The Seaforth News, 1961-07-13, Page 31UAY SCHOO1.
LESSON
By Rev- E. Barclay Walleye
B.A., 13.1).
AndreWt Stinging Alen to Jesus
loins 1:35-42; Matthew 4:18-20;
joins 6:8-9
Memory Selection: Come ye
fteir me, wed I will make you
o because fishers of men, Mk.
1:1,77.
Andrew's chief claim to. fame
Is that he brought his brother
Simon to Jesus, Simon, later
walled Peter, became the most
;tynamie of the twelve discif,les,
f+lven though Andrew apparently
played second fiddle to Peter all
his life, he did not complain or
ask for a mare prominent place.
It takes more grace than I can
tell,
'li'e play the second fiddle well.
Andrew has been described as
a man "wlw hovers an the edges
of the inner circle of the dis-
ciples, occasionally in it but usu-
ally not"
Andrew helped prepare for
the miracle of the feeding of
the Five Thousand, He knew a
boy with a 'lunch of five loaves
end two fishes, Perhaps he had
made friends with the boy, tell-
ing him some fishing experience,
or how to tie a tricky Imot, On
the last day of our Lord's pub-
lic ministry, he brought to Je-
sus the Greeks who had first
approached Philip. Andrew was
no racial bigot He wanted peo-
ple of every race to know Jesus.
Tradition says that Andrew
died a martyr in Aeheia. A pro-
consul, whose wife and brother
had been converted through An-
drew's ministry, ordered An-
drew's crucifixion and the add
K -shaped cross is known as the
St. Andrew Cross, Legend tells
pf early labours in Scythia, now
Russia, and so he became a pa-
tron saint of the Russians and
his X was a part of their flag
leefore Communism gained con-
ttrol in 191'9, Andrew so im-
pressed the early Christians in
Sootland that it has been the
' es d bf; St. Andrew ever since,
with' hie' cross in their flag, too.
When Scotland and England'.
ltulaited, 'the white X went into
the • "Britis'h flag where it ap-
eams today " with two other
messes for England and Ireland.
Ti'baiar is 'the only, major na-
n with a Christian cross in
flag, and .Andrew is the' only
tee of the twelve 'everso hon -
Very few have the leadership
quality ' and preachingability of
1Pelter. But almost everyone of us
an do the 'melder things as An -
grew did. We can introduce our
relatives and friends to Jesus.
We may, like bins, introduce a
child to Jesus, whose gifts may
later bless the world. Andrew
was a fisher of men.
Launching Time: Ws that pre -
vacation season when one sees
more boatsonlhe highways than
on rivers and lakes.
UNLUCKY? — Well, it is in o
sense, because the U.S. air mail
,rats has gone up. This 13 -cen-
ter will be used to some inter-
national points after June 28.
ISSIYIE 27 — 1961 '
'YOUR MOTHER DID THATI' — At the White House, Charley (right), President Kennedy's Welsh
terrier, is introduced to Pushinka, whose mother, Strelka, was put in orbit around !the earth
and recovered last August by the Russians. The six -month-old puppy was a gift to the Presi-
dent from Soviet Premier Kierushchev. In foreground Is Pu•shinka's passport.
TIIE FARM FRONT
Jok 1 tt
Holstein steers raised as fed
yearlings from spring 'calves
brought satisfactory returns
even through the carcasses were
not smooth and well finished.
At the Animal Research Insti-
tute of' the Canada Department
of Agriculture in Ottawa, 18.
Holsteins gave lower returns •
over feed costs than did '17
Shorthorns -(the highest) and 14.
Shorthorn -Holstein crosses. But
according, to CDA's W. A. Tor-'
dan, the. returns were satisfac-
tory and the Holstein compared
well with its • two competitors in
the tests.. s a '
Half of the calves in -,each of
the three groups were suckled,
the- others pail -fed 'on whole
milk for the first nine weeks of.
the test.
The suckled calves had access'
to a creek' from 'midsummer un-
til weaning in 'the fall, After
the first nine weeks the pail -fed
calves were fed meal and hay
until midsummer, then put on
aftermath' and given - all the meal
they would eat.
• •
In late fall all calves were fed
a fattening'' ration of silage, hay
and grain and the following
spring were slaughtered as they
reached .market finish.
Average gain of the Holsteins
and crossbreds was 1.72 pounds
daily from birth' to market, and
for the Shorthorns 1.65 pounds,
During the winter fattenicg peri-
od theHolsteins ate 9 pounds of
grain daily,'the Shorthorns 8.5
andthe crossbecds 8.1. In spite
of the extra grain consumed by
them, the Holsteins had the
poorest type and quality of car-
cass as they tended to grow' and
develop instead of putting on fat.
• e •
Holstein carcasses graded 34,
per, dent Standard and 66 per
cent Commercial; Shorthorns 6
per cent Red, 28 per cent Blue,
and' i8' 'per cent Standard and
53 per cent ,Commercial, The
crossbreds' grades were inter-
mediate: , a e
Average cold carcass weights
of the Holsteins, crossbreds and
Shorthorns were 438, 404, and
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
9, Embellish
to. Ford
11, Watches
narrowly
16. Gentle
18, Composition
in verse
ACaC.SS 3. Hubbub 20, Away from
1, a dwloh a. Legendary 31. 111 the son
lltlnef sea creature 22, omply With
4, conA of windward 24, 1ficlal
isappreval 4.eeal"den doorkeeper
'Windmill sell valley. 26, !coward
51, Amer.. the oast
Motorist 8 111155 with 29. 119.11d over
.
Sgt out violence 29, Overt
04 hours 8. cereal heed 32. A support
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t V r.�tl.tollect
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mouth
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05, Arelne, nation
family
58, Stem ve O.
heard.
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worship
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a7, Carefully
38. Provided with
weapons
29. Preserves
from harm
41. Crystalllee
42, Charles Lame
44. Thin layer
of gold
46. 70, B. Stowe
character
47. Born
48, Shooting
marble
81. Elec.
engineer (o b),
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32
tit
lknsw, r elsewhere on the page.
DOLL 'EM • UP -- "Dolling up"
her "Sweetnik" for the fair at
Rome is Yugoslavian -born doll -
maker Lierka Draskovic. The
doll above is made of wood and
fabrics and has a painted ball
for a face.
406 pounds; dressing percentages
53.0, 54,8, and 54.9. The suckled
calves in each group finished
considerably heavier than the
pail -fed ones. The returns over
feed costs from all calves were
satisfactory, n e
Potato leaf roll has not been
common in recent years, but the
threat: of a serious outbreak in
Eastern Canada still exists.
J. P. MacKinnon of Frederic-
ton, N.B., points out that an
,.-epidemic of leaf roll in late
1930's finished Green Mountain
as it commercial variety, and
varieties now popular are not
highly resistant to the disease.
Mr. MacKinnon is an author-
ity on plant pathology with 'the
Canada Department of Agricul-
ture. .
Leaf roll is espread by the
green peach aphid. Good cul-
tural methods undoubtedle help
in keeping it under control but
there must 'be some natural bar-
riers, of which little is known,
that are preventing large scale
spread of the disease. Develop-
ment of resistant or immune
varieties: appears to be the best
hope for lasting control.
Greenhouse tests at Frederic-
toli, have shown the green peach
aphid to be very effective in
spreading the . leaf roil virus.
When caged on diseased plants
for five days, over 90 per cent
picked up the virus; some be-
came infective in the first two
hours.
When infective aphids . were
placed singly" on a new plant
every day for 15 days, some in-
fected all 15 plants, Once they
picked up the virus, the aphids
continued to infect healthy
plants its long as they lived.
Just Like The Cat
Marcella Came Back
When the Senate committee
headed by Tennessee's Estes Ke-
fauver cast a net into the gumbo
of Louisiana rackets eleven years
ago, a prime catch brought to the
stand was one Carlos Marcello,
Senator Kefauver heard testi-
mony that Marcello had a hand
in Louisiana narcotics, bookmak-
ing, slot machines, and night
clubs, denounced him as "one of
the leading criminals in tite U.S.
today."
The U.S, Immigration Service
swiftly moved in: Marcello, no
U.S. citizen, could be deported.
The specific reason for doing it
was that back in 1938 Itfarcello
had been convicted of hustling
marijuana. Thus began one of
the longest would-be deportation
cases on record.
First the U.S. started shopping
around for a country that would
accept Marcello, who came to
America as an 8 -month-old infant
in 1910. (Naturally there was no
copy of his birth certificate.) Al-
together, five nations turned
Marcello down. France, where his
parents had once resided briefly,
declined. So did Tunisia, when
the U.S. offered in woof a docu-
nienh that reported that Marcel -
10 was horn Calogero Minacori,
the son of Giuseppe and Luisa, in
Carthage,
However, since Marcelln's par-
ents themselves had claimed Ital-
ian nationality, the Italian Gov-
ernment finally agreed to har-
bor him. But Marcello's attorneys
brought suit in an Italian court,
asking that he be declared a non -
Italian; the action, which is still
pending, blocked his deportation
to Italy.
There things stood — Marcello
living happily in New Orleans —
until this year. Then somebody
came forward — "a foreign in-
formant" the U.S. says — with a
record that showed a son named
Calogers was born on Feb. 8,
1910, in Guatemala, to Giuseppe
Minacore (with an "e," not an
"i,") That was when things 'be-
gan to move,
One day in April, when Mar-
cello stopped in at the Immigra-
tion Service office in New Or-
leans for a resident alien's regu-
lar check, border patrolmen took
him into custody, hustled him in-
to a car without so much as a
toothbrush, drove him to the air-
port and bundled him onto a
plane for Guatemala, U.S, offi-
cials breathed a sigh of relief,
They were rid of Marcello at
last — they thought
But now Marcello is back in
the U.S,
How he got in and where he
came from neither he not his at-
torneys were saying. Marcello
simply turned up at the Immi-
gration Service office in Shreve-
port and reported that in Guate-
mala he hadn't been welcomed at
all. Instead, be said, he had been
spirited away to El Salvador,
thence across another bonier, and
had eventually made his way
back to his favorite state, Louisi-
ana.
Wearily, immigration officials
ordered him to the alien intern-
ment center at McAllen, Texas,
to await further hearings, A re-
porter asked him where he real-
ly came trona Marcello, in a soft,
bemused voice, said: "I don't
know myself,"
In the use of tears
A woman is wise,
She can cut a man
Right down to her sighs.
DRIVE WITH CARE I
Shed A Tear Ear
The Old Cream Jug
Once again Tune is National
Dairy Month, and anything we
say will be appreciated by the
National Dairy Council. which
has provided fact -sheets foi our
editorial convenience. This ex-
plains how, of course, the inat-
tentive and disinterested editors
across the. country suddenly
chance upon a concert of erudite
editorials which move the mas-
ses in the direction of greater
milk consumption. It isn't just
coincidence,
In perusing the statistics, I
notice that while America is de-
livered its daily bottle, never-
theless umpteen million odd
quarts of milk never move into
the market at all, but are con-
sumed on the farm. Besides be-
ing the benefactor of mankind,
the dairy farmer looks out for
himself. The high commercial
purposes of National Dairy
Month thus dwindle, for not only
do we have the eager customers
along the apartment ha'lways,
but we have the prudent dairy
farmer who never has to pay a
milk bill. He, too, is a consumer.
There is more to this statistical
situation, The milk business, as
it annually does more and more
for the off -farm customer, is
doing less end less for its own
people. The reason is that as our
society pursues its course, fewer
and fewer farmers keep fewer
and fewers cows, although milk
production and consumption con-
tinue to rise. This is because of
the increasing efficiency of the
dairy cow, and the limit is not
yet in sight, It is also because of
improved methods, mechanical
aids, better knowledge of nutri-
ments, and many another "fac-
tor" the city customer need not
know about. There is also the
tendency to consolidate, making
one big business where there
used to be 10 little ones. In short,
although all this milk is retained
on the farm for home use, each
successive June sees fewer and
fewer farm families to enjoy it.
So while we cheer at Nation-
al Dairy Month, we can also
shed a symbolic tear for the
passing of the old cream jug —
the farm cream jug as distin-
guished from the paper carton
that' graces the apartment break-
fast nook. And this is extremely
important, A. friend of mine who
runs a milk route in a nearby
town was approached a few sum-
mers back by a rusticating
neighbor who wanted s o pr
cream. The gentleman had a
valid desire and a legitimate
complaint. •
It seems he had forsworn his
city ways, and after 'a rat -race
life had closed his skyscraper
office and had retired to the
scenes of his boyhood. Bright
were the suns that gleamed for
him of yore, and now be was
back again to pick up where he
left off. He had sold his place
on Long Island and had bought
another on the west side of
Hedgehog Hill where the sunsets
Would be lovely and the pace less
demanding. He had hove a sigh
of relief and settled in.
He found soon enough that
things had changed while he was
away. His lost youth was not be-
ing recovered as he expected,
And here he was back in the
hinterland of Isis yesterdays with
his yens, and he wasn't gettire
the kind of cream he remember-
ed.
He said to my friend, "Don't
you have any cream any more?"
My friend said he did, indeed,
have cream, and reached for a
bottle off the truck. "No," the
man said, "I don't mean that:'
stuff, I can get, that stuff in any
delicatessen on Broadway. 'I
mean real cream such as my
grandmother put on my Indian
pudding and my mother put on
my porridge, I mean cream that
has character, strength and fla-
vor, Cream."
My friend replied, "Yes, I do
have such cream. I have it at
home on the table, and we use
it with a free and lavish hand, It
t9 just the kind of cream you are
talking about. But I can't sell it
to you, and I'd want to look up
the law before I even offer you
some as a gift. In my opinion,
off -hand, I think you are doom-
ed to a consumer's life of abstin-
ence in this respect,"
The man said, "I would like
to have some cream that was put
in a wide tin pan on the cellar
floor, where it is cool and con-
genial. After it has beer there
two -three days, coagulating its
beneficence into magnificence. I
would like to have the cream
skum off the skim -milk into a
brown bowl with a yellow stripe
around the edge, and 1 would
like to have that bowl t rought
to me so I could put it on my
table and do what I wanted to
with it,"
My friend said, "I know what
you mean, You want a h,:wl of
activated lactic bacteria which
exceeds the legal limit by about
four hundred and sevent--seven
million, and I am restrained from
such commerce by the Milk Con-
trol Board, the Market Admini-
strator, the Board of Health, and
the Department of Public Wel-
fare. It is against the 'an. to
traffic in the commodity you
have just described so delight-
fully."
The man said, "Alas!" or words
to that effect.
"I tell you what you can do,"
my friend said, "If you want to
come out to the farm and have
dinner with us, I can set a bowl
of cream like that on the table,
and you can dip into it. We have
cream like that. We have it all
the time. I put a pan as two
down cellar every night Just
for us. But for customers, I have
to be careful, and every move I
make is regulated down to the
last notch, and if I put cream
like that in my truck theyid.
throw the book at me. When can
you come for dinner?"
"This evening," thesaid.
And he went. Bu.4tho statistics
show that fewer and fewer dairy'
farmers are producing more and
more -milk, and what this means
to bowls of cream should he con-
templated well as we lay dowit
all else and observe National
Dairy Month. — By John Gould
in the Christian Science Monitor.
Q. How can I insure a tighter
grip when driving screws into
wood?
A. If you'll dip your screws
into some paint or glue before
using them, they'll stay where
they're supposed to indefinitely.
Keeping on your toes will keep
you from getting down at heel.
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
*ESTIVITIES UP IN THE AIR — These ruins of Machu Picchu.
one-time stronghold of the'Incas, located high in the Peruvian
Andes, will be the site of a seven-month folk festival, The fes-
tival will commemorate the 50th anniversary of its discovery
by Hiram Bingham, This collection of magnificent palaces, sac-
red temples, gabled houses, elaborate plazas and massive stone
stairways and walls was lost to the world and unknown ever
to Peru Itself until the Yale professor's accidental discovery,.