HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1952-11-13, Page 7Kiss Earned Fortune
The girl is charming and seems
to like you? But pause a second
before you embrace her and
think of the possible conse-
quences. Kisses, however inno-
cent, have often brought about
the most unexpected results.
A kiss may bring you success.
Valentine Baker, a nineteenth
century subaltern, saw a pretty
girl asleep in a railway carriage.
Impulsively he kissed her, she
complained, and he was court-
martialled and dismissed in dis-
grace.
Feeling this country had no
More to offer him, he joined the
Turkish Army, rose to become
a general. His skill helped the
British to victory in the Egyptian
wars at the end of the century.
Fox, standing for Parliament
in 1784, had good reason to be
grateful for a woman's kiss. One.
of his staunchestsupporters was
Georgiana, Duchess of Devon-
shire, who promised a kiss to any
man who agreed to give his vote
to Fox.
His cause became so popular
that the opposition persuaded a
Mrs. Robert Hobart to copy the
duchess's methods, but with far
less success.
An Australian shop assistant
was at first sorry Chat he leant
across his counter co kiss a pretty
woman customer, for he was fin-
ed £2 10s. Years later, however,
he had cause to be thankful for
his impulsive action, for in her
will she left him £20,000, ex-
plaining that she treasured the
stolen kiss above everything else
in life.
But kisses can lead to disaster
involving not only the partici-
pants but those around them.
Drafted to Malta with his bat-
talion, a young soldier kissed
his sick sweetheart good-bye. He
caught mumps from her, most
of the battalion caught it from
him, the infection spread, to the
brigade, and their training pro-
]Fsion
For growing girls in that "bean
Pole" stage is this sanforized
gingham dress done in two-
color small cheek. Six-inch
^':.a.teal dust ruffle breaks the
skirt line.
:SolveJunior-Figure
Ruffles Enhance Child -Charm
BY EDNA 'was
A DUT TS are not alone in their figure problems or their
need for fashions that camouflage faulty points. Chil-
dren have their problems, such .as; too -weedy adds, pipe-
stern legs, or the reverse side of the picture, a roly-poly
body that's the result of baby fat.
In recent years, designers have come to understand that
children deed fashions that take cognizance of figure faults.
Thus, they are giving them fashions that will foreshorten
and soften where it's needed, fashions that will cut down
bean -pole height or minimize a roly-poly small girl.
STRIPES AND PUFF SLEEVES HELP
A dust ruffle, for instance, breaks a skirt line and Haus
detracts from the height of a little girl who's shooting sky-
wards rapidly. Combinations of solid and striped fabrics
foreshorten, while puff sleeves soften angular young arms.
Added to these fashion fillips is the convenience that lies
in cotton fabrics that are sanforized to prevent shrinkage.
This is a factor important to mother since she must handle
the laundering and balance the budget at one and. the same
time. It means, then, that a small wardrobe will retain its
fit and therefore, its original good looks.
Worries
Half-and-half is the styling
theme of this one-pieee san-
forized chambray dress designed
for the young Miss who needs
foreshortening and the softening
effect of puff sleeves.
gramme was delayed for three
months.
It's regrettable, but gallantry
doesn't always pay. A Berliner
and his girl friend were involved
in . an accident when riding his
motor cycle, and were told that
the fine would be £14. The girl_
managed to persuade the police-
man who called for the money
to take payment in kisses, one
kiss being worth the equivalent
of one and eightpence.
The chivalrous policeman took
ninety minutes (timed by the
man in another room) to collect
the "fine." The kisses didn't seem
so sweet, however, when he was
jailed for "abusing his author-
ity."
Humans can eat it, and to ad-
vantage, but wild rice is prim-
arily a food for wild fowl and
as such it is becoming widely
cultivated in Canada. Because of
this in popularity, the Botany
and Plant Pathology Division of
the Canada Department of Agri-
culture has issued a pamphlet
giving advice and information on
wild rice and decribing the
plant and its use, how to plant
it, and where.
Originally, the pamphlet says,
wild rice grew in southern Can-
ada but the recent interest has
spread it to wider areas. It has
a food value equal to the culti-
vated cereals although nobody
has tried planting it on arable
land, many are interested in es-
tablishing stands as food and
shelter for adequate fowl and
muskrats. Sportmen are prob-
ably more interested than others
since a stand of wild rice is a
powerful attraction for game
birds.
s: 4 a:
An annual grass, wild rice de-
pends on seeds to propagate it-
self, but once established, it will
drop its seeds into the water
automatically. It grows only in
shallow (up to four feet) water
in slow streams and along shores.
There are some places it will
not grow at al] due to unknown
factors. Fresh seed is necessary
to start it, usually over winter
but dealers manage it success-
fully. It is .sown simply by cast-
ting well-filled kernels sink,
ing the seed on the water, let-
empty hulls float away, Use a
canoe or skiff, avoiding seeding
from shore.
M: q, 4,
The experts advise using 20
pounds of seed to an acre of
water surface. 1f conditions are
right, the plant will appear the
first year, flower and produce
enough seed to make the nett.
year's growth denser A soft,
silty bottom, generally found in
shallow bends or below sand
bars. Open shore lines efiposed
to waves or currents are not
satisfactory, nor are locations in
constant shade, among dense
marsh vegetation or in salt-
water marshes and lagoons,
8'
Finally, if you don't know
what the wild rice plant looks
like and want to procure seed
from existing stand, be sure to
get expert advice since it can
be easily confused with grasses,
sedges and rushes. Send a dried
specimen to the Division of Bo-
tany and Plant pathology, Sci-
ence Service Building. Depart-
ment of Agriculture, Ottawa,
Ont., for identification.
8i * A,
N. M. Parks of the Central
Experimental Farm it Ottawa
says the primary objects in the
storage of any perishable food
J. Signal light s4. equine
aSSIN R b� 10. Poultry produc. 10. Casa -shaped
„r4' �q 11, Female deer
17. Trouble 37, Responds
rUZE 20, Speaker 3D. Faucet
��' 23. Employees 41. In that place
1 Ile sorry 42. hent
ACROSS 4. Rubber tree 5• Insect's ens 43. Blundered
5, Kind ofhawk 25. Penial digit 45, 17ar of corn
6. Final 28. Pull 47, Book division
7, High (Music.) 30. Skill 48, Tint
S. Twisted out 31. Strive 49. Compass point
of shape 32. Worle 81 Perdu
1. Gush .
6. Statute
9. Guided
12. Name
13. wing
14. cone by
15. Come to
16, Odd
18. Corroded
10. Collapsible bed
21. Deep bole
22, Itind of
window
24. Become less
severe
27.Jubilant
29. River (Span,)
30. 17nglish river
33 Spinning toy
34. Poker state
35. Tear
50. Lets down
48, Seesaw
40. Snuggle
44. Operated
45, ("creek letter
45. Pronoun
47. Division oT
a book
50. Cloudless
52. Not at home
53. Tavern
54. Short
55. Ronny gatherer
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f. Shelter
87. itidi.ni:horse
DOWN
1. Place
x. Piebald
S, Fur -bearing
Animal
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Answer EiSewbete on This Page
PURPLE BANNERS
-From Countryman's Year, by Haydn S. Pearson
TIIE humble, old-fashioned purple lilac is part of our natio al tradition.
When brought to this country about the middle of the seventeenth
century; it already had a long and interesting history. It came from
Persia to Constantinople in the twelfth or thirteenth century, and
traveled slowly across Europe. to England. In his Garden of Pleasante
Flowers, which was written in 1629, Parkinson called the purple lilac
"the blew pipe tree."
Over wide areas of our nation its fragrant masses of bloom bring
cheer in the spring. Its thick deep green leaves hold their sheen through
the heat and drought of midsummer. There are clumps of Syringa
vulgaris growing in old stop"wall-lined cemeteries in New England;
it stands faithful guard over the sacred spots where courageous pioneers
lie sleeping across a continent. As hone -seeking men and women pushed
over mountains, across rivers, and through shoulder -high prairie grasses,
they carried roots of the lilac with them. No one has a complete
record of the things mothers and wives tucked into the Conestoga
wagons and prairie schooners, but because man does'not live by bread
alone, lilacs, peonies, and favorite herbs blazed a trail along the virgin
paths to new homes.
In Cornwall and Devon the maidens believe that dew from lilac
blossoms will bring beauty to those who bathe their faces in it. Legends
and folklore have accumulated about it in England's border country.
1"n this nation it is a shrub associated with homemaking and with
memorials to those who have gone before. Unpretentious and plain, it
grows in gardens and by the corners of old cellar holes deep in woods
that have reclaimed their own. Birds nest in its security and small
wild folic seek sanctuary in its tangled dimness. The purple lilac has been
a good companion to man as he has hewed a nation of homes from a
wilderness, •
include prolonging its edible
condition and reduction of loss
during the storage period. The
chief causes of shrinkage in
storage are moisture losses and
decay. Storage, particularly
controlled storage,. makes it poss-
ible to hold all or part of the
main crop of potatoes through
winter and spring, enabling the
grower to dispose of his crop
when the requirements of the
market demand. By this he can
avoid marketing at a time of
over -supply and low prices.
e, a, 4:
Successful storage of potatoes
depends on factors like tem-
perature, Humidity, circulation
of air, exc'usion of light, sound-
ness of tubers, freedom from
soil, surface moisture and depth
of tubers in th bin:*
* 8 r
Potatoes to be stored should be
fully mature free from severe
bruises and any apparent dis-
ease. dry and free from excess
soil.
* d,
For seven to 10 days following
harvesting. potatoes should be
held at a temperature of around
60 degrees F to permit cuts and
bruises to heal. After this heal-
ing period the cellar or storage
should be cooled to 4C. degrees
F., as soon as po.csible.
4, * 4,
The temperature at which po-
tatoes should be stored for table
use is 40 degrees P. Two weeks
prior to using, they should be
placed at a temperature of 60
degrees to 70 degrees 9. A tem-
perature below 4o degrees F
causer a reversion of the starch
in potato tubers to sugar, result-
ing in sogginess. a dark colour
after cooking, and a sweet taste.
Potatoes fur seed purposes
should be stured at lit degrees
to 7 degree; F.
*. 8• 4,
High humidity in potato stor•
ages is necessary if shrinkage of
the tubers is to b' reduced to a
80 per cent is recommended,
minimum. A relative humidity
high enough to retard shrinkage
and low enough under average
conditions te proven, fromation
of free moisture on the silrfl('/'
of the tubers.
At St, Augustine, Fla., a thou
sand alligators were washed
with soap and water so the's.
would "loop right" for a mo
tion picture being made there.
Six . Hundred Feet
In A Glider
The Wright brothers took many
glides that summer. Some were
good, But many times the glider
wouldn't stay up at all. They
changed the curve of the wings,
and tried again.
"You are getting ahead," I said
one evening. "Maybe it will take
men only fifty years to learn to
fly," I smiled.
Mr. Orville shook his head. "Go
ahead and laugh, Bill," he said.
"Something is wrong in the books
we've been, reading. The men
who wrote the books didn't know
much about gliders. We've got
to find out about gliders for our-
selves."
. "I'm about ready to give up,"
said Mr. Wilbur. "Maybe some-
body will find the right answers
some day. I don't believe we
ever shall."
"Third time never fails," said
Mr. Orville. "We'll give it one
more try."
Wilbur and Orville Wright
went back to Dayton to their
bicycle shop. I didn't hear a word
from them all winter. "I' think
they've had enough of flying," I
said to my wife.
But 1 was wrong. They came
back in 1902, I met them at the
shore.,
"Do you think ,you are going
to fly this summer?" 1 asked.
"We believe so," answered Mr,
Wilbur. "We made a wooden box,
about six feet long. It had a glass
top.. We blew air through the box
with a fan.
"We hung glider models on a
string inside the box. We watch•
ed what the gliders did when the
wind blew. We tried flat wings
and curved wings. We used thick
wings and thin wings. We made
glider models with one wing and
two wings and three wings. We
put a tail on some of the gliders."
I went over to Kill Devi] Hill
the first good day. Mr. Orville
lay down on the bottom wing of
the glider. We pushed him off
into the wind, And that man did
glide! He stayed up a whole min-
ute. He travelled s.ix hundred
feet!
"We've got it, Wilbur," he
shouted from the foot of the long
hill.
Mr. Wilbur took his brother's
into He sailed away the
air. He moved the tail and the
glider went to the right. He turn -
:d the tail the other way, Then
the glider went to the left,
I couldn't believe my eyes. t
couldn't say a word at first. I
knew that nobody else in all the
world had done what they had
done. I turned to Mr. Orville,
"I've laughed at you," I said.
"I've made fun of you. Now I
take it all back. You were right
and I was wrong. You men can
fly. And you are the first in the
world to do it."
Mr. Orville was very quiet
about it• "I was sure we had it
this time," he said. "But we can't
callit flying yet. We have to
take off, and then come down
on ground as high as where we
started. We need an engine and
a propeller. Then we shall really
have a flying machine." -From
"Yesterday In America," by Har-
old B. Clifford.
On The Invention
Of Lithography
In the early nineteenth century
when pictures in books and ma-
gazines were reproduced only by
relatively slow and cumbersome
processes -from copperplate en-
gravings, from woodcuts, or by
some similar method -engravers
and publishers in Europe and in
America were beginning to ex-
periment with a new and simpler
invention. This new process was
called lithography (meaning
"writing on stone"), and it 'de-
pended on so simple a principle
as the natural antipathy between
grease and water,
Lithography had been invented
around 1795 by a Bavarian named
Alois Senefelder. It was introduc-
ed in France in 1816 and was
being used successfully in Lon-
don in 1822. Meanwhile this in-
genious new idea had already
reached the United States where,
in 1819 or 1820, the painter Bass
Otis, a pupil of Gilbert Stuart,
was making the first American
experiments.
Senefelder's invention, like
many other brilliant ones, was
remarkably simple. It demanded,
first of all, a special kind of soft
and very porous stone. The stones
used by Curries & Ives were 01
calcareous slate, imported from
Solenhofen, Bavaria, and bought
and sold by the pound. The stone
was cut in flat rectangular blocks
to the required length and width
and a couple of inches in thick-
ness. A soft yellowish gray in
color, the stone was then pre-
pared fpr the lithographer by
grinding. A very thir layer of
sand was spread over it, and it
was ground smooth by another
stone rubbed over it with a cir-
cular m o t i o n. This process,
known as "graining," gave the
stone a fine, velvety surface tex-
ture, so delicate that a touch of
the fingers could damage it,
The stone was now ready for
the design, which would be
sketched on it with special litho-
graphic crayons made of water -
repelling substances. The crayons
varied in width from the delicate
"diamond" size, used for letter-
ing, to coarser grades one and a
half inches wide. As the design
was worked on the stone, the
crayons were supplemented with
brushes and with an alpaca pad
for shading. The work was ex-
tremely delicate and required
faultless accuracy, for no erasures
were possible. A line could be re-
moved, but no proper line could
be put in its place without re -
graining the stone.
The stone, with the complete
design now sketched on it, was
given a bath of gum and acids.
Those parts of the stone not pro-
tected by the crayon would bub-
ble up under the acid, and when
the stone had been washed clean
with another solution the crayon
design, hardy enough to resist
the acid would stand out in low
relief. The stone was now a plate
ready for printing. -From "Cur-
rier & Ives," by Harry T. Peters.
THE REASON
Mr. Morcel was driving his
wife and girl friend. from Mt.
Vernon to Stamford. The girl
friend asked, "Why does your
husband always put his hand
out when he's driving?" Mrs.
Morrel answered, "I suppose it's
because the worm is getting
ready to turn."
MERRY MENAGERIE
"It's called a woman cut;"
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
Cold Weather Comfort -Practical for growing youngsters, t1 light.
weight warm snow suit that is adjustable to growth, made e+
hard-wearing washable nylon.