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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1954-09-23, Page 3That Lengthy Arm titCokleldence A girl slipped on a pevoruent. The young num who helped her up found she had twisted her ankle and popped her int() his tradesman's van so that he could drive her home. He met her sister end later the girl with the sprained ankle mel hie brother. It made a recent double wedding hi Stoke New- ington. Scarcely less strange was the meeting of Sheila Fox with handsome Keith Nicol. He went to South Africa to set up as a physiotherapist. Sheila, a nurse, went there on holiday, They both had nn invitation to the same dinner -party in Cape Town and soon found, while chatting, that they both lived in Rich- mond, in the same street. "What number?" asked Keith. "I'm at 35." "Ian at 371" said Sheila. "That's next door!" gasped Leith—and now the two neigh- bours who never exchanged a word while in London have married and set up house to- gether in Cape Town. Mrs. Clara Phillips will never forget a certain cold spell dur- ing the war. Her water -pipes burst and, she rushed next doer to her bachelor neighbour. "Mrs." was then "Miss" — and thanks to that flaw in the plumbing the Phillips family of seven is now one of Man- chester's happiest. It takes a lot to make a suc- cessful marriage — yet it's the little things that count. When Tommy Tapsell found a hole in bia sock, he happened to tell Clara Stoneham. She said, "Let me darn it!" The banns were soon read -- and yet another couple found happiness. Or take tate case of the young man who last year tried to steal A kiss when he found himself Alone with a girl In a train com- Yot thurgers Even itiore When Tom Use Mist= 9Y DOROTHY MA'DOOX ALMOSTeveryone likes hamburgers. And they tally even better with these easy -to -prepare special relishes. Mayonnaise Pickle, Relish (Makes 1 cup) One-half cup mayonnaise or salad dressing, t'x cup sweet pickle relish, 2 teaspoons grated onion, freshly ground pepper to taste. In a small bowl or a jar, combine mayonnaise; or salad dressing with remaining ingredients; blend well. Cover and keep in the refrigerator until time to serve with hamiwrgers. Mustard ,Mayonnaise (Makes 1 cup) One-half cup mayonnaise or salad dressing, lis cup prepared mustard, 1 tablespoon prepared horseradish. In a small bowl or ajar, combine mayonnaise or salad dress- ing with remaining ingredients; blend well. Cover and keep In the refrigerator until time to serve with hamburgers. * Ever here of Catch -a -Fellow Salad? It's quite a dish—whether or not it catches a fellow, Catch-a-Feilow Salad (Serves 6) r Six hard -cooked eggs, chopped; 1/2 cup finely chopped celery, 14 cup finely chopped pimento, 2 tablespoons chopped, green onion; 1 teaspoons prepared mustard, 14 cup mayonnaise or salad dressing, 6 large tomatoes, salt and pepper to taste, crisp salad greens. In a bowl, combine eggs, celery, pimento, onion, mustard and mayonnaise or salad dressing; mix thoroughly, Cober and chill several hours. Hamburgers, the any -time, any -place treat nearly everyone enc love, acquire enhancecl taste appeal when served with relishes. For each salad, turn the tomato stem end down and cut into quarters, not quite through. Spread tomato quarters out a littler on the crisp salad green and spoon egg salad mixture into the tomato roses. Or cut each tomato crosswise, into 3 slices. Arrange the largest tomato slice on the crisp salad greens. Tap with egg salad mixture, then with second tomato slice, egg naiad mixture and remaining tomato slice, partment on the way to the Midlands, Eagerly, he said, "I hope to be seeing a lot of you." Murmured the girl, "You cer- tainly will." And within a few days he found himself hauled into court and fined for assault. The girl was a policewoman. Luckily, the story has a hap- pier ending. After the case, the young man asked to see the girl and profusely expressed his apologies. Then he asked if he really could have a kiss—and she consented, In due Bourse the wedding bells rang. A simpler poultry ration is tatur'ally the goal most chicken aficiandos" are aiming for; so hese remarks, by Stanley R. - Smith of the University of Rhode Island, may be of inter- est to some of our readers, 4 4 4 Leave the baking powder out of a cake, and chances are it won't turn out so good. The gamo thing is usually true of a poultry feed — leave Out an essential ingredient, and egg production and hatchability can hit the skids. -6 0 fry t But now, after five tests, we've found out something that might save you money and work in the future; you can leave all the animal protiens like fish meal and meat scraps out of a breeder ration with- out doing a bit of harm to the hen, or to egg production and hatchabilit . In fact, sometimes we get even better results from a simple ration than from a complicated one. To show you how we stream- lined the old -type ration down to a simple one for our tests at the University of Rhode Island,. here are the ingredients, for each: n, w i The biggest change we made was to substitute butyl -fermen- tation products for the oats, wheat middlings, meat scraps, and red -fish meal flew -type sins- kapott° horn pie ration: Alfalfa meat Yellow corn Soybean ell Alfalfa ureal meal Soybean oil Steamed bone meal steal Steamed bone Mineral & meal vitamin mix Mineral & Puverized oats vitamin ndx Wheat B -fermentation middlings products Meat scraps Old -type Red -fists meal * One of the biggest surprises we get when we feed the simple ration is that it dosn't lower egg hatchability. Hatchability did drop When we first tried the simple formula, but then we added 2% alfalfa meal and 2% butyl -fermentation products to supply A and B -complex vita- mins, and hatchability rose again. Also, the hens laid larger eggs. With the eonting of full, the majority of pullets will be ap- proaching maturity. Now is the time to make preparations to help to insure the health of the birds throughput the coming laying year. The laying house should be thoroughly cleared out --- the old litter removed, and the walls and tloer scrubbed with a hot water and lye solution, or some other satisfactory dis- infectant. Roosts, nest s, and other places where the birds CROSSWORD PUZZLE ,.e> to i•,, ,e Min nort.Jta 111 t'nd,"V 0101.44 8. droving P.nweP S. Melia -cgs mi. \ PI \ warm an. Apt 10. 010 modes' 2': 4.11 note 28. Among �. -- 11, Ann 1)"t 3tiGrants 2. Al • tomb.. 18, Not tiny err, Disdain forme 10 Atom ab iTn(du g,i moot e. Punitive 911 S,,nl esignalon 3.Urchin 21. Allnwail es 10. 9'nrl:Solt title 4. Cr Sen 14100/./1 iambi* ere 1:. 4l Perini 8, 1...r (ping 25, (1111(10 weigh 45 Horde i pint en mals 211 91 earls*, t M. 0,11 er 4, Rogow? 21 IL'sglisb •i1a) Id. I'1,', 4 out At 1'03a 1 netting i Article Arnhlno Moat ort 5. 1Hari 18. Salon el0ero to rs 1t.Ttoddei Pit 1. Common 11. hnrfr,m R0sei'r(11 miler 18. Vinr„tlntllesn point 19. Ulreet 20, Aviles 25. 6'orn, or writing 25, A(1,,1,,,' 11(10,44 (PI.) 20.. [moot 27. (lo to le w 28. 1)nglt211 °rinortse 20 Leww''anaoe chit character 20. Small J1 1' e,' 81. (creel; totter 32. T,r' r 2:1, Arlooniulute ol'tI, 24, Call forth 20. Pictured look. 27. Numbers 88. Roasting stairs 81), «Jlaebnrgvd n debt. 41. l'rateutvnrthy 40. Curved molding. 40.under 47,::Nara wood 48. Go by 49. b12121 3U. Ihttg 111_ t. "'l'1) 221 •• , Answer elsewhere oat thin )Sana, THE SIG PILE—To the right of Webster's unabridged dictionary lies a stack of publications printed in the development of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 and the last 10 copies of the Congressional Record. They are examples of the Targe amount of material the Government Printing Office in Washington, D.C., had to put out in the lost session of Congress. eongregate should be treated for mites. Old crank case oil painted on these areas will supply adequate protection against these parasites. After cleaning, fresh litter is added to the house, Chopped straw or. wood shavings is satis- factory for this purpose. Ample watering space must be pro- vided for the young pullets, and four to six inches of feeder space is recommended. Three to four square feet of floor space is the requirement per bird — heavy birds such as Barred Rocks or Light Sussex need four square feet, while the light breeds, such as Leghorns or Leghorn crosses, will do well at three or three and a half square feet per bird. Before the pullets are to be housed, make a check to deter- mine if lice are .present, and if so, treat the birds. Similarly, if there Is evidence of worms, treatment should be carried out while the pullets are still on range. t {- Flail Plan to house the pullets when they approach 25 per cent egg production on the range. It is . wise to house in the morn- ing so that the birds will be- come acquainted with their new quarters before dark. This may eliminate losses due to crowd- ing in a strange location Cult • the pullets when. housing, re- moving all unthrifty and sickly looking birds. N Pulle•ta coming Into production have a three -fold strain on their systems. (1) the mainten- ance. of their bodies, (21 in- creasing their body weight to trlatu14, weight, and (3) egg pro- ! duction. To supply the birds with their needs during this critical period, top quality' feed mint he used. A 17 per ('vol pl'oteia ration (22 per cent lay- ing ration 50:50 with iterate]) grains) should be fed at the on- set of egg production and con- tinued for a month to 0 -weeks, after which the ration may be ('educed to 15 per cent protein, Oyster• shell and fresh water must be available to this pullets at all times. OB11 Yil1D ORDER The wife of Lord Chancellor Hardwick once asked his bailiff if he could procure for a state dinner a pig of such and such dimensions. The bailiff burst into the draw- ing town where she was enter- taining guests, announcing: "I've been to the market, ruy lady, and I've bought a pig of *smelly your s11c:." That 'Sixth tense' is y t (yang An Italian woman, with deep- set eyes and a high fore head, seriously believes that every time she suffers from a severe headache it presages an earth- quake in some part of the world. She declares that she .knew in advance about the recent Greek earthquake — because on the day before she had a very bad headache. She also claims that she foretold in this way a severe earthquake in• China. Her strange power t0 sense catastrophe in advance is puz- zling scientists. But people who have talked to the dark, attare- tive Signorina Adelina Roma - mill are convinced that. she genuinely senses impending. se- ismic disaster in remote parts of the globe. Often the most ordinary peo- ple have been proved to possess an ability to "see" visions of events destined to happen at enormous distances from them. Take the case of Mrs. Canner, an American woman living in Washington, who was walking home one day when she stum- bled and fell, scattering the papers she was carrying in all directions. She got up, unhurt, collected the papers and walked the remaining fifty yards to her house. By the first post next morn- ing she received e letter from a friend living 250 miles away who had foreseen her. •accident in a strange way at least twenty-four hours Urfnrc it 1)c- ,:urred, "As 1 was sitting in my room, I felt a sudden sensation of • sleek." wrote the friend ''Be- fore my eyes I saw the: whole incident -•- saw 4400 stumble and fall and the papers scatter, saw you pick then; up. "You had on your bloc}: skirt and velvet waistband. It was all so plain to me that. 1 set down at 10004 in wrier.' this letter -to 44011" Mrs, Calmer wa sat impn•es,'d even her friend's description of what she was wearing was accurate '-- that she handed it to 11 scientist who was investi- gating other reported instances of second sight. His careful in- vestigations showed bey on d question that Mrs. Cnrmor's friend possessed some inexplic- able sixth sense. He found that she •had "5000" a railway disaster three Whole days before it took place, nem, trig the place and several vic- tims who wet e 11(rnous and whose faces she therefore recog- nized. There was also _tic::' young end wealthy Budapest business man who was rung up early one morning by an agitated friend, "Whatever you - do, don't sleep in your u,u-a1 bed on the night of September 20th, exact- ly a fortnight from to -day," his friend warned. "As I shaved this morning, a strange feeling suddenly oppressed me and I saw in my mirror a vision of you being killed by that heavily framed picture of a Spanish beauty which hangs on the wall above your pillow. And the date on the calendar on the niantlepiece in your bedroom was September 20th " The business man only laugh- at him. "You've been working too hard -- you need a holi- day," he said. "Take one and you'll see no visions." Reluctantly, the friend took his advice. But as he shaved on the first morning of his holi- day, the vision came again. He warned his friend by telephone, but was scoffed at. So he wrote hitt a letter that day, Septem- ber 17th, giving him full de- tails of the tragedy which he was sure would (veur ir, three days° time. It did. The business man Was killed instantly when the pic- ture fell on him as he lay in bed at 11,30 p.m. on September 20th. His housekeeper found the warning letter describing in ad- vance exeactly what happened, lying crumpled in hie waste- paper basket. Sceptics soinetimes try to laugh off these stories of peo- ple who claim to "see" things in advance. But they always find it impossible to explain them away. It Le not a question of coincidence. No Need For Fear • Ort every side today there seems to he a spirit of unrest and doubt. Normally eleaalhinking people 901(1) the news with ap- prehension and the more they read of national and world at - fairs the more beclouded be - mine the issues On one hand there are the "don'ts" and on the other the "do's." One national leader has only to express himself on any inter- national question when, barely before leis words are assimilat- ed by the public at large, an- other lets go a broadside eon- tr•ar'y in every way to the -first individual's line of thought. No wonder Mr. and Mrs. Every Day Citizen are confused and filled vrith foreboding. SC By tote. It. Barclay Warren, RA, 41.0 Mixing Witnesses Matthew 5:83-16; Acts H ('6.: 1, Corinti,ian.s 3:14-20. i'lr;ln(lry Selection: Let poor tight so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your F'athe'r which i.t fru heaven. Matthew 5:16, TirroLtgh the past three months we have covered prae•- tically every activity that con- tributes to the Christian`3l growth, beginning with that normal early life of the Saviour as our example and proceed Ing to the things that help ua to grow inwardly and outward- ly. We have considered Bible( study, prayer, worship, self- discipline. ' We have takeli up fellowship. giving and service to the church, to industry, to our eommunity, and have en- deavoured to see how Godo love diffused through all our being gives meaning and etfee- tivnees to all that has gone be - .fore. Now we vont* to witness- ing. Dr, Daniel Steele once said that if every pulpit in the country was turned intoa witness stand for just one Sunday, there would be a receival of retigiorr on a national scale in a week's time. The early church was a witnessing church. They went eberywhere gossiping the gos- pel. A publisher was discussing how a book becomes a best- seller. It clicks with the peo- ple and they begin telling their friends. The best type of adver- tising is when a man who hats read the book enthusiastically tells his friends about it. 0 that we may have the Holy Spirit as did these disciples. They were salt cleansing and preserving their generation. They were light dispelling the darkness of sin's domination. They were witnesses telling about Jesus and hos power to save. We have a great responsible lity to spread the Good Newer. This is tate most important task of every preacher and layman. Let us get busy. It is time we got off thus merry-go-round and returned to the fundamentals of living and thinking. One doesn't have to wart t0' the opinions of any leader of the moment, acclaimed think- er or herald*; world affairs aro alyst. The answer to peace, con- tentment, serenity, and a full untroubled life, has been with us for over 2,000 ''ears. "For God bath not given us the spirit of fear; but to power, and of love, and of a sound mind." You will find it in 11 Tim- othy 1: 7—the answer to all un: rest. --Clarkson Mash.) Herald, Upsidedown to Prevent Peeling -rt CRIPPLED AND UNDERPRIVILEGED CHILDREN from all parts of Ontario will be guests of Rameses Shrine at the annual Shrine Charity Circus to be held in Maple Ledf Gardens, Toronto, from Seplernbeer 27th through to October 2nd. Seen here with one of the clowns who will be performing at this years circus is Fred Midgley, the Potentate of Rameses Temple, with .lams Laidlaw arid Cheryl Cooper. Proceeds from the circus will he in did of the 5hriners Crippled Children and Benevolent Fund,