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Zurich Herald, 1930-03-20, Page 6S • Farm Notes goodness axe found among all peoples, ,and he would Stix up i g to pity School this one foreigner, hoping news• They Frozen -Pack Strawberries ��� Jmore libel t � i them thus in Some lather interesting and apper. Lesson11aero 'to see that virtue lies concealed I • 114n1 1t 15 least S p 1 _ c, March 23. Lesson XII—Jesus Teach- ' th eW 1 5 .z 1.31. . Healing—Matthew t •teal in 'I ing and g Golden Text: Ask, and it shall be' given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you _Matthew 7: 7. ANALYSIS. X•. A MOTHER'S IMPOIITUNI'ra, 21, 22. IL THE APPARENT REFUSAL OF JESUS,. 23-27. iXIL THE REWARD OF FAITH, 28-131. INTRODUCTION—After the last lesson In many in w us ce e Jesus s leaks •.of her great faith. It i 1Jesus was atnatther foreigner toll w an said, 'I have not found so great faith, no not in Israel," Matt, 8: 10. the opposition to Jesus increased very anuch, and it was getting more and more difficult for him to escape the forces that were arrayed against him. Even ren Herod, the ruler of Galilee had been aroused against h1.m, Accord ingly Jesus decided to leave the terri- tory of Herod for a while. His visit to the coasts of Tyre and Sidon were therefore not undertaken for any mis- eionary purpose, but in order that he :night be free from political troubles that might arise. The time had not yet come for him to face the author- ities at Jeruseleni. Also he wished to have a time of quietness with the dis- • ciples. I.:1 MOTHER'S IMPORTUNITY, 21, 22. V 22. In Matthew the woman is offered it to the public as the per ec called a Canaanite, which is she to the Phoenician. In Markkequival- ent is` word r motorists who drive to the Sylro-1 public As Printers See It Some Misprints Are so Apt You Can't Think. They Were Really Slips Every editor has received, at some time or other, letters from readers pointing out printers' errors which have appeared in the columns of itis. journal. But it is very often the mis- take which has never reached the gen- eral public that shows the genius of the printer at its best. Nor is that genius always misguided —there are times when a printer's er- ror may enrich the language. For in- stance, In one cf the great newspaPer offices the other clay it was noticed that the word "barbarians" appeared on a proof as `carbarfans. to The discoverer of the error harden- er ' amounted. The r uits ,2,100 0of 0 bane s. went inch• ed his heart and corrected it, but er s leader' -writers , oate that the berries kept sufficientand mar - on one of the pap f t t well to be used as fresh fru keted as' a really first-class article. The Prince of Wales' Exhibit One of the feature attractions at the forthcoming 'World's Poultry Con- gress to be held in London, England, in July of this year will be the exhibit supplied by His Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales. eptly satisfactory results are reported in connection with recent experiments relating to the cold storage handling of stv'awberr]es. A feature at the Royal Agricultural Whiter Fair last year was the fine. appearance and uality of apparently Fresh Caaadian-grown strawberries as an item ou the menu of the Ali -Cana- dian Products Dinner. These berries had been grown in British Columbia in rune and had been kept in a frozen condition in cold storage. An Ontario jam factory recently re- ceived a 'consignment of the same pack of berries, which they report were received in good condition. The surplus crop of strawberries was sent by the British Columbia growers to the Government Experi- mental Plant, where the fruit was washed and graded under government supervision, packed in barrels with sugar, sealed and then put in cold storage where they have since been kept ata temperature of 155 degrees F. above zero. Last year's pack • crease in egg production of late years,. closely associated with the improve - Mont in quality which has followed grading. in feet the demand for home consemption alone is to -day;• greater than the supply azul at the settle time there is a real opportunity for Cana- dian eggs on the British market. Repeated tests at the Central I)17 neriniental Farm show that the pullet is more valuable as an egg producer than the older lien. It has been found that the yearly profit for a pullet is $4,34 as compared With $1.66 for a hen, or, to put it another way, that it costs 20c a dozen to produce eggs through pullets as compared with 35c5 a dozen toproduct) eggs through hens. -issued by :the Director of Publicity, Doan. Department of Agriculture, Ot- tawa, Ont. • spoken of as a Greek and s Phoenician. By this we learn that her - language was Greek, while her nation- ality was Phoenician, and her province Syria. She was, therefore, a Gentile without any direct share in the privi- leges of the Jews. Her coating to Jesus was really a great victory for: (1) She had all the national prejudice agianst a foreigner, which even still persists with. us. This healer was not one of her own folks, and she disliked asking a favor of such anone. (2) Also the disciples were not very well x Th are hnpatiento "The Little Lass---" Sometimes, indeed, a misprint is so apt that one can hardly believe it was the result of a slip. The compositor who converted "candid friends" into "candid fiends" had probably suffered front the belligerently truthful. Malice may also.be suspected in some cases— as when an American printer made "battle -scarred veteran" into "bottle - scarred. veteran," One letter can make a lot of differ - The exhibit will be essentially a Canadian feature as it will be a repro- duction in miniature of the famous h at High River Alberta. Sports Dress Accents Youth Of Wearer—Pince CollarandCuffs Contribute Interest BY Ai\h11�1'fTr_ The Two Romes Manchester Guardian (Lib.) : (The "rapproohnent" between the Fascist and Vatican. Governments has been still further strengthened by the visit of Mussolini to His Holiness.) The religion of the Cbuvch and the coli, gionef the nation -State in its Fascist foam are incompatible; their natural battleground is in the school. 1'lut quethns of ultimate philosophy have a way of being soothed to sleep when workaday expediency calls. Church and State in Italy have great need of each other at present. • The Prestige of. both is linked with the success of the Lateran experiment. Neither side can well afford a .breakdown, so that further conversations will have to take place to remove the difficulties revealed by this year's oxpereince. The differences are so great that a successful issue must remain in doubt, but the Vatican could have no bettor spokesman than Cardinal Pao- elli, who became Secretary of State on Monday. He has just concluded "E.P, rant The exhibit will employ the latest de- a particularly difficult concordat with velopments in exhibition display and protestant' Prussia. If any man can, will have unique andnovelhe din Rome. will occupy a space aro feet and has been placed in proximity with the 1 236 Love Not Lost Art The greatest sponge for the worse that has taken place in the World in this generation is that people .have stoppers' talking about love and star- ed talking abort( sex. Love between the sexes is a sexual phenomenon. It slid not creed the wisdom of darter; er even the ycungost novelist to inform the world of that. But what is equally true, and far more important, is that love is sex and ---something 7l0V8. It Is the something more that platters mos l'Ire live in an age of abolitions, and the latest illiug to be abolished, I gather from my reading, Is Romantic Love. (But reading is one thing, anal the reading of life another. Fiction. has a habit of ignoring fact.) Not only fiction writers are guilty The psychologists and the sociologists, and for all I know, the other variety of 'clogists, have lifted up their voices about sex; too ninny of them have for- gotten about love. The Mainspring of Life A German Count has just told us that Romantic Love is dead in the United States. I am expecting a Dutch Uncle to tell ns that it Is dead in Britain. I know very well that Romantic Love is not dead in the United States, any more than it is dead In Siberia, or in Papua, in London, or in Wigan. There are certain basic impulses which simply refuse to be abolished. If they were to die, humanity itself would die •with them. And of all the impulses of life, love is the most central and vital. Love, mind you— not simply sex. It is love, the romance, not sex, the instinct, that makes the world go round. When the young man falls in love with the young wo• man he is not conscious solely or primarily of sex; he thinks of beauty, and service: and ideals. It is fashionable nowadays---especl fighting should suttee ally among'the 'ologists just mention• of erste. Sir Edmund Gosse effects. It wr ea—to asseverate that "everything is "Sir Edema(' Goose ,� about 100 Osqu a sex." It would be Just as true to sac romantic figure in history been ren - hope tl Cana It's true beige w�rt}r that because the solar system was tiered as "the moist romantic." And dian exhibit. brown ilr roug f d thlt Nee" a sprawl of fire everything is spec an advertisement of a firm which The quality of the Prince's exhibit The Conservative Party is now split ht weight. The belt still goo. cal to the Man- up . into three separate fratricidal is extremely lig specialized in stained glass came out has made such an app the Beav- erbrook marks the normal waistline It The Mistake We Make groups: the Baldwin group, I that as follows—and in a Church news -agement re the Palace, where croups: group and the the Be re leather in the brown shade, What counts is not the materia: "Painted Nttidows Make the C will Crystal held that they It could Scarcely be describ-oi•r�au but re t hes grosgrain ribbon tie of neck- om inclined to her. They has become of this interruption and ass Jesusand "the most send her away, though it is probable that we are to understand that they hope that Jesus may grant her re- quest. and send her off. (3) There was also this apparent reluctance of Jesus to pay any attention to her. But in spite of all these difficulties in' her way she persists. She likely had heard of the many euces which Jesus had wrought in Galilee. and she had hopes that lie plight be persuadeu to do at least one more miracle. But above all elecr there was her mother love, Which Sar ready to fa face any peril and Th Conservative "Party" London News -Westminster (Lib.) : just -a dash of h surfaced wooleni paper: the Congress group• 'g' the spiritual remit. Ii yv Memorial." d t let 't remain as an ex trinity in unity, though its mac b affection and loyalty and self-sacrifice Best War have agree o r ed as a rue, a But it is not fair always to blame hibit for a period of twelve months The brief bodice is decidedly youth- incrmprehensibility is only too mini• have in some 'ryas developed tilt of the printer when an error occurs. following the Congress. fest. Lord Beaverbrook stands for f i fashion and is emphasized by flat that it has been, or will be, killed by When a certain Admiral was described as having two sons, one at the }Im- slowing ie u a Bee Colonies a Big Stomach Tax and a modicum hipline of. circular flaring skirt. sex equality. That. sort of couten- Building Up l for One of the most effective ways based on a Popular misconcep ince, -r eriai College, Windsor, and the duce any insult for the sake of her 1 p daughter who was so grievously al- at Dartmoor (tile .great British penal flirted. It is often the way that trials ins i my) wasmt o tit was probablyh (the l end sorrow will drive people to actions at faul which result in greatest blersiag. At the •handwriting that was t. any rate we see in this woman the value of persistence. Jesus had him- self taught the value of importunity The Optimistic Mr. 'Phomas in prayer, and this woman was deter- Edinburgh• Weekly Scotsman alined to get her request answered. (Cons.): Mr.hThomas may profess IT. THE APPARENT REFUSAL OF JESUS, that the present employment slump 23-27• is due to ratioualizaticn and reor- V• 1'i Thus far appealwe havo seen Jesus ganization of industry, but that is not sealing al every for nowheland the whole story. Industry was be- es healing all who came; but there inn• g d with the is an apparent change in his manner. g before it of easier rating and First of all, he remains silent and says not a R ord. as i 1' l.e were incliffee- ent ter what she sa:; s. When she re- 'thwh nt peaty ilei rerlLtes.c he replied wvI ser?pts to be the voice of extreme na- tional exclusiveness, "I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the hour e of I reel." The Jews had been God's chosen people. and the Messiah had been sent first to this people. The earthly life of Jesus wa_ to be limited to this one task. There was no chane of broadening out his work to include all -the world. Also if he went to the Gentiles the Jews would not have Ii'stened to him. But the time was coming when the gospel would be off; red to al.l the world, and then the real purpose of Christ would be re - ti ealed. V. 2fi. The saying about the cd•ogs mint not be regarded as a sign of the way in which Jesus regar,led other nations. There was n0 narrow na- tionalism about hien; he was the Son 1 • of man and revealed God as the Father of all mankind. It is true that the, Jews spoke of the Get:tiles as "clogs," and it niay be that Jesus s hetl (rule of i the woman of the g that day. Perhaps, also, there was a smile on his face as he uttered the words. TTI. THE REWARD of FAITH, 28-31. V• 28. Jesus evidently saw that the woman had the quality of faith which was fit to be rewarded and ,purified. He desirecd to lead her to a wortlner view of. religion. His answer was not. inspired by any harsh feelin . but he sed t o ] h e rat • a rth 0a ud '1 f he - liar r n u t 5 SLL l5 J e th ' s � 13 es rde • eves i 1. I a higher wished to n ve the disciples a lesson. r Some day they would be World mis-' sionartes, and they must learn to over- come their narrow thataliem. an 11 this woman they .s faith- a ays of of i17r Baldwin; Lord Rothmere Ii,s unbelievably easy to ma's, tion ]s b 1 pro- tads for Ihgh Protection tl rt means You Platt c Y two tion of r a and to re i all have a gilfilotine with Baldwin; Mr. Baldwin Piece skirt to be seamed. and stitched s . bo 'er. i p ' no p s lug or esign 2 , , The country w r 38 40 and tnc e pretty ohbice at the next Election. ' It is very striking in woo- Jersey :+ -- Tile h idea is that we heti ng bee colonies he to fug streweh is the importation and a bit of pian cannot be admired as a comrade, duction p I to a two-piece bodice. B the other twr Policies and yet but only as a doll ora drudge; that of package bees. C. B. Gooderham, toners for l4r Baldwin T1 is s ortive model Style No 23G rs site is remote and mysterious anti odor• pamp, tho Dominion des now fn a th Id r ed In sires 16, 18, le years tib able when Huddled r in the ; that pamphlet on package bees now avail- t recrsely suis tt us h ave1ea very 40 h s hurt flounces and fur-belotvs of the nine- ableDep rt a of AgrigU t Branch of the Department tf Agricultues, states taat teenth century, but .cocnlmonplace in acka e r dark purple shade the comluon-sense cictltes of lceait is rens o union of bees by p a h t a ver: Poor rom y. the t p gg f her a e c w a Y b proving quite satisfactory, and may SUCCe cuffs o g 1 an where in Canada. wve nd 'be which could be destroyed Ybe done safe y y by rho.. shortening of skirts or the. shingling of hair. up With Proper care and managemen in" lire is not nearly so important a they 'will build up into strong produc - ing colonies the first season. question as we sometimes think. There are easy successes that are merely the outcome of puny aims; yet the applause that follows such successes is often tremendous in a world like this. It o rte i happapplae s that a man is misled by e into thinking he is a fine fellow who has done something really worth do- ing. That delusion may last fe r Sees here anti there i with collar and faille silk crepe piped leondon Evening News (Incl. Cons.) : i along edge in red -dahlia shade crepe, Nether a man is successful o r not and worn with a red -dahlia shade lea- ther belt. Printed silk crepe, plain silk crepe • u to Iift up its ilea wr Iu the prairie provinces and other prospectie om etl' areas where. the main honey flow the conviction that unfair c p cp comes late there is a longer building up period and package bees will often In ro- equal overwintered colonies pro- duction. In regions where the main flow comes early package bees are unable to build up to full strength be- fore the flow starts and cannot be ex- pected to store such large crops. A development of importance in. this connection is the establishment of the fact that it is now possible to ship package bees without comb, the ad- vantage of the new method being that it prohibits the possibility of the in- troduction of disease. While the be- ginner may have a little more trouble with package, bees than he had with bees already established on combs, he is at least certain that his bees will be free from disease. When purchasing package bees it is extremely important that the hives should be ready to receive them when they.arsive and also that there is suE- flcieut continuous supply of food for them until they can gather enough for themselves. Increasing Egg Production tion would be elimina.ed; but tho hopes cf security have been shatter- ed and industry reacting again to the tion higher her taxa depressing fear of @ in consequence of the lavish squand- ering of money on palliatives for not un- employment. I,tr. Thomas been able to fulfil the frequent boast that a speedy remedy for unemploy- ment n employ meut was in the Socialist bag; it is somewhat pathetic to find him trying to be optimistic. 5 . y ^(rte "A sky -pilot is still a sole -saver." MUTT AND JEFF -- 'i/,tea p. and distress in a certain type of suc- cessful man whose eyes are open at last to the littleness of the things to which he has given nearly all the years of his life. The Last Stage of Free Trade and canton crepe approPYnate. Later for resort, it can be made cf men's 1 Cries the ,,Cloek! s the clots(, shirting, shant:.t�g, silk pique, sill, "Tick -tock, tic broadcloth, printed cotton pique, linen I "seize each Passing minute; or Chinese silk damask. T 1 Take the `hance before some good things it. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS I To Pack Write your name and address plain -1 Sixty seconds passing by ly, giving number and sire of such 1 Never more returning, Patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in Do your work. and do it NOW f d• •r•ip i While the light is burning. lou r one atlietic signs of an inner bitterness ; "tamps or coin (coin pre } ember, and I „ cries. the cloche , ,.:,,,,_�•„r,t; (.ink -tock, e. it carefully) for each nL , • • to Wilsol. Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. The opportunity ,for the poultry raiser to meet the increasing demand for eggs both for home consumption and export lies *hot in increasing the number 'of birds but in improving the production ability of the birds we. have, is the opinion of Mr. F. C. El- ford, Dominion Poultry Husbandman of the Federal Department of Agricul- ture: There has been eu a remarkable in - London Observer (Ina.): Nearly every considerable Protectionist coun- try has recovered from. the War while we welter. The initiative, and responsibility rest, for the presump- tive two years or more, with the Gov- ernment and with. their Liberal allies, or rather es, now s call thein. assThe tlastflchanchance r the free -importing system depends upon the utmost endeavor of Liberalism and Labor in the present Parliament to :prove what can be' done by "ra- tionalizing," by imperial enterprise on the guarantee • of British credit, and by deliberately diverting the pres- • ent vast and growing cost of unem- ployment to the' creation LE 're-em- ployment. address your OraeL Prison what ViS1tOr .-•-Al,d ar you in here for, my good malt" Prisoner _"flattery, riadat,cat canght imitating h another man's signatumeon a cheque.r ")v'ry hour is flying, In the market -place of life 'Wares you should be buying. Sixty minutes full of fun, , Full of work and sorrow, There are duties to be done i(y Et'e we greet tomorrow. "Tick -tock, tick tock,". cries the clock; "Day to night is giving, Do not blink of years to come, NOW'S the time for living. Do not wait for better days, That hope may delude you, Lyse the minutes as they come— They cannot elude You." • "Taking the conceit out of one is a good thing and golf does (drat "— John D. Rockefeller, sr.... "To brand the liquor buyer as equal- ly criminal as the seller is now of "Did• you have ,ury thrilling experi- prime importance," --BS P Caution. epees in the Alps last summer, Mr. ......a----0..--._.....— is the le Bh. yaping lightning, "Oh, yes, riles Junta. On one occa- • not to be measured by the horse -pew - Sion �n ; the understanding.—R, G' f of ha,l el slop I was forced to act as the1 e�'SOil. 1 wslitle ao few of a s atort The -Lobster Turns On The Hot Water. gy BUD FISHER A116USTUS MVT HRs NGUE vG EATED IN eftsM Com?eTaT1oN I N WS LiM .: 14Mci-rY dtinfms "niQce. oe NIS OPPonieNTS etiECKERS AT t»JE TIME AND WiNS 1NE CHAMPIONS131A o f 'tYIC W o(zt.b ! JU'DGC -("NIS E,66 r S PLMNN LOADED t e- _ w --.tetth . �--« e $A'T' Th rss .0 (G AccuSltvG A RAki JG s�locs: S CKoat.'S OUT ,ot 4 // �•1`r, ' mem' 'r ,. 0 b Q t 00