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Zurich Herald, 1931-01-01, Page 7Make Thest0eauty wolves For 1931 ,,,q,q More Than Ever, Fern - Mine Loveliness Looms High hi the Social Whirl If .everyone kept every New Year's resolution made in the bright hopeful hours of the.. young year --what a wondex'Et1m world this would be! Yet there al'e always a few resolu- tions we do keep. And women who realizethe importance . of retaining their youth, and gaining ;note beauty with •each year should count among their resolutions the vow to follow the laws of beauty c'aily throughout 'the- entire year. Beauty lies more in clear, wen - eared -for skins, well -brushed hair, clean sparkling teeth, and all evi- dences of health, cleanliness and in- telligence • than in mere doll -like prettiness. Beauty can be acquired. Not pee - haps the itind of beauty that will add °your name to, the list • of immortal beauties, but 'certainly the kind of beauty that Will improve your own looks many times. No woman today cares to be placed in•the category of beautiful but dumb; neither men noir women tolerate in their society a dumb or stupid person. The old days when mere doll -like prettiness was an advantage have .passed, We ni<ust have some cleverness, some mental advantages to go along- with our appearance. However, she who hath both beauty and brains has a definite ad- vantage over the girl who cultivates either asset at the expense of the other. This is why we find the digit- school graduate, the college woman, the progressive wife and .mother gist Mg a Certain amount of time each day to the duty of improving their toots. These are the girls and women who know the value of keeping then beauty resolutions. It must be an everyday practice to build up more beauty. If you set a few rules 'for yourself to begin with, and make them an automatic part of every day's duties, you will soon see euough results to them, and adhere to them, as well. Q$¢t • Mies Sue LaBall looks over the mechanical lien which was oxie of unioue exhibits at annual poultry and pet stock exposition whioh was held recently in Chicago Coliseum. night and moaning, and at midday if I can conveniently do so. Resolved: To care for my finger- nails. Resolved: •To cultivate the fine- ness and health of my complexion. To spend at: least ten minutee every Bight in removing the soil ofthe day, with a .good cleansing cream, S. S. Adam*. Age Doesn't Count I want you to make some beauty resolutions this bright New Year. I don't care how old you are or how young you are; if you begin right note to form' asingle beauty habit, and adhere to it throughout' all this year, I promise you,: this time next year you win admit that you have • been repaid for your attention. Let me see. In F'ranrce they begin with their girl babies, keeping their little bodies supple and sound. When they grow foto little_ :girlhood •they are taught small duties, such as sit- ting erect in their chairs, learning to plate their feet correctly in walking, and so on. In Canada, `all too fre- 'quently, girls are not taught these things till they begin to teach them - ;setae's. Often. Canadian women feel self-conscious about paying attention to their looks, as though it were a shameful thing to be earetut of• the (bodies that were given to them by the same Divine Law that makes lowers beautiful, We owe much amore to our personal beauty than we do to the beauty of OUT flower gar- elens, but as a matter of progress we should not neglect either of thein. I want to give you a little New Year's present..I want to give you a list of beauty resolutions that I have made out for you—all simple things that will not take muck time. Ths Dead of Robin Hood By William Rose Benet There hangs the .long bow,•the strong bow, once was bent To cleave the clout, to split the wil- low wand; Till the quiver's shafts were spent The bow that wrought wild justice in this land. The red deer, the roe deer knew that bow, And king and clergy knew How sure its clothyards flew To right the poor an" lay oppression low. There . grows our g,;eat oak, our gir- thed- oak; over all The shires of England may it branch and be As once in Sherwood, tall • As truth, and honor's ever -living tree! The•hunted and the hounded knew its ground For refuge, knew who stood A, stiff yew hedge in the wood Around its bole, when that horn was wound. Casting Rewards "Is He Downhearted?" No! w La's nytrit inirils to ashes when a man lnakcs a feel of himself. There would be fewer divorces . 1 there were more laughter and lase censure in homes, A.braba:nl---"Holy is business?" Solomon*"Awfuli i have so many dishonest rivals: Abraham—"Really?" Solomon—"Yep, They insist on gelling at reasonable prices. 'hen a man becomes a crab, he starts going backward. .Always be reasonably sure before yon be! oma unreasonably positive. What's good for high blonde Pres. sure? According to C'i'tll Rogers the first installment is the worst. Good Used f, Tube Sete Priced :fro as up, Write for Price Islets PANFQRTII RA010 CQ. leT0. 2086 paatforth Ave., 'resent° Massif `led A.dvertil?;ing 77i' ES CAN SUPPLY AM 1300k published with a Mint/nun' delay.. Enquiries pruntptly answered. Subscrip- tions placed for .0 Canadlan. British and American publications at a!weat prices. World's Subscription Agency cit.eg'd). 261 queen St, West. Toronto. Canada. ry� Oats MAKE "MITI, .AUTOMOBIXAD 1 start easy in coldest weather. L. ft. Guild, Guelph eal Ontario. REF.—WRITE 'TO-ISAY FOR OUR .13 1;h -page text -book on 13iseaaes, of Poultry and Swine. 14. B. Gulld Gua.ph, Ontario, — - "What a whale of a difference a few letters make." • Sweet Young Thing—"May I ask, Mr. Paderewski, who is the composer of that, selection you played last? It is indeed wonderful.:" Paderewski—"Beethoven." Sweet Young Thing—"Ah, yes. Won- derful! Is' he composing now?" Pakerewski—"\ o, madam. He is decomposing." You aren't really old until you wish to comfort a squalling brat instead of choking it. Words in German Often Gertrude—"Agnes has made three Made up Like Dominoes , swell marriages, but divorced all her husbands." A Frenchman calling attention io HuClarice—"Yes, she moves in the best triangles, so to speak." When the guest was leaving his hotel to hurry to the station, he no- ticed that he had forgotten some- thing. He said to the bell boy: Guest—"Run up quickly to room 450 and just see if my umbrella is there. I think it's to the left of the wash stand. But hurry up!" A minute later the boy returned, and panting, said: 33e11 Hop—"Yes, sir, the umbrella's still there, at the left of the wash stand.' South—"I'm bent on marrying that the fact that in some, languages words are made up as in a game of dominoes ty adding new pieces proceeded to have fun in the following way in showing how it was done in German, says "The Pathfinder." A kangaroo in German is "beutel- ratten," meaning a rat with a bag. A. cage is a "kotter," so a kangaroo cage is a "beutelrattenkotter." Grating of a cage is called "latten" and the roof "gitter," hence a kangaroo cage with a roof and grating would be "beutel- rattenlattengitterkotter," Going a step further, bad weather in German is "unwetter." So a kangaroo cage with a roof of grating to protect it from bad weather would consequently be "betttelrattenlattengitteru n w e t t e r- kotter." Another example A Hottentot another in German is "Hottentottenmuttex " Children who stammer are called "straetertrottel," so a Hottentot mother of such children ~would be "Hottentottenstraeterteettet- rnutter. To add a little, an assassin is an "attentater'' Accordingly, the as casein ei the mother just described would be "Hottentottenstraetertrottel- matter attencater ." Only just turned four and speaking only Polish, little Roman Semezyszyn, traveller by Canadian Pacific from Lemberg in Poland to Drumheller, at Al- berta, is here shown photographed Winnipeg when his 7,000 -mile trip was nearly completed. Laughing heartily, little Roman appears to be delighted with his new estuary and the friends on. the C.P.R. who looked after him so Pleasantly during his log but appar- ently delightful journey. Merry men all, God spare you to the hunt; Through time it stretches, clow:r the centuries. Outlawed, we bore the brunt Of the hour's disfavor, and its penalties; Freemen, forever we with free men ride Whenever, by God. in Heaven, They gather to make odds even! Our souls -with them they shall not fail that tide. Now, lift me; I wonld see my forest walls Badged with colors, yea, till Time be. done. The following•resolutions are the Where this last arrows falls (first and simplest of Beauty Rules. I Sod. me with turf the stag treads know many women who follow them] lightly on. —and they are always the women Go soft then, saying naught; but, who command attention for their . hark ye! kneel charming looks. One of these women 3s about seventy, anti I assure you she looks younger than many a woman young enough to be her dau- ghter. "I don't do much, my dear," she says simply when I tell her how wonderful she is; "I just keep clean inside and outside, think as nice (thoughts as I can about any fellow .men., do a good deed here and there, land add a little powder and the ~slightest tinge of rouge to my cheeks for good measure." Then she smiles at you with her wonderful smile, and lyou see the lovely dimple in the faint pink of her cheeks, and decade you (will certainly "keep your beauty :resolutions all the Test of your life." Resolved: To eat my steals regu- Marty, and to select the most whole . some and nutritious foods. To eat lslowly, and as sparingly as my health land strength permit. Resolved: To get out-of-doors for a walk every day, even if for only ten „minutes. To walk briskly, breathe deeply and stand correctly while I (am taking this exercise. Resolved: To take a quick but 'thorough bath every clay I tan, Resolved: To go to my dentist. once a, year to have my teeth exam- /Med. Resolved: To get enough hours' sleep every night, in a well-ventii- ated roost. Resolved: To watch my temper, guard my tongue and. govern my nerves. Resolved: To brush my hair care- fully each day. To shampoo it at rligular intervals of days or weeks, Recording to its needs. t B h 6! WO, Z _ # Ea M9rt-...tea 4 When the evil hour would awe, and benow all And loose your shafts in a whirls sleet of steel! Ardent Proposals.—':e "rye been. asked to get married lots of times." He -"Who asked you?" She--"Mother and Father." —'"Life" Earth's Core Composed . Of Iron and Nickel The core of the earth is comRose 1 of iron, Dr. Lesson B. Adams, phys- ical chemist of the Geophysical Lab- oratory, Carnegie Institution, of Washington, says in a research nar- rative issued by the Engineering 1'ctrndation. „ "Neglecting. the relatively thin film of sedimentary rocks at the surface," aeccrding to Dr. Adams, "there is a first layer of granite ten mi'.es thick; belety that a layer of basaltic rocks twenty males thick; then 2,000 mile: of peridotite, a ruck Taro at the sur face, consistingof iron magnesium silicate, and nally a central core 4,000 npiles in diameter of.'. metallic iron wtth•.a little nickel. "Perhaps the most striking feature of the composition of the whole earth is that our globe is made up almost entirely of four elements: ,iyor mag- nesium, silicon and oxygenta the re - e 1 staining eighty-eight possible elements Kneel d b d draw .are confined to the thin film called the r crust." ATENTS List of "Wanted Inventions„ and Full Information Sent 'Pre*en. Request. TEE Zaalasm's CO., Deet. W. 273 Bank Vit,, Ottawa, Ont. For Neuritis iylinard's is unequalled, It swiftly ends the painful throbbing and:'. leaves you lulled and relieved. Minard's Liniment for all 'Pain. .•�------- Subways for pedestrians are becom- ing popular, according to a report by the Department of Commerce. Hidden forces seem to be at work, it one way or another, to place the pedestrian un- der ground. Gabby Gertie Cnilcuria Song 'SbanipOOs Cleanse the scalp and bur of dandruff and duct and assist in the bealthyarowth of hair.You will be delighted with their fragrancesndeficieaef•: Send for trial outfit Soap and Ointment w Gunton," Box 2616, Montreal. Canada. Scrub Land Changes to Big Happy Farm Organization of Adelaide's Workless 'Proves Big Success Adelaide, S. Aus. From the depths girl," of unemployed depression to active en - His Friend—"Fell, go ahead and terprise under ideal conditions is the marry her. Then you'll not only be change that has been wrought among bent but broke." A certain club had replaced its fa- miliar black -coated servitors with young, and sometimes pretty, wait- resses. One of the old diehard mem- bers who had strongly opposed the idea dropped In for unch ons day. Die -Hard Member (growling) --"How is 'the duck to -day?" Pretty, Waitress -"Oh, I'm all right. How are you, sir?" Somebody told old Ragson Tatters that playing the stock market was a dangerous game in which ons was like- ly to win one day and lose the next, so Ragson evolved a new system. He says: "I'm going to try playing the market every other day and get rich." "A. rolling phi is no good to an igloo 'dweller—she can never get her husband cornered." Mamma: "Johnny, see that you give Bobby the lion's share of that orange." Johnny: "Yes, ma." Bobby: "Mani- ple, he hasn't given nze any." Johnny: "Well, that's all right. Lions don't eat oranges!" If you would B Ys Whenever U C Bs, U will mind your Is And never, never Ts. Some day science will arrest the story while it's brewing. a number of Adelaide's workers at the industrial colony in the depths of the bush 40 miles south of the city. In the midst of an extensive forest, owned by the Government, 50 young men, who have been for a long time idle in the city streets, and with no objective in life, are now proud an pleased workers, bringing new hope i surroundings that cannot be exceede, in loveliness in any part of the world This organization is the result of a appeal by the Central Methodist Mis sion under the leadership of the Rev. Samuel Forsyth, which has led so fax to the raising of £6,000. The Government has given practi- cally an unlimited area of land, as it is anxiot:s to insure the success of this, happy little colony in the untamed: scrub. Only a dense forest confronted the men when they went down to begin operations, but within ten weeks, the nucleus of a big industrial farm has been established. Trees are being felled for agricultt.rai land and roads are being made, preparatory to the erection of more substantial homes than the huts which the men now oc- cupy. Eventually, the colony will have electric light, telephones and all the amenities of a modern settlement. A retired well-to-do agriculturist, Samuel R. Gray, has given his ser- vices to supervise operations; and sev- eral fine wooden huts with brick fire- places, and ample space for four men, have been built. It is not a just -do -as - you -please sort of settlement, for strict discipline is observed and there are pe:,alties for breaches of rules•. The men are not allowed to leave the colony without permission, and there are fixed working hours—S.30 a.m. to 5 p.m., with an hour for lunch. "Lights out" is sounded at 10.30 p.m., and three regular meals are served. Sisc acres have now been S0'417110 oats and fruit trees, and vegetable plots have been introduced. Stock is being rais- ed for marketing. Large poultry runs will be a feature, a d poultry rearing. will be conducted on modern lines on a large scale. There will shortly los nearly 2,000 birds on the colony. The area so far cleared for grazing ' is 170 acres, and. as the land in thils locality is particularly good for vege» . tables, the men are growing large sup- plies for the Adelaide market. The organizing commissioner, Mr. Forsyth, says that although the colony has been established primarily to re- lieve the prevailing unemployed, it Is hoped to make it a permanent benefit to the State. - INFLUENCE You wilt find, if you think for ab, moment, that the people who inn*. • ence you are people who believe in you. In an atmosphere of suspicion. shrivel up; but in that atmosphere they expand, and find encouragement and educative fellowsl-lp. To b* trusted is to be saved. And if .we ter' to influence or elevate others, we Obeli soon see that success is' in pro- portion to their belief of our belie 3n theta. Dratuttiond. Bride—"How do you like these bis- cuits ?" Newlywed (Absentmindedly) —".Did you make these with your own little darling hands?' Bride (hesitatingly)—"Why, yes." Newlywed (mentally absent) -- "Who lifted them out of the stove for you?" Nothing makes a mother bleat loudly as for her boy to have an tack of calf love. The word waffle reminds us—have you heard of -the absent-minded pro- fessor who played a waffle on the phonograph and ate the record? Minard's Liniment for Frost Bite. Canadian Winter Lovers Welcome First Snow so at - ate tethseeett.e see* of e>xaty.alte : 9&i Anl II% shows bpplringsetting for winter sponte 4t.t Mouilt Royal, Montreal, ISSUE