Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
{ 1
16/&‘ MEa
2oy TN T
O R R
PROBLEMS OF WARTIME
MARRIAGE
. Parents can do a great deal to
keep their children from drifting
into unhappy marriages, if they
.will start early enough in the
swork of making and maintaining
true home. The home is the
;lace of peace and contentment
sand. of preparation ror ousy, suc
icessful, and happy lives, If chil
ldren are brought up to regard
their own home as something
%acred, as a place where happiness
sand sanctuary from the outside
‘world may always be found, these
same children will work to estab
dish new homes of the same sort.
. Our great-grandmothers were
taught that marriage was the only
career for a woman, and they
avere made to feel that a wedding
eremony -was the great goal to
ward which every girl was born
o move. The modern girl is taught
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to look upon her individual career
and material success in that career
as the only goal toward which an
intelligent woman can move, and
on marriage as a side dish at the
banquet.
The girl whom you wish to save
from a possible heartache and the
tragedy of divorce should be
brought up to steer a middle
course somewhere between the
old-fashioned idea and the new
one. Marriage, home, and children
still constitute the ideal career
for a woman. They always will.
Let her have the career and the
profession if she wants to—as a
side line. Certainly she should
know the happiness of work and
the -pleasures of independence,
both for herself and for her chil
dren. But she should be taught
that in a home and in children
she will find her truest happiness,
and the first requirement in that
instruction is a belief in the digni
ty of the home,
The mating instinct continues
in war as it does in peace. But
the war marriage raises many
problems. ‘ )
The young couple marrying in
wartime are obsessed with the
wrong kind of time—the fleeting
moments allowed them before the
man receives his orders to go
abroad. The time that is going to
count in the war marriage, as in
any other, is the long time ahead.
If they are to be happy together
then, they must stop now to weigh
their feeling for each other, their
knowledge of each other.
At a time when life is hectic and
uncertain, when the future seems
problematical, it is easy to forget
that the day must come when the
couple who has married so fren
ziedly will have to settle down to
a world at peace. When that day
comes and the marriage faces its
real ‘test, it will be the marriage
with the fewest obstacles to hurdle
which will have the best chance
of survival and happiness. Then
the uniform will be gone and the
hysteria of war. The stranger will
be a husband. If his interests and
tastes, his culture and sense of
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!values, his attitude toward life,
his religion and his background
are similar to his wife’s, they will
have a fair opportunity of coming
out all right.
But if they ignored these dif
ferences when they got married
in haste, if they knew each other
so little that they did not even
discover what the other was like,
they are headed for trouble. The
faith of people getting married
that “it will come out all right”
is like a savage’s Taith in blacki
'magic. You magnify the qualities
you like and ignore the qualities
you dislike. But marriage is & long
affair and the habits that you
disregard now cannot be disre
garded when you are married.
You are not going to change
the person you marry into some
one .else you approve of. You are
gonig to have to adjust yourself
to the kind of person he is. Mar
riage can bring out your best
qualities but it will. inevitabls
bring out the worst. too. Stop and
think of these things before you
rush in haste to the license bureau.
Next: Why I Oppose the War
Marriage.
ROUGE
rouge has gone to war. Enough
rouge is used annually on only
one of the machines used for the
polishing of precision lenses to
supply about 11,000 women with
rouge for a year. |
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FLOWER BRIGHT
RAYON PRINTS
7.90
Keep your temperature down,
and your spirits way up, by
looking cool and unwilted
through the summer. It's easy
—just wear light, delicately
draped rayon prints with clip
ped sleeves, eyelet trimming
for softness and flattery.
MATTRESS COVERS
Washable with tape bound
seams, sturdily made _69
with button closing .. 1
NUBBY TERRY
BATH TOWELS
Spanking white, with bright
borders. Quick ¢
drying. 39¢ to 9
Mattress Protector
Absorbs perspriation, keeps
you cool! .98
washablet .. -.. .y wy
Printed Lunch Cloths
Sunlit colors, prints and Mex
ican patterns. .19
ADRBOSINtR . . L 5
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PRESERVES ' 23°
MARGARINE :: 24°
ORANGE vt % 18°
CUT BEANS %’ 12°
- PDouble=Fresh Coffée
Gold Label I Silver Label
2 49| 2:: 41°
APPLE SAUCE *” 21°
GOLD MEDAL « .. 10°
SILVER LABEL ~ ;. 18°
CHEERIOATS - - .. 12°¢
KELLOGG'S <. o 9%
V,!NEGAR e «0 ‘
20 MULE TEAM o o 10°
PORK & BEANS »w .’ 12°
KARO SYRUP ::u' 15°¢
TELLAM’S oo > 25°
GRAPE JELLY - = 20°
ASTOR TEA % 2‘3¢
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| Fat Back Ib. 18¢
1" Fillets, Ih; -42
1 Mullets, Ib, _ _ 28¢
CA.T v LRy Wl
1 Fish, b, _. - _4B¢c
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Trout, Ib, . _4o¢ W
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Croakers, .. 27¢ dl
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PR (0 - »
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; FANCY HILEY BELLE . 3
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TR\ OKRA 1
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i FANCY CORN, ear ...... 5c
| CLAPp ] CROWDER PEAS, 21bs . B3c
Bibviars | FANCY YAMS, 211b5...... 19¢ :
CEREA| OR ' \RE[) RIPE :
; 2 OATMEAL i-»\;\WATERMELONS,").... I
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Pkgs, ۤN R L 45, it i
W T riple-F’i'esh.* I
| SANDWICH
| BREAD
| "
il TomATO JUICE
STOKELY ' 11°
AUNT JEMIMA s
GRITS . ' 9
Pkg.
" STOKELY'S TOMATO 4
| CATSUP > 17°
il FRENCH'S CREAM SALAD }
l MUSTARD ;> 13°
| BALLARD'S
SELF-RISING -
it - FLOUR
10-Lb. Bag 25-Lb. Bag
64° 1%
TOMATOES, Ib. 16¢
CAPBAGE 1. lil
CARROTS, 2 behs. ...... 1c
CELERY bk ... . .
CANTALOUPES, Ib ..... 8¢
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SUNSHINE {
Hi-Ho j
CRACKERS ‘
Dze,
DURKEE
SALAD DREssiNG
J’::-oz, 27¢
OUR PRIDE
BREAD
2 L::\:s lsc
BORDEN'S
HEMO
e 99°
THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1945
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| .
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| RAZOR
| BLADES
Il Pkg. of 2 Pkg. of 5
10:_25¢
[ oo iy e
| e e asred sb o
| 1t is available.
l Sweetheart
’ COMPLEXION SOAP
Reg. Bar Lge. Bar
|6O 11°
P &G Soap
3 Bars 14c
ivory Soap
PERSONAL SIZE
i 2 Bars 9¢ «
P Mt 00l
Octagon
SOAP POWDERS. i
2 Pkgs. 9¢ ;
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| Palmolive
[ COMPLEXION SOAP
Reg. Bar Bath Size
| 3.20° 2019
| v
} Rinso
Med. Pkg. Lge. Pkg.
9.l°¢ 23°,