The Brussels Post, 1957-07-03, Page 7WORLD'S . TOP: AIR SURVEYOR
DOOMS:g:OLO
PECTOR:
By DOUGIJAS 1,4ARSE
NgA Staff Correspondent
Ottawa, Cana cla .-
One el Canada's colorful insti-
tutions, the bush prospector, haS
been dorm in,
That hardy,;,,h;verdltioi di
hu$inOPM(.4Pa4 '1 1 I
,i1
seeker got theAwfbit.one...0 0 $
county
war 4 1
Mfg 401,',VUtill;4:C' ,
kind of in#gigat,14/04'-e'fftei s
going on i -i
"••Y 4:',,,, 0
Spartan , ganadiari ,;,40ip, '„h6ti,
the world's` larges,V.,1,ile ,Iter,,,e' ,i
outfit, is the hi Ilea lal
the trudging prO, to'rt.
1'1
,
In the proces$Alte,. patlyttp
revolutionizing,. Mel dicide of
finding hidden'T'hattlfa
around the wdr„201,""41,,
ates the lAvOrldt**1 /tort 'pr vete
helicopter cervi (
Spartan servi' 'b a 1
million eor,poration with more
than 500 scientists and pilots op-
erating a huge fleet ot planes
all over the world starts with the
threat ef_glermliny' 17-1, arid
„
Iii,Iv
,, Culd War
R AV -pilot ,John„M, Roberts
and 114e I1aVi4atellussell 14
I Al errassignedlo help 10-
tefltI erinissile-lahing Sites,
I1,,SToeess a:4w aerial
-Atta:P.Prtslg` l'eel'filicin .'Wes ilevel- '
' tfOse lads 'quickly' egen apply -
(*ea. Sowhen • 41 War ;elided
g ttitis Stec.itqlque:" to piaetical
IV t sn'w titrirsegf
oi,,,344517igtkityrkI;gllnia: Ill :1:1.4; •
foi
Y t rted ;4th•
1:1: forasfryt
'gatIori
ar 001`. 091 inte Alt . mingrAi1i4
ntin . sinds4 They ben
siqg ve Ocfronio 4vice called.
thettrglagne,,opletwakd clettecting
_on they add-
.5k4,,,Oi,*1094e-gle 7.e. temoter for
cieenrienbil-Ithakiletic ore bodies
small as nickel.
1!) iStiartan's experience in'oper-
ting over tile rugged Canadian
ilderness put them several
. jumps ahead ef foreign competi-
tors. 'This enabled Roberts and
Hall to begin getting their boom-
I 'Mg firm aerial survey jobs
Hi7itish Guiana, British Hondur-
.0.4, Colombia, India, the Philip-
pines and even Englapd and the
ttr:,S.
JOHN A. RQ!1EIrriSiL An aerial
-view of hidden resources, • .
•
important factor.' in The tremen-
dous minirfg boom now going on
all over Canada. Its airborne,
:scientific prospectess,discovei.ed,,
the existence of tremendous iron
ore deposits:- at Kamera., in
Southern Ontario for the 13etble-
hem Steel Corp,, for example
It did the-iaine":thin'g for the
American Cyrus' 'Eaton Enter-
prises at Knob Lake in northern
Quebec.
It spotted the huge new Bath-
urst zinc and copper' deptisitrin '
New Brunswicle •It
the oil bearingq$6„igggeV,
eral areas wheteWollWrii3OfitibtiOng
is booming. And,„..there,
case where a •Spatt.knJlt '
tually predlered:illereeiteAore
oil well, vilOrstrRatiTE41.114'
mediately bedame.,,a,,prodifee'Ff
One 4of Spartan'seari,le jobs'
was helping CanadiariXTS:-
defense experts selects sites
for the Distant Early Warning
radar line which now protects
the North American Continent
against sunrise airottack.
The phen4feenal growth of
Bpartan filsonft a Ltiny enterprise
with a couple; of broken-dOwn
World War IP planes to a multi-
• With their electronic devices
and their own technique of high
altitude surveYing, 'Spartan
ports can produce accurate• -min-,
eral reports M a few weeks
• ,which would take yearslo make
by prveioes methods, ' 'Their
work ha a proved a boon to Itn-
•derdeveltipecl colntries by'locat-
prevriouslyilnknov,,thinerel
depositgrof trelenduos value:
In 'Oa, for , exampIet. thir
eiectrormagnetometer was, able.,
• to pierce threugh Of 1
• feet of earthi overlay t6ire,veal•
the pbssible mineral -bearing ge7
°logy. below. Spartan's reports
:havelndian officials anticipating
,,a,,new mining boom in that coun-
try.
'.'i Spartan's expanding helicopter •
fleet -is being use;d:for mapping
and survey as well as for taking
m.s„eaprilipctsa,steosTI itswi sbircrn
n_loattglearn-,
Cendih
AM,010.74`.1\91:.;.0•1Y,10-:s9•FYY,F,-,19..r-
ers
9.9
4!X.11-.7,19,1R4r#0.4t.
, 'The--40•Vit,dkin''`goVet'.
otre'bUpartiiiViigg'grOstd1
foeall fgat'sf5ervic,daikaY•
4Cf
*rjlges*;#.1*.0 *crodi.t
ttg,qh:eVutiird:*&
doing r4i,earei1i on the aerial
feeding oti.4qests, for example;
an idea winch holds great prom-
ise for the paper pulp, industry
up here.
As Spartan's President Roberts
says, "Our goal is to find a
brand new aerial service to sell
each •year of our existence."
Narrow Squeaks
hmp ROOdtman, a miner in
Northern RhodeSiti, i4flySVAIng
his feet frOre his bed one morn,
'ing Pod began to dress himself
/or work.:: Jic was jut putting
�n hiaright s1� e when he sttd-'
denly frOze "with herrer,
Sol4408 was Wiggling un-
der hist foOt; then a whiplash tail
eurled3tIft liOrn insid,e the shoe
PUt NO ankle,
The petrified miner recognized,
the tail of deadly bUtir Adder
'and, • squirming with hOrror,; he
realized that he taus havehis.
heel,: or the snake's lieadi
Oriakei" iavorittor
help' brought several men.i:nri*,,
ipg to the bunkhouse'elqjit 4
hasty conference was held,.
Roodtman -tried eve
his foot from the ghee tbq, ake
would strike' as soon asits head
'was freed, There was „onli 0110
way to deal with theeznerg
the snake had to be killed *1-1,i1b,
still inside the shoe.
One of the men raced aver to
the mine hospital and told. the
other what had hapl4
pen'ed. In a flash the MO.,
7
giajoiSed a bottle of colourless
liquidUom a shelf and raced to '
Ohere Ifoodtman sat in a cold
,
Weat, pressing, downes hard as
• e could to keep the stiakotiun-
'aerfopt while its tail writhed
around his ankle,
The doctor uncorked, the bottle
•nd dumped a goodly quantity
•
COYTON4,420YAI:TY -
raiment - all of cotton
cotton Carnival, Berry
1
rif
CrOWrjed iiW esitandent'fin:"rOyal
— Kin'QtYeen of tlie ahrtual
Boswell Brooks, 55, ancliAila MtGehee
Wrajoe, 2S),,, strike regal poses. Brooks, famed ,tbig-garne,hun-
ier, gave up a tiger hunt in Indiato preiide over'this,:year's''
affair. Miss Wraper a college ittirclet is c!,' nationally leriiAvn
hoisewRmamt
Two recent changes have been
made by the Health. of Animals
Division, Department of Agri-
-4culture,,,Ottawa, in the vaccine -
tion of calves for the control of
..brucellair'"The changes are ex-
ected'io Itin the area test-
ing and eradication of brucel-
- loS44,pregrarniannounced by the
ifnpaiN•44., Agriculture, At.
Gardiner, re-
entl0Y*,;.iiiy41-xe;11ouse of Coni -
Health oAnimals regulations
,1),Oris.0*Iilk
have been amended to permit
'f
official vaccination of calves
from the age of 4 months to 11
months. Formerly the age limit
was frerei4 ,
to 8 months. The
ffered'kfii itert
tlehenget,t'W ,t apply to cattle
Oto the United
"SteteStait5lokaisally vaccinated,
without a blood test, as their
regulations still require such
calves to have been vaccinated
V, 4, at from 6 to 8 months of a e.
AiAtsliSHIWO S$ .1=-- ttrI Sel4 -1- :, Lied
. . .. ,. , ..* ' *ty4 e , -desioeat d or
s e ep• Mese opyi in tithOs4Ityascine .basybeerl ' velope and
Orte,' stilt -wagers still 4 ply ' "`` is•-nciwtheing mad ailat4le by
m'.1R4V, t*:ReSititl4r•I*IvvvvoR,RAX
• .•
OR, • •• • *
•44
555555
55
55
'RR
their trade in other countries.
Some 24 .feet tall (on stilts),
"Noe -Noe", an Englishman, is
sown stumping along in Oslo,
Norway. Purpose; to advertise
a circus.
the Division to veterinarians for
calfhood vaccination„Thisvac
cine can be kept under ordinary
refrigeration for as long as fif-
teen months, whereas the via-
bility of the former liquid vac-
cine was approximately 40 days.
irl.;11:441 ' j1he ,liq)4„,..„,, . ''' . ...1v
of, M1,01 Roodtman's
itr hood vaccination program
. s
The Federal -Provincial Calf-
sht* An OttetiOWeringalell f,fiv vveirtIvarteilAviriee'f. vacinated. Iri the
1950 when 140,643
ether sweptr ,I.rait, thfflf4
ar
,J•:1-:.,.w.,.., - - . _tresent fiscal year it is estima-
• "Just holdf tfoe-a minute,"4147.:::!,a.igdua%•r• 750,000 calves will be
doctor :said.V.;;;‘,':'
. q.f.:*•:':'•,*••; .: vaccinated, bringing the total
U.s;Ropcttalari:, wafted, ,..-,i,.n:; halt,,,..,.,,#ont.,,,,it.lte.414egn•Ln3.1,4, , of the pro-
. .
—intte'Aa. 84aec*a$.141.,,$- .', -,...., ',..' r g ta4i A6.. 374,041t4.19ir e e, '.4•Iillion. •
!:•;'44t,i'litic, i t'Ae-siou'i4, .6tit„,,;,, .d.wet,:.?,..:,:14,,,,,-?'-'-"tiV,"3:..•
,,triti-ll09tg•trc.ort:, ,caifi,oedVeeettoi,t
aloniv:eb9tottiitt*ith.ietting,aiidtonovai:pf
in-
videiit h1Pttne
to sleep the'
rOidus atalght, the:••fOutteeti-., ' `fected 'animals frOin individual.
herds, if continued for a ritirriber
1141 addertras Out "cold"..tindet ' of 'Years, rechiceSAthe lei el of
the4effects df the anaesthetic: It '' 16fect1eri of brUcellOsis to a point
"rt• was a simple matter': todispOSe where, it is. econchnicallY
(1.,„ Dos-
1- it. .,'tt, • ; sible to preceed with a test and ,
,
Blit:perhepa the oddest4larroW- slaughter pregratitl on an area
Istilleak.Was• that ,of a Nyasaland. "basiS, as antiotinced by the Min-
hatiVe,. Sirtion, W'hd was .cycling ister. ' The . regulations iunder
home one evening along a wild which : the control plat; will
bush track.Vercome With heat Operate' will •bq atineuneed
. . .
and eichaustin, Simoii lay down shortly. ,.,, , ,, fa ..
next to his bleyele and fell
' It has . been ..eYtiniate that
asleep. ; He awoke to find several lions brucellosis in dan a eau es an
mil-
sniffingannual loss of about nine his body, plainly pre -lion do
paring to drag him off to their dollars. After a survey made
lair for breakfast! in the various provinces in 1955,
n Ca -
The terrified Simon lay verytio' it, ,nal level f ififectitori was estimated that the ria -
atilt But helaiew enough abut nada at that time Was 4.2 per ‘
O'i
i . 'i'aii,.:i
116'' tc).-4*.e4liT+tilt i-eiP1 g' cent of the cattle, though the
dea1i.tWefildiitt hint ht
;,., 1 percentage varied considerably
datttleliglY lie lie 'eller-1'6.1'ft iur' in the different proVitices. Set -
his bicycle pump, removed' it
from the:frame, and, gripping it, ting up brucellosis free areas On
t similar basis to that followed
let fly Witlike blood -curdling y.ell,
Ail lihROT:13.. free area prografit
figlit into 16iidWrgOi.i.ic,,qtett ,„ ,..74'
*,„is -4,,,lio'gical step ifi the et adicat. 1
and right he lasheerefit. With the '
piaPp, yelling like! -a -Mania& . lien Of brucellesis.
4, * *
The bewildered beasts forgot Ari area testing. program was •
480 loretikteStikand Se-,- ,Pereci •• 0.•Sta-rtet,.. int ' erittark iri 1046, At
al
'itAlit3/41elit htlskiAtit 4noti! : 11,thiiitig. '5 per tea ia/ the
‘Ile'siliiry tiin'in tOpping 'on. '6' his ''' :harditecin ained brucellOsis iri„,
hike' 'dila 'Pecidliiig away as fastin fected cattle. By 1054 the .=
al lid tetild, feetect herds had been reduced.
per tea and 1957 has been: •
I lia-Ve read rtd itinCti lately $6t es a pull fof i,.a.ctioaticjit tlf • ,
abOtit the iiketteets et siteititig thd di8bdaa ,ftnni all hdrds, '
I havd given tip reeding. (Collie it, * .4,, ._,.
. .
tic4,10•:0,04,, ,,,ii it lz, s IA, 2 t I Irk The. United 8tatcs, .hlit int:
•
".„4„;,;;;;;77.Z!..;•-.•:;•;.
ote
5
U*Ak
ttnLEC0T.ItrON,15,...:PROS,PE,Caefiaitter dangles from planebornelsearch for 'iriaff'Sec vrftelds'
••'• • *•;' •
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' t;i1)44itii0p IndlaA 38 inelegiant
'• 1 *"6•41efl•Sh .4* • .1iingOage
CROSSWORD
41 . 1,aerrlicende8s, f
•
PUZZLE45,Noti)resent
2130:. 1.itetturtnefill 43, Idle talk
rpty.0.00,3,
ACitbSS- • 2: headline • ' '22; ,T1•011 aside 4vRenttri•g. •
1. Weary. • Lavinter 23. Stan agreement
4. .,• 3..Ntild • , ; 25, bAstImp r2. AreeNV
27. 2‘IiitbIe r4, Inseeta
Pitiercoverin4 5. Rent again 28. itenaletts, ,. 55. OldArtsh,oblP •
12. IrrogOrt,Otsseitt .6. Mother : ' •. •detnIptisi don 56. 'Perfekt, of tittle
33. Depart 7.."Our Mlss Ddeade ri, LilteVVIse
14. Greek E Brooks" 32. Oriente -ship 69, untruth
a
15. Cordial 5, T31rgain captltin 0. Mineral pini
1 Spring testivat 9Withdraw 36. Gentle stroke f3. A fticie
19, Cornered
'21, Burmese trAhe:c.
22. Cycle of troi
24. Vat
25. Unit ot IL.Ntstg.ht,
29 finportafIli'il
ocetirenee 4
01, And not aft
.22, Self
• $4, AeCoMpiisly
35,- ilnwever
07. Auto fuel
32. Near . 4
40. Cottotp4detto
42. Horse
44. Gray stone
46, Redact
48, Donn
Companion
50. Encourage 6
61, Divinity
52,Porlc and - • -
55,Warrn over
58. 'Celestial
beings61, Slcifl
44L1X„
613, Cook On att
eves
.64. Pinch
"0115. rismee Sten
55 Altisies1
SonntIS
Evening meal
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'''....q• ,4 t,,.- .. :. • ,I. fifii .,
portant; ,rnarket 4- fort cAnadiari
cattle, the level of infection waS
estimated at 11.5 per cent le
1935. This was reduced to 2 per
• cent by 1939, lellowing the test-
ing of 33 million cattle. During
the years-V3p1;to:1954, $193 mil-
• lion of i3lzblic funds was spent
on brucellosis ,eradiation, To-
day, seveCsAlkshand over 600
counties have been declared
• modified certified areas, Eradi-
cation programs 'are under way
in . nearly every state of the
'Union, and .;th,e work is being
speeded up in hope of having
the entire country declared a
modified certified area for bru-
cellosis control by 1961V I
,L, ,„•,,,, 4.l's ,_ *4- *
A techi-treufor iean
proc7iiiiigrSas4t:e -,..clevel ped
by the Horticulture„ ivisio of
the0,,,Itetlibridrp.; .FlEas:Oerim.' ntal
FarrM, Cafiade V lielOrnenf of
Agriculture. As a result ofl this
development,'''arymbeans gown
in Southern Alberta can now,
litsii,IWol tli ,nertr.4 NW mois-
'hire edrifent Vilich' letetriinen-
tal,t9 flood bean processine, be
suctessfullY processed for, the
pork and bean industry.
Under normal preedisiegt me-
thods which involve a 'twelve to
fifteen hour soaking period, a
certain--p-ercentage of beans.froin
this area do not absorb sufficient
reoistur-e*.and-44coaseguently te-
rrain hard;rthg re'ducing the
quality of the finished product.
G. Straehan, Food TechnolOgist,
of the Lethbridge Experimental
Farm, says this problem can be
Overcomea 2 ting beans in
water at a temperature of 160
to 190 degrees F., for three or
four minutes,'01ollowed by a
soaking period' d'f three to four
hours. A reduction in soaking
time of typillyately One-third
Is also a great assot to the bean
processing industry,
-Processors ork and beans.
requimelativelylanall beaqt
f nee,„s4tOra.'siikt40.-ageAltalgAZ:
and other defects, The moisture
content xnust be lesS than 18
per cent to ensure lOng StOrage
withOtlt MoldII/Wm=
of 11 to ,pe; ,eqht piolsture
content is preferred tor egeetive
processing by the long:seak me.
thocl. This minimum JA diip4t
to maintain in southern Alberta
due to extreme low humidity,
esp'ecially during the winter.
Samples taken from storage in.
clicate that a range ot4 to
per cent moisture content is
more common for that area,
,.•
* *
The presenee of har& bens
that is beans that fail ito )soften
when soaked in wate;:„ even
though in small quanlities in,
pack,.voduceit, the
quality of pork and beans. Com -
menially thee hard -beans' were
generally removed by hand
picking after the long -soak me-
thod of softening,-, but they, are
very difficult to observe on a
sorting table, To further compli-
cate the problem, hard beans
cannot be removed by tloe4o-
tation method as there dos
appear to be any difference in
density betweert: ard and soft
beans,
gt. ttt
The development of the, quick
pre-soak boil technique'has un-
doubtedly opened Up l• few out-
lets fOr dry bean production in
southern Alberta and ':•possibly
other areas in Canada. Also, the
adoption of this method should
greatly increase processing plant
capacity as the twelve to fifteen
hour soak requires a large num-
ber of soaking tanksIBy` redu-
cing this period to ,,,,approxi-
rnately four hours, a greater
'volume could be handled: with
less equipment,
Advice to young preachers,
e faznd9s Chtfes SPprge
'When you glidalc of he
let your face light up - let it
radiate aNeasenly gleam. When
,you speak of hell your ordinary
UpSidediiivn-ro-Plevent ee
ugin namo0 nnn
nom ,PROOPta ,R£10
PAEPIEW ROEMER!'
MUM ODE
MUD winn HEIDE
MOW EOM MOB
PO MDE REV DR
EEE RUM ROOM
piano UMW=
UOW egEEIR
MIME EMCEE
OPE EnOEW tit021
ENO IMMO WOE
•
UNDAY SCHOOL
0
tdj,s'
• •
13.A,, H,D,
Abraham and Ills World
lkevisilf:g2(r-33; 19:28
e mfri itSildatiosi: Arise 0
God, judge the earth; for Arise,
shalt inherit all nations. Naha
hdl„ • o' •
' In his last greet prayer /or
his disciples;TeISIJO, said, "I pray
not that thou shouldst take
them out of the world, hqt ti$
thou shouldest keep thorn frATA
the evil. They are not of t4e
World, even as I arn 'of WO,
World." atill 1715,11, tAbrahrlii%
was in the World but not et
the world, Hut b.e virarb, gretitt
intercessor for .the 4itirld, Th4
wickedness ig'.''',"$0131001 wax
,greater than lie :th.op,gilt. and lic,
the city was nop, saved through,.
his prayers, 1-towever *Ged re-
meMbered Alvah.= ,a;nd:, sent
Lot out of the midst of the
overthrow, So Abraham's inter.
cession was not in vain.
Man' Ahowends .4ropid the
world ale praying td:W" for the
EiglyzGrobarn campaign which
lids 'jest begun in Madison
Square Garen in New York
City, Drahl S, - Rees, Associ-
ate Evengelist with the Team
writes in the New York Cru-
sade News as follows;
"New York City: Witha high-
er skyline than any city on ttte
planet: With amusement enough
to make every day ar.''Itoman
Holiday and boreciornvenP.ughl°
keep the world's biggeSt con-
centration of psychiatrists buy
round the clock: , IXIIh,eulture
smooth enough -to)oile'ase en Athe-
nian and corruption enaugh,to
blanch - a 43ndas;.,,With ,, people
enough to start a nation and re-
sentments and hatred?" enough
to start a war: With din in her
ears and speed $n her blood and
sweat on her face and the 'Un-
nown God'l4e, .,he,,r nebulous
rt r .4
So'l otionr lAraying ra-
ters around ourselves. We are
selfish. In the, ministry of inter-
cessory prayer',,,iie pray for
o,ti-iers._9 4,r_ ,o,wn.„49.1.4.A enlarged
r e
r-:'-'eszNealoiatith„L!'AVel'itlaothers
before God in prayer. The good
-'''Ve-tirierdothis=ini'Stay: we
cannot evaluate in this life. It is a
fblesja eagellitite 1or ourselves,
Abiailain was aired the friend
„.. of.„ GO.„,Let us enter more in-
's4tirlitlely into fellokhip with.
i ,God through prayer. In the
Words of Rev. .T. D. Blinco, Bri-
tish Methodist Leader with the
illrPraharn. team: "The short-
est route to New York from any
„:.•;peint.in,the world its,,ot by the
idagrilfiedit-lir"liftertliat serve
44 fantastic „age, but through
tire threaregf,,404 on the wings
of prayer.”
04,:• itlie'..t..4500, -
,85840* • h,
51
41.14=w•
•44,4-4.3:
PRACTICES WHAT HE PREACHES --r Believing that the odors
from waste treatment- pinta Will tsmell only half as bad if the
grounds aropncliar Rtets'arkorettledi„up, W. T. Blackman Sr.
fashions ebu'aly csit deaf 'a 4080 tit' th‘e tv1inireesboro Woks!!!
treatment'ltalPoP,INKiWt• t.
A
•
; ,;• •
YOU wowt FEEL A THING
bto' beedre "gurit's for
e in thf Midst
44-
-,....„
(MAYBE)-Pedre, itttilt.lrown hih 1tJdS enio dui tibOtit
his own goadhttire happens to.tiltvir iii.„/„yiertipliis, arid Meiri&iiii
bf d residellts!,,attOol'ated,aaaritist taboiti•
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