The Brussels Post, 1961-09-14, Page 6ty-gh,tz. 44.$
4663
10-18
Not So Crazy As
Neighbors Thought
"`Well," I replied, "ler one
tiling anyone with a high tem-
perature Was kept in, bed, Soino=,
times the tonsils were painted
with idoine, Embrocation or oil
of some kind was rubbed on the
throat and glands and everything
Possible was done to, bring down
the temperature and reduce the
danger of A chill, I remember
my mother used to wrap .a warm
woolen stocking around my.
throat —• just as it .came from.
the wearer!"
Things .are so different now..
A person with tonsilitis often
takee a shot of penicillin or
swallows antibiotics for a few
days, and thus .menages to keep
going. Speaking of modern
treatments, it might be just as
well if people were a little more
careful in regard to self-medica-
tion, Even taking too many as-
pirin can have disasterous results
over a period of time. But a little
more sleep never does anyone
any harm — that is if one is un-
der the weather,.
IT'S GINA'S — French actor
Alain Delon expresses a cheer-
ful "hattitude". in Grotto Fer-
rate, Italy, The hat belongs to
Gina Lollobrigida. They're both
in Italy for filming of a new
movie.
Too Much .1...eg,Show
In Rea China Tool.
Admirably designed to show
off pretty legs, the Chinese slit-
tea skirt has never before gotten
into politics. Rut it is there now'
— thigh high.
Puritanical Red China is to
blame, 13y decreeing that thcir
women must wear ankle-length,
sparingly alitted Mother. Hulse
bard sort of things, the Com-.
munists set off a .counteraction
in Hong :Kong, Up went hem-
lines and up went the side slits
to hitherto forbidden heightes
They got so high in fact that
they hrought down the wrath of
the Women's Section of Hong
Kong's Welfare Association,
Last month, the association's
Mrs. Mathilde Ng urged all wo-
men to keep their side slits at a
maximum 2 inches above the
knee.
Dance-hall hostesses balked,
They said they would, continue
to expose as much as the trade
demanded, and get away with it
too. Merely by using zippers on
the slits, they pointed out, it was
poesible for any girl to indicate
whether She was in the mood to
be a lady or a tramp.
HANDLED WITH CARE — Little girl from East Germany waits pa-
tiently while her parents complete registration at Marienfeld
refugee centre, West Berlin. Her family was one of many re-
ceiving CARE "welcome kits" containing necessities so many
refugees had to leave when they fled. Some women claim to keep
Secrets to the bitter end —
Which is usually the spot
Where they meet a woman
friend.
Plainly Perfect
PRINTED PATTERN
into trouble — "Detour" . .
"Bridge out" . . . "Road closed"
—and so on. You have to keep
your eyes on the road the whole
time. There was a time when I
enjoyed a cross-country drive —
but not any more, not if I'm do-
ing the driving. I can still enjoy
it if I'm a passenger but that
doesn't happen too often.
When we got to Milton last
Thursday we found poor little
Ross running a temperature of
104 degrees — the result of
tonsilitis. Poor little chap, he
wasn't himself at all. Cedric, on
the other hand, was full of beans,
charging in and out of the house
without a care in the world.
There seems to be a lot of ton-
silitis around these days. One
of our neighbours is suffering
from her third attack this sum-
mer Apparently antibiotics have
no effect upon her at all. She
said to me today — "What did
you do years ago before penicil-
lin and antibiotics had been dis-
covered?"
Well now, what did we do — I
had to think twice before I an-
swered.
Jupiter Honeymoon
Might Be Better
Mars and Venus, the earth's
closest planetary neighbors, have
been rated the likeliest habitats
for extraterrestrial life. Astrono-
mers ruled out Jupiter because
the intense cold of its atmos-
phere (210 degrees below zero
Fahrenheit) would freeze any
known organism,
Now astronomer Carl Sagan
of the University of California
has come up with a new idea:
Suppose the clouds of Jupiter
behave like a giant greenhouse,
trapping and storing the feeble
heat received from the sun?
Far from the traditional idea of
a frozen waste shrouded by am-
monia, methane, and hydrogen
gases, the planet's surface might
actually reach a comfortable
room temperature.
On the basis of laboratory ex-
periments with a test-tube at-
mosphere of Jupiter, Sagan fur-
ther speculates that lightning
and solar radiation produce or-
ganic chemicals which sink into
Jupiter's warm seas of ammonia
and water. There the chemicals
may become precursors of living
organisms, in much the same
way of life is reckoned to have
started on earth.
"The possibility of life on Ju-
piter seems somewhat better
than the possibility of life on
Venus," the astronomer says in
the current issue of Radiation
Research, The latter now seems
remote, he said, because the
same. "greenhouse effect" that
may warm Jupiter has heated
Venus to a searing 600 degrees
Fahrenhei t.
What shall we say of the esti-
mine sixteenth-century Frencl
humanist Guillaume Bueie Once,
informed by his servant that the
I house was on fire, Buda replied,
"Co.tell your mistress. You
know t. leave all household mat-
ters in her hands," But, after
you have laughed at Bude, re-
colleet also that we probably
owe to him the Bibliotheeine
Nationale and in part the revival
of Greek learning in Europe.
His achievements and his some-
what bizarre anticipation of the
theory of the division of labor
may well be connected.
*
A notable contrast to Susie's
borded attitude to conflagration
is the impetuous nineteenth-cen-
tury Englishman John .nlytton
who once set fire to his night-
shirt in order to get rid of the
hiccups, He succeeded, but I
should make clear that he hap-
pened to be inside the nightshirt.
If all of us slept twenty-three
hours a day, the man who per-
sisted in staying awake for six-
teen would seem eccentric. Yet
the man of high intellect is rath-
er in this position. His mind is
always working. Mine is almost
asleep. To me he seems absent-
minded because his mind is al-
ways present. But it is present
in a country from which I am
shut out. *
Take chemist-physicist Henry
Cavendish (1731-1810), who was
one of the richest men in Eng-
land—a situation available to any
fool who chooses the right an-
cestors—and also the first man
to combine oxygen and hydrogen
into water, Cavendish cared no-
thing for dress, social diversion,
or, I regret to say, women. He
had his meals delivered to him
through a hole in his laboratory
wall. He constructed a second
staircase so that be might never
encounter domestics or visitors,
When he wanted a book from his
own shelves he would go there
as if to a public library and sign
a formal receipt. He was some-
thing less than a normal man
But also something more. A
memoir by one of his few
friends sums him up brilliantly:
"An intellectual head, thinking;
a pair of wonderful acute eyes,
observing; a pair of very skilful
hands, experimenting or record-
ing, are all that I realize in xead-
ing his memorials."
Shortage of Harps
felt in Wales.
Wales is. a =St exelting place
to visit in this summer of 1901.
Apart from the fact that the
ancient principality is enjoying
a big economic revival, it is as
stimulating as only a Celtic so-
ciety can be — culturally,
tically, conversationally,
Among the out-of-the-ordinary
topics which are currently prow
yoking lively debate in Welsh
towns and villages are harps and
kilts and cockles and panzers,
The question of harps came up
at the Royal National. Eisteddfod
of Wales which has just been
held at the village of Rhos, near
Wrexham, in the county of Den-
bighshire. This National Eistedd-
fod which has been going on for
100 years is a festival of music,
poetry, dancing and art,
The harp is the traditional
musical instrument of Wales. In
particular it is used for the ac-
companiment of pennillion sing-
ing — in which an impromptu
counterpoint is sung against the
melody played on the harp.
It appears that today there is
a crisis in the harp business.
There is such a shortage of Gre-
cian and Gothic pedal harps that
a welcome renaissance in harp-
playing is being hampered,
So a meeting was held at this
years National Eisteddofcl by the
Cymdeithas Cersid Dant (a so-
ciety for the promotion of harp-
playing and pennillion singing)
to discuss how to meet the situa-
tion.
It was explained that a large
number of Welsh school children
are leaving school these days
after having learned to be pro-
ficient on the harp, only to find
there are no harps for them to
play,
Virtually all the harps in ac-
tive service are old ones. The
harp repairers have been be-
guiled away from harp-repairing
by the higher rewards of guitar-
mending for swing bands and
pop singers.
At the present time, it was
pointed out, harps are being
made in substantial numbers
only in parts of continental
Europe and in the United States.
This means that to import a
new instrument into Wales may
cost nearly .1,000 or about
$2,800.
This year's National Eisteddfod
provided the usual colorful cere-
monies including the Gorsedd
procession and the crowning of
the bardic crown was the never-
tsnd Haydon Lewis, Presbyterian,
minister, of Ton-Pentre, Rhond-
da.
Some of the women at the
Eisteddfod were, as usual, at-
tired in their attractive Welsh
'the bard of the year. Winner of
This Saves Money!
*
The eccentric as monomaniac
is usually a pitiful case. But not
always. Sir Edwin Chadwick
(1800-1890) lived a long, useful
life devoted almost entirely to
the disposal of liquid manure.
He was crazy about sewage, he
lived for drains. His single-
handed efforts created our mod-
ern disposal systems. We are
proud of our bathrooms, and
justly so; but, at the appropriate
moment, give a thought to that
eccentric, Sir Edwin Chadwick.
From "Any Number Can Play"
by Clifton Fadiman.
Fish That Travel
Really Fast
Naturalists are finding it hard
to agree which is the world's
fastest fish. Many of them are
insistent that it is the sword-
fish.
One of these mighty fish —
their average length is seven
feet and weight 250 lb. — poked
its sword through twenty inches
of hard wood sheathed with cop-
per during a clash with a sail-,
ing ship.
"Such a feat would have been
impossible at a speed, at the mo-
ment of impact, of less than sixty
miles an hour," reported a mar-
ine biologist. "But the cruising
speed of a swordfish is only
thirty-five miles an hour."
Another expert thinks the
swordfish comparatively slaw af-
ter checking up on the speed of
a sailfish in the Atlantic, The
run of a hooked specimen was
timed with a stopwatch and the
speed attained was 100 yards in
three seconds.
Michael Goodman, University
of California Professor of Archi-
tecture, on being asked what he
thought of a speech by Frank -
Lloyd Wright: Well, I thought he
was more Frank than Wright!
—Herb Caen in San Francisco
Examiner
SALLY'S SALLIO
"You'll have to blame the reg-
ister, lady, It makes all the
change,"
Cut a beautiful figure — ift
EASY with this shapely sheath
Curved-on-high seaming accent!
midriff, simple neckline "loves'
strands of glittering jewels
Choose shantung, cotton, linen.
Printed Pattern 4663. Misses
Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size
takes 33/4 yards 35-inch fabric,
Send FIFTY CENTS (stamp
cannot be accepted, use poste
note for safety) for this pattern
Please print plainly SIZE, NAME
ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER.
Send order- to ANNE ADAMS
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., Ness
Toronto, Onl,
The biggest fashion show of
Summer, 1961 — pages, pages,
pages of patterns in our new
Color Catalog. Hurry, send 350.
national costumes of tall black
hat, red jacket and white lace
frills,
But what of the men? Despite
Welsh civilization's being older
than that of England the Welsh
men have hitherto had no real
national costume.
So this year, as part of the
general Welsh revival, a move
has been started to design kilts
for Welshmen. The Welsh Tourist
and Holidays Board has called on
woolen manufacturers to submit
designs.
A spokesman of the board has
said, "We are as much. a Celtic
race as the Scots. There is a
Welsh national costume for wo-
men but nothing for men. We are
hoping the kilt will be worn on
such occasions as the Eisteddfod
and the Welsh games."
But will the Welshman, who is
more often than not of shorter
build than the. Scot, be able to
emulate the Scotsman's swirl and
swish and waggle of the kilt
which the late Sir Harry Lauder
used to sing about so nostalgical-
ly?
This is a topic which gets the
conversation fairly bristling and
sparkling, writes Peter Lyne in
the Christian Science Monitor.
As for the cockles (a bivalve
mollusk, as the dictionary calls
them), they are a factor in the
problem of spreading the new
prosperity of South Wales more
widely to the still economically
depressed areas of North and
mid-Wales.
The South Wales revival has
resulted from planned diversifi-
cation of industry with the in-
troduction of many new indus-
tries into areas which were
formerly dominated by coal, iron,
steel, and tinplate.
The government in London
now is being urged to take simi-
lar action in central and North
Wales. The latest government re-
port sees hopeful opportunities
in many unexpected directions.
It says that the fishermen of
the little North Wales harbor of
Portmadoc have formed them-
selves into a company for ex-
porting bottled cockles. A ship-
ment has already gone to the
United States.
Here the idea of reviving
North Wales by bottled cockles
is a controversial one. But it was
the same in South Wales when
some coal miners were scornful
at the thought of starting their
working life again making but-
tons. Today they see how in-
dustrial diversification is paying
off.
Finally the most lively de-
bates of all are raging in Pem-
brokeshire and Cardiganshire.
There the traditional pacifist
Welsh people are being called on
to act as hosts this coming
autumn to German Panzer units,
who will be carrying out firing
practice with their 40 tanks on
the range at Castlemartin under
a NATO exchange training
scheme,
Many Welsh folk regard this
as a supreme affront to "the
land of our fathers," But others
are equally determined to show
that Wales has ceased to be a
land of misty remoteness and
ancient dogmas,
Modern efiq• uette
By Anne Ashley
We drove to Milton last Thurs-
day and as is our custom we
went by one road and came back
by another, but in each case
what we saw was the same —
field after field of ripening oats
laying flat on the ground, obvi-
ously the result of wind and
rain during recent storms —
storm damage that we hadn't
even known about, either by
radio or through the press. If
there is a bad fire, a robbery or
a traffic accident we hear or
read about it until we know all
the details, but here was a disas-
ter that hadn't attracted any
attention at all. Hundreds of
people will drive along the road
we travelled — and others
and may . not even notice the
flattened fields, or if they see
them they won't even know that
it means a loss of hundreds of
dollars to the farmers concern-
ed. Those flattened fields will
have far-reaching results. In some
cases farmers will not have
enough grain to feed their live-
stock during the coming winter;
they must either buy feed or sell
some of their cattle and poultry.
It will also mean lower financial
returns on the milk, cream and
egg receipts. Mrs. Farmer may
have to go without that new
electric stove, or the oilcloth for
the kitchen that she had been
promised after the harvest was
taken care of. It may also mean
waiting another year before a
trade-in can be arranged on the
old family car. But just let-Mr.
Farmer or any member of his
family air their grievances to
those who live in urban districts
and their complaints will fall on
deaf ears, or be brushed aside
with the usual comment — "Oh,
you farm folk — you're never
satisfied — the summer season
is either too wet or too dry; too
hot or too cold!" Unfortunately,
that is all too true. The weather
can make or break the farmer.
it means more to him than in-
convenience — such as a spoilt
week-end at the cottage, a day
at the golf links, or attending a
ball game. No one can change
the weather but at least there
could be a better understanding
between city folk and their coun-
try cousins . . . and less grumbl-
ing of the price of eggs should
go up an extra cent or two in the
fall. So, Mr. Motorist, as you
drive past those ruined crops,
have a heart — try to realize
there is more work and worry
ahead for the owners of those
fields than appears on the stir-
fate,
You knoW, it gives inc a queer
feeling driving in once familiar
surroundings and, find that even
the roads have changed, Four-
lane highways etitting across
country means the rightsofswey
on many badk concessions has
been entirely elliniriated. Yon
have' to look UP directions before
you visit farm felk these days!
I never did have a Very good
sense of direction but now T get
Completely 10Stv Aowever, as
long as Partner is with Mt we
manage to get wherever we want
to go. Re seems to know the
way by instinct. But he' also
likes to got off the. Mehl high-
ways and that way we often rub
Thrifty: Easy: So satisfacs
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Step-by-Step Instructions 841 for
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Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern to Laura Wheeler. Box 1,
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ties Oilt, Print plainly FAT.,
TERN NUMBER, your NAME
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Send now for our exciting, new
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ISSUE 86 ~9s
THE MACHINE' TALKS tAdk = A hoot - d -vel by - -dli d C b • t y e ope electronic anti, ce e y er ron, is
designed fo recognize all English" SpeeCh satitidi and, When Spoken LthroOglh a"mioro,
go'hondi type out exactly "Mitt it has rittedie The new Machine is unlike the usual edmputee,
which rs Only able to perfarti aecording to ifittrubtions fed into it. the G`yliei'tron is alit." to'
learn' fitaiii iikpiiriettOti' and fa' -SOIVI problems in this way, constantly triproving. its `skill.
ot.11, CU! Ann'Cohen shows
Whot's new inside the Free -eh-
built jerlinert of O'Hore Field.
The new unifohern introduced'
ley united Ale Lines, includes a
Stiiack and' Parisian-style beret..
R. When atteliditig a buffet
dinner, IS it permissible for a
guest to revisit the table for a
sedond he.11iiii ;?
A. This is perfectly proper,
The big -rule to observe is to
refrain from filling the plate a
second time, and then leaving
some of it Uneaten..
Q, -what is One SiniSiosed
to say to the bride and 'bride-
groom at the Wedding reception
se-and aisle what does one say to
their Parents?
A. You Wish the bride Stennis
teas, tengratulate the bride-
groom, tell the bride's parents
hew lovely the bride is, and tell
the bridegtootn's parents: what a
couple' they make.
'4 '