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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1931-04-23, Page 3tt (Home ads !Sy ,11114IIWIANN ass:T eaVly business Is not to remake my - telt, but to intake the absolute hest of what Cod made,"—Browning. A Unique Summer House . The summer house need not be of elaborate design or of great expenee. Indeed the simpler the building the cooler and more enjoyable it will be, A boy at home could easily make the w kind described, I can tell you. She took him to some Secure posts by thinning out the fine picture shows au d showed him the tops of willow trees. Then trim and store windows all lit up eo brilliantly cut to temper leugth, arid set in eight and full of each. beautiful things. You holes, three feet apart, forming an See, Billy's home was in the country octagonal shaped upright foundation end this was all new to him. So he one -which a pyramid top can be built, t nnieusely. But after a To the top and uglier pats of the sides short strips should be nailed to form simple designs finishing a at the top with some decoratiou. Within the summer house, at suit- able height, a seat phould be built con- sisting of short strips of branches halved. Quite often the willow poste will send out shoots which extend from the top in all directions. They continue to grow and by interlacing form a na- tural and attractive roof for the sum- mer house. Twilight Hour Story—About Chicks and Other Little Friends. Chapter 9 It was getting pretty. cold outside now. In fact it was just about time for Thanksgiving Day. That is a nice time in the year, isn't it? Do you re- member last Thanksgiviag, when the big juicy grapes were ripe and the apples all rosy and sweet? In fact it is the time when everybody gets ready for winter, Isla it? All the good things to eat which took all sum- mer long to grow are ripe then, and are brought inside the house or the barn or the cellar, somewhere so Jack Frost calla get a. hold of then. Then all winter long everybody and you and I and little jack Horner and Dolly Dimples will have all we want to eat even. though there is ice and. snow out- side and everything frozen, up hard. Then enougb. is put away for the ani- mals too. That is for the animals who live with us. Let me see what ani- mals do live with us. Well, on the farms what kinds are out ine the big warm barns? Of course the barns Sunday School Lesson them a Dice bed while 'Obey are bere. they give us their good bodies, • ••'4 The May 9. Lesson V.-4esus Home of Zacchaeus--1-ttice 191 1-10. , ader a jesu. This made %ace gee eltien Text—The Son et man la wriTeltizell'ed assinftelivieuss. beBfuot7InIalidsditoiownn, Como to seek and to save that that this. spotless person, which was lost, --Luke 191 10; • be re-alized Who knew hint thraugh and through, called him to be his•real self. Then olliething broke in Zacclueus and ae L JESUS IN TUE MKS OP ZACOIIAZIJS, ern auggeeted that it did not Inat- ter, Indeed, in his presence, men realized their sinfulness in a way that nO,Scorching denunciations would ever beve effected. Ent 3000 Made it plain, that, in spite of sin, he loved the sinner and believed him. We may aseume that In some dim way Zac„ chmus realized the nature and elms - yet really liked him, believed in him, ANALYSIS. Then ' a at and sleek, and —puff—just as 19; easy as tat, they are gone, leaving be- TT .. ttt, ZAConus aeFeNTS AND REFORMS, hied them good cbicken roasts, and 191 8-10. thou another little chick collies to take its place. I, JESUS IN TUE Hoene OP ZAMILAROS, Tell, this Thanksgiving Day 13illY 19: 14. went to his auntie's In the city for a Jericho was a very rich and verY bad a good time there too, famous city. It had many times been destroyed and had as often arisen from the dust..The site of the city in the time of Christ seethe to have been Seine siX miles west of the Jordan Rive and six. miles north of the Dead bee,. It was a rich city for two rep.. E,ons, first because thew. are but two laces where the Jordan can be crossed, here one further north by the enjoye and Fluffy, and he wondered leow Jim- plain of Esdraelon. A velar e while be began to think about Rover lute Chick and three little chicks that amount of merchandise, therefore, looked so muck alike were getting assed inevitably through Jericho. In along and oh, he was getting home- ?he second place, the city was sheeted in a veritable little ,aradise. It was sick to see his 'eternal% and Daddy, so a lled the city of gardens._ andI frwaags- they started to bring Billy home. as "the swereet :melt: - all got in Uncle Will's car and off rant balsam plantations J c next you'll hear about what haPPeued . I fonnowswfl that the chief tax - e So thergforet Is 0 when Billy got home again, was a -converted man. There can be no real rppentance that does not carry with it mevital3ly the attempt, so far as poseible, to put right the evil we have done, no matter hoW much of publicity and scandal this may involve. Verse 10, is the unique gospel of Christianity. Lazy England! An Utah Colonial In. Truth (London) (Andre Siegfried, 'writing in the London Times, has accused the Eng- lishman of being 1azY, and refusing to learn. foreign languages,) It is high time that the relative baselessness of these charges was given some of the Publicity to which the charges them- selves have been exposed. Speaking as an Irish Colonial who has lived a little in four continents, I can say with absolutely no desire to work off a paradox or BOOM by cheaply pre- tending bleak to be white, that the What New York Canning Industry is Wearing 1/Y ANNABELLE woRTHINGTON Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Fier .nishecl With Deov P Worn Sweets Induce Early Rising Saratoga Springs. ---That there is as =oh truth as poetry in. the expres- sion "sweet sleep" is shown, we are told in a bulletin issued by the Col gate 'University Press Bureau, by the record of an inter -collegiate sluraber contest recentle, conducted between men students at that UniverSity. and girl students at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs. The contest, conducted on a scien- tific basis jointly by Dr. Donald. A. Laird, director of Colgate% depart - inept of psychology, and Dr. Linus W. Kline, Skidmore psychologist, ended in a walkaway for the girls, and indi- cated that the most restful and re- freshing sleep was the reward. of those who went in for diets rich in sweets and other carbohydrates. We read: Furthermore, the sveeet-eating girls were said to be much sweeter and. prompter about rising in the morning than the Colgate men and their sister students who went in for more ascetic eating. Most of the young men at Col gate had to be called at least twice before they could be aroused from their slumbers. The Skidmore girls bounded out of their beds at the first note otethe alarm clock. eseeEiteleeot. the 136,- Skidmore stadente tide gatherer of such a place, or, a w English are the finest linguists among might say, the head of the customs and the big nations of the world. ... John taxes department, was a man of great Bull has more faults than he can af- Importance, a man, too, who, if he foredmninertlinifso wiooirdo;f bmuotvidnoglefrtomus his nineteenth-century pre-eminence to a - were not honest, would -have m unrival- led opportunities for "feathering his awn neat." new stability is more awkward than Vschariah. He was a man of small of any other struggling nation. stature. We are not told why he kAintngereleea.0,. Zacchmus' Hebrew name would be +ha. When he haendwaSsounitha,kisnrgaswmara, wanted so much to see Jesus. It may have been idle curiosity to see the normo whoopee. When, afterwards, he an whose name was on every one's was paying his debts, France was mak- lips and who had anarrelled so pub- lug economic whoopee. Poor old 'Hely with the Pharisees. Or Zag- The strain upon him has been ter - more religious motive, having heard , bunt crocked s he thc, and the only reason that he ohms may have been moved by A r. that this new teacher in Israel did not ibecause is the despise nor refuse to consort with men starcliest and most resourceful fellow n. of his class. Or mans rnav have ithe world. one rotvia that Jesus was Titan/ling or exile/el-am some great "sign" at the coming; Feast. Or. again, Zaechmus Canada's Future Sir Henry Thornton in the English may have been interested. in Jesus only as a miracle worker. At any Review (London); Tbere is no ren - rate. the F:f f et of Trans? visit on Zac- chmus was very different from any son for alarm concerning Canada. It thi-oct, he had anticinated. bas not been necessary to disrupt or - not as warm as our houses be- cattee..syba antastaareneamber,.- animals ',Ave eir or e • ers, , so e ey k'...and 140 Colgate studen s w f eta th d 't ' * s attd in the experiment reported daily Want it se warma Well, , if youlook AT over you'll See great piles and piles of hay, and it is lots Of fun to play in it too, isn't it.? Then there are great big boxes of oats and wheat and everything that animals like and the animals are the horses and cows and pigs and chickens. Oh, a single house full of chickens grow big and fat and lay lots of eggs for Mamma Lady and Daddy and. Billy. Of course, the little boys and girls who live iu the city or town bayou% got a barn, very likely, so they just 11 eve a kitty or a dog who like to snooze in front of the warm fireplace. But in our story it is nearly Thanks- giving Day, and Thanksgiving Day comes because we have so much to be thankful for, don't you think? rni sure mother can think of many other things too, which you will want to be thaultful for besides all these good things. to eat, won't she? We, only need to think a little and find that the world. is just full of wonderful things. Do you remember what you had. for Thanksgiving dinner? It's just awful - le good when we have roast chicken or turkey, isn't it? I guess most peo- ple have roast (thicken on that day, don't they? • It must take a great many chickena to feed everybody. • And do .:70u know, little girls and boys, the chickens don't mind after they grow up if they are used for chicken roast. No, they don't. In fact, that is why a lot of them were born. $o they just have a good time while they are here, and they can have suck a good time it we take good care of them, feed- ing anti ‚watering them and keeping their little houses clean and giving over a period of two seeeks on 2 items of data which had to do with their mode of living, their emotional states, and their reactions to physical exertion. A classification of this data showed that the two contestants having per- fect sleep scores were girls wb.o con- sumed the largest quantities of sweets. It also showed that the girl students la general slept about 15 per cents bet- ter than men students. ganizations in this country because of It seems that this incident of the meeting with Zacchaeus took place as the slump, and when the recovery, Jesus was on his way up to Jerusalem which is certain to come, does get for the Feast, where he made his last, under way, Canada will be in a posi- great appeal to the nation, and where tion to rnake the best of her eppor- he met his doom. If Jesus amities. Her people have been for - hope that he vauld prevail in his great challenge to the Pharisees and Sadducees in Jeresalem, it must have Mrs. 13.—"Are you sure Harold is engagea te Miss DeCash?" Mrs, C.—"Well, I hear his tailor has let him have another suit of cloth's." ed important that he should draw tal possible popular support to his side, and that he should not unnecea- sarily alienate. any .who might syme Urces of wealth are unimpaired. ... pathize with him. We cannot but When the demand comeswithre wonder therefore, at the courage covery of the countries to which Can - which led him,. at this critical moment, ada looks for her markets that demand t o oat of his way to favor with his is likely to be on a larger scale, even, Shows Increase According to a recent report the pack of vegetables In Canada Showed an increase of over 60 per cent. la 1930, while there was a decline of aboutftlilt, 17,1 hpe se er ecotp, a 0 utiste arpack eedf upon officially Issued agures, which relate to quantities not to values. Other figures for an earlier year ehow that the Canadian industry supplied over 80 per cent. of the Immo market for these products. This eoMparisen, 'watch is for the year 1928, Is for val- ues, which. provide the only common denominator between production and extended trade. The outstanding feature of the r0. port on the pack of fruits and raga, tables in Canada is the large increase shown in the production. ot tomatoes, peas and corn. The pack of tomatoes increased over 1929 by nearly 104 per cent., peas by almost 165 per cent, and cora by 19.5 per cent. Th.e itt- crease in the total pack id canned vegetables was 3,646,382 cases, or 64.8 per cent. The total pack of canned vegetables, exclusive of canned soars, amounted to 9,272,480 eases, the fig- ures being based on 24 No. 2 cans to a case. In 1929 the pack on the same basis was 5,626,098 cases. Tomatoes with 4,025,283 cases comprised the bulk of the 1930 pack. Peas were next in order with 2,553,983 cases, followed by baked beans with 1,096,042 cases and corn. with 1,066,830 cases. While vegetable canning showed great expansion in Canada last erear, the pack of canned fruits in 1930 fell considerably below that ot 1929, drop- ping from. 1,101,188 cases that year to 978,510 cases in. 1930, or slightly more than 11 per cent. This is accounted for by the large decrease in the apple pack, which fell from 831,691 cases is 1929 to 20,957 cases last year. Sub. stantial increases, however, were noted in the pack of pears, peaches and cherries, pears being up by 101,722 cases to a total of 339, 106 cases, peaches an increase of 64,973 to 155,- 128 cases and cherries up by 51,131. cases to 146,286 cases canned last year. In 1928, when Cauadiaa canners supplied 84 per cent. of the home market, the total pack of canned fruits and vegetables was valued at $14,823,- 295. The imports were $4,463,097 and the exports e1,687,258. In 1930 the imports of canned vegetables into Can- ada were valued. at 81,461,185 and the imports of cauned fruits at $2,954,415. Exports of canned vegetables in 1930 were valued at 5631,015 and of canned fruits at $250,271. Here's slimming lines for the 'WO - man of heavier figure. And a smart dress that will answer many ueeds for the lovely spring days that are not so far away. The bodice has a deep cross-over vest, one of the best means to conceal breadth. The softly falling jabots lend a pretty effect and contribute mueh toward its slenderness. The yoke of the skirt is cut to the smartest depth to narrow the hipline. The seaming, tapering as it does to a deep point, is decidedly length giving. Printed crepe silk in midnight blue combines with plain matching blue crepe, with white embroidered mous- seline in this lovely model. Style No. 3038 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3% yards 89 -inch, with % yard a9-ineh contrasting and 14 Yard 39-ineh all-over lace. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. tunate in that they have suffered. prob- ably less than those of any other cou try during the recent depression; her resources are still awaiting develop- ment to a very large extent, and her nresence the man who was probable the most hated person in Jericho, the elan who stood for compromise with the Roman power and epitomized all that most most obnoxious to the fan - ,tical nat'onalism of the day. II. ZACCHAEOS REPENTS AND REPORNIS, 19: 8-10. When Zacohmus says in v. 8, "the half of my goods I give to the poor," he is making a declaration of his pur- pose, not stating his habit in he past. In Exodus 22: 1 the man *ho has stolen one sheep is required to restore four, and fourfold restitution is known to Roman law in the case of a man caught in the act of robbery. It is not plain whether Zacehmus' re- pentance and solemn reparation are due to something (unreported) that Jesus had said to him, or simply to the fact that Jesus came to his house. any event, we should compare and contrast the impresSion made upon notorioes rogues by Jesus and by Christians. Christians ha se always' denounced robbery, rapacity and swindling. They have not infrequent- ly lost their tempers with the wrong- doer and have done their best to get him punished by any means in thesr rower. No doubt they have often ex- pressed a concern for the wrong y must come first Twelve Canadian Oaks There are twelve species of oak in Canada a.ccoaling to the Forest Sea - vice, Department of the Interior; one (the Garry oak) is found in Britisb. Columbia, the remainder in the East. than that to which we have been ac- customed. Canadian Bird Sanctuaries The total seabird population of the tea sanctuaries along the north shore of the gult of St. Lawrence In 1930, according to the National Parks of Canada, Department of the Interior, not including young birds hatched In that year, was 100,836. The birds were of sixteen different species, mostly seabirds. Altogether Canada has now more than forty bird. sanctuaries spe- cially reserved for bird protection pur- poses. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you, want. Enclose 90c 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. 4 small and pugnacious man was arguing with a parson about certain incidents in the Bible. "Take -the story of Daniel in the lions' den" he said. "I can explain that for you. It waseet a miracle. What happened was that when Daniel's friends heard he was to be cast into the lions' den the' had the lions gorged with food so that they had no appetite when. Daniel was put beside them." "That's intere; " sting," said the parson.and Skyscrapers Philadelphia Ledger: The first skyscrapers were novelties. , TheY were aecause. • they offered an opportunity to make small pieta of ground pay large dividends in congested areas, But times are changing. Now the tendency in. municipal planning — and in. the larger architecture of designing cities for health, light and convenience — is away from the spire of offices grouped on top of each other around_ an elevator shaft. And despite the fact that the Chrysler Building, the Empire State Building and similar inhabited obelisks continue to rear their young heads high above Ameri- ca's stteets, the time is coming when American 'architectural achievement will be devoted less to height and more to mass, line and stability. Proof Against Bullets Giese used for the "hull panes"—not I Portholes now—of a- new liner is of a special kind that has withstood a pres- sure of twenty tons. In one test of this glass. a Piece of it weighing fifty-six pounds was drela ped eighteen feet onto a steel plate, it came through this ordeal without showing; even. a crack. But glass nowadays can. be wonder- fully eesistant. In certain. tests of a bulist-proof glass recently a .303 bul- let was fired at it at a range of ars yards. The glass plate under test was about an inch. and a 'half thick and .was made ep of three layer. The bul- let starred tba first layer, but made no impression ea the, seeousi.—Ans- wers. "Tom sent me a brick by parcel post, but I got even vith hint." "What did you do?" doer's soul, bat they have generall "Passed the word along to a num- feltber of agents that he was figuring thatpunishment p noW tell me this. Would you go n , on taking out more life insurance." to think that Jesas denounced Zee-, a flan of lions even if you knew they 'I Here, however, we have no reason chmus. It would seem that already had dined well?" "Well . . . er • • ' i Fiction- by any other name would "in his heart of hearts" Zaccbreus had yes, I would," said the man, a little be a falseeood just the same, often denounced himself, and his ex- uncomfortably. "And if you ray' said the parson, measuring the little man, "I feel sure the lions a ou one look at you and say to each other, right if everybody is equally wroug." `Boys, we've forgotten the savourY: " —G. K. Chesterton. cuses were for the pub1lC eye Jesus showed no inclination to "et Zacchasus punished," for he was only concerned to get Zacchmue changed, Jesus never for a moment condones t d • an ever set anything MUTT AND JEFF— —By BUD FISHER. wwve 6�t OU. ---rttSTiWr-Me vost:. tivsl iseeitseellaG tea% IT a tic -1 OFF: X Dot•S'r mt.Ara -lie loss- 1 MAP -r JOCKEY! 1"1 LAsr vme RStateG can LAUGHING FlelatattallteTEle: %MAT% motto6? He's alal tilt BACK AGAIN- t #DoNtT mem) -rtke Joct‹e'Y MOAN The 00'5! nees :a -a} OUR 4 ocKGy MUST 13.e. CRoSS-EN#Gb --- Hes WIAMPING TG MIRO% N-• The biggest thing on earth isotEt13 tinder when. its in your eye. A Giraffe Would 1 -lave Won by a N ItiP, we LOST BY A NOSE iF tiA"D Bee.t4 WONG TkiAT Ross -VN,1E wouirt HAVE- LuoN: LALIGKING FRANkftatTeR ts The. ES RAU c...sx Pott'( iti Ti ‘NOIZLb- tie'S etkAStNe ALL orielt lAosSeS ATouNb THE: TRAck aTa 540 M, ,11 S Pa „ it'H11114111 1kt , 7 .411111 •