The Seaforth News, 1957-12-19, Page 3um°1ed Above
Then Brainwashed
Most visitors to the Tower of
London, or the Bastille in Paris,
shudder et the sight of the old
instruments of torture designed
to loosen the tongues of those
suspected a treasonable activi-
ties; "Thank God, . people are
civilized to -day," they murmur.
But are they?
In Hungary, when the more
usual methods of "softening" a
suspect's resistance have met
with failure, he is liable to be.
taken before what he believes to
be a secret Court of Justice.
Here the president tells him
that despite his denials, his guilt'
is known and the verdict of the
court is that he is to be buried
alive. The unfortunate prisoner
is then dragged away to the
dungeons below the Secret Po-
lice headquarters and is shown
a catacomb, with niche after
niche of named coffins.
He is then compelled to select
bis own coffin and to paint his
name and the date on the out-
side. A guard "persuades" his
eolieagues to "let the poor devil
have enough brandy to knock
him right out." But the liquor is
drugged.
One sip, and the prisoner is
out cold for about half an hour.
When he recovers consciousness
he finds himself in the ,inky
blackness and utter silence of
he sealed coffin. It is useless to
struggle as his hands and feet
are tied.
Imagine the agony of mind in
such circumstances as a man
realizes he is to , die slow as-
phyxiation!
But fastened to the outside of
the coffin is a glass tube, like a
thermometer, in which the fluid
changes colour according to the
oxygen content of the air in-
side. When the oxygen falls to
a certain percentage, a further
supply is secretly pumped in,
and the prisoner revives. Then
the mental torture begins all
over again.
After the third infusion of
oxygen, and asphyxiation point
approaches for the fourth time,
the coffin is opened. By this time
even the strongest character,
assuming that he is still sane,
is usually willing to confess any-
thing true or false.
The mediaeval practice of
bricking -up erring nuns and
their illegitimate babies within
the convent walls was more
civilized. At least they were al -
DIFFERENT -it's Sputnik, not St.
Nick, charming French children
in this Paris department store.
Keeping close tabs on current
events, Santa Claus is display-
ing an earth satellite toy and
o little dog representing"Laika",
Russian space dog,
]owed to die once consciousness
was lost. They were not revived
periodically to prolong the agony.
Another form of modern tor-
ture, known as "The Widovv," is
practised to -day in the prisons
and concentration camps be-
hind the Iron Curtain. The Wi-
dow is a small room, each wall
of which has a swiftly revolving
wheel attached to it. To the
spokes of the wheels are fixed
scores of powerful electric lights
of violently contrasting minors.
The prisoner is fastened to :a
chair, his eyes are injected with
atropine to enlarge the pupils
and make them snore than
usulaly sensitive to light. The
lights are switched on and the
• wheels are set revolving at 9
terrine speed. Closing the eyes
brings no relief as the lights are
bright enough to pentrate the
thin flesh of the lids.
In addition to appalling pain
in the optic nerves. The Widow
produces hideous nausea. Few
prisoners subjected to this form
of treatment have been able to
resistquestioning for more than
an. hour.
An equally, devilish eontrap-
tion is called "The Bee" because
it produces a faint, persistent
buzzing through earphones
clamped to the prisoner's head.
Such is the peculiar pitch of
the buzz that it results in the
most agonizing headache.
Even the inquisitors' realize
that questioning is useless until
the victim has been prescribed
a certain quantity of heroin.
The .threat of a second session
With The Bee is generally suffi-
cient to make a prisoner talk.
Unlike the tortures inflicted
during the Middle Ages, none of
the more scientific modernva-
riety leaves any permanent
physical trace - crushed bones
or deformed, dislocated joints -
to bear witness of man's in-
humanity to man. There is, how-
ever, •one method of "soften-
ing" a prisoner in Central Eur-
ope which produces effects not
easily distinguishable from rheu-
matoid arthritis.
The prisoner's hands are
forced into "gloves" not unlike
those worn by deep-sea divers..
By means of a machine the at-'
mospheric pressure is slowly in-
creased - and then suddenly
lessened to below normal. In-
creased again, and again sud-
denly lessened, the process be-
ing repeated for about a quarter
ofan hour,
Only those who have suffered
(or witnessed) the pains of "Div-
er's Cramps" can imagine the
agonies produced by such a dia-
bolic device.
Is the world more civilized
than it was 500 hundred years
ago? Or has the knowldege that
"progress" has brought made it'
even less so?
Make Money That
Can't Be Spent
Gold sovereigns are still being
made in small numbers at Brit-
ain's Royal Mint, although the
minting of gold coins for public
circulation ceased In 1917.
They are being 'made so that
the Mint can preserve the in-
herited knowledge and crafts-
manship of gold coining which
requires a different technique
from coining in other metals and
greater precision in workman-
ship. There is no question of
issuing these sovereigns for cir-
culation; they will remain part
of the gold reserves.
When the sovereign was first
issued during the reign of Henry
VII its value Was sometimes as
high as 30s., but under Charles
II the value was fixed at 21s.
'The sovereign, which our par-
ents and grandparents used,
dates from a royal proclamation
of 1817 "that certain pieces of
gold money should be coined
which should be called 'sover-
eigns of 20 -shilling pieces'."
9. Ancient 31, remain inn
R DGreekCRY Song
19.Optnion 33. Mohammedan
11. Droop scriptures
13. Close tightly 35. Allows
17. Composer of 28. Be penitent
"Good-bye" 42. Bunoff to
19. Printing wed
3. brother forms 44.Perfume
erfume
3 Cheap 21. Author of 40. Grafted
apartment men:twee (Her,)
Musketeers" 48, German river
4. 17xiel 22. Detachment 49. What person
0. Petcer slake from others 50. Small tumor
9, Commences 34. Doggish 52, American
7. Biblical priest school Indian
8. Supports for 'Lai, Withers 52,. Chess • pieces -
an upper 29, watched .e 'Mines len
mili0Mnn 0a rrnu,1V (111(71x1
CROSSW
PUZZLE
ACROSS
1, Frequently
4, More Ignoble
9, Cingllsh letter
12. After a. little
}while
14, Field
15, Rational
10: Vitiating
38, Diner
20. Form of the
verb 'do"
21. faintly
23. Girl's nick-
name
29, Exists
27, Utility
29, NUisanre
120. Largevoi um
33. Med of
animal
74, Mr TV/ Iat
'311.
Sin,ging voice
37 Sra eagle
39. Compass point'
49 Samarium,
symbol
41. Interpret
41. Small pies
45 River er duck
47. Stakes
49. Fanned away
shaft
61. Particle
09. ilixreedfngly
warm
65. Pierce .
57, Smallest.
Integer
58, Vestibule
59. Distant
DOWN
3, Harvest
anddeee
Answer elsewhere on this page,
FOUR YEARS 114 FIRST -Like the fellow who got tossed out of
school for not shaving when he was in the third grade, "Susie",
qn English springer Spaniel, is having a tough lime getting
past the first grade at Blessed Sacrament School, The pooch,
patiently sitting alongside Martha Donnelly, first visited the
school by following his young master, Martha's older brother,
John. But when John moved on, Susie decided to stay in tha
first grade, and though she's hqd an almost perfect record for
attendance, she just can't seem to master those doggone
lessons. It seems she'll never be promoted.
TIll PMM F1ZONT
The Canadian sheep industry
has had a checkered career, part-
ly because it has never adopted
a standard practice for the pro-
duction of high quality market
lambs similar to that long fol-
lowed in Scotland, and other
sheep -raising countries. The use
of cross breds by breeders in
these countries . to obtain the
maximum of hybrid vigour is
probably the chief factor contri-
buting to a profitable sheep in-
dustry.
* 4, r
At about the end of the last
war, Canada's sheep population
was roughly four million bead.
Very shortly afterward, this fig-
ure dropped to about one -end-
orse -half million. In addition, .40
per cent of the lambs coming
from the surrounding territory
to Montreal, one of the country's
largest sheep and lamb market-
ing centres, were grading "cull".
This was an economic loss not
easily overlooked.
Y. 41 3
As the first step in initiating a
program to reduce the large
number of culls, J. W. Grallfin,
of the Livestock and Poultry"
Division, Canada Department of
.Agriculture, went to Scotland in -
1949 and purchased a small num-
ber Of sheep for use in cross-
breeding, This was followed by
a joint program with the Quebec
Department o f Agriculture.
Since then, increased interest
has been shown in both that pro-
gram and the industry generally.
e 0
For example, a high level of
performance was revealed by the
recent annual inspection of the
North County Cheviot sheep
flock at Normandin, P.Q. This
flock, owned by the Canada De-
partment of Agriculture, is used
to multiply breeding stock for
the Quebec cross -breeding pro-
gram. Ram lambs used last fall
for project testing had not only
developed into excellent shear-
lirigs,but had also indicated
their •worth as sires. A similar
program is being followed with
top performers for the current
breeding season. Selections of
ewe stock were made for the
breeding flock, which now con-
tains 87 females, with the objec-
tive of 100 head to be attained
next year.
Satisfactory progress with the
use of cross bred ewes for im-
proved market lamb production
is reported from the many dis-
tricts In the province where the
program is developing. Several
selections of rams were made for
breeders outside of Quebec and
the balance of the current year's
ram crop will be sold to the.
Quebec Department of Agricul
titre to augment the program,
' e 4.
Increased interest in sheep in
Saskatchewan, is indicated by
inquiries from farmers wishing
to buy ewes. The first 4-H sheep
club in Saskatchewan, consist-
ing of 18 members, was recently
formed. Each member will re-
ceive 10 range ewes. The Cana-
dian Co-operative Wool Growers
are financing purchase of the
sheep, and rams will be loaned
by the Department through the
Sire Loan Policy.
In the Bluffton and Rimbey
districts of Alberta, a new ram
club has been organized. This is
a marginal farming area and
sheep production is important to
the economy of the area. About
20 farmers have sheep flocks and
deposits were received for eight
rams of the North Country
Cheviot and Corriesdale breeds
for use in crossing with the ewe
Rocks, which are predominant-
ly Suffolk. These farmers had
been convinced, at a meeting
held earlier, of the value of
cross -breeding in market lamb
and wool production.
41 e
Members of a ram club or-
ganized in Sangudo, Alberta, in
1955 were pleased with cross-
breeding results. Corriesdale and
North County Cheviot rams
were used on grade and pure-
bred Suffolk ewes. Most of the
lambs from this cross went to
market at four and one-half
months, weighing an average al
95 pounds. Some members of the
club are now exchanging their
rams among themselves or with
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
S
3
S
d
0
farmers in the surrounding dis-
trict.
* 4 M,
The "broiler -fowl" competitive
price relationship has tended to
focus attention on the wider use
of the Leghorn breed for egg pro-
duction in the Maritime Provin-
ces. Comparative egg -production
performance tests conducted by
the Kentville N.S., Experimen-
tal Perm, have shown some
strains of Leghorns to be clef -
finitely superior in egg -produc-
tion. These superior Leghorn
stocks are not pure strains but
are crosses of one kind or an-
other, which have been develop-
ed by crossing specially bred
pure strains, These special beed-
ing methods for the production
of commercial stock are being
conducted by relatively few
breeders, all of whom are work-
ing with large 'poultry popula-
tions,
In the test work at Kentville
unculled flocks of these superior
Leghorn stocks gave perform-
ance records of 240 eggs per hen
housed, in 350 days, with a feed
efficiency of 4.5 pounds of feed
per dozen eggs laid and laying
house mortality in the vicinity
of 5 per cent. Admittedly these
birds were kept under good
housing and management con-
ditions; nevertheless these rec-
ords should be attainable under
commercial production condi-
tions.
n r
Some of the other advantages
of Leghorns are that they re-
quire less floor space per bird
than birds of the heavy breeds
and their white shelled eggs may
be more adaptable to "electronic
egg candling" if this system of
candling is adopted by the in-
dustry in the future. But it
should also be recognized that the
meat salvage value of the Leg-
horn is generally lower than
that of the heavy birds (current-
ly amounting to about 50 cents
per bird. in the Kentville area),
and small egg size can be a prob-
lem with some Leghorn stocks,
particularly when the price dif-
ferential between Large and Me-
dium eggs becomes as wide as it
was this past summer. Leghorn
chicks also appear to be more
sensitive to adverse brooding
temperatures than birds of the
heavy breeds and more atten-
tion must be given to this detail
of management,
a 4' a
Intensive breeding ttechniques
are being used on some large
populations of the heavy breeds
as well, but, in most instances
the emphasis is on the develop-
ment of stock for the production
of broiler chicks. As in egg pro-
duction stock, the commercial
broiler stock is also usually the
progeny of crossbred parents.
of crossbred parents.
It would seem that heavy and
UNDAYSCIIOOI
LESSON
By, Rev. R. Barclay Warren
'B.A., B.D.
Living With Christian Joy
Philippians 4:1-13
Memory Selection: My God
shall supply all your need ac-
cording to his riches in glory by
Christ Jesus, Philippians 4:19.
I said to a doctor friend as we
drove to the hospital, 'I presume
many of your patients are psy-
chosomatic." His reply was,
"About 90%." Perhaps his estim-
ate was high: At any rate, many
of the illnesses today, - real and
imagined, - are emotionally in-
duced. People become sick be-
cause they are unhappy and they
remain unhappy because they
are sick. But the origin of their
illness is in the mind rather than
in the body. Their stress tolex-
ance is low. Small frustrations
upset them.
Our lesson is one of the finest
Scripture portions to read when
life seems to be getting too much
for. you. Remember that Paul is
chained to a Roman guard as he
writes from prison. He calls for
the workers to cooperate, Failure
to do this is one of the main
causes of mental uneasiness.
Then he calls for rejoicing in all
circumstances and for sweet
reasonableness. To say to people,
'Don't worry," only aggravates
unless you say or ado something
further. Paul urges prayer with
thanksgiving. The result is God's
peace keeping heart and mind.
We must carefully guard our
thinking, We should concentrate
on the things that are true, hon-
est, just, pure, lovely and of good
report. That will free us from
the sordid and obscene that is
featured in many magazines and
on the radio and TV.
We need to learn contentment.
it takes constant learning but
Paul was enjoying this state of
restfulness even in prison.
But how can we achieve this
happy tranquil state. The answer
is, `I can do all things through
Christ who strengtheneth me.
We need Jesus Christ. We need
Him to redeem us from our guilt
and our sin. We need Him t0
Cleanse us from impurity of
heart. We need His strength mo-
ment by moment. He will give us
His joy and we can live happily
in the midst of a troubled world,
Jesus Christ is the answer to Our
need,
light poultry stocks are each be-
coming more specialized, with
the heavy breeds being develop-
ed mainly for meat production
and the Leghorns for commercial
egg production.
WHO IS i'HE FAIRER? -Ancient art provides o nice contrast to
the beauty of Olga Orozco, who pauses in native costume by
a relic of pre -Spanish culture in Medellin, Colombia. One of
many in the country, the statue was erected long before the
Conquistadors as a memorial to a tribal chieftain of the Andes.
x
SMILE FOR THE CAMERA -This 21 foot reiiculated python must be comers, shy because se,vem
men are needed to make it pose during a science television show. The .big reptile held the
spotlight as "Animal of the Month" on the program.