The Seaforth News, 1953-12-31, Page 7era --
Mao WIth May Eyes
David O'iteilly, of Wtntatou,
County Durhaui, 1i t, been able to
read and ie upside down ,ince
he learned the (nH,r• nu't
method at reboot
Newrastte. on -Tyne doctor
were eontpiotely puzzled to ox •
plain away David's gift when he
laet visited them, but they nie
net the o•ts;v members of the
medical profession to be left
wondering,
A 22-yeur•oid Oklahoma stir
dent, Jack -Husband, ticks like a
clock, and until he was nine
years old he thought that every-
one else did. A school chum was
the first to hear the slight tick
coaling from Jack's dead whet':
he was wrestling with httn one
day.
He remarked ort the noise, and
that was how Jack found out he
was far from normal with his
tick. Since then more than '200
doctors have listened -in, hut not
one of them has managed to ex-
plain why it happens.
A few years ago a` patient in a
Cleveland, Ohio, hospital claim-
ed to hear radio programmes
without having a set, What was
at first thought to be hallucina-
tion was finally proved to he
true, and the sufferer had to be
fitted with a steel headband to
combat his receptive brain,
Another ease of this kind
came to light recently, but ,t
sitnpier cure was found for the
patient, Jahn Mogowsky. He was
a knife -grinder by trade, and
doctors discovered that small
particles of carborundum were
lodging in his teeth and turning
him into a human crystal set.
They prescribed a toothbrush
and cured him. Of course, all
grinders are .not similar suffer-
ers, John just happened to be
gifted that way.
The case of the luminous wo-
man was never cleared up by
Italian doctors. They took Anna
Monaro to hdspital, but she was
still glowing with .a blue light
at night when they discharged
s her without discovering the rea-
'nan or a cure,
Pat Marquise, of California,
4
1224 J:.C2UAY Ina
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L..,.
1954
1934
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11154 JULY 11154
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1954 ocroeER 19114
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can play tennis and billiards with
his eyes bandaged. He has X-ray
eyes, So has Pieter van Jam's.
vel, of Bugheredorp, South Af-
rica, but he uses his talent to
search out deposits of gold and
diaznonde, as well as under-
ground streams.
Another man who has turned
an abnormality 'to good use is
Jimmie Edmondson, of Atlanta,
Georgia.
Ile can read backwards with-
out any trouble, and earns a
good salary as a radio entertain-
er by specialising in singing pop-
ular songs in reverse.
There are times when it page
to be different!
Here are sotne diversified
notes taken from the proceed-
ings of this year's Federal -Pro-
vincial Agricultural Conference.
They'Il give you an idea of
_,eg,yvhat the experts think the year
11.""1964 will bring to the Canadian
farmer.
And maybe, at that, their pre-
dictions will come true. Even
experts hit the bullseye occa-
sionally.
N i 4
Prospects for 1954 are that the
generally firm trend of eco-
nomic activity during 1953 will
continue without serious inter-
ruption. Consumer purchases
which showed 'a significant , in-
crease early in 1953, are being
maintained, Though exports de-
clined somewhat in the early
months of 1953 they unproved
later and held to levels of the
comparable period of 1952. Con-
tinuing firm demand for agri-
cultural products in the domes-
tic market can be expected
Prospects:, for wheat sales are
reasonably good even though
the world supply is larger. Sales
of other commodities in over-
seas markets have undergone
some adjustment but generally
seem to be firmly based.
4 i e
The demand for farm workers
during 1954 is expected to he
about the same as in 1953 and
farm labour supply and demand
to he in better balance.
u 4 m
Basic farm supplies, such as
machinery, fertilizers, pesticides,
twine and bags are expected to
be ample during 1954 with
prices about the same as those
of 1953. Ammonium nitrate is
the only material in short sup-
ply, but other nitrogen materials
are available. The trend toward
the increased use of higher ana-
lysis fertilizers is expected to
continue.
4 ^ 4 k
World production of wheat
s la b C 'weld- pr
if <
(';B ..... A.
Art Run; In The FamilyThis sketch byCelina Tal, grand-
daughter of artist Paul auguin, was insired by the painter's
self portrait. It is part of a Paris exposition of drawings by
children of the Oceania coionles. The 12 -year-old girl, who
scribbled "My Grandfather Paul Gauguin" atop the drawing, is
the daughter of Tat, a son of Gauguin.
FIN TE
1014 rf gs wtttY 614
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211 . ___ ... _.—.
1914
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1954 JIUOUST 1954
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1954 NomERJe=R 1959
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during the 1953-54 crop year is
forecast at about four per cent
below last year's record of 7.3
billion bushels. Basic to the cur-
rent world wheat situation is
the fact that Canadian farmers
have harvested a total of 1,855
million bushels of wheat in the
past three years, an average of
618 trillion bushels per year.
This is nearly twice the prewar
(1935-39) average production of
312 million bushels.
4 s'
Total supplies of Canadian
feed grains for 1953-54 are only
slightly below last year's rec-
ord. Decreases in production of
the chief feed grains from the
record or near -record levels,
were almost offset by increased
carryover stocks of all grains,
which reached new peaks for
both barley and rye and were
second highest for oats.
Increased supplies at beef,
veal, mutton and lamb and
smaller supplies of pork are in
prospect for the marketing year
ending September 1954. Antici-
pated reduction in pork sup-
plies will be more than offset by
greater production of other
meats and total supplies of all
meats will likely be about four
per cent above the 1952-53 fig-
ure. 4 4
Anticipated high level of
domestic demand in 1954 will
limit the surplus of cattle and
calves in .Spite of larger volume
of marketings. In 1953-54 Cana-
da's surplus of cattle and calves
may amount to about 230000
head.
r 4
Indications are that during
1954 there will be a continuing
strong domestic market for eggs
and poultry with an increase in
egg consumption comparable to
the increase in population and
an increase in consumption of
poultry greater than the relative
population rise.
4 « 10
The outlook for 1954 is fur a
sizeable increase in the produc-
tion of apples and grapes and
for a moderate increase in the
production of apricots, cherries,
pears, plums and prunes and
strawberries. This forecast is
contingent on weather, and fac-
tors such as insects and diseases.
4 4 r
Combined production of Reg-
istered and Certified cereal, flax,
corn, bean, pea, and soybean
seeds in 1963 was a little larger
than in 1952. Production of
wheat was the highest in a
number of years and that of soy-
bean was much the largest ever
recorded. Supplies are adequate
for domestic needs.
+ 4 e
Seed supplies of alfalfa, al -
elite, red and sweet clover will
be more tjian adequate for do-
mestic needs in 1954, with the
possible exception of double cut
or early type of red clover. Any
shortage of this kind could be
met from carryover stocks and
by a greater use of other kinds
such as alsike, alfalfa and nine -
thy,
MST YOU
IF you are an average man or
woman, this is what happens to
you in twenty-four hours:
Your heart beats 102,080 times.,
You breathe 23,040 times.
You drink 2.9 pints of liquid.
You eat 3 lb. of food.
You speak 4,800 words.
You move 750 major muscles,
Your hair grows .01714 in,
Your nails grow 000040 in,
You exercise 7,000,000 brain
Cells.
You turn in sleep from 25 to 35
titles.
1954
JAd W1
YM .x9N
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23..29.307131
JUNt 111^3
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eerfeelaelt ayIW94
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Hangover --Quickly titled "Hang-
over" by local wits is this new
hat designed by Sandy Pendery,
Even though it hides part of her
charms, she still commands ad-
miring attention as she suns. on
the beaches of southern Florida.
O R O OO DI L E FOR
SabMWSTONES
High up on a rocky path bf the
Magaliesberg Range, in the
Transvaal, a big -game hunter
rested, his rifle at his side.
A cliff dropped sheer before
him, and twenty feet below
spread the top of a moepel tree.
Chin on`hands, elbows on knees,
he closed his eyes to listen to
the splashing stream down
among the shadows.
Suddenly, from behind him,
came the faint clatter of a roll-
ing pebble. He turned his head.
An old baboon mouth open,
fangs gleaming, hands outstret-
ched, was within inches of grab-
bing him by the head. Beyond,
squatted a score or more of its
silent fellows
Jerking forward, the hunter
kicked at the cliffside with his
heels, launching himself into
space, turning as he fell. Falling,
too, was the baboon twisting
frantically as it plunged over the
cliff.
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Together they. crashed through
the tree, below, the leafy bran-
ches saving them both from ser-
ious, injury, By the time the
dazed hunter reached the ground
the baboon had disappeared, but
above him the ugly, doglike,
grimacing faces of the rest of
the tribe leered at hint from the
cliff edge. Had that brute got
him, he would have been torn
to pieces.
That wasn't the only chilling
experience Alexander Lake had,
for in his exciting new adven-
ture book, "Killer in Africa'" he
recounts another occasion when
he saw two heads leering at
him, this time over a dwarfed
castor-oil bush. Both instantly
disappeared, But glancing at the
edge of rock above his head,
Lake was alarmed to find a
full-grown baboon staring at
him some fifty feet away.
The hunter let fly with his gun,
and the hill suddenly became
alive, Pandemonium broke loose,
as from behind rocks all around,
dark forms raced, shrieking,
bellowing and barking up the
hillside. While Lake had thought
he was stalking thein, the whole
troop had been stalking him!
With Col. Capel, of the Trans-
vaal Signal Corps, and a Zulu
tracker, the author was on a
trail skirting the Crocodile Riv-
er — a narrow cutting in the
cliff -face which ended abruptly,
where a section of cliff had top-
pled into a gorge.
The party was in the middle
of the pile of rock when, with
a ferocious roar, a large male
baboon shot out from behind a
boulder and faced them. He was
in a rage and, at his first bel-
low, baboons sprang into view
on a hundred rocks — howling,
shrieking, and closing in with
short, threatening rushes. The
colonel aimed his rifle, but the
Zulu tracker knocked up the
barrel.
"If you shoot, Baas, we are
dead men!"
He's right," Lake told Capel.
"Those baboons are hysterical.
They might tear us to shreds."
As the troop crept closer, the
din was so great that Lake had
to shout. Behind, a group of
males barked and roared about
fifty feet away. The largest
moved slowly forward.
It was touch and go. A sew
fast shots might panic the mob
-- or might bring thein down on
the party, Members of the main
troop were shifting their pod -
nuns, the females, bubiee and
young baboons moving back a
little, the alder males moving
forward. It was formation for
an attack.
All the three sten could do
was sit and wait, The baboon
on the ledge was less than
twenty-five feet otf, and the
hair on its shoulder: stood up
like en angry dog's. Lake stared
straight Into his eyes -- yellow
and filled with hatred. Suddenly
it backed a couple of feet, loosed
three roaring barks, then slip-
ped behind a rock. That must
have been a signal, for the
whole troop turned and ran.
. Another time, an angry ba-
boon sprang at a young Kaffir,
holding him with all four hands
and sinking his teeth in the
boy's upper arm. Lake's rifle
spat death to the enitnai, but
before anyone could helpthe
screaming Kaffir a second ba-
boon leapt on Lake's back and
knocked him over, ripping his
arm. No time to shoot. Ho swung
the rifle like a club. The baboon
crumpled.
Lake say's, in this graphic ac-
count of his adventure,., that ba-
boons are cunning, particularly
their leaders. Though the ani-
mals have phenomenal eyesight,
they are emotionally unstable,
and two, driven by frenzy, can
tear even a leopard to pieces
But the ugliest, cruellest, most
loathsome eater: of men and
beasts in Africa are crocodiles.
Once, in the Congo Basin coun-
try, Alexander Lake lay on a
rock, and in his sleep moved,
accidentally kicking his rifle
over the edge.
Sliding over to retrieve it, he
stepped on something soft and
wiggly that yelped ... he tried
to jump ... slipped ... and sat
down hard on four newly hatch -
baby crocs. About sixty of the
ten -inch devils surrounded him.
Their mother was up on her
toes, not twenty feet away. glar-
ing at him.
Six of the yellow -eyed de-
mons attacked his toes. heels
and calves with their needle-
sharp teeth. Grabbing his rifle,
he regained the rock a second
before the mother swiped with
her tail, almost turning a back
somersault to get. at him with
her jaws.
Camping at night in another
place with companions, the au-
thor was trapped by a masa
trot migration. On they carne,
in two files, skirting the wagon
tents and fire on both sides,
leaving him in a circular oasis
about eighty feet across. Ubusu-
ku, a Zulu, and Bill, a Bechuana
boy were outside the circle,
Picking Bill up. the Zulu used
the crocs' backs as stepping
stones, and in three hops set
him down safely in the fire -lit
circle.
The book abounds in thrills
like these, packed with much
absorbing lore about wild crea-
tures.
Masked Testimony — A masked
and unidentified Roman Catholic
priest testifies before a Congres-
sional Baltic Committee hearing
in New York on the matter of
Soviet brutalities. The priest, ar-
rested by the Russians in Janu-
ary, 1941 on charges of spying,
said he had been stuffed into e
coffin -like box or left stripped in
a room filled with ice.
SRI -TIME IN CANADA. Milos of cross-country trails and thrilling downhill runs through thick powder
snow attract many thousands of winter Vacation sts each year to the winter sports area in the
Laurentian Mountains, about 40 miles north of. Montreal. Skiers find facilities to accommodate all grades
of skill, excellent instructors for those who want to improve their technique, and a large number
of rope tows as well as several types of lifts for their convenience. Many ski meets and carnivals
are scheduled at the various resort centers during the snow season, which lasts through March. At
left, above, snow enthuslasta check their skis at the Canadian National hallways baggage room in
the Central Station at Montreal. The couple In the righthand picture glide past snowladen evergreens
en a erase -country trait at Morin Heights, a popular resort in the heart of the Laurentian sIiing country.