HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1954-05-27, Page 3With rmore and heavier work in
prospect or farm treaters and
tsars, the bellowing suggestions
from the B.C. Eacperimental Sta-
tion, Departi ent of Agriculture,
are well worth studying.
W 4'
Manufacturers consider all the
main features of a spark plug
when designing their engines.
For this reason it is generally
best to replace a wornout plug
with one similar to the original
to all Of its essential features.
4, 4 t,
Spark plugs vary in many ways
such as head or diameter size,
threads, length of barrel, kind of
insulator, the number and ar-
rangement of points, head resis-
tance and general design,
Head diameters run In 3s inch,
% inch and % inch sizes for some
engines. In others they are made
in 10, 14 and 18 millimeter sizes,
4' 4' 4:
The spacing of the electrode
points varies from .020 t6 ,030
inches, depending on the kind
and size of plug and engine mak-
er's recommendations. A prop-
er spark plug point gauge should
be used for setting the points.
Points that are spaced too far
apart cause missing, especially
under heavy loads and high
compression. This, in turn, re-
cruits In fouling of the plug. It
may also cause pitting or burn-
ing of magneto breaker points
and breakdown in the condenser.
Where points are set too close,
missing may also occur when
the engine is idling Or On a light
load. This again may cause foul-
ing of the plug.
The correct length of plug is
important. usually the bottom
of the spark plug barrel should
be about even with the inner side
of the cylinder head or cylinder
wall, depending on where it is
located. Plugs that are too short
may foul easily, while the points
o£ plugs that are too long tend
to cause pre-ignition and burn
*way faster. Short plugs are us-
ually cooler plugs because they
transfer heat over a short dis-
tance to the water cooled jacket
41f the engine. Long plugs' run
hotter because the heat has fur-
ther distance to travel before it
reaches the cooler engine parts._
In some cases, due to other
engine inefficiencies, fouling of
a spark plug may persist, and the
use of a Ionger, hotter type of
plug may be necessary until
other engine deficiencies are
remedied. On the other hand, if
Carrot -Top - Guiseppe Archin»
boldo, 1 dih-Century pioneer of
the surrealistic school, had a
market -place approach to his
art, His "Greengrocer," above,
now on exhibition in Paris, is
right out of the garden. Other
tasty subjects for the Italian's
hungry brush included crabs and
fish.
burning off of points or pre-ig-
nition persists, then the cooler,
shorter type of plug may serve
satisfactorily,
w * t:
When overhauling an engine, or
before the beginning of a season
of heavy work, it is often worth
while to have spark plugs clean-
ed and tested at a local garage
or establishment where special
equipment is available for the
purpose.
Egg quality begins to decline
as soon as an egg has been laid
and it continues at a steady rate.
The rate of decline is greatly in-
creased by the high temperature
and low humidity of the warmer
months. of the year. This means
reduced profits for the poultry-
man especially during the sum-
mer months. Many poultrymen,
however, do not realize how rel-
atively easy it is to produce high
quality eggs tluoughout the year,
Walter T'Iunsaker of the Poultry
Division Central Experimental
farm, Ottawa, suggests a few
simple rules which will help to
maintain egg quality, and com-
bine greater profit for the pro-
ducer with better quality for the
consumer,
G * a
1, Gather eggs twice a clay in
winter and three times a day In
summer and cool quickly. Heat
is the most important factor in
the loss of egg quality. An egg
that has been left in the nest all
day will be little better, by the
time it is gathered. than a 3 -
day -old egg,
2. Use wire baskets to rather
and cool eggs. Eggs tvfll cool
twice as fast in a wire basket as
in a pail or egg case.
4, (: 4.
3. Hold eggs in a cool moist
place. A temperature of 50 de-
grees to 60 degrees Fahrenheit
and a relative humidity of 7o to
80 per cent is recommended.
C 4, 4,
4, Case eggs the next morning
atter they have been thoroughly
cooled. Cases and flats should be
cooled as well.
11 ",. "
5. Place eggs in case with the
large end up. Handle eggs care-
fully at all times to avoid crack-
ing the shell.
4.6, Market eggs at least once a
week and twice or three times if
possible. The best time to sell
an egg is as soon as possible after
it has been laid.
'7. Feed a complete ration, This
means a good laying mash,
scratch grains, oyster shell or
limestone and plenty of fresh
clean drinking water.
13. Provide plenty of nests and
change' the nesting material fre-
quently in order to reduce the
number of dirty eggs.
9. Confine the layer's until at
least mid-afternoon. This will
help to keep the eggs clean dur-
ing•damp, rainy weather. In ad-
dition the buds will' eat less
green grass and other materials
outside which cause objeetiotl-
ably dark yolks.
10: Produce infertile eggs. Fer-
tile eggs lose their market value
very quickly if held at high tem•
perature due to rapid develop-
ment'of the embryo
a: 1 ,.
A satisfactory egg cooler may
be constructed quickly ancl at
reasonable cost. Plans for such
a cooler may be obtained by writ-
ing to the Poultry Division. Cen-
tral Experilnentai Farm. Ottawa.
• . CROSSVICTID
ACI; OSV ,^.. Accltsio,n
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4.. Depen
9. :'Prow 401411.
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sweat bel
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l.gly 0,4
4'041414„
6'! 11•l,il,,,
Answer etsewltere en th
age.
Buoy's 'Bottle Bounce
6Y kDNA 1211,113
TEE new plastic nursing bot-
tle nen/ well prove to be the
greatest boon to mankind since
sliced bread. Just ask any
mother (or father) who's strug-
gled with a bottle at 3 a. me only
to have it crash to the floor.
And if- you could interview
Selby, he'd tell you he likes a
bottle on which he can get a
grip. He'd also tell ,you he ex-
pecte; to break * number of bot-
tles, and at this point Mother
will step in to tell you that not
only is this true, it's expensive,
The answer to these problems
was thought up by an irate
father who got up in the wee
hours, fumbled the baby's bot-
tle and decided there must be
some easier way to go et the
whole thing.
As he caressed his bruised
left foot, his eyes, fell on a plat -
cosmetic container belonging
to his wife. And a brand-new
polyethylene nursing bottle Was
born, one that's odorless, taste-
less, harmless to formula and a
natural insulator as well.
Formula, the nlaltees of this-
bottle
his bottle claim, keeps waren flue. Going—gofer—bet not tont. What Baby .heaves one or the new
times longer .than In glass, This plastic nursing bottles overboard, there's s crash, but no animal.
la an extra boon If yours Is a 1asY to clean and heat -retentive, the well-nigh unbreakable
slow -feeding baby. bottles are 0 real boon to Mother, Dad, and the pocketbook,
the Ounces
'Y=x;44,,- •"
Use Dog As
Poultice For
Stomach -Ache
Most people have heard of the
stormy petrel, ethe wonderful
little sea bird that skims the
waves within a few inches of
the water, however rough the
sea may be. Few know the re-
markable stories about it.
Travel author Carveth Wells,
who saw some in the Atlantic,
soutl. of Iceland, says that for
hundreds of years mariners be-
lieved — and some old salts
still do — that petrels never
approached land, the female lay-
ing her one egg at sea and car-
rying it under wing until it
hatched. In fact, the petrels of
the North Atlantic that are any-
where within hundreds of miles
of the Cape Verde Islands lay
their eggs there, underground
and in the most desolate place
they can find.
A legend that no one ever
found a dead petrel led sailors
to believe that they have some
secret place to which they fly
when death approaches. We
know that the birds do have
their own private cemetery on
the uninhabited island of Cima
where there is a plateau cover-
ed with the tiny white bones of
millions of them.
Exploring Lapland, Mr., Wells
discovered some unusual things
about the dogs there. They are
regarded as honoured members
Of the household. When a Lapp
girl is born -he writes in a fine
travel book, "The Road to Shal-
imar"—her father gives her two
presents: a female reindeer, to
start a herd for her dowry. and.
a female dog.
There were four dogs in the
house where Wells stayed. At
meal times they watched pati-
ently while their food was be-
ing prepared, then at a word
from the master the oldest walk-
ed slowly towards it and took
his share, each in turn doing
the same, with no barking or
fighting.
Lapp:= say dogs arc very sen
sitive to punishment. For small
offences they must be scolded,
for serines ones whipped, but
never whipped and scolded at
the steno time, however badly
they behave, for such treatment
breaks a dog's spirit. They sleep
' with members of the family,
snuggling: into the small or the
back, turning u\'ei' when the
sleeper turns, When a :.app bus
stone -nal -ache .he makes a clog go
:.o s iecip on his stomach, and
soon the dog gel:l the ache, hav-
ing drawn it out of the man!
Net So tntmy year's age ances-
tors of the Lapps used to locate
a lost reindeer by means of a
drum with a map of the locality
drawn on rite ch'wnskin, and on
this a small iron ring. fielding
the. drum level, the Lapp lap
ped its side with a email Mine
mer made 01 rciucleet- metier.
This caused the slain to vibrate
and the ring 1.o Manes about, Al'
the vibt•atimee ceased, the rine;
came to rest un the ::pot where,
the missing reincleetl n'as to be
sought,
If it wasn't found thele it n a'
assumed to have wandered eine
where. The d1 sin was then i.oil-
sulted again and again, and ev-
entually the lost animal Was le -
sated.
At Tromso, Norway, Wells see-
the bombed German battleship
Von Tnpitz, half -submerged and
upside down, with rne11 remov-
ing valuable ntach111ery through
a huge hole in her bottom, It
must: be a gruesome job, he sawe
for when she was hit and cap-
sized she had 11101.4' 1114113 a thew
sand sailors on board, Ile heard
titat a, tea rupia tot sightseers
has been built on the bottom!
Fiying from 01410 to 'lltdia,
a
Press 11 Up—Dorian Lovell -Prank,
6, got the thrill of a lifetime at
a recent wedding in London,
England. He had his headgear
adjusted by Charles Cassie, of
the 3rd Hussars from Dingwall,
Scotland.
Wells and his wife hired a house'
boat on Dal Lake in lovely Kash-
mir, and one cold morning the
owner, Dtindoo, came in looking
unusually fat and portly. Lift-
ing his shirt, he pointed to a
small wicker basket slung round
hie waist, "ICangra," he said. -
"Must keep warm. Very cold
day."
The "kangra" was lined with
earthenware and filled with
glowing charcoal, for in winter
a Kashmiri carries one with him
wherever he goes, and occasion-
ally. overcome by carbon Mon-
oxide fusses, he may tall asleep
and burn himself severely;
Al} kinds of pedlars cante in
boats. They included a vegetable
seller who steered with a long
pole e small floating island on
which the vegetables were grow-
ing* Dundee, too, had a floating-
island
loatingisland anchored near his kitchen
boat—with a house on it for a
hen and her chicks.
As the Welik were near Srina-
gar they bad to see the Shali-
mar of the Indian love lyric.
It is a level: shady park about
600 ,sarcle (king with velvety
lawns, huge 11-ee,4, 101114 straight
flower 117ds,•fountai0Ts, lake, arid
mountain Ia3'ealn, dim bing in
four terraces towards snowcap
ped mountains.. On each terrace
ie •t pavilion, the fourth at the
far end being the most beauti-
fui. Wan 4,1.q 1i.sitc Mavis marble
pillars.
It u'e.. laud out by life 1V1nl;t1,
Eml 'rv,t .teh,ingir, and loIre the
royal i,tte4,in ladies rested in cool
seclusion t:lei.le members of the
court ; tlnited under the trees.
Elis hnll(Wed wife was Nur Juli-
an, Light of the Wuelet, wt1o83
son, Shall ,7,((71()?, built the Tat
Mahe} Cor the Minn of his own
beloved queen, Mumtaz Mahal,
Glory of the Palace
A long p1 r I essinn of elephants,
pack hof cs and gaily decorated
sedan chairs containing the her,
em ladies used to arrive at She -
timer front Delhi, Accompanied
by ins many as 30,1100 servants,
5 1 Y SHOE Te) A 00051E
Very soon naw .Hungarians
will he table to buy Spurs made
from goose -shins. Special pro-
eessiuh of the el it7 proved, it to
be durable stir* •comfortable in
the footwear line. Ma!nufactur-
ere aim. to produce 5,000 pairs of
goose -skin shoes in twenty dif
fererIt shades for getlerai wear
this seeing.
Occupation: Hobo
That delightful song, "The
Happy Wanderer," seems to
have burst on American radio
audiences at the wrong time so
far as factual background is
concerned. That is, unless it is
designed to suggest a backdrop
at the Tyrolese Alps rather than
the rustle byways of Merrle
England.
For, according to Ernie Hen-
son, a bearded wayfarer to
whom 30 years of tramping the
roads of Britain represents "a
way of life," the welfare state
has played hob with the life
of a hobo. "We have been regis-
tered, checked, urged into new-
fangled reception stations, per-
suaded to take regular 'jobs,
bathed, questioned, and general-
ly treated as prehistoric freaks."
he says.
Your true tramp or hobo deep-
ly resents the implication that
his career is one of worthless-
ness. He is an itinerant, a vaga-
bond, a follower of the open
road, living off countryside,
but he has his dignity. And he
is not looking for security; he
has it - or did have until far-
mers took to sending him to the
neatest hostel, sometimes in a
taxi, to be put to work.
And he has no more lilting for
bureaucrats with their forms
and red tape than did Henry
David Thoreau when he retired.
to Walden Pond. In fact, that is
what makes other fields, pos-
sibly French or Italian fields,
look greener to Ernie Henson
and his few remaining compan-
ions in Britain.
The Labor government which
inaugurated "fair shares" missed
the point that not all the indi-
vidualists are capitalists with.
something tangible to share Mr.
Henson's "boys" report that "the
French and Italians are prepared
to let us alone as long as we be-.
have, and that is all we have
ever wanted" -From The Chilli -
fiat, Science Monitor.
Cloths for eleaniug windows
without the. use of water can be
made with a semi-liquid paste
of benzine and calcined mag-
nesia. The cloth, which should
be of coarse linen or something
free from lint, is dipped into this
mixture and hueg in the air
until the spirits have evaporate
ed and it is free from odor, This
cloth may be used again and
again. and is a great conveui'
epee' When soiled, wash
M' SCHOOL
LESSON
by llev. ll., Barclay Warren..
SA, 17.D.
Elijah Rebukes Ahab
1 Kings 21:1-4. 16-20.
ltIetrto'ry Selection Thou anal*
'Mot covet. Famine 20:17.
Ahab Was one of the ablest
kings who ever occupied the
throne of Samaria, but in mare
raring Jembel, he had united
himself to a dominating per's
sonaiity who often determined
the king's policies and action*:
with dire results to himself and
to the nation. In the telling
words of scripture, Ahab "did.
sell himself to do that which.
was evil in the sight rof tha
Lord, whom Jezebel his wife
stirred tip." If you are content -
plating marl;iage, ponder ' long
and carefully before you select
a wife or husband. The right
one can help make you a bet-
ter man or woman and enhance
your chances of success in life;
the wrong one at best will ham-
per you so that your life and
accomplishments will be less
than your best, and at the worst
may actually kill your desire
and will to do right, and lead
you into sin. Better spend e
lifetime of indecision on that
issue and marry nobody at all,
than pick the wrong nate and 1'P—
gret it for a lifetime
Ahab coveted Naboth's vine-
yard. But Naboth. trite to the
law which forbade the selling of
one's inheritance outside of one's
own tribe refused to sell. Ahab
sulked like a spoiled child but
Jezebel went to work with dia-
bolical design. She arcomptish-
ed the death not only of Naboth
but also of his sone who might
have claimed the inheritance.
2Kgs. 9:26. Then Ahab went ins
to the vineyard he had coveted,
But Elijah met him and pro-
nounced God's fearful judgment
upon him. History records the
fulfillment of these predictions.
The dogs licked his blood in this
vineyard and his wife, JeasebeI,
was eaten by dogs by the wall
of Jezreel. Because Ahab hum-
bled himself the judgment upon
his descendants was delayed un-
til after his death. Then his rev
enty sons were slain.
The story reminds us ui the
fateful end of two recent ty-.
rants. The bodices of Mussolini
and his mistress were subjected
to mob abuse and later buried
in unmarked graves in the pau-
per section of the cemetery in
Milan. Hitler is thought to have
committed suicide along with
his former mistress, Eva Braun,
whom he is thought to have
married shortly before his death.
Thus is the end of Tyrants an.
tient and modern.
HONEY (fell[:) MOON
"Bow is Srownson getting on
with his young wife?"
"Well, a month after the wed-
ding a belated telegram at con-
gratulation arrived and • they re-
fused
wfused to accept it."
(Upside clown to prevent peeking)
3cYr S b N 3?90
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341,
N3
Weather Testing An Ali Force ".Mobs Dick' ,•,•sonnei balloon
is released' al the Grenier Air rorce Anse, The huge balloons
carry instrument pacl.acles suspended beneath thorn so research-
ers at the base can receive automatic reports of weather data
through radio relays, Officials say the balloons aren't dangerous
and all aircraft in the release area are notified of the ascent.
4'
9
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e
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zr
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t
27
ri
'30-
3
g. +
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is
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k
$.�
+Zen'
rfs
.
"#4
'3$
-
■110.
Answer etsewltere en th
age.
Buoy's 'Bottle Bounce
6Y kDNA 1211,113
TEE new plastic nursing bot-
tle nen/ well prove to be the
greatest boon to mankind since
sliced bread. Just ask any
mother (or father) who's strug-
gled with a bottle at 3 a. me only
to have it crash to the floor.
And if- you could interview
Selby, he'd tell you he likes a
bottle on which he can get a
grip. He'd also tell ,you he ex-
pecte; to break * number of bot-
tles, and at this point Mother
will step in to tell you that not
only is this true, it's expensive,
The answer to these problems
was thought up by an irate
father who got up in the wee
hours, fumbled the baby's bot-
tle and decided there must be
some easier way to go et the
whole thing.
As he caressed his bruised
left foot, his eyes, fell on a plat -
cosmetic container belonging
to his wife. And a brand-new
polyethylene nursing bottle Was
born, one that's odorless, taste-
less, harmless to formula and a
natural insulator as well.
Formula, the nlaltees of this-
bottle
his bottle claim, keeps waren flue. Going—gofer—bet not tont. What Baby .heaves one or the new
times longer .than In glass, This plastic nursing bottles overboard, there's s crash, but no animal.
la an extra boon If yours Is a 1asY to clean and heat -retentive, the well-nigh unbreakable
slow -feeding baby. bottles are 0 real boon to Mother, Dad, and the pocketbook,
the Ounces
'Y=x;44,,- •"
Use Dog As
Poultice For
Stomach -Ache
Most people have heard of the
stormy petrel, ethe wonderful
little sea bird that skims the
waves within a few inches of
the water, however rough the
sea may be. Few know the re-
markable stories about it.
Travel author Carveth Wells,
who saw some in the Atlantic,
soutl. of Iceland, says that for
hundreds of years mariners be-
lieved — and some old salts
still do — that petrels never
approached land, the female lay-
ing her one egg at sea and car-
rying it under wing until it
hatched. In fact, the petrels of
the North Atlantic that are any-
where within hundreds of miles
of the Cape Verde Islands lay
their eggs there, underground
and in the most desolate place
they can find.
A legend that no one ever
found a dead petrel led sailors
to believe that they have some
secret place to which they fly
when death approaches. We
know that the birds do have
their own private cemetery on
the uninhabited island of Cima
where there is a plateau cover-
ed with the tiny white bones of
millions of them.
Exploring Lapland, Mr., Wells
discovered some unusual things
about the dogs there. They are
regarded as honoured members
Of the household. When a Lapp
girl is born -he writes in a fine
travel book, "The Road to Shal-
imar"—her father gives her two
presents: a female reindeer, to
start a herd for her dowry. and.
a female dog.
There were four dogs in the
house where Wells stayed. At
meal times they watched pati-
ently while their food was be-
ing prepared, then at a word
from the master the oldest walk-
ed slowly towards it and took
his share, each in turn doing
the same, with no barking or
fighting.
Lapp:= say dogs arc very sen
sitive to punishment. For small
offences they must be scolded,
for serines ones whipped, but
never whipped and scolded at
the steno time, however badly
they behave, for such treatment
breaks a dog's spirit. They sleep
' with members of the family,
snuggling: into the small or the
back, turning u\'ei' when the
sleeper turns, When a :.app bus
stone -nal -ache .he makes a clog go
:.o s iecip on his stomach, and
soon the dog gel:l the ache, hav-
ing drawn it out of the man!
Net So tntmy year's age ances-
tors of the Lapps used to locate
a lost reindeer by means of a
drum with a map of the locality
drawn on rite ch'wnskin, and on
this a small iron ring. fielding
the. drum level, the Lapp lap
ped its side with a email Mine
mer made 01 rciucleet- metier.
This caused the slain to vibrate
and the ring 1.o Manes about, Al'
the vibt•atimee ceased, the rine;
came to rest un the ::pot where,
the missing reincleetl n'as to be
sought,
If it wasn't found thele it n a'
assumed to have wandered eine
where. The d1 sin was then i.oil-
sulted again and again, and ev-
entually the lost animal Was le -
sated.
At Tromso, Norway, Wells see-
the bombed German battleship
Von Tnpitz, half -submerged and
upside down, with rne11 remov-
ing valuable ntach111ery through
a huge hole in her bottom, It
must: be a gruesome job, he sawe
for when she was hit and cap-
sized she had 11101.4' 1114113 a thew
sand sailors on board, Ile heard
titat a, tea rupia tot sightseers
has been built on the bottom!
Fiying from 01410 to 'lltdia,
a
Press 11 Up—Dorian Lovell -Prank,
6, got the thrill of a lifetime at
a recent wedding in London,
England. He had his headgear
adjusted by Charles Cassie, of
the 3rd Hussars from Dingwall,
Scotland.
Wells and his wife hired a house'
boat on Dal Lake in lovely Kash-
mir, and one cold morning the
owner, Dtindoo, came in looking
unusually fat and portly. Lift-
ing his shirt, he pointed to a
small wicker basket slung round
hie waist, "ICangra," he said. -
"Must keep warm. Very cold
day."
The "kangra" was lined with
earthenware and filled with
glowing charcoal, for in winter
a Kashmiri carries one with him
wherever he goes, and occasion-
ally. overcome by carbon Mon-
oxide fusses, he may tall asleep
and burn himself severely;
Al} kinds of pedlars cante in
boats. They included a vegetable
seller who steered with a long
pole e small floating island on
which the vegetables were grow-
ing* Dundee, too, had a floating-
island
loatingisland anchored near his kitchen
boat—with a house on it for a
hen and her chicks.
As the Welik were near Srina-
gar they bad to see the Shali-
mar of the Indian love lyric.
It is a level: shady park about
600 ,sarcle (king with velvety
lawns, huge 11-ee,4, 101114 straight
flower 117ds,•fountai0Ts, lake, arid
mountain Ia3'ealn, dim bing in
four terraces towards snowcap
ped mountains.. On each terrace
ie •t pavilion, the fourth at the
far end being the most beauti-
fui. Wan 4,1.q 1i.sitc Mavis marble
pillars.
It u'e.. laud out by life 1V1nl;t1,
Eml 'rv,t .teh,ingir, and loIre the
royal i,tte4,in ladies rested in cool
seclusion t:lei.le members of the
court ; tlnited under the trees.
Elis hnll(Wed wife was Nur Juli-
an, Light of the Wuelet, wt1o83
son, Shall ,7,((71()?, built the Tat
Mahe} Cor the Minn of his own
beloved queen, Mumtaz Mahal,
Glory of the Palace
A long p1 r I essinn of elephants,
pack hof cs and gaily decorated
sedan chairs containing the her,
em ladies used to arrive at She -
timer front Delhi, Accompanied
by ins many as 30,1100 servants,
5 1 Y SHOE Te) A 00051E
Very soon naw .Hungarians
will he table to buy Spurs made
from goose -shins. Special pro-
eessiuh of the el it7 proved, it to
be durable stir* •comfortable in
the footwear line. Ma!nufactur-
ere aim. to produce 5,000 pairs of
goose -skin shoes in twenty dif
fererIt shades for getlerai wear
this seeing.
Occupation: Hobo
That delightful song, "The
Happy Wanderer," seems to
have burst on American radio
audiences at the wrong time so
far as factual background is
concerned. That is, unless it is
designed to suggest a backdrop
at the Tyrolese Alps rather than
the rustle byways of Merrle
England.
For, according to Ernie Hen-
son, a bearded wayfarer to
whom 30 years of tramping the
roads of Britain represents "a
way of life," the welfare state
has played hob with the life
of a hobo. "We have been regis-
tered, checked, urged into new-
fangled reception stations, per-
suaded to take regular 'jobs,
bathed, questioned, and general-
ly treated as prehistoric freaks."
he says.
Your true tramp or hobo deep-
ly resents the implication that
his career is one of worthless-
ness. He is an itinerant, a vaga-
bond, a follower of the open
road, living off countryside,
but he has his dignity. And he
is not looking for security; he
has it - or did have until far-
mers took to sending him to the
neatest hostel, sometimes in a
taxi, to be put to work.
And he has no more lilting for
bureaucrats with their forms
and red tape than did Henry
David Thoreau when he retired.
to Walden Pond. In fact, that is
what makes other fields, pos-
sibly French or Italian fields,
look greener to Ernie Henson
and his few remaining compan-
ions in Britain.
The Labor government which
inaugurated "fair shares" missed
the point that not all the indi-
vidualists are capitalists with.
something tangible to share Mr.
Henson's "boys" report that "the
French and Italians are prepared
to let us alone as long as we be-.
have, and that is all we have
ever wanted" -From The Chilli -
fiat, Science Monitor.
Cloths for eleaniug windows
without the. use of water can be
made with a semi-liquid paste
of benzine and calcined mag-
nesia. The cloth, which should
be of coarse linen or something
free from lint, is dipped into this
mixture and hueg in the air
until the spirits have evaporate
ed and it is free from odor, This
cloth may be used again and
again. and is a great conveui'
epee' When soiled, wash
M' SCHOOL
LESSON
by llev. ll., Barclay Warren..
SA, 17.D.
Elijah Rebukes Ahab
1 Kings 21:1-4. 16-20.
ltIetrto'ry Selection Thou anal*
'Mot covet. Famine 20:17.
Ahab Was one of the ablest
kings who ever occupied the
throne of Samaria, but in mare
raring Jembel, he had united
himself to a dominating per's
sonaiity who often determined
the king's policies and action*:
with dire results to himself and
to the nation. In the telling
words of scripture, Ahab "did.
sell himself to do that which.
was evil in the sight rof tha
Lord, whom Jezebel his wife
stirred tip." If you are content -
plating marl;iage, ponder ' long
and carefully before you select
a wife or husband. The right
one can help make you a bet-
ter man or woman and enhance
your chances of success in life;
the wrong one at best will ham-
per you so that your life and
accomplishments will be less
than your best, and at the worst
may actually kill your desire
and will to do right, and lead
you into sin. Better spend e
lifetime of indecision on that
issue and marry nobody at all,
than pick the wrong nate and 1'P—
gret it for a lifetime
Ahab coveted Naboth's vine-
yard. But Naboth. trite to the
law which forbade the selling of
one's inheritance outside of one's
own tribe refused to sell. Ahab
sulked like a spoiled child but
Jezebel went to work with dia-
bolical design. She arcomptish-
ed the death not only of Naboth
but also of his sone who might
have claimed the inheritance.
2Kgs. 9:26. Then Ahab went ins
to the vineyard he had coveted,
But Elijah met him and pro-
nounced God's fearful judgment
upon him. History records the
fulfillment of these predictions.
The dogs licked his blood in this
vineyard and his wife, JeasebeI,
was eaten by dogs by the wall
of Jezreel. Because Ahab hum-
bled himself the judgment upon
his descendants was delayed un-
til after his death. Then his rev
enty sons were slain.
The story reminds us ui the
fateful end of two recent ty-.
rants. The bodices of Mussolini
and his mistress were subjected
to mob abuse and later buried
in unmarked graves in the pau-
per section of the cemetery in
Milan. Hitler is thought to have
committed suicide along with
his former mistress, Eva Braun,
whom he is thought to have
married shortly before his death.
Thus is the end of Tyrants an.
tient and modern.
HONEY (fell[:) MOON
"Bow is Srownson getting on
with his young wife?"
"Well, a month after the wed-
ding a belated telegram at con-
gratulation arrived and • they re-
fused
wfused to accept it."
(Upside clown to prevent peeking)
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Weather Testing An Ali Force ".Mobs Dick' ,•,•sonnei balloon
is released' al the Grenier Air rorce Anse, The huge balloons
carry instrument pacl.acles suspended beneath thorn so research-
ers at the base can receive automatic reports of weather data
through radio relays, Officials say the balloons aren't dangerous
and all aircraft in the release area are notified of the ascent.