to color, on "Dear Anne -Hirst: I'm not writing to ask you how to get this boy back, I don't want him. But I do want to know how a girl dan tell when a boy is just ° feeding her a line, or is really sincere. 1 went steady with this c¢ne for three weeks (which 1 know now was silly) but he told me right away how much he loved me and he drew a rosy picture of our future. "Then suddenly it was all over. He walked out. He said he just likes to date a girl a dozen times or so and then ditch her, La'ce: I learned he was that kind. "Are all bdys like that? Deo they just string you along until they have vou at their feet ard then walk out? A decent girl can't lke a boy she's afraid to trust "How cun_ a girl know when a boy is telling the truth and when he is not? I'm only 17, but honestly 1 feel like 90. I'm fed up. with them all! Are they ali like this one? OLD LADY" THE MALE ANIMAL t No, my young friend, ali * boys are not like this one, but * the species boasts a larger * membership than we like to * admit. Conceited as a pea- * cock, they flit from one girl * to another trying out various * shenanigans to win her over, * and they file the results with * the smug comment, "That was ¢ easy." They are out for Ex- * perience with a capital E, and Four Gay Patches bs Coma Who, Colors run riot in this quilt made of scraps -- the more the merrier. It's just four patches, easy-to-piece. Use one block alone for a pillow cover. Pattern 784: charts, directions, pattern of patches, yardages for single, double-bed size. i 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 Toronto Ont. Print plainly PAT- TERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. A Send for a copy of 1959 Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book. It has Invely designs to order: embroi- dery, crochet, knitting, weaving, quiltirig, toys. In the book, a spe- cial surprise to make a little girl happy -- a cutout doll, clothes Send 25 cents for this book. ' NE HIRST our Family (bunselot | not concerned at all with the girl's state when they toss het a careless goodbye. You served this boy as Fx- hibit 9 or 19 in his book. Let CEE EEE IE that truth lie there, but use it to your advantage. To go steady with a boy from the very first date is to set him on top of the world, 'a flattering but foolish ges. * ture. Immediately you are cut vif from other dates, automa- * tically removed from circula- * tion. If your next beau wants * to go steady so soon, say "Oh I don't know you well "enough," and let him work to win whatever laurels you find * he deserves. That will put him on his tees, and you will head his list as one gir! that has to be shown. He expected you to fall on his neck, and then you'd have been like all the rest he has known. But YOUR favours are not to be had for «ee oe ow the asking. That's not good enough for a girl like you. -Remember this: Boys like to date the girl that other boys date. When they see her around with several, they be- gin to wonder what secret at- traction she has, and make it their business to find out. Yes, every boy has a line, The smart girl lets him toss it out, she nibbles at it, but she doesn't swallow the bait. Only when he has proved he is worth her time -- depend- able, considerate, and someone she's proud to be seen with --is he worth all your time --and even then he should be only on probation. * * * REBELLIOUS DAUGHTER "Dear Anne Hirst: I am only 16, and was looking forward to a fine summer with nothing to do but fun. But my father has asked me to work in his office part-time, with only two weeks offl I was mad about the whole idea and I told him so, but of course I will do -it. "Last term I studied hard, and I think the family owes me a good time till school starts again. I love my Dad, but I think he is being unreasonable. How do you feel about it? " BAP FN BE PE eB oEE EE EE ow IX DISGUSTED" * Your letter was far too long * to print, but from it, I gather * that you are so interested in * your father's business that * when you graduate from col- * lege you hope to take charge * of its woman's ¢* Then why do you object to * learning what you can dur- * ing this coming summer? * Look ahead. The more you * learn about the business, the * faster you will get ahead in * it. You will be surprised how * much you can pick up even in * half-days now. Your approach to it now is childish; you are not being a good sport. I expect that your father as a boy worked every summer through with never two weeks of! for fun. Remember that, and be fair; it will show your respect for his judgment, and bring you both closer to each other, If you are to be part- ners some day, that.comrade- ship cannot begin too. soon. *» tr * To Every Girl Who Wanis to Be Popular: It isn't the number of boys you date, it is who they -are (hat counts, Make sure any new acquaintance is worth your time . . . Anne Hirst has helped thousands of teenagers how to have the kind of fun that lasts. Write her at Box 1, 123 Eigh- teenth St, New Toronto, Ont. A joint checking account is never over-drawn by the wife. Its just under-deposited by her husband. EI BE ER TE TE EE TE TE Se ~ HULA HEEL--Hula hoop ring encircles shiny heel of this new shoe style from Rome. Another hoop up front is for the big . foe, replacing conventional straps. A minidture of a woman's face graces the rear of the shoe. ¥ department. | Early Millinery It is not a young industry, mil- linery. It dates back to 1798 when little, twelve-yr.-old Betsy Metcalfe, who lived in Provid- ence, R.I, saw an imported straw bonnet in a local shop window, Betsy liked it, so she went home, slit and plaited some oat straw and made herself 'a copy of the hat. A good Yankee, Betsy de- cided to sell her handiwork: she priced it at half the cost of the imported bonnet. That was enough for her neighbors. They demanded th~t she make more. - Twelve-year-old Betsy thereby became the mother of the Ame- rican' millinery industry. Soon, people all over New England started manufacturing straw bon- nets, too. Two Beston families started doing it in 1799; they made $340 worth of hats in 1800 In Medfield, Mass.,, two owners of a general store arranged to take straw braid instead of cash in payment for their goods. They gave the straw to. neighbour- hood women who sewed it into bonnets at home. " The industry grew rapidly. . . . American women were not con- tented, however, with just straw bonnets. They 'demanded -- and - got -- hats made out of all sorts of other materials. That meant the development of a new kind of industry. These new hats were created from flowers to feathers. .. Orig- "on a buckram or wire frame. They were trimmed with a wide variety of ornaments that ranged from flowers to feather. ... Orig- inally made-to-order, by 1850 they had become a factory item... Style, naturally, was the one doctrine of the millinery jndus- try. One year, American women were given ornate hats with in- tricate trimmings. A year later, as taste varies, they wanted sim- ple, almost untrimmed hats. -- - From "Spotlight on a Union," by Donald B. Robinson. UNDEREXPOSURE -- Uncropped picture affords behind - the scenes peek at lengths a pho- tographer will go to get the view he wants. With plenty of natural beach around, this prop was built in order to obtain low-angle shot of pretty Katy Liefheit. Gesundheit! For Arthur Window, of New South Wales, Australia, a sneeze had results of terrifying dimen- sions. At the itme he was driv- ing a truck loaded with wool bales and cigarettes. Sneezing suddenly, he lost control, crash- ed into two parked cars, re- bounded and hit a telegraph pole. His truck toppled over and burst into flames. . . _ He extricated himself and stumbled off to the nearest tele- phone boath to call the fire vrigade. When he got back all three vehicles were blazing mer. rily, Then his truck exploded, the blazing debris injuring two - onlookers. They had to be taken to hos- pitel along with himself. Alto- cether Window's sudden sneeze 1= reckoned to have cost $70,000! And that takes no .account of the three hospital patients. Men dont marry women on $25 a week anymore -- the girl must be making at least twice that. ' "simile, a. a aE] NO NEEDLE USED -- This young man is getting his. polio vaccine _in a much more pleasant way than the usual shot in the arm. He's testing a cherry-flavored, one-dose serum that is taken orally. | CLEEEN ZG , ppt 1d HRONICLES GINGER Gwendoline P.Clathe We didn't think it could hap- pen -- but it did. We got water - in our basement -- that was the night whene there was a three- quarter inch rainfall in many Ontario districts. I woke up in the night and heard a terrific wind driving rain against the front, of the housé;: From the window I could see floods every- where, including the road. Pres- ently I went downstairs, found the sump-pump working all right and only a small trickle of water across the floor. I thought there wasn't too much to worry about and went back to bed without waking Partner." About five o'clock he was awake and down- stairs and by that time it was a different storv. Water was com- ing in at several places. Worse than that the sump-pump wasn't operating properly. We couldn't take a chance on that quitting so a plumber was sent for. He put on a r,v switch and then it was all right. We thought we were lucky not having to buy a new pump. But even that would have been better than a flooded base- ment. However, there was still work to do -- sweeping water away from the furnace and over towards the drain. Later on Bob came to the rescue, fixed a pipe across the floor so there was better drainage. With that done we were able to sleep in com- fort. Next morning 'after listen- ing to the radio and hearing of the flood damage in so many dis- tricts we were ashamed to feel sorry for ourselves. For instance, one morning" at the hairdresser's the entire con- versation was about flooded base- ments -- and even of ground floors being under water. At ong drugstore eight inches of water at the street level and six inches in a nearby restaurant. One wo- man said come spring there would be a "For Sale" notice up outside their house. I can't see much point in that. I would say far better to. reinforce the walls against flooding. To sell one place and buy another might be jump- ing from the frying pan into the fire -- or maybe from a stream into a lake 'would be a bettet We may never have a situation like this again. After all it is only the result of so much frost in the ground there is no natural drainage for the super -abundance of surface water. And do you know what? When the rain stopped and the sun came out I went sloshing through ,the water to get the mail and there, if you please, was a crow 'strutting around in our backyard and a robin singing lustily from a tree-top. Insolent creatures -- it might be spring for them but it wasn't for us. They were both wrong anyway -- it wasn't spring for them "either. The next day. we were back to winter again. Yesterady afternoon Dee and family came in for a visit. I told her to bring skates for the _ children as we had plenty of ice. But by the time they got here the ice was covered with snow, Such quick change 22 looks. as + if we can nover, guess right, Af- ter playing with our toboggan for awhile the boys came -into - the house and it wasn't long be- fore Jerry provided us with a little excitement. Dee put him into the crib for a nap( we al- ways keep a crib into the spare room). Fifteen' minutes: later there was a terrific thump and' then a yell. Dee rushed into the bedroom and found Jerry on the' floor, flat on his tummy. Appar- ently he had tried to climb over the high side of the crib, couldn't quite make it and over- balanced. It is a mercy the good Lord watches over children and fools or Jerry would have a small -.chance of survival. He is more mischievous than all the others put together. And a most Two-Way Drama pl UN1ew PATTEKN For day, arrow-narrow sheath -- for dates, a romantic over- skirt to make of breezy chiffon or voile. Jiffy-sew--choose shan- tung, cotton or Bilk for dress. Printed Pattern 4790: Jr. Miss Sizes 9, 11, 13, 15, 17. Size 13 | dress takes 2% yards 39-inch fabric; overskirt 3% yards, Printed directions on each pat- tern part. Easier, accurate. Send FORTY CENTS (40¢) - (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern, Please print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER, = Sar 'Send order to ANNE: ADAMS, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St, New 'Toronto, Ont. ; S i . Raa el, ee P- Fast | angelic smile, of course. This morning I was lying awake thinking about daylight saving time which will soon be with us once again, And I was thinking what a handicap it Is to the farmer and how little dif- ference it makes to anyone else. And because it makes so little difference to town and city folk surely greater consideration could be given to the farmer when you consider the incon- venience he suffers from April to October. Usually he falls in line by putting; back the clock but - that doesn't dry the dew on the grass, And cows cannot, be" put out to pasture on wet alfalfa or they'll bloat. Nor can hay be raked or baled until it's dry: That means farmers lose hours of precious time, day after day, week after week. No one, other than the farmer, takes the least bit of notice. And yet, surely the farmer's -work is more important than the office worker's pleasure. The farmer is having , a hard - enough time as it is, with high production costs and low returns. * Prices paid for eggs and market hogs are ridiculously. low and many a farmer now faces "the necessity -- and the expense -- ° of drilling a new well during the coming season. And then to have DST wished upon him once again. Must the majority always win when the decision is so definitely against the interests of the minority -- that is, the far- mers? Blame The Sun For Crime Wave ? Two of the most spectacular sun-spots ever seen from the earth were observed by millions of people recently, Each spot-or "pimple" was about 100,000 miles in diameter -- moré than four times bigger than the earth. The white-hot vapours of & sun-spot appear dark only in contrast to the even greater blaze c¢i heat around them. As- tronomers say that they now know how hot sun-spots are -- 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit com- pared with 6,000 in the rest of the sun. -Sun-spas are "great tornado- like storms within the sun's at- mosphere. Intensive study by scientists of the sun's behaviour shows that these internal hur- ricanes operate in cycles of about eleven years. San Some people blame them for bad weather, trade depression, pe Nurse's Training not. required Trans-Canada Air Lines STEWARDESSES © Age 20-26 . @ Single @ Jr. Matriculation or Business equivalent @ Helght 52" to 57" Weight In proportion to . Nelght, but not over 130 Ibs. "Salary range $275:$400 Flue in English essential -- Additional languages and experi desirable, : Applicants able to meet the above qualifications should have a pleas ing personality and be of good appearance, Unable to co er applicants who wear glasses, contact lenses or full dentures, Please reply to nearest TCA Employment Office: 663 Yonge St.--Toronto 352 Donald $t.--Winnlpeg 'international Aviation Bldg., : Montreal crime 'waves, even wars. They claim that in the past sun-spots.. gales, = _ have cpincided with floods, mysterious air crashes and the fading - out of" short- wave radio, ; ; When the" early astronomers first detected sun-spots -- the Chinese first noted them .about A.D. 170 -- scientific men of the day. ridiculed the suggestion that the sun. could "have "blemishes" on its surface. But telescopes later confirmed there were rents in the glowing at- mosphere. £0 A Russian scientist some years ago insisted that all human des- tiny was controlled by sun-spots. He pointed out that the sun was a colossal radio transmitter and that - its "radio waves" across space in vast streams and at speeds close to that of light 'All this increased electric en- ergy pouring upon. our - planet produced character changes, he added. "There's .a letter from our men in the Sahara Desert branch again," said the assistant manager of an oil company. "They say they're short of water." : "They're always short of water out there." "l know, but this time it's serious -- the stamp's stuck on ~ with a pin." oy ISSUE 14 -- 1959 FASHION HINT speed - Ty' Si A