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The Seaforth News, 1956-10-04, Page 3
'fll�m�©NE t ,5 O©OI1 cummommolum RAW d � bd®1 v illiE fiw �9 ❑ q S O ©riioQ . aminos :4SSdd-- i To See ' orsegves Our cant) scents so large, so ubstautial and so much with us, that we tend to forget the minor position it occupies in the solar family- of planets, Only be a small in:nein is it the largest of the other similar planets, True, it does possess a tnode,rately thick atmosphere that overlies a thin patchy lay- er of water and it does have a noble :satellite, about one fourth its diameter. The pair, as view- ed from a suitable position in space, say from Venus . would undoubtedly provide an inspiring sight. , Unfortunately there are no large mirrors in space to em- power us to see ourselves as others might see us. There is, nevertheless, one very poor ap- proximation to the mirror in space - the dark side of the new Moon, At this phase of the Moon, when it lies almost in a line with the Sun, the light te- fected from the Earth illumin- ates the otherwise unlighted black hemisphere. , .. Measures of the earth -shine on the Moon Indicate that the Earth is a good refect*: of light, as are the Other planets with atmospheres The Earth, therefore, when Viewed from outer space must be a bright planet, almost as bright as Venus. Whelhor an outside observer could recognize the continents is somewhat uncertain, but surely in time., by carefully plotting the positions of all the surface features, he would find that the huge cloudbanks moved and changed, while certain areas remained fixed, One peculiarity that we can- not observe on any other planet could be seen by our hypotheti- sal astronomer outside the Earth. He would be able to ob- serve the direct reflection of the Sun from our oceans, whets the Earth was properly turned. The phenomenon might be a great surprise for a Martian astronomer, who had never en- countered large bodies of wa- ter. Ile might very well at- tribute the bright pointlike re- flection to a smooth crystalline surface on the Earth, as the early astronomers visualized the Moon to be a perfect crystal sphere. -- From "Earth, Moon and Planets," by Fred L. Whip- ple. ROMANCE ESPANOL-Romantic as an old Spanish love story, Christian Dior's dramatic even- ing gown is a froth of delicately etched black French chantilly lace over layers and layers of pink tulle. The strapless gown, with a big bell skirt that lust grazes the ground, is worn with e wide black velvet sash and matching mantilla, SHE'D RATHER ROLL THAN ROCK - Miss 011ie Robinson, 75, pilots a tractor -sprayer rig through a cotton field on the Robin- son farm, which is operated in its entirety by a quintet of sisters who range in age from 61 to 80. Children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren of Lillie, the only sister who ever married, are learning farming under tutelage of the five self-sufficient sisters. Home vegetable storage may be marked by extensive spoil- age during the long winter months. This problem is usually traceable to a lack of knowledge of specific storage requirements for the several (!asses of vege- table;. 0 V In general, vegetables are classified into four categories on the basis of temperature and moisture needs when kept over an extended period. Onions, pumpkins and squash must be exposed to a dry atmosphere and a temperature of 40 to 45 degrees F. Cabbage, cauliflow- er, turnips and potatoes stored In Open bins or shelves require damp air and a temperature of 38 to 40 degrees F. Carrots, beets and parsnips keep best when packed in a generous quantity of dry sawdust at 38 degrees F. Celery must be kept growing in storage by re -planting it in sand an the basement floor aft as at the foliage and some of ' 'e roote have been trimmed off with a knife. A cellar temperature of 40 to 45 degrees F. is best for celery. Full maturity is essential in all vegetables intended for stor- age. This is indicated in onions when the tops fall over volun- tarily in the garden, in pumpkin and squash when the rind is so hard that it cannot be punctured with the thumb nail and in crops such as cabbage, carrots and beets when the tops develop a paler colon often associated with a noticeably waxy leaf sur- face. All vegetables placed in stor- age should be sound and free from bruises. Therefore much care is required in harvesting. Boxes and pails are preferred to gunny socks as containers for conveying the produce from garden to storage. Where facilities and time per- mit much can be done to- assist the curing processes of vegeta-. bles prior to storage. The time honored practice- of braiding binder twine and onion tops, with the bulbs attached, into long ropes and •hanging these on the sunny side of a building to cure is conducive to good keep- ing when placed in Stora e. At CROSSWORD PUZZLE 12'!;11`:- 1. I1r01el, 2•: boat 2: Mao- e In, Ripe t 2. tingle:,u 12, ilars,o12v 11. Love apple . hero 1 16 lir the Silo 4. 4ari.0 w2!�, 11 f 2rpt1110 erred bull 01. Rodent 22. Minus „. Ahaten,enl. "r 2 disease,. . Uethron0. 27, And not 211. Pan0a "r light 00. Agent 33. Variety or lily 81 !tall away s Doily 45, Wardle soil 41 spike of cut•n 42.small prairie in a forest f# Young bear 45 f(in^ Art hues abode 47. (lairntntlnent 44. Revolt Rig Parts `.D ioapnitls beetle 51. nerve net- work 50. Marry again T)O WN 0, V rtrrrinyr X \12111,:` .:,.I. 'lase .tablets32 ('ha, 0,lp 5, r:rlstly €tat 1e. 1'0t'tn loins 10 '. natter I. 1,5,211 , 11r 11, Aevti'21,1 2,0,212.2,0, eel ors (0, 22, 1'202':-.2 . 2. 1 Irls in nut bene J'L......un,„ ::5, 1'2.1.. ,•r tile oar :1,. 1 2000,1 'd, 3. .5',.119.0 "•encs Neto,,-. 20 ,'anal.. :.'1'up' 4:'. Cents.,'' ori 4. reel 4 nd of love ", Toper 41 211111 2, tt'11.gin€ 1.7,l,'5 221, 1111,'.,,,,12 ..:_ I n:llllity r.. Noedy L0 Bonk or ,.Le 4:2, 2010(0120, 1 I'or lnoe 101,1" s.101212,0J2 a wall Answer elsewtse'e on this page the Morden, Man., Experimental Farm the onions with the tops are harvested when the first se- vere frost threatens and then placed in a blast of hot air at 85 to 90 degrees F. for 8 to 10 days. This is an excellent method of curing the bulbs. Pumpkins, squash and the root vegetables keep well if they are placed in small piles in the field and cov- ered with vines or plant tops to cure before they are transferred to storage. b • 0 Plant breeders at the Canada Department of Agriculture For- age Plants Laboratory, Saska- toon, have what they now be- lieve to be a variety of sweet clover adapted to the area and almost free from coumarin. Livestock deaths from "sweet clover poisoning" had been traced over twenty years ago to the presence in the plant of an organic compound known as coumarin, in itself not harmful though gives t g ve s sweet clover et bitter taste, but under unfavor- able conditions in the curing of sweet clover hay or silage the coumarin changes to dicumarol, a substance which even in small quantities is toxic to all warns blooded animals. It acts through changes in the blood that leng- then the clotting time of the blood to a point where the ani- mal will bleed spontaneously in- ternally or from any type of el- ternal wound. Death often re- sults and several animals may be stricken at the same time. r - d The new variety of sweet clo- ver is simply one that contains very little coumarin, but retains other good qualities of the stan- dard varieties, but .it has taken .20 years of careful research in produce it. J. E, Greenshields of the Forage Plants Laboratory, Saskatoon, where the work was done, says: "Some .of the early workers, such as Dr, T. M. Ste- venson and Dr. W. J. White, would have required special courage had they known the years of breeding and the amount of work required before a variety void of counun'in could be'c'ame a reality." In 1935 a method Was tit' ' t- aped by which coumarin was extracted from plant material with alcohol and the amount nl coumarin determined by the ase of an indicator. On the basis of this test the Forage Plants La- boratory produr'ed a variety "Pioneer" in 1940. I1 was soon dis„*vexed that alcohol will not extractell the coumarin in a sweet plover plant. Whatis known as "bound" c:otllnariu re- mained. When the total cou- marin was extracted by the use of sodium hydrnxlde (caustic soda) Pioneer proved to have as much ns the variety "Arctic" from which it Was selected. MOUTHFUL ! in a recent contest to find thu longest word in the English lap- gunge a student von hands down with this word, which is to be found only in a medical diction- ary: pneumonoultramicroscopic- silicovoicanokoniosis simply am other word for Miners' T.B. Second prize went to a word found in most standard diction aries: floccinaixcimhiliphlifiratiair whose meaning is estimated as being worthless. Third prize went to a word in the English language of nineteen letters of the alphabet without a Iepest' blaelsmllh-forced-py\. b D2 Se�'llf[[ ON JESSOi 11 BY REV R BARCLAY WARREN B.A. 13.1) • A Vision of the Church Victorious, Revelation 7:9-17 God's people are sometimes tempted to wonder if it is vain to serve the Lord. In Malachi's day they said, "Now we call the proud happy; yea, they that work wickedness are set up; yea, they that tempt God " are even de- livered." (3:14,15). David said, "I was envious at the foolish, when I 'saw the prosperity of the wicked. For there are no bands in their death: but their strength is firm. They are not in trouble as other men; neither are they plagued like other men. -Verily I kave cleansed my heart in vain, and washed my hands in inno- cency, .For all the day long have I been plagued, and chastened every morning." This thinking was very painful to David until he went into the sanctuary of God. He writes, "Then under- stood T their end. Surely thou didst set them in slippery places: thou castedst them down into de- struction:-lt is good for me to draw near to God." Psalm '13. Malachi had a good answer for his generation, ton. (3:18-4:3) 'They that feared the Lord snake Often one to another: and the Lord hearkened and heard it, and a book of remembrance was written before him, -They shall be mine -in that day when I make up my special treasure; and I will spare them, --Unto: you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with heal- ing in his wings." It is a most heartening passage. Today's lesson gives a preview of the great triumph of the re- deemed. They are a multitude which no man can number. They are clothed in white robes and have palms in their hands. They have come out et great tribula- tion and have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes. Kingdoms come and go. Caes- ar, Napoleon, Hitler aha gtain have had their day. Now Nasser wants his place in the sun, but Ills day will end. Sooner than we expect the angel will sound and great voices in heaven will say the words of our memory selection: "The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms s f our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for ever and eve." Revelation 11:15. 'Danger.aus' Lion Only A oriel 011e Strandberg, the Swedish travel -writer, has made some scathing comments on the tour- ist invasion of Africa. In "Jambe' ---a Swahili greet- ing meaning "How are you?" -- he says Nairobi has become the centre of a tourist industry which "sells" Africa to would-be specu- lators, and big safari firms com- pete in providing extra -ordinary facilities. The tourists -as dis- tinct from the genuine hunters - Sall into roughly four categories. Type A, the "murderer" or "sporting butcher," has an im- pressive equipment of rifles, en- joys slaughter, and buys the most expensive game licence en- titling him to four Lions, two elephants, two rhinos. and an immense number of giraffe, buck, gazelles and other innocent creatures. He feels "red blood flowing 11, his veins" when he has himself photographed with one foot on a slain lion or elephant. Ile does not live as dangerously as may appear, for he has a constant bodyguard of white hunters and gun bearers who intervene if the situation becomes critical. At times he is seized by a sort of Tartan complex, runs round in leopard- pants, battles where there are crocodiles and insists on cleepatg in a tree. Type 13 is the "savanna snob" who goes on safari for the same reason that he has polo ponies lie can't ride, a sea -going yacht he can't sail. He may be an American playboy requiring to bolster up his self-esteem and manly prestige or an English lord who has taken to gin and big game to forget his last divorce. Type C is the fanatical spe- cialist who means to shoot a rec- ord specimen of the bongo an- telope or track down some rare kind of buck. He measures its horns with a tape -measure, his great aim being to get his name an the list of recordhunting tro- phies. Type D Is the appreciative, en- thusiastic sportsman whose greatest joy is not to kill, swank or collect, but watch. He con- siders his camera as valuable as his rifle, and the safari com- panies specialize in supplying him with subjects. For a relatively small fee he can have a rhino placed in the exact middle of the savanna with Kilitnanjaro's ice summit soaring in the background, be piloted to a convenient distance from the camera -blase family of lions at Serengeti, even photograph hippo from below at Amboseli by get- ting into a little glass -walled "hide" specially built by Walt Disney. Strandberg adds: "It is true that the camera hunter is the cause of snapshots of lions and rhinos having become appalling- ly commonplace, but he has also helped to bring about a more sensible and less costly approach to Africa's game." Round about Nairobi there are specimens of lion and rhino which have become photogra- phers° models, and Strandberg was himself there the day the eity's pet, an aged, magnificent lion, was accidentally killed on the Mombasa railway level -cross- ing and has his obituary notice reverently printed in the 'East African Standard.' He had long been a popular model for many a picture repor- tage or film ''from darkest and most dangerous Africa" --as was also Molly, a tame rhino who will sometimes even allow people to ride On her, Strandberg was south of I.u- bero when a long caravan 01 lorries belonging to a large sa- fari firm came winding up the road to Kabasha Gap. They were loaded with tents, pneu- matic mattresses, folding veran- das, bales of mosquito -netting. Separate vehicles carried bath- tub, wash -hand basin, water tanks, then came a gigantic lorry with refrigerator, cases of whis- ky, beer. champagne, and Danish chef. Station -waggons conveyed the staff -in white suits, red turbans •---including gun -bearers, trophy preparers, bar -tenders, water -ear • riers, dealers in empty bottles. In a truck equipped with wireless transmitter sat two white hunterm in khaki, looking rather drowsy after a night playing ccutasee with their clients, Last of all, in a sky-blue Amer -- lean car, ;at WO men and two women. The two men wore Ha- waiian shirts printed with pisie- apples or palms and hula-hula girls; each chewed grimly a black, cigar. The women were in apri- cot sharkskin coats and skirts, with complexions like milk, mouths like blood, hoarse voiced that swore magnificent naths isa quick succession. They had come to select the scenery for the next big Cinema - Scope film of the wilds, about d white hunter who endangers him reputation to save Ava Gardner from (1) a rhino, (2) Frank Sin- atra, but finally falls a victim to one of P'rank's dum-dum bullet* during a lion hunt. • After which Ava withdraws to a nunnery on Mount Kenya and has found peace when Frank suddenly pops up, hotly pursued by Jomo Kenyatta, the Flaming Spear, and his Mau Mau terrar- Ists, Ava hoists the Stars and Stripes over the nunnery, Frantz fights at her side, and with hits last shot drops Jomo as he's elinbing the flagstaff to replace it with the hammer and sickle. But the nunnery is now on fire, and the two, reconciled; sit side by side on the organ bench, with the flames licking at their feet, playing with four hands "The Bells of Mount Kenya" -and die, In the final scene, Strandberg was told, we would see Ave in noxi s habit walking in a cloud across a savanna full of zebra, 'rhino, leopards, Watutsi dancers and lions. "We have tried to utilize and fuse the experience gained by 'King Solomon's Mines,' 'Joan of Arc; and 'Mogambn,' " said the man with the pineapple shirt. "If we can squeeze religion, gla- mour, un-American activities and a complete zoo into the same film, it's bound to be a success --- but we must have a wide screen 11 we're to have room for it ati at the same time." Strandberg's own safaris with photographer Rune Hasner, co- vering over 60,000 miles, are the real thing, brilliantly recorded., vividly illustrated and very read- able. Upsidedown to Prevent Peelct,olg 3 1:l -iI tiW o a WHERE'D IT GO, WHERE'D IT GO? -- Dog -gone difficult for thils canine caddy to find the stray golf ball, but he's trying hard, The Great Dane, owned by Dominick Cotucci, was entered lea the first National Dog Caddy contest. THERE ARE 47 MORE -Volunteer carpenter, at cuts lumber for dormitory in which to house th are children of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Whyte, who horses, because "we just can't say no" to nee family to New York City where she'll make a her factory -worker husband. left, has 20 of 67 children to watch him as his' e huge brood at Bowmanville, Ontario. i°iv* have taken in the other 62, all from broken dy children. Mrs. Whyte will take her autsikn TV appeal for funds to supplement income ,s / a ®4 ill YC.s a 7 a an ,3 1111111114...C. ®..t-ll®®.�. /4 �. /A ..2D '1�..Mg 22MN ... lila 2.4 tEill.ie...�'%ii' 22 ta• 30 3/RIM OZ 5 34 35 97 INill ov. %..k,••46 ®■39 �..A.43 ..0 4 ..� . 5n ■ ...a 98 ... iii■■rmu. Answer elsewtse'e on this page the Morden, Man., Experimental Farm the onions with the tops are harvested when the first se- vere frost threatens and then placed in a blast of hot air at 85 to 90 degrees F. for 8 to 10 days. This is an excellent method of curing the bulbs. Pumpkins, squash and the root vegetables keep well if they are placed in small piles in the field and cov- ered with vines or plant tops to cure before they are transferred to storage. b • 0 Plant breeders at the Canada Department of Agriculture For- age Plants Laboratory, Saska- toon, have what they now be- lieve to be a variety of sweet clover adapted to the area and almost free from coumarin. Livestock deaths from "sweet clover poisoning" had been traced over twenty years ago to the presence in the plant of an organic compound known as coumarin, in itself not harmful though gives t g ve s sweet clover et bitter taste, but under unfavor- able conditions in the curing of sweet clover hay or silage the coumarin changes to dicumarol, a substance which even in small quantities is toxic to all warns blooded animals. It acts through changes in the blood that leng- then the clotting time of the blood to a point where the ani- mal will bleed spontaneously in- ternally or from any type of el- ternal wound. Death often re- sults and several animals may be stricken at the same time. r - d The new variety of sweet clo- ver is simply one that contains very little coumarin, but retains other good qualities of the stan- dard varieties, but .it has taken .20 years of careful research in produce it. J. E, Greenshields of the Forage Plants Laboratory, Saskatoon, where the work was done, says: "Some .of the early workers, such as Dr, T. M. Ste- venson and Dr. W. J. White, would have required special courage had they known the years of breeding and the amount of work required before a variety void of counun'in could be'c'ame a reality." In 1935 a method Was tit' ' t- aped by which coumarin was extracted from plant material with alcohol and the amount nl coumarin determined by the ase of an indicator. On the basis of this test the Forage Plants La- boratory produr'ed a variety "Pioneer" in 1940. I1 was soon dis„*vexed that alcohol will not extractell the coumarin in a sweet plover plant. Whatis known as "bound" c:otllnariu re- mained. When the total cou- marin was extracted by the use of sodium hydrnxlde (caustic soda) Pioneer proved to have as much ns the variety "Arctic" from which it Was selected. MOUTHFUL ! in a recent contest to find thu longest word in the English lap- gunge a student von hands down with this word, which is to be found only in a medical diction- ary: pneumonoultramicroscopic- silicovoicanokoniosis simply am other word for Miners' T.B. Second prize went to a word found in most standard diction aries: floccinaixcimhiliphlifiratiair whose meaning is estimated as being worthless. Third prize went to a word in the English language of nineteen letters of the alphabet without a Iepest' blaelsmllh-forced-py\. b D2 Se�'llf[[ ON JESSOi 11 BY REV R BARCLAY WARREN B.A. 13.1) • A Vision of the Church Victorious, Revelation 7:9-17 God's people are sometimes tempted to wonder if it is vain to serve the Lord. In Malachi's day they said, "Now we call the proud happy; yea, they that work wickedness are set up; yea, they that tempt God " are even de- livered." (3:14,15). David said, "I was envious at the foolish, when I 'saw the prosperity of the wicked. For there are no bands in their death: but their strength is firm. They are not in trouble as other men; neither are they plagued like other men. -Verily I kave cleansed my heart in vain, and washed my hands in inno- cency, .For all the day long have I been plagued, and chastened every morning." This thinking was very painful to David until he went into the sanctuary of God. He writes, "Then under- stood T their end. Surely thou didst set them in slippery places: thou castedst them down into de- struction:-lt is good for me to draw near to God." Psalm '13. Malachi had a good answer for his generation, ton. (3:18-4:3) 'They that feared the Lord snake Often one to another: and the Lord hearkened and heard it, and a book of remembrance was written before him, -They shall be mine -in that day when I make up my special treasure; and I will spare them, --Unto: you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with heal- ing in his wings." It is a most heartening passage. Today's lesson gives a preview of the great triumph of the re- deemed. They are a multitude which no man can number. They are clothed in white robes and have palms in their hands. They have come out et great tribula- tion and have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes. Kingdoms come and go. Caes- ar, Napoleon, Hitler aha gtain have had their day. Now Nasser wants his place in the sun, but Ills day will end. Sooner than we expect the angel will sound and great voices in heaven will say the words of our memory selection: "The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms s f our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for ever and eve." Revelation 11:15. 'Danger.aus' Lion Only A oriel 011e Strandberg, the Swedish travel -writer, has made some scathing comments on the tour- ist invasion of Africa. In "Jambe' ---a Swahili greet- ing meaning "How are you?" -- he says Nairobi has become the centre of a tourist industry which "sells" Africa to would-be specu- lators, and big safari firms com- pete in providing extra -ordinary facilities. The tourists -as dis- tinct from the genuine hunters - Sall into roughly four categories. Type A, the "murderer" or "sporting butcher," has an im- pressive equipment of rifles, en- joys slaughter, and buys the most expensive game licence en- titling him to four Lions, two elephants, two rhinos. and an immense number of giraffe, buck, gazelles and other innocent creatures. He feels "red blood flowing 11, his veins" when he has himself photographed with one foot on a slain lion or elephant. Ile does not live as dangerously as may appear, for he has a constant bodyguard of white hunters and gun bearers who intervene if the situation becomes critical. At times he is seized by a sort of Tartan complex, runs round in leopard- pants, battles where there are crocodiles and insists on cleepatg in a tree. Type 13 is the "savanna snob" who goes on safari for the same reason that he has polo ponies lie can't ride, a sea -going yacht he can't sail. He may be an American playboy requiring to bolster up his self-esteem and manly prestige or an English lord who has taken to gin and big game to forget his last divorce. Type C is the fanatical spe- cialist who means to shoot a rec- ord specimen of the bongo an- telope or track down some rare kind of buck. He measures its horns with a tape -measure, his great aim being to get his name an the list of recordhunting tro- phies. Type D Is the appreciative, en- thusiastic sportsman whose greatest joy is not to kill, swank or collect, but watch. He con- siders his camera as valuable as his rifle, and the safari com- panies specialize in supplying him with subjects. For a relatively small fee he can have a rhino placed in the exact middle of the savanna with Kilitnanjaro's ice summit soaring in the background, be piloted to a convenient distance from the camera -blase family of lions at Serengeti, even photograph hippo from below at Amboseli by get- ting into a little glass -walled "hide" specially built by Walt Disney. Strandberg adds: "It is true that the camera hunter is the cause of snapshots of lions and rhinos having become appalling- ly commonplace, but he has also helped to bring about a more sensible and less costly approach to Africa's game." Round about Nairobi there are specimens of lion and rhino which have become photogra- phers° models, and Strandberg was himself there the day the eity's pet, an aged, magnificent lion, was accidentally killed on the Mombasa railway level -cross- ing and has his obituary notice reverently printed in the 'East African Standard.' He had long been a popular model for many a picture repor- tage or film ''from darkest and most dangerous Africa" --as was also Molly, a tame rhino who will sometimes even allow people to ride On her, Strandberg was south of I.u- bero when a long caravan 01 lorries belonging to a large sa- fari firm came winding up the road to Kabasha Gap. They were loaded with tents, pneu- matic mattresses, folding veran- das, bales of mosquito -netting. Separate vehicles carried bath- tub, wash -hand basin, water tanks, then came a gigantic lorry with refrigerator, cases of whis- ky, beer. champagne, and Danish chef. Station -waggons conveyed the staff -in white suits, red turbans •---including gun -bearers, trophy preparers, bar -tenders, water -ear • riers, dealers in empty bottles. In a truck equipped with wireless transmitter sat two white hunterm in khaki, looking rather drowsy after a night playing ccutasee with their clients, Last of all, in a sky-blue Amer -- lean car, ;at WO men and two women. The two men wore Ha- waiian shirts printed with pisie- apples or palms and hula-hula girls; each chewed grimly a black, cigar. The women were in apri- cot sharkskin coats and skirts, with complexions like milk, mouths like blood, hoarse voiced that swore magnificent naths isa quick succession. They had come to select the scenery for the next big Cinema - Scope film of the wilds, about d white hunter who endangers him reputation to save Ava Gardner from (1) a rhino, (2) Frank Sin- atra, but finally falls a victim to one of P'rank's dum-dum bullet* during a lion hunt. • After which Ava withdraws to a nunnery on Mount Kenya and has found peace when Frank suddenly pops up, hotly pursued by Jomo Kenyatta, the Flaming Spear, and his Mau Mau terrar- Ists, Ava hoists the Stars and Stripes over the nunnery, Frantz fights at her side, and with hits last shot drops Jomo as he's elinbing the flagstaff to replace it with the hammer and sickle. But the nunnery is now on fire, and the two, reconciled; sit side by side on the organ bench, with the flames licking at their feet, playing with four hands "The Bells of Mount Kenya" -and die, In the final scene, Strandberg was told, we would see Ave in noxi s habit walking in a cloud across a savanna full of zebra, 'rhino, leopards, Watutsi dancers and lions. "We have tried to utilize and fuse the experience gained by 'King Solomon's Mines,' 'Joan of Arc; and 'Mogambn,' " said the man with the pineapple shirt. "If we can squeeze religion, gla- mour, un-American activities and a complete zoo into the same film, it's bound to be a success --- but we must have a wide screen 11 we're to have room for it ati at the same time." Strandberg's own safaris with photographer Rune Hasner, co- vering over 60,000 miles, are the real thing, brilliantly recorded., vividly illustrated and very read- able. Upsidedown to Prevent Peelct,olg 3 1:l -iI tiW o a WHERE'D IT GO, WHERE'D IT GO? -- Dog -gone difficult for thils canine caddy to find the stray golf ball, but he's trying hard, The Great Dane, owned by Dominick Cotucci, was entered lea the first National Dog Caddy contest. THERE ARE 47 MORE -Volunteer carpenter, at cuts lumber for dormitory in which to house th are children of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Whyte, who horses, because "we just can't say no" to nee family to New York City where she'll make a her factory -worker husband. left, has 20 of 67 children to watch him as his' e huge brood at Bowmanville, Ontario. i°iv* have taken in the other 62, all from broken dy children. Mrs. Whyte will take her autsikn TV appeal for funds to supplement income ,s