HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1952-10-23, Page 3•
3 Was Too Much
For Pulling To. th
One of the most generous men
In the world is a Scotsman. He is
a self-made millionaire named
Harry Falconer McLean, who lives
In Canada,
•
Although he hates publicity,
Canadian reporters have relied on
him for years to provide them
with a constant stream of news
items.
McLean gives generously to vari-
ous charities, but it is his "small"
gifts that appeal to the public
fancy. •
One day he went to a musical
eomedy and enjoyed the show so
much that he sent every member
of the chorus a mink coat.
During the war he turned up at
ra Toronto soldiers' hospital and
distributed hundred -dollar bills to
nurses and patients to the amount
of $3,000 dollars.
One evening McLean was late
'for a train, but the taxi-driver got
him to the station in record time.
Next day the driver's baby boy
received a cheque for $2,0001
There have been other super -
spendthrifts, In America, before
the war, "Coal -Oil Johnny" Steele
spent 8,000 dollars on clothes in
a" single day.
When he stayed at an hotel in
Philadelphia one of the clerks
failed to accord him proper defer-
ence. "Coal -Oil Johnny" paid out
$10,000 to lease the hotel for one
day -and fired the clerk.
HATED SPENDING
An ancestor of the Marquis of
Hastings was a Lavish spender, But '
he wagered his entire inheritance
on one horse.
And the horse lost.
Years ago Hollywood made a
film about another fabulous rich
man. He was "Diamond Jim"
Brady, who had a separate,, com-
plete set of jewelled studs, rings
and cuff -links for every day of the
month.
But what about multi -millionaire
ban' ti5Y"'• �i'3+�%v
"Unsinkable" Suit Suits Her -Carolyn Keen, 15 -month-old wetter.
baby, floats along with utmost confidence. She's wearing 'an "un-
sinkable" oathingsuit, which is being tested by the Infanfile
Paralysis Fellowship of London, England. Particularly useful in
supporting polio patients unl,argoing water therapy treatments,
the suit may also be worn under street clothing, and is said to be
able to support a person indefinitely.
John D. Rockerfeller? He signed
cheques for thousands of dollars,
but 'hated spending loose change
on himself. One day (so the story
goes) he went to the dentist to
have a tooth out..
"How much?" We inquired be-
fore hand. "Three dollars," said
the dentist, who didn't know his
client was Rockerfeller.
"Three dollars just to pull a
tooth!" mumbled the millionaire.
"Here's one dollar. Loosen it a
little bits"
;ir LE iS
clam Andttews
What to put in school childrens
lunch boxes is a five -times -a -week
problem which thousands of
mothers are up against. I thor-
oughly agree with a suggestion
made bY Eleanor Richey Johnston
in this connection. Writing in the
Christian Science Monitor she ad-
visee s thatyou do
s uld a1 a: be
w Ys
sure to pack a surprise in:the box,
because' all children love surprises,
and are happy with even the simp-
lest ones. When you're icing cup-
cakes, for instance, it takes only a
few seconds to write your child's
name on It with jelly beans or to
press an animal cracker or a fancy
colored gumdrop into the center
before the icing : hardens.
* * dr
If you're making pies, roll the
leftover dough and cut into small
rounds or animal shapes and cover
with a mixture of butter, sugar,
and cinnamon befire you bake
them. Add colored sugar for an
especially gay effect.
• * s:
Fruit is an addition to every
lunch, and it will appeal to the im-
agination of your child if, when
he turns to his lunch box apple,
he finds you have taken out the
core and filled the cavity with rai-
sins.
* * ."
Oranges are, of course, a per-
ennial lunch -box favorite and it
is a good idea to prepare then
for easy eating. First, nark a
strip about 4 inch wide complete-
ly encircling the orange at the
"equator"' line, Now remove peel
above and below. Cut remaining
/ inch band vertically, at a section
division and gently part the orange
to its core. Now part each section
separately until they all lie flat on
their backs attached to one another
by the / in. band of peel. They
are easily put back in position then,
ready for the lunchbox, yet ready
to eat with little muss.
* * a:
Tuck in the sandwich package
a cube
of .
on a colored tao.th-
park ora, little
package. � of ,'raisins
or carrot sticks wrapped in silver
foil and tied with colored cord to
add interest to the meal.
* * *
Here are a few suggestions for
sandwich fillings' that your child
will like. You can devise others,
using what you have in the house
as well as catering to the taste of
your own child.
Cream cheese, jam, and raisins.
Chopped dates, chopped nuts,
lemon juice, and mayonnaise.
Ground cooked meat, pickle
relish, chopped hard -cooked eggs,
and mayonnaise.
Chopped frankfurters, pickle
relish, mustard, and chili sauce.
Tuna fish, chopped hard -cooked
eggs, chopped celery, chopped pic-
kle, and salad dressing.
Peanut gutter and chopped bacon,
Peanut batter and dried ground
fruits.
Cottage cheese, chopped peanuts,
and apricot jam.
Grated Canadian cheese, ground
or grated onion, chipped beef, and
chili sauce.
Peanut butter and honey or
orange marmalade.
Cream cheese and grape jelly,
strawberry jam, or chopped dates.
If you would like to knew the pro-
portions that make the best sand-
wich fillings, here are -a few exact
recipes. You can adjust your own
ingredients to these:
S. Cwt3eded.
Fa't ;y yt� K 0. Ped.
�• !f ? `, 10. Peer Gynt's
mother.
11, Marry.
16. Money drawer
13. T3ridle strap.
20. rtesened
arttOss 2, Limb, 21. Irises high.
1. Fairy 3. Mystical 22. 11Tountain
4. T4arsh sound, beings. erect,
9. Teelemrnt. 4. Group of 23, Garden
12. students. mnlements
men<ure of 5. U,eeent. 24. street urchin
yrtit'tt• 5. Mr. Lincoln ..".rt. P,rrt of the leg
1.1. Work 7. Negative. 2- r tri
14. TTtitize.
15 Ctir. tip,
17, Forts`ted.
19. Ascend
20. Targe knife
21. Crean
e:Ceurstone.
2s. tirades.
20. Tturatnn eitY
27, Tort
24. Tilxelnrnation
20, 'Roman bronze
30. Prodded.
31, Wine vessel.
32, nirrht (ab,)
31, rnrirnvored.
!l4 resettle.
as, pronhetess.
37, T"":pre�'S
e'ratitude.
35 tr•ni"tenet,
!19 Trait to hold
Tinnid
An &lets at liberty
42. Stingin
inserts,
40, 'c*entilate
40. rrrntlfal
maces"
45, neve
n
49. Period of
tight.
10, 'porn slicbtlY
01,'rihntan rrheeP.
3, Oidinperces/
SS
PUZZLE
30. Squeezes.
31. Arouses from
steep.
53, Large plant.
14. Comparative
conjunction.
30. Hach,
7. Concise.
39, 'Lengthy.
40. Hobby.
11. Creek.
12, Fowl.
43. XTenule
I, Cteean,
47. Five hundred
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Answer Elsew lett on 'f'his pa
Barber's Despair
ProccotKtr� e.f Algie .l
Af •is• arts th
�r'"�
f all the 'men'' in -the
Battalion in Korea. The luxuriant
growth saves him many minutes
otherwise wasted shaving,and
helps him present a fierce face
to the enemy.
RAISIN -PEANUT BUTTER
FILLING
s/q cup peanut butter
6 tablespoons chopped seedless
rais•ns
6 tablespoons orange juice
Combine peanut • butter, raisins
and orange juice. Makes filling for
5 sandwiches.
* *
VEGETABLE SANDWICH
FILLING
/A cup grated raw carrots
1/4 cup finely chopped celery
1 cup grated cabbage
Y4 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons chili sauce
2 teaspoons salad dressing
Combine vegetables and ad 1 chili
sauce and salad . dressing. Makes
filling• for four sandwiches.
a: * *
APPLESAUCE. NUGGET
COOKIES
2 cups sifted flour
1/4 teaspoon sal
T/Z teaspoon each, cinnamon, nut-
meg, cloves and allspice
1 cup broken nut meats
1/4 cup shortening
1 cup brown sugar,- firmly
packed
1 teaspoon soda
1 cup applesauce
1 egg, well beaten
1 (6 -ounce) package semi -sweet
chocolate bits
Sift flour, salt, and spices to-
gether. Add nut meats. Cream
shortening and sugar, Add soda
to applesauce, then add egg. Blend
this with creamed mixture; add dry
ingredients. Stir in chocolate bits.
Drop by spoonful on greased
baking sheet, 2 or 3 inches apart,
Bake 12-15 minutes at 3759r,
MERRY MENAGERIE
►a,INI,+Lmd•
M,Ar+A M r,V t���rr, I,Nu4
Hees yisin•
by
"Well, guess we've put if oft ns
long as possible!"
TIE FAB FRONT
A t'Jrt 4.i1 V1F/Q \
114.41c,w,;
Just as youngsters hate to go
back to ,school after the summer
vacation, cows in many instances
resent being deprived of their liber-
,":#+:"aw the fall. The change from
green forage to dry hay and silage,
the reduction in the amount of daily
exereise, can result in reduction in
feed intake and Hulk production-
and in digestive disorders. Besides
these 'things ; other items of care
must be considered if the comfort
and well being of the herd is to be
kept at a high level.
The ability of a dairyman is
quickly reflected by how his herd
reacts to the • charge -over frons Na-
ture to dry roughage - in the fall
of the year. The experienced herds -
map makes the changeover from
pastor,; to` dry roughage feeding as
gradual as possible. As the pas-
ture becomes. shorter. and of lower
putritional value he substitutes
good.. hay' .and corn si:•age, as -rough-
age .fed hi tacks in pasture and in
barn'at milking. As the nights be-
come cold and frosty he keeps the
cows in the barn and lets them out
to graze only -during the sunny
part of the day.
* x:
During the change -over period
fall -planted rye and legume hay
lands can be grazed for a few hours
a day to a very good advantage.
Never pasture Sudan grass after
frosts, since freezing develops a
cyanic acid in the plants that may
poison cattle. When cattle are first
confined to the barn watch the con-
dition of the droppings. Cows that
show a tendency to constipation
and hard dropping should be given
a tonic prescription at once to get
them back to rormal.
* * *
During the summer pasture per-
iod, sunshine and showers keep the
cows' hair coats and skin, clean and
.fresh. Being kept in the barn
changes this, and necessitates daily
cleaning to remove loose hair, dirt,
and manure which accumulates.
The best dairymen curry and brush
their cows daily after the morning
milking. Such treatment stimulates
the flow of blood just below the
surface of the skin, and makes the
cows feel more comfortable. The
head, neck, flanks, udder and belly
should be clipped soon after
stabling'the tie herd, in the interest
of cleanliness and easier grooming.
* ' * *
Care .
d s ah. tYtation,play a strong
part in- the prevention and- control
of mastitis. Amp'e bedding should
be kept under cows at all tines
while they are in the barn during
the winter. This will prevent the
cows' udder from . resting on the
cold concrete floors, which prac-
tice can lead to swellings, fever and
mastitic in the udder. Cold floors
are not the direct cause of mastitis,
a common "winter time" disease,
but it is a fact that this disease is
much more prevalent, in herds
where cows lie on cold floors with
insufficient bedding. This is due to
the fact that an udder, weakened
by chilling on a hard cold floor,
is much more susceptible to an at-
tack of mastitis.
* * *
Studies at the University of Il-
linois have shown that a large per-
centage of acute mastitis cases were
started by teat and udder injuries,
improper sterilization of milking
machine tea cups, and failure to
prevent mastitis germs from travel-
ing from one cow to the other over
the stall platf firms and bedding.
Tests have shown that mastitis
germs live as lona as 20 days on
undisiufectcd stall plaCorms or
cows skin. Where such germs con-
tacted properly disinfected surfaces,
the live of the mastitis germ was
cut to less than sole day. This in-
dicates the vital oecess'ty of proper
disinfertioe in the protection of a
milking herd against mastitis infee-
tion. A good dip and disinfectant
solution should be sprayed on the
stall floor and bedding of cows
every day or so,
* *
Should a cow develop mastitis in
;spite of the precautions mentioned,
the use of a mastitis treatment is
recommended, Penicillin - dihydro-
streptomycin ointment is a highly
effective treatment if used in time.
This product comes in a handy
"squeeze" tube that makes treat-
ment very easy. The small tip of
the tube is inserted in the infected
teat and the contents slowly squeez-
ed out of the tube and into the
quarter. Then a light massage
spreads the ointment throughout
the quarte.r
* * *
Many times a cow's udder may
he bruised or damaged by being
stepped on, butted, or stung by in-
sects. This causes congestion in
one or more quarters of the udder.
In such cases, bathing with warm
water, milking out, and rubbing
with an udder ointment several
times a day, will bring relief and
prevent a "gargety" condition
which may lead to infectious mas-
titis.
.� * *
Winter conditions of housing,
cause cattle to become more sus-
ceptible to attacks of lice. It is
therefore, a good practice to treat
the herd regularly, by applying a
dry insecticide or louse powder in
the spots where the lice usually
frequent, namely around the shoul-
ders, neck, brisket, and tail. A
repeat treament every 3 or 4 weeks,
as needed, should he given.
Having missed his railway con-
nection, a disgruntled man spent a
miserable hour exploring a dark
and dreary town in the pouring
rain, Hoping to cheer himself up
with a really good meal, he en-
tered a restaurant.
"What have you got that's
good?" be asked a waitress grump-
ily.
"Sage, hen," she senswered.
'What's sage hen?"
"011, it's a bird that's shot
around here."
"Has it got wings?"
"Of course it's got win_,gs."
"Then I don't want any," snort-
ed the man. "I don't want any-
thing that has wings and still
stays in this rotten town."
A Hollywood starlet once upset
precedent by asking KreisIer for
an autograph instead of giving her
own to wild-eyed bobby soxers.
The starlet's disarming request read
-"It doesn't matter whether you
write it or print
it,
Mr. Kr. l
sler
I copy all my autographs over, any-
how, alphabetically in nay scrap-
book."
NDAY SCHOOL
LESSON.
By Rev. R. B. Warren, B.A., B.D.
Jesus Dedicates His Life
Matthew 3:16 to 4:11; 4i17
Memory Selection:
Lo, 1 come to do thy will, 0 Geer$,
Hebrews 10:7
We now begin a course of les-
sons upon the Gospel as recorded
by Matthew. It will continue for
two quarters. Matthew seems to
write with the Jews particularly its
mind. He begins with Abraham
and sets forth Christ as the Mes-
s:a11. "That it might be fulfilled
which was written" occurs many
tinges. Christ was the fulfillment ef
the hopes expressed in the 014
Testament. Matthew does not
speak of Christ's ascension. Mark
writing of Romans begins with
Malachi and shows Christ as an
active worker. He gives His resur
rcetlon and ascension, Luke writes
of Gentile converts. He begins with
John the Baptist though he traces
the lineage of Jesus back to Adam
and to God, There is no sugges-
tion of any state in which man was
either a water puppy or a chimpan-
zee. Luke presents Christ as the
perfect man. He gives His reser*
rection and the promise of a Com-
forter. John begins with God and
rrescnt Christ as a personal Savior.
He spea'.:s of Christ coming again..
Together they give beautiful view
of the life and ministry of Jesus
Christ, The writers had a different
emphasis but without any contra.
diction,
Jesus Christ met and defeated the
Tempter. Strong appeals were made
to the lust of the flesh, the lust of
the eye and the pride of life. But
where Eve and Adam had fallen,
Jesus remained steadfast. He saw
beyond the present and would not
sacrifice the future good for the
present pleasure. Since He won on
the battle field of temptation, we,
by His grace, may also win. He
has paved the way for victory over
sin, the flesh and the devil.
Through Him we are conquerors.
May the spirit of obedience which
characterized the Iife of our Savior,
be ours, too,
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
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FAMILY ALBUMS
From Countryman's Year, by Haydn S. Pearson
ULTRAMODERN sophisticates look down their noses at anything
remotely tinged with Victorianism. In their judgment family albums
are definitely apart of the spirit of yesteryear. Perhaps we are still toss
young as people to appreciate properly the soul -satisfying traditions of
previous generations, but time is catching 'up on this regrettable attitude.
The collection properly begins with a group of old daguerreotypes
and ferrotypes. Great-grandfathers posed stiffly in their hirsute glory.
In the nineteenth century beards and mustaches framed faces of solid,
resolute character. Great-grandmothers used billows of petticoats and
fetching bustles and seemed to favor high neckpieces of lacy, starched
material. They piled their hair high and occasionally they went in 'for
braids worn as a crown. But in the faces of those men and women,
family likenesses can be seen.
1t the turn of the century, styles were more daring. Beards were
disappearing and the bustle was gone; petticoats were reduced to one or
two. 'There were Gargantuan hats piled high with flowers and ornamental
fruits. The girls, now grandmothers, had print shirtwaists, ankle -length
shirts, incl hitli shoes. The boys specialized in tight -fitting suits and
wide.,/bite collars. Through the years the procession continued. The
changes in dress reflected the growing freedom of human beings as they
emerged, into the age of mechanical marvels. The bulky, billowy bathing
suits gradually carate nearer the irreducible minimum. The cars changed
from horseless carriages to modern streamlined automobiles.
The family album is a part of our growing tradition; it tells the
story of myriad changes. On a rainy afternoon when the children gather
round the living -room table to see the pictures and hear the familiar,
loved stories, they are learning a nation's history.
Checkups for Chimps are important too, according to Mickey, zoo -socialite. Mickey hied himself
to the family Doc, made sure all was in good order by getting the medico's O.K. At left, Mickey waits
while the Doc listens in on his heart. No thumps, jumps, yowls or murmurs there. Middle panel
shows Mickey mystified by the flickering contra nt:on Dec uses to peer inside his eyes. "How's it
look, Doc?" he asks. Apparently all is O.K. b- cause at right Doc goes on to check teeth, throat
and tonsils. Mickey gurgles, "Ah -h -h-," reyea1ir , '. '--yrrtic, e• ;^,1 t„o ico cream he had for
dessert. And so, stamped "O.K.'r for another year, the healthy Chimp rests easy. He wants to
pass the word along advising others to have an annual check-up ,just to be sure."
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