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The Brussels Post, 1954-01-13, Page 2
TllLFA1M FRONT Here iu Canada we have to import a lot of things which we cannot grow or produce our- selves, But It seems almost un- believable that we should be im- porting quantities of believe it or not: - poultry. Still, that's what's happening, and here's why. • * Canadian consumers prefer to buy their chickens and turkeys ready to cook. 'In preparation for Thanksgiving, states the Poultry Division, Department of Agricul- ture, Ottawa, substantial quanti. ties of eviscerated, or drawn, tur- keys were imported and offered at retail levels at around 69 cents per pound. These were popular with consumers. * * Total imports from January 1 to November 14, 1953, amounted to 4,665,892 pounds. This -includ- ed turkeys, fowl, chickens, ducks, geese, and 3,054 pounds of pig- eons. Turkeys were approximate- ly half the total imports and of these about 644,000 pounds were in eviscerated ready -to -cook - form. * * * Large retailers are now de- manding eviscerated poultry, and this is particularly true in the case of turkeys for the Christmas trade where the demand for ev- isceraled birds far exceeds the supply. While the eviscerating capacity in Canada has been steadily in- creasing and is around 700,000 pounds per day, it is not sufficient to take care of the evisceration during the period when turkeys are normally marketed which, in Western Canada, is from Novem- ber 15 to the latter part of Dec- ember, There will have to be con- siderable development of addit- ional capacity, states the Poultry Division, if the supply of turkeys prepared in this manner is to be sufficient to meet the demand. * 4' • Many people think Federal Department of Agriculture em- ployees are employed solely in work of value and interest to the farmer. They are surprised to learn that hundreds of these em- ployees are fully engaged in pro- tecting the health and welfare of consumers. * * a Today practically all food pro- ducts entering commercial chan- nels of trade are inspected and graded at some stage by Federal Shield Of Honor - This is Sir Winston Churchill's Garter Shield which will hang in St. George's Hall at Windsor, along with those of other Knights of the Garter. It was designed by artist ?ercy Vere Collings of Herts, 2ngland, who was painter to both King George V and King George VI. Dupartinent of Agriculture offi- cials. This ensures that they are wholesome and of the quality they are represented to be by those offering them for sale. The inspection and grading applies to wheat and other cereal products, fruits and vegetables, dairy pro- ducts, poultry products, and all classes of meats. • 01, An illustration of the work involved in this protection for the consumer is indicated in the latest report of the Meat Inspec- tion Service of the Health of Ani- mals Division, Ottawa, The re- port states that "Approximately 70 per cent of all cattle, calves, sheep and swine slaughtered commercially, during the fiscal year 1952.53 were slaughtered under the supervision of the Fed- eral Meat Inspection Service.' The Service was engaged princi- pally in: -- e * ,, 1. G eterinary examination be- fore slaughter of food -producing animals, including cattle, swine, sheep, :,oats, horses and poultry to eliminate those affected with disease or other unwholesome conditions. 2 A thorough veterinary post- mortem examination of each car- cass at time of slaughter to detect and eliminate diseased and other- wise unfit meat, 3. The destruction tor food purposes of all diseased unsound or unwholesome meat and meat by-products. 4. Constant supervision of the preparation of meat food pro- ducts to ensure cleanliness dur- ing their preparation into articles of food. 5. Guarding against the use of harmful preservatives and other deleterious ingredients. 6. Supervising application of the Canada Approved iris ection legend to meat and m'tal food products to show that ,elief were at time of marking, soutiealtb- ful and fit for food. ;Tem 7. Informative labellies 'arid prevention of false and decep- tive labelling on meat products. 8. Certification of meat and meat products for export. 9. Inspection of meat and moat food products offered for importation into this country. Inspection of • •meats was car- ried out on a full time basis in 124 meat packing plants and cov- ered 13,084,059 meat animals, of which 79,423 or less than two- thirds of one per cent were con- demned. Fifteen years ago, in 1939, the Meat Inspection Service covered only 83 plants and 6,081,899 ani- mals, of which 36.677 or approxi- mately the same percentage were condemned. This indicates the expansion of Ibe ,Service in 15 years. STEALS RUN Rube Marshall pitching 1' or Wichita Falls, Texas, clouted a home run early in the game and pitched air -tight ball fol seven innings to maintain his one -run lead. In the eighth inning. how- ever, he lost his control and loaded the bases on twelve straight bad pitches. The man- ager waved him to the shower, room, but instead of proceeding directly, Marshall halted the game while he walked over to the score board, removed "his" one run, tucked the figure un- der his arm, 'and walked off the field. - 'CROSS '1 AOa) ACrinss 1.Croniea 5, Poorly 5,. Mark of a wound 11. tartlet 18. tato fcomb. form) 1.4. 101• h ruptot," 1n. Leff- 17. ,efr17. State of the Milan (ab.) 13. Stntlntnrn parr 10. Omitted In'• pronoupoing. 21. tudtrnllan kir& 23: nearof metal 24. tearsnart 27..s'' zc do 'Prima ima Nater 22.'ttolfows 52. h'r.tn'of the Ole -51one who does not belong' Pal jt*It. 25, SWIM, 45.34erltttlearn 45, Small lump 45. Norden= 45, r l ngratrfui Penton* to. Ile fond of 62. Attolfeo to foe l nartioa 59. wermarly 04.410 wrong' 51. Ancient. clays DOW1. Shaul abler. 9. Cst "ud ° ((Phil. lett 4. Ansarted 5. Y acrpnnl.ed R. Shelter 7. Deposit of 5, nolo' nodic *dr •. numAcurn50l: tr n 1. Part t av, 16. VIAS? t9 ([•cal anti rill retina 24. 1(irt.r (8p.1 15. 01,1 Prong, onto 25, Openwork fabric 23.23,1 nor.•' Person .'::11:4t Mono. :. i2 h canters 4e int 4a. In t xor "f 15. b •.!alit (Dial. Eng.) 01. tltn,alavan wt d e' at (var.) 12. l.n55,tt to i4 1• irrlan in I;nn., 4rn, rt.fa „r, eMn,t1 baf,tc ' Answer elsewhere on this page, WINTER' WONDERLAND 1'h,*u n• lc..,' ,.'ultiunn,n Australia's Blau[ Felice Trackers Can Fellow "Shak5;; s" in the Sand Imagine you are on the run from the police in the wild bush of New South Wales. You are wanted for robbery under arms. You are Jimmy G overnor, "last of the Australian bushrangers" They'lI never get me, you say, even if they have got aboriginal trackers with them, You know what they say in the bush -that black trackers can follow a man almost everywhere and draw •a map of a fly crawling round a mirror. But 'they cannot track you down, you tell yourself. You are an aborigine and you know all their tricks and what they look for. So you wrap sheepskins over your boots to hide your tracks, You cross rocky ground, and you use the dry beds of rivers and creks, where you think you will not leave a mark. You double and circle. You lead the trackers and the police to a river and you enter the water, but several feet out you reach for the branch of a trey and draw ourself upinto it. And you y swing from tree to tree for per- haps a hundred yards and steal back in the direction from which the police -constables and track- ers are coming You do these Shiites again and again. But you cannot threw them off your trail. Like human bloodhounds, they camp on your heels every night. And anally they surround and arra'[ you - after you have wounded one of the constables. You, Jimmy Governor, know then what everyone in the Australian bush saysthatyou cannot escape the black trackers. You are caught and you go to jail for 11 years. Black trackers, like those that caught the "lest of the Australian bushrangers" just over twenty years ago, are the invaluable aids of the Australian white police- man. So remarkable is their skill that some people credit them with supernatural gifts. But it is nothing more than the acutest powers of observation -- as the following story will show. A white police -constable and a tracker were on patrol it West- ern Australia when they came on the tracks of three shod hor- ses, The tracker examined them and said; , "That all one Kendy (Ktnne- dy) track. That one big block horse Kendy ride; that grey one Charlie ride; that little horse for pack." And he named the three police horses, Newark, Nipper, and Fancy. The trooper wouldn't have it. From his knowledge he knew that Trooper Kennedy should be a good 200 miles away in another direction, Subsequently the black tracker was shown to be right. Kennedy had changed the direction of his patrol. What made the tracker's feat all the more remarkable was that he had seen the three horses only once, and six months before --and then they were unshod. Testimony to the aborigine's un- canny powers of observation is paid by T.the G. it.Strehlow, aliart He says that native stockmen at the Her= mannsburg Mission, in- Central Australia, could identify the tracks of over 200 aboriginal men, women and children, those of 12 white men and women, and the hoofmarks of 50 working- - horses and a number of camels and donkeys. Such skill is the product of many generations of a people who have had to depend on -their eyes for their livelihood; who must kill every day (or every few days) in order to live, as they have no methods of preserv- ing food. From the time he can crawl a young aborigine is taught the ways of the bush by the men of the tribe. They trace tracks in the sand, and he learns not mer- ely the tracks of the various ani- mals, reptiles and birds, but their habits. He learns when and where they feed and drink. He learns to tell from a track whether an animal is travelling fast or slow, and whether it is i11. If it walks over stony plains it will not leave prints, but it will move stones slightly or press them in, The fabulous skill of the black trackers has saved the lives of many men, women and children in the great emptiness of the bush. Trackers are stationed at cen- tral points throughout Australia so they can be rushed by plane or car to the point where they are needed. One hot summer night a message reached the police station at Merredin, a West Australian wheat town, that the five-year- old daughter of a farmer had wandered into the bush and was lost. The tracker at Kelerberrin, 30 miles away, arrived at the bush homestead just before dawn. Here is how someone who was there tells the story: "It seemed pretty hopeless. It was mid -summer. The g'rouud, baked hard, wouldn't show the marks of 'a baby's bare feet. and unless she were found quickly -- the day promised to be a scorch- er, 'about 110 in the waterbag' - the child wouldn't last long. "As soon as he could see, the tracker was circling round the house, widening his circle as each cast failed. Within 15 minutes he'd eut her track. That twig - which looked to me like' any of the hundred -odd twigs in the vi- cinity had ben displaced, For hours he followed this alleged track consisting of an occasional broken twig er crushed leaf, un- til in the late afternoon he tame on her, tear -stained and sun- burnt, asleep under -a hush,'.' On .one epic patrol in the Northern Torirtory a few years ago, four trackers trailed a native who had murdered a white man for 500 miles before they caught him. One of the moat remarkable pieces of tracking followed the robbery of a gold escort near Peak Downs, in Central Queens land, some years ago. The escort had been stuck up, and two of the troopers killed. In charge of the ingtiiry was Police -inspector 3. T." Griffin, who was also gold commissioner. The simple-minded aborigine examined the spot of the robbery and then declared that Griffin himself was responsible for the crime. ' The inquiry went on. Then it leaked out that Griffin was in a jam for money. Other evidence came to light, and the upshot was that Griffin was charged, tried, found guilty, and hanged. ' by Jeff Peters in "Answers." Boxing Champs and Double -Crosses Throughout boxing history, there have' always been a few ambitious but relatively unknown pugilists who sought a quick and easy way to fame by knoclrinng out titleholders in exhibition bouts, Usually, the conditions of these bouts were prearranged- ' but many fighters wouldn't hesi- tate to go back on their word if they saw a chance to dethrone a champion with an all-out as- sault, No champion had a more pain- ful experience in this respect than . Bob Fitzsimmons, In 1894 -three years after he had won the mid- dleweight championship from Jack Dempsey and while he was trying to get a match with Jim Corbett for heavyweight hon- ours -Fitz proposed a six -round bout with Joe Choynski, to be decided in a Boston theatre. At that time, Choynski was in fine condition and was regarded by some as a promising candidate for the heavyweight title. But Fitzsimmons had no thought of making a real fight of the match and it was agreed by both box- ers that they would make the bout interesting without attempt- ing to hurt one another. On the night of the fight few people were in the audience and there was little incentive for the boxers to exert themselves, but Choynski decided that it would be a great feather in his cap if he could catch Fitz unaware and knock him out. For two rounds they exchang- ed love taps and the few specta- tors began to yawn. In the third round, Fitz was counting the house to see how much money there would be for him when Choynski sent a smashing left to the jaw that tumbled Fitz down on his face and set the small crowd 3•elling like a tribe of Co- manches, Fitz rolled oVer on the floor, his freckles mingling with the resin dust, and Choynski stood watching an with a cynical smile, Finally, "Ruby Robert" got up on his hands and knees and shook his head to clear it. JusI as the referee counted nine, Fitz_ tottered to his feet, Choynski rushed forward to finish his maty; but Fitz clutched the Californian before he could strike and held on to him like grim death. All around the stage they wrestled, Choynski making a desperate ef- fort to free himself and Fitz hang- ing en tenaciously. After steadying himself, Fitz broke away and sparred at long range to the end of the round. He Was fresh when he came out for the fourth round and there was a dangerous glitter in his eyes, He rushed et Choynski anthammer- ed him llke a blacksmith ham - niers a red -hat iron Choynski was on the floor most of the time but managed to get through the round and come up for the fifth. Fitz floored him a half-dozen times in quick succession before the police decided that the fight was brutal pard. stopped it. - Six years'later, Choynski was tile victim of a somewhat similar double cross, He and Kid McCoy were matched for a twenty -round bout at the Broadway Athletic' Club in New York, and there was widespread interest in the con- test. McCoy was the favorite, but Choynski pummeled hien furious- ly frdm the moment the gong sounded in the first round. Choynski banged the Kid all around -the ring in the second and third rounds, and towards the' close of the fourth dropped him with a solid right to the. jaw. McCoy seemed to be knocked out, but staggered to his feet just as the gong sounded for the end of the round. Choynski stood ready to apply the finishing punches, but when •he heard the gong he immediately started , to- ward his cornier, Two seconds later. when Choynski was partly turned away, McCoy sent a straight right that landid'd:'back of Joe's ear and sent him sprawling to the floor. It was an obvious foul, but the• referee may not have been look- ing at the time. At any rate, he ignored Choynski's set7tnds, who cried "foul" while they - dragged Joe to his corner and tried to revive him. The seconds worked over Choynski desperately, but as he always felt a knockout punch in his legs more 'than in any other part of his body, he was unable to respond to the bell for the fifth round. He tried to rise from his chair, but his legs buckled under him and he sank, back helpless. He waved his arms in violent pro- test, but the referee counted off the seconds and :.declared the grinning Kid the, winner, . Fitzsimmons ,had another nar- row escape at the hands of Peter Maher, They met in a bout in New Orleans in 1892, and Maher reached Fitz's jaw with one of his famous -left-handers in the sec- ond round. Down to the canvas went Fitz, withhis nose in the dust -but on his knees. He was apparently unable to get his head off the floor, although his legs were not seriously affected. The Cornishman kept scraping his nose on the boards, and the count was close to ten before he man- aged to get to his feet. After that he fought carefully and wore Maher down so that the Irish champion became discouraged and refused to come out of his corner for the thirteenth round. When asked why he would not go on with the battle, Maher an- swered, "I can't hit the divil." Fitzsimmons was asked what he was looking for when he was rubbing his nose in the dust of the ring floor. "Maher," he re- plied. UNDAY SCIIOOL LESSON Mold pineapple gelatin salad right in the can. Remove the can lid, and pour off juice. Refill with gelatin mixture; chill until solid. Salad unrnolds easily if you hold can briefly in warm • water. Cut between pineapple slices to serve. Drive With Care 35 lj,ev it Y,. Warren 841.. R.U. Jesus . Uses KitsA.ut sg*Ity John 913,i$'" ' Memory Selection:' trod Is •A Spirit; and they that. worship Him must worship Him in spirit and In truth, John 4x24., We often sing, "Gentle Jesus, meek and mild," -but the senti- ment of these words does not stilt the mood of Jesus in today's les- son. '3esus was angry because the temple, His Father's house, had became a house of merchan- dise. Providing sacrificial ani- mals had probably originated as a convenience. for thosewho had brought ° none of their own. Money -changing was also a prac- - tical service. Animals brought in for sacrifice had to pass in- spection, for which there was a fee, and could be rejected, thus forcing the owners to buy i*rom the temple market, The con- venience became a racket, Doves, the poor man's sacrifice were, sometimes sold at ninety times their normal price. The leading priests got a large share of the fees and profits. No'wonder Jesus was indignant. What things Jesus would eon- - demn and remove if he were to enter our church and individual life today? To have him come and radically purge the unseem- ly things would be a revolution- izing and healthy experience for all of us; but because we already have ample light, he leaves it to us to look at his life and the Spirit -guided early • church and then follow the same Spirit as we do our own purging, The • light is the sante, the saving power is the same, and the judg- ment will be the same in any case In the unprinted portion of this lesson we have the record of the first miracle of Jesus, - the turning of water into wine. It should be remembered that the drink which the ruler of the feast called "the good wine" was not the juice of anything. but was wholly supernatural, made en- tirely out of water. No chemist analyzed it and stated whether or not it contained any' alcohol. We have no doubt that God was well able to produce miraculous- ly a drink, and a nutritious drink, too, that tasted better than their man-made wine, without alcohol in it. The wedding was a sacred occasion, not a drunken brawl. Stitch 'white` shoe - laces on Baby's bib for a sturdy, long - wearing tie. The model airplane builder can use a plastic spray bottle to help dampen plane's paper covering easily and evenly. To fill the bot- tle, ottle, immerse it in clear water, • then squeeze and release. (Upside down to prevent peeking) 3 ti 8 3 d? 3 ®V3MOOD DEW X°3301:} © si r ©`1 ©© TIONICEI WOMB � ,,,•©DOAWo DULflQUtd CMCOl• ii n M0' env J. 8 3118 11 my 3 10419 a• S l n a O Si 321 JI V 1 9 d 1 C ne 0 d Jumps A Grade -- Lee Dia Koon, Korean war orphan, flashes his promotion -winning smile for foster -father, Sgt, William Freer. A picture of Lee, wearing his enchanting grin, was mailed to Freer's mother who offered to adopt the child, and starred the chain of circumstances which "promoted" the Korean waif from squadron mascot to adopted son. of Freer. Tony has already learned the English alphabet and counts to 100. r 3 4 *5 6 ra8 s la 17 12 ;..:.,V 12 ... W 13. IS 17 16it 19 0 r '.. `l 22 Si. 5 24 J26 5 28 29 31 ,. < 31 ! 33 34 36f 4 37 �.. • 35 59. ky 4C 4f 41r 13 ■I 43 47 Vit. 98 '9 �� 50WAr- ,,SI rt., y: ®� 55 55 rky Answer elsewhere on this page, WINTER' WONDERLAND 1'h,*u n• lc..,' ,.'ultiunn,n Australia's Blau[ Felice Trackers Can Fellow "Shak5;; s" in the Sand Imagine you are on the run from the police in the wild bush of New South Wales. You are wanted for robbery under arms. You are Jimmy G overnor, "last of the Australian bushrangers" They'lI never get me, you say, even if they have got aboriginal trackers with them, You know what they say in the bush -that black trackers can follow a man almost everywhere and draw •a map of a fly crawling round a mirror. But 'they cannot track you down, you tell yourself. You are an aborigine and you know all their tricks and what they look for. So you wrap sheepskins over your boots to hide your tracks, You cross rocky ground, and you use the dry beds of rivers and creks, where you think you will not leave a mark. You double and circle. You lead the trackers and the police to a river and you enter the water, but several feet out you reach for the branch of a trey and draw ourself upinto it. And you y swing from tree to tree for per- haps a hundred yards and steal back in the direction from which the police -constables and track- ers are coming You do these Shiites again and again. But you cannot threw them off your trail. Like human bloodhounds, they camp on your heels every night. And anally they surround and arra'[ you - after you have wounded one of the constables. You, Jimmy Governor, know then what everyone in the Australian bush saysthatyou cannot escape the black trackers. You are caught and you go to jail for 11 years. Black trackers, like those that caught the "lest of the Australian bushrangers" just over twenty years ago, are the invaluable aids of the Australian white police- man. So remarkable is their skill that some people credit them with supernatural gifts. But it is nothing more than the acutest powers of observation -- as the following story will show. A white police -constable and a tracker were on patrol it West- ern Australia when they came on the tracks of three shod hor- ses, The tracker examined them and said; , "That all one Kendy (Ktnne- dy) track. That one big block horse Kendy ride; that grey one Charlie ride; that little horse for pack." And he named the three police horses, Newark, Nipper, and Fancy. The trooper wouldn't have it. From his knowledge he knew that Trooper Kennedy should be a good 200 miles away in another direction, Subsequently the black tracker was shown to be right. Kennedy had changed the direction of his patrol. What made the tracker's feat all the more remarkable was that he had seen the three horses only once, and six months before --and then they were unshod. Testimony to the aborigine's un- canny powers of observation is paid by T.the G. it.Strehlow, aliart He says that native stockmen at the Her= mannsburg Mission, in- Central Australia, could identify the tracks of over 200 aboriginal men, women and children, those of 12 white men and women, and the hoofmarks of 50 working- - horses and a number of camels and donkeys. Such skill is the product of many generations of a people who have had to depend on -their eyes for their livelihood; who must kill every day (or every few days) in order to live, as they have no methods of preserv- ing food. From the time he can crawl a young aborigine is taught the ways of the bush by the men of the tribe. They trace tracks in the sand, and he learns not mer- ely the tracks of the various ani- mals, reptiles and birds, but their habits. He learns when and where they feed and drink. He learns to tell from a track whether an animal is travelling fast or slow, and whether it is i11. If it walks over stony plains it will not leave prints, but it will move stones slightly or press them in, The fabulous skill of the black trackers has saved the lives of many men, women and children in the great emptiness of the bush. Trackers are stationed at cen- tral points throughout Australia so they can be rushed by plane or car to the point where they are needed. One hot summer night a message reached the police station at Merredin, a West Australian wheat town, that the five-year- old daughter of a farmer had wandered into the bush and was lost. The tracker at Kelerberrin, 30 miles away, arrived at the bush homestead just before dawn. Here is how someone who was there tells the story: "It seemed pretty hopeless. It was mid -summer. The g'rouud, baked hard, wouldn't show the marks of 'a baby's bare feet. and unless she were found quickly -- the day promised to be a scorch- er, 'about 110 in the waterbag' - the child wouldn't last long. "As soon as he could see, the tracker was circling round the house, widening his circle as each cast failed. Within 15 minutes he'd eut her track. That twig - which looked to me like' any of the hundred -odd twigs in the vi- cinity had ben displaced, For hours he followed this alleged track consisting of an occasional broken twig er crushed leaf, un- til in the late afternoon he tame on her, tear -stained and sun- burnt, asleep under -a hush,'.' On .one epic patrol in the Northern Torirtory a few years ago, four trackers trailed a native who had murdered a white man for 500 miles before they caught him. One of the moat remarkable pieces of tracking followed the robbery of a gold escort near Peak Downs, in Central Queens land, some years ago. The escort had been stuck up, and two of the troopers killed. In charge of the ingtiiry was Police -inspector 3. T." Griffin, who was also gold commissioner. The simple-minded aborigine examined the spot of the robbery and then declared that Griffin himself was responsible for the crime. ' The inquiry went on. Then it leaked out that Griffin was in a jam for money. Other evidence came to light, and the upshot was that Griffin was charged, tried, found guilty, and hanged. ' by Jeff Peters in "Answers." Boxing Champs and Double -Crosses Throughout boxing history, there have' always been a few ambitious but relatively unknown pugilists who sought a quick and easy way to fame by knoclrinng out titleholders in exhibition bouts, Usually, the conditions of these bouts were prearranged- ' but many fighters wouldn't hesi- tate to go back on their word if they saw a chance to dethrone a champion with an all-out as- sault, No champion had a more pain- ful experience in this respect than . Bob Fitzsimmons, In 1894 -three years after he had won the mid- dleweight championship from Jack Dempsey and while he was trying to get a match with Jim Corbett for heavyweight hon- ours -Fitz proposed a six -round bout with Joe Choynski, to be decided in a Boston theatre. At that time, Choynski was in fine condition and was regarded by some as a promising candidate for the heavyweight title. But Fitzsimmons had no thought of making a real fight of the match and it was agreed by both box- ers that they would make the bout interesting without attempt- ing to hurt one another. On the night of the fight few people were in the audience and there was little incentive for the boxers to exert themselves, but Choynski decided that it would be a great feather in his cap if he could catch Fitz unaware and knock him out. For two rounds they exchang- ed love taps and the few specta- tors began to yawn. In the third round, Fitz was counting the house to see how much money there would be for him when Choynski sent a smashing left to the jaw that tumbled Fitz down on his face and set the small crowd 3•elling like a tribe of Co- manches, Fitz rolled oVer on the floor, his freckles mingling with the resin dust, and Choynski stood watching an with a cynical smile, Finally, "Ruby Robert" got up on his hands and knees and shook his head to clear it. JusI as the referee counted nine, Fitz_ tottered to his feet, Choynski rushed forward to finish his maty; but Fitz clutched the Californian before he could strike and held on to him like grim death. All around the stage they wrestled, Choynski making a desperate ef- fort to free himself and Fitz hang- ing en tenaciously. After steadying himself, Fitz broke away and sparred at long range to the end of the round. He Was fresh when he came out for the fourth round and there was a dangerous glitter in his eyes, He rushed et Choynski anthammer- ed him llke a blacksmith ham - niers a red -hat iron Choynski was on the floor most of the time but managed to get through the round and come up for the fifth. Fitz floored him a half-dozen times in quick succession before the police decided that the fight was brutal pard. stopped it. - Six years'later, Choynski was tile victim of a somewhat similar double cross, He and Kid McCoy were matched for a twenty -round bout at the Broadway Athletic' Club in New York, and there was widespread interest in the con- test. McCoy was the favorite, but Choynski pummeled hien furious- ly frdm the moment the gong sounded in the first round. Choynski banged the Kid all around -the ring in the second and third rounds, and towards the' close of the fourth dropped him with a solid right to the. jaw. McCoy seemed to be knocked out, but staggered to his feet just as the gong sounded for the end of the round. Choynski stood ready to apply the finishing punches, but when •he heard the gong he immediately started , to- ward his cornier, Two seconds later. when Choynski was partly turned away, McCoy sent a straight right that landid'd:'back of Joe's ear and sent him sprawling to the floor. It was an obvious foul, but the• referee may not have been look- ing at the time. At any rate, he ignored Choynski's set7tnds, who cried "foul" while they - dragged Joe to his corner and tried to revive him. The seconds worked over Choynski desperately, but as he always felt a knockout punch in his legs more 'than in any other part of his body, he was unable to respond to the bell for the fifth round. He tried to rise from his chair, but his legs buckled under him and he sank, back helpless. He waved his arms in violent pro- test, but the referee counted off the seconds and :.declared the grinning Kid the, winner, . Fitzsimmons ,had another nar- row escape at the hands of Peter Maher, They met in a bout in New Orleans in 1892, and Maher reached Fitz's jaw with one of his famous -left-handers in the sec- ond round. Down to the canvas went Fitz, withhis nose in the dust -but on his knees. He was apparently unable to get his head off the floor, although his legs were not seriously affected. The Cornishman kept scraping his nose on the boards, and the count was close to ten before he man- aged to get to his feet. After that he fought carefully and wore Maher down so that the Irish champion became discouraged and refused to come out of his corner for the thirteenth round. When asked why he would not go on with the battle, Maher an- swered, "I can't hit the divil." Fitzsimmons was asked what he was looking for when he was rubbing his nose in the dust of the ring floor. "Maher," he re- plied. UNDAY SCIIOOL LESSON Mold pineapple gelatin salad right in the can. Remove the can lid, and pour off juice. Refill with gelatin mixture; chill until solid. Salad unrnolds easily if you hold can briefly in warm • water. Cut between pineapple slices to serve. Drive With Care 35 lj,ev it Y,. Warren 841.. R.U. Jesus . Uses KitsA.ut sg*Ity John 913,i$'" ' Memory Selection:' trod Is •A Spirit; and they that. worship Him must worship Him in spirit and In truth, John 4x24., We often sing, "Gentle Jesus, meek and mild," -but the senti- ment of these words does not stilt the mood of Jesus in today's les- son. '3esus was angry because the temple, His Father's house, had became a house of merchan- dise. Providing sacrificial ani- mals had probably originated as a convenience. for thosewho had brought ° none of their own. Money -changing was also a prac- - tical service. Animals brought in for sacrifice had to pass in- spection, for which there was a fee, and could be rejected, thus forcing the owners to buy i*rom the temple market, The con- venience became a racket, Doves, the poor man's sacrifice were, sometimes sold at ninety times their normal price. The leading priests got a large share of the fees and profits. No'wonder Jesus was indignant. What things Jesus would eon- - demn and remove if he were to enter our church and individual life today? To have him come and radically purge the unseem- ly things would be a revolution- izing and healthy experience for all of us; but because we already have ample light, he leaves it to us to look at his life and the Spirit -guided early • church and then follow the same Spirit as we do our own purging, The • light is the sante, the saving power is the same, and the judg- ment will be the same in any case In the unprinted portion of this lesson we have the record of the first miracle of Jesus, - the turning of water into wine. It should be remembered that the drink which the ruler of the feast called "the good wine" was not the juice of anything. but was wholly supernatural, made en- tirely out of water. No chemist analyzed it and stated whether or not it contained any' alcohol. We have no doubt that God was well able to produce miraculous- ly a drink, and a nutritious drink, too, that tasted better than their man-made wine, without alcohol in it. The wedding was a sacred occasion, not a drunken brawl. Stitch 'white` shoe - laces on Baby's bib for a sturdy, long - wearing tie. The model airplane builder can use a plastic spray bottle to help dampen plane's paper covering easily and evenly. To fill the bot- tle, ottle, immerse it in clear water, • then squeeze and release. (Upside down to prevent peeking) 3 ti 8 3 d? 3 ®V3MOOD DEW X°3301:} © si r ©`1 ©© TIONICEI WOMB � ,,,•©DOAWo DULflQUtd CMCOl• ii n M0' env J. 8 3118 11 my 3 10419 a• S l n a O Si 321 JI V 1 9 d 1 C ne 0 d Jumps A Grade -- Lee Dia Koon, Korean war orphan, flashes his promotion -winning smile for foster -father, Sgt, William Freer. A picture of Lee, wearing his enchanting grin, was mailed to Freer's mother who offered to adopt the child, and starred the chain of circumstances which "promoted" the Korean waif from squadron mascot to adopted son. of Freer. Tony has already learned the English alphabet and counts to 100.