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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1929-06-13, Page 6Ip .._, Ile oar efforts do not have Some lul- Bishop at London mediate result or brine its saltie via- f ibis <n edit; brit, it we take a large y� Life 'Peak Master tis wliae Inter lity alseen I an bi.._ in bview and are working' for an unseen V...----- 14s ' work out I Pleas,allows us to do our• little bit in the shoat' span of life {.lotted to tis, then "tete mind is:its own peace,,, and we ate not undulyworried about immediate results, There are some lines of Wendell Holmes I found written up in my dear old father's study after he was deed: So might I, toiliug morn to eve Some purpose in Illy life fulfil To live and move when 1 ani still. 1 ask not with that work combined �lelle, whose pnderful ability and My name shall down the ages move, 'York is being now fully appreciated I not think teat the question which But that my toil some end limy find_ Which ..man may bless and God Mere Chance of Winnirxg Ex- hibition at Oxford Deter. mined .Course AIM AND PURPOSE ust Slogging on Without Hope 'is Depressing B usiness With all due respect to Lord Hal - hie started in his 1Vlemoirs is really evorth discussing at any length, ob- Serves the Bishop of Loudon in this Puteresting article hi this "Loudon Daily Express. For good or ,for i11, five are .what we are, we have done *fiat, we have done, and we have left 1 redone what cannot as a rale now be glone. • But I expect that the answer which She gave' to hie distiuguished friend !wonlrl be the answer that most of us .voitld give. He says: "We are alit greatly to hider -rate the part which accident and good luck have played in. the shaping of our careers." Even if we add a. belief in an over -ruling Providence, few can deny by what ap- parent chances our whole lives have been affected. It was the mere .chance of winning sin exhibition at Oxford which deckled any father (who had six other sons to educate) to send me there and re- verse the whole family tracition, which hadbeen "Trinity College, Cambridge." Bat for that 'I should never have been appointed Head of 'Oxford House, or in all probability coin to London at all. t That is merely an illustration of ap dirigible was seeking a landing place.) Parent chances which have great et- ne Cuers, 'France, May 18.—Dr. Eck - feet upon one's life, and which circ d f the Graf Zeppelin has. no right to expect to happen. again if one hacl to live one's life Into the salon. over again. I might easily have ac• eepted the'small family living offered me at the age of thirty, instead of • Making the great venture of a plunge. 1.nto the unknown when I accepted the call to live in East London for nine years. I could not be bold enough. to be sure that I could again leave the '}security of a settled post at Lichfield And "face the music." I might, if I lived my life over again, have made "the great refusal." The Unhappy People approve, This seems to suns up the situation. Eckener's Skill Saved Zeppelin, Passenger Says Water Ballast, Dumped Ship is About to Strike Mountain, Avoided Crash as Parachutes For Life Belts Strange CUat4cl From Japan i Dance on Board Ended by Grim Drama of the Skies (The following story of the struggle of the Graf Zeppelin to reach safety was written by' Alexander R. von Kryha, a passenger', for The Associ- ted Press, front notes made while the PREMiER LEAVES •io. CALL ON TH-E MIKADO THE HO LIDAYS AND H-HEALT.' Heaitlt prOtectlon, for the holiday maker his come to he regarded eger' extensivee s a important necessity, automobile traffic .of recent Seal's dais .Caused tou'ist Camps and highway re- freshment booths to spring., ui, in great nnmbors. Unless these tourist services are properly cared for. they mai' be the means of spreading dis- ease. .Improper sanitary measures in chiding polluted, drinking water, fly nuisance,',infected utensils, contamin- ated onf.a sin ated food and refreshtneuts must all be -avoided. In order that the tourist and others ,,using these facilities ora the highways may be safeguarded the Provincial Department . of Health in - !poets all tourist can ps and highway refreshment booths each year. Where •conclitioris are found satisfactory, and equivalent to the standards adopted by the Department eonspicuons 'ban. Oars of approval' are given. These are displayed iii 1promihent positions by the camp dr 'heath and indicate to. the tourist where the safest and best services can be secured. Water Nothing a'equires more consideration than the water we chink when away teem hoihite If contaminated, it mai cause typhoid or other illness, A few ,sinirile . precautions are all that are neCeSSar'y. Swimming One' •of the., summer's main attrac- tions I' swimming. Swimmers can- not easily avoid. .taking some water into the mouth .,nose and ears; conse- quently the Water should .be as safe tis that required for drinking imposes. All indoor and artificial pools must be chlorinated in order to protect the bathers.. In open streams or lakes, on the -other hand, it is seldom feasi- ble .to treat the, water by chlorine as in closed pools. Under these condi- tions the bather must exerices clic- cretion about the quality of the water 1 'which he swims. Rnnniltg.streams r lakes may bo receiving sewage or' eller, commander o li5s. house en acute to the United 'States, walked wears shoes in his Thursday Premier Tanaka of, Japan putting on his :shoes ,nese yieaviug 1 of the ship Thu Y • 'western costume. No Japanese' afternoon as the passengers were to appear at the palette in dancing merrily on the tunes of aI own home. phonograph and, _striking a serious attitude, said: mechanics at the various lavers, see}c `.`Ladies and gentlemen, I have bad ing to find favorable air currents. news to impart to you. We must re- The ship hopped up and down sev- turn to Friedrichshafeu. There is aril hundred feet at times. `,lien sud- denly trouble with the :motors, but d. straight ahead there loomed out there is no danger. Remain calm, we of the deepening gloom of the evening shall reach henna safciy .Friday even- the abrupt flank of a small mountain ing or Saturday morning." on. which it appeared the ship must The announcement came as a thun- crash. derstroke out of the clearest sky to the LEAPED OVER MOUNTAIN 13ut, as I have said, I honestly: think passengers, who were not aware o such. a. question is not worth discuss= any difficulty to the motors. The ing at an)/ length. What is much dancing stopped immediately to he d question: I shipswung about to return more serious is the secon q h ve I ]Fon. the elite you gained what are the lessons life has taught 0 of sial work. I always think that cel.na. Such was the dramatic m ers of the Graf Zep- pelin were made aware heir flight to the Unite a While the passengers waited tensely, the ship suddenly leaped several hun- dred feet .in the air like a trained steeplechaser. Everyone.. gasped until it was explained that Dr: Eckener,. aware of the danger, large amount o wa other contamination so close to the i(coin preferred) bathing area as to Blake it unsafe for HOW ;TO ORDER PATTERNS. use. Safety demands that ere look l TO, nam and PATTERNS. pial around before you dive. Where pos,iii Write y Bible, use artificial pools. They are treated for your safety: Milk it all food away from `l 'milk. Milk is re- sponsible ofn The protects the Pierce, at clown, the long swell Consumer against this danger. Safe Power Where this can -1 C�r��ia1� T A ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c n stamps or coin (coin preferred; it carefully) for each number and All These Are Mine Be careful abut mine these none can address your order to Wilson Pattern All these are , home particular y Service, 78 West Adelaide St., Toronto. take from me— • spouslble far the spread etch sick Patterns sent by an early mail. ierce. arrows of the rising sun sick- ness Pasteurization sent by a 'Thates of the sea ... milk is pasteurized. COOL AND SAIART, A Desiga No. 820,—You can't :;e in fashion this 'season and be without a sleeveless dress that cane -be worn for all sports occasions. You'll like it nils -"-e of washable .flat silk crepe, crepe satin, georgette crepe, men's silk shirt- ing f abric, figured madtas, pique, printed linen or crepe de chine. der• the 36 -inch size, only '2% yards of 40 - inch material is required. Pattern , 18, 26 No. 820 88, had nd sizes inches bust years, 86, 38, measure. Price 20c in stamps or coin of 'Various Milks The chime of evening bells when , not be secured it may be rendered! clay is clone. I safe by heating to 142 F. for 30 nn t S. I raw llll uta $ ilk must be used, ge All these are urine; Life's gifts of love' it from a dairy free from infectious• Dairy specialists at the New York to ale, diseases, and from cows that are free Agricultural. Exerpiluent Station in • My treasures fair which nope may from tuberculosis.Geneva have been investigating the winds or Springtime in light Sanitary Conveniences factors that affect the creaming abil- The of Springtime blown g g Out -door closets are the usual.sani- ity of milk, we are told in the Nevr and free,. • that . ar conveniences at camps earl sural- York "Times." A • conparison has Sea foam beneath grey gullst r ges A pail closet—with been made of Holstein and Jersey 'did. and wheel. Cows, with result that milk from • ashes throt�'n on to have expert t manner in g had dumped -a stet cottab • th which the passeng f ter ballast, thus lots of dry 'earth or t � e you is the joy d that tiled these with the leas been found • Undoubtedly dey the first to failed lightening the ship. passengers United States had'Si life's ed every week and made fly-proof—is equal capacities for producing cream The last thrill for. the p g if ueverui siee were Ito mineeaiintt °see, the con tents .after each visit—clean- tzl Proportion to the amount of fat in ebefore the Yet the ` totle's definition of .happiness can- Then, after a long, hard pull over the came as the airship, flying silent more sanitary than a pit closet. A Arts eli e e ori a sur- partt of Lionand over the southern latest day, bettered, "Thefought wind and with all her motors route r i • locked within my Memory small quantity of kerosene added to the mills. "Milk from Jersey and not' be that theof France, the Zeppelin I believe . averaged fifty miles an hour en Seen e } *{ads' the pail helps to keep it free from i Holstein Cows has the Bower to pro - end aessfuh energy -"I • per cent. of cream layer sally unhappy People are the 'for headway past Nimes, ;4lontel{star f .to the landing field at Cuers. The flies and odors.each per cent. of only >. ' h hi was ter- mos C Marquardt, coag Dawn, chum1ng bells, Spring tit Flush closets are, of duce foul 1 fat in the milk," white sea sT,tAy- , t desirable, but. chemical for dairyspecialist says J. C. at the station, who points out that the establishment of a creaming power factor for normal milk is an impor- tant advance in the study, and that knowledge gained from further stud- ies is expected to prove of special in. terest to the dairy industry. He adds: "An exhaustive study 'of the factors affecting the creaming of milk has nleiit of inter:Entl your I been undertaken in the station daisy appreciation of in the laboratory. The first step in this froth those. Canada's liege slogan In app' orders- work was to establish a creaming ilk of a al m should idiga shipbuilding power factor for norm s}iotilcl .guide• us more in the future UseCYe Y strong, feeds on grass high and a low fat content. For this +_ u talking about?" than it has in the past. t i e de5cl purpose milk: from a Jersey and from What are you b understand dd some of ---•;• a Holstein herd has been used. EVERYONE ELSE these other peoples an 1 post," reads h to itis own, Au impartial _"It is possible to conclude from } t f tl "Late manager wants is p its strength normal cream. In spite of the tension of the mo i to be in a way the interpreter of btl.er I La i obsorver might suppose that if food these studies that the meet, the other passengers who had peoples among one's own."—N. Pain- an advertisement. Perhaps es if he winnere i for muscle understood the gp:im warning' which, leve in the Revue cls %'ranee. not late 1 I tit Ile. in idle. That is not a mere copybook maxim, but the result of a life's experience. Even in Bast London, so long as a vas not sweated or underpaid, and Valence. •passengers thought t e s p Just as the sun was setting in the; p toilets, employing a caustic solution, western hazy horizon Friday I tale to be blown over the 1<Ieciiterran-i —F: noisiest iVIoitlunan, in Wi11 sans tours , troubled Y b t by slcillfni manoeuvering she monthly, 1 gra well adapted for use at summer afternoon Captain Christian Kiser, ficial German passenger, entered, "Whatever Victoria Times (Lib.) the ultimate action of Congress may be however,. the Government at Ot- i; , Inter -Empire Trade of- it the down and was quickly tethered cottages. They can be had at a rea- sonablehands cost, and are installed either indoors or out. When givenreason- able attention, they are fly -proof, free from odors, and quite satisfactory. eau, came by the .strong rands men 'on the field. -��— A .Mission taws should lose no time in malting "The iaas its elite of. each some plans for a .more intensive clever try 11as as its mission the improve - its its pita traclec "Buy meat of the genius of that country, to op manifest in their highest forms all the nuances of thought and feeling which chi lie v salon as the ship was tacking alpou he enjoyed his. work. We spent our time at the Oxford House in hasping l above Valence. him also to employ and enjoy (a1 gaadiesr. Rand gentlemen: There and leisure, but the carpenter, the boot- i inain calm. Remove are your1 bag to ldnd. re- maker and the weaver, who abound inGeneral sielence g1or ed the d." •Spitklfields, clearly enjoyed. their I nouncement. All, or almost all, of the n - work. e1`e was an old 1pootntaker in passengers made for r thee oi• ieomen ThiBethnal Green who MAcle My hoots, their baggage, when on •sen4 acseneers in a high-pitched voice characterise the personality there is Foods and Fads 'Phe Rev. the Hon. Edward Lytton all the time I was in Beth:nai iii p and at St. Paul's, and finally put up i exclaimed: over his little dwelling, "Boatntaker to the Bishop of Loudon." He en -LAUGHED joyed making these boots till the last day of his life, 'and bringing -them up to Fulham Palace. - Achievement Of course, the lamentable feature of modern industry is that the sub -di - vision of work necessitated by ala- i ger, who understood no German, ilia chinery does, to a certain extent, de- l re was troublee ou pe ahead h adInust and laaa the. stray the joy of workmalrsh 1 e joy {ship, But, roughly speaking, it is' which is the' plied. "Now 1 iinde st nd,right with lit'islquite of a successful "energy .dearest and most satisfying . joy of all right." lieI :think that it must essfuh'e to felt igive I thein With parachutes instead wrapped ofathe usual be,d in One sense, SLLCC the full joy. The world may know l lifebelts of steata:ships the passengers nothing of it, and the mail himself . watched as the Zeppelin manoeuvred May have no so-called "fame," but � above Valence and Montelhnar from lite sense of 'Isomethiug accomplished,' 3.30 pan. until 5 p.m, in the inost un- usual "lifeboat" drill ever held in the air. BECOMES .A MERE BALLOON. The Graf. Zeppelin by this time had completely lost all control of steering and was turned into a there balloon, country among others. another 1111555011 Which must also be filled; itis-toand profoundly hosoulso 1 d th who buy ft om Nineteenth Century (Loudon). It is the fundamental conviction that an . a therefore a man by stuffing himself with the w c t flesh of the animal will a the as ing power of holstein and Jersey is so important p5rant would imitate the ox in his I milk is equal when the layers of -four hours had been spoken lin German, broke out * — prover _ cream formed after twenty-four Y al roar of laughter. al chat alone. 'Lindbergh, ��disappear because feed5ug, and; instead of turning .the fo to a genes It is typic noble beast into, g were measured. It to the passer aColoy over a whole Some Husbands f Fruits herbs Holstein milk It was then explained1 , waret lie flies non eh •e's no place like home.mal tissue, would I tiller to call an his fiancee, �— Japanese Tenders Royal Welcome something done," must be present with hinh, to give him the full joy. Richard Wilson, who worked for thirty-six years in a poor parish in Stepney, said to me on his deathbed, "I suppose I am the happiest man ted by the wind. continually and I buried hint the wealth of affection who ever lived,'" and certainly when buffeted drifting toward the Mediterranean in and• gratitude from his poor people ing spite of the one -motor that was still Thee suddenly his 1st e I , • array well have made hire happy, an _• the same mright be said of Father 'Wainwright after his fifty-five years'' work at St. Peter's, Londoin Docks. This really is, I think, the answer to the third question, Is achievement the only way to peace of mind? Certainly not, if you mean by it vis one of then number to go to the nevi ibis acliievetlietlt which the world will anon cabin where Dr,: Eckcner with I his officers were. sitting quietly in applaud and crown withso its Withipat I gKpnd tion; but merely to slog on without their seats The doctor's son, end without any belief that it their throbbing. T en .. tis a motor stopped after several coughing spells, sputtered and died. The dreaded niintral, blowing from the northwest, was pushing the help- less Zeppelin toward the sea ata speed of: forty miles an hour; The passen- gers thoroughly alarmed, delegated lave to ltdpe c ,,.en e , eves - said does the slightest r teas at the steering wheel, good is a depress- Dr, Eckener in response to a ing business, and we U{shops l tion, said that it was imperative to look. carefully round to see if we are find a landing field. allowing any' of our sten to:get into , !HEADED a lanEOR MEDITERRANEAN this hopeless state. - o a (Ines. Plying in before the 'wind and headed mss round to i � y g .. , with It really all comes n of itpotfve. What are we really � straight for th�o�idiinithe steering, tib aiming at ill our lives? If we are I only , one motor elin went through the it t°tally 'anti frankly Only ccnsid the Graf app errttg. is Y tons hour of the entire vorlel attd judging the work of most nt0itie hirnstil"P. directed JAPANESE PRINCE O tg.ts DUKE OP GLOUCESTER a gory mass • of ask'ant- 11 • , and greens were after all not the best aid most natural food. Instead of which, what happens? He calls the vegetarians faddists and goes his way with a smile on his face, as from a problem solved! A faddist is a man who; on a point of not first-class im- portance, thinks and acts differently from the majority. The majority dub flint wit a name implying that while al ,the time ac• •and also; �� as , that normal JerseY and will produce approximately four per eeilt. of cream layer for each per cent. of fat in the milk when the lat- ter is held at a low . temperature. "Holstein milk was found to cream more Completely and uniformly dur- ing two and four-hour periods than does Jersey milk, The age of the sow, the season and the period of lac- ,n„, tation did not seem to Have any ma- terial influence on the creaming ca - he is wrong).. lcnowledging that they know nothing 1 paoity of milk from either breed. T he about the matter whatever, but secret- Health of the aliilnal, however, Ives a ly believing he i5 i•igitt. factor, for in most cases sick COWS ' i produced an abnormally deep cream Railway Construction layer." Windsor Border Cities Star (Ind. Lib.) ; Oiie of the most optimestic signs in Canada today is the energy being 'displayed by both the Canadian Pacific and Canadian National Rail- ways towards branching out and eit- pending their services. Each company looks forward to a busy season and hundreds pf miles of new. tracks are to be started, Particularly -in the West is there intense activity. Not only does this centre around the Hud - soft Bay route, but,both lines are mak- ink plaits to give better service to the urines and the farms. as acebrdod Et roYal welcome when Duke of C#I4ucester,, Prince Henry, w ,y Mikado, Prince i like 'old escort him to Tokio., he arrived In Japan to confer the Order. of the Cotter on the 14 this i Ulliehibn journed to 5 oicahama to gr the p an action bir its immediate cited, flight. Ili. 3'.ckenei then we shall be terribly disappeint.ocl his. son at the steering wheel and the', THIS CAN'T PE TRUE "1Vho is that behind tis?" asked the motorist of a man beside hien. "Only a womlan ' driver;," said the man beside him, ,,• The motorist quickly turned th' wheel to the right, the ear bit the ditch, flopped into the niud, turned turtle a conl?le of times and smashed.) The motorist got out front beneath the wreck and yelled: "Thank heavet We' ed,' She; 10. love to go to college: HE 1f you Went to a co,educa-, t%ontl college, you'd hatter. Incubators capable of de;‘ling with; 50,000 eggs at once are 1tt a a� `ou poultry farts et Elten, Gerl,�ia Y