HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1956-11-28, Page 7The day of air-conditioning in
barns, farrowing houses, laying
houses and 'other livestock build-
ings is just dawning but experi-
ments with stock kept at varying
temperatures seem to indicate
that air-conditioning 'may be
technology's next major contri-
bution to the farm scene.
In Canada little has been done
so far with farm air-conditioning,
but in the United States cooling
farm buildings with air-condi-
tioners has proved worthwhile in
a variety of cases.
At the University of Missouri
"climate laboratory," for instance,
it was found that cows produce
better at 50 to 60 degrees Fahren-
heit than at higher temperatures.
Even In the not-too-hot 75 to 80
degrees range, they ate less and
gave less 'milk.
In a Maryland test, hens laid
more and - heavier eggs when
both temperature and humidity
were controlled by air-condition-
Christmas Delight
2fla4chae
4526
TALL
w-4
EFARM FRONT
Noise—The Great
Modern Curse
Milkman Robert Thompson
whistled cheerfully to.
as ho walked briskly up and
down the empty streets of the
sleeping Own of Omaha, Ne,
braska. Jangling his crates of hot
." ties, he swung through garden
gates, letting them slam behind
him, and his shoes echoed on the
flagstones in the stillness of the
early morning,
RV seven o'clock he had Work-
ed through the outskirts and was
in the city itself—and in trouble,
Here a sleepy-eyed .policeman
saw—and heard —him, and the
next clay the milkman found
himself in court charged with
breaking a by-law which protects
sleepers from the clatter of milk
bottles, He was fined one dollar.
To-day governments, with the
help of scientists, are waging an
all-out war on one of the great-
est curses of civilization—NOISE.
Doctors are worried that the
ever-increasing din of modern
life may be responsible for the
postwar outcrop of neuktics, for
loud noise is a physical assault—
an attack on the nervous system.
It can seriously affect digestion,
thicken the ear drums, stiffen the
small bones of the body and
make a person thoroughly ex-
hausted. A doctor reports that in
cases of pneumonia or early con-
valescence the back-firing of a
ca? or frequent sounding of a car
horn may be sufficient to cause
a relapse,
Indeed, horn-blowing was re-
cently outlawed in one American
city, except for occasional toots
in cases of emergency,
But you can make as much
noise as you like—and hardly
hear yourself—in a unique "room
of silence" recently built at the
University of California.
The entire room has been cov-
ered with sound-absorbing spikes
of glass-fibre and will be used
this autumn for experiments in
measuring the noise produced by
motors and various electrical de-
vices. The noises will be recorded
on instruments outside.
Criminologists are now investi-
gating a link between city noise
and city crime, and New York's
"Committee for a Quiet City" is
experimenting with plastic gar-
bage cans, following a report that
clanging metal cans are the last
straw for some highly-strung
New Yorkers.
MATADOR TEEN JEANS — The
matador touch comes to teen-
agers' jeans in this colorful out-
fit modeled by Claire Gordon
at a parade of original spring-
summer fashions in London,
England. Blouse and leans are
topped by a contrasting poplin
skirt in a button-through style.
Cotton three-piece ensemble is
by Debut,
In July this year, Ramsgate's
COuncil voted to potition the
Prime Minister to banish scream-
ing American jet aircraft from
near-by 11'Ianston air base,
"Intolerable, unbearable, fright,
ful," shouted council members,
Protesting that the noise was kill-,
ing the town's holiday trade and
forcing some residents to the
brink of nervous breakdowns,
Complained one alderman: "The
other day my little grand,claugha
ter, aged five, fell on the 1round
with her hands over her ears,
absolutely terrified."
The simple truth, which is
understandably alarming people
who are unfortunate enough to
live near airfields, is that practi-
cally nothing can be done to tame
the ear-splitting roar of jets, If
8,000,000 people roared together
they would make less noise than
a single jet engine:
Scientists are to be congratu-
lated, certainly, on the successful
development of ground "muff-
lers" which effectively reduce
jet noise to a bearable level
while 'planes are warming up
prior to take-off, but in the air
adequate silencing is impossible.
Noise in blocks of flats is an-
other nuisance which is receiving
close attention. For years experts
believed that the clatter heard
clearly around buildings — and
from deck to deck in ships — was
carried through air. Now it has
been discovered that the reason
the noise of, for example, an all-
night burning fire being raked
can be heard several flats away
is because it is transmitted
through the walls and •floors.
Tests show that glass-fibre
"carpets" laid over concrete
floors, together with suspended
ceilings for the rooms below,
effectively insulate against most
of the bumps and bangs that
plague flat-dwellers,
If you live in a flat and as a
hobby play a musical instrument,
you're pretty certain, to have had
the neighbours banging on your
door. Harry Mills, sixty-two-
year-old porter at a block of-flats
in Earls Court, London, has
solved the problem by buying a
sound-proof telephone booth.
He fixed it up in a 'spare bed-
room at his home and practises
his accordion for hours without
annoying anybody. Even his wife,
sitting in the lounge, cannot hear
a thing.
"It's a very good idea," says
Harry of his kiosk, "but I'm near-
ly deafened now!"
Researchers into the causes and
control of noise say that one of
their biggest problems is that few
people can agree about what is
noisy and what isn't. Some very
found noises, are welcome; the
rasp of exhaust of a grand prix
racing car is music to the en-
thusiast, but murder to someone
not interested; hep-cats can jive
all night in absolute bedlam,
without ill effects, but neighbours •
go crazy. Some very quiet noises,
on the other hand can be deva-
steating; like a dripping tap, or a
fly buzzing on the ceiling.
Noise has been proved to cause
physical pain, and if big enough,
can kill. Scientists' have killed
mice and rats with high-pitched
sound vibration. In one experi-
ment, cockroaches died in about
three seconds and mosquitoes in
ten seconds. Utra-sonic vibrations
can kill bacteria and even bore
holes in our teeth for the dentist.
Doctors say., that most people
suffer from noise, but not every-
one is aware of it. Noise takes its
toll on nerves, producing ir-
ritability which is often just put
down to bad temper.
SLEEPLESS
The longest period of insomnia
on record is claimed by Fabiana
Geonzon, of Manila, the Philip-
pine Islands, Vile, for 30 years,
hasn't slept.
Troubled with headaches as a
child Geonzon found it increas-
ingly difficult to get to sleep un-
til, at the age of six, he couldn't
sleep at all, '
Although admitting to feeling
tired on occasions; he states that
his sleeplessness hasn't affected
his health.
It proves once again that the
modern crook will take immense
trouble and stop at nothing once.'
he has made up his 'mind to crack
a valuable' "crib," =
Look at the. vast 'effort that
resulted in a $300,000 haul at a
Warsaw bank by painstaking
thieves who entered the building
by means of a tunnel sitxy-three
yards long which they had con-
structed under a roadway.
They had great technical
knowledge, for the tunnel was
built on the most up-to-date
system applied in mines. It was
even supplied with an electric
light and telephone service con-,
nected with the cellars of an
innocent - looking toyshop op-
posite the bank premises.
In this shop the thieves esta-
blished their headquarters and
spent nearly a fortnight' pre-
paring for their raid. Polled after-
wards calculated that it had cost
them more than $3,000 to con-
struct the underground corridor.
They were not entirely success-
ful in their raid. They apparently
overlooked the fact that the use
of chemicals necessary to open
the various bank safes would
produce asphyxiating gases.
The poisonous fumes compelled
them to withdraw before they
could open the principal safe, a
giant whose contents would have
doubled the value of the raiders'
loot.
Those thiayes were never
caught. Others who devised a
method of fishing for the con-
tents of a safe in Pennsylvania
ended in jail.
They first tried to force open
the door of the vault, failed, and
tried the roof where they were
more successful. They then bored
a hole in the safe big enough
to put a hand through, They
flooded the safe with water from
a canal running alongside the
building and carefully fished out
$75,000 worth of securities that
floated up within their reach.
They got away from the city, but
were arrested by mobile police
as they, sped along a country .
read.
A thief in Ohio successfully
fished out $450 from a bank's all-
night safe, using string and a
hook.
A clever trick practised on a
, Toulouse jeweller cost him jewels
worth about $6,000 some years
ago. The thief knew that every,
night the jeweller was in the
habit of taking a small handbag
of jewels home with him, and
that every morning he took it
back to the shop and laid it, on
the counter while he raised the
iron shutters,
One morning the jeweller was
raising the shutters as usual,
when a man, walking in front of
the shop with a large basket of
eggs; apparently slipped and fell
down, breaking the eggs all over
the doorstep—like an enormous
Omelette.
The man was very apologetic
and offered • to help the jeweller
clean-up the mess of broken eggs.
A passer-by offered his assist-
ance.
"Haven't you got a broom?"
asked the passer-by.
Suspecting nothing, the jewel-
ler rushed to the back of the
shop to look for one, When he
returned the man who had
broken the eggs and the generous
Passer-by, his accomplice, had
both. disappeared.
So had the bag of jewels.
WHO'S doNttitit)1 West
Fourth tint only Meets. brut bi-
sects West Sixth that's What
these street. in. Michigan
City, Ind., Say, .but,Of4Owneri
aren't the only victiitts of
kiiidenti still. don't
know whatever happened' to
West Fifth ttreef,
Thrilling Christmas gift—TEN'
garment wardrobe for your lit-
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item is sew-easy—fun to make!
Party Mtge School Dress! SUS-
Vender Jumper! Blouse! Coat!
Pixie Rat! Nightie! Robe! Slip!.
Panties!
Pattern 4526! in roll Sizes 14,
16 0. 18, 20, 22 inches tall. You can
Use scraps for Many of these
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ages.
this pattern easy to use,
pie to sew, is tested for flt. Ras
complete illustrated instructions.
Send l'IlitTY=FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted; use
postal note for Safety) • for this
pattern. Print plainly your SIZE,
NAME, ADDREBSi and STYLE
NUMBER.
Send Order tit ANN; ADAM'S',
123 tighteehtti St., New Torciii
to, Onto
t4.1.111Ms.m, „„
DON'T LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU Deathi' flagged dciWn the
for Phillip Watkins, 21-year-old. He lost the race with .a ,
ipeed!ft train, and paid for if with his life, ,as the ,engine
dragged his car d half Mile down the track. Oleq. it safe, and
avoid being 'the body they. have' to carry away' team the'
Wrecktidel
Frogman Crook
Swims To Loot
ro, months tt daring series Of
robber* ,!0 tecierie$ puzzled, the palic9,to; Turin, Italy, 1Vntli
one day recentlYm a sharp-eyed
police officer saw4 man emerge
from a manhole in a quiet street.
just before dawn::
He proved to he the thief—a
frogman-burglar who confessed
that, with the aid of underwater
equipment; he had swum into the
buildings .through' 'the 'city's
drains!
TWO MOUTHS. TO FEED—Apparently believing that two heads
are better than one, this Hereford calf sticks them both in a
feeding trough 'and chomps contentedly. Its owner, Arnold
Raybuck, bought, the freak animal in. North Carolina and plans
to put it on exhibition.
ing. And Illinois broilers raised
in air-conditioned houses gained
extra weight in less time than
others without artificial cooling
on the same farm.
* •
A Georgia hog breeder reported
that two air-conditioners in his
farrowing house saved him - two
or more fall pigs a litter. Not
only was there less crushing of
pigs when sows were comfort-
able, he said, but the pigs gained
weight faster.
*
Kentucky tests showed that
summer breeding for fall lambs
was more successful if rams were
kept in air-conditioned rooms.
A North Carolina artificial in-
semination association found the
vitality of bulls' semen was
higher when animals were kept
in cooled barns.
* * *
Greenhouses offer another ex-
ample. They have been operating
for centuries with a normal out-
put of 40 to 50 tons of fruit an
acre, Scientists calculate that
average yields of 160 tons to the
acre can be expected through
proper air-conditioning.
Air - conditioned greenhouses
are essential, too, as laboratories
for further investigation of plant
behaviour in relation to environ-
ment. By such means the effects
of climate on all crops can be
measured. This could bring about
selective breeding of many
plants, to adjust to growing con-
ditions, and the development of
methods of modifying field con-
ditions to increase production.
* * *
Ekperiments with livestock
kept at varying temperatures in
air-conditioned barns seem to
indicate that investment in "com-
fort cooling" equipment might
pay dividends to farmers. ▪ * *
In the United States an appara-
tus which automatically heats,
cools, dehumidifies and ventilates
is in farm use on an experimental
basis. Called a "heat pump" it
operates on the same principle
DROUGHT IS ALL ITS CRACKED UP TO SE—, Sffects of the rtiontliS.long drisught in Kansas
are seen in 'this, pare1164, cracked pond, located hear Kansas Ci in iiibufban,. Wyandotte
'County. Last sizable rain, the -was On Aug. when let thon half an inch way tettii'dad.
*
Used in floors, polythene film
reduces the passage of moisture
vapor, dust and air currents. This
can be particularly important in
the floor of a hay mow located
above a dairy barn. The layer of
plastic film will prevent dust and
seeds from falling through the
floor and interfering with the
production of clean, healthful
milk.
"FLY" FISHERMAN
New lures, baits and tackle are
in constant demand by keen
anglers in their attempt to land
a big 'un, but Walter G, Austin,
of Maysville, has devised a novel
means of pursuing his finny op-
ponents to their out-of-the-way
and difficult-to-get-at hiding
places.
He does his angling in, a 'wood-
en washtub and for buoyancy
the tub is encircled by a huge
inner tube. Having made him-
self comfortable in this unortho-
dox craft, Austin allows it to
float along the stream gently
propelled by the current.
SOME PARTY
"I hear you went to Bill's party
last night. Have a good time?"
"A smashing time."
"Stay long?"
"Well, we left when the cork-
screw got too hot to use!"
5 4t J.
Harvesting over, Canadian
farmers now are turning to the
painter .carpenter plasterer
plumber,interior decorator rQies
that their ingeniousness fits them
for — and necessity often re-
quires them to fill.
The farm home frequently is
planned and built by the farmer.
himself. Even the lumber used
in its construction may well
originate On the land he farms.
New farm buildings are cOnstant-
ly required for new operations
and old buildings need remodel-
ling to incorporate labor-saving
devices and to take advantage of
new farming techniques,
* *
Whether the job on hand, in-
volves the building of a new
farm home, or the laying of a
concrete floor in the stable, poly-
thene sheeting can be a time-
saving and valuable helpmate. In
the variable Canadian climate,
moisture seeps through the walls,
ceilings and floors of buildings.
Polythene sheets set between in-
sulation and plasterboard or gyp-
rock, or placed over wall sheath-
ing prevents the transmission of
this moisture.
When applying the film to
walls, it can be stapled vertically
to two-by-four studding on 10-
inch centres with a full lap on
alternate studs. It, can also be
applied horizontally to the stud-
ding or directly over interior
sheathing under the lath or
plaster board. On ceilings it
should be applied to the warm
side of 'the joists by stapling the
film lengthwise to the joists,
overlapping the full width of the
joists.
as a ,refrigeratwnsing retriger,
ant for both heating and Cooling
air,
The Ideal Gift
SPIRITUAL STRENGTH FOR TODAY
,by R. Barclay Warren
Columnist to 85 newspapers
Published by Thomas Nelson & Sons
$2 at your bookstore or send $2 for
postpaid autographed copy to
R. B. WARREN
105 Egiinfon Ave., E.,
TORONTO, 12, Ont.
The story of the Prodigal Son
has been called the heart of the
Gospel, That is because it
teaches that God forgives sin-
ners. How thrilled the publicani
and sinners must have been
when they learned how the boy
who had wasted his substance
on riotous living was joyfully
welcomed by his father. There
was hope for them too,
World Conquest tells of a col-
porteur selling a New Testament
to a French woman named
Jeanne. Her husband, Jacques,
reproved her for spending her
money in that fashion and de-
manded the book. "But," she
said, "the money is not all
yours, I brought my dowry when
we married."
"Alright," said JacqueS. "The
money was half yours and hall
mine, The book is the same.".
He tore it in two and gave her
half, Some days later as he sat
by his charcoal fires in the for-
est, he felt lonely. He thought
of the book. Taking it out of
his blouse he read from the be-
ginning. It‘ began, "And will
say unto him, 'Father, I have
sinned against heaven and be-
fore thee, and am no more
worthy to be called thy son."
He read to the eni. of the story.
Then he wondered: what had
the poor lost son done? Where
had he been? The questions
haunted him. "I wish I had the
beginning of the story," he
sighed. Meanwhile Jeanne had
read the first portion of the New
Testament and came to the
point where the son said "I
will rise and go to my father."
She wondered what- happened.
the father welcome him? That
night he asked Jeanne for her
half of the tern book. Together
they read "the whole of the
beautiful parable and the Spirit
of God, who had been working
in both their hearts, caused its
meaning to dawn on them. Both
yielded their hearts and lives
to the Lord Jesus Christ.
"The word of God is quick,
and powerful, and sharper than
any twoedged piercing even to
the dividing asunder of soul and
spirit, and of the joints and
marrow, and is a discerner of
the thoughts and intents of the
heart." Hebrew 4: 12: We should
study God's Word each day.
Memory Selection; ifle bath
not deal( with us after our sins=
nor rewarded' us according' t.
,our iniquities, For as the hea,-
yen is high above the earth, so
great Is his mercy toward them
that fear him. Psalm 103; 10-;11.
BY REV R BARCLAY
WARR4N. B.D.
The Prodigal Bork
Luke 14; 11-24
4.4