HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1931-07-02, Page 7Iigktfu•i
For cooking, coo!
Marla in Canada
For dinner to -night, serve
Macaroni and cheese,
baked golden brown ..
for to -morrow's luncheon,
give the children toast
covered with tasty, bub-
bling cheese,
But be sure you use Kraft
cheese, for Kraft, being
fully matured, is readily
digestible and, because it
is exceptionally rich in
butter fat, it is a particu-
larly nourishing food.
Made by the makers of Kraft Se lad D'essing and Velveeta
Owl Laffs
Miss Ima Hardnut, of. Brushville,
has returned the lavallier her sweetie
gave her because it made a green spot
on her wishbone.
Teacher—"Robert, here is an ex-
ample in subtraction. Seven boys
went down to the creek to swim, but
two, of them had been told not to go
to the water. Now, can you inform
me how many went in?"
Robert—"Yes'm; seven."
If yon} want to and out how valu-
able
aluable you are about an institution, lay
off a week and see how easy it is to
fill your place. This is a a good cure
for a person who has allowed his con-
coct to assume undue proportions.
Flattery often leaves a pleasant feel-
ing even though you know it is flat-
tery. There ought to be a law against
travel bureaus sending their alluring
summer trip folders to busy folks.
They disrupt the entire day's work.
It is now claimed that no man can
really love until he is 60. A lot of peo-
ple are lying about their age if this is
true. The radio inventor who will in -
'rent a radio which will tune out pro-
grams filled with boring advertising
broadcasts, will make a fortune. An
optimist is a guy who thinks his wife
has quit cigarettes when he finds cigar
butts around the house, A Scottish
lassie, who applied for a job as an
artist's model, was told to come down
again the next day and to bring along
a pair of tights. She brought her
tether and mother.
Inerald—":Hello, aren't you a stranger
around here?"
Imogene—"Yes, to you!"
their husbands are made to order. A
girl may allow herself to be led to the
altar, but that's when the leading ends.
Dashing young ladies often lead fast
lives. Even in these swift modern
times occasionally a girl niay be found
who is so slow that it takes her thirty
years to reach the age of nineteen.
Any store, any business, that lets a
gang of loafers hang around it, no
matter how fine and charming they
may be personally, is sure to fail.
These hangers-on won't buy much. But
they' will keep real customers out of
a place.
Paul—"Are you going to kiss me
good -night?"
Eve—"Mercy, No!
thing I'll do."
Paul—"All right, then, what'll we
do first?"
That's the last
It's terrible to be poor and old, but
it isn't very much better to be old and
rich, either.
The Sun's Munificence
Boundingly up through Night's wall
dense and dark,
Embattled crags and clouds, outbroke
the Sun
Above the conscious
by one
Her heights and depths absorbed to
the last spark
His fluid glory, from the
ridge
Of mountain -granite
termed to gold,
Laughed first the thanks back, to the
vale's dusk fold
On fold of vapor -swathing, like a
bridge
Shattered beneath some giant's stamp.
Night wist
and betook herself In
earth, and one
which,
far fine
trans -
Her work done
mist
To marsh and
her time
hollow, there to bide
Blindly in acquiescence. Everywhere
Did earth. acknowledge Sun's embrace
sublime,
Thrilling her to the hearth of things:
since there
No ore ran liquid, no spar branched
anew,
No arrowy crystal gleamed,
straightway grew . -
Glad through the inrush -glad nor
more nor less
Than, 'neath his gaze, forest and wild -
Mrs. Pemberton—"It is said that the hill, dale,sland, sea, the whole vast
young girls to -day ere abandoning all
restrictions." stretch and spread,
Mr. Pemberton—"W ell, I'd better The universal world of creatures bred
not catch Mary Katherine without By Sun's munificence, alike gave
praise.
hers on:'
—Robert Browning, in Poems.
Simpson—"Hallerston is the most
0r
Mar'kstoon t
'i'te haaaclseme silver ctip, shawl above, Was sent to Lt. Cul.. R. J. Bird -
whistle, secretary of the Dominion if Canada Rifle Association, Ottawa, by
the- Canadian Pacific Railway Comb; .y, to be shot for at the famous meet-
ing at Birley, England, by teams film various parts of the British Empire,
at long ranges. It is 30 inches bids, including the triple wooden mounting
which forms the base. The figui'1 of a rifleman in the prone position is
reproduced on the base of the cup,roinciding with the front and rear faces
of the pedestal
Paris Suburbs
brlataily frank business man in town." Grow
]Lewis—"How so?"
Simpson—"When he remits in pay-
ment he writes: 'You have already
found the enclosed cheque'."
It's Up to the Girls
When skirts were short, some funny
things
Both fat and thiel were viewed;
We hope those 'props will be improved
Ere short skirts are renewed.
Father (to son who is leaving on
summer vacation)—"Don't let me hear
any bad reports about you."
Son—"I'll. try, Dad, but You know
bow these things leak out'
Egypt Yields Secrets
Of Animal God Cults
a.
The Crocodile of a SanctuaryrRecently Dug Up Was One of
Many Creatures the. Ancients Held Sacred
New knowledge of an auciait rife' serpent seems to have been con -
Egyptian cult will result, it is re-
lieved, from the recent discovery of
the first complete sanctuary, with -II
annexes, of the crocodile god Seknib-
tunis. This sanctuary, composed ora.
long processional way, a temple aid
priests' dwellings within a walled In.
closure, has been unearthed by"an
Italian archaeological mission in tie
Stant in all generations and many
prayers were said to deliver the hu-
ni4n.. •dead from the "Serpents which
.aria ^in the Underworld, which lie up-
on`the bodies of men and women and
consume their blood." The Egyptian
so coveted the power of the serpent
that he learned those prapers which
were most certain to bring him its
Fayum district. Limestone reliefs sk powers after death, when his soul wan -
a vestibule at one end of the way Oil
Seknebtunis in several aspects, as tell
as a procession bearing the sac
crocodile on a litter.
Much has still to be learned of
many cults of the ancient Egyptia s,
though it is known that hundreds f
them were recognized by theologiai`s
even in late dynastic times when ant.
mals, beasts, birds, fishes and reptile$
were worshiped. The )gyptians°`,?=
tended their veneration to human tit
ings, to the great powers of net es
and to the large numbers of bents
with which they peopled the heaven;
the air, the earth, the eley, the'°ssut
the moon, the stars and the orate;
These animals were not'venerated
dynastic times as animals, but as tit
abodes of gods.
The cults had their origin in;th9
precarious life of primitive man who
the physical conditions of Egypt wet
similar to those in certain .part
Central Africa to -day. The.1axe.
covered with forests and th,.
obscured by dense undergrowth
e
lered about the earth: "I am the ser-
-tint
er-
- nt Seta whose years are many. I
se and I am born again each day. I
am the serpent Sate which dwelleth
in the uttermost parts of the earth.
2. die and I am born again, and I re-
new myself, and I grow young each.
,
-At the period when the serpent was
being worshiped hi Lower Egypt the
vulture was the chief object of ador-
ation in Upper Egypt. So powerful
were these two centres of worship
that the kings gave themselves the
title, "Lord of the Shrines of the Vul-
ture and Uraeus,' 'to proclaim their
sovereignty. Other wild animals
whiclirwere worshiped by the Egyp-
tians were the lion, the lynx and the
liipp• . tames. Not much is known of
the of the fish, but several species
ierated.
There is a duty on Ti* now of .four
cents per pound and four percent Sales
Tax. All imports of Tea now pay these
extra charges, but.
We have not
increased the price of
beetle or scarabaeus became
bol of the god of creation and
tion. It was often placed in
s because it was thought to give
o cu, lase to the dead body upon
fm hers of. beasts roamed about teee -which It was placed, provides :I the pro-
fdrests; huge` serpents of various sit - ped' r-ords of power were first said
cies, including hosts of deadly rel,. o';er it or written upon it. The idea
tiles, lived in the undergrowth, anal oflife appears to have been associated
the river was filled with great croon` wij• the scarab from time immemorial
Biles such as may be seen even to dad` in Egypt, for to this day, the insect is
in the Blue Nile. When the, cauda drfetl; pounded, mixed with water, and
dried- up, the crocodiles; Wender d then; drunk by the women, who be -
about the field at will and ate Wilt liaved it to be an unfailing specific for
ever came their way. When'nian e - the Rroduction of large families.
tured them he tamed them,fed tlagn } One of the oldest animal cults was
honey, put crystal and gold It arri;tgs that of the Apis or Bull which. was
into their ears, and bracelets'on deir,�2 Orshiped throughout the Nile Valley.
s birth was commemorated by an
1• which lasted seven
ring this period no man
oiled even by a crocodile.
res turned loose in the court-
D RO
TEA
We bear the loss
So you can still buy the very best
of Tea at the same price as before the
duty was put on.
T. H. ESTABROOKS Co. Ltd.—ST. JOHN, N.B.
Montreal Toronto Winnipeg
yard of the sanctuary on certain days
to be exhibited to the worshipers.
They fed him cakes made of the finest
wheat flour mixed with honey; boiledI REMNANTS
d
Classified Advertising
or roasted geese, and live birds ofcer- SIT OR
c�y LBS. PRINTS,
e7 $1.00. A. Mccreery Co.,
tain kinds. Ontario.
The vulture, the hawk, the heron,
the ibis and the benne, among the
birds, were universally venerated
throughout Egypt. Some of them
were regarded as spirits of the dawn
which, having sung hymns of praise
while the sun was rising, turned into
apes.
There were many other gods for the
Egyptian, which Egypt's conquerors
adopted in time, but they never were
fully assimilated by them. The As-
syrians and Babylonians never made
them their own, and the Greeks scof-
fed not a little at such materialism,
though they themselves used animals
as symbols of their gods and god
desses.
Paris—Paris suburbs are growing forepaws. After death he eznbalifed
rapidly, the recent census shows, their bodies and buried them in vaults.
while the city itself expands more Worship Because of Fear i d
slowly. The explanation, Iles in the Facts now available indicate that i
housing problem and in suburban primitive man worshiped animals be -
communications. cause he feared them. They possess -
In 1926 the census showed an in- ed, he thought, greater strength, power
crease of 220,000 inhabitants in the and canning than his own; they were
suburban districts of the Depart- endowed with some quality which .en-
ment of the Seine, while the popula- -bled them to do him harm and to
tion of Paris itself decreased by 27,- cause his death. He regarded them as
000. Since then Paris has annexed the personification of tie powerb,Cbw•
the outer zone, where the old forts- evil and of death, and came to believ,
ficatlons stood, with a population of that he might court their good-wi
40,000, and apartment buildings have by offerings and -prayers, for thei
been built within the city limits ac- spirits must be appeased.
commodating 39,000. The Egyptians, having develeeed
Notwithstanding this increase, the the idea that individual animals were
Wedlock often develops into a dead- total gain in the 1931 census was 20,- the abodes of gods, believed that ter-
tain ideas wee: incarnate in thei
They were beloved by him and ti eat'
ed with reverence and care. Api<rt-
ments were set aside for them in ,,te !
temples throughout the coait'.'3 ; •.'
whole cities were dedicated to.th:ln. I'`
Sacred animals were washed in hot ''
baths, their bodies annointed and ier-
fumed. Rich beds were provided fox•';;.'
them to lie upon and the greatest
Kennedy eft
Menton
421 College St.,
Toronto
Harley Lavidson Distributor'
its at nave rc,r mar bargain list of
ed ,n t"r"wrles Te.rms +arranged
lock. Bathing beauties are among
the bare necessities of life. The late
husband catches the early morning
,lecture. The turning point in a man's
life often is when he begins turning
his pay envelope over to his wife. Men
have only themselves to blame. Wo-
men buy nearly everything on their
account. Some wives seem to think
•
WOOL
HIGHEST PRICES PAID
The Canadian Wool Co. Ltd.
2 CHURCH ST.. TORONTO
LERGT RQ
NSi
a but effective. No bad
affects. For 60 a fry
chrtet � 'iLcarlasb�tya
�,.�:cidlty,l"lstel
*Woos.
DCF
'TiPA►TION
Dir Caster's famous Lanita
Pills. Entirely Veg abl
5c& 75c t'edpackages
000 for the city, while the popula-
tion of the Seine Department was
augmented by 280,000. Migration of
the Paris population to better quar-
ters in the suburbs has been made
possible by improved transit facili-
ties.
A Sense of Progress
I was dining once in London, quite
informally, with a great electrical en-
gineer, a very trim maid in attendance.
At the table near my host's right hand
was a small block of white marble
and a tiny silver mallet. When he
wanted the maid, he struck the mar-
ble a resounding blow.
I was, somewhat amused, and asked
I him if he had ever heard of a push-
button for the same purpose.
"My boy, I have," was his reply, "but
I get enough of electrical devices in
the city; I don't want a single one of
them in my own homy. I've not come
yet to using gas; I prefer candles;
they are not so likely to get out of or-
der. I hate this pushing a dimple and
waiting for something to happen.
GVhen I make a noise myself I begin to
feel a dense of ]progress; that's what t 'S Good
care was exercised to give then" ;the
most comfort.
The Fear of the Serpent
The abject fear of the Egyptians, for
sA
11.7).
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To be happy is to say little and feel
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did all my friends."
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The minister was visiting a wom-
an noted for grumbling. She had a
good crop of potatoes. The person
said, "Now, Mrs. Higgins, you bave
nothing to grumble about." iSlie
replied—"Indeed I have; where's the
little ones for the pigs?"
As®
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DEPRESSION
"t I'm a different woman
" Two Sears ago I began to get
depressed, and everything was toe
much trouble for me. I was a misery
to myself and everyone around me.
I was advised to take Glauber Salts
by my friends who said it was the
same as Iiruschen but it did me no
good, so at last niy husband got nie
a bottle of Iiruschen and no one would
realise the different woman I ani. 1L
have been taking Iiruschen now
constantly for two years. My daughter
also would not be without it. I have
got my neighbour to take Iiruschen
as well and she has found its worth
as she feels a different woman."
—(Mrs. G. A. E.)
The commonest cause of depression
is partial constipation—an insidious
complaint because the sufferer is
seldom aware of it. It means this
gradual accumulation of body poisons
which dull the mind., damp the spiritsa
sap tate nervous strength and lower
the whole vitality.
Nruschen Salts make constipation
impossible. Therefore, if you keep to
Kruschen you need never know the
meaning of melancholy ; never fee&
" nervy." or depressed.
•
this im
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