HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1955-12-01, Page 3About 2,000 horizontal silos
were in use in Canada at the
beginning of 1955 according to
a preliminary survey conducted
by the Field Husbandry Divi-
sion, Department of Agricul-
ture, Ottawa. The majority of
these `silos were in the provin-
ces of Quebec, Ontario, Manito-
ba and .British Columbia. Most
of them were • of the ground
surface type, requiring no ex-
savatioo, Experimental work on
this method of ensiling crops,
particularly for grass and le-
gume silage, was started at the
Central Experimental Farm in
1951. Results of this work have
been sufficiently encouraging
to secure growing adoption by
farmers of the horizontal silo.
s e •
Beef calves with only an open
shed as protection from the
wind appear to make as rapid
and economical gains as ani-
mals wintered inside a barn,
L, A. Charetter_ of the Ex-
perimental Farm, Kapuskasing,
reports that twenty shorthorn
steers were placed on test in
the fall at an average age of
seven months and continued on
test for 196 days, At the end
of this period they were put on
pasture. One group of steers
was wintered inside a dairy
barn while another group was
placed in a shed where the
doors remained open all winter.
The animals in the shed had
access to outside paddocks at
all times.
* 0 0
During these trials the steers
in the open shelter made an
average total gain of 174 pounds
compared to 191 pounds for the
steers wintered inside the barn.
• * *
Th calves wintered outside
consumed a daily average of 5
pounds of hay, 18.7 pounds of
grass silage and 1.4 pounds of
grain while the calves inside
the barn consumed 5.5 pounds
of hay, 18.8 pounds of silage,
and 1.4 pounds of grain.
O * e
Since the steers were watered
and fed inside the shed, this
limited the number of hours
they would spend outside. The
OUCH! -- Just looking at Julia
as she and her partner rehearse
-their act in London can make
/our bones ache. But Darvas'
snd Julia, specialty dancers,
lave trained for this sort of
sf thing, which is why they op -
Seared before Queen Elizabeth
n the Royal Variety Perform -
Ince at Victoria Palace Theatre.
daily average of hours spent
outside was 2.3 hours. It was
observed that animals would go
outside even on cold days, how-
ever during stormy weather
they looked for shelter else-
where. During the trial tempera-
tures dropped as low as 25 de-
grees below zero.
O , 4 P.
The question as to whether or
not beef calves can be wintered
with a .limited amount of shelter
without seriously affecting their
growth and increasing their
feed requirements has been dis-
cussed by cattlemen and .agri-
culturists for years. The trials
at Kapuskasing and other re-
search centres across Canada
are supplying valuable informa-
tion on the subject.
* rr r
Artificial Lights to maintain
egg production during the
shorter clays of the winter
months, will make a laying
flock., more profitable. however,
the effectiveness of lights will
depend on their proper use, re-
port poultry officials at the
Brandon Experimental Farm.
Lighting should commence in
time to maintain a 12 -hour day
once daylight alone is inade-
quate. This is sufficient while
production is on the increase
but should be stepped up to a
minimum of 13 hours, when
production levels off.
* *
Once started, the lighting
schedule must be regular. An
abrupt reduction in either
length of time or strength of
light may cause egg production
to stop. A time switch is con-
sidered essential to insure
against forgetfulness. When
lights are started in fall, there
is nothing to be gained by do-
ing this gradually. However,
when they are discontinued a
gradual 15 minutes per week
reduction is recommended.
a e s
Laying houses should have
one 40 -watt bulb for each 200
square feet of floor space. When
all-night lights are used, this
intensity may be reduced to
one-third.
f r •
The location of the lights will
depend on the type and width
of the house. In houses not more
than 24 feet wide, the lights
should be placed in a single row
at intervals not exceeding 10
feet, midway between the roost-
ing quarters and the front el
the house. In wider houses a
double row of lights is neces-
sary. The lights should be sus-
pended about 6 feet from the
floor. The greatest light inten-
sity should fall on the water
fountains and feeders, with a
lesser amount on the roosting
quarters to induce the hens to
leave them.
Aside from convenience there
'apparently is little difference in
the various methods of supply-
ing light. If morning light is
provided, feed and water must
be available at the time the
lights come on. When the birds
are receiving light and feed in
the evening, it s necessary to
have a dimming device to in-
duce them to return to the
roosts,
NEEDED FIXING
Bang in the middle of her first
driving lesson Mrs. Williams
complained to. her husband:
"Albert, that little mirror up
there isn't set right,"
"What's wrong with it?"
"Well, all I can see in it is
the car behind"
CROSSWORD
FUZZLi
Amoss only :‘,1
1, Of An nr1e.
2 Ern Ivy
;.
Credited
f h areelted •
5. "Uncle • -
8. n 'tells
1,rt tones-
5. Pouch
8. Nortergllul
name
t2 Cnntpositlon
tor two
10 Bother
14 Sarrnitions
19 Small island
16 Saltie of
10 Principal
29 I wn-pniotcd
12,11,0
82 (1,0011
01'01'1110C
24 throe
24 Remitting
wail
07 hrr
80. imitated
81 llrngnay
tab,)
82 Prat -animal
20 Among
40. Pleasing•'
20 (urge 011
87 Hollow
d8 Inn rney'a
42 P,esnirntorl
n11,1d8
45. nweller
44 Masotiiae
- nickname
48 i reehold
right (var.)
49. I urmerle
80 DItitian tive
ending
10, ASteruooa
navels*
62. Scltelt
fib Sislna
7. TC opt up - 28 Poorly
8,. Steal (slang, ell. ti,irn
9 Stringed 1)2. Contrived.
Instrument 84 010
10. Slave 28 Always
11, li,ea1lune) 1e"ni r).
17. Sour 28 .0 ),hues
10 Proper 28 .Ina
23. Those 1010 1 9 Interpret
Import (1l'eh.)
illegally 40. tin 1110 ocean
25 Scale sheep 1. [dirge knife
25 Noun 21 081100
& 11,n ntler ,her.)
27 "tent rads of 4 witnesses
mind 41. Shire lea, hoe
Answer elsewhere on ties po e,
"MOUTH -PAINTED BY MERLE" Two years ago, Merle Chisholm, pretty, 28 -year-old wife and
mother, was a commercial artist. Today she is polio -paralyzed- from the neck down. But she
has wasted no time in self-pity. She set about to learn to draw and paint again with a pencil
or brush clenched in her teeth. She won that ba the and has built a new artistic career with a
collection of exclusive "mouth -painted -by -Merle" Christmas cards and personal note paper. Her
husband, Robert, is also an artist, Here their four-year-old son, Gary, watches in fascination as
his mother draws a picture.
IKANGAF
OS LED TO URANIUM
FORTUNE
Uranium fever now grips
Australia. Not so long ago,
mining experts rejected this
radio -active ore as dross. Now,
as the raw material of atomic
fission, it is more coveted than
gold and, when stockpiled, im-
measurably more useful -and
dangerous.
Uranium is bound shortly to
revolutionize the world, wheth-
er used for power generation,
transport or defence. Sources
fit for mining are far scattered.
Canada struck one of the rich-
est fields beside the Great Bear
Lake, but lying within the Arc-
tic Circle, 800 miles north by
air of the nearest railhead, its
inaccessibility impedes rapid
developmen t.
The Belgian Congo's mines
are more advantageously plac-
ed. Apart from that, small but
valuable ore beds of high radio-
active yields have been lo-
cated in the United Stelae and
Africa.
Yet now, with Australia's en-
try into the production field;
the picture of uranium distri-
bution changes. For no one can
accuse the Western democracies
of irresponsible optimism in
suspecting that "down under"
contains the earth's richest
strata of this coveted ore.
And, as in so many remark-
able enterprises, it was left to
a single individual, a man of
very ordinary attainments, to
set Australia's atomic prosper-
ity moving. Jack White, a
brawny prospector of the pick
and pan school, has spent a life-
time amid the Northern Terri-
tory's alternately sun - beaten
and rain-ch'enched wastes.
Always he lived rough. Some-
times he fossicked for gold,
keeping himself alive on kan-
garoo meat, and sometimes he
farmed until white ants devour-
ed his buildings and pests de-
spoiled his crops.
Then one day in 1949, driving
his ramshackle jeep, he set out
from Darwin to hunt kangaroos
in Rum Jungle, a waste land of
green mangoes, broken bilis,
gum -tree scrub and crumbling,
ant -eaten R.A.A.F.-hut encamp-
ments.
The 'roes were scarce, But
while searching for them. White
chanced to stumble on some
green and canary -yellow lumps
of rock lying on the site of
some long abandoned' canner
and lin workings. Uranium ore
oxidizes a bright yellow when
exposed to the atmosphere.
That he knew. And he knew
ton that the colours of the rocks
at his feet fitted in with des --
captions of the new ore he had
read in a Bureau of Mines pam-
phlet. - Putting down his gun
and fetching a sack from his
jeep, he filled it with rock
lumps, then flung it cavelossly
on the jeeps floor.
Back at his shack. Jack post-
, ed off his sample, to the Min-
ing Bureau's offices at Alice
Springs, 900 miles distant He
didn't hope for much. "After
twenty years in the scrub he
afterwards 0emerlced "one gets
tired of looking for new things,
I just picked 'em up. not parti-
cular like."
But when the expert at Alice
Springs ran his detector over
these samples it vibrated as if
smitten with hysterics. Soon, a
swarm of scientists descended
on Run? Jungle, probing it with -
their geiger counters. s. Then, in
conditions of secrecy, experi-
mental shafts wore sums. Dia-
mond drillings disclosed how
('701"nc!1)' was I:ll^ field....
,Sark White, lifted out of ob-
scurity, blinked irritably on dis-
covering himself to be a cele-
brity, a national hero. Grizzled
and slow -speaking, he never-
theless pocketed the Govern-
ment's maximum reward for his
find, a cheque for $75,000. Yet
when invited to join disting-
uished guests at Rwn Jungle's
opening ceremony, in Septem-
ber, 1954, Jack White stayed
away.
At the very moment that the
Australian Prime Minister, Mr.
R. G. Menzies, pressed the
switch, setting in motion one of
the world's greatest and most
costly uranium oxide extraction
plants, Jack was enjoying a
quiet drink in the bar of the
Adelaide River Hotel, Darwin:
Despite his fortune, he dwells
still in a simple galvanized iron
cottage. He is without running
water, electricity, or any of civ-
lization's domestic amenities.
When atomic power opens up
this corner of Australia he'll
probably be the last to use it!
But he .has equipped himself
with a new jeep. And, when re-
porters pressed him to disclose
his new ambitions, all they got
out of him was, "What I want
is to be left alone by you guys,
and grow peanuts." So the
mighty atom has transformed
him from a casual propector in-
to a full-time •peamlt farmer.
Now, at Batchelor, the old
R.A.A.F. township in Rum Jun-
gle, a new town on stilts has
arisen. All the new buildings,
shops, messes and primary
schools stand on stilts. They
are also. "louvred," or heavily
shuttered, so that internal air
temperatures can be easily con-
trolled.
The spot has the -great ad-
vantage of being only sixty miles
from a port and of lying on the
main highway from Darwin to
Alice Springs. Australia has
started off her premier produc-
tion plant with tremendous phys-
ical factors in her favour,
Formerly, in this wild terri-
tory, many adventurers and
tough breeds lived off the coun-
try. Provided they could shoot,
they need never fear starvation.
And with a little prospecting
knowledge they sometimes stum-
bled across gold, copper, tin,
wolfram and other useful min-
erals.
Now, since Jack White's ter-
rific luck, these wiry old pros-
pectors have a new look and
new tools. Instead of the fa-
miliar gold washing pan and
sluice -box, the more go-ahead
• have equipped themselves with
four -wheeled trucks, g e i g e r
counters (these alone cost about
$300). ultra -violet lamps and
modern camping equipment.
But keen eyes, patience and
energy are still the prospector's
stock -in -trade. Uranium oxide
docs not cause geiger reactions
JML1.1J J0\LLI1.4
'Six cents postage due, 1' imow
Who it's from and it's not worth
that:"
if embedded below a foot of
rock or three feet of soil, So
many a man may walk over
riches, as thousands of Austra-
lian war -time airmen did around
Batchelor in the war years.
Lately the Federal Govern-
ment carried out an aerial sur-
vey of 4,000 square miles of this
territory for radioactive mineral
deposits. Twelve areas were
found worthy of ground pros-
pecting, mostly in the Rum Jun-
gle vicinity. And in these areas
the surveying aircraft's atom
detector, or scinntillometer, made
900 strikes.
The Government still offers
substantial rewards for fresh
uranium ore discoveries. Where
a commercially exploitable lode
is found, the full $75,000 will
be paid. Spurred by such induce-
ments, Sam Macumher, a. 59 -
year -old brewery worker, and
his younger brother Bill, a rail-
way gate -keeper, spent last win-
ter's evenings studying the symp-
toms of uranium -bearing rocks.
Then recently, acting on a
hunch, the two began a search
at Mount Kangaroo, near Ingle-
wood, a small township some
thirty miles from the famous old
gold -mining town of Bendigo.
They took out a mining licence.
?respecters are also attacking
Mount Isa in Western Queens-
land in a spirit as lively as any
shown during the Klondike gold
rushes. Here one group of eight
men, headed by taxi driver Cle-
ment Walton, hit on a hillock,
200 feet wide by 400 feet across,
which they now call Mount
Atom. It appears to be solid with
radioactive ore.
The Australian Oil Exploita-
tion Company has bought out
their claim for $750,000. But,
wisely, the lucky eight have
contracted to receive a share in
the mine's gross profits as well.
The excitement of sudden
riches proved nearly fatal for.,
taximan Walton. He collapsed
after a severe heart attack. But
'fortunately he pulled around.
Now, regaining his strength in
a first-class convalescent home
in Adelaide, he's smiling afresh.
He sees happy days ahead in
which to enjoy his astounding
uranium luck.
The artificial flowers and
feathers industry has grown
from four firms with a gross
production value of $117,6'71
LESS
1:. Barclay Warren. B.A., I051l5.
Meaning of Discipleship
Luke 9:23-36
Memory Selection: If any nasal
will come after me, let him
deny himself, and take nip
Itis cross daily, and follow
me. Luke 9:23.
Jesus Christ did not gain hiss
followers by making rosy pro-
mises. It was a call to self -denied
and cross -bearing, "For whose -
will save his life shall lost j,41d,
but whosoever will lose his life
for my sake, the same shall find
it." So the self must die if we
are to follow Christ
There is something very beau-
tiful about the crucified life.
Pride is absent and Christ bo
seen. The desire is to lose ones
life for Christ's salve, Dr, Albert
Schweitzer is a modern examples.
Now in his eighties this great
philosopher, theologian and mu-
sician is not resting on .Ma
laurels but is ministering to the
needy in his leper colony Sul
Africa. There is so much sole -
seeking today. It is refreshing to
meet and hear those who have
said 'NO' to self and are bearing
the cross for Jesus,
It isn't by chance that Luke
follows these words on disciple-
ship by an account,of the trans-
figuration which took place eight
days later. It was a heavenly
experience to see -something o2
Christ's glory. Moses and Mae
talked with Jesus of his decease
but it was in a heavenly atmos-
phere.
The cross is always lightened
when we think of the coming
glory. First the cross, -then the
crown, That is why Christians
are willing to suffer for their
faith. A native teacher in Kenya
was called out of his house by'
Mau Mau adherents who profes-
sed to be police, They said that
if he did not take the Mau Masi
Oath they would kill him. fie
replied: "Everyone must choose
which world he wants, You have
chosen this world, but I haves
chosen the world of Jesus and
his kingdom. Come and kill ma
if you will, and I shall go to
him." Thereupon he was shot
and went to be with his Lord.
"If we suffer, we shall at*
reign with him." 2 Timothy 2:12.
ODD WAY OF
GETTING EVEN
4
'1
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
Many, many years ago there
existed a feud between the
1
people of Little Basle and those
of Basle, in Switzerland. Sepa-
rating the two quarrelling
towns was the Rhine River,
spanned by a bridge.
The people of Basle hit upots
an idea for displaying their con-
tempt in a manner easily un-
derstood. On the bridge, facing
their rivals, they erected a huge,
ugly stone statue. To the hide-
ous face of the statue was fitted
an automatic device whlcta
every fifteen minutes canoed
the figure to stick its long
tongue out at Little Basle.
Upsidedown to Prevent Peek tie
LOOK AT THE BIRDIE - Not exactly a dirty bird, but kind elf
earthy, is this potato sculptured by mature to look like a bird. lit
was found by Jesse Bedwell, above, while digging potatoes on
his grandmother's farm, The only thing Bedwell, 25, added he
complete the similarity was the paper wings.
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Answer elsewhere on ties po e,
"MOUTH -PAINTED BY MERLE" Two years ago, Merle Chisholm, pretty, 28 -year-old wife and
mother, was a commercial artist. Today she is polio -paralyzed- from the neck down. But she
has wasted no time in self-pity. She set about to learn to draw and paint again with a pencil
or brush clenched in her teeth. She won that ba the and has built a new artistic career with a
collection of exclusive "mouth -painted -by -Merle" Christmas cards and personal note paper. Her
husband, Robert, is also an artist, Here their four-year-old son, Gary, watches in fascination as
his mother draws a picture.
IKANGAF
OS LED TO URANIUM
FORTUNE
Uranium fever now grips
Australia. Not so long ago,
mining experts rejected this
radio -active ore as dross. Now,
as the raw material of atomic
fission, it is more coveted than
gold and, when stockpiled, im-
measurably more useful -and
dangerous.
Uranium is bound shortly to
revolutionize the world, wheth-
er used for power generation,
transport or defence. Sources
fit for mining are far scattered.
Canada struck one of the rich-
est fields beside the Great Bear
Lake, but lying within the Arc-
tic Circle, 800 miles north by
air of the nearest railhead, its
inaccessibility impedes rapid
developmen t.
The Belgian Congo's mines
are more advantageously plac-
ed. Apart from that, small but
valuable ore beds of high radio-
active yields have been lo-
cated in the United Stelae and
Africa.
Yet now, with Australia's en-
try into the production field;
the picture of uranium distri-
bution changes. For no one can
accuse the Western democracies
of irresponsible optimism in
suspecting that "down under"
contains the earth's richest
strata of this coveted ore.
And, as in so many remark-
able enterprises, it was left to
a single individual, a man of
very ordinary attainments, to
set Australia's atomic prosper-
ity moving. Jack White, a
brawny prospector of the pick
and pan school, has spent a life-
time amid the Northern Terri-
tory's alternately sun - beaten
and rain-ch'enched wastes.
Always he lived rough. Some-
times he fossicked for gold,
keeping himself alive on kan-
garoo meat, and sometimes he
farmed until white ants devour-
ed his buildings and pests de-
spoiled his crops.
Then one day in 1949, driving
his ramshackle jeep, he set out
from Darwin to hunt kangaroos
in Rum Jungle, a waste land of
green mangoes, broken bilis,
gum -tree scrub and crumbling,
ant -eaten R.A.A.F.-hut encamp-
ments.
The 'roes were scarce, But
while searching for them. White
chanced to stumble on some
green and canary -yellow lumps
of rock lying on the site of
some long abandoned' canner
and lin workings. Uranium ore
oxidizes a bright yellow when
exposed to the atmosphere.
That he knew. And he knew
ton that the colours of the rocks
at his feet fitted in with des --
captions of the new ore he had
read in a Bureau of Mines pam-
phlet. - Putting down his gun
and fetching a sack from his
jeep, he filled it with rock
lumps, then flung it cavelossly
on the jeeps floor.
Back at his shack. Jack post-
, ed off his sample, to the Min-
ing Bureau's offices at Alice
Springs, 900 miles distant He
didn't hope for much. "After
twenty years in the scrub he
afterwards 0emerlced "one gets
tired of looking for new things,
I just picked 'em up. not parti-
cular like."
But when the expert at Alice
Springs ran his detector over
these samples it vibrated as if
smitten with hysterics. Soon, a
swarm of scientists descended
on Run? Jungle, probing it with -
their geiger counters. s. Then, in
conditions of secrecy, experi-
mental shafts wore sums. Dia-
mond drillings disclosed how
('701"nc!1)' was I:ll^ field....
,Sark White, lifted out of ob-
scurity, blinked irritably on dis-
covering himself to be a cele-
brity, a national hero. Grizzled
and slow -speaking, he never-
theless pocketed the Govern-
ment's maximum reward for his
find, a cheque for $75,000. Yet
when invited to join disting-
uished guests at Rwn Jungle's
opening ceremony, in Septem-
ber, 1954, Jack White stayed
away.
At the very moment that the
Australian Prime Minister, Mr.
R. G. Menzies, pressed the
switch, setting in motion one of
the world's greatest and most
costly uranium oxide extraction
plants, Jack was enjoying a
quiet drink in the bar of the
Adelaide River Hotel, Darwin:
Despite his fortune, he dwells
still in a simple galvanized iron
cottage. He is without running
water, electricity, or any of civ-
lization's domestic amenities.
When atomic power opens up
this corner of Australia he'll
probably be the last to use it!
But he .has equipped himself
with a new jeep. And, when re-
porters pressed him to disclose
his new ambitions, all they got
out of him was, "What I want
is to be left alone by you guys,
and grow peanuts." So the
mighty atom has transformed
him from a casual propector in-
to a full-time •peamlt farmer.
Now, at Batchelor, the old
R.A.A.F. township in Rum Jun-
gle, a new town on stilts has
arisen. All the new buildings,
shops, messes and primary
schools stand on stilts. They
are also. "louvred," or heavily
shuttered, so that internal air
temperatures can be easily con-
trolled.
The spot has the -great ad-
vantage of being only sixty miles
from a port and of lying on the
main highway from Darwin to
Alice Springs. Australia has
started off her premier produc-
tion plant with tremendous phys-
ical factors in her favour,
Formerly, in this wild terri-
tory, many adventurers and
tough breeds lived off the coun-
try. Provided they could shoot,
they need never fear starvation.
And with a little prospecting
knowledge they sometimes stum-
bled across gold, copper, tin,
wolfram and other useful min-
erals.
Now, since Jack White's ter-
rific luck, these wiry old pros-
pectors have a new look and
new tools. Instead of the fa-
miliar gold washing pan and
sluice -box, the more go-ahead
• have equipped themselves with
four -wheeled trucks, g e i g e r
counters (these alone cost about
$300). ultra -violet lamps and
modern camping equipment.
But keen eyes, patience and
energy are still the prospector's
stock -in -trade. Uranium oxide
docs not cause geiger reactions
JML1.1J J0\LLI1.4
'Six cents postage due, 1' imow
Who it's from and it's not worth
that:"
if embedded below a foot of
rock or three feet of soil, So
many a man may walk over
riches, as thousands of Austra-
lian war -time airmen did around
Batchelor in the war years.
Lately the Federal Govern-
ment carried out an aerial sur-
vey of 4,000 square miles of this
territory for radioactive mineral
deposits. Twelve areas were
found worthy of ground pros-
pecting, mostly in the Rum Jun-
gle vicinity. And in these areas
the surveying aircraft's atom
detector, or scinntillometer, made
900 strikes.
The Government still offers
substantial rewards for fresh
uranium ore discoveries. Where
a commercially exploitable lode
is found, the full $75,000 will
be paid. Spurred by such induce-
ments, Sam Macumher, a. 59 -
year -old brewery worker, and
his younger brother Bill, a rail-
way gate -keeper, spent last win-
ter's evenings studying the symp-
toms of uranium -bearing rocks.
Then recently, acting on a
hunch, the two began a search
at Mount Kangaroo, near Ingle-
wood, a small township some
thirty miles from the famous old
gold -mining town of Bendigo.
They took out a mining licence.
?respecters are also attacking
Mount Isa in Western Queens-
land in a spirit as lively as any
shown during the Klondike gold
rushes. Here one group of eight
men, headed by taxi driver Cle-
ment Walton, hit on a hillock,
200 feet wide by 400 feet across,
which they now call Mount
Atom. It appears to be solid with
radioactive ore.
The Australian Oil Exploita-
tion Company has bought out
their claim for $750,000. But,
wisely, the lucky eight have
contracted to receive a share in
the mine's gross profits as well.
The excitement of sudden
riches proved nearly fatal for.,
taximan Walton. He collapsed
after a severe heart attack. But
'fortunately he pulled around.
Now, regaining his strength in
a first-class convalescent home
in Adelaide, he's smiling afresh.
He sees happy days ahead in
which to enjoy his astounding
uranium luck.
The artificial flowers and
feathers industry has grown
from four firms with a gross
production value of $117,6'71
LESS
1:. Barclay Warren. B.A., I051l5.
Meaning of Discipleship
Luke 9:23-36
Memory Selection: If any nasal
will come after me, let him
deny himself, and take nip
Itis cross daily, and follow
me. Luke 9:23.
Jesus Christ did not gain hiss
followers by making rosy pro-
mises. It was a call to self -denied
and cross -bearing, "For whose -
will save his life shall lost j,41d,
but whosoever will lose his life
for my sake, the same shall find
it." So the self must die if we
are to follow Christ
There is something very beau-
tiful about the crucified life.
Pride is absent and Christ bo
seen. The desire is to lose ones
life for Christ's salve, Dr, Albert
Schweitzer is a modern examples.
Now in his eighties this great
philosopher, theologian and mu-
sician is not resting on .Ma
laurels but is ministering to the
needy in his leper colony Sul
Africa. There is so much sole -
seeking today. It is refreshing to
meet and hear those who have
said 'NO' to self and are bearing
the cross for Jesus,
It isn't by chance that Luke
follows these words on disciple-
ship by an account,of the trans-
figuration which took place eight
days later. It was a heavenly
experience to see -something o2
Christ's glory. Moses and Mae
talked with Jesus of his decease
but it was in a heavenly atmos-
phere.
The cross is always lightened
when we think of the coming
glory. First the cross, -then the
crown, That is why Christians
are willing to suffer for their
faith. A native teacher in Kenya
was called out of his house by'
Mau Mau adherents who profes-
sed to be police, They said that
if he did not take the Mau Masi
Oath they would kill him. fie
replied: "Everyone must choose
which world he wants, You have
chosen this world, but I haves
chosen the world of Jesus and
his kingdom. Come and kill ma
if you will, and I shall go to
him." Thereupon he was shot
and went to be with his Lord.
"If we suffer, we shall at*
reign with him." 2 Timothy 2:12.
ODD WAY OF
GETTING EVEN
4
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4
1
1
1
1
1
1
Many, many years ago there
existed a feud between the
1
people of Little Basle and those
of Basle, in Switzerland. Sepa-
rating the two quarrelling
towns was the Rhine River,
spanned by a bridge.
The people of Basle hit upots
an idea for displaying their con-
tempt in a manner easily un-
derstood. On the bridge, facing
their rivals, they erected a huge,
ugly stone statue. To the hide-
ous face of the statue was fitted
an automatic device whlcta
every fifteen minutes canoed
the figure to stick its long
tongue out at Little Basle.
Upsidedown to Prevent Peek tie
LOOK AT THE BIRDIE - Not exactly a dirty bird, but kind elf
earthy, is this potato sculptured by mature to look like a bird. lit
was found by Jesse Bedwell, above, while digging potatoes on
his grandmother's farm, The only thing Bedwell, 25, added he
complete the similarity was the paper wings.
r