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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1960-11-10, Page 3! Jut Lid tit ah ;? lnrlu,�c•n I;S:reu l 170 puuud 06 a1=e4 r+tta e... a I.t , 1aar.•d fn leotlnttr indiirld male who have made some out standing contribution to agricul• hire in past years, a Canadian Agr`:tnitural Balt of Fame will be treablished inuring the. 1980 Rny e1 Agricultural Winter Fair, which will be held in Toronto from November 11 to 19. Sparked by W, P. Watson, Live Stook Commissioner for the Province of Ontario, a move- ment for such a project has been ur,el;,,r)4'a fni,snnle time, The Royal Agricultural Winter Fair will act as sponsor of the Canadian Agricultural Hall of Paine and nil agricultural groups,,,. and organizations..... across the n;_rtien_az'etbc*ilii urged to active- -Ty support this undertaking. Objects of the proposed Cana- dian Agricultural Ball of Fame include recognition of individuals for outstanding contributions to agriculture, the establishment of a portait gallery and the promo. tion of interest in and the study of agriculture generally. Working with Mr. Watson on the project are Geore, M. Cle- mons, Brantford, Harold White, Guelph J. A, Carroll, Brampton and Professor G. E. Raithby, Guelph. "Just a little extra attention to hog weights on the part of producers would return divid- ends." That's the conclusion of Elgin Senn, chief of the grading sec- tion, Livestock Division, Canada Department of Agriculture, after analysing the results of a nation- wide survey of hag carcass grades. It showed that 23.5 per Bent of grade B carcass were either a Tittle ton Light or a shade ton heavy to meet grade A require- ments. This fault will bit a hog producer's pocketbook even harder now that a e3 quality premium is being paid on grade A carcasses and none on grade 13 carcasses. Mr. Senn estimated that on a 180 -pound carcass, the cash dif- ference between the two grades would be $4.60. To measure up to grade A standards, the carcass must tip POPCORN - Virginia Spencer holds an ear of corn shaped and colored like a strawberry. Of was grown at the research nursery of the Missouri Farm- cers Assn. The hybrid is called, appropriately, strawberry corn. The :;area.) point ed up tit: feet that 130 per cent of al, grade e' c Ite :.mases err it in d be - (worn 171 and 180 pounce, and 9.7 par cent betty:. n 11,3 and , 134 p "Ov"rfiilistc" -- too much 101•:. is 0 leading fault in (trade 13 c•ai'cases and has been stressed as such for many years, accord.. ing to Mr, Senn. Actually, 89.9 per cent of the carcasses in this grade were reported to be over - finished, Another 17 per cent were "Off -type" -. too short, round - ribbed, or with heavy frnnd ends. An encouraging downward trend was indicated in the number of grade B ' carcasses wlth--a pigment fault -- colored Italie. The percentage in Eastern Canada totaled 1,7 and the per- rentage in Western Canada was 3.0. Just six years ago, these figures were' 10.3 per cent for Western Canada and 5.9 per cent for' the East, - Concludes Mr. Senn: "Pro- ducers who pay a little closer attention to the market weight of their hogs will find it pays off." A new oat variety, Russell, was released this year. In tests made in Ontario dur- ing the past four years, Russell generally outyielded the rec- ommended varieties in all areas except the northern part of the province, * * * Russell is similar to Garry in its resistance to steal rust, crown rust, smut and other diseases and is more tolerant of stem than the currently grown varieties. It has a larger kernel and a lower percentage of hull than Garry. It has shorter straw and ripens about the sante •time. Seed treatment for seed - borne diseases is recommended, just as it is with other varieties -of oats, While Russell has stimulated interest in other provinces, Dr. Zillinsky feels it is best suited to the medium and lighter soils of On fano. • Rocky on Tests It is nearly two years since the administration voluntarily banned nuclear tests. In that time there has been no progress in negotiations with the Russians on a satisfactory test ban agree- ment, nor has there been any certain assurance that the Rus- sians have not been testing secretly. In view of these facts (as has been pointed out here before) there seems no good reason why we should continue our volun- tary plan, It is a gamble with our security and hampers de- velopment of peaceful uses of nuclear explosions. We should resume underground tests which present no fallout hazard at all. Our great nuclear physicist, Dr. Edward Teller, is among those urging such a course. Governor Rockefeller of New York is once more urging it, too. He has proposed a practical pro- gram on nuclear testing as fol- lows: The United States should re- nounce further testing in the atmosphere and invite the Unit- ed Nations to establish a com- mittee to monitor fallout. It should agree to end other tests that can be detected (providing, we would add, built-in self -en- forcing detection guare.ntees are possible). It should rest...see un- derground testing both ae a measure of security and of press- ing the Soviet Union toward a realistic approach to armament control This makes sense. - Seattle Post-Intelligencer. a - c .'iryry{ PUZZLE ''•ZZLEmai RD 1 J ACROSS 1. Acknowledge 5.1101st 2. Quarrel 10. Plmulate 13. worthless (70111.) 14. Head 19. Porind of ttme. 10. p'lt pant 17. Doll of love 31. Snake 0. nreaks sud- di. Commerciale 72.7Torsefiy larvae 53. Plugs up so. Yield 27. Anger 35. Lassa SI, Turkish can 33. Sun disk 83. Re under obligation 98, Cnshlo Is. Lose 114e f1u1,1 38. Driving line 88, other than 30. A drttelgo 41, Distilling Y*d9a 40, Resent tt141 o lvan*es 8. Unpin nevus 40. impel with forte Animal nada, 1. ntrW114 nn s. Dr l i** 3. Dr toeeenr PttI less, ,1 V 3, Hunger -os 41. Winnow 10. On the eummlt 32 TYPe yof vole* 11. Thomas Hardly 41 Bread spread heroine 37. Turn. inside 12. L'in sh line out 10, Mother pig 38, Oravlsh tan 22. Charles 38. Cabbage salad 40. Decor n•hn- ming 41. Uncommon 42. Ocmnlleh 43. ,Togging gait 44. Portico rrndev,'lnnrd 11,,wor ". Telegraph ie cera S. tow tido 23. Theatre sign er 4. Plaits 24. Land fiber 9, Wading birds 20.2Conducts bottom 8. Land measure 15.I•'aa ale 7. Mete man l7tper 8. Tired 01(1 20, it.'mnnnt An5w41¢ elsewhree on this page Federal Aviation Authorities Given The Bird By Starling STARLINGS: By JERRY BENNETT Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Washington - The squawk of a frightened bird may make air travel safer some day - if other birds can finally be made to un- derstand that they are flying in the face of progress. Federal Aviation Agency ex- • perts are studying ways to dis- courage flocks of small birds, like starlings, which menace tliglit,,, from roosting near air- ports. Broadcasting a record of bird cries has always succeeeded in driving away starlings from air- ports, but only for short periods of time. The birds always return. This story might seem funny if it weren't so frightening, The FAA believes a flock of migrat- ing starlings might have been sucked into the turbo -jet engines of an Electra airliner on Oct, 4 at Boston, causing a "flame out" which resulted in the deaths of 01 persons, So the FAA takes its recordings seriously. 4 The novel recording is made by holding a starling upside down in front of a microphone. The squawk is recorded on tape and broadcast over a loud- speaker. The system was devel- oped by Dr. Hubert Frings and Prof. Joseph Jumber of Pennsyl- venia State College and tested in 1954. On three consecutive evenings, federal officials broadcast the tape from the fourth story of the Washington Archives Build- ing as the starlings flew in to roost. Playing time was five to 20 seconds until the birds were driven away. The starlings avoided the fourth floor and went elsewhere around the building where the sound couldn't be heard, They stayed there for the next three months until they migrated for the summer. But the starlings eventually returned to their usual Archives roost. The same thing happened in Air Force experiments at Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio. The Air Force also tried to rid itself of the starlings by emitting high pitched sirens above human hearing level, beating drums and firing guns into the air. These methods worked - temporarily, In 1958, the General Services Administration, believing that the starlings might be more frightened by the cry of a nat- ural enemy, the hawk, switched "vocalists." The starlings disappeared. They were replaced by a flock of hawks. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serv- ice is after the starlings, too. Dr. James S. Lindzey, an FWS official, says that the starlings, introduced here at the turn of the century, feast upon improve- ments In U.S. crop growing methods and there are few en- vironmental hazards to bother then(. Therefore, the starling is not wanted on farmland either. All agencies worried about the starling might hear the plight of the Navy, which has its own bird problems. What the starling threatens to do to some flights around the country, the gooney bird has done to flights on Midway Is- land in the Pacific. In one year, 538 Navy air- craft were involved in collisions with gooney birds, (albatrosses), which inflicted damage totalling more than $158,000 and endan- gering persons on the planes. So the Navy tried to frighten the birds off with weird noise*, smoke thein out and steal their ISSUE 4,!'r - 1960 Airborne hazard eggs. When these methods didn't work, the sailors tried to "club" (hem. Finally they spent $110,000 to level the dunes near the run- ways, the gooney birds' takeoff- point. akeoflfpoint, They also provided simi- lar sites on another island to at- tract the birds there. At last report, the problem on Midway has been reduced sub- stantially --- but it, too, has not be, in .ntintinafcd entirely. First Sight Of .Asko Comes As Shock To anyone travelling eastwards from Europe the first sight of the Asian plateau must come as something of a shock. Perhaps it will be at the end of the Iong climb inland above Trebizond, up from the lush timbered slopes of the Black Sea; when far above the tree -line at the top of the pass - the same spot where Xenaphon's soldiers mar- ching in the opposite direction first glimpsed the sea - the mists fall back and the great barren hogs' backs, edged with range on range of blue peaks, break into view. Father east across the Taurus Mountains, in Persia proper, the landscape is even more astonish. ing. As the snowcapped cone of Ararat sinks behind the horizon the long burnt plains crossed by chains of smooth hills, unfold, rolling it seems for ever in waves of bare brown and yellow until they wash the feet of yet another line of mountains whose purple spikes, sharp as dogs' teeth, melt into the sky. Never a tree or a house or the sight of a man; only the thin white thread of dust road unwinding over the plain. As the sun swings westward the colours deepen, turning the sea of burnt grass to gold, flush- ing the peaks to pink and orange, while huge shadows creep out from the Bills to swallow the land. Standing so small in so gigantic a scene, the silence made more enormous by the thin pipe of a bird fluttering in the grass, there conies a sense of desolation that is almost painful; a loneliness appalling and yet exultant. Night shuts out the earth; the vionseflea flie.k i a flint answer to the o d 1,111ti ane,. of the sit Erma d hfld, the first large city Haat greeted cc: ted ue en aur entre Into Perm t, we had driven south, - roads reeireely marked on the inap, following the summer that W414 beginning to fail 00 those northern highlands; smith by the marshy shoe.., of I:als.e Urznyia, tip on to the windswept plateaux •+ of I.urdistan. Tiny village. meet- ed in tiers of mud roofs in ran sheher of valleys watered by streams green with - trate r, Y t r;.,, I3y one of these streams see came upon a group of women in long flowered petticoats of sear - let and black,- baggy dark pante- •1 loons clipped tightly above their - ( bare feet, with untidy bands of black lace wrapped loosely round the oiled ringlets of their hair.... In some villages the men were winnowing, tossing the eora with forks into the blue sky, the grain floating in a mist of void, in the light breeze. (ze, W i Lung round the winnowers i n a, -once startled by a thin curl of smoke that rose I-etween my ft, 1, only to find that I was standing on the roofs of cottages. -- From - "From -a Persian Tea -House," by Michael Carroll. To' Keep Calm Look At Goldfish • Millions of goldfish se r:,tn ;suds _ denly to freedom, their deaths or the waiting acts of hundreds of small boys ill 0 city of West- ern Japan nee'ently when rain from a passing typhe,nn flooded I the local cultivation pentaa Children 'woke in the morn- ing eater the typhoon to tinct the ' city's streets filled with •gold- fish. Ten million had escaped but another sixty million in the ponds were not affected by the typhoon. To -day goldfish are the most popular of all ornamental Halt tend millions of dollars are spent annually in rearing then( in various parts of the world. Goldfish are really carp and for many years most of those seen in Britain came from Italy. They like heat and thrive well in water at a temperature of 90 degrees, but experts say that tate goldfish of to -day are much hardier and can withstand the cold of an English winter much better than their forbears did a century ago. The United States has many goldfish farms. Some in Mary- land employ hundreds of men. So popular are goldfish in Am- erica that some of the big stores present them to customers, giv- ing one goldfish for each stated amount spent, One goldfish expert recom- mends the stury of goldfish and their habits as a perfect cure for worry. People can find tran- quility merely by gazing at gold- fish, he says. The first goldfish to reach Europe came from China and were presented to the famous Madame Pompadour. The artist Whistler did not like goldfish. While in Italy he had a grudge against his landlady so he angled for her goldfish - placed tempt- ingly on a ledge beneath his window -sill - and caught them. Then he callously fried them and dropped them back into their bowl DRIVE CAREFULLY - The life you save may be your own. `.1 o.' LESS N By (Rev. t!. Barclay %,9 terms list). Confession and Irnrgivcneee Psalms 32 and .51 The .1,1,1 1, 1tieti t- t,rt forth t -on clo'n,y to this lcssott. Tatou. /ous.t r:,t of all bo 1len that b+ruriucc5 sorrow for sin. Nu where is this more txpees:.nd in Script ur0 than in P atm 31. W a-, a 1;11+) ui Pr:alrn 32, "For day and night ti ti hand -1) ,vy upon, nor." I1 -14a comes <'oz f- -.+ion, 1 .flea, 'I will coot e$11 My (ran--aross...o5 unto the lord,'" Cente aeon mates testily 011(n godly se, ev for sin has worked re:pr t 51.10. Ile who i5 thorenehi. rttpe'1 larch reed. to bang 11'13 11e011 br°ior3 110d. Ile want; to lac deue with ate fate: 11,0 s0,0000, that his stns, hoerevel 1 b1iy (tar hare intloc- ed ol10,1.0, in;cr Leen prilut.rily art offense igitost (loci. H.• :, •0 himself a,. I u'!iy respca., iblc tom Christ', closet/ mean tl., rro-s., It was. the tins. of ea all teat n:lilecl Him there. The next amp c, fai:1:. An t'n- cnura';en e r t for Utah is painted uta in oat we re elftss cur ::1s, r s iaith- 1 and Jtut to irt:e t;_ our' sins,_ tad l.e e e ;t:.+e n. fru In alt Iii i'i1,:,0,1a.ne,_." I ,lohn 1:9. This 1< )'','',Ow a that 1l,101411 me most when I t. s 1':,n 140ra e than way e t : le, ;n 11. 1 O. ad ' t.:r:cr- cdif P'.hear,-I 1)111,0111rura-.- my sins t,1 God and tel reeea e no ferelveuess. ' t t minister e ]) tall. 1 111.-. t':: 11:1:'.1 'os en '1..,, God would be `adarel and ju:t. 0.e forgive. 1 could count on Him t:> d.. Iii: p:,1 t If I v; e,uld ti0 thine. S :(1 : 11,::111:,: lal.,r .an. dem- a doe:, :,,n,: n11' 111- 11;',e I became irul-; .:..11 v four a: .gins. I was sorry eaemat to quit tam all, raaardiess of whet- at.yun,e of my c ,:tlpini ) .• at High vehoct thought ar said ala, ut it. I saw my Sayic ur dying tot me on Calvary. ary. I eonlessed nay sin to God. T!ten the weeds of our memory seleetion came to mind. God had pt,mtsed I bJieved. My burden of guilt was gone. I arose, forgiven. • the way 01f salvation ;s really very simple when we are willing to humble ourselves and 'turn to Jesue Christ with Ilie v:lf )le heart. I have always been very glad for that day when, I experienced the forgiveness of sin. It was the beginning of a noon' life.. a life in Christ Jesus. T became a new' creature through faith m Jesus! Christ, The way grime better every day. I shall be -eternally grateful to my Lord. There's always plenty o8 trouble about, yet some people insist on wasting time looking for it. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking 09''a;SONa' NSA" 3 '1 1 J. c1 3id SOdi3 A J Iy 3 1 'did FL b -CS NO HORSING AROUND -- Tugging for all they're worth, the nighty horses Jim, left, and Jane) strain into a new world record at annual horse pulling contest in Port Huron. Owner and drive is R. F. Oakleaf, who coaxed his team to pull a total of 4,300 pounds, 32 feet, 11 inches., 2 b .;yH 5 4 7 ::+:}8 9 10 a/ / 3 %q • a j %U •/7 VIII9 -•u-,.-....-.... N' ::._ 27 25 59 ; 43 . ;t4i -n 31 35 t= : r$ 'Nf 3^7 ky�y^y�rr".. ee ;. tn_ aS3 t ." e 4xr t t11t2 046 An5w41¢ elsewhree on this page Federal Aviation Authorities Given The Bird By Starling STARLINGS: By JERRY BENNETT Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Washington - The squawk of a frightened bird may make air travel safer some day - if other birds can finally be made to un- derstand that they are flying in the face of progress. Federal Aviation Agency ex- • perts are studying ways to dis- courage flocks of small birds, like starlings, which menace tliglit,,, from roosting near air- ports. Broadcasting a record of bird cries has always succeeeded in driving away starlings from air- ports, but only for short periods of time. The birds always return. This story might seem funny if it weren't so frightening, The FAA believes a flock of migrat- ing starlings might have been sucked into the turbo -jet engines of an Electra airliner on Oct, 4 at Boston, causing a "flame out" which resulted in the deaths of 01 persons, So the FAA takes its recordings seriously. 4 The novel recording is made by holding a starling upside down in front of a microphone. The squawk is recorded on tape and broadcast over a loud- speaker. The system was devel- oped by Dr. Hubert Frings and Prof. Joseph Jumber of Pennsyl- venia State College and tested in 1954. On three consecutive evenings, federal officials broadcast the tape from the fourth story of the Washington Archives Build- ing as the starlings flew in to roost. Playing time was five to 20 seconds until the birds were driven away. The starlings avoided the fourth floor and went elsewhere around the building where the sound couldn't be heard, They stayed there for the next three months until they migrated for the summer. But the starlings eventually returned to their usual Archives roost. The same thing happened in Air Force experiments at Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio. The Air Force also tried to rid itself of the starlings by emitting high pitched sirens above human hearing level, beating drums and firing guns into the air. These methods worked - temporarily, In 1958, the General Services Administration, believing that the starlings might be more frightened by the cry of a nat- ural enemy, the hawk, switched "vocalists." The starlings disappeared. They were replaced by a flock of hawks. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serv- ice is after the starlings, too. Dr. James S. Lindzey, an FWS official, says that the starlings, introduced here at the turn of the century, feast upon improve- ments In U.S. crop growing methods and there are few en- vironmental hazards to bother then(. Therefore, the starling is not wanted on farmland either. All agencies worried about the starling might hear the plight of the Navy, which has its own bird problems. What the starling threatens to do to some flights around the country, the gooney bird has done to flights on Midway Is- land in the Pacific. In one year, 538 Navy air- craft were involved in collisions with gooney birds, (albatrosses), which inflicted damage totalling more than $158,000 and endan- gering persons on the planes. So the Navy tried to frighten the birds off with weird noise*, smoke thein out and steal their ISSUE 4,!'r - 1960 Airborne hazard eggs. When these methods didn't work, the sailors tried to "club" (hem. Finally they spent $110,000 to level the dunes near the run- ways, the gooney birds' takeoff- point. akeoflfpoint, They also provided simi- lar sites on another island to at- tract the birds there. At last report, the problem on Midway has been reduced sub- stantially --- but it, too, has not be, in .ntintinafcd entirely. First Sight Of .Asko Comes As Shock To anyone travelling eastwards from Europe the first sight of the Asian plateau must come as something of a shock. Perhaps it will be at the end of the Iong climb inland above Trebizond, up from the lush timbered slopes of the Black Sea; when far above the tree -line at the top of the pass - the same spot where Xenaphon's soldiers mar- ching in the opposite direction first glimpsed the sea - the mists fall back and the great barren hogs' backs, edged with range on range of blue peaks, break into view. Father east across the Taurus Mountains, in Persia proper, the landscape is even more astonish. ing. As the snowcapped cone of Ararat sinks behind the horizon the long burnt plains crossed by chains of smooth hills, unfold, rolling it seems for ever in waves of bare brown and yellow until they wash the feet of yet another line of mountains whose purple spikes, sharp as dogs' teeth, melt into the sky. Never a tree or a house or the sight of a man; only the thin white thread of dust road unwinding over the plain. As the sun swings westward the colours deepen, turning the sea of burnt grass to gold, flush- ing the peaks to pink and orange, while huge shadows creep out from the Bills to swallow the land. Standing so small in so gigantic a scene, the silence made more enormous by the thin pipe of a bird fluttering in the grass, there conies a sense of desolation that is almost painful; a loneliness appalling and yet exultant. Night shuts out the earth; the vionseflea flie.k i a flint answer to the o d 1,111ti ane,. of the sit Erma d hfld, the first large city Haat greeted cc: ted ue en aur entre Into Perm t, we had driven south, - roads reeireely marked on the inap, following the summer that W414 beginning to fail 00 those northern highlands; smith by the marshy shoe.., of I:als.e Urznyia, tip on to the windswept plateaux •+ of I.urdistan. Tiny village. meet- ed in tiers of mud roofs in ran sheher of valleys watered by streams green with - trate r, Y t r;.,, I3y one of these streams see came upon a group of women in long flowered petticoats of sear - let and black,- baggy dark pante- •1 loons clipped tightly above their - ( bare feet, with untidy bands of black lace wrapped loosely round the oiled ringlets of their hair.... In some villages the men were winnowing, tossing the eora with forks into the blue sky, the grain floating in a mist of void, in the light breeze. (ze, W i Lung round the winnowers i n a, -once startled by a thin curl of smoke that rose I-etween my ft, 1, only to find that I was standing on the roofs of cottages. -- From - "From -a Persian Tea -House," by Michael Carroll. To' Keep Calm Look At Goldfish • Millions of goldfish se r:,tn ;suds _ denly to freedom, their deaths or the waiting acts of hundreds of small boys ill 0 city of West- ern Japan nee'ently when rain from a passing typhe,nn flooded I the local cultivation pentaa Children 'woke in the morn- ing eater the typhoon to tinct the ' city's streets filled with •gold- fish. Ten million had escaped but another sixty million in the ponds were not affected by the typhoon. To -day goldfish are the most popular of all ornamental Halt tend millions of dollars are spent annually in rearing then( in various parts of the world. Goldfish are really carp and for many years most of those seen in Britain came from Italy. They like heat and thrive well in water at a temperature of 90 degrees, but experts say that tate goldfish of to -day are much hardier and can withstand the cold of an English winter much better than their forbears did a century ago. The United States has many goldfish farms. Some in Mary- land employ hundreds of men. So popular are goldfish in Am- erica that some of the big stores present them to customers, giv- ing one goldfish for each stated amount spent, One goldfish expert recom- mends the stury of goldfish and their habits as a perfect cure for worry. People can find tran- quility merely by gazing at gold- fish, he says. The first goldfish to reach Europe came from China and were presented to the famous Madame Pompadour. The artist Whistler did not like goldfish. While in Italy he had a grudge against his landlady so he angled for her goldfish - placed tempt- ingly on a ledge beneath his window -sill - and caught them. Then he callously fried them and dropped them back into their bowl DRIVE CAREFULLY - The life you save may be your own. `.1 o.' LESS N By (Rev. t!. Barclay %,9 terms list). Confession and Irnrgivcneee Psalms 32 and .51 The .1,1,1 1, 1tieti t- t,rt forth t -on clo'n,y to this lcssott. Tatou. /ous.t r:,t of all bo 1len that b+ruriucc5 sorrow for sin. Nu where is this more txpees:.nd in Script ur0 than in P atm 31. W a-, a 1;11+) ui Pr:alrn 32, "For day and night ti ti hand -1) ,vy upon, nor." I1 -14a comes <'oz f- -.+ion, 1 .flea, 'I will coot e$11 My (ran--aross...o5 unto the lord,'" Cente aeon mates testily 011(n godly se, ev for sin has worked re:pr t 51.10. Ile who i5 thorenehi. rttpe'1 larch reed. to bang 11'13 11e011 br°ior3 110d. Ile want; to lac deue with ate fate: 11,0 s0,0000, that his stns, hoerevel 1 b1iy (tar hare intloc- ed ol10,1.0, in;cr Leen prilut.rily art offense igitost (loci. H.• :, •0 himself a,. I u'!iy respca., iblc tom Christ', closet/ mean tl., rro-s., It was. the tins. of ea all teat n:lilecl Him there. The next amp c, fai:1:. An t'n- cnura';en e r t for Utah is painted uta in oat we re elftss cur ::1s, r s iaith- 1 and Jtut to irt:e t;_ our' sins,_ tad l.e e e ;t:.+e n. fru In alt Iii i'i1,:,0,1a.ne,_." I ,lohn 1:9. This 1< )'','',Ow a that 1l,101411 me most when I t. s 1':,n 140ra e than way e t : le, ;n 11. 1 O. ad ' t.:r:cr- cdif P'.hear,-I 1)111,0111rura-.- my sins t,1 God and tel reeea e no ferelveuess. ' t t minister e ]) tall. 1 111.-. t':: 11:1:'.1 'os en '1..,, God would be `adarel and ju:t. 0.e forgive. 1 could count on Him t:> d.. Iii: p:,1 t If I v; e,uld ti0 thine. S :(1 : 11,::111:,: lal.,r .an. dem- a doe:, :,,n,: n11' 111- 11;',e I became irul-; .:..11 v four a: .gins. I was sorry eaemat to quit tam all, raaardiess of whet- at.yun,e of my c ,:tlpini ) .• at High vehoct thought ar said ala, ut it. I saw my Sayic ur dying tot me on Calvary. ary. I eonlessed nay sin to God. T!ten the weeds of our memory seleetion came to mind. God had pt,mtsed I bJieved. My burden of guilt was gone. I arose, forgiven. • the way 01f salvation ;s really very simple when we are willing to humble ourselves and 'turn to Jesue Christ with Ilie v:lf )le heart. I have always been very glad for that day when, I experienced the forgiveness of sin. It was the beginning of a noon' life.. a life in Christ Jesus. T became a new' creature through faith m Jesus! Christ, The way grime better every day. I shall be -eternally grateful to my Lord. There's always plenty o8 trouble about, yet some people insist on wasting time looking for it. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking 09''a;SONa' NSA" 3 '1 1 J. c1 3id SOdi3 A J Iy 3 1 'did FL b -CS NO HORSING AROUND -- Tugging for all they're worth, the nighty horses Jim, left, and Jane) strain into a new world record at annual horse pulling contest in Port Huron. Owner and drive is R. F. Oakleaf, who coaxed his team to pull a total of 4,300 pounds, 32 feet, 11 inches.,