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The Seaforth News, 1954-08-12, Page 3Over in the States the Am erican Cattlemen's Association is out to double the amount of beef eaten within the next ten years, which, from this angle, sounds like a good trick — if they do it. However here is something of what they're planning in order to reach their goal, • Some western state livestock associations are getting set to vote 10 to 15 cents a head, volun- tary collections at point of sale, to promote beef, * 4• At Miles City; the Montana Stock Growers Association voted 5 cents a head on animals mar- keted by members through auc- tion rings, which are to match funds. Washington and other States are working on a sin -tiler "check -Off." 9 k 4• A Wyoming Stockgrowers As- sociation resolution call's for a 15 -cent voluntary deduction on each sale, California is polling both beef raisers and dairymen on a voluntary 10 -cent collection. The first 3,000 returns show 80% in favor. n + Two cents would go to the National Livestock and Meat Board, the rest to be used by the California Beef Industry Council for advertising and merchan-• dicing researeh. California may collect through state brand in- spectors. 4 , * Meanwhile, Colorado is lead - keg the parade with a co-opera- tive billboard campaign, tied in with traffic safety—"Watch Your Curves — Eat Beef." Colorado Cattlemen's Asociation raised $3,000 in 30 minutes at a ban- quet. q. "mss The American National Cattle- men's Association in Denver is putting out another sign, "Enjoy Beef for Health." This sign costs $2, and steclunen in 20 states are already putting it up. Idea is to get up something on your own beef factory" to help sell your product. California is distributing tnore than six xtuillion recipe cards through retail outlets. Already, in the first five months of the year, Californians are eating beef at the rate of 125 pounds per per- son -- double their 50 -year av- erage. "The Tune -Up icing" — Although he won't concede an inch to his rivals on the C.N.E. track, Len Hurley is the one they all flock to when mechanical trouble creeps in as he is a marvel at diagnos- ing, and curing, the diseases that beset the speedy stock cars, Utah's association is cont1I'tuing its effifeetlye arrangement with retailers who feature producer- apOnsored posters, banners, and newspaper beef sections, Must be workink, too: beef consumption is up 40%, 4' 4, 9 Florida cattlemen have hired an advertising agency to provide restaurants and retailers with merchandising aids, r a 9 Stockmen in North Dakota, Ala- bama, and several other states, have printed thousands of auto window and bumper 'strips, and small stickers for menus, 4< 4' * Iowa cattlemen sponsored Iowa Beef Month, which brought in more than 30 organization% to sponsor and distribute thousands of posters, recipes, window stick- ers, restaurant "table tents." 4, 4, M, Maryland, Virginia, New York, Ohio, and other eastern states are in early stages of beef promotion programs, The National Cow Belles are collecting favorite beef recipes, and are snaking final arrange- ments for national publication of an all -beef cook book, featuring thrifty cuts, Hundreds of cattle- men are helping finance the book (their brands are featured as dec- oration). "Other commodity groups are working hard for peoples' food dollar," observes Jay Taylor, "Only way out for us is to pro- mote beef harder." Idleness Plot So 1.1 Recently one of the unions at Kitimat had a long session with the management discussing a 35 - cent -an -hour pay increase and a 40 -hour work. The comment of one of the workers on these discussions is noteworthy. He said: "An increase in pay is just what I need but my complaint has not been the rate of pay per hour but the few hours only which I am allow- ed to work at that rate. On a rough calculation of 168 hours to a week I find I sleep 70 hours, line up for food 31/2 hours, eat food 7 hours, lie on my bed or have nothing to do for •40 hours and work 48 hours. It will, there- fore, be easily understood why I do not wish to find myself working for 40 hours and flopping around unproductively f o r 43 hours per week. The only major commercial disadvantage of Kiti- mat to me is that the hours of work are not long enough and thereby follows - that the conse- quent pay cheque on an hourly basis is also insufficient." Enforced idleness as a result of the 40 -hour week must be par- ticularly unwelcome on projects like Kitimat and others in the remote places in Canada. Nor is enforced idleness really welcome in more populated centres — but in these places the workers can - do something about it. In fact, the 40 -hour week has created a new class of workers known as "moonlighters," These are meo and women who have two jobs, They do one job during the short workday of the 40 -hour week and have another job to occupy their evening hours The fact scenes to be that many workers do not really like idle- ness. — Winnipeg Tribune. ", _SWORD PUZZLES' A(lit0S8 1. Place 4, 9'It1N: 111,,"lr untag 7. Uneven 12. SerulWino 14, pestis Mal l 17. etuneao meanort 16. Send out 17. 71u0e tr1111 18. Rubber tree 16. (Immigrant) settlement elueruent 92. Not tunny 7. Pit 105891ter 25. Habil ed horse n7, nrIllt 010wly 9, tirtromm bronze 91. It's, 311, Mt uny 34. 7,71slalre4 37. (!n11roJ 1ll4risn 30. A7Lernatlnsr current (nb.4' 40, nrtm,te 42, Itinnlo 'R Thvee T. atlx 1 4, n 47. Insert 47. Wash fond 59, wmau 12, Pleased 54, Inlet 56, .t4hndlos 57, snores lma. o 50, Pound tab.) 00. Vo e rt Homed 61, rli'osn 63,Vorgive 1G Sommer (Tr.) Poenowe 1, etre teat fluid 7. Taman 3. 4ymh"r roe I alll',ftl lint 5. G1rt snu nee el 6. Ida161 slow or 7. clay to H. Cony J'rl lop, nr si blinding 5. n"110r11c 56, Land wreatlli' 99.1'eclalzn 10. Pacltfn4 38. Ai1mlc 11.17von (1081.1., 11. 111 will 13. Myself 14. Mohammed-. 19. SSroilier of 0010114 Jacob 49, Silent 29. damage 13. Troub+ad 24. Steering 45. Stand devise 51. Half (prof48) 26. Dip unto,. 53, lie overtnnd 29. Antler ican 59. Wast*entad 39, neat, .seer ss. Symbol for 39. Tinit of uvPleb, .mod lu,n 11. l•r. rn„t"nl a rrn,elich Anewer Elsewhere on Th s Pato • 1::M1 t ye' 7et;S r s fie, He's A 21st -Century Gulliver — William H. Cullen steps gently into the next century as he maintains the "City of the Future" to the Ford Rotunda. At right is a 24 -story "Communications Building," and between "Gulliver's" legs in a monorail train right-of-way (top level), and beneath it a two-level auto high- way. Building to left of the communications center 11 an auto- matic garage for "Jetmobiles." they stick out of the bed; travel- ling is a nightmare in buses and trains, which you'll find are all built low. 'ted Evans had to have a spec- ial allocation of wartime cloth- ing coupons, his shoes cost $60.00 a pair and $5.00 to sole and heel -•- and when he took up cycling, a special machine had to be made to accommodate those long legs and his weight, But worst of all, he Iaments, are the endless jokes about his height. Tt's still worse for a girl when she goes on growing and grow- ing, because there are so few men tall enough to dance with her -- or lead her to the altar. But extra inches quite often go with feminine charm. Victim Mc- Lagien's bewitching niece, Den- ise McLaglen, is 6 feet 1 inch in her nylons and one of London's tallest showgirls. She recently went to the United States — to Footsteps To Follow — Setting the pace for a blood donor drive, Gloria Frazer, left, and Gertrude Gilhooley paint blood - red footsteps that lead pedest- rians to their Red Cross Blood- mobile. ow 1t Feels To e Nine Feet Tall Albert Kinberg, the man who burst into the Soviet Embassy in Berlin recently and demanded to talk peace with Molotov, is a seven -foot tall Swede. His extra . inches proved useful, for he knelled out four of the twelve Russian guards who surrounded, and finally overpowered, him, Seven foot is tall, even for a Scandinavian, and certainly in comparison with the average height of an Englishman — 5 feet 7,14 inches; and of a Scot, 8 feet, 81/2 inches. But even up there, head and shoulders above the rest of us, Mr, Kinberg is not by any means alone. He could look Adi Berber, who plays the circus strong man in the film, "Carnival Story," right in the eye without even bending his his head. Adi is a seven -foot, 350 pound tower of muscle who earns his living as a professional wrest- ler and has two sons, the elder of whole is as big as he. The commanding stature of Queen Salute of Tonga was no ticeable at the Coronation. But back home h1 her native land where leen and women are among the tallest in the world, she looks quite average. But then to the Polynesians a tall Ameri- can like Hal Baker, New York lawyer and squash rackets cham- pion, who stands 6 feet 7 inches, wouldn't merit a second glance. Baker finds his height a great: ad- vantage because he can reach the bail anywhere in the court. The tallest man In the world? Czechoslovakia boasts of an 8. foot.3-filch giant. There is a loan - in Austria only one inch shorter. And Ted Evans of Lnglefleld Green, Surrey, at the last meas. ming, went just over 9 feet., 4 inches. When Ted was way down in the 7 foot 6 Inch mark, his doc- tor warned him that he might eltpect to grow to eight feet, but he didn't stop there and medical science can neither amount fox' the way he went on growing. nor could it put on the brakes. What's life like up there? Prel- ty difficult, You can't live in a prefab or a bungalow without cracking your head several al times a day: your clothes have to be specially made for you, which is an expensive luxury: you suffer From cold Pent at night because lays in freezing. It lepreferable to freeze in small lots to make sure the heat is removed rapidly. The freezing of fruits offers cog difficulties and most fruit* can be frozen with no other pre- treatment than cleaning and nix- ing with dry sugar or syrup. The amount Of eugar or strength Of syrup used depends upon the tartness of the fruit and On in- dividual taste. Some fruits like blueberries, currants, gooseber- ries, raspberries, may be satisfac- torily frozen without sugar er syrup. Peaches and apricots re- tain their colour and flavour bet- ter If one and One-half grams of ascorbic acid are dissolved in each quart of cold syrup before packaging. Adhering to the simple prin- ciples will mean high quality frozen products for the winter menu BAY t11V SSON Took Seventh elle When 113 Years Old An old leather-bound volume recently discovered in a Bedford library reveals the case historiees of eighteenth -century Britons who cheated old age. There was Thomas Wishart, who died at Annandale, Drum- frlesshir'e, aged 124, He'd been chewing tobacco steadily from the age of seven. John Riva, a broker from London, lived to be 116. All his life he chewed cit- ron bark. His wife bore him e child when he was 100. Mrs, Sarah Taylor was the wife of a Norfolk farmer. To earn her keep when she was a widow, she worked on the farm till her death -- at 107. Perhaps it was also work that killed John Hart, of Haltem, Sussex. He was a blacksmith, aged 105. Who would have wanted to hill Mr:. Elizabeth Hodson, of Scamp- ston, near York? Someone hacked her to death when she was 110. Mrs, Hilton, of Liverpool, hang- ed herself at 121 -- maybe she thought she was going on for ever. Mrs. Jane Gray, ofArtrep-Ru- den,' in Essex, loved to travel. Shortly before her death she crossed Europe, only to come and die -- aged 109. Near Cork there lived a sol- dier named Ames M'Donald who lived to be 117 and was seven feet six inches tall. One poor lady was not so for - see how America felt about a tunate. Her house was consumed girl of that height in show bus- by fire when she was only ninety- iness. 1 six, At the time of her death she Another six-foot lovely is Ter- was mother, grandmother, and ry Morley, who toured South Africa recently with the Folies Bergere company and there met and married a Southern 'Rhodes- ian 6 foot 31/2 inches tall. Is there any advantage in be- ing taller than everybody else? Well, the world's great brains are sometimes to be found at the top of tall, thin people. When sci- entific feats were made, it was found that, on average, a hund- red distinguished scientists stood 21/4 inches taller than the aver- age — while a hundred convicted criminals averaged nearly two inches below the normal. And it's a great help being tall when you want to paint the ceiling. great-grandmother of 104 chil- dren, And that is by no means the largest family. An epitaph could once be seen in the church- yard at Hoyden, Yorkshire, with the following words: Here lies William Sturton. aged 104, of Patrington, who died in 1726. He had by his first wife 27 children, by his second 17. He was the father of 44, grandfath- er 01 56. and great-grandfather of 51. In all 151 children. These, then, are some of Brit- ain's centenarians. Records have been carefully kept showing that, while the southern climates have encouraged longevity, there have been amazingly active cen- tenarians in all parts of England. Ger, The Best Fr,,m Take, for example., Laurence Es- mond, who went out riding a 'Your ilo'i'2'fle.Free er few days before his death, at 106, and Mrs. Stillfan, of Battersea. With the increasing popular- who was still an active school - fly of home freezers many house- teacher when she died at 104. wives are freezing home-grown , Perhaps Patrick O'Neil, who fruits and vegetables. To obtain ' was married in 1760 at Clomnell, the best quality frozen foods itaged 113, to his seventh wife, was is necessary to take certain pre- 1 the most remarkable of all. He cautions in handling ltlost vege- j never drank anything stronger tables and fruits are satisfactory than plain ale, never ate meat for frozen preservation if har. (except when he gave his fain- vested anvested at the peak of quality. ily a feast), would "rise and go This is usually when the vege- to bed with the sun,' walked table or fruit would be gathered without crutches. went to church for table use. evert Sunday, and never had an Vegetables and fruit deterior- ate rapidly after harvesting, and so should he frozen as soon after picking as poesibie Thorough washing is necessary to remove soil and other foreign platter. After washing the blanching arid scalding of all vegetables, ex- - cept rhubarb. is essential, This treatment helps preserve the color and flavour. If vegetables are not blanched, deterioration soon occurs, making the frozen vegetable unpalatable. Blanching times shown in most bulletins or cookbooks refer to boiling tem- perrli.ure conditions,and so it is advisable to use the largest avail- able contain,', and relatively - snlall anloll11 of materiels for each bateh, After blanching the vegetables should be cooled by immediate plungieg into told or preferably icy water. This hastens freezing and reduces the load on the freez- m unit. The product is drained before packaging in vapour -proof containers. Moisture vapory -proof package are essential, especially for dry peeked vegetables. The heat -seal type of plastic bags which are readily avallab le are both econ0lnl '11 and practical. Packaged material insist be placed in the freezer unit as quickly as possible. many home,. Produce to makers allow good 17' t spoil by leaving it at room t"t.ni- 1ature. For flavour i n ecOi'1 ple, the cob- by3 is hastened by insufficient cooling a f ter blancttillg and unnecessary dire. By &est. 1t, Barclay Warren, B.A., 11,31, Ohrietian Worship and (Fellowship Acts 5i46-4'4 Colossians 1:18-t17 Hebrews 10:23-225. Memory Selection; Let us VOW Eider one another to provoke 0055 - to love and to good works: not forsaking the assembling of car - selves together, es the manner of some is. Hebrews 10:24-25. .., • Theunique fellowship of Chria.. (lanes is one of the most attrac- tive features of the Christian re- ligion. A group Of born-again men and woman have a oneness In Christ which Is unmarred by differences of race or language. At the same time it is not snob- bish or exclusive. Christians want to share their joy with others. They say with the Psalm- ist, "0 taste and see that the Lord is good: blessed is the mart that trusteth in him," 34:8. When this spirit prevails as it did in the early church the Lord will add daily to the church such as are saved. The church today may well examine herself and ask, "Are we like the early Christ: fans?" We, too often, take people into the church before they are saved, The church today is not al' ways composed of those who are of "the general assembly and church of the firstborn which are written h1 heaven." Heb. 10.23,• Christians have a forgiving spirit. They cannot hold a grudge. God's love in their hearts givee them a love for their fellowmen. Christians love to sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs. Some gospel songs are frothy like SO many popular secular songs. They lose their appeal in a sea- son. But the psalms and so many spiritual hymns live on. The exhortation not to forsake the assembling of ourselves to- gether is especially timely at this holiday season. Many trek to the cottage every weekend and com- pletely forget the assembly for worship. This is tragic. It fa well to care for the body but we must remember that we are immortal spirits soon to give ea account of ourselves before Al- mighty God. if we starve the soul we are acting foolishly. hour's illness in all his life. fle lived to be 127. From the ancient Greek alchem- ists to Voronoff, who experiment- ed with glands, scientists and doctors through the ages have sought the elixir of longevity. Perhaps the new atomic age will extend man's usual spell of three- score -years -and -ten. BOLD YOUR BIIEATItI In some houses of refreshment in Doula, French Cameroons, wine is sold by the minute. A rubber tube is inserted in the cask and handed to the customer, who is entitled to as much as het can get through in the time he has paid for. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking EFIABFIEWBIUMEIrl 65�xs' �0 E©i�iz1 p Z piiwunermg 3 K 1 3 0 J. -1 0 0 },t Si J.I 3N Ll id td I )c Lifesaving "Doughnuts" -- Resembling huge doughnuts, with the bolas left in, these • uld rubber lifesaving rafts are undergoing oin g tests in harbor waters near London, England, as researcher* aboard a conventional raft, top lett, check their performance. Quickly they have a shallow draft high degree ree of seaworthiness, smolt storage volume, and con be propelled by oars, sails or an auxiliary motor. The smaller one carries ten passengers, the larger one 20 and i;. designed to do a maximum 24 knots under power. a-..0•, r e a 3' eTt A / es IIl t. Cs is•' lt4 I maw ill II sa :.• Anewer Elsewhere on Th s Pato • 1::M1 t ye' 7et;S r s fie, He's A 21st -Century Gulliver — William H. Cullen steps gently into the next century as he maintains the "City of the Future" to the Ford Rotunda. At right is a 24 -story "Communications Building," and between "Gulliver's" legs in a monorail train right-of-way (top level), and beneath it a two-level auto high- way. Building to left of the communications center 11 an auto- matic garage for "Jetmobiles." they stick out of the bed; travel- ling is a nightmare in buses and trains, which you'll find are all built low. 'ted Evans had to have a spec- ial allocation of wartime cloth- ing coupons, his shoes cost $60.00 a pair and $5.00 to sole and heel -•- and when he took up cycling, a special machine had to be made to accommodate those long legs and his weight, But worst of all, he Iaments, are the endless jokes about his height. Tt's still worse for a girl when she goes on growing and grow- ing, because there are so few men tall enough to dance with her -- or lead her to the altar. But extra inches quite often go with feminine charm. Victim Mc- Lagien's bewitching niece, Den- ise McLaglen, is 6 feet 1 inch in her nylons and one of London's tallest showgirls. She recently went to the United States — to Footsteps To Follow — Setting the pace for a blood donor drive, Gloria Frazer, left, and Gertrude Gilhooley paint blood - red footsteps that lead pedest- rians to their Red Cross Blood- mobile. ow 1t Feels To e Nine Feet Tall Albert Kinberg, the man who burst into the Soviet Embassy in Berlin recently and demanded to talk peace with Molotov, is a seven -foot tall Swede. His extra . inches proved useful, for he knelled out four of the twelve Russian guards who surrounded, and finally overpowered, him, Seven foot is tall, even for a Scandinavian, and certainly in comparison with the average height of an Englishman — 5 feet 7,14 inches; and of a Scot, 8 feet, 81/2 inches. But even up there, head and shoulders above the rest of us, Mr, Kinberg is not by any means alone. He could look Adi Berber, who plays the circus strong man in the film, "Carnival Story," right in the eye without even bending his his head. Adi is a seven -foot, 350 pound tower of muscle who earns his living as a professional wrest- ler and has two sons, the elder of whole is as big as he. The commanding stature of Queen Salute of Tonga was no ticeable at the Coronation. But back home h1 her native land where leen and women are among the tallest in the world, she looks quite average. But then to the Polynesians a tall Ameri- can like Hal Baker, New York lawyer and squash rackets cham- pion, who stands 6 feet 7 inches, wouldn't merit a second glance. Baker finds his height a great: ad- vantage because he can reach the bail anywhere in the court. The tallest man In the world? Czechoslovakia boasts of an 8. foot.3-filch giant. There is a loan - in Austria only one inch shorter. And Ted Evans of Lnglefleld Green, Surrey, at the last meas. ming, went just over 9 feet., 4 inches. When Ted was way down in the 7 foot 6 Inch mark, his doc- tor warned him that he might eltpect to grow to eight feet, but he didn't stop there and medical science can neither amount fox' the way he went on growing. nor could it put on the brakes. What's life like up there? Prel- ty difficult, You can't live in a prefab or a bungalow without cracking your head several al times a day: your clothes have to be specially made for you, which is an expensive luxury: you suffer From cold Pent at night because lays in freezing. It lepreferable to freeze in small lots to make sure the heat is removed rapidly. The freezing of fruits offers cog difficulties and most fruit* can be frozen with no other pre- treatment than cleaning and nix- ing with dry sugar or syrup. The amount Of eugar or strength Of syrup used depends upon the tartness of the fruit and On in- dividual taste. Some fruits like blueberries, currants, gooseber- ries, raspberries, may be satisfac- torily frozen without sugar er syrup. Peaches and apricots re- tain their colour and flavour bet- ter If one and One-half grams of ascorbic acid are dissolved in each quart of cold syrup before packaging. Adhering to the simple prin- ciples will mean high quality frozen products for the winter menu BAY t11V SSON Took Seventh elle When 113 Years Old An old leather-bound volume recently discovered in a Bedford library reveals the case historiees of eighteenth -century Britons who cheated old age. There was Thomas Wishart, who died at Annandale, Drum- frlesshir'e, aged 124, He'd been chewing tobacco steadily from the age of seven. John Riva, a broker from London, lived to be 116. All his life he chewed cit- ron bark. His wife bore him e child when he was 100. Mrs, Sarah Taylor was the wife of a Norfolk farmer. To earn her keep when she was a widow, she worked on the farm till her death -- at 107. Perhaps it was also work that killed John Hart, of Haltem, Sussex. He was a blacksmith, aged 105. Who would have wanted to hill Mr:. Elizabeth Hodson, of Scamp- ston, near York? Someone hacked her to death when she was 110. Mrs, Hilton, of Liverpool, hang- ed herself at 121 -- maybe she thought she was going on for ever. Mrs. Jane Gray, ofArtrep-Ru- den,' in Essex, loved to travel. Shortly before her death she crossed Europe, only to come and die -- aged 109. Near Cork there lived a sol- dier named Ames M'Donald who lived to be 117 and was seven feet six inches tall. One poor lady was not so for - see how America felt about a tunate. Her house was consumed girl of that height in show bus- by fire when she was only ninety- iness. 1 six, At the time of her death she Another six-foot lovely is Ter- was mother, grandmother, and ry Morley, who toured South Africa recently with the Folies Bergere company and there met and married a Southern 'Rhodes- ian 6 foot 31/2 inches tall. Is there any advantage in be- ing taller than everybody else? Well, the world's great brains are sometimes to be found at the top of tall, thin people. When sci- entific feats were made, it was found that, on average, a hund- red distinguished scientists stood 21/4 inches taller than the aver- age — while a hundred convicted criminals averaged nearly two inches below the normal. And it's a great help being tall when you want to paint the ceiling. great-grandmother of 104 chil- dren, And that is by no means the largest family. An epitaph could once be seen in the church- yard at Hoyden, Yorkshire, with the following words: Here lies William Sturton. aged 104, of Patrington, who died in 1726. He had by his first wife 27 children, by his second 17. He was the father of 44, grandfath- er 01 56. and great-grandfather of 51. In all 151 children. These, then, are some of Brit- ain's centenarians. Records have been carefully kept showing that, while the southern climates have encouraged longevity, there have been amazingly active cen- tenarians in all parts of England. Ger, The Best Fr,,m Take, for example., Laurence Es- mond, who went out riding a 'Your ilo'i'2'fle.Free er few days before his death, at 106, and Mrs. Stillfan, of Battersea. With the increasing popular- who was still an active school - fly of home freezers many house- teacher when she died at 104. wives are freezing home-grown , Perhaps Patrick O'Neil, who fruits and vegetables. To obtain ' was married in 1760 at Clomnell, the best quality frozen foods itaged 113, to his seventh wife, was is necessary to take certain pre- 1 the most remarkable of all. He cautions in handling ltlost vege- j never drank anything stronger tables and fruits are satisfactory than plain ale, never ate meat for frozen preservation if har. (except when he gave his fain- vested anvested at the peak of quality. ily a feast), would "rise and go This is usually when the vege- to bed with the sun,' walked table or fruit would be gathered without crutches. went to church for table use. evert Sunday, and never had an Vegetables and fruit deterior- ate rapidly after harvesting, and so should he frozen as soon after picking as poesibie Thorough washing is necessary to remove soil and other foreign platter. After washing the blanching arid scalding of all vegetables, ex- - cept rhubarb. is essential, This treatment helps preserve the color and flavour. If vegetables are not blanched, deterioration soon occurs, making the frozen vegetable unpalatable. Blanching times shown in most bulletins or cookbooks refer to boiling tem- perrli.ure conditions,and so it is advisable to use the largest avail- able contain,', and relatively - snlall anloll11 of materiels for each bateh, After blanching the vegetables should be cooled by immediate plungieg into told or preferably icy water. This hastens freezing and reduces the load on the freez- m unit. The product is drained before packaging in vapour -proof containers. Moisture vapory -proof package are essential, especially for dry peeked vegetables. The heat -seal type of plastic bags which are readily avallab le are both econ0lnl '11 and practical. Packaged material insist be placed in the freezer unit as quickly as possible. many home,. Produce to makers allow good 17' t spoil by leaving it at room t"t.ni- 1ature. For flavour i n ecOi'1 ple, the cob- by3 is hastened by insufficient cooling a f ter blancttillg and unnecessary dire. By &est. 1t, Barclay Warren, B.A., 11,31, Ohrietian Worship and (Fellowship Acts 5i46-4'4 Colossians 1:18-t17 Hebrews 10:23-225. Memory Selection; Let us VOW Eider one another to provoke 0055 - to love and to good works: not forsaking the assembling of car - selves together, es the manner of some is. Hebrews 10:24-25. .., • Theunique fellowship of Chria.. (lanes is one of the most attrac- tive features of the Christian re- ligion. A group Of born-again men and woman have a oneness In Christ which Is unmarred by differences of race or language. At the same time it is not snob- bish or exclusive. Christians want to share their joy with others. They say with the Psalm- ist, "0 taste and see that the Lord is good: blessed is the mart that trusteth in him," 34:8. When this spirit prevails as it did in the early church the Lord will add daily to the church such as are saved. The church today may well examine herself and ask, "Are we like the early Christ: fans?" We, too often, take people into the church before they are saved, The church today is not al' ways composed of those who are of "the general assembly and church of the firstborn which are written h1 heaven." Heb. 10.23,• Christians have a forgiving spirit. They cannot hold a grudge. God's love in their hearts givee them a love for their fellowmen. Christians love to sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs. Some gospel songs are frothy like SO many popular secular songs. They lose their appeal in a sea- son. But the psalms and so many spiritual hymns live on. The exhortation not to forsake the assembling of ourselves to- gether is especially timely at this holiday season. Many trek to the cottage every weekend and com- pletely forget the assembly for worship. This is tragic. It fa well to care for the body but we must remember that we are immortal spirits soon to give ea account of ourselves before Al- mighty God. if we starve the soul we are acting foolishly. hour's illness in all his life. fle lived to be 127. From the ancient Greek alchem- ists to Voronoff, who experiment- ed with glands, scientists and doctors through the ages have sought the elixir of longevity. Perhaps the new atomic age will extend man's usual spell of three- score -years -and -ten. BOLD YOUR BIIEATItI In some houses of refreshment in Doula, French Cameroons, wine is sold by the minute. A rubber tube is inserted in the cask and handed to the customer, who is entitled to as much as het can get through in the time he has paid for. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking EFIABFIEWBIUMEIrl 65�xs' �0 E©i�iz1 p Z piiwunermg 3 K 1 3 0 J. -1 0 0 },t Si J.I 3N Ll id td I )c Lifesaving "Doughnuts" -- Resembling huge doughnuts, with the bolas left in, these • uld rubber lifesaving rafts are undergoing oin g tests in harbor waters near London, England, as researcher* aboard a conventional raft, top lett, check their performance. Quickly they have a shallow draft high degree ree of seaworthiness, smolt storage volume, and con be propelled by oars, sails or an auxiliary motor. The smaller one carries ten passengers, the larger one 20 and i;. designed to do a maximum 24 knots under power.