The Brussels Post, 1961-09-07, Page 3,k.s ; a • . • - :, - P i - , ,,, .4es...A , is
In. The Open Door suddenly' reinembered that Hid -
napped" was up there, and I laid
Of The Old Barn , mine Limey lin L& to do to
41**4*******r=55 .:4***(004.4,N1,4451,5* ,, 15,,,57.,*** :4-.*0-ini lip it tadei0,44,144,5 5r:4:04.5x0i'alt I 1.'*.
0'05 5 k!'l •0:0•.51 isinet. reaming- .b(irsy arifp14,41,1eby Dick,' and
44 l', l'' I • la' in Ire modern "te.• h. II ilTwo y` ail 3 B enTr*,,,t4e
1141111 ''' """Alealt'" 114(1 big : in one season. al.likeuiiii it ,svcis
in 11,n' gable tn''' rainier that ..yetn, flin usual.
ward lisalaaltV.13VViikc?"04.w144 Possibly .tite ss-roWtliz 'reading ae-
the bav pai•zed On a trite c -fork., compliahraca'ef aur yeunget. set
'rile en!tr,i -liaN•ing'operatiOn ha
1.• is because loose hay Nis .One
ithantied, and when themy agrono,-*Nt,.01 style. apetilalipkiist the acivan-
Tlid-e'"a-r tseaae otiu.41 ripheral
tatles 11e P'reV4111'8' Y°4 will advantages to'Me-cri •• rays. One
was driving:the hares. riloday
the bales arboostecl on a fiat -
body truck which (low' ',' stop
at all - it just lc:.e'eps gOin . But
with loose hay, -pitohed ,up ;with
a fork, a 'pause, was nficeSsary,
And thee.lead 'had to be 'built."
This moanV that e aveh forkful.
should be placed jut so, with a
binding layer up the middle to
keep the sides from slipping
away. U .a load was 't daunt
right, it cpuld, and wo ld, col -
imagine a youngster,. growing up lapse on the way to)he barn
this "minute with •th:4v to' make''. and fill the 'whole dopryarcl, Part
of this construction depended on
beading, and a' flock of inform-
ed jumped up, and
down on the load was a gxeat
help - so they Said, But after
eath bunch' was stesged up and
ltp&,-;cloWn Ithe,tra•A had to be
0.116n tb•*"the next -bunch, and.
,:, 4 4 k,ii.ks.,,.svp5,11yeirz exacting work.
.
rue, tne not s were old hands
'Kt thiSV' and atag'totup." from
• die' ldaclii5tillder tli'drwould set-
tle into ili'dfr". blill'a"i# and move
lothe neRt hay, stopping Just
'tAlighWall by themselves.
't- Another chance at the horses
,stayettrlope a r after ,kkay..ing,,Ivas-,:.„1 eeroe„At ,tho ba,rnAykere one of
don e, .et a V pti, rmi LI v aratila till g , tb• ; ,thez..r.te anl , .. qip 41 4:teu , unhitchecl
mel,v, and a bay could climb the from Itie...fragic andolins whift;e-
ladder onto the _ beams, walktree hooked to the.,1„Ong rope of
across to the "Szca'fflifiiia arid he ?UtliiPiieelefoiC.:11-rei ,,would raise
on frii'rbliclOttli'en , ill'Atheaaciazika F., thea hay -up, fthrougla the gable
and It;Whiltti,664 the' ethiverse:4,15 ' :decks iihrttc. the gilows, The farm
you can't dciactliatickwitimPelecl .•• i hoy who ;had the job of: lead -
hay, y9.1.1 se4..pr A.. has 1:101, , ing him eel apd back was very
spring,,,,and-4veansl-if;d99si•q lucky, fell ' he was In command
take up reomDigaRugil 5P.)#.§.017- ' f '•,1 oto grPat pr and controlled
age toureach the. soaffliogs =Any- - iathei situation:a:It was a rule tnat
way, ACK) .. 1,, 12 In aa Wt.: It '-a tie *than •Who/flaunt load should
A ras- innight WA elorrlatts?'N''"") 131-teli' Off, Se he would thrust
'
soft mid -summer rain, drumming Riallielleng'' tines of the horse-forIc
on the roof, dripping from the,, into the load, and when he lock -
eaves, and a bow 6iirledt. up ha' , ed the trigs he would stand back,
. a soft, fragrant bed of meadow arrange the tripline and shout,
L'IlaY.1's"geiltitthing the farm -maws 'Haut-zasassaylllossiassimaskassikaaas
Chiner,y people have eliminated
from pbssibility. But if the night
were clear the open doors would
frame ,,the s polar, . • sky, and., you
could lie there with your hands
looped bellinatlisur head and
speculate on the ,distancea. The
North Star seemealosetinfil yoct
project toward it, and it teases --
see nOniention .lsaf the wander
an4 maglakiceriCe that belonged
to those great khble doors. They
opined''14` thelfaam of the Big
Diopely vac 4t .rairyiand beyolcyt.
compare? 1.4 4
WhatllaS hapcened to the ow
business is.,,rta different, ainT
what 11,s itappeeed 4,4Itetheirl
buainesa, probably, and haying
has been ,changed to a mechaffi-
cal 111(,(5P0$ ttla,P, V.9144 sd‘reMlik
yen might remember. 1 can't
coring back to it ,i`n ''frithahry
40 years hence and having ary-
thing ta....,talk about. The end
accomplishhirdrIsa-and-Ws to
Jay Todd -etc, aside so the ,,,eattle
could eat durirg-the-ginter; the,-
a§,icle'of pleasafit icecoliet-s
bons h:clde Atha poft," Per -1
haps. The rine;ealzed hey,,trt
chinery that moves ' the hay t
warcr3'11-iWy*6arn' and ''bri'd'g$,Aita
baled'eo'V'pktent .11-Tt.N vAn'efer-","
ful and amazing, and extremely
efficient, Yet .1)/try441r1,./tini.
The thing abotati theg-rae a 4 -
doors on the gable was ,that,:the3a
•The boy would lead the horse
past the Woodaced;p'ist the kit-
chen doo,, past.,,lhe petunia bed,
onli*Ao he mailbox. The
yopewoulfl,i4queak in the wood-
-en P'ullei; the barn roof -timbers
weusld creak under the weight,
,. al, the horse would dig in and
--.Y.'•ir'4with mighty effect. The
You on landettala uitil „xsuare or1ou1d rumble along
truly in apace - and of course the steel anie peak of the barn,
oacroboday had been in space then. andce htment the
The Dipper tips up for you, and man would jerk the line and re-
'PlEm 'saddehl'Y ``Y0f1----wak4 thelloada'=hewhoase, feel -
the roosters crowing and the ing the load gone, would natur-
oatble .stirring in their stanch- ally stop all by himself, the boy
fon s4sstnd, morning has •eome,
)off the clevis,
white lyiu were asleep. ,"4: ""'
"";1•iyht,b4„ealloc '
eap4 t one load would
A young lady, down the road, make ready for the next hoist.
going away to school this fall,- If ybli had a' •$hower-coming up
was telling ine4,:b4...either'dAy thit wik done with considerable
about h s r reading list:*" The speed" and a boy. felt mighty im-
school had sentgierithet,titlesief.,-J pps,talitOs he trotted his horse
three books shKs.a.ssokkaae 1,iista%infm the next load.
pectecl.)to e4before classes
started, It"-'\itql surprising thIft
04is„.t.411,e0aEIDAFAstzeadY&Z,readv,ithenz-Q
for all rhiee'VeTrtioicirtrEad
read as a boy in ;min 4ayprow4
library, up in the topthi Moults.
On rainy days, when most farm
work can be skipped, 'I'd.
up and ,reads :There was a bealn
that made a bookcase; and
once had several books up there
for summer reading and left
them, In the 'winter, "after the
hay had. beentused ,clown, it "was
,11
2ietliio 4 t
UpsIdeclio.rn to Prevent Peeking
211
1'1
I
3 1:1
CI • 3
315 1
Nis 3
D
1
1 V
V 1
VA
I , 4
go....0-1
tq. .v
i 0.
13M3,,,)
',,•'
0.1...10'-''
8 1 V
13
sNooilt,tn
N
VON
0
t.- .n 0 A•
o 110d
• .V.
8 44..
3D 5 lagai.
IS
$
.L
..1..
N
v
,3 .1
-
1 3 :-.•
'' ---'
4.:,;:; •
17
3 vg 4 3
kirt,
a . Et
3 • 3.1.V
Z3),-.:
n It
o
.i.
-7 v .!14... 1
V' )3
1
1
V ;1;',g, :a J115
I do't pytaxhat boys do to-
day during fl' If they aren't
4.-ii_bl.prplai.020,,t2aftza„:::haie they
can't fit in. And there fs 'no hay -
now for them to lie in and read,
or study the eters, or dream their
'1b -long„ thoughts where but-
111"eiteurisA3ratever are laid by.-
as,..13rJohrrailissid in the Christian
"Science Monitor.
--Big--Cors--Bonned
4,apain- hl2s.,flaken an interesting
„all4 , 1.0401,151 • . .
unusual, approach to the
pr oie4.1,5
m or roan construction
.51.eisAs. ‘,I.Inder a new construction
ministry regulation that takes
neffect right'aaway, big cars, many
of them American, will be ban -
"MI Tied' iltate side roads. The bus
companies that use such roads
On A
have been given three years to
reduce the size of their vehicles.
idtg 1).66fr'rTftire"stion 05
to whether the government was
11101.1realilly obligated to provide roads
everywhere that would stand up
tiltIctkit the pounding of heavy ve-
hicles. Jgaati has said not,
Appeal (Memphis)
. • • a,51' ..•
*0 a ; •
c14;
.ijetri6hIslfa. 'aiissl taitik, kiIl�
tow
insfr0' Er; d rand. e tduncker s li +lie rears
'y
, taady land a Vickers.- Vigilant ykiiii.§1110 � Ri wa
a* this ietiitgiltAirtAiggerstlIS'n13.4j'''-•
otittt,te'4:. v.ft‘crott 111a.4 T I
Time Bomb ifOlti=utemagOz-
An coltor Hunters
Louis Leakey has a reputation
for being a "loner." /i.'or two
years, the 51.year-old, white-
haired bone hunter sat on the
biggest anthrnpological news of
the century: Ills fossil find, Zin*
janthroptis was really 1,750,000
yoars old. The news, published in
Nature last month, broke upon
the world of anthropology with
a resounding crash, Man was
almost twice as old as any text-
book indicated, and three tinieS
as old as any fossil evidence sug-
gested. Every anthropology text
was suddenly out of date, and
man's concept of his origins and
early evblution was radieally al-
tered.
In his tiny fossii-eluttered of-
fice in London's Natural History
Museum, Leakey explained his
time bomb to Newsweek's Irwin
Goodwin:
"When we discovered Ibell
janthropus skull, I already k ew
that it was more than 1 mil ion
years old„ But I eautionaly cl m -
ed it was 'more that:64040
years old' so as not to upset My
colleagues. Scientists are odd
chaps. They would be staggered
if I revealed that date without
double-checking, triple -checking,
and cross-checking,"
The checking was done by two
geologists at the University of
California in Berkeley, Jack F.
Evernden, 39, and Garniss M.
Curtis, 42, They used the new
potassium -argon dating tech-
nique to determine the age of
the rock strata where Zinj
uncovered in Tanganyika's Oldu-
vat Gorge. Radioactive potassittnO
decays into argon and calcium
at a known rate. Since the layer
in which Zinj was found con-
tains potassium -bearing volcanic
ash, the California tearn;,,,,pin-
pointed its age by calculating
NEW PINCH? - East German
Communist leader Walter Ul-
bricht is reported to have made
a secret flight to Moscow to
ask Soviet premier Khrushchev
for permission to seal the West
Berlin border againsf the flight
of refugees.
the ration of potassium to argon
atoms.
The Berkeley geologists did
their first dating in 1959, and
immediately suspected the great
age of the soil Zinj walked, on.
But they held back until they
had run ten samples. Their ages
came out between 1.6 million
and 1,9 million years. "The' old-
er date seemed to be more ac-
curate," Curtis s a i d, ""but we
'u s e d the average of '050,000
years,"
If this new, startling date
stands tip in future tests, there
will inevitably be a spate of
textbook rewriting, Butlin many
ways, the date makes the anthro
pologist's task simpler. I '"
The current time sile,„saici
Leakey, "Was all a matter ,,of
wild guesses and hYpothesea.
Now we'Vd got facts."
Further, as Dr, T. Dale Se-
a t, an anthropologist at the
Smithsonian Institution in Wash-
ington, pointed out, "ita`belfet
to have more time for !this ,evo,
lutionary process leading to
mart." The 'first men, "Stich' aa'
Zinjanthrcpus, were dxtrdmelg•
primitive, Stewart explains, able
to talk and communicate only on
a simple level. For thein, the
thought of chipping an edge onto
one stone with another stone
was near the limits of {ddibbPal
achievement, That such. men
could develop into modern.man
in the geologically shoih tine of
600,000 years seemed unlikely.
lIerice rnost early inen have been
pushed off evolution's main
stein by Many anthropologists,
and relegated to branciliet that
led to OctitittiOri.
But another million years'
time Makes hUitati eVciltttkin
edgier to understand Stewart
Stiid: "Maybe even Zinjantlirci,
pita is in the direct line. At least
he had the time." - Froth
NEWSWEEX.
Ffk.
114:06-it,Siiirt:ina b� your owfl
•
•
PISTOL PACI(IN'PLAYMATtt pNT'Br
•style, for these two small desperadoes as they face each other
for the showdown. Robbie Jamison may be out of gun range,
V'' -h
.1iVt'gOa'tCPtefe°1'4Yttil rje‘ctn1 csli::hipiff°
is7-16119-$5.1'°9t1A1- t
going to give it a try. 'The shot panis set seenii td' ike the
ti
fi
f5nd.vitestws,tpo..•
• •
, • Livestock. provides about 42
per cent of the agricultural in-
come of the Prairie provinces' of
„Canada, This includes primarily.
beef cattle, although dairy and
sheep contribute a substantial -
protion to this income. , •
• In this period of, excessive
dryness throughout the _plains
country, the lack of sufficient
moisture,. has heightened appre-
hensions that the grass cover
might not be enough to carry
'the .norrnal - nerds into .and
, through liext winter.
* •
•
Eatlier this' summer, as the
rainless days stretched endless-
ly„ there was sore panic selling
of cattle:Fol: a while this threat-
ened to depress the prices which
ranchers and farmers gel for
their beef animals.
After the first rush, hoWever,
the urgency, faded. This, coupled
with emergency steps taken by
federal and provincial govern-
ments to head off any depletion
in livestock herds or at least to
assure better prices for those
market.
okhetave to sell, firmed up the
As the ranchers and farmers
looked around, they discovered
that feed might, be more readily,
available than they had expect-
ed, And some rains, though pri-
marily local in nature, came
along at just the right time in
just' the right places on occasion
• to save the grass and strengthen
the feed situation enough by
helping revive to some extent
grain crops which had 'declined
almost to a point where it would
not be feasible to cp.I, them even„:,
for feed.
The federal. 'government step-
ped in, with Lelia measures
which in, some cases make it
more profitable Co' cut stunted
'-wheat ' Stands to use asfeed for
cattle.- Other .measures- have
combined also to give tne ranch-
ers and farmers,thore confidence
in the stability of the Canadian
. economy and forestall fuir.thet
selling off of and,
in a Panic.
• 'Some gdvernthene offlaialg note
that the -ranching ,asea hap been
moving into- a period of, inoNiure
deficiency fbr almost live years.
During this period the•cattle in-
dustry has been getting itself set
against »» the, .scrionstess ot the
current 'dry wfil&t tetain-`-"
nlng. to .talce,, serious blows at
Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and
Alberta.- -•
t •,
While the livestock industrY
is and of 'die leasontrolled in
Canadian agriculture, the fed-
eral and provincial governments
de have itt Operation various
°
it d"116"IterP' tIthose"aalti.e.
i,,,tgrowerarwho,,;,thight,,yitridetherrit:.1.
selves hard put 4:1 teep theh
a-Thlfldfat'
lation
Goverintient offiCials, among
thein the Federal Minister �f
Agrietlittire, Alvin itatilitont
katchewan, say they Cannot glare' t
an accurate estimate this time
on the possible total cost ot gdVt.'
*
Who deitieS frOni northern aS-
is•if ' -• .». » •TA
ernment relief, but they do point
with pride to specific measures,
* *
One, of these is the operation
of community pressures under
the Prairie Farm and Rehabili-
tation Administration, To meet
the increasing pressures from
farmers and ranchers whose own
pasture's are not able to carry
their normal cattle population,
the PFRA has announced plans
• to thitible the size of herds al-
lowed on the community pas-
tures.
This restoration of confidence
• has an' effect on the Canadian
economy which reaches far be-
yond the livestock industry,
writes Bicknell Eubanks in the
Christian Science Monitor,
In addition to being a princi-
pal part of the agricultural eco-
nomy in the prairies, » livestock
also makes up the basis of large
investments in packing plants,
milk - condensing plants, and
other food-processing activities.
This give jobs to thousands of
eity-dwelling workers, '
• * *
Like other facets of the west-
ern agriculture in Canada and
elsewhere in the. northern Great
Plains down in the Dakotas and
Montana, the experts as well as
the ranchers and farmers are
trying..to peer as far into the
future as they can.
• Ranchers especially have ta be'
prepared to carry their herds
through the winter by laying in
ample supplies of hay and other
feeds and keep their herds at a -
size that would not put too great
pressure on spring paStures and
,early,sumtner grass should the
fall, winter, and early spring
precipitation turn out to be as
,shert, as it was this. season.
• * 1
In gaskatehewan, farmers and
ranchers who have ben short-
,,,trelta,14e4d.,;StcTtOrinal-10,.adOr-guP•7-,
1The tWO--
znetitOrls.
An feeding their cattle
through the current ,dry spell.
Farmers are swathing and
bail -
in standing wheat crops. Grain,
growers who have thinly filled
cereals are selling their standing
crops for fodder at about $10
tan. This rosta the stockmen
about $15 a ton after haying
costs are added an,
Western agricultural Publics. -
tions are giving space to provide
lists of farmers in the three
provinces,,,who areofferin vart-
ott.0k, Inds of locidor.
!nye n tecit, Hirpielf
Itito ThJ Pokey I-
Walter Shaw of Miami Is an
amateur inventor who speeializes
in gadgets that drive the tele-
phone companies crazy, He has
one which allows you to reeeive
your home telephone calls at any
phone you may be near. All you
do is call home and another lit-
tle box reeozfrs-cArtizt nureser
you'y* callin4 frona anrwill
trarrsfer the e 11 there. "
Walte'r's be inver4 on is an
el'ectronic-clev.i whidh cuts4he
cost of long-distance telephone
bilis to nothing. It is such a good
gimmick that he went to jail
because of it.
His inven.tioa, contained in a
box.Nix inchesjsquare, attaches
to/wires le4dffi• g from a tele-
pla•one,Anfdirect-dial call made
IC that aahen,9 „costs nothing be-
cause a signal issued froxn the
ce
devlisnilitertfbc4
e:eis,wirityth...ti.hpieritieyler-
phonm
e syste's timing apparatus.
,,
completei, YOu kda a4s
nt' lolg
aa you,..,4ke„,„p.9..d tbere:Sis no, re -
dad or' the tall. ' * ' ° 44 •
Shaw, who used to work for a
telephone company as a lineman,
was ma -king about ten of the
gadgets a day, in his living room,
arid aellingrthem to Jaociltmakers, -
who normally run up a high -
phone bill, for $1,500 each.
A recent raid on a bookie par-
lor just outside New York City
uncovered several of the gadgets.
They were traced first to Dade
County, Florida, and then to
Shaw. Shaw was charged with
attaching unauthorized equip-
ment to a telephone, a misde-
meanor with a one-year maxi-
mum sentence. When he gets fin-
ished 'with the law, the phone
company where he used to work
„rnay want ,hint 17aelt., It would
rather have him for a friend
• than an enemy. -- Preen SAGA.'
"The best things in life are
free," says the adage. Yes, but
you need imagination and a will
to work to ,find them.
UNDAYSCH001
LESSON
»By Itev, 11, Barclay Warren
B.A., B.D.
14clia., a Christian Business
Woman. Acta 16: 114L 35-44
Memory Selection: As many as
received Him, to them have ilo
power to become the sons dt
004, even to them that believe
on His name, John 1:12.
••••••••,,,
Women have always played an
important part in the advance or
Christianity. On most mission
fields, women outnumber the
men two to one. Go to any pray-
er meeting, (if you can find one
in your community), and you
will find women are in the ma-
jority.
When Paul and his eompan-
ions arrived in Europe, by God's
lea,cling, they went on the first
Sabbath to a prayer meeting by
the4iver outside the city. Lydia,
a s jeslady for the purple -dyed
gar ents made in Thyatira, 115 -
nM attentively. She was al-
ready a worshipper of God. That
day as she listened to the mes-
sage of God's Son, Jesus Christ,
the Lard opened her heart, This
coming to know Jesus Christ is a
supernatural experience. Unless
there is a spiritual rebirth, one
cannot enter the kingdom. This
is accomplished by the Holy
Spirit leading the repentant sin-
ner to faith in Jesus Christ as
Lord and aviour.
Lydia and her heuselidlcl were
baptized. Then she invited the
group, Paul, Silas, Timothy, and
Luke, to stay at her house. It
wasn't easy to put up four men,
but this was part of her expres-
sion of gratitude to God,
When Paul and Silas were re-
leased frci'm prison, Lydia was
still their friend. She wasn't
ashamed of the Gospel of Christ.
They came again to her home,
saw the believers and comforted
them, One would have thought
Paul and Silas with scarred
backs were the ones needing
comfort, but they were comfort-
ing others. Actually, helping
others is a good way to help
yourself.
The memory selection .emPha,-
sizes the truth of this lesson. Re-
ceiving Christ is much more than
joining a church. It is receiving
power to become a child of God.
And this glorious experience is
for us all on the simple condi-
tion .of believing on Jesus Christ,
ISSUE 34 - 1961
CROSsWORD
PUZZI,E
'5,5,5,4,54 •
45,sionse.c.
ACROSS 53. Antlered
1 '9Inerg5 . animal
(slang) DOWN
4. Unfathomable
X Pag-end i. toung salmon
14. ffighest ine,le
12. Goddess of ^ -.
13 Of an era , . "r" - "
in fatuatiOn ". ;,,,,,,liii; .
voice -.'•.' 66 Amer
Small case
1:, nilemma • O. Auricle
4, 9Iander
6. S.likworm,
11. impetuosity
17 Sustenance. 7*Double fold
In cloth
11. Lasso
20. SertudinaVian
legend
22 Type square!
24 (lentils
28 Thorough-
"-
32. ital Ian
seaport
SA Textile'
• Mc:rem, pine
34 'Person
addressed
38 Milt of •
. weight
• 27 Afrthtigeript
40 TInfastem5
43 tli5er1nsting .
(noet.)
48 Men :
48 rInneror
f118i3flj'
'Roman
'Empire;
48 qtairease
nnst
62 Onnntry In
•'kr; Al4ZIL"..
57, 'F.Te.r1) eve
..38,TTonk 15011 60'
159.'Atiele'nt slave
• 40 „Uproar
• 61.-7-terting satire
62 took askance
In tontemPt
8, Mexican food
9. Beverage
10. Greenland
•Eskimo
31. Razard
19. Fagoda.
ornament
21. Toke
23, Swine pen
25, Within
(comb, form)
26, Secluded
' place
21. Dresses
leather
28. Dependable
29. Jogging gait
29. Breathing
• sound
31. Small Fr.
coin
• 35. Fairy queen
38. Sarcastic
39. Canadian
province (ab..)
41. Thwart
42. Unref Ined
metal
44. Feminine
name
47. Fr. river
49. Broad
50. Corrupt
51. Scraggy
52. Palm ]eat
63, Prefix
meaning
"wrong"
54. Uuido's
second nets
66. Comnass
point
I
a ,
3
:•••:•
.,, .
4 '
5'
6 -7
''';',;
::;.
:"..x•
8
4
9 .
10
0
12
' -
••••51:
13
IS
-,-
::',5":::
•
4.:,;:; •
17
18
19
xe:
20
1
ii.:. •4:5,::X*:
... •
..,
• .
t •
.. •
..,i'.•
•Af:
4.1
2a
r
.23
+X
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
.
21
••• •••
:vv.
•W.
32
33
,
:.w...x,*:
2:•:5::::*:*
34
3
t.x.::.:.:.
'!:!:•:.
!VS..
36
i
37.
-
•
•
18
39
• *
v.::
5.0. •
v.5.
40
41
2
43 '
,
• .
i.
44
;::.
;$
4s
*.:4,,,:s•A4
':•:M::::*.
;v.
•-:**•
40:...:-:.::::-:.:
p:::::46
'
47;2;";
C.:
98
99
50
51
sa
53
''
54
-.:
;
: n
<4.:
........
N.::
55
56
.451
• •
At
57
•
56 -•'
;•,,...:,•
_k•
Al
s6
vv.
A..
...
6o•
61
-1
-
•
"N
''''.
63.-
•;.• :.;
1-22
63
Answer elsewhere on this page.
4x55554i555954-).»
g .''115. -
• P• `•1 41F*k•5051553PngtWOnr, rfM0/10W5*-.
•;" 5
•
WIDE ‘SPOT,IN tiii ROAD .‘,L.1NO less Itlicin 11 railroad cars were pulled by a locomotive •
cross tris nature!) frestI lit kingrldrn City, Mo. T r ad bed fell into aba d ned quarry.,
The ti
leaving a holes 1Cio feet derepi, NabOdy knew what ,htioptin&d until after the train passed safely
iaver,thei fiorp,g
• 111
•
4
4
4
11
„..ro
• I
4
11
• a'l
'15
• ..-rx
•
• ,a.'s
• .•4
...4
•• • "4
0
•0
-.•-
• • -.4
4
•..
••••.4
`5‘1