HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1962-01-11, Page 7NDM X11001
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building can in thernselvee either
induee hinder spiritual wor-
ship, We build more convenient
homes than our grandparents
did, We should improve on one
churches, too, One minister afte
signing the contract for nearly
quarter of a million dollars for
new church acknowledged a feel*
ing of unhappiness that go much
was being spent on, a hocuriota
building when so much of the
world is hungry, In our buildin;
of a new church last summer wa
had to make many important
decisions. We decided that we
wanted a church that would be
beautfiul in its simplicity. Wheat
choosing light fixtures we con-
sidered that the purpose= of light*
in a church is to give light and
not just ornaments to be ad-
mired, We like our lights, Wit
had to borrow money to finish
the furnishings but our people
0,dvanceci it frost their' saying a1
'loans at 5%. We go to church na
to wonder at the vast amount of
Money lavished on it, but to wole
ship God in spirit arid In truth
Let us keep the second corn'
mandment.
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
r;ilsii et cwitcre o n this Page
"Eight Nazis Who
tome Here To Kill.
More In. A Tree
Than Just Boards.
Iter, R, B, Warren, BA, XII
600 .1S .,Sritttrl'.
Exodus
Jplin 4:7, 9, 10,;, 10-23
an .Averege than can he reploced
by new growth each year, 41 has
been highly successful. so that we
are now taking some 25 per cent
less 'wood than we are growing.
each year,
The goals of perpetual forests,
offering both commercial and
recreational values and full util-
ization of each tree cut, are being
well met. Barring government or
other outside interference, your
great-grandchildren will know
the beauties of wild tree-covered
lands as well as the wonders of
the thousands of products coming
from Them,—Red Bluff (Calif.)
Daily News
MERRY SPIN FOR CAB METER To make' sure 'they
wouldn't miss sailing aboard their cruise ship, these three
Californians hired a taxi in Indianapolis, Ind, and ran up
a $337 fare getting to. New York, The trio called the cob
when their jet airliner was grounded by bad weather en route
to New York.
or milk houses. Only pesticides
that are labeled for 'use on
animals or in barns should be
used. The labels give' directions
for use of the products on cattle
or in buildings.
A guide for the safe use of in-
secticides for a dairy herd is as
follows:
—For cattle sprays: pyrethrins
mixed with either piperonyl
butoxide or MGK 264. Some
suitable sprays also contain
repellents, * * *
—For spraying the walls and
ceilings ,of ii a r n s: Diazinon,
ronnel, and enalathion are effec-
tive in most areas. If these do• not
give adequate control,use one of
the recommended baits. In milk ,
houses, use only the sprays
recommended for use on cattle"
and... protect the utensils, cans,
tanks, etc., from the spray
material.
The ten commandments are
easy to understand, The second
is, "Thou shalt not make unto
thee any traven image, or any
likeness of any thing that is In
heaven above, or that is in the
earth beneath, or that is in the
water under the earth: Thou
shalt not bow down thyself to
them, hor serve them: for I the
Lord thy God am a jealous God,"
Isaiah, in the 40th chapter of his
prophecy, describes the making
of a graven image, .flow fogligh
for man to worship that which
man has made.
Jesus teaches us spiritual wor-
ship, Our memory selection are
words which He spoke: "God is
a Spirit: and they that worship
him must worship him in spirit
and in truth." John 4:24, This
came in reply to the Samaritan
woman's statement, "Our fathers
worshipped in this mountain; and
ye say, that Jerusalem is the
place where men ought to wor-
ship." Jesus' answer shows that
the important thing about wor-
ship is not where we worship but
how we worship.
In the great church building
boom since the war, there have
been many innovations in the
architectural designs of churches.
Arrd why not? Neither the parti-
cular hill or the Mode of the
Some Silly Things
Most Motorists Do
Actual trials have proved time
and again that the motorist who
disregards the laws of courtesy
and violates the traffic ordi-
nances gains little or nothing in
time. The careful, law-abiding
driver will ordinarily get over
the distance prescribed for a test
in only a very few minutes more
than the number needed by the
reckless fellow. The careful chap,
in the meantime, has avoided
many of the dangers inherent in
bad driving.
There is no sense, in other
words, in switching lanes when-
ever any opening appears. It is
folly to dash to get through on
the amber light. It is impolite
and risky to cheat when the
lights change. If you find, on
examining your driving habits,
that you are guilty of these es-
sentially senseless performances,
any or all, you could just stop it.
—Memphis (Tenn.) Commercial
Appeal
Despite the appearance of a
great many so-called "new" ma-
terials, wood is used in 90 per
cent of the nation's homes. But
as a result of research, there's a,
great deal more to be found in a
tree than boards,
It is estimated that more than
5,000 different products are made
from forest materials. Wood has
many hidden faces which are yet
only partially knOwn, Shredded,-
cooked and re-formed, it is made
into countless paper products —
useful for everything from hand-
kerchiefs to packaging grand
pianos, It is treated chemically
to. produce such things as imita-
tion leather, alcohol, plastics, lac-
quers, synthetic rubber, acetic
acid and glycerin,
We're a long way from know-
ing the full potential of wood.
Some 25 per pent of the contents
of a-log is composed of a sub-
stance called lignin—a kind of
cement that binds the cells of a
tree together, How to use it is
still largely unknown.
The forest industries, through
broad use of their products, touch
every part of the country. The
central fact about this industry
is that it is based upon our only
renewable „natural resource—our
forests. Timber companies, both
large and small, are vitally con-
cerned with conservation prac-
tices which run the gamut from
full utilization of the log once it
is cut, to reforestation programs
on the broadest scale.
Sustained yield' logging, devel-
oped on private timberlands, in-
volves putting no more trees on
The Magic Touch of Frost
* *
Canadian hog producers will
turn over a new leaf in 1962 in
regard to any deficiency pay-
ments that might become neces-
sary for hogs sold in the coming
year.
The Agricultural Stabilization
Board has decided to adopt a new
and simpler method of Procedure
—but it will require farmers to
retain all their grading certif-
icates for at. least 12 months.
*
If it should become necessary
to make deficiency payments on
hogs marketed in 1962, produ-
cers will be asked to claim for
payments.
The• application for payments
would be accompanied by a copy
of the hog carcass grading certif-
icate. Farmers are therefore
urged' to keep. all 1962 grading
certificates issued to them by
slaughtering establishments and
to keep them until the end of
1962 in case they are needed for
deficiency payment purposes.
Of course any hog premium war-
rants should be detached from
the hog grading certificate and
cashed by producers.
Vor eighteen years the tree,
script of the trial of the eight
Nazi saboteurs, on which this
book is largely based, remained
sealed in secret government files
how Eugene Recline, in his book
they came to. kill reveals in
detail for the flea time how nee
tentially deadly a menace to
Canada and the United States
this group might have proven
but for a bizarre turn of events.
The author describes the land-
ings of two separate groups of
.saboteurs In June, 1942, from
German U-bOatS. One of these
groups landed near Arnagansett
on the shore of Long Island and
the other at Polite Vedra just
.south of Jacksonville, Florida. In.
Florida the eaboteure were able
to bury their cache of explosives
and detonators and to make their
way north undetected,
Things might have gone as
smoothly for the group on Long
Island but for a chance encoun-
ter with a young coastguardman.
The Germans' inept handling of
this threat to their security was
to prove a fatal mistake. Alerted
by the coastguardman's report,
NaVal Intelligence and the. FBI
swung into action. Discovery of
the buried explosives and the
-discarded clothing revealed to
the American authorities that
several men were at large,
Th author dramatically re-
traces the movements of the va-
rious members of the group from
the time of their landings to their
apprehension by FBI. agents. Ob-
viously most of this information
was obtained from the testimony
of the -men themselves although
from the first alerting the FBI
had their known former contacts
under surveillance.
The deliberate betrayal of the
group by two of their number
points to one of the recognized
weak links in the Nazi espionage
system. Not infrequently, agents
were chosen with 'little or no
regard for their morals or their
loyalty to each other in the event
of capture, From the evidence
presented it would appear that
the eight men were an all-assort-
'ed group, lacking confidence in
their leader and victims in some
measure of the feud between the
Abwehr and the Gestapo.
Several chapters are devoted
to the secret military trial of the,
saboteurs and reveal in consider-
able detail the proceedings — the
transcript of which had remain-
ed a classified government doc-
ument until 1960.
With the memory of the Black
Tore and Kingsland disasters and
scores of other acts of enemy
sabotage during World War I,
United States security forces
even prior to Pearl Harbor had
.considered the possibility of sub-
marines landing enemy agents.
Hundreds of miles of coastline
offered countless stretches of
beach where men in considerable
numbers could be put ashore.
Fortunately for the United
States, in the years between the
two wars, the FBI had become
a very potent arm of the Justice
Department, As the author points
out, it was the effective roundup
of Nazi agents and spies early in
1941 by the FBI, thereby depriv-
ing the Germans of their source's
of information, which precipi-
tated their decision to put into
effect Operation Pastorius. That
It was foredeorned to failure be-
comes increasingly clear in the
light of some of the facts dis-
closed. The book constitutes a
Inajor contribution to public
knowledge of what was probably
Vie war's greatest threat to Am-
erica's internal security.
* * *
n the chill hours of early morning, hoarfrost adorns the countryside
with icy needlework .
Experience is what you get
when you're looking for some-
thing else.
Producers would be well
advised to market, all hogs
throughout the year under the
name appearing, on their hog
registration certificate,
Those who have not yet reg-
istered as hog producers should
apply to the Data Processing
Service, Canada Department of
Agriculture, Ottawa.
There were no deficiency pay-
ments made on hogs in 1960 and
it would appear that none will be
necessary in 1961 as the cumula-
tive national average selling
price for hogs is about $27.50 per
cwt,, well above the national
support price level of $22.65 per
cwt. * *
A warning to farmers not to
spray dairy cattle with insectie,
cides that emay contaminate the
milk has Been issued by the
Canada Department of Agricul-
ture,
The Food and Drugs Act does
not allow pesticide residues in
any amount in milk or milk
products, explains R. H, Painter,
CDA scientist at the Lethbridge,
Alberta, research station.
* *
DDT, BHC, lindane, chlordane,
aldrin, dieldri n, toxaphene,
heptachlor, and related corn-
pounds should not be used as
sprays on dairy cattle or in barns
Obey the traffic signs — they
Sre placed there for YOUR
AFETY,
MI.*
29, HaCtoh.
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center
92, 'Covered'
completely
95. Views
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—For sprays against horn flies:
pyrethrins mixed either with
piperonyl butoxide or 'MGK 264,
or use Lethane or Thanite. If
preferred, sprinkle the backs and
necks of animals every three*
weeks with methoxychlor wet-
table powder or weekly , with
malathion, dust, Animals should
not be dusted with malathion
within five hours before milking.
For cattle grubs, rotenone is
recommended.
* *
For pastures and forage
crops: use only recommended
insecticides. Also observe the
rates and times, number of appl-
ications recommended. Do not
allow spray drift to contaminate
pastures or forage crops that are
near orchards or canning crops.
For the recommened practices
consult your local agricultural
authorities.
—Do not feed pea vines, apple
pomace, corn wastes, sugar beet
tops, or other by-products unless
you can be sure that they 'do not
contain residues that will pass
into milk. * *
Canadian beef producers can
jack up their profits through the
use of hormone implants.
This is the conclusion of Dr, S.
E. Beacom, a 'Canada Department
of Agriculture scientist, He found
that hormone implants increased
gains of steers on good pasture
at the Melfort, Saskatchewan,
experimental farm, by an aver-
age of 45 pounds.
And, point out. Dr. Beacom,
only a couple of pounds of extra
gain are required to pay for the
cost of the implant.
* * *
Two pellets, each containing
12 milligrams of diethylstil -
bestrol,were implatited into the
ear tissue of 600'-pound steel'`
calves at the start Of the pasture
season, Cost was about 25 cents
per head,
Dining the 1060 pastnee season
of 117 deys, 16 implanted Steete
out-gained their untreated
nets by an average of 45 Panicle.
Though all treated eteere otitgain-
ed their ii treated partners,
differences ranged from 3 to 97
panicle in.favour Of the treated
itiditibee of the Pales The ihiplante
ed steers averaged 301 poutids'et
gain On Pasttite.
e
In 1, a dry year, gains of
implanteS .'steers on an old Page'
tune aveteged only 6% poundS
ektrdper head over a 45 day Pas,
hire period,. on a newer stand
the iiiiplentecl steers gained 244
Panicle there thandid the tine
treated afire dtiririg a 74- day'
graiing, Period,
isSut 2 196i
crowns a majestic tree with a
halo of silVery tinSel.
*livery white deposit of ice' heedies forteiad by direct
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hoctutliol radiatiati.' Hoarfrost and its delioote etri=
brokiery is werih 'waiting for as these sttlicirig photot
by An McDougall, l'eproduded with pettrission of
the Harvester jaraVoi.
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