Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1950 — Page 22
Ta Mrs. Niannels—
Even if Wrong, Men
Don’t Like Nagging
DEAR MRS. MANNERS:
{ 80 YOU'D LAUGH it off if your husband came home with Hp-
stick on his shirt? Nuts.
{ | Have you ever dressed-a couplenof kids for school, done the | washing, gone to the grocery, paid the milk man and cleane [cooked good meals, and have your husband fail to show? gave no explanation, just showed -
| vices, i [their husbands are.
lan “It's none of your business {where I've been” attitude you'd ‘smile and smile, no doubt. If you did you'd be fit for psychiatric examination. | Idon’t think you believe women]
“tare human, subject 6 the same’
{ tempers, temperaments, faults, virtues and the like that They are
{human, nevertheless, and they do
{ |
possess faults. They are responsive to good treatment the same a8 their husbands.
Why expect a wife to take any
kind. of treatment and smile? You {don't expect men to do this, and
men wouldn't,
Neither will wives
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{who have any spirit at all. I'm talking of red-blooded American
women
You certainly are biased where men are concerned. You shouldn't be. Men. have had it easy too long. You'd think the laws of God and {the country were just made for women the way men act. No wonmany home break-ups when a woman in your position constantly defends the men's wrong attitudes and be-
nee ro d-H Club Prizes at
der there are so
littles women Are a man,
How grossly unfair to take it
for granted wives cause break-ups. If an analysis were made of 100 marriages that went on the rocks I'm certain you'd find in 90 the
{wives had tried very hard and
got little co-operation from the husbands,
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I wouldn't want to" be a man | and be bored with the. wordy, wimpering women or scared to death of the smart ones knowing how to use the tentacles in
one of us and I like us, but I get pretty upset when we think we | | ean hold our men merely by
wouldn't like to be nagged at if | I were a man, even if 1 were
gotten around, just as | can as a woman, with the right treatment. | You've wasted a lot of time | telling me why Pm wrong and
haven't mentioned a thing you St.
may do wrong. You probably | waste a lot of | Your husband but never analyz-
i ing yourself or him. The
Before you married him he surely was late occasionally. You had a lot less grip on him and a lot less at stake then, but you played it smart. You gave “him the doubt or made him want to stop hurting your feelings and be anxious to spend more time with you because you were so darn sweet, Interesting and understanding.
Lest We Forget
i TT WAS mad at the world when] I climbed out of bed. I'd slept poorly and worked too hard. | Like most women, I took my bad temper out on my husband. After he left I sullenly drank my coffee, reading about the Korean
invasion. It was only a few years,
ago I didn't have a husband to| pick on. He was overseas in service, 1 wasn't thinking then] of his little faults and our minor| differences, - I was thinking of] ithe day he'd come home to me. | I went to the phone and called {my husband. I didn’t mention the! | argument or the war. I just told; him I loved him. When he came home I let him know I was glad, as always, to have him. It took one war to make some ,0f us appreciate our husbands. It was a hard-learned lesson Wwe shouldn't forget. i JUST A WIFE, Always expecting the telegram from thé War Depart- |
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ment and awaiting his letters | that arrived late put Slmpor. tant things in the unimport: place they belong, Husba and wives became grateful for each other's .love. They took | the —time to teil each other about it. It is too bad they forget so quickly. : I hear the griping woman of
r and! If he
lg
i
|
{ | { 1 i i 4 { { i
they were treated when your fa-
Told to Listen
business world learn what his
employers like and dislike? My | father tells me things about his experiences as a beginner | | but things have changed since | then. I am a young man, 19 | years old, and a high schoal | graduate. I hope to be an office | manager some day.
By JAMES GRAYSON _Employers like to be treated as:
ther started out. They dislike the {same things now that they did then, particularly those negative
war years walling again over |
the Korean war,
“I just can’t |
go through another war,” she |
says. She'll be lonesome. So what? She'll be safe, only slightly inconvenienced by
shortages, and pretty certain |
she'll be alive the next day. Surely she can take loneliness if that man she loves can wallow in mud, march dead-tired and zig-zag gunfire. That type of woman doesn’t make good use of her time or count her blessings, peace-time or wartime,
Let Mrs, Manners and readers of The Times share your problems. Write in care of The Times, Mn Ws + Maryland St.
State Hit $21,301
Four hundred and
events with cash premiums total- Which: were real ing $21,301 will be open to 4-H|/have also seen men lose club members in the first three Jobs because of their disregard
If you have a personal job
problem, write James Grayson in care of The Times,
traits which make employees poor {workers. Employers do not change much over the years in their likes land dislikes of the characteristics and actions of those who {work for them. What your fa[ther learned about { therefore, is good for you to know, Weigh carefully his suggestions. He is, of course, interested in | your welfare and will take pains to give you the best of his obser{vations and experience. Some of you fellows perhaps get tired of
hearing about the experiences o
your elders. I'll admit that some But you
of it can be tiresome. must learn to separate the whea
from the chaff, The average father wants his children to avoid some of the mistakes he made. There are very few fathers who eighteen haven't made mistakes,
some oO boners.
days of the 1950 Indiana State for some of the boss’ ideas.
Fair beginning Aug. 31. Dean Harry
the first three days of the fair.| The. 4-H home economics exhibits | in the Youth Auditorium will be! open to the public daily from 8 wrong, but I'm sure TI could be '& Mm. 10 9 p. m.
Fined and diled
In ‘Peeping Tom' Case
Rufus Hines, 41, of 1449 Kappes vesterday was fined $50 and| sentenced to 30 days) the Indiana state farm on a| charge of peeping into a house. imposed by Judge pro tem John Carson of Muncipal Court 3.
sentence was
activities, said
{
{
|
Hines was arrested night De-|
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ROBERT E. KIRBY
Kirby
MORTUARY 19th AND MERIDIAN Wa-3331
To Father's Comments you the real low-down. How does a beginner in the |
experience. If you haven't had l | rome enough ex, - of Torms to Suit to try to benefit by that of some You
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