The Brussels Post, 1958-05-14, Page 5flogerprintA Write, prifneWs. Dramas
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THE HOLY CITY-In the Jordan sector of Jerusalem two Jordanian,
policemen stand near the arch of Ecco. Homo-Behold the Man-
built by Hadrian in 131' A.D. 'and- said to span'the spot from
which Pilate presented Christ to the mob to be crucified, Today,
in the city where Jesus hung from a crass nearly 2;000 years
ago to bring a new kind of love to the world, hate swells
through old Jerusalem. The hate has built up since Israel's
birth as a nation.
'
A good eomtneeseial..eatheneehietild..
contain a ettillelent amount of •
manganese sulfate to insure.
.good shell ,,quality„
4; 4. 4...
w;PmStudies have ,shown that shell
:quelity, as measured by ehell.
thickness, :declines, from A MAX,"
irOtArn level during the. winter
months to a relatively low level
during the summer months,. This
ciPPli310 in the- amount of cal,
eitim .1.eld down on the shell may
be the .result el an increase in
the environmental temperatot'e,
a reduction in feed .consumption
or changes in the physiology .of
the bird for causes yet 4,1044own.
• .4 4 • •
In spite of good breeding and
good .nutrition many birds e0t1--.
tinge to lay eggs with thin
shells, poor texture and •413npr-
31131, shapes, This has sometimes
been termed "physiological shell
.quality." The many phyaiologi,
cal and: biochemical' functions
involved' in forming the •egg shell
are poorly understood, Much. of
the data Available is fragreen,
tary and inconclusive. It is
through research in this field
that the greatest improvement
in shell quality may be achieved
in the future.
* •
In summary, poultrymen
should observe the following
points in order to achieve and
maintain good egg shell qual-
ity.
1. Choose a strain of birds
that has the inherited ability to
produce good quality egg shells..
Feed a good. commercial
ration: or, if using a home mixed
ration, be sure that sufficient
amounts of calcium, manganese
and vitamin D are provided.
3. Insure an adequate supply
of calcium by allowing free ac-
cess ,to good quality .oyster shell
at all times.
4. Follow sound, management
practices" with regard to feed-
inge water; housing and disease
control.
Picket. In Ardmore, Okla.,
State Trooper Paul Clark was
waved.down by a man at the
side of the road who got himself
arrested when he stuck his head
in the window, warned: "Hey,
the highway cops are working a
radar trap over the hill."
sees:0e.
TRIPLETS — Trying !'•ta•. dock
mean in their first appearance
at Fleishhacker Zoo are Sam,
Henry and Florine, fivetweek-
old tiger cubs. They're the off-
spring of a couple named Pat
and Mike.
"
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God Delivers His. People
Exodus, LW/ 1Z:2391,/ 1441414
Memory. Seketleet saved
;them tor his name!s sake, that, he might, make his mighty pow-
er to 1.0 known, Psalm 106;1,
Trouble comes to all but Foie'
ple react differently,
"One ship sails oast and one
sails west
By the, self same wind that
blows;
It isn't the gale but the eset of
the sail
That determines the way It
goes."
"The children of Israel sighed
by reason of their bondage, and
they pried, and their cry came
up unto God by reason of the "
bondage. And God heard their
groaning, and God remembered
his covenant with Abraham,
with Isaac, and with Jacob. ,And
God looked upon the children of
Israel, and God had respect un-
to them," God's deliverance by
the hand of Moses was miracu-
lous. Critics will say that
plagues of lice and flies are
common in Egypt. Perhaps so.
But they don't come and go at
the word of man, The smiting
of the first born was, of course,
the climax. Pharaoh yielded but
it was not genuine repentance.
He was sorry that he was suf-
fering but he wasn't sorry for
his sin against God and, against
Israel. Hence he found no de-
liverance but instead a watery
grave.
People are the same today.
One woman became bitter about
her. suffering, She *.flitts made
life more miserable for herself
and for those about her. She
shed forth gloom.
A man became seriously ill.
He had no place for God in his
life, But in the months of ill-,
ness his attitude gradually
changed. Through prayer and
medical skill his health was re-
stored. Now he values prayer
and is very thankful to God. He
can say with David, "Before I
was afflicted I went astray: but
now have I kept thy word. — It
is good for me that I have been
afflicted that I might kern thy
statutes." Psalm 119:67, 71.
Hitler, learned the folly of op-
pressing the descendants of
AbraharrneThOugh they have not
yet acknOwledged Jesus Christ
as their Messiah, God has not
forgotten ,His'" covenant with
this people. What a day it will
be for all men when they turn
from their unbelief! I hope I
am Eying to see it.
=0A.
To keep a child's CRAYONS
FROM ROLLING AND GET-
TING UNDERFOOT place them
on a strip of corrugated card-
board. The indentations keep
the crayons in orderly arrange-
ment and protect them from
damage.
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
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CHART FROM FBI FILES shows identical points of comparison
in two fingerprints-. Comparison like this solves scores of
mysteries each year as intriguing as 'any on TV. dramas.
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Icy JFEEEY PENNETT
NEA Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON es, (NEA) =-
Fingerprints help solve scores of
intelgleing mysteries each year
that have' nothing to do with
crime,
For, agents of the Federal Bte-
reser of Investigation use the
tell-tale ink smudges to ipcate
missing persons and identify
'victims of fatal disasters ranging
-from airline crashes to attacks
by map-eating sharks.
The little known public sere-
ice is provided by the FBI's
Identification Division which op-
eratee the largest and most effi-
cient fingerprint storehouse in
the world. The elaborate filing
eystem contains almost 148 mil-
lion sets of fingerprints belong-
ing to about 74 million people,
The majority of these are con-
tained in the non-criminal see-
lion which files prints contribut-
ed by more than 11 ,000 agencies.
And agents agree that cases
which these prints help solve are
often more dramatic than the
ones involving notorious gunmen
or spies.
A typical example is the case
of Gregory LaTraille who walk-
ed into the FBI's Los Angeles
office and asked agents to find
his father whom he had never-
seen. What little information La-
Traille could give was imme-
diately sent to ID specialists in
Washington.
Their files contained a set of
the father's prints which had
been made when he applied for
a jab with the. U.S. Naval Air
Station in Seattle. The finger-
print card also listed his street
address., With this information,
LaTraige was soon able to, meet
his father for the first time.
One of the identificatioriDivi-
sion's most macabre cases began
when the FBI received 'a set of
fingerprints from a hand found
in the belly of a shark.
Miami Beach police wanted to
know the name of the victim.
An intensive fingerprint check
soon revealed that the hand be-
longed to a Navy gunner who
had gone down with a tanker off
the Florida coast.
The enormous fingerprint file
proves especially valuable in
helping identify amnesia victims.
On a summer day in, 1956 an eld •
erly man wandered- into the
Sheriff's Office in Lawton, Okla.,
and said that he had „forgotten,
his name. The sheriff took the
man's prints and sent them to
the FBI,
ID specialists finally identie
lied the amnesia vietim:i when
they checked their olde"errifed
forces file „Which contaree's fin-
gerprints dating 'back 0 lege n
The prints that;•„rev,eeileel his ...
identity, had been rria'd0aineeet
50 years before the FBI cheeks
took place.
The role that a set of fine;t
prints Olayed in the case of Senen
ora Petrae Gerclosa de Garcia- of
Piedras Negev, •Messiee; is as
dramatic as many TV and movie
produttions. The Army notified
Senora Garcia that ,her. son had
been listed as a deeerter, and
that, her desperately needed mili-
tary allotment weould be stopped.
,S,0111)r4 0.4).*Cia:'.11/515tcid that A. •
letter her son had written the
day before teeing, listed AWOL•.
was so el)eerf441 that she eouid
.not believe the' charge, An FI
omk. men led: to a. .search.••
through its W•4/.!'' .casualty file. -
514.rpris0, agents found that her
wee fingerprints compared with
those of an Unknown soldier
buried m an overseas military
cemetery, The .evidence further
revealed that instead ,of being a
deserter, Senora. Garcia's son had
died a hero.
The most unpleasant job of the
highly :trainee ID specialists is
identifying vietims of airplane
crashes, ship fires and burri- •
canes, As soon as FS1 head-
quarters gets a request for this,
unique service, a epecial squad
of fiegerpriet experts is
sliately dispatched to the leis-
aeter scene,
Before leaving Washington,
these specialists collect finger-
print cards of persons whose
names are the same or similar
to those believed to be disaster
victims. Then -they compare fine
geeprints taken from the man-
gled, burned bodies With the
FBI cards to establish positive
identificaeion. Suecees in this
gruesome operation often
quires that an agent have a
strong stomach as well a's expel
technical know-how.
Recent headline disaster which
received FBI identification serve
ice' were last year's Romance
of the Skies stratocruiser erash
and the havoc caused by Hurri-
cane Audrey on the Louisiana
coast.
Pamper Those
Pant Brushes
It's quite jrue that? "you get
what you pay for" and buying
cheap paint brushes is not eco-
nomicel. The bristles will soon
fall out and the finished paint
job will look anything but Pro-
fessional. ses
A good paint brush will last
indefinitely if you give it proper
care, This consists of .areful
cleaning and storing after'' every
paint job.
To , clearit‘ brushes of enamel,
house paint' or oil-basen paint,
swish in turpentine until all
loose paint is removed. Then
e wash int warm e water „and soap,
wrap in several thicknesses of
paper and put away, Brushes or
rollers ,used with latex paint
are merely washed with, warm
water and soap. -
During ane extendele job,
bruShes'can be suspended in lin-
seed oil between painting ses-
sions. The brush should' ,inever
touch the bottom of the contain-
er eor 'the bristles will hecome
bent.
Even brushes that have be-
come hardened ,with old paint
will' respond to treatment. How-
ever; these may'receire' soaking
in a stronger solvent like paint
and varnish remover before the
stubborn paint will give up the
ghost. Paint brushes treated with
respect will do a better job.
The Highlands.
Are Marvelous
"Aye" said my Highland guide,
waving a brawny hand toward
the pass of Larig Ghru, 4.we are
fighting for it; we are fighting
for it. It will make all the dif-
ference,"
W. are' they fighting for?
For, two miles pf road into the
foothills ef the Calle-Amen
IViountains,
Two miles of road!
They need just two miles of
road to ppen up these wonder-
ful wild mountains that rise out
Of the legendary valley pf the
Spey as a winter playground
for all. Britain, closer than
Switzerland and just as fine as
Austria.
If I were the government in
London—a, most nnlikely hap-
pening—I would not let the
Scots. Highlanders light for two
miles of road. I would force 30
miles of roads upon them. I
would beg them to take the
money.
Scptland is England's greatest
hidden asset. But so far the
English barely realize it.
The Highlands are marvelous.
And they are empty,
Well, relatively empty.
A great deal of development
is going on. Almost all of it is
being done by the Scots them-
selves:
Cairngorms now boast a
Cairngorm's Winter,,Sports De-
velopment Board. ne day it
means to have ski lifts and
chalet's. At -present it mustes,
offer a little hill climbing alenge
with, or more accurately juste before; its skiing.,;, ,
But-e there ,,,now are,,, Swiss',
Norwegian,:. Aus trians a rid
French' ski Schools in the'Stealers
of Spey. There's some snow
until 'June.
Inclusive fees 'in the hotels
cover skis; boots, transport, in ,
stRuction, food And entertain-
ment. The cost is around-$35 a
week. The importance of proper
maintenance of farm machinery
cannot be over-emphasized, ac-
cording to Agricultural Engineer
F. Bigsby of the Swift Current
Experimental Farm. Special at-
tention to machinery mainten-
ance he says, will, in the long
- run, more than pay for the im-
mediate expense and extra time
required to do the job properly.
• • "
The best aid to good machin-
ery , servicing is the operator's
manual supplied with the ma-
chine. This manual has been
prepared by engineering speci-
alists who know the require-
ments of the machine, and their
recommendations should be fol-
lowed.
*
A check list is another aid to
good maintenance ,and it should
include an -entry for all the ser,
vice operations required, With
a space for the hour meter read-
ing, or date when each service
operation was done, This is et-
pecially important for jobs such
as engine oil changes; transmis-
sion oil changes and wheel
bearing packs. Through the use
of a check list an operator will
not have to rely on his memory
to know when certain opera-
tions should be done.
* *
Great care should always be
taken in machinery mainten- •
ance regardless of what oPera-
tion must be performed.. )For
example, grease nipples should
be cleaned off before greasing,
and all nipples ' should be at-
' tended to. If grease nipples are
e in an awkward position they
should be, replaced with a fit-
ting that is easier to reach. Fur-
thermore alb' nipples should be
checked to ensure that they are
taking the grease. The oil level
in gear boxes should always be
checked carefully and ethe plug
on the gear box should be clean-
ed before it is removed. It is also
important to see that no dirt
gets into the gears while the
plug is alit. 'The' best lubricant
available cannot do a Proper job
if it has dirt in it.
•
On many occasions a major
breakdown is caused by a minor
fault such as a loose bolt or a
cracked pare., For this reaeore
careful seryicing, is Important
as it gives the operator a Chance
to check over his machine'dur-
ing the servicing process. At
such periods he May spot ,faulte
before they lead to a major
breakdown.
4 4,
Breeding and nutrition are
Possibly the Mat ininOttant
feelers affecting egg shell qual-
ity but disease and other fac-
tors associated with the Physi-
ology of the bird, also have a
bearing on shell
The ability to produce eggs
With Shells of gbed quality is nti
inherited, characteristie of the
indiVidneelierie Different breeds
and; mord ittnetirtant perhaps,
etranie Within bedecise differ in
their ability to, Prodtled Strong,
Well formed deitirrideeial
egg producers should insure
that the chicks they buy are
from a strain evith proved ebil-
Ay Id Pecidece good shelli This
also is an important point for
the breeder, Not only does he
want to-produce a good saleable
chick but he wants to obtain
the highest hatchability as well.
Good hatchability is due in part
to good shell„ quality. Poor shell
quality can be improved by
breeding.
• *
Regardless of the inherited
capacity of a bird to lay eggs
with good strong shells, she
must -ereceive an adequate
amount of the nutrients neces-
sary for shell formation. The
most important of these are cal-
cium, vitamin D and manganese.
About 98 per cent of the egg
shell is composed of calcium in
the form of calcium carbonate.
It is very importane, therefore
that a supply, of calcium be
available to the birds. This can
best be' achieved by keeping
clean oyster shell before the
birds at all times. In this way
a hen will regulate her own
calcium intake in accordance
with her rate of production.
* ecees
Vitamin D is intimately asso-
ciated with the assimilation and
utilization of calcium, although
the nlanner ,of this association is
not completely 'understood; espe-
cially with respect,to shell gm-
/nation. Experiments haVe shown
however, that vitamin D is re-
quired for good shell fort-ration.
Normally a good duality "com-
mercial ration should contain
sufficient vitamin D.
,Manganese- s 'a ls o been
Shown to influence shell quality.
SEES SEA OF MUD-And that's all you see On m
W. Mettle, cheeks on his 'dairy cattle, who or
things, several of the cows dripped calves: Wli
they get Mud -with if nd if Makes them sick. W
be washed down berofe they bah be milked. "
itIt1 §ti/r soys Mar'l'ine
Br'itish railways offeV a 20-Per •
cent redtiction of fare to those
who will travel on Tuesdays,,,
Wednesdays, or Thursdays., The,
b
h
q
e
o
te
k
1
i
s
n
e
gs.
wilI accept '' tnideveek
In the Queens Forest of Glen:
more, beside the erclielited"Loch
Morlich, a lake with a broad
sandy Pacific atoll beach that
lies below the Larig Ghru at
1,000 feet, the Scottish Council
of Physical Recreation has turn-
ed the former* shooting lodge of
the Dukes of Richmond and
Gordon into a training center
for skiers, climbers, naturalists,
dinghy sailors, and canoeists.
Many Scottish townships are
making bloc bookings for their
school children at Glenmore
Lodge. But anyone can go, if
they book.
But probably the greatest new
industry of the Highlands is
pony trekking. This was more
or less invented foe Scotland
by Mr. Ewan Ormiston of Neve-
tonmoreowho keeps the Balavil
Arms Hotel.
There now are 18 pony trek,
king centers in Scotland. From
them one can go riding arid
roaming among the bens and
carries and across the Moors,
staying out, if you wish, days
at a time. There is also trail-
riding, which is a more advanced
form of trekking, and yeu can
even learn dresage, and shoW-
jumping, writes . John Allan
May in The , Christian Science
Monitor.
The Clyde, which has always
been a center for smart sailing,
has'. become now a center for
popular sailing. The SCPR runs
sailing courses from a number
Of towns on various lochs and
last year more than 1,000 fore
riser nonsailors took part in
Scottish sailing holidays and
more than 250 went cruising
out to the western isles in
SCPR deeP waster schooners,
Water skiing, has become a
Scottish sport with a very sud-
den eplash; in, spite of the cold
Water. -When the first Scottish
championships were held in
August, 1957, more than 20,000
people turned up at Lochearri-
heed to watch.
It is even possible to'water-
ski on Loch Lomond these days,
There are •Aists gliding courses
in Abeedeeziehite over sable of
the finest gliding country in
Europe.
Jes probebly is unnecessary to
Mention two other special Scot-
tieh `epOtte—fishing and golf,
The fact is that the Scottish
Highlands are surely at the
dpetling OLa bright,110W chapter
iii their strange and lovely and
,ttifiteritie gory.
One hopes so.
When I Was On 'My way Mine
to England I Met some skiers
tram SeViteetlerid On their Way
Nethy Midge, They had not
found' enough snow its Switzer-
land, Arid someone had just
told.thetie • about Scotland.
And When I got borne f per,
siOnally told itiy neighbor. Hie
daughter left for Avietribre at
Once. She recognized her Swiss
ski instructor friern my deetrip,
deist
any ci Kansas forth These days, Above, Frank
knee-deep in the sticky goo, To catnplieati
en the youngsters get Milk front their thotisere,
hen Mcirtiti does h1S hillkirig, the cows have id
If shakes getting' the work( done three fillies Os