill ttt it to . _ tgtetrt _thI (will! ..-,"Wc have talked things over “j think! we should butt the with . . _ and r but w __ “l thin II. but hm , shoutd >eitte " ." Two in you . with h ts pert of .3. eral ex P Or I , definite P, clal [If 'f met " §° l he i. in-laws " ttther P ttance. r ttertsatr f and ym 3:45 lea, ( "Now I Lay Me Down To T Slap" Is the mspmng theme T " thls column] meroxdered yqutit. The little sleeping figures l keep your own baby” company I' in slumbcrland. P I never advise living with P irt-laws unless there is no " ttther way open. In this in- P 'ttance. there would be com- tt mnsations: his people like you P and you are intelligent enough £3.13 leave the running of the Pattttrtte m his mother', capable it hunds You will not have the l" ttrivaev vou prefer but at P least vou two will be man and " wife, sharing joys and prob- L' loms. growing to understand P. and love each other mere. ;/ It is a pity you seem so x kr, “MM (In (Ilium ta In.) still am each other i "tf tlt unnumcnt in ended will be the end tor me. I In deeply in love to be with on.» with marriage so in! l the emotional strain is too' tr,',"".,;,;,',,)',',',';',,',',,,',';"')'-',',',',',', and wouldn't mind keepin- , but we' both wan. I family. “i think he is tine to be " II. but when I think of my tutu" I wonder whether should wait indetlnitely, not ”in: him at all? -.. - In com; (stamps cannot be tMY caplet!) tor this p-nern to Box I. 123 Eighteenth St.. New For onto. Ont. Prim plainly PAT. [IN NUMBER. vour NAME Ind ‘DDRESS. LOOK FOR smartest Ideas m “nun! m our Laura Wheel 'tfr Cnulog for I955 Crochet. "ttttns, embrmdermg and Irv; ly‘thmgs to wean Iron ons. qums. uprons. novelties - easy. 'un to mlke' Send " can” tor dur copy ot this book NOW' -lou will want ta ordu every " dough In IL ', "tlt" unwound» It q undo! 90 Oh. Fm M can. and penny» plan‘- whkh "a , My "plat. the trea. the do”, a pooch/p0 of on. scheduled to fly new you. wilt i'lrf, a ”panama 00,06" and will ”out. hem clvpm half the sin roquirod by 35 _ BCa's. Pattern 818, Baby Quilt. 35% I 43% mches Diagrams. em- brmdcry ind applique transfer: inauded W an. Jl'ti' How long 0 gm I t to mun m at. but? My than an m " and we've and our l , m NI ammo. Mu. wmown; In __ fry? "fr. (or. I 'ttttNt Two courses are opem misr. ry your fiance and. move in with his" family. contributing part of your salary to the len- era) expenses. V _ Or break the engagement definitely. and resume the IO- cial life you had before you met him Send TWENTY FIVE cums a and m keep known; ru be I la la lb]. to DFSOLATIOIN" on mine nearly 30 support a . amount-11y ' Cu OI. . Cl. In”: . mom u bu ' would «in . m to 00! ' and an m . court" the . tum to th ' mu will t ' in. nan . you. In?» in an mun- . mom u broken. Many 1 gm ' would when. an alumni. . him to and but hum-t. ' and an an ammo- on- . com-nu the man and "up!" . tum to the - one“. . mu will tutu m woddm; ' at. now. "ovum. you / know yourself and it an idee . is beyond your Acceptmco. . that u that. Anne Hire! hasn't always the novice! solution to your problem but her nnalysls ot the sltun- tion otd the several Idea she win contribute will help to clear your mind. Write her at Box I. 123 Eighteenth St.. New Toronto, Ont. "Remember, it is not to " played with, this river," said our outfitter in Tadoussac. "Thank you," I replied for Tam McCulloch and myself. "One must be u "utiau. with the Saguenay as with a lign." Land of Quietness Up The Saguenay So we pointed our canoe up- stream into the silent reaches of the untamed river on that morning of late summer. "What is this, another Bud- son?", Tam exclaimed as the headlands closed off’civilization behind us. "You'll sec. " has the nobility of the Hudson as the Duteh - plorers saw it, but tar wildnen the Hudson no more resembles it than a cat resembles a lynx " When the world was young. travel was discovery. The better part of travel is discovery still, the coming upon things which are essentially our own. So it was with us on that day of free- dom when each stroke of the paddle mod n: where space onro more became dominant in the mind. Perhaps our first discovery, or rediscovery, was the satisfaction of simplicity. Our world was horizontal water and perpendic- ular elift beneath the are of sky. Yet of these three lines tuid' a little color, nature composed Vlrlations of infinite number and subtlety. Throughout the trip, planned for a week and stretch- ed into a fortnight. this simpliei- ty gained in richness, the in- conceivable richness that hides itself trom those who gulp and run, writes T. Morris Longstreth in The Chirstian Science Moni- tor. womanly “01w: that e", "YYP, 991' .9912? tt you are left “out. don't m but Ind resign younen to maidenhood. Cultivate your {armor hum“: (hung them will divert you 'and keep your social lite active. You but Inn. with this young man only about a year. and it in not untorseeable that an- othor will attract you. . One of the'pleasantest dis- coveries on my part w" finding how surely Tum had "futteed himself to the people who had become a part, a sort of natural resource, of this noble region I had forseen that my friend, who has never been naturalized to haste, would appreciate the descendants of New France ln the habitant households on the green shores. I knew that the Scots had ever felt In affinity with the Frankl. But these French Canadians not only were Normans old stvle, in the re- mater places; they had been nurified of the wperfluities of Europe by centuries of wilder- ness living Tam found himself quietly responsive and " home whenever we beached our canoe to seek provision. When the youngsters tUrtt their brother', engagement u broken. It may spur the boy to fresh ambitions so he can begin helping out earlier than he planned. At least it will be a start toward relieving the man of the entire respon- sihility. You he! you are " In Impasse. but it is my opinion it exists mainly in your own mind. Your tlance will need your moral support more than ever during the comm] few years: and perhaps you will feel. one: all. that your plan in by hia lid. either in his home or encouraging him as you fill the role of flancee-m. waiting, We rediscovered stability " the same time. The fluidity of life at home swr‘eps everything Into its Punch! and threatens to wash us into 9pm.. ~m mush! living where " was born is deemed hopelessly backward, an unawakened van Winkle. The habitant, on the contrary. cher- ishes and clings to his hard-won acres. One of the little noted miracles is the quiet transforma- tion of labor into love. The necessary deed in remembered with affection. The habitant's woodpile and garden. his dwel- ling and the road to it. become a part of him. A white chum-h, a handful of neighbors housed in stone-solid homes instead of a contractor's speculation, are his treasure. They served a prior instinct in my friend,. reminding (him of his boyhood security lbacked by the earth itself. HANG YOUR SHIN ON A MK uM.-thot', what Ecuador”. Ministry of Economics would nova you do, on " annodncal that it is making largo tracts of land availablo to those who would cultivate the living "amoral “our" hitherto harvested only from wild growth. _ Bork In wad In manufacture of twine, lacks, nus, hammock and cloth. _ Holrllko fruit fibre, llghlor than canon, is used for stuffing floats', Illrpruarvorl, cushlom. Sud fiber, vary alasjic, far oxcaads cork In floototion qualities and is usod In liluavlng devices, clalhln and upholstery, Soad also yields oil for soap maklng and food cake for Ilve. stock. The Kapok tree ls told to be bot) rain and drought resistant. True, the families overflowed. The young men sought work in the cities. and some were lost to mammon. But many carried memories of tishine and hunting and singing together and the rare freedom of that life which ran hand in hand with the im.. nulse of the heart. Best of all. they had known a close-knit Lucky Teeners - little sew. ing time to make this lovely dress: for your back-to-school wardrobe! Very newest style - "ttering long-torso. atop a flare skirt; clever back belt, smooth fitting bodice! Choose short or three-quarter sleeves - equally smart! V This pattern easy' to use, sim. ple to sew, is tested for fit Has complete illustrated Instructions Pattern 4831: Teenage Sizes IO, 12, 14, 16 Sizes 12 takes 4% yards M-inch fabric. % yard contrast. _ Sénd THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (350) in coins (stumps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print pmmy SIZE, NAME moans and STYLE NUMBER. Eighteenth St., New Tm. Ont. ok,d 4/4.; Send order to Box l, 12T lamily life that wu " once I dllcipline and I contentment. One afternoon of thunder Tam and I were taken underite wing of the family Duchesneau. After . brief taste ot Madame Duches- nenu'l sovereignty, Tam whis- pered to me, "Now I understand matriarchy. It's monarchy with the democratic touch." Certainly Madame Duches- qeau's subjects - husband and eleven trhildren--revolved about the enthroned head with the neatness and assurance of the solar system. Her accents, when she wished something done. and at once. might have echoed le Roi Soleil. Her disposition 'up- plied the. 'sunlight of this ar- rangement. while her determin- ation provided the power. She delegated duties to every gradu- ate of the cradle, yet I have never seen children happier or ‘more cheerfully obedient. Wil- lingness was the orbit in which they moved. Astonishingly they were handsome. as the young who have the run of woods and waters tend to be. I doubt if all the agencies of reform could find I delinquent juvenile in a day's travel along that aultere river. When the sun emerged, I noticed the older boys putting their heads together. The ques- tion that came shyly was this: Would my friend and I like to go fishing.' ' "The gentlemen will not en- joy the flies." Madame Duches- neau said definitely. The look of breathless anticipation "m the young eyes faded, but l'had to agree with her. For another thing, we redis- covered quiet. This heavenly realization had begun the first evening under canvas. We had pitched the tent near the dark- ening river At our barks rose the twofold ttight-of the forest. and farther back the cliffs. "The final luxury," Tam sigh- ed "To be safe from noise " Actually the air was busy carrying sounds -- the lap and splash of the tidal waters. the crackle of snark; from our fire, the flow cf wind in the trees, and at intervals the night cry of some bird or thud of falling boulder. I knew what Tam meant "What makes it hard to beat," Tam went on. “is that you and I remember a lite when quiet was the normal thing and now? was occasional. Now it's nearly continuum from one quarter ur another. and more airplanes blast the auiet overhead every year " "With me it's not only the noise but the outrage." I agreed "rr a thief invades mv privacy and steals something, the police do what they can. But when no- body tslse's rarket occupies my home. the law throws up Rs hands. Yet it is a thimf. too" Thu situation violates my sense of iueriref' Tam knew what concerned me. for quiet is a pool in whose calm. elusive thoughts can vise tn the top, Quiet is the arena of future deeds, Thrsre is immensely more In us than we up aware. and quiet is the invitation mr it to app"!- "Madame Durhesncnu u'nutd know how to handle it." Tam raid "Perhaps vou and I are ehiMrer, a" over ttit- in this Ufa of marhims and rtttrqt he dirriniitted, By ourselves. I mp- pore" "Meanwhile there said Tam made no "binder and we I" the quiet new Ibout u! " life'e not "orth living " may " your llv-rl In I - n uh- " lo m - a In. in. n a” to in your dig-in In“ in my IMpo! your liver HI. . It led“ Incl, w" "rd Fer I“ tire, v_etAlttt1rtt um. ._ ."-. “v -' "..-' v - - _ ”mm. .. ”helm Ind cl 01"- and ”All u out M .'%'tr w“: an and mild - Curt-n uni} Um Gt, " llmfm' 7TH: pilh id, Mack‘- MAT 1dt,'t.UT ml trtr, on um 'n ' an h? In” 1','ht2 Jam - no. un- Alm- i- M's In“! £7,153" 31'" -__ "' T at “cm :gwwi Liitr IT " BE YOUR [IVER III!!! " - I.“ ig this," I On day an mantle Comte 'ettt Imam in ttte wood: we cum but with . huge wad but. no tttought u would [than Hammad. to no In: capture. to M ttttt on It: had Ind brought it In to show Mr. The sight at the blending hon": and on I digit I’ll too much for the um- tUd girl, and Ih. hinted. Her fright had hldnoul mum. when her baby wu born it lad the land of . wild bou- on an body ot 0 girl. The father we: no broken.I hurM he ordered the monum- slty to be drowned. But the little culture we; lived by I servmt who hadn't the hurt to drown her. Insteed he took the child to the unrest monastery and laid her on the steps, The monks felt the had been lent to them for a purpose. In great Secrecy they brought up the little boar girl whom they mm- ed Benedlcte. She learned to walk and sit down, won to kneel and eurtsy, but although she could understnnd all that was raid to her Ihe wu never able to speak. read pr write. When her husband died Hon- orinde, who had no other chil- dren, was told by the old Mt vant what had happened. She went to the monks and asked to see her daughter, but the sight of the child made her feel so ill she couldn‘t bear to any The prior, realizing that Ben- edict: came from such I wealthy family. suggested to I'll! ambi- tioul nephew that he marry her The young man was understand; ably reluctant. But he finally agreed. In the same room with her Filled with horror she "" the monkl I huge mm ot man Ind left, never to see the {Lam again. This strung. marriage was a dismal failure. Benedict: bit her husband each time be came near her. indeed. one day she at. tacked him with such ferocious. ness that, fearing he would be torn to pieces, he seized a pis tol and shot her dead. l Honorinde had her unhappy child buried " Fontevrauit. and over her tomb she built an ab- bey and herself became its first labbess. It was known Is the Commun ity of Benedictine Nuns. tn the dome wan sculptured a boar's head in memory ot its name- sake. ahti-freeze make to your car ? . HOW much Rl (ilk) difference , "lil!' will the ill With "tihetitm in awry tttotmttt.ttt, he took tho works ot I unndhthor'l clock ttut ot the blink“ in which they were wand. and at them on nu Hench. . They won good workl: bull mu tarttiglted, but whack were wall cut. Ind pinion. we!) at: in wary spec! the works. tilled dreams. Vultu- lolnr hit! (and mm In wand” , Aa he In quietly gain: " them. the who]. plan which m and his father had dilcuuad be- came cluster to hll mind. He would build In astronomical me- chanism that could in attached to these works, and while the clock would show the hours and minutes (he wouldn't bother with I hand and dial to Ihr'w so lecondl in a minute), the as- tronomical addition, would show the extol tlme ot the rising and ADMITS KIDNAPPING - Mrs. Betty Jean Benedicio nervous. ly fingers baby diapers in o Stockton, Calif., iail after she confessed kidnapping the in- font son of Dr. and Mrs. San- ford Marcus from a San Fran. cisco hospital. tho the the " With "Preatone" Anti-Freeze you get much more than jun. (new up protection. In addition to main] chemical inhibitors, "Preaton." Brand Anti-Freeze contain. a unique Polar Film inhibitor which tonn- tl thin protective coating in the radiator. engine cooling )Acket. hone connection- Ind water pump. Thin mued film seals the cooling system against run, corrosion and deterioration. It prevents loosening of any rust particlol preterit in the cooling ayswm beforl "Pm-tone" Anti-Free“ In. udder}. " prevents rust from Helm Hound to clog radiator who. . _ . which could rank in ovuhutinl Ind overflow ' This extr- protection man. a clean. properly working mun. lystem all winter . . . lets your engine run freely at mor- mum temperature. Ind with but wan. $4 PRESTONE Brand Anti-Freeze will give your cor cu cooler, smoother running engine next summer You'll get the full trettefit of "Prentone" Ami-Freon protection with wear and rust inhibitor. During winter tho cooling nylum In. bad maximum protection against rusting, stranding. or clogging. It's clean and clan of nut . . . "t to twp your engin- oool in bones! tranche! . . . [he you bum [ll mil-up. Boa-uh what-r Mm bu put the lust “rain on your engine . . . ith in mush-pg to {In your month porfrmnnneo throughout the loop-t unmet rum. Th. best Oni-tr-e mah- nll tho dim-m in the Our“ to you 16 up annual"! war 3 tablespoon. IENSON'S or CANADA Com m 'A 00mm so" 2 Cup- wa1 . 2 tau-moon butter 3 Iabluponns lam Md. 2 'IGIPOOOII grand lumen rhd " my", mson's or CANADA Com Sloruh and all together in saucepan. ADD valor gradually, nlllng or”! smooth. COOK over medium hoot, "lulu. New. lul mixturu thlekou and come: to a bolt. ' SlMMER IO ruinous, stirring oeeasktrtatrr., REMOVE from he!) add bunny, lumen lulu and rind. SERVE hot over calm squares. suttrnod or M Puddings. YIELD: 2 cup! um Chocolalo Sour... Follow above roclpo. Deer-an BENSON'S or CANADA Corn Starch lo 2 lahlnpoon and add 2 lublelpoom cocoa. Omit lumen lulu and rind and odd 2 teaspoons vanlllo. Hula sod., Follow lemon Sana Reclpu. Rodua sugar to 'A cup and unlawful. 2 logspoovu vcnlllu for lemon lulu and rind. Add few drops red food colouring to tint mun a dollcule plat. kqrcfi14F7, Eu var/Bog 'IM' " . / o? PRESTONE B' Brand Anti-Freeze m will give your car a cleaner, smoother running engine this winter it? Juno Add-y, Homo Servko Department, THE CANADA STARCH COMPANY LIMITED, PO. Box 129, Montreal, Nh fay he. Iolder of who delicious udpos, who bl it, a. “hilly Ttft ttt and ti in plaee, and a work-.11“ "I? trtutt9_yr?t, 19W; - On July c. 1190. Walter hooked " the pendulum. Ind 'tttt ttim-hom T", Clock Th. Tllhl and W tt Tull." hy Will 0min». t

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