HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1931-03-05, Page 7Chrome Gaits
, !AMINE ANN JEST
"Do with thy might what thy hand lively as could be. They were so
Ands to do."
Simple Cleaning Processes
tried their little wiegs, saying, "flood -
Each kind o1 febricseems to need morning, Good morning, how is eveey-
a differeat method for cleani,..e. The body'? My, but it is fine to be alive,"
following are a few suggestions which and started to look around for some
might be remembered: breakfast.
If satin is very soiled It should soak. After they were all fen. Mamma
for an hour or so in 11/2 Wisps, coal oil Lady went to the door to let out Fluffy,
and 3 quarts of soapsuds. Then the the house pussy -cat. It was a cold
satiu should be dilmed an and down morning outside, but of course puss
repeatedly in cleat' warm soapy didn't mind that. She has on such a
Water, after which it should be rinsed , warm fur coat,. hasn't she?
Well by moving up and down in clear ;
i Well, when she opened the door
warm water. Itathould be Pressed I Fluffy ran out, but jumped sidewaye,
when nearly dry, . ! right near the door, and looked at
•To elean very flue fabric allow it to . something on the porch. Mamma
sLand in a weak solution of cold BoaPY Lady looked to see what it was and
water for a few minutes in a large , you could never guess what it was,
jar, shaking the jar to make it clean, : I'm sure. It Was a beautiful butter -
•or if the article is too large put into i fh. an gold and black, lying on the
a cloth bag and wash. Rinse well in
hag or jar, dry, and iron with a moder-
ately hot iron on the fabric itself.
strong too, because they bad six Meals
the day before, so wheat they flew out
from their warm bedraana they even
floor, and it was so cold she thought
it was dead, for its two, lovely Wings
were tight together. She picked it up
To grease spots from silk , gently and laid it on the window -ledge
make a ,paste or equal parts of pow -1 in the sun to let it get a warm stun
• der& ;French chalk and fullers' earth! bath. All morning it. stayed there with
with either Water or turpentine and i folded wings, then at noon she went
apply it to tho spots, allowing it to ;
1 over and touehed. it ever so carefully,
stay on a few days before brushing and, "Oh.," she cried to Billy, "Come,
it off. . look dear, the butterfly is alive after
To remove stains from white flan-, all, We just got it. in time," and stare
nel mix together equal quantities of i enough. it unfolded its wings back and
the yolk of an egg. and glycerine. forth, back and forth, slowly and
Cover the stain with the mixture and! gracefully, but she found it couldut
allow it to remain on the spot for 1 Ilse its little feet yet. They had got
half an hour. Then wash the flannel i so cold, and stiff. Well, jut let it sit
in light sad; of white soap and warm i on the window ledge, Billy, till the
water. I sun makes it well.'
Grease stains can be removed from Next Week—"More Little Friends."
wall paper by making a paste of either
Dips clay or fuller's earth and, wane..
This. mixture must be plastered lightly
over the epot and allowed to dry
"thorOughly. Then. it shouldle brushed
oft and if grease has not dieappeand,
Fashion Note
The hat with the halo effect has
a second application of paste should appeared to brighten our lives this
he applied, spring! And a very intriguing bon -
A Good Cake—Orange Date Cake net it is too, a decidedly flattering
cup butter (lei ]b.), 1 cup sugar addition to the wardrobe. Agnes is
tbrowna 2 eggs, 1 pkge best dates, 1 thee Chief sponsor of the halo hat, but
orange, squeeze juice out, and save Rose Valois, Descat and other emin-
half for icing. 1 tsp. soda in 1 cup est modistes have endorsed it.
sour milk, cups flour (good mea- 'Agnes' halo bats are, of course, small
sure), 1 tsp. baking powder. Before sized—the halo effect produced by a
.squeezing orange, grate rind off or put decorative twist, or soft roll, or cuff
rind through grinder and add to cake. set on around the hat runniug direct-
ly across the top. The basis is the
Icing For Cake
The World's Ur Piano Hand
ra.
I ,
a 114
Haild of Walter Gleseltil)g', Vinous ' Gerruan pianist, the biggest
piano hand in the world, as it striitches over eleven notes easily and
. ' P' •
twelve it necessary,
..........e.....—, ......-.....aaa
simplest sort. of a skull -cap. Accus-
Put dish in top oil boiling tea kettle toned as we have been for the past
and butter and other half of orange season to exposing our foreheads,
juice, when hot add icing sugar and
the new halo hats go further, and
bea.t. show an inch or more of hair at the
You win find that luck front and certainly at one side—for
1s. Only pluck, -the majority are worn tipped a bit
To try things over and over; '
Patience and skill,
Courage and will,
Aro the four leaves of luck's clover.
ve.But entarian and racial hatred be-
unday School bitter, and the Jews would net avel-
ltween Jews and 3arnaritans was very
Viewing the Moon's Mountains
The mountains of the MOOR P.re
rarely beautiful sight witieli any One
may see with the aid of an ordinary
Pair of opera, glasses during the Win-
ter months. The view of these "eteie
nal bills," as solid and substantial as
our own, is one of muck grandeur,
rull moon is the least advantageous
time to tee these hills. During that
period the flood of sunshine poUred
perpendicularly upon the face of our
satellite conceals its outstanding fea-
tures as effectually as it a veil had
been drawn over them.
Observations of the moon's inoun-
tains should begin with the appear-
ance of the narrowest crescent of the
new moon and should continue as it
gradually fills. In this way can be
seen the advancing line of lunar sun-
rise revealing the mountains over
whose slopes and peaks it is climbing
by its ragged and sinuous outline. The
observer must remember that he is
looking straight down upon the slope
of the lunar hills, as if he were view-
ing the speetaele from a balloon at a
tremendous height.
,come a story oa which a Samaritan
Lesson
was the hero. There is still a handful!
of Samar..:ans living in Palestine at
• fNablus, the ancient 8g:chem.
, V. 34. IZ the Samaritan was a corn -
March 8. Lesson X.—The Goats mereial traveler, he would have one
Samaritan—Luke 10: 25-37. Golder,;•ass for himself and another for his
Text—Thou shalt love thynelfai samples. About half way down the
e
bour as thyself.—Leviticus 19: lel road there are still to be seen the
ruins of an ancient khan or hostelry
Twilight Hour Story—Chap. 12
Now that the chicks had found such
- a good home and so many good eats,
they started. to gat very lively and full
of fun just like you do, little boys .and,
girls, when you feel like running and
jumping just because you feel so hap-
py. Well, they were scratohiug away
In the grai and throwing 11 1.11) high
so it got into the water dish again.
In fact, Billy had to change it twice.
But how, after they had a real good
tamper, it was time to go to bed, so
the covers were all tucked in and the
lid put down, when all at once Jimmie
started to call out "peep -peep -peep"
very excitedly, Mamma Lady knew
something was wrong and sure enough
he hadn't been tucked in well enough
aud he thought it would be fan to hop
out into the playroom and not go to
bed, but when he got out there he
found it was all dark and not as nice
as he thought it would be and then
he didn't know how to get back, for it
certainly wasn't a very nice warm bed
- out there so he just called like you
would eall mamma it. yon fell out of
- bed. Mamma Lady put him in again
and this time lie was glad to stay.
• Then.they all went to sleep just 5.5
quick as wink. Can you go to sloe])
As. quick as that? Try it to -night.
don't believe you can.
The next morning when 'Mamma
Lady .opetedthe box ihe.y were as
• ANALYSIS,
I. THE LAW OF LOVE, 10: 25-28.
II. THE PARABLE OF THE GOOD SAM
'TAN, 10: 29-35.
III. OER NEIGH3ORS, 10: 36, 37.
INrummorrorr—Accorcling to I,.
the lawyer askbd his question in orc
to "tempt." or 'catch" Jesus. -
answer did he .expect Jesus to giv
Possibly he was asking Jesus wh. t
distinguished his teaching frone
of the other . rabbis; perhaps he
thought that Jesus might dispartige
the law of Moses and • thus alien*
Jewish sympathy., it is far Irom.cle.,
In Mack 12: 28-31 the incidentpS
differently told, perhaps more. accur-
ately, or possibly it is a differentAb-
-
cident.
I. THE LAW OF LOVE, 10: 25-28.
V. 27. This combination of Dent, 5:
6 with Lev. 19: 18 was familiar it the
teaching of the rabbis of the day:,
V. 28. Jesus' answer Must not- be
taken to mean that a man can save
his own soul by good works:: for
"love" is not a work, but an attitude
that issues in Works. It is hard to
which .may mark the site of the one
mentioned in this story.
V, 35. The sum corresponds to about
fifty cents, but it would buy more then
i
than today.
I.
• III. 01.111 NEIGHBORS, 10: 313, 37.
, V,. 37. What is to "do likevvisel
Our neighbor is not merely the, man
who lives close to us, or who belongs
te our own race 1e party, but any
'person who needs our help. The ap-
plication of this.principle 15 infinitely
mare complicated today than it was
when civilizaticat was simpler. Those
who liva in our cities never grow the
food they eat; those who live on our
farms never make the machinery they
use; common articles af everyday foel,
tea, coffee, cocoa, rice, sugar, salt,
pepper come to our doors from the
ends of the earth. When the women
ofEurope and America. give up wear-
ing' hairnets, thousands are thrown
out of work in China; the price of
soap hi our markets affects the lives
and fortunes of tl.e islanders in. the
Pacific. Through the economic unifi-
cation of the world the problems r.% 2
neighborhood, mutual dependence,
need and responsibility have become
find much real distinction between
"saving faith" and staving . love. . 1 0 .most intricate. We cannot say. that,
min -
"live" in this verse means to 11.tet, because we have never seen the into eternal life, or, as we saY, heaven, ers who hew the coal for our furnace
U. THE PARABLE OP. THE MOD SAaian or miles who tend the tea -Which we
drink 6r the darkies who toil over the
a . rrAer, 10:--29e----e-e----ee ea,. • Cotton fields for the fabric . of our
V.- 29. A parable Ls a stZnzy taken clothes, therefore they are no neigh
. .
• Wills of ours. On the contrary, the
support of home and foreign. iniesion-
ary work, the faithful service in poli-
tics and. business are required of
Christian neighborliness today,
The mountains of the Moon an be,.
lieved to be as high as those upon our
own globe, their size being reYealed.
by the contrast of lights and shadowS.
Onthe moon shadows Are ranch dark
-
or thatvearth shadows, because of the
extreme rarity of the lunar atmos-
phere. It has been estimated by as,
tronornees that by stepping around the
corner of a rock. on the moon one
might pass abruptly from dazzling
noonday into the llacknees of Mid.
night.
.Astronomers say that the surface of
the moon is extremely uneven, broad
plains covering about two-fifths of it
and mountains and hills the retualie
der. Sunshine, creeping ove these Ala
pine landseapes, casts the black shad.
ows of the peaks and craters many
miles across the plains. The sum-
mits of mountains may be seen cap -
pen with vivid light when the Plaine
are still buried in night.
Early observers, using telescopes,
supposed 'that the dark portions were
seas and the brighter portions con-
tinents, because the darker portions
looked smoother.
What New York
Is Wearing
BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON
Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Fur-
nished With Every Pattern
over one eye. This return of hair,
1 from one aspect of life to illuetrateeo*
and Carefully arranged coiffures it interpret another. Thus the working
calls for, is flattering to the face as of yeast illustrates the secret growth
well as to the hat. or the kingdom. The Good Samaritan
_____-0 story, therefore, is not strictly. a par-
able but a direct illustration. Pre-
sumably .the story was told in Juclea
where. the dange-...ous Jericho road
would be well known. It is some.
twenty-one miles from Jerusalem to
TaritAl" Ti• VVIS a stee and rock
London Bans Horse
Traffic on Busy Street
Londou.—For the first time in the
history or London, horse 'tranle te to
be forbidden to one or the eity's prin-
cipal streets.
The time-honored equine traction
has been constautly dwindling of late
years .with the ever Increasing adop-
goo of motor cars, but enough horses
are still used for heavy commercial
traffic to cause serious congestiou.
The ministry of transport recently
announced an exPerimental scheme
operative during the coming spring
by which Oxford Street, one of the
great east and west thoroughfaves,
will be Closed daily to all slow mov-
ing traffic, including horse drawn ve-
hicles, between noon and 7 p.m.
The regulations, which also forbid
vehicles standing and turning, will, it
is hopecl, result in a continuous flow
or traffic down this famous .street,
which now is one of the worst con-
gested in London. :re hu.c.cessfu1 the
scheme may be extended.
"The public is a fickle master; one
day it, puts a laurel wreath round
your head and the next it presses a
erown of thorns upon your brow."
—Philip Snowden,
MUTT AND JEFF— By BUD FISHER
'MN DIDN'T Nov PUT -Mose
ELAIIGN 'DOLLPMS IN 111G
BANK 196.CALISE
CASIAIER VORI<CD
HIS Ha ON?
THAT s Tete.
GYPS•( wARNING.
A U'( V41Th HIS
RAT oN is ALWA\15
zeAb`( la Go
SomeLui-
111
11
ti
v
'emuYaAr,t4M51,r,W7,,'
"What a lot of difference mar -
lege makes."
"And what a lot of differences."
"Have you any education, Mose?"
ked the prospective employer.
"Yes, suh, auttingly," says Mose.
"Well, can yoli write your name?"
esw.,
Tan you write your name?"
"No, suh," said the unabashed Mose,
h always dictates it." — "The
corder".
NOT DIV FERENc•e
laes iT MAke
IF 'Me cASIAtere
60T IT AND Leer,
..1•VOMMIO, .11.••1110411111M.9110116111101•1•111111
That Sinking Feeling
When you get into the wrong car
and, haying driven a matter of halt
a mile, realize that you never decor-
ate yonr dashboard with roses.
* 0 0 0
When demonstratingthe speed of
your car and your hat -blows off.
* 41 0 *
When, after telling your passenger
you are certain you are on the right
road and that she is insane to sug-
gest that yon are not, you discover
from a signpost that she was right
all the time.
* * * * •
When, just as you are passing that
road hog who has been crowding the
road for ten miles or more, you drop
your lighted cigarette down your
vest.
When, after offering to assist a
lady • driver who has got into a mess
in a traffic jam, you find yourself in
a worse mess.
* * 0 *
When you stop to help a stranded
motorist and. discover that the ear
concerned. is your old one, which you
sold a month ago as mechanically per-
fect.
Dashing youth will enjoy this
sportsy model of crepe printed silk.
Its sleeveless, too, for the flatter-
ing shoulder capelet provides suffi-
cient covering for the arms. How-
ever, it also may be made with long
sleeves or with short cuffed sleeves.
The cape may be discarded too—and
the neck finished with applied band
and bow in simple smart manner
shown in miniature view.
The circular skirt has an inverted
plait at the centre -front.
Carried out in plain colored crepe
silk in the new lighter shades, crepy
woolen, wool jersey., tweed mixtures
and novelty cottons, it is also most
attractive.
Style No. 2881 may be had in sins
8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20 years,
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
Write your name and address plain-
ly, giving number and size of such
patterns as you want, Enclose 20e in
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) for each number, and
address your order to Wilson Pattern
Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto,
The men of culture are the true
apostles of equality.—Mattliew Arnold,
* * * *
When, hooting like mad, you roar
past the chap in front and, glancing
at the driver, You recognize the big
chief at the office.—The Motor.
World's Best Car Drivers
Every now and then Londoners are
amazed to see a car threading its way
in and out of the traffic at great speed.
It seems to brush aside lorries and
motor -buses and to pass through gaps
between vehicles so narrow that an-
other coat or paint would haVe meant
an appalling smash.
"That fellow must be mad," you
may hear people say as one of these
ears dashes headlong through a core
gested street. Not re. bit of it, It Is
being driven by one of Scotland Yard's
Flying Squad chauffeurs. and it is
dashing in headlong pursuit of some
criminal er gang.
All of the drivers are specially
chosen for the job. Each is a police
officer who has previously undergone
a special course in driving. Flying
squad drivel's are kept in perfect
training, so that their eyes, nerves,
and muscle's are always in perfect con-
dition. No man allowed. to drive a
Flying Squad car has less than ten,
years' real experience, and none re-
tains. his past long Unless Ite shows
that he is .capable of driving at top
sPeed and with perfect safety through
the densest traffic.—Tit-Bits.
Electricity in Ireland
The progress of the electrification
project of the River Shannon, in Ire-
land, was recently described by the
managing editor of the board. In
11130, according to the report, the three
largest cities of the Irish Free State—
Dublin, Cork and Limerick — and
twenty-four country towns which for-
merly obtained their supply of elec-
tricity from local generating systems,
were brought into the Shannon 575 -
(till.
----.-....,............-fa.s.......swezoonartsourosqrsccanraeser-summacesaan****6400111
. .
The Security Is Only Size Six,•and-Three-Eighths.
VJC.Lt., AIN'T
GOING TO PAY "IOU
BUT 1Ot•I1T
WANT—NoU To BE
cHGATED •ou-c
oe
et I M bING -ro A NIGR-r CLUB—AND
!NI ORDefe. -re MiW<1h CeRTAIN YOUR.
GLGAGN 'DOLLARS IS SAFE. — t'M GoINGJ
TO LGT- `t'OU STAY HOPME
AND Wircf4 IAY
liAT!