Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1948)

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NEW BISSELLS* NEED NO HANDLE PRESSURE ! New "Bisco-matic”* Brush Action adjusts automatically to any rug — thick or thin! Sweeps clean with one easy swoop, even under beds and chairs! Actually the pick-up is so perfect you never have to press on the handle at all! Available now in limited quantities at Bissell dealers only — complete with exclusive "Sta-up” Handle and the new, easier "Flip-O” Empty. NEW BISSELL SWEEPERS with patented "Bisco-matic” Brush Action What Should I Do? ( Continued from page 68) school together or t vith one of them participating in the G. I. educational benefits, to write to me, telling their problems and how they have solved them. Claudette Colbert Dear Miss Colbert: A year ago I married one of the finest men in the world. He is so good and kind that I know I am a lucky girl. However, nothing in life can be perfect it seems. I knew before we married that his mother would have to live with us. This has not been easy as she means well, but she and I don’t do things in the same way, and I feel that it is my home. My husband’s oldest brother has become a hopeless invalid. He and his wife have always been the type who spent everything they made even faster than they made it. My husband has spent hundreds of dollars on doctor bills for his brother, and has paid their mortgage payments for the past five years. Now his *wife has made the statement that she is too young to be tied to a cripple, so she has left him and we have had to take him into our already crowded home. I will soon be thirty, so I would like to have my family as soon as possible. I have been scrimping and saving so that we could bring children into the world with some sort of security, and could start to buy our own home. Now all that will be impossible if we must accept the burden of this brother-in-law, along with my motherin-law. Can you think of some way to lighten the burden? Margaret E. I’m certain that there are a number of things you can do to aid your husband in this difficulty. First of all, you must remember that his brother and his mother may be very dear to him so don’t antagonize him. Try to work along with him, easing his burden. Your sister-in-laiv should be forced, legally, to accept at least part of the responsibility for her husband. You should see your public defender about this as I am certain that she can be forced to contribute to his support. Since your mother-in-law attempts to run the house, why don’t you allow her to accept the responsibility along with the nursing care of her ailing son? Why not return to work, setting aside your entire salary for a home and the welfare of the family you hope to establish. With care, you could save a nice nest egg in two or three years. Meanivhile, you would have given your mother-in-law the place she really wants, and you would have eased your husband’s conscience about his duty to his brother. Try to work out a comfortable solution that will engender no friction between you and your husband. Don’t lose your temper nor become irritable; try to be constructive, and to attack the problem with cheerful efficiency. Claudette Colbert Dear Miss Colbert: I am twenty years old. Three years ago I started going with a girl I met in school. Until that time I had spent most of my time with my mother, taking her shopping, to movies, driving her to call on her friends, etc. When I started going steady with this girl, my mother was upset because. I spent all my time with the girl. The situation was temporarily solved when I went into the Navy where I spent two and one-half years. During that time U. •. PATENT OFF* Bissell carpet sweeper co., grand rapids 2, mich