HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1955-07-28, Page 3HHMM FRONT
d. ohm
Cattle use up an enormous
amount of energy fighting horn
flies which rob them of sizable
quantities of blood each year.
This loss of energy and blood
represents a great waste of for-
age and feed. An animal bother-
ed by the parsites may lose. as
much as half a pound in weight
a day, and milk flow may be
reduced as much as 20 per cent.
The horn fly resembles the
house fly, but is only about half
as large. The female lays its
eggs on fresh cattle manure, and
in warm weather the eggs hatch
into maggots in less than a day.
s
* *
The maggot feeds for five days,
then rests as a pupa for about
a week before emerging as an
adult ready to lay eggs in two
days. Thus, the complete life
cycle from egg to egg takes only
two weeks. At this rate, there
would be 12 generations in six
months, from spring until fall,
but fortunately, there is usually
a decrease in numbers during
hot, dry weather.
*: * *
Horn flies are primarily a pest
of cattle, and spend most of their
lives upon their unwilling hosts.
They feed by piercing the cattle's
skin and withdrawing blood.
They usually attack the part of
the animal's back that cannot be
disturbed by a swing of the tail
(!or head. The flies are sensitive
to changes in weather. To avoid
hot sun or rain, they may con-
gregate on the under side of the
animal, but when the air is cool
they frequently infest the base
of the horn — hence, the name
"horn flies."
* * *
A quick and easy method of
controlling horn flies on dairy
cattle, according to agricultural
chemists, is to sprinkle a table-
spoon of 50 per cent methoxy -
HAPPY TEARS - Patricia Ann
O'Kane, 19, wipes tears of joy
from her eyes after winning the
title of "Miss New York, 1955"
at Palisades Park, N.J. The
blonde beauty is 5 feet, 8 inches
tall, weights 138 pounds and
measurers 36, 24, 36.
chlor insecticide along the back
of the cow and then spread it
around and rub into the hair
with a few sweeps of the hand.
It should be distributed evenly
over back, neck and upper sides.
Two to three weeks' control has
been reported with this treat-
ment. Four pounds of the insec-
ticide applied at two-week inter-
vals is said to be enough to con-
trol flies on up to 20 milk cows
for 10 weeks.
M *
Our innate urge to "save"
things is both a bane and a bless-
ing. It can manifest far-sighted
thrift or the squirrel-like accum-
ulation of odds and ends.
Preserving something for fu-
ture use is the usual motive for
saving, and, on the face - of it,
nothing could be more commend-
able. Discarding things that can
be of further use is wasteful.
The problem lies in deciding
what has further usefulness,
states a writer in "Farm Pro-
gress."
*
It's usually easy to evaluate
material goods. But what of our
accumulation of intangibles —
the ideas, beliefs and prejudices
which are often factors for or
against progress? How many of
these should be "preserved for
future use" and how many should
be discarded as''having outlived
their usefulness, if, indeed, some
ever had any value anyway?
YJ 9 *
The livestock industry, as agri-
culture in general, is at a point
where a re-evaluation of meth-
ods and objectives is no longer
optional but necessary. Many
outmoded ideas and beliefs are
in the way of the acceptance of
changes which have already
proved practical and economical-
ly sound.
To cite but one example: Much
of the effort and cost of provid-
ing the modern winter housing
quarters for a dairy herd is ap-
parently "loves labor lost." The
shed loafing barn, with its ac-
cumulation of droppings well
diluted with suitable bedding,
offers a warm bed and a cool
house which, given free choice,
cattle prefer to the warm "glean"
barn. The saving in labor is
striking. Housing is simpler and
cheaper, and the milk drawn
from "shed" cows in a small
milking parlor will likely show
a lower bacterial count than that
from their barn-stanchioned sis-
ters.
* +e *
Introduction of new methods
may, in many cases, be slow be-
cause of inadequate educational
extension programs. But it can-
not be denied that resistance to
change is also a factor, and one
which often seems to be stronger
in agricultui a than in industry,
perhaps because of the larger
number of individual "entre-
preneurs" in the former.
Regardless of causes, the les-
son is clear. The periodic "stock
taking" of industry with its ac-
companying re-evaluation of as-
sets could well be, more often
imitated by the farmer. Worn-
out ideas and beliefs should be
quickly "written off" as area any
other worthless goods. Saving
them may be more of a liability
than the business will stand.
Leather footwear output climb-
ed 11% to 30,274,582 pairs in the
first three quarters of 1953 from
27,334,335 pairs in 1952.
CROSS RD
PUZZLE
ACROSS 50 Present
1 Shed 551. City in town
feathers 62, Lair
63 Paradise
DOWN
1 F'a41 to hit
2. Formerly
3 Treated 09
a celebrity
4. Coal prod uat
5 Bazaars
G. Corpulent
8. Dia,
12 Fresh -water
porpoise
13. Malt
beverage
14, Sacred image
12 Poisonous
spider
17, Tear
38 Coin of Japan
19 Guido's
second note
20. Botch
21. Rainbow
23 Bobby
24. rather
26, Demolished
28. Bark
40, Immerse
30. 'Having
181 Dally
82 rleisted
133New
England nape
I34 Merry
2n Allude
26. Morning'
tab.)
I88, Wait toil
180. Off
41. Grown ba
y
42, pone by
42. 10^;ypttatt
goddess
45, pBlaseb 11
46. Impalii:a
48, 3api nee*
atetesteeme
6. Fragrant
herb
7. Decade
8. Discharged
9, Playing
cards -
10. Plot
11. Purpose
16. Remunerated
20. Month
22, Scarlet
23. Fairy
25. ttiimic
26 Wot'thle: e
27 Runminant's
fourth
stomach
28. Lad
29 Worsted
31. Scotch river
32. Marry
34. Supporting
rope
35 Skating
arena
37. Groundworks
33. Breakfast
meat
40. Broad
91. Ship's
officer
43 Triangular
inset
44. Begin
45. Babylonian
90, gndiof war
47. The girl
AilliWer elsewhere ori this page
p m Fashion Hints 4
FOR SUMMER EVENING WE
mushroom pleated and softly
-back, was used in this summer
in Europe with a collection of
AR -Daffodil yellow "terylene",
banded with bows down the
evening dress now being shown
Canadian fashions and fabrics.
READS SCIENTISTS' STATEMENT
Bertrand Russell, British
mathematician and philosopher,
reads a statement subscribed
to by the late Albert Einstein
and signed by eight other emi-
nent scientists. It appeals to
nations to forswear war because
of the threat of the hydrogen
bomb. .
£o -Called GE.;mour
In the streets of Nice, French-
men stood and gaped, riveted to
the pavement. And no wonder!
—for their, goggling eyes were
taking in the curves of an outsize
Marilyn Monroe, sprawling in
swelling perspectives in the
clouds.
An inventor was trying out a
publicity gadget for projecting
pictures in the night sky. But
the French agree it's a device
that should be used with dis-
cretion.
High above Broadway eighteen
miles of neon tubing were used
to show a shapely girl walking
across a 100 -ft. display, demon-
strating lingerie. The illusion of
movement was achieved by
flashing her on and off in ten
successive positions—and the ef-
fect was so real that it is said.
that more than 800 cars bumped
into each other on opening night
because the drivers were look-
ing the wrong way!
Out -size publicity is big bus-
iness these days. Even when
Princess Margaret toured the
West Indies, publicity muscled
in. An hour before the Princess
stepped ashore at Nassau, Baha-
mas, a famous movie actress ar-
rived and borrowed the whole
colourful welcome.
She charmed her way through
the police cordons, posed for pic-
tures, using the royal yacht as
backround — a n d publicity
agents made sure she was sched-
uled for picture pages and head-
lines around the world before
she was escorted away.
When the Princess visited the
island of Grenada, there were
protests because she would be
using a closed car. An open
American limousine was substi-
tuted instead, shipped in by an
enterprising
sales
ttG
agent
who
realized that useful publicity
would accrue to the makers.
Remember when plump Xing
Farouk seemed to be chasing lit-
tle Mimi Medart, a sweet and
unspoiled American girl from St.
Louis? As he bent low over her
hand the flashbulbs popped. As
if in flight, Mimi left her Deau-
ville hotel and went to Biarritz
. but she had scarcely signed
the hotel register there than
Farouk and his suite checked in
behind her.
Mimi's name flashed round the
world. So, incidentally, did that
of her father, Bill Medart, the
American hamburger king. But
in the background was the au-
dacious Italian publicist, Guido
Orlando.
When Farouk stepped from a
hotel lift and kissed the hands
of his friends, Guido made sure
that Mimi was pushed well up
front, her fingers extended.
When he knew that Farouk was
moving from Deauville to Biar-
ritz, he made sure of the royal
choice of hotels. Mimi went
ahead and it looked as if a bold,
bad monarch was pursuing
American innocence.'
In reality, it all made publicity
... for hamburgers!
When Marqueez, the dancer,
came to town, the amazing story
went around that she was a Bur-
mese temple dancer, the first
ever to be allowed to dance on
the public stage. On her birth-
day, she insisted on riding on
an elephant. It made a first-rate
picture; Marqueez and Jumbo
posed alongside a London bus.
But then officials in Burma
protested that there were no
female temple dancers in their
country and the truth leaked
out. Marqueez was the dancing
daughter of a Sheffield tea deal-
er. That vintage temple dancer
story, however, helped to make
her name. -
Publicity makes perfect . .
or at least it's often a decisive
factor in moulding a career.
Before Jane Russell became
famous in "The Outlaw," pub-
licity scouts thought up hun-
dreds of news stories to put her
on the front pages.
In 21/a years, 50,000 photo-
-graphs were distributed to make
magazine and newspaper readers
conscious of her curves in the
greatest publicity build-up ever
known.
WORD FROM THE WISE
William Wrigley, the chewing -
gum magnate, got into a con-
versation with a fellow -passen-
ger on a fast train. The subject
of advertising cropped up and
his- companion asked him why
he kept on spending such fabu-
lous amounts on it.
"Your product is known ev-
erywhere," he remarked, "why
not stop advertising and save a
few millions?"
Wrigley thought tor a moment
and said, "This train is going
fast, isn't it?"
"Yes, over sixty miles an
hour," was the reply.
Asked Wrigley: "Why doesn't
the railroad company unhitch
the engine and let the train
travel under its own momen-
tum;"'
Housewife (to friend, encoun-
tered
tered in street) ; "A lot has hap-
pened since 1 saw you last. 1
have had all my teeth out, and a
frig. and television set put in".
ritain Takes Aim
At Drunken Drivers
Drunken drivers are singled
Out for special attenion in new
efforts by the British Govern-
ment to reduce road accidents.
The goevrnments' road traffic
bill, introduced in the House of
Commons July 4, is intended as
an all-around effort to get tough
with road offenders. With 6,250,-
000 vehicles on its gravely in-
adequate road system, Britain
has one of the worst traffic
problems in the world.
In 1954 there were 238,281
casualties on British roads, in-
cluding 5,010 killed and 57,201
seriously injured. May, 1955,
was the worst -ever month for
road casualties.
Public opinion is increasingly
impatient with what it regards
as governmental failure to take
drastic action. An X85,000,000
($238,000,000) road extension
program was announced here
July 5. But the opinion of the
Labor opposition in the Com-
mons and of a large part of the
nation as a whole is that ex-
isting plans are completely in-
adequate,
Furthermore, existing British
laws are condemned for being
antiquated and unhelpful in
countering the road casualty
problem. It is at this shortcom-
ing in the law that the new
road traffic bill is aimed.
For one thing, the law on
drunken drivers is to be
changed. Hitherto, magistrates
and juries have been confused
in their ruling. It seemed that
the law failed to distinguish be-
tween a driver who drove when
drunk and a driver who recog-
nized his inability to drive and
took a snooze by the roadside
or even parked his car and went
home to bed.
In this repect the law out-
raged public opinion. There was
confusion among the police, the
medical professions, and the
courts. The new bill aims to
iron out the anomalies and deal
more severely with drunken
driving through fines up to $300,
disqualification, and prison sen-
tences.
The charge of being drunk in
charge of a car will be less
ists will be encouraged to desist
severe in the hope that motor -
from driving if they think they
are under the influence of al-
cohol.
In the course of the Com-
mons debate on the new road
traffic bill, a former Laborite
Home Secretary, Chuter Ede,
made an urgent plea to the
medical profession to show more
responsibility in its court evi-
dence on drunken drivers. Mr.
Ede, a respected veteran mem-
ber
ember of the Commons, spoke
from personal experience as a
magistrate when he said that
doctors often confused jurymen
with their evidence.
Leniency Charged
Mr. Ede cited a doctor who
declared in court that the term
"drunk" was a colloquial term
and he didn't know what it
meant. Mr. Ede said it should be
quite clear to a doctor when
a driver was sufficiently drunk
to be incapable of driving with-
out due care.
Mr. Ede made the serious al-
legation that some doctors were
inclined to be too lenient with
middle-class drivers. In other
words, what he appeared to
mean was that there was a ten-
dency to shield people who were
thought to get drunk in a tra-
ditional gentlemanly way.
Mr. Ede's high standing is ex-
pected to give considerable
weight to this denunciation of
some doctors for being soft with
drunken drivers. Mr. Ede said
he did not think there should
be leniency for dangerous driv-
ing when 600 children were be-
ing killed on roads every year.
R. Barclay Warren, B.A., 2S.110,
Ezekiel and the Earlier Captivity
2 Wings 24:8-15a;
Ezekiel 1;3-3; 18:30-32.
Memory Selection: Repent,
and turn yourselves from a2
your transgressions; so iniquity
shall not be your ruin. Ezekiel
18:30.
This generation has witnessed
the transfer of thousands o
peace -loving people from their
homes into Siberia and other
parts of Russia. It is not a new
thing. Nebuchadnezzar, the king
of the Chaldeans took Jehoiakise
the king of Judah and carried
him away captive. "Surely at the
commandment of the Lord came
this upon Judah, to remove them
out of his sight." During the
three months reign of his Solis,
Jehoiachin, Nebuchadnezzer laidi
seige to Jerusalem. Jehoiachin,
with his mother, servants and
princes went out of the city and
s u r rendered, Nebuchadnezzar
then took all vessels of gold and.
10,000 captives to Babylon. This
was the first stage of the cap-
tivity of Judah.
But God did not leave himself
without a witness. Among the
captives was a youth named
Ezekiel. In the fifth year Ezekiel
was called to be a prophet. God
sent him to his own people in
captivity, "independent children
and stiff -hearted." It was a bold
message which he must deliver.
"Repent, and turn yourselves
from all your transgressions; so
iniquity shall not be your ruin?'
It differs from much of the pop-
ular religion today. Ezekiel said,
"Cast away from you all your
transgressions, whereby ye have
transgressed; and make you a
new heart and a new spirit: for
why will ye die, 0 house of Is-
rael? For I have no pleasure in
the death of hint that dieth, saitlx
the Lord God: wherefore turas
yourselves, and live ye." Ezekiel'a
message is still timely. Gaining
confidence in yourself is not suf-
ficient. We must turn from our
sins to God or sin will be our
ruin. People prefer to keep their
pet sins and yet have a sense
of assurance that all is well be-
tween them and God. This is a
false security. God abhors sin.
We must abhor it, too. Only then
will we find refuge in God.
NO PRIVATE EYES
IN 5 PROVINCES
The last census showed 14
detective agencies='in Canada --
5 in Ontario, 3 in Quebec, 3 ha
British Columbia, 2 in Manito-
ba and 1 in Alberta. During
1951 they employed from 73 to
104, including 10 working pro.
prietors, had a payroll of $101,-
700 and total receipts of $223,--
600.
Fencing: Shipments of woven
wire farrn fencing totalled 11,-
152 tons in the first three quar-
ters of 1953, 1,080 less than in
1952.
Upsidedown to Preveni Peeking
LOST -- A little girl and her bathing suit. That's the story behind
this picture taken at Palisades Park. Officer John Murphy found
18 -month-old Cathy Russo wanderoing on the amusement park's
beach looking harder for her mom than for her suit.
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AilliWer elsewhere ori this page
p m Fashion Hints 4
FOR SUMMER EVENING WE
mushroom pleated and softly
-back, was used in this summer
in Europe with a collection of
AR -Daffodil yellow "terylene",
banded with bows down the
evening dress now being shown
Canadian fashions and fabrics.
READS SCIENTISTS' STATEMENT
Bertrand Russell, British
mathematician and philosopher,
reads a statement subscribed
to by the late Albert Einstein
and signed by eight other emi-
nent scientists. It appeals to
nations to forswear war because
of the threat of the hydrogen
bomb. .
£o -Called GE.;mour
In the streets of Nice, French-
men stood and gaped, riveted to
the pavement. And no wonder!
—for their, goggling eyes were
taking in the curves of an outsize
Marilyn Monroe, sprawling in
swelling perspectives in the
clouds.
An inventor was trying out a
publicity gadget for projecting
pictures in the night sky. But
the French agree it's a device
that should be used with dis-
cretion.
High above Broadway eighteen
miles of neon tubing were used
to show a shapely girl walking
across a 100 -ft. display, demon-
strating lingerie. The illusion of
movement was achieved by
flashing her on and off in ten
successive positions—and the ef-
fect was so real that it is said.
that more than 800 cars bumped
into each other on opening night
because the drivers were look-
ing the wrong way!
Out -size publicity is big bus-
iness these days. Even when
Princess Margaret toured the
West Indies, publicity muscled
in. An hour before the Princess
stepped ashore at Nassau, Baha-
mas, a famous movie actress ar-
rived and borrowed the whole
colourful welcome.
She charmed her way through
the police cordons, posed for pic-
tures, using the royal yacht as
backround — a n d publicity
agents made sure she was sched-
uled for picture pages and head-
lines around the world before
she was escorted away.
When the Princess visited the
island of Grenada, there were
protests because she would be
using a closed car. An open
American limousine was substi-
tuted instead, shipped in by an
enterprising
sales
ttG
agent
who
realized that useful publicity
would accrue to the makers.
Remember when plump Xing
Farouk seemed to be chasing lit-
tle Mimi Medart, a sweet and
unspoiled American girl from St.
Louis? As he bent low over her
hand the flashbulbs popped. As
if in flight, Mimi left her Deau-
ville hotel and went to Biarritz
. but she had scarcely signed
the hotel register there than
Farouk and his suite checked in
behind her.
Mimi's name flashed round the
world. So, incidentally, did that
of her father, Bill Medart, the
American hamburger king. But
in the background was the au-
dacious Italian publicist, Guido
Orlando.
When Farouk stepped from a
hotel lift and kissed the hands
of his friends, Guido made sure
that Mimi was pushed well up
front, her fingers extended.
When he knew that Farouk was
moving from Deauville to Biar-
ritz, he made sure of the royal
choice of hotels. Mimi went
ahead and it looked as if a bold,
bad monarch was pursuing
American innocence.'
In reality, it all made publicity
... for hamburgers!
When Marqueez, the dancer,
came to town, the amazing story
went around that she was a Bur-
mese temple dancer, the first
ever to be allowed to dance on
the public stage. On her birth-
day, she insisted on riding on
an elephant. It made a first-rate
picture; Marqueez and Jumbo
posed alongside a London bus.
But then officials in Burma
protested that there were no
female temple dancers in their
country and the truth leaked
out. Marqueez was the dancing
daughter of a Sheffield tea deal-
er. That vintage temple dancer
story, however, helped to make
her name. -
Publicity makes perfect . .
or at least it's often a decisive
factor in moulding a career.
Before Jane Russell became
famous in "The Outlaw," pub-
licity scouts thought up hun-
dreds of news stories to put her
on the front pages.
In 21/a years, 50,000 photo-
-graphs were distributed to make
magazine and newspaper readers
conscious of her curves in the
greatest publicity build-up ever
known.
WORD FROM THE WISE
William Wrigley, the chewing -
gum magnate, got into a con-
versation with a fellow -passen-
ger on a fast train. The subject
of advertising cropped up and
his- companion asked him why
he kept on spending such fabu-
lous amounts on it.
"Your product is known ev-
erywhere," he remarked, "why
not stop advertising and save a
few millions?"
Wrigley thought tor a moment
and said, "This train is going
fast, isn't it?"
"Yes, over sixty miles an
hour," was the reply.
Asked Wrigley: "Why doesn't
the railroad company unhitch
the engine and let the train
travel under its own momen-
tum;"'
Housewife (to friend, encoun-
tered
tered in street) ; "A lot has hap-
pened since 1 saw you last. 1
have had all my teeth out, and a
frig. and television set put in".
ritain Takes Aim
At Drunken Drivers
Drunken drivers are singled
Out for special attenion in new
efforts by the British Govern-
ment to reduce road accidents.
The goevrnments' road traffic
bill, introduced in the House of
Commons July 4, is intended as
an all-around effort to get tough
with road offenders. With 6,250,-
000 vehicles on its gravely in-
adequate road system, Britain
has one of the worst traffic
problems in the world.
In 1954 there were 238,281
casualties on British roads, in-
cluding 5,010 killed and 57,201
seriously injured. May, 1955,
was the worst -ever month for
road casualties.
Public opinion is increasingly
impatient with what it regards
as governmental failure to take
drastic action. An X85,000,000
($238,000,000) road extension
program was announced here
July 5. But the opinion of the
Labor opposition in the Com-
mons and of a large part of the
nation as a whole is that ex-
isting plans are completely in-
adequate,
Furthermore, existing British
laws are condemned for being
antiquated and unhelpful in
countering the road casualty
problem. It is at this shortcom-
ing in the law that the new
road traffic bill is aimed.
For one thing, the law on
drunken drivers is to be
changed. Hitherto, magistrates
and juries have been confused
in their ruling. It seemed that
the law failed to distinguish be-
tween a driver who drove when
drunk and a driver who recog-
nized his inability to drive and
took a snooze by the roadside
or even parked his car and went
home to bed.
In this repect the law out-
raged public opinion. There was
confusion among the police, the
medical professions, and the
courts. The new bill aims to
iron out the anomalies and deal
more severely with drunken
driving through fines up to $300,
disqualification, and prison sen-
tences.
The charge of being drunk in
charge of a car will be less
ists will be encouraged to desist
severe in the hope that motor -
from driving if they think they
are under the influence of al-
cohol.
In the course of the Com-
mons debate on the new road
traffic bill, a former Laborite
Home Secretary, Chuter Ede,
made an urgent plea to the
medical profession to show more
responsibility in its court evi-
dence on drunken drivers. Mr.
Ede, a respected veteran mem-
ber
ember of the Commons, spoke
from personal experience as a
magistrate when he said that
doctors often confused jurymen
with their evidence.
Leniency Charged
Mr. Ede cited a doctor who
declared in court that the term
"drunk" was a colloquial term
and he didn't know what it
meant. Mr. Ede said it should be
quite clear to a doctor when
a driver was sufficiently drunk
to be incapable of driving with-
out due care.
Mr. Ede made the serious al-
legation that some doctors were
inclined to be too lenient with
middle-class drivers. In other
words, what he appeared to
mean was that there was a ten-
dency to shield people who were
thought to get drunk in a tra-
ditional gentlemanly way.
Mr. Ede's high standing is ex-
pected to give considerable
weight to this denunciation of
some doctors for being soft with
drunken drivers. Mr. Ede said
he did not think there should
be leniency for dangerous driv-
ing when 600 children were be-
ing killed on roads every year.
R. Barclay Warren, B.A., 2S.110,
Ezekiel and the Earlier Captivity
2 Wings 24:8-15a;
Ezekiel 1;3-3; 18:30-32.
Memory Selection: Repent,
and turn yourselves from a2
your transgressions; so iniquity
shall not be your ruin. Ezekiel
18:30.
This generation has witnessed
the transfer of thousands o
peace -loving people from their
homes into Siberia and other
parts of Russia. It is not a new
thing. Nebuchadnezzar, the king
of the Chaldeans took Jehoiakise
the king of Judah and carried
him away captive. "Surely at the
commandment of the Lord came
this upon Judah, to remove them
out of his sight." During the
three months reign of his Solis,
Jehoiachin, Nebuchadnezzer laidi
seige to Jerusalem. Jehoiachin,
with his mother, servants and
princes went out of the city and
s u r rendered, Nebuchadnezzar
then took all vessels of gold and.
10,000 captives to Babylon. This
was the first stage of the cap-
tivity of Judah.
But God did not leave himself
without a witness. Among the
captives was a youth named
Ezekiel. In the fifth year Ezekiel
was called to be a prophet. God
sent him to his own people in
captivity, "independent children
and stiff -hearted." It was a bold
message which he must deliver.
"Repent, and turn yourselves
from all your transgressions; so
iniquity shall not be your ruin?'
It differs from much of the pop-
ular religion today. Ezekiel said,
"Cast away from you all your
transgressions, whereby ye have
transgressed; and make you a
new heart and a new spirit: for
why will ye die, 0 house of Is-
rael? For I have no pleasure in
the death of hint that dieth, saitlx
the Lord God: wherefore turas
yourselves, and live ye." Ezekiel'a
message is still timely. Gaining
confidence in yourself is not suf-
ficient. We must turn from our
sins to God or sin will be our
ruin. People prefer to keep their
pet sins and yet have a sense
of assurance that all is well be-
tween them and God. This is a
false security. God abhors sin.
We must abhor it, too. Only then
will we find refuge in God.
NO PRIVATE EYES
IN 5 PROVINCES
The last census showed 14
detective agencies='in Canada --
5 in Ontario, 3 in Quebec, 3 ha
British Columbia, 2 in Manito-
ba and 1 in Alberta. During
1951 they employed from 73 to
104, including 10 working pro.
prietors, had a payroll of $101,-
700 and total receipts of $223,--
600.
Fencing: Shipments of woven
wire farrn fencing totalled 11,-
152 tons in the first three quar-
ters of 1953, 1,080 less than in
1952.
Upsidedown to Preveni Peeking
LOST -- A little girl and her bathing suit. That's the story behind
this picture taken at Palisades Park. Officer John Murphy found
18 -month-old Cathy Russo wanderoing on the amusement park's
beach looking harder for her mom than for her suit.