Lögberg - 25.03.1937, Side 5

Lögberg - 25.03.1937, Side 5
LÖGBEBG, FIMTUDAGINN 25. MARZ 1937 5 jarÖneskrar gleði sé móÖur-gleÖin og sárust allra mannlegra sorga sé móðursorgin. Sjálf móðir Drottins Jesú, hefir í söng og sögu hlotið nafnið Mater dolorosa, móðirin harmþrungna. Samt vitnaði sendi- boðinn himneski það, að sælust væri hún allra kvenna. Móðirin góða, kristin kirkja, biður sig ekki undan sorginni. Sé hún sjálfri sér trú, hefir hún fyrirheiti herra síns: “Hrygð yðar mun snúast i fögnuð.” “í Jerúsalem skuluð þér huggaðir verða.” Með þann fögnuð trúarinnar í hjarta lúkurn vér máli þessu um æskulýðinn ,og kirkjuna, horfandi björtum vonar-augum fram í tímann og biðjandi Guð af öllu hjarta að gefa oss hinurn eldri lund til þess og lag á því að búa æskulýð vorn að heiman með treflana tvo, svo ekki kólni, honum á brjósti í snjóflóði lífsins. Margföld umbun alls sem vér á oss leggjum, er sá fögnuð,ur hjarta vors, að vér vitum, að æskan tekur við af oss og eftirkomendur vorir muni trúaröruggir syngja “Lofið vorn Drottin” og “Á hendur fel þú honuimi,” löngu eftir er vér hinir eldri höfum hinsta sinni sung- ið “Nú legg eg augun aftur.” PERFECTED DETROIT DARK REDBEET Manitoba Market Gardeners’ Award of Merit, 1936, and All American Award, 1934 Detroit Dark Red has been Canada’s best main crop Beet, but has now been still further improved by the deepening of the zoning and the lessening of the white rings, which in the New Perfected Strain is almost entirely absent, especially in the fall. An excellent canner. Postpaid: Pkt. (Vi-ot.) 5c; 2 pkts. 9c; 1 oz. 15c; 2 ozs. 25c; %-lb. 45c; %-lb. 65c; 1 lb. ¥1.10. 23 New Varieties of Vegetables, grown on our own Seed Testing Plant Breeding Farm, re- ceived the Market Gardeners’ Award of Merit 1936. McFayden’s Seed List also contains the All American Flower Awards. Keep your garden up to date. M^FAYDEN BiqOversiiePackels SEEDS 0nly3‘~4mt■ In addition to the newest varieties, not yet in full production and necessarily sold at higher prices McFay«len’s Seed Company offer thelr regular stocks, tried and tested on tb.eir own Plant Breedlng and Seed Testing Farm, at 3c to 4c per packet postpaid. llig oversize packets, too. Every packet da^ted day packed and guaranteed to full amoupt of purchase price. Individual cultural direc- tions, for Canadian conditions, on every packet. BCV YOUR SEEDS DIRECT—It is impos- sible for us to give in any Commission Cabinet the wide assortment to choose from found in our Seed List, containing 281 varie- ties of vegetables and over 500 varieties of flowers. IF—McFayden Seeds were se.nt out to Stores in Commission Boxes, we would prob- ably have a lot of seed on our hands at the end of the season. If this seed we.s thrown away it would be a total loss, and we would have to charge more for our seeds, or put less seed in a packet to make up for it. If, bn the other hand, we did not throw it away, but kept it over and sent it out in packages again, the tendency would be for us to accumulate a lot of old seed. We, therefore, sell direct to you only—NOT through Commission Boxes — TESTED SEEDS, and give you the beneflt of the sav- ings made in this way. McFAYDENS FAMOUS l)v VEGETABLE COLLECTIOH IOpKre.25^ —and you get your 25c back on next order Ten regular, full-size 5c and lOc packets, 25c postpaid, and you get the 26c back on your first order of $2.00 or more by means of a refund coupon good for 25c sent with this collection. Money order preferred to coin or stamps. Makes a nice gift. Coets so littlc. Grows so mncli. Order NOW. You will need seeds anyway. McFayden's Seeds have been the foundation of good gardens since 1910. Collection contains one regular full size , packet each of the following: _____ Detroit Dark Red. The best all BEETS— round Red Beet. Sufficient seed for 25 ft. of row . Half Long Chantenay. The , best all round C a r r o t . Enough seed for 40 to 50 ft. of row. Early Fortane. Pickles, sweet or sour, add zest to any meal. Sufficient for 25 ft. of row. Grand Rapids. Loose Leaf variety. Cool, crlsp, green lettuce. This packet will sow 20 to 25 ft. of row. Yellow Globe Danvers. A splen- did winter keeper. White Portugal. A popular white onion for cooking pickles. Packet will sow 15 to 20 ft. of drill. ~ _________ Half Long Guernsey. Suf- PARSNIP— t0 sow 40 to 50 of drill. French Breakfast. C o o 1, R AniQU—» crisp, qulck-growing variety. 1****'H*3** This packet will sow 25 to 30 ft. of drill. —T_ _ _w_ White Summer Talile. Early, 1 URNIP— quick-growing. Packet will sow 25 to 30 ft. of drill. mrmn Canadian Gem. y*. - SWEDE TURNIP—•ounce aows 76 (t of row. CARROTS- CUCUMBER- LETTUCE— 0NI0N— 0N10N— l 20O°.oCash Prizes^OOS? in our Wheat Estlmating Contest, open our customers. 54 prizes. Full particulars in McFayden’s Seed List, sent wlth above seed collection, or on request. FREE—Cllp this advertisement and get Large I*aeket Beautifiil Flowers FREE (L.) Worth-While Savings on Club Orders described in Seed List. WE’RE ALL NUTTY HERE AND THERE tty P. N. SUMMER SPORT HERE we are again, almost into the season of unrest and dissatis- faction. Spring is just in the offing and it must be the heavy flannel underwear that itches and keeps folks on edge. Everybody wants to get into some new line of business. Feeling that he has not been getting anywhere at what he has been doing, he wants to try something else. When I went in for a haircut the other day, Frank, the barber, had the shop all littered up with pamphlets on “How to Raise Bees and Produce Honey.” He had sent away for the literature, and he was hot on the honey game. He says the barberirig trade is all shot. Women are cutting the men’s hair, or pulling it out or something. Lots of fellows who used to be tidy about their hair have got careless and let it grow, until they look like House of David ballplayers, Frank says. It all kills business and makes the outlook bad for barber- ing. Frank has several boys and he had thought of getting a vacant lot and putting some bee hives on it to keep the lads employed during the summer, and maybe make some cash. One of the customers in the barber shop advised Frank to keep out of it. He had tried it and got in trouble. The neighbor women complained. When- ever their children had a rash or hives or such, they said the bees had stung them, and it kept him in hot water all the tiine. He advised Frank to grow mushrooms or chickens. j “And,” Frank said, “I might get stung too, or my boys might.” So he may go into chickens or mush- rooms until barbering improves. ♦ * * LITTLE CHESTER FIRST thing each morning I run up the blind on my bedroom win- dow, to catch a glimpse of the sunrise and try to figure if there is any chance of an early Spring. It was a bright February morning, about fifteen below. There was little Chester again, just outside the back gate, picking over the ash heap, looking for the odd piece of coal or coke that worked its way through the furnace grate. Nearly every morning during the winter I had seen the boy picking away at the ashes with a stick, his fingers, or kicking at the pile with the heel of his shoe, in search of the unburnt chunk which he tossed into the large paper bag he had standing beside him in the lane. I would have been surprised if Chester hadn’t been out there when I ran up the blind. He had been there regularly at about the same time in the morning nearly all win- ter. It was a tough job for the little lad. I had often noticed him shiver- ing from the cold. He seemed to run off at a fast clip every time he got through with our pile of ashes. When I had first noticed him, I mentioned him to Margaret, and she said she would tell the boy who carried our ashes out to the lane, to put a shovel ful of good coke into each scuttleful of ashes. Chester seemed to be about eight years old and he was awfully well pleased when he no- ticed so much good coke in the pile. Chester said his folks were very poor, and that was why he had to go out in the cold mornings to gather all the coal he could find to keep his mother and little sister warm at home. His dad had to work for very little, whenever he had work to do. The incident brought back to me recollections of sixty years ago, about 1876, down in Ontario, when the boys who were poor used to go out with bags on their backs and gather bones or old cast iron, which they would sell for one cent a pound. After even sixty years of progress and prosperity in this fertile country there are still poor boys who have to go out and pick coal and coke out of the discarded ashes in the lanes to keep from freezing in chilly homes, same as poor boys sixty years ago had to gather bones and old iron to get a few pennies to keep soul and body together. * * * BETTER TIMES ROGER W. BABSON, the famous economist, in reviewing the gen- eral trade situation in America recently, said the outlook for pro- gress and improvement was better in Canada and the Southern States than elsewhere on this continent. * * * RIGHT IDEA THE Windsor Daily Star, Canada’s greatest newspaper, says: “Attorney-General W. J. Major is trying a laudable experiment with Manitoba’s dope addicts. When they go to jail, he’s segregating them. The boys out at Headingly, just west of Winnipeg, are reported to be object- ing to this discrimination. They threaten violence. But Mr. Major has the right idea. “Until Canada wakes up to the seriousness of the situation, drug fiends should be segregated. They shouldn’t be allowed to mix with youthful auto thieves or veteran safe-crackers, at all. Hospitals, with iron bars of course, are where they should be. In the meantime, you’re only asking for trouble when you send coke sniffers or morphine needle plungers to the same hoosegows to which you commit other offenderg. For addicts, as any doctor will tell you, are never content to keep their sad affliction to themselves. They’re constantly looking for converts. Ánd they get ’em, in our jails, by the scads.” * * * I SHALL NOT ASK TOO MUCH I shall not ask too much beyond the grave; Just some dear, common things that living gave— And time for them—ah, time to stay a while Where wind blows over grasses, mile on mile; And time to watch when stars are gleaming through Some still and starless dusk’s deep drifted blue. I And I should like, one summer after- noon, To climb a hill and wait there for the moon, That I could never wait for, and then go Unhurried back to certain friends l know, I shall be glad if seasons come and pass, Bringing the same swift miracles of grass. Of sun and rain, of berry, bud and bloom, And snow-filled midnights of wind- shaken bloom. I shall want little paths and woods and walking, And those same friends at evening and their talking. Under dull lamps in queer, quaint smoky places— (I would not lose those voices and those faces. These I shall ask beyond the narrow grave, And time for them—which living never gave. —David Martin, in the Forum. 25 oz. $2.15 40 oz. $3.25 G&W OLD RYE WHISKY (Gamalt kornbrennivín) \ GOODERHAM & WORTS, LIMITED Stofnsett 1832 Elzta áfengisgerð I Canaria McFÁYDEN seed co. WINHIPEG - TORONTO Thls ad vcrtlsement Is not lnserted by the Oovernment Tdquor Control Commlsslon. The (bnnmlssion Is not responsihlo for atntements made as to tho quality of products advertised. EaSter Greetings! FLEECE COATS Lead on to Spring! They’re Color- ful! Inspiring! Tailored on New Lines and in New Silhouettes! Go streamlined in one of the gored designs—swank in one of the other new pleated styles we’ve sketched below. Whichever you choose, be sure it’s colorful. T h a t ’ s what fashion authorities stress for style —and for value we’d call attention to these ... in folly green, Tyrol red, shrimp, coral, tempo blue, beige. Titian rust and gold — Celanese lined. Junior sizes, 11 to 19. Misses’ sizes 12 to 20. Each $15.00 Budget Plan Available — Woníen’s Coat Section, Fourth \ Floor, Donald. Pick Your Easter Hat From the Leaders! . KNOX . STETSON . CHRISTY . BORSALINO . BROCK . BILTMORE ; Æm These famous “firsts” offer you hats that do much more than merely cover your head. Styled by the master designers of Hatdom, these Spring 1937 styles give you more hat smartness than you ever thought possible. Not only so but these aristocrats among hats present the new mode in all its delightful variations—so that you can choose from more styles (as well as more STYLE!) than we ever remember seeing in a pre-Easter pre-view! As to colors there are such new ones as Afghan, Rock Marble mixtures, and plain s*hades of Cedar, Arab, Sky, Grey and Ash Green. Plain snap brim and snap welts. Every hat as you expect from these makers, a master-piece of making, as well as a leader of fashion. Priced $5.00 to $8.50 V Men’s Tlat Section, The Hargrave Shops for Men, Main Floor T. EATON C°„,„ /

x

Lögberg

Direkte link

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: Lögberg
https://timarit.is/publication/132

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.