Zurich Herald, 1951-10-25, Page 7BEAM }'' R
Special make-up care, in preparation for an im-
portant evening, boosts the morale of this young
woman ea well as enhancing her appearance. Eye-
lashes, curled for tb.e occasion, add glamor and
allure hi keeping with the party flood.
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BY EDNI MUM
ANY women, looking forward
for weeks to the date of some
special occasion, find themselves
puzzled and saddened when real-
ity, finally arrived, falls far short
of anticipation.
It's the party mood, in many
cases, that makes the difference,
To create a gay mood -in your-
self and others at the party -it
takes a bit of advance planning
and effort.
If you've been in the habit of
letting your daily beauty routines
slip a little, make this the moment
to revive your important day-by-
day good looks tricks, Make it
a time, too, for special effects with
which you ordinarily don't bother.
Not only will a sleek, new hair -do,
foundation and powder applied
with extra care, lips colored with
new precision and dash, make you
Iook better but these routines make
you feel better, too. For additional
morale -boosting, try a special
manicure, and eye make-up, too,
If you don't care for colored eye -
shadow, highlight your lids with
a transparent eye cream. And curl
your lashes for special allure,
Special, clever little accessories
can guide the observing eye to
your special brand of evening
beauty, too. Such devices as pin-
ning jeweled butterfly pins to your
Tong evening gloves, then fastening
matched ones to your ears should
prove as effective for you as for
film actress Donna Reed, who
originated this arresting trick.
MOR
Planned -in -advance jewelry tricks, such as the
matching jeweled butterflies that highlight the
gloves and ear -lobes of Columbia Pictures star
Donna. Reed, do much to make an event of what
otherwise might be just another evening.
Tt.? T
JcQusseil
I have been asked to bring to
the attention of my readers the
fact that an advance sale of tickets
to farmers has been arranged this
year for the Royal Agricultural
Winter Fair's horse show, Nov.
13-21.
Purpose of the advance sale,
which is being supervised by re-
gional agricultural representatives,
is to give farmers who are plan-
ning to attend the Royal a better
opportunity of securing horse show
tickets.
Horse show performances take
place every evening, except Sunday,
Nov. 18, and on every afternoon
with the exception of the Thursday
and Friday of the first week and
Monday of the second week.
Features of this year's horse
show will be jumping teams from
the United States, Europe, South
America and Canada, as well as the
famed Codre Noir, an elite riding
unit from the French cavalry school
at Saumur. The Codre Noir, which
means Black Regiment, are so
called because of their black uni-
forms.
:k * *
While most mineral elements are
required only in minute quantities,
their absence in the diet of live-
stock can result in such harmful
effects such as the development
of rickets, loss of appetite, loss of
weight, a drop in milk or egg pro-
duction, the production of weak
offspring, goitre, anaemia and
other disorders.
:r. *
Ordinary feeds such as grains
and forages supply certain essen-
tial minerals but mineral suuple-
ments are necessary to supply cal-
cium, phosphorus, salt, iodine, iron,
copper, manganese and cobalt, ac-
cording to scientists. All but the
first three of these minerals are
required in very small quantities.
* * *
Cattle, sheep and horses require
a mineral supplement with a high
proportion of phosphorus to cal-
cium since they are forage con-
sumers and forage contains more
calcium than phosphorus. hogs on
the other hand are grain consumers
and require a mineral supplement
which is high in calcium to com-
pensate for the low -calcium con-
tent of grains.
* :k
The importance of mineral ele-
ments in livestock rations is being
stressed more and more by author-
ities on animal nutrition and pro-
gressive farmers and all farmers
should be on the look -out for signs
of profit stealing mineral defici-
encies.
If you want top performance
from your shotshells this and every
fall, keep your shotgun in good
condition. That's the advice of gun
experts.
* *
Important points to consider,
they say, are cleaning and storing.
A dirty shotgun will kick your aim
off centre and interfere with the
true- flight of the pellets. Impro-
per storage of your shotgun dur-
ing the off-season may lead to cor-
rosion of the barrel, and make the
gun much harder to keep clean
during the shooting season.
z *
Before the hunting season opens,
shotguns should be thoroughly
cleaned with gun oil, using a clean-
ing rod .or pull-through inside the
barrel. This should be repeated
after duck hunting in the marshes
to guard against the effect of any
moisture that may have been pick-
ed up.
Occasionally a gun will "lead up"
in use, with gray streaks of lead
being visible at the forcing cone
just ahead of the chamber, and at
the choke where the barrel is con -
affected parts and allowed to stand
with ordinary mercuric ointment
which should be applied to the
affected parts an d allowed to stand
for 24 hours. After the ointment has
been removed, the gun should be
thoroughly cleaned again with gun
oil.
in. preparation for storage dur-
ing the off-season, the gun should
be cleaned, then liberally greased
with petroleum jelly, During this
cleaning and greasing, piety of rags
should be used and care taken that
the fingers do not touch the metal,
as body acids can start corrosion
which will carry on tinder the
grease.
Guns should always be stored in
a clean, cool, dry place. They
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should not be stored in leather
cases as these tend to attract mois-
ture, and should never be stored
with their barrels plugged. Air
should be allowed to circulate
freely.
:k
A chemical coating for foods
such as turnips and cheese may
soon replace paraffin since the new
coating allows the food to be eaten
with the "skin on" without harm
to the consumer.
Known as acetostearn, the chemi-
cal is as easy to apply as paraffin,
solidifies to a non -greasy flexible
solid and does not .crack or flake
readily at low temperatures.
The product, developed in the
U.S., is said to seal in flavors and
odors, is impervious to moisture
and relatively resistant to mold and
bacterial attack. The chemical, or
another form of it, may he used
for coating candies and ice-cream
bars. Cleaned poultry coated with
the chemical may be removed from
freezing and cooked with the skin
on.
EMBARRASSING
A young clergyman, after deliv-
ering his first funeral sermon, wish-
ed to invite the mourners to view
the deceased. He became confused
and muttered: "We will now pass
around the bier."
•
This Sheep Was
Tried. For Murder
People in a Calcutta magistrate's
court dashed for shelter recently
when a buffalo ran wild in the
court compound. The buffalo and
two other animals were brought to
the court as exhibits in a case.'The
court attendants finally quietened
the buffalo, but not before it had
wounded a solicitor and a litigant.
Practically every kind of ani-
mal and insect has appeared in a
court of law at some time. Legal
history abounds with authentic
instances of animals appearing as
"witnesses," In mediaeval times
animals were actually tried by as-
size courts and sentenced to "ban-
ishment" or death for certain
crimes.
A London lawyer: "A Passer-by
kicked by a horse sometimes
brought a lawsuit against it and
the horse paid the penalty -not the
owner. IN hen a crime was discov-
ered that could be attributed to an
animal a search was made, and the
beast -usually a bull or a pig -
found in the neighborhood of the
crime vias solemnly arrested, im-
prisoned and tried.
"The case for the Crown was
stated by the Public Prosecutor,
witnesses were heard and sentence
passed by the judge on a jury's
verdict..Death sentences were often
passed.
"Sometimes the animal was exe-
cuted clothed as a human being,"
Way back in 1386 a pig was
tried in the old Norman town of
Falaise for killing an infant. All the
populace turned out for the trial,
which was made a festive occasion,
The pig was found guilty and be-
headed. And during the famous
witch prosecutions in New Eng-
land in 1694 a dog which acted
rather queerly was arrested be-
cause it was said he had been
"ridden by a warlock." They hang-
ed the dog after a trial.
Today we pride ourselves on be-
ing more sensible. But it was only
a comparatively few years ago that
a sheep, accompanied by its mas-
ter, was summoned to court at
Verviers, Belgium, on a charge of
having caused the death of a four-
year-old boy. Children had been
teasing the animal and in a moment
of fury it pushed the boy into the
river nearby, drowning him,
The "accused" was acquitted,
however, the judge declaring that
the sheep had been unduly provok-
ed by the boy.
It is on record that rats, locusts
and caterpillars were "excommuni-
cated" frequently by ecclesiastical
courts. "Excommunication" meant
removal to an uncultivated spot
named by the court where the in-
sects could do no more damage to
crops .or food stores,
AIR -MINDED
A woman who was a fanatic
about going to seances, took her
little boy with her one day so that
the lad might talk to his dear de-
parted father. After the contact had
been made by the medium, the son
said with simple directness: "Where
are you, Papa?"
"I'm in II eaven, son," came back
an answering voice.
"And are you an angel, Papa?"'
asked the boy.
"Yes, 111y boy," came back the
voice.
"An angel with wings and a harp
and everything?"
"That's right."
The boy stopped and considered
a,Pnoment.
"S a y, Daddy," he continued
eagerly, "tell the -what do you
measure from tip to tip?"
"Won't you give me your tele-
phone number?" he murmured, '
"It's in the book," she said.
"Splendid," he sighed. "And
what's your name?"
"That's in the book, too," she
snapped.
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C.;t'catecl and signed by The house of Seagram, this advertisement, with
appropriate copy for foreign lands, is appearing in magazines and news-
papers printed in various languages and circulated throughout the world.
,Seatxam TELLS THE WORLD ABOUT Miltada
THIS advertisement was designed by
The House of Seagram to tell the people
of other lands about Canada and things
exclusively Canadian.
Many people in Latin America, Asia,
Europe and other parts of the world are
not fully aware of the richness of Canada's
natural resources, wild life, scenic beauty
and cn1tural traditions. The more the
he
lou
peoples of other lands know about (tut
country, the greater will be their interest
in Canada and Canadian products.
The House of Seagram feels that the
horizon of industry rhes not terminate' at
the boundary of its plants : it has a broader
horizon, (a farther view---^rr Vir°il' dedicated to
the development of Canada's .stature iu (tier y
land of the glob(.
( rol'.