Durham Region Newspapers banner

Port Perry Star (1907-), 22 Sep 1960, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

SAME VT EENENE HP ARIS RT $74 Yu v A Ae RENE aE CO = a_i. a a > ' ith cist k H Experiments with cistus, or roc i Yes! You Can Still rose, such as are now being car- NDAY SCHio0l ried out by the Los Angeles Ar- Buy A Slave! boretum, indicate it is almost The headlines in London news- like asbestos. papers sounded like a cry from Fires in this area have provid- Re the dim, dark past: Slaves For -ed an poPORiuBILY, for, next. |. By Rev. RB. Warren, B.A, B.D," Britain © . . 150 pounds buys a spring. Foresters can spray " Tree i ssa nr MINES ES ATITeANS *Ofered Sta YT tt YT selected ridge tops, now clear ot False Leadership Brings Rule English farmers. ; : growth, to kefp new growth Micah 31-6, 9-12 The furor started when a from coming. In this way they Memory Selection: The ways i i an make fuel breaks, stretches white man in Southern Rhodesia | can na R00 fact ite. GL of the Lord are right, and the k | began circularizing British farm- Perkaps ' ooh we, v ep just shall walk in them: but (he ers, offering them "robust" Afri- |: can be ep Shefile oF on. 9 ho transgressors shall fall therein cans for £150 ($420) down and | A ao. 2 oy Roni jSrow Mu Hosea 14:9, £5 ($14) a mofitl for two years. | H foresters call low-volume fuel-- . : s 3 5 : > : lants that will not burn big Micah has a twofold come ; "Preposterous!" charged Br { p : i A tain' p Se | F c A Be will ! Programs like this, of - course, plaint. The one is against the y rs ly Js Jona Saupe i cost money, but losses-caused by leaders in government which in. Joa ana tu It write , apy of the | } the lack of prevention may cost cluded the administrators of Cod Iniify : a a yp copy gy e : $ vastly more, writes Kimmis justice, and the other is against ¢ ry circu'ar, signed by one M. J. Hendrick in the Christian Sci- the religious leaders, the pro- b/ / Mitchley, postmarked Salisbury, 'nce Monit Sh tacts y Southern Rhodesia, and iled + ence Monitor. phets and priests. 3 J G8sig, dng mate Many techniques for fighting The leaders are described as y to, among other farmers William x ; NRL fires have been developed, the those, "who hate the good, and ; . E. Allen of Brentwood, Essex, | A h - . \ England . LE most dramatic being the use of love the evil." When such men { ry "i airplanes. Mr. Jarvi stresses are in office, woe to the peopls. 5! Obviously, Britain never would that planes are a tool, not an The leaders are greedy and op- 3 Sad Jon Sivan Yet hi Wg " answer, They can't be used at pressive. They are like canni- J ouse 0 rds last month, Vis- night and they can't be used bals, feeding on the people. They count Maugham, author and Ara- when there is air turbulence. "abhor judgment, and pervert ( blest, made even the drowsiest Recently the effective use of all equity." They "judge for ra- peers sit up with a firsthand i f illustrated a ' i 4 a nrsthand ac- aircraft was illustrate near ward." . count of how he, himself, bought [PF heie, though, when Angeles Micah's description is appil- a slave -- "like one buys a piece ; $ af National Forest's team of 13 cable to the leaders of soma 2) of meat." ads a TT SA Nr 5 1, planes went in and "clobbered | countries today. But revolution "3 During a motor trip into the A SREY NY UT ASTER ATE Sa =| the fire in San Antonio Can- has ousted some of them. Com- 3 Sous oi; Jeu, Slap on THE MUSCLES OF YOUTH -- Young calf fights efforts of young girl to lead it through the : : mn Wn Mi. dares Bots Ji They Ipinst Jaidets a STH op- { stopped at a settlement of noma- 3 i 3 Lt : : : 2 . J iter pressive. But what about Cana- i J die. fair-ski 3 Missouri State Fair grounds. Vicki Lea Fitchett, 7, won the battle. She was helping with | and doused. the five. d37 Frontentiv corrumtion is Une : c, r-skinned Tuaregs, 100 Fut F fA tea exhibit . q 3 pti miles north.of Timbuctu, where viure rarmers © merneq : When you talk about forests, covered at all levels of govern- J f he purchased a 20-year-old slave : ; in any part of the United States ment. And how much more will 4 named Ibrahim for $105 in d or any part of the world, you only be uncovered at the judg- § French francs. "Ibrahim was a : lb AD ¥ i They Cut Down | open the question of land use ment? Of "course those in ofiice by cheerful enough type," Maugham ' On Forest Fires { for the sake of people. Drive may be no worse than the gen- A recalled, "but he had no skills oo thrcugh one of the great national cral run of the people. But when 3 *. .. Of course, 1 gave him his | Southern California's popula- forests of France, for instance, those in public office misappro- i } freedom . . . I only wanted to : ea and you sce how centuries of priate funds and it is discovered, A A tion has zoomed like a rocket in . : ; \ . > : prove that slavery still the past ten years, but the num- human experience with natural it becomes widely known. Peo- 5 ; flourishes." ver of forest fires hasn't. This is resources produce a thrifty at: ple are too apt to judge all by 3? Slavery on the biggest scale is an amazing thing, once you stop titude toward inthes al is al. the few and hence men of good y found in the Arabian peninsula, | to think of it. Sim Jarvi, super- most pin imprespne the pe character are often reticent ) ! where an estimated 500,000 men, visor of the great Angeles SOIhe Soatly 'of 3he 'ree-arche about, pecepting leadership. ARCH ; women and children now live National Forest, suggests it very rozaway. . | Mical's condemnation of pro- oN » and t6il in bondage. : . . . well may indicate that people Did medieval men gel "the in- phets and priests was even mors, it In a single year, as many as One developing. innovation in Basically the problem is to re- are friends of the forests, and spiration for their Gothic cath- tevere. The prophets made tha it 10,000 Moslem pilgrims from the poultry industry may tend move body heat. No outside heat that the more people there are, | edrals from these graceful people err, The, tone of theie 3 Africa Iran, and Pakistan have to divorce it entirely from the is necessary even in winter, and the safer the forests are bound boughs. Maybe, for beauty is prophecy depended on how < been kidnapped by slavers and farm, producing eggs in circular most of it must be thrown away to be. . utilitarian and -- at the very much the person gave them, = led to the dakkat al abeed (slave factories right next to cities, and to keep the birds healthy. Both This isn't to minimize the least where trees are concerned The bigger the bite the fairer : 1 platforms), where the women climinating entirely the long temperature and humidity are seriousness of fire losses in Calis -- it means safety to the soil, the prophecy." And the prophet Ca { are paraded like mannequins 3 haul from the country. completely controlled, writes fornia and other parts of the pretection to cities, and indus- was vicious in his denunciation y i children are exhibited in chains. The circular shape has been Roscoe Fleming in the Christian West this summer. Nobody can try. Of course it also means the ol those who didn't put into his Bs x and the buyers compete franti- chosen to allow these super- Science Monitor. view these losses complacently. treasury of the.out of doors. mouth, : ry , # IY. modern production plants to ride . * ' = Trees are too precious. They Today there are religious yi The demand for. slaves-in the Persian Gulf area actually has increased in direct proportion to the growing oil wealth of the sheiks, In some sheikdoms, a man now is known for the number of slaves he has, rather than for his Cadillacs. slavery? At present, there is little to be done except com- plain. When Western nations "tried in 1956 to give U.N. mem- bers the right to search and seize slave ships, Egypt, Sudan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen blocked the plan. Russia also voted no. A Room of His Own For the First Time | There are many "firsts" in 'one's life when one is young and at the beginning of things; but there are certain "firsts" that re- main forever memorable. I had never been outside New York City itself. I had never ridden in a Pullman train or eaten in a dining car, and I had never stay- ed overnight in a hotel. All of ~~ What can be done to stamp out -- these things now took place in glittering succession. ; ~~ When the train roared out of ' Grand Central station and emerged from the tunnel at 96th Street, '1 sat in my seat at the ~ window and watched the squalid tenements rush past me, in one of which, though I could not see it, I had lived all my life. I have never emerged from the tunnel since then without thinking of that first ride. I sat there not quite daring to hope that the ISSUE 38 -- 1960 a WATERY EYE -- Jim Coker, Phillies catcher, tries out an eye freshening device in the dug- out of Connie Mack Stadium, Philadelphia. Twin streams of cool, aerated water may relieve --eye fatigue and help sharpen a player's vision. time would come when 1 would never have to return to the Bronx and the poverty that dull- ed and demeaned each day. In the dining car I sat opposite Mrs. Harris and Mr, .Pitou, and sensed what it was like to order -the food that tickled one's pal- ate at a particular moment with- out thinking of what-it cost. And when 1 settled into my room at the hotel in Rochester, I sat for a long moment. on the bed drinking in a joyous sense of privacy that I had never before experienced. I would sléep alone in a room that night for the first time in my life. I did not know until that moment how starved I had 'been for privacy, what .a. precious refreshment to the spirit it is; there is no such in- dulgence in the realms of pov- erty, and only those who have lived without it can know, what a prime luxury privacy is. From that moment on I began to fight savagely for the blessed solace of a door closing behind me in sufficiently to leave and go to the theatre where the dress rehears- al was about to begin. -- From "Act One," An Autobiography by. Moss Hart. : z= ~a room of my own. It was a long |... "time before I could rouse myself ~present project. n LJ LJ ~thousands of hens in individual cages on a "merry-go-round" in- stallation that will bring hens to their food, and the eggs to the hand of the collector. Ma%/ chinery will do all the work ra- ther than people; the few people needed will all be technicians _ | 1 rather-than laborers. n . * Cyclo Manufacturing Company of Denver, manufacturers of pol- - ishing equipment, has operated such an experimental egg factory for six months now, housing 6,000 hens. : This is small compared to some present egg-production plants, particularly in California,' but Cyclo claims its revolution- ary design, when applied to units ~ to house 100,000 hens or. mare, can: Increase egg production to about 80 per cent, or 800 eggs per thousand hens per day, as against a present national aver- age of 55 per cent. Provide practically all Grade AA eggs, never more than 24 hours from the grocer's shelf. And do all this at a production and wholesale cost from 10 to 14 cents lower a dozen than the present costs. LJ + LJ The company president, Lewis Hayden, started looking for di- versification some years ago, and hired James Helbig, Colorado ° State University graduate, to sur- vey the agricultural field. Mr. Helbig in turn decided that egg production offered the most promising field for automation. "It's still in" the Middle Ages, technologically speaking." He has devoted three years to the Mr. Helbig says the birds are happy and unafraid. They talk briskly with each other, yet the separate cages prevent the usual problems of rivalry and combat. And how they lay! The 80 per cent production ratio is main- tained. One valuable byproduct is in the fertilizer which is automati- cally collected, dried, packaged, - and sold. In the final units everything will be done by machinery save for record keeping, and this can be done from the central station "around which the tiers of cages move, . Practically "all the eggs from Cyclo's 6,000-bird unit are taken by Denver's newest and largest hotel. : : We Can't Keep Them All On The Farm Suppose none of the boys ever left the farms! Have you ever - visited one of Europe's countries . where the land has been divided, generation after generation? In Extreme cases you would see a "farm" with little strips, an acre here, a half acre there, maybe widely separated. Under governments .which discouraged new opportunities, where a peasant's sons were expected to become peasants, to slice up the property was the only solution. From the time I was knee high to a chipmunk, I have "heard complaints about young people leaving the land, and still hear the same words, One regrets to see an outstanding youth leave, Yet, what if he couldn't? Shouldn't we be glad to live in a 'nation where a youngster is free have too great economic value. They mean too much to recrea-" tion, to flood control, to safety. But conscientious people--"The . public is wonderfully co-opera- tive," Mr. Jarvi says -- establish firebreaks of responsible behav- ior which cut down danger. People less conscientious or less responsible can cause fires, and it only takes oné stroke of heedlessness to lay waste thou- sands of timbered acres during the dry seasons of the western year. People cannot be called re- sponsible for- fires started by lightning, a bigger factor than usual in these parts this summer and always a major factor up- state. But deliberate incendiar- ism is a tough problem. Letting children play with matches is another, Tossing a lighted cigar- ette into the grass is still an- other. Incidentally, in (wo recent cases, California judges have meted out justice by requiring men who were careless with: their matches to help rebuild cabins destroyed in the forest as a consequence of carelessness. . Visitors are sometimes amus- ed, then puzzled, to gnter- an area in this southern part of Caiifornia marked national or state forest without a tree in sight. What they discover is that brush covering the mountains is as vital to the 'watérshed as trees. And brush can burn like paper. Then the hillsides are de- nuded, and the winter rains come along to unravel the soil at a great rate, The upshot Is a big price to taxpayers for measures fo restore the surface, stop erosion, and prevent the floods that could prove extreme- End Of The World Just Postponed "Like Noah, we can take shel- ter for 40 days and 40 nights." _This prediction by one member of the Full Gospel Assembly in Benson, Ariz.,, was eclipsed last month when some 100 wan members emerged after 42 days "in newly built, concrete bomb shelters. "It's strange," said the Rev. Ann Weimer, plump, 49- year-old pastor who had pre- pared the soul-winning sect members for what she prophesied would be a nuclear dooms day. "The parents got to know their children and each other better, .But the children were treated normally. When' they stepped out of line, they were paddled." None the worse for all the publicity: and the fact that their pastor's grim forecast was wrong, the brethren went immediately to their small, cement-block church to thank God for deliver- ance. "Our - faith has - not ~shaken," Mrs. Weimer "When there is an atomic attack, we will wait it out. Then we will come up and work for the Lord." been The way politicians call up images of past greats you'd think they were running for the lcad in a historical pageant. said. leaders who depend on men ra- ther than God for their support and who gear their message to ensure themselves of the reward. God have mercy when money determines the type of message " fo- be given. No wonder such a rophet has no vision and turns o giving book reviews, et When religious leaders preach and pray with their eye og money, they can only. lead peo- ple to err. We fear there is a - lot of it today. We nced to turn to the Bible and start obeying God. LIKE PAROLE BOARDS Inmates of Kilby Prison In Montgomery, Ala, have em- barked on a 14-week course on "how to win friends and influ- ence people." Upsidedown to Prevent Pecking ly costly to nearby urban areas. to choose his future, and to Recent fires In the Tahoé and Essentially the experimental make the most of his abilities? 6. Morning (ab.) 33. Lure | CROSSWORD 3: unbrelia part 35. latevrm plant consists of cages for 6,000 Eldorado National Forests of {3 3.fiiean tribe 30.10rt of Le individual birds, mounted in high ia boy. ibis California have looked, -of Eh 10. Dog house 37. At the apex tiers that revolve around the course, like the classic concept / : PUZZLE : 1 tah 3. Holly arm: central handling place. Soe So pinot, and oie jhe of the forest fire. Thousands of - wr 12. Dress leather 41. Faucet Each hen gets two minutes an ' & prolessiona acres covered by magnificent, ACROSS - 62 E. Indian coln y3' By birth 42. Wading tird or business man, . ' > 1. Indefinite pe-63 Toward the 1g Flaps 44. Corundum hour to eat and drink, as her True, some who do have the | Mature trees have been lost in & A riod of time - stern * 20. Overbearing 46. Run off to cage passes the troughs in font. 4 Ave 118 flames, : 2 lossy paint 23. op of 49. Corrod She spends 15 mines an hour iot TA Gedte 10: 1 Tamme | le Hobe Wok pe0 | soun 1. Glossy paint . Top of a . Corrodes yi / ecide to do somethin 1 A . eo- i 8. U. £ allor 2. Hypothetical i" buiiding ; 51. Epoch , in"the lighted zone in which the cause they lack Caphal, 52 be; ple who are specialists are doing 11: Vere 8 Recently "38 Taga IR 86. Gr troughs are located, then her. | "quo we seldom hear of good to minimize this kind of tragic 3 Sh war 4. dw 20. Musteal 5% One himdre cage passes into a "twilight zone" | gos thé fail to find good destruction of a marvelous nat- 16 River in 5. Beaver State - Instrument 60.1In case for the next 45 minutes. At night 'farmers, ural resource. The Fifth World Nigeria the whole installation stops for The land produces more new Forestry Congress has just con- ' {3 Porters nt 10hourgc oo b, boys than new farms. With effi. | Vvened in Seattle bringing to- - 21. Jacket -- . ther experts from around the 3 : ; J, ciency demanding larger acre- ge xpe ] 5 LR A girl technician now collects | ages "some: of the bans will in. world to whom fire prevention sAvall aneself the eggs by means of an elévator evitably go out to become the is one of many vital concerns. 27. rm foint that moves up and down the engineers, scientists" and educa. Recently two groups of men en ' \ J 20. Hebrew face of the tiers and keeps a tors that the nation needs. route to Seattle stopped in Cali- M,N al EE "|, punch-card record of the per- The boy who Is not going to fornia to confer with experts i (ab) formance of each hen. Hens that stay on the land can capitalize here. In Australia, Venezuela, 12. Rowan tree 24. Small nall 26. Mother 3% Anthoritative decree don't produce are sold. = Health is extraordinarily good, and precautions are takén to on his farm background. Indus- try is looking for him, especial- ly if he does well in college. For and various other nations, the challenge Is like California's, Weather and climate in forest 40. Tmpudent keep itso... __.. _. __ ... Ll instance, the demand for train- | protecHon --are worldwida con-- a -- id ere nf Most of the cost of convention= ed agricultural engineers rises | cerns. = > 48. Fatigue al henhouses is in air condition- every year. Even now the sup- One way to protect forests, ' - ' i 4. Tobe ing, Mr. Helbig says he studied ply is'short. Only about 250 ag- | Mr, Jarvi points out, is to de- / » MSOLY this problem afresh, coming to ricultural engineers will get de- velop green strips along 'main 5. Entice (a1a1.) the decision that the only prac- grees in 1962, as compared with highways, Kept clear of dead- B3. Targe body of water 85. Minuta orifice fi op f ne 8: Faeileh | i eathedra ticable shape is circular. His de- sign offers adequate air condi- tioning at a basic cost only about 20 per cent of that of convention- 420 in 1049, The demand Is active for farm boys who gradu- ate In industrial and commer- elal fields," -- "Farm Journal Magazine, wood, these strips have nothing that will kindle, or at least noth- ing that will kindle too swiftly to control Another protection f(s is fire-resistant. THE QUICK AND THE THIRSTY -- His fast-beatin Invisible, a havering hummingbird pokes his q wings almost long, narrow beak into an outdoor bird bar. Charles Harris. filled the bottle ty Answer elsewhere on thie page with sugar water. al houses. : planting that - al

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy