Times & Guide (1909), 26 Apr 1956, p. 8

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»A ® sidered this grave condition * for years; their opinion seems * to be that unless the victim * wants to stop drinking, there * is little hope that he will. In * any applied treatment he * must BELIEVE that he can * be cured, and _ collaborate * with his physician or advisor * with all his physical and * spiritual strength. * _ Your husband‘s efforts have * mot lasted more than a month (®" ? a time. I give a layman‘s WEHAT CHANCE? * The trained minds of brilâ€" ® liant spécialists have conâ€" TWO pretty parts to this sumâ€", "* _ ~ C. .0 C%, § mer fashion â€" a cool sundress,| § a‘cute overblouse to add in The eye crosses a full river. "separates" . effect! â€" Prizeâ€"winâ€" (The desire to go beyond the Ming combination for the little| POssible.) miss; with a grownup styling * * * she‘ll love! Sewâ€"easy; you‘ll|l The tail must follow the Want to make several mixâ€" head. (The rank and file must match sets‘ follow the leader.) Pattern 4852 Children‘s Sizes| * * U 2. 4; 6. 8. 10. Size 6 dress. 2‘1| If the head falls into the fire, yards 35â€"inch; overblouse. ‘a the beard will not burn also? yard.. .__ | (People who complain\nbout Thisâ€"pattern easy to use, simâ€"| their ruler suffer with him.) _ Thisâ€"pattern easy to use, simâ€" ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has @ompleted | illustrated â€" instrucâ€" Send THIRTYâ€"FIVE CENTS, (stamps cannot be accepted â€"* use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Print plainly $IZE,| NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE! Send your order to Anne Adams Patterns, 123 Eighteenth Street, New Toronto. Ont. Sh 3 times, 2!; c.onceâ€"sifted pastry flout (or 2 e. onceâ€" sifted allâ€"purpose flour), 2}4 tep. Magic Baking Powder, }4 tep. sait, 14 tsps. cimnmamon, ‘; tsp. each of ground dloves, ginger, allspide, nutmeg and mace; mix in 14 c. seediers raigins and !{ c. chopped walnuts. Cream % c. butter or margarine and blend in 1!j c. lightlyâ€"packed brown sugar; beat in 3 wellâ€"beaten egg yolks and }; tap. vanilla. Add dry ingredients to creamed mixture alternately with ?, ¢. milk; apread batter in greased 9" square pan lined * in the bottom with greased paper. Beat stiff, not dry, 3 egg whites and a few grains salt; graduaily beat in 1 c. lightlyâ€"packed brown sugar and spread over cake; sprinkle with 14 e. chopped wainuts. Bake in rather slow oven, 3258%, 114 to 114 hourn; cover lightly : wWith brown paper for last half hout. ‘Always Dependable Efllkf T | “ No man clever enough to lick his own back. (There are isome things we cannot do. no matter how smart we may be.) Anne Hirst does not pretend to be a psychiatrist. Her downâ€" toâ€"earth guidance and knowlâ€" "But I still am not convinced I did the right thing. We are taught there is good in us all Am I deserting a weakling when he needs me? Will it drive him faster down the wrong\ road? I am so confused I appeal to you, whose work I honor, to set me straight. edge are based on years of obâ€" servation, experience and apâ€" plied reading. Everyone who writes her will understand her wise counsel and common sense, and she is always kind. Write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth A forthcoming book by the Rev. Waltee B. Williams and his wife, "Adventures With the Krus in West Africa," tells of their experience as Methodist missionaries in Angola and Liâ€" beria between 1905 and 1983. It includes a collection of African sayings, some of which appear ‘below. A WORTHLESS MALE "Dear Anne Hirst : After five years of living with a drunken husband, who also gambled, got in trouble with the law, and was cruel to my little son and me, I have left. St., New Toronto, Ont. Anger is a warmth which lights itself. You are like a small pot between two fires (You are squeezed between two eneâ€" mies.) > 1 bore this child, but not .his heart or soul, (Said of a bad child.) We like to wash our clothes in the front yard. (Spreading our friend‘s troubles.) & Cockroach cannot crow â€" in the fowl‘s country. (A poor man cannot dictate to & rich, nor a stranger to the native of a place.) The eye crosses a full river. (The desire to go beyond the possible.) I urge you to stop sentiâ€" mentalizing, and face the facts of your marriage as your letter revealed them. Your husband is irresponsâ€" ible, dishonest, brutal. He made it necessary for you to move from one little place to another, while he continued his drinking and various ofâ€" fences that humiliated you so much. He has had. all the chances he deserved. Living with such a creature can bring only misery‘ to a perâ€" son like you, and later to your little son. Go through with the divâ€" orce. You have succeeded in making an honest living for yourself and your child; you have found some measure of peade. Keep it that way. Out Of Africa i; 'flig ask‘ him if he will make effort for your sake; And small boysâ€"and girlsâ€" are pleading with their parents, for some help in making a kite. So let‘s clear the workshop table and give the youngsters a hand, Better yet, take the chilâ€" dren to a breezy hilltopâ€"and "go fly a kite." Of course, you can buy kites readyâ€"made; but children are naturally "do it yourselfers." They get a special thrill out of the simple craftwork. Besides, they can have fun decorating their kites in personalized styles, patterns, or motifs. It‘s spring! The winds are blowingâ€"and kites are flying We don‘t claim our idea is a new one. Actually, kitemaking is centuries old. The Chinese have long been worldâ€"famous kite makers. But mostly, kites are just for funâ€"as hordes of small boys He be big box too much; when you flog him ‘good he cry plenty. (Kru boy describing a piano.) To make a kite, you will need ; sticks of spruce, white pine, or bamboo; tissue papeér, heavy wrapping paper, or cloth for covering; rags for tails and kite string. Your tools will inâ€" clude a knife, coping saw, ruler, yardstick, pencils, paste or glue. and crayons or water colors for decorating. ownr reward.) Water is never tired of runâ€" ning. (Said of great talkers.) * # * The cow licks the one that He weeps with one eye. (Inâ€" sincere.) When push comes on top of shove, how‘s a man going to do? I‘m kicking, but not so high. (Answer to inquiry about one‘s health.) _ * * * His hips will be glad when he dies because they will get a chance to rest. (Said of a lazy man, always sitting down.) Softly, softly _ catches the monkey. (Patience.) Use a vertical rib, 41 inches long, and a cross stick the same length. Notch the stick ends and outline the frame with a string. Cut the paper frame, decqrate it, and then paste it over the string frame. When cutting the frame pattern, allow two inches One day no be all the days. (The better day will come later.) it be said that he followed his teacher‘s precept: "Whatever you get, get it got." â€" He did, however, pick up enâ€" ough information to get admitted to Hamilton College, a Presbyâ€" terian institution at Clinton, 9 mil®s southwest of Utica, New York. But his love for pranks far oushone his fordness for learning, and his love of wanâ€" dering in the countryside, fishâ€" ing anid just observing, exceeded even his joy from practical jokes. So it was a wonder that Although it can not be said that he loved to study, he did relish Virgil more than the chores around a farm. Nor can The Rev. Mr. Whalley, ho started the system in the west coast Bcottish resort, contacts the members by telephone or ing an indolent, trifling boy, who shirked his work to go trout fAshing on the clear _ water streams in the long line of blue hills thatâ€"overlooked the little town, or to swim in Pontoosue and Oneta‘lakes, or to climb the rugged sides of old Greylock. . . Thirty â€" churchgoers in the Scottish town of Ayr fight disâ€" ease and death with a "prayer by telephone" system by which, their pastor said, "it is impossâ€" ible to say how many our prayâ€" ers have helped to save." clared. thing." CRUISING DOWN THE RIVER â€" Ken Stiegman, 19, and Fred Graefen, are shown on their roft, the Uâ€"Nameâ€"It, in the Chicago River, completing the last leg of their 2960â€"mile journey. The pair spent three months gravelling to New Orleans and the Mardi Gras, and then back to Chicago. "I think every church should have a prayer group like ‘this," the Rev, William Whalley, deâ€" Prayer by Phone Go Fly a Kite! "It is â€" a _ wond/pful its Turn the cross stick at right angles to the upright. Insert string corners in notches at ends of cross stick. Tie a string taut between ends of cross stick on the back side of the kite so that it bows about six to eight inches. extraâ€"one inch for pasting and one inch so that the paper will not be too taut. On the front side, make a bridle string by tying a 36â€"inch string through paper to upright stick. Tie one end at a point eight inches from the top of the vertical rib and the other eight inches from the bottom. Tie the ball of flying cord to bridle at a point about oneâ€"third of the way dbwn from the top. _ .: _ Now you‘re ready. _ _ So, we aré not trying to be offensive when we say: at this time of year : "Go fly a kite !" he scraped by his freshman year On his return the next fallâ€" by a roundâ€"about way on steam» boats and stagecoaches, to deâ€" lay his getting there â€" he heard exciting tales _ of the great West . .. Back in Hamilton, living in a room that faced the chapel, Henry was awakened each morâ€" ning by a bell that called all students to religious . service. For Henry it may have been cpportunity ringing. One morâ€" ning before the bell got in its peals, Henry shinnied / up a lightning «rod (which is still on the chapel) and removed the clapper from the bell. The Preâ€" sident of the College promptly removed Henry from the cam: pus. Rack home Henry was neither an ‘ornamefit to his family nor a joy to himself. He did a few ‘"Now, don‘t get impatient â€"â€" we‘ve got a search party aut for , _ the honey !** MERRY MENAGERIE Spring Fashions odd chores around the house; read â€" deeply in Shakespeare; and spent the rest of his time longing to go. West. "I guess you had better go," his father said one day. "You certainly aren‘t doing any good around here." So he gave the boy a tenâ€"dolâ€" lar bill, his mother fixed him a bundle of clothes, and off he went, not to come back for ten years. â€"â€" From "Uncle Sam‘s Uncle Josh," by Donald Day. bicycle..whenever he hears a sick person is in danger. Early Adventures Of ‘Josh Billings‘ Josh Billings was born Henry Wheeler Shaw on April 21, 1818, in Lanesboro, Massachusetts, at a time when the United States was shedding its pinfeathers for a self â€" conscious, croaking crow 22 . wos _ already breaking through the mountains in great swarm preparatory to flowing in succeeding waves cross the North American continent to the Paâ€" cific. "We do not claim to have saved â€" lives â€" ourselves. God saves the sick, we merely pray for them," the pastor said. Every week in his church, the Rev. Mr. Whalley calls on a 100â€"member prayer group to bow their heads and pray for the sick. No matter what the hour, they all begin to pray. . â€" ‘Baby Henry‘s pedigree had little rust on it. It was good solid New England ancestry with a conscious concept of an "early to bed, early to rise" duty both to do the job and to get the rewards (if God in his wisdom chose to allow it) . . . But all of this good influence could not keep Henry from beâ€" or in showing that a rich mounâ€" tain of mercury ore is unecoâ€" nomic to mine because of disâ€" tance, that the north is not a continuous â€" bonanzaâ€"land . soon to be as heavily populated as the rest of Canada, He points out that as yet the land has only two important resources: fur and minerals. Water power has still to be tapped. And before any feal populatioh growth can be expected, man must solve the _ problem _ of _ permafrost ‘whlch prevents _ systematic plumbing and sewage use. Then too there are social problems. In some places, for instance, the \Indian is as rigidly segregated from the white man as is the Negro in the American South. One afternoon Lefty Gome: turn:b around and saw Joe Diâ€" Maggio playing an excessively shallow centerfield. With Rudy York coming up, Gomez blanchâ€" ed and waved DiMag back. Afâ€" ter the game, he asked Joe why he had moved in so close. "I‘m supposed to make people forget Tris Speaker," DiMag said with a grine _ â€" "If you play in for guys like York, you‘ll make them forget Gomez," retorted Lefty. Running up to a policeman, a middleâ€"aged man shouted, "Ofâ€" ficer, Offiter, somebody | just stole my c@r=â€"but I got the li« SHALLOW REMARK Job A. Not at all. This might even serve as the "gentle hint" your neighbor evidently needs. Amazing Facts About Canada Q. What amount should be given as a fee to a clergyman for a house christening? â€" A. This, like the fee for wedâ€" ding, is determined by the means of the parents. Q. Is it proper for a married woman to send a gift in her name only to a bride, especially if the bride is not known by her husband? A. Never; her husband‘s name should always be includâ€" ed. Q. How soon after receiving an invitation to a large dinner party should one send one‘s acâ€" ceptance or regret? A. Immediatély. Nothing is more inconsiderate or illâ€"bred than to keep a hostess waiting for a reply, since she must have the time to invite substitute guests. The Mysterious North, by Pierre Berton, illustrated with photographs and maps. (Toronâ€" to; McClelland & Stewart). Pierre . Berton was born at Whitehorse and grew up at Dawson in the Yukon Territory. As a newsman and magazine editor he has returned many times to all parts of the far north, from the mouth of the Mackenzie in the West to the precipitous eastern shores of Baffin Island. His book is a reâ€" flection of the attachment that grows om men who know this primevally lonely land, an afâ€" fection that is not dulled by subzero cold or the exploding of glamorous myths by prosaic fact. And fortunately it is also as accurate, complete and readâ€" able a surveyâ€"of arctic and subâ€" arctic Canada as has yet been produced. â€" The thing that makes ‘"The Mysterious North" such sprigh(i ly reading is that it is peppere with the sort of amazing facts and legends that readers have come to associate with books on Texas. But since Texas would be lost in these northern terriâ€" tories, these Canadian stories often are even more startling. Consider these: The Canadian north contains more lakes than all the rest of the world put together. 1 It also,however, supports one of the world‘s great deserts, the arctic tundra, on a meager preâ€" cipitation of between 2 and 10 inches _ yearly. _ Paradoxically, thousands of the aforementionâ€" ed lakes happen to lie in this deésert. Propriety is the rule in alâ€" most every northern boom town and mining camp. Even Dawson City, at the height of the Klonâ€" dike gold stampede in 1898, obs served the Sabbath so rigidly thit the Mounted Police put men in jail for chopping their own kindling on Sunday. ~~~_ Great areas of the land reâ€" main _ unexplored, ‘ uncharted. And yet no comparable area of the earth‘s surface presents such a record of sustained explora» tion â€"â€" nearly 400 years of it.. Mr. Berton is never merely flamboyant at the cost of obâ€" jectivity, however. He makes it clear that to say the Canadian north is all of a 'flece is a great misconception. emphasizes, whether in puncturing the legâ€" end of a hidden tropical valley Modern Etiqueti During World War II the proâ€" fessor buried the collection in the cellar of <his home for safety, When the Russians came they seized‘the house before he had time to dig up and remove the treasure, and the professor was sure the Russians had disâ€" covered the collection. But he never dared to investigate. He made a restitution claim at the Viennese Treasury Board. When the Russians left, a comâ€" mission was sent to the h:ou;z for inspection of damage . to the property. When the basement floor was dug up, the treasure was found, intact and unharmed. Now the professor has heard that the Russians did actually dig up the whole of the cellar to within a few inches of where the treasure had ‘been hidden. But they were not looking for it. They were trying to trace the fault in a defective water main | emmmmmnmmns When the tide is ising the shore is a place of unrcst, with the surg@ leaping high â€" ver jutting rocks a~d running in lacy cascades of foam over the landward side of massive boulâ€" ders. But on the ebb it is r ore peaceful, for then the waves dn not have behind them the push of the inward pressing tides. There is no particular drama about the turn of the tide, but nresently a zone _‘ wetness shows on the gray rock shores, and offshore the incoâ€" ming swells begin to swir: and break over "idden ledges. Soon the rocks that the high tide has concealed rise into view and glisten with the wetmess left on them by the receding water. Small, dingy snails move about over rocks that are slipâ€" pery with grow‘" of infinitesiâ€" mal green plants; the snails scraping, scraping, scraping to finc food before the tide returns. Like drifts f â€"l1d snow no longer white, the barnacles ccme into view; they _ i et rocks and old spars wedged inâ€" to rock crevices, an‘ their sharp cones are sprinkled ove empty mussel shells and lobsterâ€"pat buoys and the hard stripes of deepâ€"water seaweeds, all minâ€" gled in the flotsam of the tide. Meadows â€" of _ brown roâ€"kâ€" weeds appear as the ~e imperâ€" ceptibly ebbs. Smaller patches of green weed, stringy as mer maids‘ hair, begin to / i white and crinkly where the <un has dried them. â€" Now the gulls, that lately rested on, the higher l:dges, pace with â€" grave â€" intentness along the walls of rock, and iney probe under the hanging curâ€" tains of weed to find crabs and sea urchin. In the low places little pools and gutters are left where the water trickles and gurgles and cascades in â€" miniature | waterâ€" fall and many of the dark caverns between and «under the Luscious HONEY BUN RING Quick to make with the new Active Dry Yeast At Ebb Tide © Hot goodies come puffia‘ from Â¥our oven in quick time with new leischmann‘s Active Dry Yeast) No more spoiled cakes of yeast! No no: II-‘.lnl.m!i:nu“ tri%sâ€"thi: u‘: form eischmann‘s Yeast keeps in your cupg» board! Order a month‘s supply, stand like clusters of fragile spring flowers, the bronze and electricâ€"blue gleams of the Irish moss, the oldâ€"rose beauty of the caroline algae. And over it all there is the smell of low tide, compounded of the faint pervasive smell of worms and snails and jellyfish LOq EUEA nctotine ansall m and crabsâ€"the sulphur smeli of sponge, the iodine shell of rockâ€" weed, and the salt smell of the rime that glitters on th sunâ€" dried rocks. â€" From "The Edge of the Sea," by Rachel Carson. Crochet a graceful bowl to hold fruit and flowers â€" lovely matching doily beneath! They‘re worked together â€"â€" im gay contrast colors! Pattern 594: Doilyâ€"bowl comâ€" bination, or 17â€"inch doily alone; quick crochet in heavy jiffy cote ton! Starch bow! for stiffness. Our gift to you â€" two wornâ€" derful patterns for yourself, your home â€" printed in our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft book for 1986! Dozens of other new designs to order â€" erochet, knitting, â€" embrodery, fronâ€"ons, novelties. Send 25 cents for your copy of this book NOW â€"â€" with gift patterns printed in it! Send TWENTYâ€"FIVE CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted â€" use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Print plainly PAT. TERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. Send your order to Laura Wheeler Patterns, 123 Eighteenth Street, New Toronto, Ont. this pattern. and 34 . liquid honey; spread over dough and pprinflt w'!’trh 4 e. broken wainuts. Befinning at a long side, loosely roll up like a Jelly roll. Lift carefully into a greased 8%%" tube pan and r{:h ends of dough to form a g. Brush top with mefted butter. Cover a:X let rise until doubled in bulk. Bake in moderately hot in bulk, Bake in -odcrnouot oven, 375°, 45â€"50 minutes. h top with honey and sprinkle with chopped walnute. dough, Cover and set in warm place, free from draught. Let rise until doubled in bulk. Punch down dough and roll out into an oblong about 9" wide and 24" long;jopun dough. Combine 34 ¢. lightlyâ€"packed brown and %‘ f’_ g‘l‘-i: h:-.-- Unusual Crochet by £

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