The Seaforth News, 1956-01-19, Page 3TI1HMM FRONT
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The following article, taken
from "American Farm Youth'(
tells how one poultryman gets
premium prices for his eggs;
and ,1 , thought , it interesting
enough to pass on to you, In-
cidentally, where it speaks of
selling eggs at "auctions" it just
means "wholesalers.'
0 * 4
Through careful control of his
feed and hens to produce, large,
high quality eggs the year
around, one New Jersey egg
raiser is selling 30,000 dozen
eggs a year at a 50 per cent
Increase in profits on a retail
route.
The raiser, Abe Berkowitz of
Lambertville, N. J., 'follows a
closely controlled, all - mash
feeding program and a plan of
careful management of hen ro-
tation, In addition to supplying
his retail route in New York
City, Berkowitz' 5,000 hens pro-
duce 45,000 dozen eggs a year
for the auction at Flemington,
N.J.
Berkowitz reports that sales
on his retail route in upper
Manhattan and the Bronx,
worked two days a week, aver-
age 580 dozen eggs a week; 290
dozen a day; 29 dozen an bour;•
a dozen every two minutes.
Such a schedule gives little
time for sales talk or displaying
the quality of the product. The
customers, who have been sold
on the Berkowitz egg by the
recommendations of friends who.
use them, will stay sold only
if the eggs hold the sane top
quality week in and week out,
p, * 11
To the Berkowitz customer
the perfect egg is white, light -
yolked and of large, extra or
jumbo size, For this egg, the
Berkowitz customer will pay
from 20 to •30 cents per dozen
more than auction prices.
Against a typical run of auc-
tion prices per dozen — me-
diums, 380; large, 400; extra
large, 423h0; and jumbos, 490
— equivalent route prices per
dozen are; 586, 600, 671/44, and
790 respectively.
The minimum premium of
204 per dozen on mediums and
large is 50 per cent better than
auction prices. The 254 and 300
premiums on extra large and
jumbo are 60 per cent better.
* 4: 4•
The quality egg that attracts
the premium customer does not
occur by accident, Berkowitz
says. Producing it requires
careful feed control and a close
schedule of flock rotation.
Berkowitz feeds his white
leghorns on an all -mash pro-
gram. He uses no scratch. The
mash formula is delivered in
bulk by 12 -ton trucks that
pump the feed into Berkowitz's
three bins.
The mash formula is so bal-
MERRY MENAGERIE
-Now, THIS is. what I call a
FANCILY tree:"
F�.
anced that the vitamin A con-
tent is high enough to counter-
act the xanthophyll in the cern
the mash contains. This is es-
sential to the productions of
light -yolked eggs.
Berkowitz also believes . that
full A potency reduces the num-
ber of eggs with blood spots
Both the A anti D vitamins in
the mash must be delivered to
the birds at full potency to
maintained their health and
appetite, Without these two es-
sential nutrients egg size, qual-
ity and production become ir-
regular, and Berkowitz cannot
obtain the' premium eggs he
needs for his route.
e * *
The bulk delivery -bin storage
method of feed -handling re-
lieves Berkowitz of most of the
labor he would have if he used
bagged feed and leaves him free
to manage his flock and his
route.
But bin storage of the mash
creates heat conditions that are
detrimental to most vitamin
supplements.
Sun on bins generates tem-
peratures as high as 125 de-
grees Fahrenheit and destroys
the potency of vitamin A and
D unless proper forms of these
vitamins are present.
To assure Berkowitz and
other customers who store feed
in bins that their mash will
retain full potencies of vitamins
A and D, the cooperative forti-
fies its mash with the Micra-
tized vitamins A and D.
The cooperative had a com-
mercial laboratory test Micra-
tized A and D against a variety
of other vitamin supplements
and found the Micratized vita-
mins were the only ones that
would retain full potency in the
severe heat conditions of bin
storage.
'5 * *
Berkowitz says his egg qual-
ity confirms the laboratory re-
sults on the retention of vitamin
potency in the mash the co-
operative supplies. He has less
than one per cent of dark -
yolked eggs and his incidence of
blood spots is similarly low.
With good feed to produce
high quality eggs Berkowitz
couples careful hen rotation to
achieve steady production of
large eggs. Unlike egg raisers
who sell only to auctions, Ber-
kowitz cannot replace his flock
entirely every fifteen months.
The wholesalers can take all
their hens at the same time
through the small egg period
when their laying careers begin.
With no steady requirement for
large eggs, the small egg period
amounts to a production lull for
the wholesaler and a time of
lower income, but it does not
endanger his market. ,
s 4: *
For Berkowitz a period of
small eggs would be a period
when he could not deliver the
premium eggs his route re-
quires. To avoid such lulls, he
replaces his flock gradually.
Each year he raises 4,000 new
pullets. With these pullets he
replaces 3,000 of his 5,000 hens
at the end of their fifteen month
laying career, Of the remaining
2,000, he replaces 1,000 at the.
end of eighteen months of lay-
ing and holds the final 1,000
over for a second year. The
older birds give him large eggs
while the young birds are de-
veloping
CROSSWORD
6.
7. Part of a
curve
3. Arctic. base
5. Yount; hen
10. Native metal
11. Fruit stone
10. Alternative
ACROSS 61. Conflict 20.
Male sheep
G2, Type of auto- 20, excursion
4Short
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63. SPrear1 loosely 22. Phrygian
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tom) -2. went at easy 'tier
13. (lush - gait 26. Con es in
14. Swiss canton 4. Inquire 27. Pleasant
15. Mattress 3 A'n't smell
filling
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20, Near
27. Man's alcit-
PUZZLE
name
22, Angry
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river
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35. Pngn,ia
37, About
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49, IOxists
50, 7lxelatllation
51. Pertaining to
milk
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57. Exist
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30. Vitas
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39. Inquiry Co,
lost goods
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44.1n good healti,.
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Answer elsewhere on this page.
BOTTLED UP - These jug -tooting high school lads have formed
a new kind of band. Bottles are their instruments. Their music
is called "watersport;' because various notes are sounded by
filling bottles to different levels with water. Trouble is, speculates
two -gallon bass Grant Miller, center, that when the music gets
real hot the water is liable to steam off and the band get out
of tune. Others in the "Blowhearts" band are, from left: Bob
show, Swen. Swensen, Dave Wright, John Hart and Brent Brock-
bank. Oh, yes, they don't really play in a jug. This is just a
trick photo.
er { oghtmare
Vine rthed corder
Mrs. Gordon Tombe came
down pale and haggard to the
parsonage breakfast table at
Little Tew, in the rural fastness
of Oxfordshire.
"I dreamed of Eric," she said.
"It was terrible. I dreamed he
was lying dead at the bottom
of a well, half -forced through a
kind of hole. And yet there was
transferred to a Paris branch
and was practically spent.
It seemed obvious that Eric
had cut loose and was buying
himself quite a time. Yet his
mother's weird recurrent dream
still persisted.
Then Mr. Tombe at last struck
a lead. A barber remembered
not only Eric but also a friend
whom he had introduced, a man
named Ernest Dyer, living at a
farmhouse oddly called The
Welcomes, at Kenley, Surrey.
RIGGED .IN ICE — With the New York City skyline in the back-
ground, a crewman of the fishing boat "Florence 8" chops off
heavy ice formed on the boat's rigging after returning from a
fishing trip. The city was suffering from a record cold wave.
a stone slab above him. It was
like — it was like murder]"
Her husband, the Rev. G. C.
Tombe, tried to reassure her.
"Your nerves are on edge," he
said. "Our boy will surely come
home .. , ,
It was then autumn. Ever
since April of that year-1922—
Eric Tombe, a handsome ex -
Army officer, had been missing
without trace.
His parents went to his Lon-
don flat and found their letters
still cluttering the hall mat, un-
opened. No doubt it was natural
in the circumstances that an
anxious mother should dream of
accidental death and even mur-
der.
But she had the hideous night-
mare again . .. and yet again.
Time stone slab in her dream
seemed to be in the grounds of
a farm, sealing a well, where
far beneath .the body of her son
lay still and quiet. With grue-
some persistence, the vision
haunted her sleep through
weeks and months.
Finally, the nightly. torment
grew so extreme that the parson
resigned his living and went to
London determined to search for
his son by every means in his
power. He made inquiries in the
shops and restaurants neigh-
bouring his son's flat. He pester- •
ed Scotland Yard, and perhaps
the C.I.D. detectives found the
old clergyman somewhat of a
nuisance.
For the police had, of course,
already made a routine ,investi-
gation and discovered that che-
ques duly signed "Eric Tombe"
had been drawn from Paris dur-
ing the summer on the young
man's .bank account. Moreover,
the sum of $3,700 had been
The old parson hurried to the
farm. Locals of whom he asked
the way gave him some queer
looks. He began to understand
the reason when he found him-
self gazing down a grass -grown,
briar -tangled drive, At the far
end the farmhouse was a ruined
shell, gutted by fire.
But local gossip at last sug-
gested a possible motive for
Eric Tombe's disappearance.
Tombe and Dyer in partnership
had run The Welcomes as a
racing table. Tombe had sup-
plied the cash and Dyer the ex-
perience. The latter, a bigbet-
ting man, had once wagered
every penny he had on a rank
outsider in the Lincolnshire and
had pocketed $45,000 when the
horse romped home at 33-1.
The money had been swiftly
dissipated in London's night-
clubs and, subsequently, the
racing stables had enjoyed no
great success. There had been
a fierce outbreak of fire and
trouble over the. resulting in-
surance claim. Indeed, the in-
surance inspector asked so many
awkward questions about the
petrol tins he found in the gut-
ted building that Dyer did not
press his claim.
Instead, Dyer and Tombe both
disappeared. Not far . from the
stables, however, was living a
woman who regarded herself as
Dyer's widow. Dyer, it seemed,
had perished in a road crash in
France and she had received a
final cheque for £60 from
Tombe winding up poor Dyer's
afairs.
The leter, signed "Eric Gord-
on Tombe," and dated July
1922, looked conspicuously nor -
mai. But the Bev. Tombe felt
instinctively that it had been
forged.
His hunch was that his son
was dead and that Dyer still
lived. Once more Mrs. Tombe
endured her terrible dream. The
fact that The Welcomes had
been a farm could no longer
be overlooked. The old parson
went to Scotland Yard, repeat-
ing the details of the dream, '
and begged them to scour the
grounds, More to humour him
than anything else a few po-
licemen were deputed to search
the place — with startling' re-
sults,
Every yard was overgrown
and dilapidated. Yet in a corner
of the paddlock thepolice found
two stone slabs covering dis-
used cesspools. Both were
pumped dry — and found emp-
The police shrugged their
shoulders. Many a dream hunch
has proved fruitless before now.
But suddenly a'young constable
gave a cry, Almost hidden be-
neath grass tufts was a third
slab. Under it was a cesspool
that had been filled with stones
and rubble.
The searchers dug with rising
excitement. It was hours before
sufficient rubble had been re-
moved to reveal a manhole
cover. Beneath it was another
hole similar to that described by
Mrs. Tombe from her dream.
And here, hunched up, head
downwards, were the remains
of the body of a man.
Hideous gunshot wounds at
the back of the head, injuries
that could not have been self-
inflicted, disclosed proof of foul
play. Though little remained of
the thing that had been Eric
Tombe, a watch -key in one of
the tattered pockets, an in-
scribed wrist -watch and gold
fillings in the upper jaw proved
identity.
The discovery was made on
September 12th, 1923, almost a
year after Mrs. Tombe first had
her dream. And evidence at the
inquest set the date of the
crime as April, 1922, six months
before the onset of the recurring
nightmare.
The verdict was one of mur-
der against Ernest Dyer. His
wife had seen him one night the
previous summer hurling large
stones down the death pit. But
where was Dyer now? Oddly
enough, he, too, was dead. Un-
erring justice, though thorough-
ly blindfold, had caught up with
him long months before.
There's a flashback in fact to
an occasion in November, 1922,
when the Scarborough police
successfully got on the track of
a confidence trickster named
James FitzSimmons, who was
wanted for questioning after
palming off a number of dis-
honoured cheques on northern
business men.
When asked to step round to
the police station, FitzSimmons
played for time. "Do you mind
if I get a few things from my
room?" he asked the inspector.
They mounted the stairs togeth-
er„ but suddenly the con man
brought a revolver from his
pocket. Before it could be pre-
vented he shot himself and
rolled over dead.
Dyer — alias FitzSimmons
must have thought that the body
of Eric Tombe had already been
discovered. In his luggage was
Tombe's passport, with Tombe's
signature and Dyer's picture,
Here, too, were blank cheques
and practice sheets of forged
signatures.
It was Dyer who diverted Eric
Tombe's funds to Paris. Dyer
killed himself on November
16th, 1922. Though the date was
never definitely pinned down,
this could have been the eve of
Mrs. Tombe's first nightmare.
Did the murderer signal his
ghastly secret from the grave?
SCHOOL
LESSON
R. Barclay Warren, B A. 6.0.
Parables on Discipleship
Luke 14:7-11, 16-24
Memory Selection: Whosoever,
exalteth himself shall be
abased; and he that humbleth
himself shall be exalted. Luke
14:11.
Iiow very practical is the
teaching of Jesus for the every-
day relationships of life, in so-
cial and business as well as in
spiritual matters! He was en-
tertained often in humble homes
and in the homes of important
people. What a delightful guest
be must have been—gracious,
courteous, sincere and friendly!
He must have been politeness
itself, but unaffected and genu-
ine.
In high social circles it is very
important that the people at the
banquet be seated according to
rank. It is embarrassing for the
person who has pushed himself
forward to . be asked to take a
lower seat. The person who is
called to a higher seat is in a
more favorable light. Sometimes
the humbleness of the act of
taking the lowly seat is more
apparent than real. Some indi-
viduals take pleasure in being
spotted, and called to the plat-
form in the presence of all
when they knew they were des-
ignated to sit on the platform,
Ministers are frequently guilty.
God knows the heart.
0
* s
None of us would think of
refusing an invitation from the
Queen, Yet many neglect the
invitation of the King of kings
to the great gospel banquet pro-
vided at so great a cost. Most
people do it quite politely. But
whether they say, "I pray thee
have me excused," or "I cannot
come," the end result is the
same. They miss the banquet.
The excuses in the parable are
trivial. No wise man would buy
land without seeing it or oxen
without testing them. No groom
would want to miss the oppor-
tunity of 'showing off his bride.
They were only excuses. They
remind one of the man who went
to his neighbour to borrow a
rope. The neighbour replied, "I
cannot lend it to you, for I am
using it myself to tie up a heap
of sand." "But," said the first,
"you cannot tie up sand with a
rope." "Oh, yes," returned the
other, "you can do almost any-
thing with a rope when you do
not wish to lend it."
No excuse will stand at the
judgment. '
REMINDER
Little David was saying his
prayers one night. After the us-
ual "God bless Mummy and
Daddy," he came up with: "And
please make Tommy stop throw-
ing things at me, By the way,
I've mentioned this before!"
Upsidedown to Preven, reeking
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THAT COLLEGIATE LOOK — This 1911 model -T Ford is the
proud possession of Bill Robeson, right, The 12th auto Robeson,;
has restored in two years, this one has gleaming brass radiator
and headlights, a high body and straps to hold down the top.
The student finished it with 14 coats of hand -rubbed lacquer.
His only casualty with car, which averages 28 to :30,1 miles per
gallon; of either gasoline of kerosene; was`a broken wrist while
cranking the car to start it.