HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1953-1-28, Page 3rn
Electric Heating
For Eskimo Igloos
The Sa1110 Eskimos 'who bought
iceboxes are about to get Another
modern. invention.
• Only this time the developere
hope L'skinaos won't be an in-
• genious in adapting the product
to dallY, requirements above the
Arctic 'Creole,
"They use refrigerators to
store food so it won't freeze," ad-
mitted Tex Ziegler, a pilot who
hes spent the past seven years
flying everything from pressure
cookers to ogruk skins an and
out of the frozen north.
Mr. Ziegler, in his small plane,
arranged to carry a supply of
radiant beat panels and a couple
of brand new combination light
and heat fixtures called thermo-
litcs. Destination: kotzebue, an
Alaskan village some 50 miles
above/ the Arctic Pirele.
Thia,""Seetns'..A redical change -
for an:. igloo fortatlylieatad by;
burning sail 'nil -er• Maybe
low branchana ohe .pf
overhead heattligitt T.:au:Yes, is; I
earmarked " for theonelroom -.sod
igloo of an Eskimo woman,
"She can pay for it by making
Eskimo dolls," 1Mr. Zieglelv ex,'
plained. "1 pan sell those to Poet
exchanges, Electric heating *ip
do her it world of good," • .
Electricity is provided from
the town's generator, The cost of
seal oil being what it is today,
Mr. Ziegler figures the Eskimos
will, regard electric heating es a
saving.
"The, eleeteiglass Ilet4il?.4 PR"
els will go in Archie Ferguson's
house fh.st," the flying trader
explained. "He used to run the
trading post in Kotzebue. I need
skins from him anyway."
Mr. Ziegler traded most of the
refrigerators for reindeer skin,'.
The Eskimos promptly discover-
ed thiettapee iaaletatedebosean were
idealiaerj *MU114ittati meat.
Pressure cooker i liave 'become a
pendia,. ltiteheneeitem ip the
1:311ieel alaer (141'
. ra.arr:q 0+.1,
Pot Roast Always Gets a Hearty Welcome
5 4
BY DOROTHY VIAPPDX
Bur pot Mat, is a timely menusuggestien, With good supplies
of beef in the markets, most beef cuts, particularly the chuck
e and rump, are economical meat latlys. Other pot roasts may be the
boneless sirloin tip or round eteek, cid at least 2 Inches thieli. Look
for a good covering of fat and streetee' a fat in the lean of the beef
for a more juicy mast. , • 6 '1
In purchasing a pot roast, allow 14 pound of a bone -in toast or
late pound of boned roast for each serving, Because the leftover pot
roast is so good and has so many uses, you will probably want to
purebase enough for at least two meals.
Good Reasoning, slinv, moist -beat °molting and colorlat vegetable
accompaniments 'ate the basis for a .fine beef pot roast. "ativ,er the
meat with seasoned flour and brown thoroughly in a little fascia a
heavy kettle or a roasting pan, When browned on both sides, Ole0e
the meat on a trivet or rack and add cup of water, a thin sliced
onion and 2 bay leaves.
Cover and cook either on low surface beater in a moderate oven
(350 degrees F.) After 2 hours .cooking, add prepared vegetables,
such as quartered onion, scraped carrots, strips of green pepper and
pared, Whole, small potatoes,
• Cover and continue cooking 45 to 50 minutes. When ready to
• serve, remove the meat anti vegetables to a warmed platter and
thicken the meat' broth with flour tsernake a rich flavorful ,gravy.
• Bane is a variation of the cOnventid441 pot 1 -oast and vegetable
• eembination:: 1'11
CReOLE POT ROAST
Savory pot roast with vegetables) an Ideareold weather meal.
(Yield: 6,8 serviOs)
Three poundslbeef pot roast, 2 tublesPoons fat 1 Is tjttes tomato
puree, ia cup olive liquid, 2 cups sliced onions, a) cup sliced stuffed
olives.
Melt the fat in a heavy -skillet. Brewn the mem well on both
sides. Add the tomato puree and olive liquid, Top the meat with
heions and olives. Cover tightly and anok over low heat for alla
•
hour. Serve with hot fluffy rice M true Creole style.
• If gravy is made with the pot roast:ruse only` 1 tablespoon flea
mixed with la cup cold water for each CUP of broth. A teaspoon of . •
curry powder mixed with la cup water, a -few- shakes of pepper
sauce, and a dash of Worcestershliveseuee will give added evidence
of the Southern influence,
sparsely populated area too. Es-
kimo women use those in the
accepted eashion.
The Igloos. around •Kotzebue
are made of sod blocks instead'
of ice blocks, so for the time
being, at least, there is no pos-
sibility of a gullible Eskimo turn-
ingehis heap into •a pie:idle by
installing wall -radiant heating.
''"They like efelekeep upl, with
Said the formersoldier, wh has
the Joneses the $tne as we,
his own trading .peet at •gloo,
lialfway between ;Nome
Kazebue. "From anal oil tora-
diatit heating isn't -as far-fetched
as it *Inds." '
-1.
LOOK WHAT FRESH WATER
CAN DO DURING WINTER
can pa a pounds of
gain year p gs s arbor:ter, so
A si7whiReflikifresh. water..
tegaeg lanra State erellege show.
Three bah-cher& pi5 were -
put on test for 40 days last win-
ter when temperatures averaged
16 degrees.
,Cee bunch get water" by the
old Method -it was' just poured
out to them ,e,ach day, and usual-
- ly"lebze'll feii14i1inutes after ItS,
• ,a.ethit :thee troughea
•eopTwo.9,ther bunphes were serv-
e -at. . ..1 ,gligt • 04 ?ino.c1
:99g70 7
9112 t
ed in style - from -automatic,
heated warterers. They had
water whenever Akey wanted it.
AChe bilhch that Ited jtist ice
1inost -,eti „the day egained. -49,1
pounds' per pig, while the tiela
btifichea &hiking' from heated
waterers averaged 58 and 60.2
pounds per head.
Did the warmth of the water
make any difference? No, say the
researchers. As long ai. yon keep
it from freezing that's enough.
Watt!' ''sillf 'help -put'Achbepee
Otait1S 026 YOUS pig e too, .the:pearayane
Pigs that had water all-Aseattrnie
tenet only ateenagre feed than the
aeotkresenlenetatheyeeelso made more
igeps , .eler vpsiund of feed eaten.
Sq there's ' doil
sehte
e :pea 07 :WV" •:9
ame teelipeti (31011 ass
jayggp, g“ -m1.4 S-MaPLEMENIewe
el It IY•tEN.-06r RIMPF FFIELDS
orn '15gedidtlerlfeedlIeffie' protein sup-
plementotialtbeqsame thne, tests
at Virginia Polytechnic eltestitntee,
show.
eeeerltecithelesenattela97,1,2-atePeapaanulke
and corn planted togetbet. Tliey
give good hogging -off gains, but
the pigs still need that extra sup-
plement ••
But the pasture tests told a
different story. Wheal growing
pigs were-- on good Ladino clover,
they didn't need. any extra pr8-
tein.
Boils down to this: - They
ifiee:c1:104,Arireltris, either iu tar with
'But I thought your name was
Mra, ,Gsiztapji Daetely ohlls y,qe,„,
,
pet:Z.10. . ,
4.6,„ 4'' 1"-S- ',feu 6•L'i
1 slgoet4c.i.,!,-!`
kl4Y4Jk , g oroila e In
O ;110; Oatiadirk,
PUZZLE 4 '''' "110311.7%4.144,2
1 31. Salutation
.43. Rapid
A.01109,9 : ...GaO11.21,4 --•' 45, B.,,m‘e .,,
1 Aulmatiorl : ' s.atetsalete; •1 . N. g',,,11-11,
4, ThroW 1101it13 '',.4 r•,-eet ' 00., 2.' dy of tiatei
3.11seited , , ,, . I,
12. Wrath , .,,,,, 4 ,, 6. ay wineet, ..s. Vita MIS% or
14. Masculine
Is. Russian '0.,71s.1ce et a tree ' 01. , mt thins:
mountain 7, rut to death 24. X? st
nicIttiame
16. 10nirlIsh letter 2 y ..‘ 4. y 6 y r...,
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20.Billow , :,
20, Blue mouton..
ware :2 . 10
21. Stnnuit
. 2711"litt Mae ,1 i)
30, Bo situated
12, lroitatt. ': :” p.
33. 16xnanas
30 Obliterates
02. OnoltiteMUSies
47. The Bear
00, (20050,02,040
17.25DL-6,1,./ng!irtd:7
46, Ineendlaritri9
40. Coin -
43. PrinUnir forms .•
40. Salamander • •
40. Domain '
44. Horisoinial.:;,
1 !
1
15
34, Wniror • ,
35, Asterlick
46. Small swallo'w
' 37: Affirmative
• vote
16 Vrindfitsr.'
material
19, Red card
41. Edible tuber
43, Shoal
45. Preach 2/Lew
ta, rettlinine name
51, Minna
10 Ilse nlever
24 4. wbuIlh
05. Medicinal plant
511, Serpent
57, .aboulnd
54. Makes loathes
OO. Town in Nevf
0411000
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Auswer Elsewl ere on This Page
•
TEST YOUR INTELLIGENCE
Score your self 19 points for each correetanswer in the first five
questions. •
1. One of the foil wing men is not a playwright. Can you name -
hen? •e t'
-Elmer Rio -Norman Thomas --Robert Sherwood•, .
--Maxivell Anderson
2. Cldlee is grannd from which of the following?
' .eeeeelBerelee,; , 1 t :—.43.fiy9ts -Leaves
3. Whieli of the following words doenet match the other three 1• -
eased td Oseribe parts of the.eye? • r
. ,• -Retina -Ventricle "." t
4. • Thorne, Jellerson'e home was called
--Monticello :" -Mount Vernon .0 -. -The Hermitage- T
-Shangri-la •ti"
5. Which of the following boxers won a decision over Joe Louisa
-Randy Turpin ; -..elylexie Rosenbloom
-Max Sch'inkine1d.' "' -1-4SiigailtRay, Robinson
6, Match the followinederefisleeithethathodies of water which they
connect. Score yourself 10 points for each correct combination.
(A) Suez Canal p nAige,an Seeserad Ionian Sea
• (B) Panama Camel, , ee-Red Sea and Mediterranean Seal
(C) Sault St. Marie -Pacific' an Aantic Oceans
(D) Corinth Canal -Lake Suiidisand Lake Huron 4 :
ANSWERS TO INTELLIGENCE TEST
•eag iremoe pan eas weaaace,
(C) 1uoanie axwi pue amaadns alferl (0) `streaa0 onuotiv PuB
dliteeel (a) 'BOTreat•rel.101TPDJAI puo os Pall (V)-9 xelet
v-eacetailutrafe-'s 'anp.tate--eg 'seinotee mittuote-
Sc
eNEW, TEST , T.3.7
IF Y
COW IS PIGEGI4AN
A quick, easy -to -run pregnan-
cy test for dairy cows has been
developed by Oregon State Col-
lege dairy scientists.
While they admit there . -are
,•
FEED YCiek1R TREES LIAY?
-"Don't e give up on those non-,
productive apple trees just yet
-not until you've tried, mull -1111)g'
with high -nitrogen hay.
It works like a tonic; restores
vigor,. gives tree,s, all the plant
bugs to be ironed out (a cow food they need, and in just, the
"wflirtestlabiasiticle for three weeks„ORM t,halancet re
eiweet, atter. waiving), the„ 4est USDA. hOfticulfurief& tried 'theleProYd 54%,- ageurete, wheiiiried 1t& first 'atllBeltstlite, Md., Ott
. :On 6 .g0W5 111 the cellegellibirfil esorWiltayeateeld.York trees thee, •
Seine animals were tested d1ct. a* einveire -021.1 theiaree# legs-peetty.,
cessfully within 10 claysetater • %seller leEta..of ifif
- Falb e - • Harley, f the
saniple,,,is need
'C.?, Awn( uss4c111' ORtiard-pgrass,
milupg e teSt. rite sample 3f) !=•bat tiffs 'tdiryou &tit 'use ihretrie.
traded Vail a 'antinion grage: Just
ing this ..yd* beeaker 'L'Oelitfei d ba liserteatoi feriellim that grass
tltre ,..eow) aF iiinlr1e
i.110:(1 nWteftthjilreDtglitgt hareTairp°11gte ep3A10P-
tut:9Am ten,prgAnwd
turns green, stays Aliat cannel foy e. eieddepuniciesilf afneit);601144lin ..riiitriet.tetpaer
5 teAlteliniffiftbe.t If 'she's .notarege
atninneethe urine color reaPPO'Sag
within a matter of seconds after
Tetireatinitielle.colorrohangeEeetaweee....
When the test is developed to
a point where any dairyman can
use it, it should cut heavy lessee.
• "The number' 'of 1‘aa.i..iy. cattle,
dt 'ikti'llkiatIfigethnttajust what the
stems carried the biggest
_ animate ..of erittregeele and 'ether
Plant 'ratite/WI:faille 'caet the,
grass, and spread 200 pounds of
air-dry bay under each treo:•1116
saw %results,' ickly-foliage be -
'Wally with ealf, ainount to lt17,,'
sent to slaughter as stile and aealonlI_,,,., dark4ii.og:•n and thick, fruit
of' all dalry annuals .buteliered," - • aillljacliett trees still 11illiPed
non -pregnant, but which are no-
. • spei•s thereat; O, and the , trees
started. beari .
says ,T,,,,H. Byers, Mie of the re- . he Harley. gave
searchera.who'develop0 the test!: , • themeemnaliee la] fertilizer equal
• „.e,,..e.e., „ • iit•Plidefead value to nutrients
FEED. COWS' SILAGE •AS - ' in 'a'&11-10";',"1
THE ONLY ROUGHAGE? . • • ,,weo,bo us
mo
if ,±)wy,bavo to, dairy ealj. to
ing this meth-
t:an . ilo'" their job of "produchne
oltIVeaa and . Milk, with llame' de
the . 'enti.,,:'1:61.1ghage. .In
w Or qs..,,tpe:i; dein't, • neeesarp.‘
have'toebeiye hay oieleastete.: ..."
1, ttig»t" grade Helsteila .104,,lese'6 • ''it''''''tl'4 - '''t 1070did" "1°1
1»tetta2actedeeted by the' her- , ,
eau of Dairy Industry, 17,S,V,e,• paces, •.,...,,,,
heifers were split up;'0,1-W,,atineit '• -1.4111'' JuleWtet'i
I --
was ralea1(1: ori only • oiiigo!"-bild- ' •
grain, ,the- atter got a .sn-lailee e SVON16E1,.1) UGS DON'T
grain ratien,plus alfalfa .an4:(40- eMAKE T4t1.1EGGS 4:11 41
othyr„hay, 1" , •• • ' ' Antiebailindrage may 'ittakel.
Af ter freeheriing,„ the Haleteine thielta grorel faster, but they.,
on silage produced .13,149 ,•liss' • won't -make Aarns lay any more-.
Mali', compared with 11,408 ear, eggs., ,•t 1
Holsteins on regular ratione: Jere Thatet ewlitt .1. S. Carver erntl.,
'Wye On Silage made 10,,S16 pounds' 1.-... .R. 'Bang 71. aye found out' 'at
coinparecte- with , 9,585, on three • , Washingten Rtate College. They
milking daily, 365 days. ' • ran three tgis with White Leg-.
Off -heed; you'd conclude from born ptillets,,, and drew blanks •
thane records that ifsebetter to on three anorbs:
(ed silage /to no hay. But folks The antiaoties didn't raise
ruening the tests have Jigs to egg produatoin they didn't Make"
'pay: When corn silage #--the only the birds tiny' heavier; and ,they
• roughage, you have to feed more didn't cut down death lossee.. ,
grain to boost the total digestible And whoa the pullets were
nutrients. mated to produce hatching eggs,
One other thing -carotene is anti -biotics in the feed failed to
essential for a cow to produce make any illmertant difference
normal calves. Silage is low in in hatchability of the eggs.
carotehe, se there's a chance that This apparently means that
feeding it as the only roughage there's a limit to what even won -
might cut down the calf crop. der drags will do. It looks like
.,•,1.od stht(314o trees for several
-,,7:704:4;j1t1c1LtIft' response hitatheen
nettling ' 51154 01 am azi tig„,e.ayte
heir last Ware' that
Would riot re. ond to other-(ltreelt-'1,
,
nlent5., raadO,', remorltrible :usenet et
your hens will do just as well
on a good, standard laying ra-
tion as on one that's fortified
with drugs.
RIGHT LIGHT BULB
HELPS EGG GRADES
The kind of electric light you
use: -eV hen you carton or ,case
eggs can make money for you
:pieta:an
That'sbeceuse some lights
•IlloW up -tinted eggs better than
bther light's. -
• There's nothink wrong 'with
''tinted eggs-that.isn't .tlae point.
But customers, whether tbey buy
frons you ,qt retail or wholesale,
like, their _eggs to lqols alike -all
White all brown, Or all tinted.
They'll' pay mo? g for .a tun -form
-$60k1T •
• A daylight fluorescent bultels
the best light for showing VIP
tints, according to, tests made t
Cornell 'University. Next best •s
a white 'ilitorescent, and aft
that cSo1, white, deluxe bulb.'
•- Here's -a -tip: Shade the bul
• and.hang it low enough so no
of the shines in your eyer.
Catches and .Bands
• Geese -by .1-fundred
. On November 22, Jasper Wil-
son Mine, who was in charge
of banding Ducks and Geese at,
• the Jack Miner Sanctuary, Kings-
ville, Ontario," made a record
catch of Canada Geese when he
caught 844.
251 had been banded in other
. years.
180 had been banded previous- .
• 1y in the fall' of 1952 and 404 had
• never been banded previously,
tmaking a total of 844 in the
catch, Each bird was. banded
with a Jack Miner band which
contains 'Sank Miner's name and
• address, date and serial number.
Makes Business
Of 4 -Leaf Clover
At St. Petersbnig,'Plonada, luck
is a growItig besiness:
Ther .grerwer is William Dan-
iels. ,The business is four-leaf
clot'. And avitiLlwe ganerations
of horticulturists behind him,
*nets- owns the greatest stock-
pile of airdanation 'against lean-
Irtgladders and' free flowing salt.
backyard -Mak factory, run
,.,enesunpoweeeand staffed by four
clover mechanics, arms nearly
three million soldiers of super-
etifitbi each yetiVO-ktith`the charm-
ed prantte • e •
• Alba willefindethem on greet-
. ing carele,ein keyerings, pressed
inte.„ breeelats, pendanth, calen-
dars, paperweights and watch-
• fobs. One novelty manufacturer
has a standing order for a million
, plants annually. -
tuft the busine-S- of growing
faur-leaf blower depends on more
2 -then :luck- The majority of Dan-
iels' blooms epme April trans -
'a -planted... roots or runners. With
seedeplanting liable to produce
three-lealf leahr, baniels selects
oulf • the runnere which have
sprouted the lour -leaf variety.
. Now and than a velvet run-
3)#11.e.grePa illeeerous, end clover
springs " up •With :five or six
Eleee'S. 'Nide& 'Ainbutates the
l•Eettlik; leaving the
,abltattineti•eda tolfill out the plant.
The•barvelet lasts the year round.
Andetheepieleediplants must be
Ileceesed„etagore they can cast
spell. There is first a sa-
1 vanilla/nit the chlor-
+10-Phyll: .; Then ,he clover is re-
stlYeel10 nonefaclina, green. Press-
ed, assorted, mounted, the four -
Teal clover are really for ship-
ping to the front lines of super-
„,'• a. ,. e •
No Wonder: Man . in Brixton
was going bald. "Move ,to
Hampstead,” a skin specialist ade
vlsed him, He did and his hair
grew again. Said the doctor: "1
found he had been living next
door to his mother-in-law."
'tinging Nettles
Cure Lumbago
Sir Stephen Tenant* recently
told a meeting of the Somerset
Wornen's Institute that a Sitef,,.
field woman wrote that her bus.
band suffered severely Vern an
attack of lumbago, "Thrash Isbn
with nettles," advised a Wend,
and the poor fellow was In Such
agony that he willingly agreed
esubstitute one , nein for an-
o
t
h
e
r
,
Surprisingly-enough, withiu a
few hours the lumbago vanished,
and "now we find," wrote the
lady, "that a few light ;taps' with
nettle are sufficient."
The nettle cure for rheumae "
tesm is merely one of those an-
cient remedies that have fallen
into disuse and been forgettert.
The skin is a greet.eliminator of
poisons, and the athelent Greeks
believed that a man should sweat •
at least once every day to keep
in good health. When perspira-
tion is restricted, the body re-
tains poisonous acids. which set
up inflammation and cause in-
tense pain, for it is through the
skin that we rid ourselves of
some 2 lb, a impurities -daily.
In the seventh century an
eminent Duteh physician discov-
ered that arthritis was often cur-
ed quickly if the patient con-
tracted smallpox -then a come
mon malady -itch, hives, or
other skin eruptions. Alter a pe-
riod of observation he began us-
ing irritants and, gained a reputa-
tion as a miracle worker. r,.
Lumbago, arthritis, sciatica,
neuritis - all are but different
forms of rheumatism, shad their
names merely indicate the parts
of the body affected. Lanabageli
a pain in the lumbar region;
neuritis, of the nerves; arthritis,
rwheethe joints; and,rheennatism,
ticle covert the entire fieldi
cane' from.' 'tile Greek sword
rheum, meaning, Vfloper.l.' elt refers
to liquid' substances settling
'e"deleflillia.different organs. .
.,;.,10Tb,e_tlx,...404111erenxisal.,.dAtI4stsle'ihrtanere, 1plYrset
e.nteti a pager to the Medical
Society in 'Vienna on the use of
irritant e te cure rheumatic pains.
He cited t/See ease of a woman
whose"- knees,' shoulders, elbows
and wrists -were so swollen and
painful. ethat she was crippled,
and laOr right aria had to be
worn in a1 splint,
Aschner examined her and was
struck by the dryness of her skin
and the fact that she was over-
weight. He set about ,reducing
her and ,applied pustulants (em-
brocation to produce a rash).
. Within two months this woman
was pa only doing her household
duties, but had resumed piano -
playing! Aschmer, 'a student of
history) was merely using the
methods of doctors of the past.
MS WISH
In his' smash. hit, A Streetcar
Named Desire, Tennessee Wil-
liams revived the story of the
colored gentleman who sat in
his favorite rocker on the porch
and watched a rooster purse a
ten round and round the house.
A girl came out Of the house
and sprinkled corn on the
ground. in, the middle of the re-
lay race. The hen ignored it,
and continued- its flight. The
rooster, however, gave up the
chase instantly and started to
peek at the corn. The Negro
gentleman rnamured • softly,
"Lord, ale lectreli alt *Pea 1 t*Vkr
gits as hungry as that!"
UNDAYSC11001
LESSON
By Rev. 41. 13arclan Warren
DA., 13.D.
Possessions Help oe Mandrel:1e*
Matthew 19 :16 -26
Memory Selection: Talcs heed
and beware of covetousness: foer
o xnan's life consisteth not in Um
abundance of the thingfrwhich Otto
r X94Petigetho s I
the, Iiiblo 0we Fell "Give
,31-04 neither :Pcfl'extY -n,,F4.ti,c"e"
feethne with Riad convement for
me; lest 1 be 4;14 ..rld'rleny thee,
and say, Who is the 2',,h4t or lest
• I be poor, end the
taker
• the name of my God in vain,"
Proverbs 30:8, 0, Siam one haft
said, ilris zio disgraceto be poor,
but it is inconvenient." however
a man's character is detlermin'
pot by what he has but by his
attitude toward what he has."
("They that Neill be rich fall
into temptation eand 0 mare, and
into many foolish arid hurtful,
lusts; which drown men in des-
truction and perdition. For the
love of money is the root of all
evil." 1 Tim, 6 ; 9, 10. The rick
young ruler in our lesson failed,
in the most crucial hour of his
life not because he was rich but
because his heart was a set upon
• his possessions ,that ,be could not
give them up for Jesus' sake.
Heevas a °lean lreaneetable young
man, but the coin was so close to,
• 'Ms eye elk it hindifed him front.
seeing the • ,value of following
Jesus at any bast. We have
no record" that he" ever altered
his decision. He gained the world,
but lost his soul.
%low much did he -leave?" ask-
ed one Wheal hi jest?been in-
formed of the death& Of a maza
reputed -,•$o be rich, "Ile left it
all," was the reply. iere are no
pockets di a shroud.'
We are only stewards in Ode
life. Let us use what weefflave
to the glory of God. Let the
remember that "It is ear& for
the camel to go through the eye
of a needle than for a rich man
to enter into the kingdom of
God." Let all others remember
that when the disciples asked,
"Who then,ean be saved?", Jesus
replied, "3,1ljth men this is im-
possible; but with God all things
are possible." The salvation pro-
vided by our Lord Jesus Christ
is adequate for all.
LONG RII,N
An electric motor, to be used
in the. first atomic submarine
engine 'has bean operating for a
year and a half without a break-
down, the Westinghouse Electric
Corporation reports. The motor
has, been sealed in a tin contain-
er to test its performance during
the eighteen months.
(Upside downto prevent peeking)
-71 -art
EV
Substeinte Over Shedow-Mrs.,)-leekiert E Seefilse(right) spends
few' Iteromerds with her five-year-old;daugil Linda Carafes,
in Memphis, TORO., before the echlid t earrie , can a court
order by receiving rabies injectitio„ Linda had been bitten by a
rabid deg Isul berpprents idl.nted'eheelideiletiol,gercause, they scik
"ft9d• has cured het' Alt,erpplils,,Lude tiaysui treatment, No
one cohfAi'ebt betIon, u