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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1931-04-16, Page 3CHome Cats Hy , LAKE BEST ;What do we plant when we pleat a tree? - A thousand things that we daily see: We plant the spire that out -towers the crag, ace plant the staff for our country's flag, re plant the shade from the hot sun free, We plant all these when we plant a Don't you think so? tree. e —Henry Abbey, Well, Fluffy was away up in the tree seeing all this, and when Mamma A Good Spring Appetizer and Spring Lady looked up at her and called her, she was so excited and delighted she couldn't stand still. She called her again, and do you know what Fluffy did? She didn't climb down this time but she jamped down all the way, It may be she lost her balance, for the branch was so little away up there and she wasn't used to climbing yet. Anyway she jumped down all that way, and what clo you think? She landed right on her paws. Kitties always fall on their paws if they slip, did you evee know that? They never fall ou their sides where it Would. hurt like every- thing, the way we woulti most likely fall. No, they never do. Well, when she plunked down right beside Mamma Lady she didn't run eithee. No, she knew Rover 'wouldn't ruu after her again if Mamma Lady was there, so she just waited until Mamma Lady picked her up and took her into the house. ' But Fluffy got back at Rover after a few days for renting after her like that. She wasn't quite so afraid of him now when he'ci come in the house. This is *hat she did: You see, when Rover is glad Ile wags his big tail, which is his way of saying be is hap - Well, when he came in one day feeling awfully good and "Svging his brushy tail like a good fellow, Fluffy was behind him and she started to play with it. He was so surprised and stopped and looked round at her. But Fluffy knew he couldn't come after her with Billy around. She just hid until he stopped looking at her and as soon as he wagged it again she grab- bed it again, and the only way he could keep Fluffy from pulling at his long hair was to keep it real still, and such a funny look came into his brown eyes. He didn't like standing still when he was feeling glad and not be able to wag his tail, Do you know, he had to go off in a corner if he wanted te evag his tail in comfort. Fluffy was prettye:aineete: thee, time, don't you thialte74tiVI'eventler 'what Slialifie 'Chick and the three little chicle sis- ters have been doing all this time. We're going to find out next issue. took his howl in her hand and slapped the side of his nose a few times. Not very hard, for, did you know, you don't often need to punish animals very hard to make them mind. But then you mustn't let them off altogether, either, for they must know what is right and what is Wrong just the same as little boys and girls must be taught. Tonic—The Lowly Dandelion in Salad Gather the early tender plant of dandelion, It is best when just show- ing on top of the ground, The whiter •and more blanched it is the more deli- cate is the flavor. Sometimes it grows up long, blanched and delicious under fallen boards or around and un- der .stones. Sometimes you may find it in a freshly plowed field. And you may be sure the farmer will be only too glad to see you come and gather all you can takeaway for it is an un- desirable weed to him except when he uses it on his table, if he has also grown to like its slightly bitter taste. Cut off the roots as you gather it and keep as free from grass as pos- sible as you go along. Put it all in a large dishpan (it takes a lot of dande- lion to make a good sized dish full for it goes together a good bit), cover veil with warm salty water, wash through a number of waters to remove alt the sand, then cut a few slices of bacon into (lice arta fry brown in page frying pan. Add Se, to ae cup white wine vinegar not too strong, 1 tblsp. sugar more or less according to taste, salt and pepper. When it is boiling acid the dandelion. Turn it over and over with a spoon to -get it well mixed until it is wilted, but do not boil or cook it. Put it into a salad bowl and cover with sliced hard boiled eggs, This tastes very good with a ham and eggs dinner. Many people eat it every day in the spring if they have time to gather it until the dandelion grow e too old. An Easy Crumb Cake cups pastry flour, 11,a cups brown sugar, cup butter, 2 tease. baking powder, dash of cinnamon. Work above ingredients to crumbs, then take Out of a cup and add to the remain- der 2 eggs, not beaten, Ve, cup sweet a alk and vanilla it desired,. Beat up •• await: 'Puts in greased SMUT and covEse With -the Crunilie. Bake in moderate oven. Cool in the pan and cut pieces out as needed. r••••1•• ...•••............•••••••10•11. • Sunday School Lesson April 26. -Lesson IV—How to Pray -e-. Luke 18. 1-14. "Golden Text—Lord, teach us to pray,—Luke 11: 1; ANALYSIS, I. THE PARABLE OF THE 'UNJUST JUDGE, . 18; 1-8. II. THE PHARISEE AND THE PUBLICAN,. 18: 9-14, L THE PARABLE OF Tien 'UNJUST JUDGE. 18: 1-8. The point of the parable is lo show that Christians are to pray "at all times" (that is, even when their pray- ers seem not to be answered) and not _to faint or give up in despair. The jidge in the story is perhaps a local magistrate, or me of the two regular police-coutt magistrates in Jerusalem, who, because they sat continuOusly, were paid out of the Temple treasury. ':here are various references to the "ignorance, arbitrariness and. covet- ousness" of such men. In v. 5 a very strong expressi, n is used, "lest in :he end she come and give me a black eye," but perhaps this is not meant literally. For some reason or other the un- just judge does not want to right the woman's wrong, but in the end be- cause of her importunity he as ens, to her, thinking it will on the. wholee'peee less bother to him to be rid Of, We mint not understand. by..the.liv•T• able that God, who otherwise not trouble to answer one prayers, will in the end answer them if we bother him enough. God does not an, swer our prayers because of our im- portunity, but we are to go on asking him without ever despairing, because we know he will answer our prayers. This is another instance of the 'how much more" argument which Jesus so often employed in his teaching .about God; if even an unjust judge in the end will listen to prayers, how nmeh more shall God, who loves his children in the end (in his own good time) 'r: sever their prayets1 • By "avenging his elect" we are. p . • variably to understand the delle'- ance, vindication and justification those who have been, faithful througa trial .and persecution. The parable, as we have .it, seems to deal in gen- eral with the question of prayers that seem to be unanswered, and in par- ticular with the sufferings and trials of the Church between the death of Jesus and his eageely •expected re- turn. Let the nersecuted Church take heart; God will speedily "avenge his elect." It is not clear whether the secant part of v. 8 is a saying of Jesus ar a comment by the evangelist. "When the So.i of Man comes, will he find" (not "faith" but) "the faith on the earth?" The words "the faith" seem naturally to mean "true Christianity," and it is perhaps right to suppose thnt the wordeeetee the, comment of some dishaitened•Church'leadev wao 19,.()R,T)Eilt PATTERNS, ly, giving. member and size of such patterns ,ete you want. Enclose 20c is stamps oae.co4i (coin preferred; wrap it Carefully) for each number, and eraddeess your order to Wilson Pattern ervice, 73 Weet,Adelaide St., Toronto. Of course Gott vindica e Age but are you sure that you will b.g!..1 desti e -echo, " it 'would be a great Twilight Hour Story—Chapter 18 • BY ANN 1eLE 'WORTHINGTON ithestreid, ressmaking L088071 Fier - wish' With Every Pattern ' 'efis • .1-0,', About Wee Chickies and Other Little Friends I told you last week that when they first brought Fluffy, the persiau pima)", home, Rover didn't care about it very much. OE course he wouldn't hurt her because he knew Fluffy belonged to the house just as much as he did, but one day just shortly after Fluffy came she was outside enjoying a sun bath. Valium and. Billy were rip town and Rover thought it would be fun to make Fluffy run and he actually chased her up a tree. She was so sur- prise to think he'd run after her, but she found elm could climb a tree al- ,ost as easily as walking. Bpi: even when she was high above Rover she was so frightened that she kept on elimbing up and up. Then when she was away up there and looked down she was so high up she was afraid to come down. I tell you Fluffy was glad when she saw Mamma. Lady and 13illy canaing home just then. It happened a little neighbor boy saw Rover chase Fluffy, so he came over and said, 'Rover abased Finlay up the tree. eaw him." Mamma Lady looked hard at Rover and said, "Rover, did you chase MOST up there? Shame: I didn't think, you'd do that." And Rover hung his head and came over slowly, then when, be got to Mamma Lady he put up his paw to shake hands. That was his way of saying he was sorry. But M1111111E1 Lady had to 'Amish him for doing that so he wouldn't do it again, and she ;cpeeieeeeeee-eeeeeeeeeeereeeeeee.eeee_eeeeeeseeeeeeeeeeee.eeeeeeeeeeee _ ,••• Mrs, Brown: "You used to call me your turtle clove." air. Brown: "Well, I wee .4:11111 - thing of a bird, myself, in those days." eltereee:,,1 part displays a com- fort40aelettemline. 741cope it- eie;actly takes but 31/..1 yards eef.. a9 -inch material LIT the medium irik. • Stle Nod 3032 is designed for sizes 16, 18 'ieearee 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. 'Y It s very fashionable too in plain crepe silk irenavy Mae. Or if you pre- fer, black crepe silk, it is stunning with a touch .of white in embroidered organdie with narrow lace edge used for theeflounce sleeve frills. Spring Song ,TIIEA smell a crocus, and ,close yew' eyesa- But yosukiceast,i't shut out the blue a the The green of the gross and the glint of the brook, Thia leAhcininog6kand chasing of mad You can't shut out the fleecy clouds, Floating and downy—fairy shrouas— For the crocus has in it the spirit of And 1tgaypurple bells the Spring Song ring, And its gay yellow heart is the b.eart of Spring, Just smell a crocus and listen not— For you'll hear the songs that tan% he forgot; The song of the lark in an airy dell, The rustling of fairies at wishing well, 'The raucous cry of the coal black crow, The honk of the wild geese as over ] they go; For the crocus has In it the spirit of Spring, And its gsapyritipsu.rple bells the Spring And its gay yellow heart is the heart song ring, 'AIM, chic for all -day ixpeelted in this simple ed crepe silk. eellape and flounce trim - a softened touch to ,ever shaping of the tiet,z,,,clecidedly slimming eeee Fashion's Latest We know Spring is here when days grow long, heu the brain. is cleared and the 'heart beats strong, When ice breaks up and the lakes shine blue, We know spring is coming, then, we dol But we greet the crocus with. roll of drums For Spring is here when the crocus comes; For the creme has in it the spirit of Spring, And its gay purple bells the Spring Song ring, And its gay yellow heart is the heart of Spring, —(Original), "One of the Race That Knows Joseph!' Short Hours and One Job clieneenet .ctbefbt tat aeon ChDIt Will laiiZ;Josur name and address plain - come, but who is gravely disetne e about -Li, state of the Church. In any case, the point of the parable seems to be this: your prayers for deliverance seem not to be answered; von are amilatin•g whether God will elsa his part, but the real questiett is whether you will do yourSe . . rier Majesty Discovers Quaint Wallpaper London—Many collecting families which have been long settled in one house have been known to discover bidden treasure in some neglected at- tic. it is now disclosed that Queen . Mary, herself an ardent collector, bee " paid • 1VIS tithes n only on his ma - made several interesl.ing discovevias duce, as the Law vequired, but on he of this kind. Not long ego. she retina whole of his income; he has avoided in Buckingham Palace. I 'understand the open sins of the worldling. A not diesimilar prayer of a rabbi has come to her surprise tied delight, a east; down to us: "I thank thee, 0 Lord ene Painted Chinese -wallpaper, acquired God, that thou least put my part pith those who sit in the Academy*, and tot with those who (like money-ehangers and tenders) sit at the covners. For I rise early. and they rise early; I eise early to the words cf the Law, and they to vain things; labor and they leber: label" end 1.eCeivo a reward: New coiffure by Emile, with ear - sect size veil and plumes, and ornament worn off forehead. Lon- don fashion's decree for this: year' debutantes. British Author Gives List of Favorite Works Phnadelphia,—John. Galsworthy dise cussed English and. American litera- ture of the past .eentury, at the Phila- delphia Forum here. 1 -le discussed the So-called "realists" With franlumss, saying that their phil- osophy would not live, though their style was arresting. The novelists Mr. Galsworthy himself finds perennially interestiug, were Charles Dickens, Robert Louis Stevenson, Katharine Mansfield, Joseph Conrad, W. H. Hud- son, and Mark Twain. "Dickens was the greatest of Eng- lish. novelists," Mr. Galsworthy said. "The quest for truth and beauty is a hard one, but what else is there worth seeking," he added, in discussing the use of satire, which, he said, was to Offered As Solution forcibly point out truths. Berlin—The commission appointed "Stevenson," Mr. Galsworthy re - by the Chancellor, Dr, Heinrich marked, "gave us the unexpected in Bruening, to study Germany's mem- diction. more frequently than. any other DloYment problem, suggested two English writer, excepting Shake - partial eolutions—general shortening speare," of working hours and prohibition of The outstanding literature produced civil servants engaging in side jobs. by writers of. the United States were The commission headed by the listed by Mr. Galsworthy as Mark former *Minister of Labor, Heinrich Twain's "Tom. Sawyer," Hawthorne's Brauns, believed that shortening of "Scaelet Letter," and; Frank Norris'e working hours would afford an op- McTeagne." --- portunity for at least part time wont to many who now are without jobs. Mending Curtains The commission recommended that where industries proved recalcitrant Springtime and house-cleaning time to the plan the Government he Mu -1 approach. Those muslin curtains need laundering and yet they are powered- to, fixe the. hones. of. work- The .coniniisSion urged also Ithat rather old and delicate to withstand all civil servants be prohibited from another washing. Try this and see accepting remunerative jobs outside how well it succeeds: After the cur- tains are washed, starched and damp. their regular eivil service, ends put a piece of thin white net under the worn parts and press the two together while ironing them. The damp starch will cause the net to stick to the curtains and the net backing will make them look like new. It will save hours of mending and when the curtains are hung the net will not be noticed in the fun - Ross. • Curtains mended in this way, have been in use for two years or more and the results are' very satis- factory, a eis,take, hosvieese to suppose that eelli Tonna numbered among the elect? ese prayers Woe ue a complete and II. THE Pneenser, AND THE puBizCAN 1 pictirltAf the piety of the reit 1"na 18: 9-14. . mrisaic parteiscMoreover the Pistol- Self-righteimeness is the subject of . ,ei in the nave. I* does not seem to be this story. The public and officiate° - olly centleneeEd; the publican re - is to .his heasee with a heart more chisively sacrificial; but the Temple ...,._. • ptable.tp e,..e 'than the Pharisee's evoeship of the Temple was almost ex e•mrts, it would seem, were also used I beeause he has a greater sense of for private prayer. It is difficult te) moral realities' -but the righteousness of the Pharisedels.not despised. Pharisee may properly be called a -- What ie, meant. by saying that he: see how far the "prayer" if the prayer a, all; he gives thanks to God publican is justified rather than the for the blessedness ).f his 'condition.. °ther? .c`justified" is strictly a term hut the impression is left with us that taken ftoni the law courts and means "aequittee- . It applies here that ,t11 to God for the gifts of God's grace as men are sinful in God's eyes, and all the Pharisee is not so much grateful he is boasting before God of his ewn must pray, "forgive us our tree - attainments. He as -lone neon than passes,'' but that "a broken and cot- ta e Law requires ; he has fasted on 'xite heart" is more acceptable to God than a proud and self-satisfied eight - Mondays and Thursday (the Chris- - eousness. Humility is the right atti- tians, to be different, chose Wednes- tude of man before God, and the son. da - and Fridays for their taste) ; he ship to which we are called is not an easy and lighthearted companions-Aia and familiarity. - by lelug George TV, stored away and forgotten. The b cant itul. and in Mee tally valuable, wallpaper Low adonis one lof the sitting rooms in the- palace, known as the Yellow Drawing Room because the coloreicheme is carried. they Weer and 'receive no mem , out in e. charming, clear,- leemine- run and they run; 1 run to the life of yellows -Collector. the world to come, and they to the pit MUTT AND JEFF— —By BUD FISHER. ,on, YoUqe.c., "rtie COL C1411.,LIE,SX tveNel ABS.OLUTE.L'ef DEVOID OF 14UPAANMP6Ttrif YOUR • SO FRtGID yatiRE. 'BELOW ZE.RO: s- ? ----r--m-FRAJ etowk.- NAWAG- 31 Jusi- t‘eNtzt. -rtiAT sm. stbNEY is At4b r'eyk GoeiNA SUBMIT 713 A, TRANSFUSION! ---,— Waiter: "And how Md. you find the beef, sir?" Customer: "Oh, 1 moved a potato and there it was." Fire Halts Wolf -Pack North Bay. Out. —Like a tale. front Siberia came the story of the all. night vigil of a trapper and two young boys who. forced to camp near a lonely northern lake, burned pine. Drying Roos , boughs until dawn to keep a wolf A. kitchen stool which yields 16 peek at bay. 26 -inch galvanized rods for drylag : The trapper. au experienced man, small articles helps to solve the and his companions had started on a problem of lack or dryiug space in ! fifty -mile trip to a northern settle - the tiny itoartmeut. When the rodsiment. Heavy snow slowed their are not itt use they ill in a cone be- ; progress and forced them to spend a . s b ' Iteht • n the trail. Startled near neath the, s•tool, ma I One thorn of experience is worth a serve as a useful pieee of kitchen midnight by the howls of wolves, they Whole wilderneSs of Warnings. --.T. R. furniture. heaped boughs upon their fire until dames shot high into the night. The who wolves ccnild be dimly seen in the "Whets I got home last night." saidl An Observer eerrounding woods, but they kept • . can obeerve minutely without being I1WI1V. and at the tit; st). $tItrrk)rtt)faiiri, awa He 11101113l8 an acute oleasseee the struggling author, "I found that 1 bueglars had been in naI i , "Reelly1" exclaimed his friend. "Whet aoservatleaeLaVt.ttele haimened? laic they take anything?" This .same philosophy Le a good Flowers of many forest trees are eeliee searpea through every in the stable, but an arrant important sourcee of pollen for honey drawer in the Ille•and then left $2.00 iih:dr:eou a j0111:110Y.--Oliver Goldsmith. bees, ' oneiny desk." . red•WEIPItt0.00111110:8rrelroml•It....-teRVAIMELIM691.1A...,111•1157rMrItp".7544,24.5115...S.WWWWW61=4:31431.1•311E This Good Sarnaritvia :,:t. an Eslerno. GE:s, 1ubge.3) Vt%aTT V*006- c Dlize7 Mink tie tvAS THAT HOMAN-.1 muS1- -, APOL GrZEI WAS Thi» OPGRATIoN successrtn. WAS- Eqci.P. LT WP%$ ouER- "tt‘e tibcTottS rmscotietzeb -ma FA% SIDNIEN iiAt. Bol EARs FROZEN, aite.,BLAIms, AM b iAts _. rINGF S PANT:, TOES -1-11., MOST BITTENg 41.. Fen:ET. (a„.0 )0 t A _Defoe ,ar 'estas?a'eees 11,0101:16,fisk4 sm. •