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The Seaforth News, 1957-10-10, Page 3013Ry10 Isms o1 131IS ppm 000 O0 ' 0003 v ©' 3 E1 4 ©MMoil 011100 3MOO 0 UMW M.3130- 9 10 10 ©E©01 1_0011011001;', 13.. 0 ©B ©lU ' I. 3© 1:: M 3©b'Q1 s© a f 1I Jg , MEMO -6U $116 AMU 01110-; glEM I.W MEW -NOD n o© M©©0©© MODEM •4h lack Cat Trips Cat ! ° urgiar Some people should pever turn to crime, for they are just naturally jinxed from the start -would -be crooks like the one who recently •b r oke into the , home of a wealthy Johannesburg gold -mining magnate. The burglar had cased the house carefully and had assured himself that this was really a push -over, He even went so far as tospend a shilling -on a piece of raw meat for the dog. ' Then while he was busy in the drawing -room, a budgerigar began to chatter furiously from under the black cloth covering its cage. He ignored the budgie and continued his efforts to open the small wall safe which he be- lieved contained plenty of cash and levels. He was still hard at it when the light in the room was snap- ped on and the householder stood there in dressing -gown and holding a revolver. In prison to -day, the burglar is doubtless ruminating over the budgie. For it was the little bird's chattering - unusal in the middle of the night - that brought the householder down to find out what had disturbed his pet. Robert C. Elkin, an elederly New Yorker, parked his new car in busy Fulton Street in Brooklyn while he hurried into e bank. Two men who were loi- tering near by moved casually over to the car and glanced in. Elkin had left the keys! While one stood. by and then climbed casually in behind the steering whel, the other slipped into a restaurant, helditup, grabbed what cash he could and mads a dash for the car. To all intents and purposes the theft of the car and the hold-up was like taking money from a blind man's hat. But as the busy thieves sped from the scene, the car lurched drunken- ly in a wild curve, As the driver tried to brake he became more and more confused, and he final- ly piled up against a lamp standard where obliging police assisted the two dazed thieves Out. Mr. Elkins arrived minutes later to stare disconsolately at his battered new car. "I couldn't see where I was going!" the bandit moaned, "I'm not surprised," retorted the short-sighted car owner. "My windscreen's made of spe- cial glass, ground to my own prescription so that I don't need spectacles when I drive!" In Paris police quickly found the man who had broken into a house and stolen some articles. He had dropped his prison dis- charge form on the . the floor while burgling the place! In Sydney, police were just, as quickly on the trail of s petty thief who broke into a house and stole two watches. The next morning he walked into a pawn- shop and tried to "pop" them. He was arrested on the spot. The pawnbroker owned the house which was burgled. The watches were his and his wife's! Bad luck? Don't talk to one forger about it. In 1935 he forged a cheque in New York and walked into a bank with it only to be arrested right there, for by one of those freak chances the man whose signa- ture he had forged was 'stand- ing right behind him as he pre- sented the cheque! He got twoyears and was deported to his native England. Here he cashed three dud cheques and a few days later walked into a shop to cash the third. Talking to the shopkeeper at that moment was one of the men who had cashed one of the other duds for him. For that he got twelve months. Out of prison again, he de- cided to give Canada a try and to get his fare swindled a num- ber of dealers in Sussex and Kent. He slipped off to South- ampton and obtained work as a ship's steward. On the day when the ship was due to sail he went up on deck for one last look at Blighty - and found himself staring into the face of one of the shopkeepers who had cash- ed one of his bad cheques for him. He got three years this time. What Happened to him during the war is not known, but in 1949 in Cape Town he once again appeared before a judge, this time on a cat burglary charge. At His trial even the judge had to smile at the manner in which the little man was caught, Then he slapped him into prison for four years. He had broken into a rich home and was helping himself quite liberally when he began to make his exit and tripped over something which kicked up such a row that the house- holder came charging down fir- ing a shotgun. The housebreaker decided to give himself up ra- ther than face another blast from the gun. What had trapped Nim with its squawking? A black cat dozing near the door. A polythene bag over the head gives good protection when put- ting on a dress. The bag pre- vents lipstick and powder from marking the dress, SOME GIZMO - A one-man helicopter, dubbed the "Gizmo", is tested. Powered by a simple two-cycle outboard motor, the' all -frame 'copier weighs slightly more than 200 pounds. It can hover, fly in formation, turn sharply and scoot forward at speeds up to 70 m.p.h. The Gizmo is designed to serve as either a courier -liaison or tactical vehicle, permitting its use by ground forces during assaults behind enemy lines. 8. Tellurium 38. Epistles symbol 35. Parts worked 9. seaweed 36. with the Light 10. Shoot 37. Came animal. 11. Margin 811,. Unfasten 12. More unhappy 40. Flew high 17. Sochi affairs 43. Cripples ACROSS 2. Knight's 20. To one side. 46. Cattle 1, wandering' attendant 23 Send out 47. Brink 7, Poles3. wash vessel 2fi.wlclted 49, Location.. L'S. Equilateral q, Sun god ' 28. Rocky 68• Large rectangle pinnacles+ 5. Asiatic native receptacle 14. Flight38. Call forth 55 Short Cor 5 25. Canter of 6. Shouts 31.Nerverk 57.13 man's name a wheel 7. Not so 1or g 16. Low voice 13. Dry 10. Ohm, measm•e 20 Mere com- petent 21. Tear apart 22. Godof war CROSSWORD PUZZLE 24. Glut 20 Earth (comb. 80251) 27. Forgive 29, More rigorous 92 linage 34, Split 85 Somme exhauster) 88. Flower of forgetfulness 41, 1LIgh railway 42. Part o2 a plant 44. Gambling ' game 45. Levee 43 Comb weal 50. Note of the scale 51. Sour 52. (1o. in N.Y. 'ta l e 59 (tail 4. Remain long 55.111 will 53. Chargers. 69. Pitted DO1, SqureaS.tone ,tnst,er elsewhere on this page, BY THE YARD - Shades of Jack and the beanstalk. This giant plant may never reach the sky, but its giant green beans can practically be picked by the yard rather than by the pan. Little Debra Allgood, 3, meaures out enough for a meal in the garden of Joe Lewalski. Some of the beans have grown to a length, of 2'!x feet. Across the vast alkaline flats of the Chott el Djerid, from the strange underground dwellings near Foum Tatahouine, Erg, and from the date groves of Homer's Land of the Lotus -Eaters the men and women of Tunisia have watched gigantic black clouds come whirring and crackling out of the Algerian desert to the west. * • 5 And today this newly inde- pendent land is fighting one of the bitterest battles in its near- ly 30 centuries of recorded his- tory: + w * This struggle whose outcome will determine the food supply for several million individuals, is against a rose -hued insect only three inches long. For, de- spite its size, this insect -the red locust -is one of the most voracious eaters of which we have knowledge. * • 5 And so severe is this on- slaught that six countries, sev- eral of whom are in bitter politi- cal opposition to each other, have temporarily suspended their disagreements to prevent a widespread natural disaster, • • • Locusts first made their ap- pearance in Tunisia this year, several weeks ago when, by the uncouritable billions, they were borne in vast clouds to this land by hot winds from the west and at once began devouring every- thing in sight, Trees, plants, grains, shrubs - even the un- appetizing cactus - were strip- ped or even consumed before the eyes of farmers and vil- lagers. ,s * s Since locusts know nothing about national boundaries and fly where the wind takes them, there was every probability that Libya and Morocdo would soon be drowned in a sea of locusts. Entomologists here began to worry lest a shift in wind •cur- rents would even bring this pest to Europe's southern Mediter- ranean littoral. • * • The full extent of the locust plague can be seen from the fact that, two years ago, when an infestation occurred which was regarded then as the worst in history, the cost of combating its spread was $1,000,000 and took 1,700 tons of HCH powder Thus far, the cost has been $2,000,000 and it has taken 3,500 ' tons. According to Mustapha Filali, Tunisia's young Minister of Agriculture, the red locusts have destroyed 50,000 date, olive and almond trees and wiped out 40 per cent of the date harvest, writes Arnold Beichman in The Christian Science Monitor. To get an idea of what billions and billions of locusts means, it was recalled, that during a minor plague last year, locust -eating inhabitants of a village in south- ern Tunisia sacked add dried three thousand tons, estimated to be 740,000,000 insects. And this in 011E small area alone, • • Mr, Filali blames the war in Algeria for the locust plague which has threatened a country where every bit of food counts. Locust control is a year-round' job and control measures can never be cased for a moment. But the struggle in neighboring Algeria between the French and Algerians has made it impos- sible to wipe out the locusts in their breeding stages. • 5 5 The Tunisian Government is' undertaking the development of an antilocust research center at Sidi Buzid where it already runs an entomological laboratory and agricultural schools. • • e In the meantime, throughout the western and southwestern regions of Tunisia bordering on Algeria, a round-the-clock war againstinsectsgoes on. From Le Kef south through Theta Gafsa to Tozeur and Sbe'itla and Tebessa, Piper Cub planes with spray equipment and land spray equipment on trucks are coating the land with powdery insecti- cide. For weeks it seemed as if nothing could stop the invasion from Algeria as billions and bil- lions of the insects kept flying in, driven by a wind from the west. But there is hope now that the pest will be eliminated be- fore the wheat and other crops turn green, since locusts eat and kill only what is green. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking UNDAYSC11001 LESSON By Rev. R. Barclay Warren B.A., B.D. Paul Writes to the Corinthians 1 Corinthians 1:1-3, 10-15, 21-25. Memory Selection: 1 deter- mined not to know any thing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified. I Corin- thians 2:2. During this quarter we shall study three of Paul's letters: 1 Corinthians, Philippians a n d Philemon. An article in the Saturday Re- view entitled, "What Makes A Genius?" lists Paul among the thirty-three persons from all history whom the writer con- sidered to be qualified to be termed geniuses. Brilliant in intellect, skilled' in logic, trained in all the subtleties of Hebraic tradition, endowed with maeter- ly powers of oratory and rhet- oric, capable of experiencing heart -bursting emotion - all this Saul possessed even before the light of heaven blinded him on the Damascus road. There- after, to his human endowments 'came the empowerment of the One who had singled him out as a chosen vessel to bear his name before the Gentiles and kings and the Children of Israel. We shall profit from studying his inspired writings. In Paul's first letters to the Corinthians he deals delicately but forcefully with some un- wholesome existing conditions. There was a divisive spirit in the church. Some said, "I am of Paul"; others, "I of Apollos"; others, "I of Cephas"; and still others, "I of Christ." Paul asked, "Is Christ divided?" There are things to be said for and against the divisions in Christendom. A study of church history reveals that individuals and groups have been expelled from churches because they con- tended for some sacred truth. Refusing to compromise they had no alternative but to organ- ize a new body. That God has blessed those who have thus gone forth has been illustrated o'er and o'er. Jesus and Paul were both cast out of the places of worship by the religionists Of their day. On the other hand some divi- sions have stemmed from pride and stubbornness rather than from a holy desire to preserve the truth Of the Gospel. Heresies too, always finds •a following,. When division results for any of these reasons the devil Is gleeful. Christ is not divided. If w are to be Christian we must lov. our fellowmen. We may die - agree with their doctrine but wq must manifest the Spirit Ot Christ, 'If any man have nee the Spirit of - Christ, he is non.' of his. Romans 8:9. Dave Garroway Extolled Merits Ontario Fruits, Dave Garroway's morning T.V. show "To -day" emanating from the fountain at the Cana- dian National Exhibition on Thursday, September 5th, did not miss showing Ontario grown fruits and vegetables and sing- ing their praises to some 18,000,- 000 viewers. The Fruit Branch, Ontario De- partment of Agriculture, realiz- ing the potential impact of such a program, quickly agreed tb set up two floats, one of fruit and one of vegetables, when given the opportunity by Jack Perdue, Agricultural Manager of the C.N.E. Ken Hunter, Lew Howe, and George Benson of the Fruit Branch worked through the night to have the displays on wheels and ready for the show- ing. Doug Williams, Associate Director of the Branch, visited the early morning show, gained the ear of lovely Helen O'Con- nell, co-star of "To -day", and made a few suggestions as to the dialogue which might bte used in connection with the produce. As a result, Miss O'Connell and the casual Dave Garroway, each eating Niagara grown plums and enjoying them, stood in front of the attractively ar- ranged fruits and vegetables and for two minutes millions of Americans from coast to coast were able to appreciate that On- tario can grow fruits and vege- tables second to none. A young man had just got back from Hollywood. He had been dazzled by the film colony, "Everything is done on a tre- mendous scale," he enthused to his friends, "I attended dinner at a producer's home one eve- ning and, instead of using fin- ger bowls at the end of the meat all the guests took sllowetx baths!" TOURISTS IN RED CHINA - Touring American youths get a first- hand look at some antiquated farm methods and implements during a visit to a collective farm near Peiping, China. Coolie in foreground is carrying his produce in baskets suspended from a pole carried over the shoulder. DON'T SHOOT It's time for a shot and judging from his expression Tick doesn't a,ppear tole happy about being "shot" with a needle as big as he is. l'he one -year-old Chihaulluo s, owned by. Clarence R. McNaugton. 0 3 4 5 0 ;ti;,,7 a 9 10 11 12 13.. 1:: M Mi• 15 $116 17 ?,23 '10.e21 9■ •4h ez 25 \ru 0 • 3'a! 20 27 26 \ 29 •2' 31 1‘,.9111111111111E, 1111111111K:. • 3 7 W ox: ^ 39: 41 ..4 . Ae 43" rs as vss,� 51 ` 2 th 57 Sa 0•' ,tnst,er elsewhere on this page, BY THE YARD - Shades of Jack and the beanstalk. This giant plant may never reach the sky, but its giant green beans can practically be picked by the yard rather than by the pan. Little Debra Allgood, 3, meaures out enough for a meal in the garden of Joe Lewalski. Some of the beans have grown to a length, of 2'!x feet. Across the vast alkaline flats of the Chott el Djerid, from the strange underground dwellings near Foum Tatahouine, Erg, and from the date groves of Homer's Land of the Lotus -Eaters the men and women of Tunisia have watched gigantic black clouds come whirring and crackling out of the Algerian desert to the west. * • 5 And today this newly inde- pendent land is fighting one of the bitterest battles in its near- ly 30 centuries of recorded his- tory: + w * This struggle whose outcome will determine the food supply for several million individuals, is against a rose -hued insect only three inches long. For, de- spite its size, this insect -the red locust -is one of the most voracious eaters of which we have knowledge. * • 5 And so severe is this on- slaught that six countries, sev- eral of whom are in bitter politi- cal opposition to each other, have temporarily suspended their disagreements to prevent a widespread natural disaster, • • • Locusts first made their ap- pearance in Tunisia this year, several weeks ago when, by the uncouritable billions, they were borne in vast clouds to this land by hot winds from the west and at once began devouring every- thing in sight, Trees, plants, grains, shrubs - even the un- appetizing cactus - were strip- ped or even consumed before the eyes of farmers and vil- lagers. ,s * s Since locusts know nothing about national boundaries and fly where the wind takes them, there was every probability that Libya and Morocdo would soon be drowned in a sea of locusts. Entomologists here began to worry lest a shift in wind •cur- rents would even bring this pest to Europe's southern Mediter- ranean littoral. • * • The full extent of the locust plague can be seen from the fact that, two years ago, when an infestation occurred which was regarded then as the worst in history, the cost of combating its spread was $1,000,000 and took 1,700 tons of HCH powder Thus far, the cost has been $2,000,000 and it has taken 3,500 ' tons. According to Mustapha Filali, Tunisia's young Minister of Agriculture, the red locusts have destroyed 50,000 date, olive and almond trees and wiped out 40 per cent of the date harvest, writes Arnold Beichman in The Christian Science Monitor. To get an idea of what billions and billions of locusts means, it was recalled, that during a minor plague last year, locust -eating inhabitants of a village in south- ern Tunisia sacked add dried three thousand tons, estimated to be 740,000,000 insects. And this in 011E small area alone, • • Mr, Filali blames the war in Algeria for the locust plague which has threatened a country where every bit of food counts. Locust control is a year-round' job and control measures can never be cased for a moment. But the struggle in neighboring Algeria between the French and Algerians has made it impos- sible to wipe out the locusts in their breeding stages. • 5 5 The Tunisian Government is' undertaking the development of an antilocust research center at Sidi Buzid where it already runs an entomological laboratory and agricultural schools. • • e In the meantime, throughout the western and southwestern regions of Tunisia bordering on Algeria, a round-the-clock war againstinsectsgoes on. From Le Kef south through Theta Gafsa to Tozeur and Sbe'itla and Tebessa, Piper Cub planes with spray equipment and land spray equipment on trucks are coating the land with powdery insecti- cide. For weeks it seemed as if nothing could stop the invasion from Algeria as billions and bil- lions of the insects kept flying in, driven by a wind from the west. But there is hope now that the pest will be eliminated be- fore the wheat and other crops turn green, since locusts eat and kill only what is green. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking UNDAYSC11001 LESSON By Rev. R. Barclay Warren B.A., B.D. Paul Writes to the Corinthians 1 Corinthians 1:1-3, 10-15, 21-25. Memory Selection: 1 deter- mined not to know any thing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified. I Corin- thians 2:2. During this quarter we shall study three of Paul's letters: 1 Corinthians, Philippians a n d Philemon. An article in the Saturday Re- view entitled, "What Makes A Genius?" lists Paul among the thirty-three persons from all history whom the writer con- sidered to be qualified to be termed geniuses. Brilliant in intellect, skilled' in logic, trained in all the subtleties of Hebraic tradition, endowed with maeter- ly powers of oratory and rhet- oric, capable of experiencing heart -bursting emotion - all this Saul possessed even before the light of heaven blinded him on the Damascus road. There- after, to his human endowments 'came the empowerment of the One who had singled him out as a chosen vessel to bear his name before the Gentiles and kings and the Children of Israel. We shall profit from studying his inspired writings. In Paul's first letters to the Corinthians he deals delicately but forcefully with some un- wholesome existing conditions. There was a divisive spirit in the church. Some said, "I am of Paul"; others, "I of Apollos"; others, "I of Cephas"; and still others, "I of Christ." Paul asked, "Is Christ divided?" There are things to be said for and against the divisions in Christendom. A study of church history reveals that individuals and groups have been expelled from churches because they con- tended for some sacred truth. Refusing to compromise they had no alternative but to organ- ize a new body. That God has blessed those who have thus gone forth has been illustrated o'er and o'er. Jesus and Paul were both cast out of the places of worship by the religionists Of their day. On the other hand some divi- sions have stemmed from pride and stubbornness rather than from a holy desire to preserve the truth Of the Gospel. Heresies too, always finds •a following,. When division results for any of these reasons the devil Is gleeful. Christ is not divided. If w are to be Christian we must lov. our fellowmen. We may die - agree with their doctrine but wq must manifest the Spirit Ot Christ, 'If any man have nee the Spirit of - Christ, he is non.' of his. Romans 8:9. Dave Garroway Extolled Merits Ontario Fruits, Dave Garroway's morning T.V. show "To -day" emanating from the fountain at the Cana- dian National Exhibition on Thursday, September 5th, did not miss showing Ontario grown fruits and vegetables and sing- ing their praises to some 18,000,- 000 viewers. The Fruit Branch, Ontario De- partment of Agriculture, realiz- ing the potential impact of such a program, quickly agreed tb set up two floats, one of fruit and one of vegetables, when given the opportunity by Jack Perdue, Agricultural Manager of the C.N.E. Ken Hunter, Lew Howe, and George Benson of the Fruit Branch worked through the night to have the displays on wheels and ready for the show- ing. Doug Williams, Associate Director of the Branch, visited the early morning show, gained the ear of lovely Helen O'Con- nell, co-star of "To -day", and made a few suggestions as to the dialogue which might bte used in connection with the produce. As a result, Miss O'Connell and the casual Dave Garroway, each eating Niagara grown plums and enjoying them, stood in front of the attractively ar- ranged fruits and vegetables and for two minutes millions of Americans from coast to coast were able to appreciate that On- tario can grow fruits and vege- tables second to none. A young man had just got back from Hollywood. He had been dazzled by the film colony, "Everything is done on a tre- mendous scale," he enthused to his friends, "I attended dinner at a producer's home one eve- ning and, instead of using fin- ger bowls at the end of the meat all the guests took sllowetx baths!" TOURISTS IN RED CHINA - Touring American youths get a first- hand look at some antiquated farm methods and implements during a visit to a collective farm near Peiping, China. Coolie in foreground is carrying his produce in baskets suspended from a pole carried over the shoulder. DON'T SHOOT It's time for a shot and judging from his expression Tick doesn't a,ppear tole happy about being "shot" with a needle as big as he is. l'he one -year-old Chihaulluo s, owned by. Clarence R. McNaugton.