HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1951-1-17, Page 6New Ideas For
Cheaper Roads
Scientists are cop t aptly seeking
methods for making toads that will
carry the tremendous loads of mod-
ern tragic, and yet will cost less
than those we now construct. They
may be on the right track with the
new "plastic" road now being
developed on bot[] ;isles of the
Atlantic,
At the military cngiueeriug ex-
perimental establishment at Christ-
church, Hamp:hire, they have found
a way to knit soil together in a
solid plass and slake it so hard that
it will hear the weight of 100.000
tons of vehicles per day.
They "dope' the soil with
chemicals ttutil it sets as hard as
concrete. Then the surface is tested
by a "traffic simulator," a machine
which heats the road as would a
heavy truck.
"Roll 'em out"
Engineers claim that a beach,
a soft mud road, or a muddy pas-
ture can be turned into a stable
road surface by this method. -
The soia stud or sand has first
to be analysed before tete appro-
priate binding chemical can be sel-
ected.
United States Navy technicians
have re "rolled out" such roans at the
aate of eight miles
Per hour on a
beach in California.
Another innovation is the use
of chalk for building roads.
For over two years hundreds
of lorries a day have used a chalk
road at Prudhoe, Northumberland,
to take loads from Prudhoe's
2,000,000 -ton chalk "mountain."
After the initial flattening of the
surface the chalk road has remain-
ed in perfect condition. A tarmac
road subjected to the sante heavy
traffic would have required constant
maintenance, yet not a penny has
been spent on the chalk road.
A cheap, non-skid upper skin
would have to be laid on a trunk
road built of chalk,
"We could then make the Ger-
man autobahns (perhaps the finest
roads in Europe) look like cart
tracks," said one engineer.
SALLY'S, SALVES
'I didn't think I had to rush those
letters because they're go ng by
air mail:"
Perfume Racket
in a region frequently visited by
tourists — the Little white -walled
town of Grasse, back of the French
Riviera -20,000 people have just
reaped the world's greatest flower
harvest.
Perfume is third in France's lead-
ing exports, and the Grasse per-
fumiers have been building; labor-
atories four tinges larger than the
old ones, with stills three tines as
large.
With lemons from Sicily, gera-
alums from Madagascar, sandal-
wood from India, tonka beans from
Venezuela, French perfume is in-
ternational as well as exotic.
At dawn the jasmine pickers
Start work in the long, sweeping
fields, for jasmine loses its precious
quality if touched by sunshine.
Then the lavender squads emerge
with their portable stills, process-
ing flowers and stents on the spot.
Lavender loses its intrinsic es-
sence if moved. Carnations are at
their scented best after precisely
three hours of sunshine. Such
knowledge is elementary to the
Grasse experts, some of whom
have inherited family secrets
through ten generations. Every
year Grasse absorbs two million
pounds of jasmine and a million
pounds of roses, some from as far
afield as Yugoslavia and North
Africa, while alcohol is shipped in
by the thousand gallons.
With more than 2,000 ingredients
perfulnc isn't all attar of roses. In
it scent factory established in a dis-
used monastery the writer was
shown a buffalo -horn of civet scent
Zoom Abyssinia. Ramming a needle
through the fat seal, the guide al-
lowed him to sniff. The odour was
eJPPatijilq, vat : vet• innlarte to ex-
hensisee perfume the lingering gha-1-
ty that the salesmen talk about.
Lack of civet explains the brief
life of some post-war perfumes.
Whisk, too, the dried gland of the
Himalayan musk -deer, has been
holding up the perfume works,
The Grasse manufacturers buy
;by weight, and the Tibetans have
' `been introducing lead pellets into
the boxes of tissue. There's a trick
et. every trade, but the perfunsiers
consider this little racket a etinkerl
Turned Up: P.C. Iiedges, of
Long Wittenham, lost a gold ring
18 years ago, while gardening at
the police station. His successor has
ting it up in a plattt root.
TKETA1M FRONT
J o r. �2usseU.
"'Phis tlatioo" says 3 R. Snyder,
prominent agronomist, "was once
the centre of civilization; but today
its extensive acres of barren soils
stand as a constant reminder of
what the loss of fertility and pro-
ductiveness will do to a nation's
well-being. So it has been since
time began that each nation pros-
pered only so long as its agricnl-
ture prospered,"
*
11 those words stake you feel
like ducking toward the. nearest
bomb -shelter, set your mind at rest.
The nation Mr. Snyder was speak-
ing about was China, not Canada;
and he coupled the remark with the
warning that the fate of our pre-
sent civilization hinges largely on
'what we do about soil conservation
in the next few years.
Such a warning is by no gleans
new. But it is one that can hardly
be repeated too often.
For a prosperous agriculturehurt good
regent i-� a necessity, • this'
land management a }K
g
soil expert states. This means the
complete utilization of all lands for
continued maximum production. To
attain this we must control erosion,
conserve water and return to the
soil the needed plant fond and
minerals.
*
Erosio,t 'ontrol may be accom-
plished by contour ploughing, strip
crapping, erecting wind breaks and
keeping land too steep for cultiva-
tion in sod. By terracing and con-
tour cropping, water can be better
controlled. Stubble mulching and
leaving crop residue on the sur-
face are effective in preventing both
erosion and water run-off,
:k * :k
The soil, climate and :nature of
the crop determine the kinds of
plant food needed. Each individual
farmer must find out what nutrients
his farm and crops require and
apply them accordingly. High per -
acre yields can be obtained by keep-
ing the soil nearly neutral in re-
action and well supplied with or-
ganic matter and available plant
food by the judicious use of crop
residues, green manure crops, barn-
yard manure, commercial fertilizers
and lime.
The use of feathers as a feed
supplement for poultry is being ex-
perimented with at a western re-
gional research laboratory. Accord-
ing to the research workers, feathers
are high in arginine, one of the
amino acids considered essential
for the feeding of poultry. In the
sante laboratory processed feathers
are being tested as a conditioning
agent in mixed organic fertilizers,
in the preparation of plaster retard-
ers and the manufacure of plastic
articles. * "` *
The process consists of a cooker,
drier and grinder. Feathers are
cooked under pressure in saturated
steam at a temperature of 287 to
307 degrees F. To obtain uniform
heating, the feathers are agitated
during cooking.
*
After cooking for 30 to o0 'Ma-
tes, the steam is exhausted and
the feathers transferred to drying
equipment where the moisture con-
tent is reduced to eight to 10 per
cent. The dry, friable material is
then easily ground to produce a
meal or powder suitable for pack-
aging in such containers as multi -
wall paper bags.
thousands of tons of feathers go
to waste each year in Canada be-
cause no suitable method has been
devised to process then[ economic-
ally. In fact, the cost of disposing
feathers has been a costly problem
for many packers of fresh and fro.
zen poultry. Before long, however,
1.t ngth 5 ,.
Vdingspon
Weight 30,000 Lbs.
1
20 -mm
Cannon
Fuel
Tonics
New Sting For The Air Force—Here is a cutaway view of the F-80 Scorpion. Type boxes
p„ ittt out features of the plane. The twin -jet trowels in the 600 -mile -an -hour range, and is
designed for day or night operations in all weatheraconditions,
these feathers will be changed from
y
liabilit • into o a real asset.
k * 5
And while we're on this fowl
subject, I might as well pass along
a message which may be of value to
some of you who do not only raise
poultry, but have a home freezer
as well. > * *
\Vhy feed perfectly good grain
to lazy hens when it could be used
for human food? Do you know that
these non -laying hens consume 5
to 8 pounds of costly feed a month?
Why not freeze these loafers who
are slowly draining the country's
grain supply? \Vith these frozen
chickens in your home freezer, a
chicken dinner ,will present no prob-
lem when unexpected company
drops M. " * *
To kill birds, use a pointed blade
that tapers from a width of ?,3 inch
at the handle to a point. Hang the
fowl at a convenient height and
press lightly against the bones in
the neck as the blade passes through
the jugular vein. This Method in-
sures rapid, thorough bleeding.
* * *
Scald the birds in water about
128 degrees F. for 20 to 50 seconds
depending on the age of the bird.
This leaves the skin in good con-
dition; whereas scalding at a higher
temperature makes picking faster
but tends to make the skin look
blotchy and unattractive. Chill the
birds in ice water or chill room
immediately after they are scalded
and picked.
5 * k
Non -laying hens are likely to be
big boned; therefore, the meaty
and bony pieces should be separ-
ated in order to prevent a waste
of storage space. Disjoint the
chickens; separate the meaty pieces,
which include breasts, thighs, and
legs. Bones may be removed from
the legs and only the meat Stored
to preserve space. The back, wings
and necks may be made into tasty
creamed chicken,
* :k
Birds ulna be packaged in mois-
ture -proof, vapor -resistant wrappers
which can be sealed tightly. Use
medium fir small containers accord-
ing to your familys needs. Cartons
may be labeled with the late and
contents. A fold of cellophane
should be placed between the
pieces before packing to prevent
sticking together, Frozen chicken
may be cooked without thawing in
either stew or fricassee.
* :k ;
In eparing creamed chicken,
cover the bony pieces with salt
water and simper until tender. A
small hag of herbs (;5 teaspoon
thyme and ;s teaspoon marjoram
may be added to the cooking water
as a mild seasoning, Cool tate cook-
ed meat and separate the meat from
skin and fat. In stripping the bones,
try to have good sized pieces that
Corrin' Round The Mountain—Deinonstratiog his skiing skill
on a mountainside, John Litchfield, 34, executive director of
Sun Valley Ski School, is the first American ever to )lead a
major ski school anywhere itt the world. Litchfield was a
member of the 1940 American Olympicc ski team.
can be cut into cubes of uniform
size.These are just rightit
for mak-
ing wonderful creamed chickenen
with your favorite rec'pe.
k *
Meat from the necks, wings and
backs of six chickens yields approx-
imately 4% pints. If the legs are
added, the yield is about 8 to 9
pints, Cool the chicken quickly,
. package, and freeze it at zero de-
grees F. or lower.
Ancient Pottery
Found In Israel
`
Pottery from the first Jewish
kingdom to the Herodias epoch was
discovered when excavators opened
an ancient rock -hewn cistern in
the northeastern corner of the Na-
tivity Church in Bethlehem.
The excavators belonged to the
British -staffed Department of An-
tiquities of the Hashemite Jordan
government which is carrying out
restoration work at the fatuous
shrine.
According to the excavators, the
cistern corresponds far more to the
"David's well" mentioned in the
Old Testament than the cistern in
western Bethlehem which is usually
claimed to be the historic well.
They said that the close con-
nection between the cistern and the
Nativity grotto tends to confirm the
tradition that the grotto was a sub-
terranean stable. The cistern has
seemingly been untouched since
the Roman destuction of Bethle-
hem in 70 A.D.
Some Records For
You To Shoot At
Do you want to break a world
record? Here is a selection of
challenges,
It is on record that a snail can
bold his breath for 20 minutes 5
seconds; stay under water for 6
minutes, 29 seconds; live witbout
sleep for 115 hours; run 5,625 miles
in 59 days; live in a heat of 248
degrees Fahrenheit; live in a cold
of 103 degrees below , , All you
have to do is do better,
Sixty-four Vancouver smokers
recently gathered to see how long
they could make a pipe last. The
winner kept his one-eighth of an
ounce puffing for 1 hour} 57 min -
Rtes
To Moscow on Stilts
Then there are the R.A.F. cor-
poral who recently swallowed a
yard -long glass of ale in 55 seconds,
the champion packer who has
squeezed 187 different objects into
a matchbox, the Tokyo champ fly -
swatter, who swatted 180,003 flies in
a day — no D,D,T, and no cheat-
ing?.
Freak records are nothing new.
In 1891 Silvain Donlon walked
1,800 miles frons Paris to Moscow
in 58 days on stilts. In 1900 Johan-
na Hasslinger strolled 875 miles
from Vienna to Paris on her hands.
In 1880 Johann Ketzler, a porter
by trade, a champion eater by in-
clination, ate 80 liver sausages in
two hours, 200 fried potatoes in
three hours, a whole roasted ox in
42 clays.
But let's be more reasonable.
Two Aussie tree -fellers, IIarry
Jackson and Pete McClaren, hold
the double -handed saw champion-
ship, slicing through a tree 78
inches in circumference in 42
seconds. George Hossfield won the
world's typing championship by
rapping out 139 words per minute
from unfamiliar printed copy for
an hour. A Manchester barber can
shave a man in 12 seconds, A
US. naval officer can tie 772 differ-
ent knots, Is anyone game for 773?
Could you beat any of these?
Swing a club 17,000 times without
stopping? Sit on an ice -block 27/
hours or on a flagpole 300 days?
Drink 37 scalding cups of coffee at
a sitting? Rock in, a rocking chair
92 consecutive hours without cu-
sbious,
A gallon of beer has been drunk
in 27.6 seconds, 200 yards of spag-
hetti consumed in five minutes. A
bath -chair has been talcen round the
world, A game of rummy has been
played for a million points,
p.1
P,O1H
/a S1Y,BLTC'l LC
Over the stretch of years during
which we have been cobbling
around with various sports columns,
the reading world has been spared
many pieces from our typewriter
because of one of our most persis-
tent beliefs. (Incidentally, we have
also personally been spared a good
deal of work.)
* 'k V
Whenever we think of something
snappy to write, we are immediately
assailed with the belief that (a)
somebody has already said the same
thing and said it better or, (b) if
we wait long enough somebody else
will say the same thing and say it
better.
* * *
Ever since they started this "Ca-
nadian Athlete of the Half Cen-
tury" thing, which filled so many
columns of newspaper space and so
many minutes of radio air, there
has been one interesting point we
had a desire to bring up. But we
never got around to writing it, for
some reason or other; and, sure
enough, we weren't kept waiting
too long before it was done for us
in a manner which we could not
hope to equal, let alone top.
* * 'k
So, without further ado, we quote
the following from the pen of Can-
ada's ace columnist, J. V. ivlcAree,
as published in the 'Foronto Globe
and Mail.
"We do not dissent front the
choice of outstanding Canadian
athletes made by a poll of sports
writers and sportcasters. We have
seen most of them and have known
some of them. We do not deny that
the choices were wisely made, es-
pecially the choice of our friend,
Miss Bobbie Rosenfeld.
* " 'k
"What we feel inclined to doubt
is the competence of the judges. We
doubt if half of them were born
fifty years ago. We doubt if nine -
tenths of them fifty years ago were
in any position to form any but
juvenile opinions of what they saw.
* * ,k
"If they were adults 'in 1900 they
must be in their seventies now, and
we do not know any of them who
from appearance would be taken for
venerable citizens. How many of
the judges ever saw Henry Hoobin,
the Shamrock lacrosse player? We
doubt if most of them ever saw
Newsy Lalonde, who was chosen
the best player of Canada's national
game in the past half century. DID
THEY DO THEIR JUDGING
FROM NEWSPAPER CLIP-
PINGS?"
x n 5
• To which Mr, McAfee might well
have added the doubt that fifty per
cent of the pollsters ever even saw
a real game of lacrosse—that is, the
old 12 -man style played on wide,
open spaces—or are in a position
to compare Newsy Lalonde with the
likes of Billy Fitzgerald, Eddie
Powers, Mickey Ion and a whole
host of other top-notchers.
'k 'k 'k
We, ourselves, saw in action a
large majority of those mentioned
in the various polis. Bet in sport,
as in everything else, distance has
a way of lending enchantment.
When you are young and enthusias-
tic, members of your "home teats"
acquire a glamour that is largely in
the eye of the beholder. For years
we, in lacrosse, were a dyed-in-the-
wool Tecumseh fan, Anybody trot
wearing a Tecumseh uniform was
all enemy, If Lalonde or FitzGerald
scored a goal, it was by sheer Ittck,
not ability. in other words we
were not "in any position to forts
any but juvenile opinions" of men
! Was Nearly Crazy
With Fiery Itch ""1
Until r dissevered Dr, D. D, Dennis" amesintf
ly fast relief -0, D. D. Proscription. Wer d
5Opulm'. this pure, cooling,. liquid medtentton
speeds Deno() and contort Iran cruel itehing
caused b5 ee5OMa, 1n50,01t)0,, r(51Og, athlete's
toot and other Stott troabide, Trial Uottto alit
5'Irat application shooks avers the iaWilttt0nao
Belt or y(drdtii'n y Or extra fltreler hgihn:
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like Henry Hoobin and a lot more.
* k *
Take ,as another example, foot-
ball. Conacher was the outstanding
choice as the half -century's great-
est. On his record, he could hardly
be passed up. Still, if we were al-
lowed to make just one pick" for
a player around whom to build a
team we would take Joe ICrol ahead
of Conacher, and Red Batstone
ahead of either. So it's all a platter
• of opinion. Big Con himself says
that the greatest Canadian football
player he ever saw was Warren
Snyder of Varsity, and Conacher
certainly should know what he's
talking about. Yet just how often
did you see Snyder's name men-
tioned when the hullabaloo was on?
So it all boils down to a matter
of personal taste. The experts have
spoken, but don't let that throw
you. If you still think that Whoozis
was better than \Vhatisname you
have a right to your opinion; and
if your old man maintains that
Whatehaeallunt was greater 117511
either, don't try to argue with him.
The old song said "There'll be pie
in the sky bye -and -bye" but we
never heard anybody hold obit hopes
that there would be sport there
too. And, unless there is, it will
never be settled definitely who
would be the winner in a bout be-
tween, say, Jack Johnson and Jack
Dempsey or who would finish first
in a field made up of Man O'\Var,
Exterminator and Noor.
4 u
We would parlay Johnson and
Exterminator; but we could be
Wrong, at that. For 110W that we
have taken time to think it over,
our choice of the outstanding Ca-
nadian athlete of the half century
night very well be a gentleman
whose name we never even saw
Mentioned, Jimmy Archer, whose
family lived right around the cor-
ner from us in Toronto, was the
first big league catcher to throw
to second from a squatting posi-
tion—an innovation which probably
had a more revolutionary effect on
a major sport than anything ever ,
done by any other Canadian. First
thing yon know we'll be starting
a poll of our own. In fact if there
doesn't soon cone tip anything bet-
ter to' write about titan this "mys-
tery hooch" the New York Rangers
are hopping themselves with, well
darned well have tot
HARNESS &. COLLARS
Farmers Attention — Consult
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The goods are right, and so are
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tor low vitality and general deb111010
One Dollar, At Druggists
Nt•ICOaiIt} ST1('R...�.--'...0
YOUR Invitation to new planting econonlp',
Free Creeping willows and shrubs while
they last. For Information n rite, watts
Nurseries, 1''Onwlck, Ont.
OPPORTUNITIES P011 011" . & w'1131F,9
BE A I'IAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LI -JADING wase 1
Grant Onpnrtunity Learn
tlalydreaeing
Pleasant dignified profession, good weans
Thousands of successful llervel graduates
America's Gr0111.e6t 050tetrl
Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or can
t1ARytI. 1Am0RESSINO 5C110015
3338 Blnor St. W., Toronto
Branches;
54 ging St . ['amnion
,2 Rideau 0) Ol,awn
MORE AND MORE HONEY!
Through a Profitable hobby that can be
built Into your own paying buntnesa, F5c0
Literature. ANGORAS (Canada)
Winona, Ontario
PATENTS
AN OFFER to every inventor—Lint of In-
ventions and fall information sent free,
The Ramsay Co.. Registered Patent Atter.
neva. 273 Bank Street, Ottawa.
PETU'ERSTONHAUOld & Company. Pa-
tent Solicitors. Established 1890. 350
Bay Street. P00001n. Snider or informo.
tion on requem.
WANTED
CASH FOR BAGS
WId any hlgbent prices for all types o0
good and torn, lute and cotton bags—
including feed bags. Weiss nage & Burlap
Company, 235 Albert 01. S. Kitchener, Ont.
Open 7.00 aan.-0.00 p.m., Saturday 11.00
noon.
A
Pram lour 11l)0I(S and CAST, from
TIRE and Till EVt0S, We Intoe n sloe
and Dino Of Sere, or 001111,15, for 0119
nurun00, V1015 110 et wilt, [nr waive.
etc., to Dent. W.
J. &J,TAVLE LI M ITEO
TORONTO SMTO WORKS
Iia from St, F.., termite
Diehl bl Ished 1035
WANE OP YOR
LIVER RILE
Without Calomel—And You91 Jump Out of
Bed in the Morning Rarin' to Go
The liver should pour out about s pints at
bile juice Into your digestive tract every day,
If We bile is not flowing freely your food may
not digest, It may loot decay In tho di eetivo
tract. ')'hen gas bloats up your etomnob. You
gotwould loolatiookopatopond. e, You feel mos, sunk and the
10 takes those thea gentle Carter's Little
Liver Pills to get these 2 pent" of bnd Bow.
lug Sooty to make you fast 'up, and up."
Get n parkageeely. today. Carter's Little In a'linking
.
bile flow freely. Ask for Carter's Little Liver
01ae,
ane at any drugstore,
ISSUE 3 e- 1951