Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 29 Jan 1931, p. 6

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io to the National Automobile . too tight an adjustment. gasoline per capita than those of any kless Driver 'Wil! Be Curbed - Safety Resporibility Rulings | Wil Feature 1931 Motor 3 {.egiclation Automobile leg'slation in Canada ~annd the United States during 1931 will be concerned chiefly with the enactment of safety responsibility lays for the control 6t the reckless driver, This is the prediction of the Aemrican Automobile Association made in its latest bulletin, issued this week, The motoring body believes that safety responsibility rulings similar to the law new-in force in Ontario and saveral states on the other side of the border will come up before the ma- jority of legislatures in the United States and Canada in the spring. It is now definitely known that Quebec, Arkansas, Illinois, North Carolina, Maryland, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, | Texas, Virginia, South Carolina, Wash- ington and West Virginia will take some action. For the rest, the safety responsibil. ity law is now in force in whole or in part in Ontario, Manitoba, New Tork Rhode Island, Connecticut, California, | Towa, Maine, North Dakota, Wiscon-| sin, Vermont, New Jersey, New Hamp- shire and Minnesota. This means, the AAA. estimates, that one-half of the drivers in Canada and one-third | m those In the United States are operat-| ing under one or more of its clauses. "Officials in charge of the enforce-' ment of law In those sections wher the law is in force are confident that it is fulfillinn its major object, n: imely, | the. control of the reckless and irre- sponsible driver," Thomas P. bene. | president of the association declared. | 'The best proof of the confidence ot | these officials lies in the fact that they | are advocating the strengthening of its | features." | mas Air Mail Route Repeats History, Winnipeg - Pembina Link Recalls West's Postal Outlet in 1862 Ottawa. --History is repealing itselt with the inauguration on Feb. 2 of a new air mail service between Winni- peg and St. Paul. At the post office department it is recalled that the same route was chosen in 1862 for the first movement of mail from the Selkirk settlement in Manitoba to] Eastern Canada, . Next month Canadian airplanes will carry mail from Winnipeg to Pembina, | North Dakota. Just inside the United | States border. From thence. it wi be flown eastward to re-enter Canada at Windsor. | The area north of the Great Lakes | which 70 years ago presented such | difficulties to the men who sought to carry mail to early western settle- ments today offer distinct hazards to the aviator. . The choice of a route through Pembina, into St. Paul and! eastward into Windsor completes the parallel with tha route chosen at the beginning of development in the prairies, The route established in 1862 was confirmed at Confederation in 1870 In 1879 a railway was built from Win: mipeg to Pembina and not until 1884 when the Canadian Pacific Rallway was built was an all-Canadian route available, AREAL 3 an Ld Car Hints When Clutches Spin Too tight an adjustment of the clutch or oil on the clutch brake ac- count for most ot the troubla known a3 2 spinning clutch. The latter is the mores commoner of the two. It makes gear shifting more difficult. = Backfire Causes Backfiring may mean the sticking | of an intake valve at times, but a more likely accurate diagnosis is too lean a mixture the carburetor, .It shows up best In idling and acceler- ation whe ngine is fool. at Friction is Better Here is the engineer's opinion om chal They are safer becauss the co-efficient of friction between metal and ice or snow is greater than that between rubber and the same slip- pery surfaces. A humming noise in the differen- tial after it has been tightened, oo curring when the engine Is being driven by the rear wheels, Indicates Eh A Valuable Results Since safety education work for the prevention of accidents to children was first undertaken eight years ago, the ratio of child traffic fatalities haa been decreased nearly 30 per cent., ac- hamber of Commerce, State in the Union last year. consumption averaged 663 gal- California motorists, with a 'consumptipn of 634 gallons, ran sec = | C. Coleman, Winnipeg; C. T. Jaffray, Minneapolis; C. M, Bowman, Water- loo; James A. Richardson, Winnipeg; J. N. K. MacAliser, Montreal; S. G. Porter, Calgary; Geo. A. Walker, Cal- gary, and W. J. Blake Wilson, Van- couver, T. O. F. Herzet was re-appointed manager, and A. II. Love, secretary- | treasurer, BE a .-"- Families From Britain Making Good Out West Winnipeg.--During 1930, 489 fami- lies were settled on 92,666 acres, the purchase price being $1,962,919, the annual report of the Canada Coloniza- tion Association shows. The work of the Association covers all provinces from Ontario to the Pacific Coast. "A thorough check-up of the fami- lies settled by the Association since 1925 shows that only 12 per cent. have failed," Col. Dennis stated. "Of con- siderable interest is the fact that only 16 per cent, of British families placed were failires, The marked success with British families is due to careful selection and constant supervision." Col. J. 8. Dennis was re-elected pre- sident. Reports showed a marked suc- cess in the settlement schemes of the organization with 4,107 families set- tled on 936,924 acres, the total pur- chase price being $35,115,202. P. L. Naismith, Victoria, was re- elected vice-president and the follow- ing appointed to the diréctorate:--D. 3 billy Brown, 22- » Device Reduces Gasoline Bills terminal, Glendale, Calif., foot altitude, Shows 'Em How year-old feminine jumper, who put it all over men in target chuting event at charity air circus, Grand Central Air landing in exact centre of airport from 5,000 RTT Winter Fair Girl Guests ntario, 4, 2 1930 erve Manager of Royal Winter Fair, 217 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario. Dear Sir:-- Each of the two hundred and sixty girls from rural Ontario, who were your guests, would like to say 'thank you" individually, but we realize, if we did so, you would be simply be- sieged wih letters, so, as representa- tives from the North, South, East and West of Ontario, may we convey their Message of appreciation id you. Write Letter of Thanks We are aware that we anloyed rare privileges in being given free admis- sion to the Dog Show and the Horse Show, The opportunity. of seeing "The World's Greatest Agricultural Fair" was one never to be forgotten. We shall take great pride in broad- "casting our impression of the splen- dour of it all. With best wishes for continued suc- cess ard prosperity, we are Yours very truly, Flossie Lewtas, Thunder Bay District Dorothy Blight, Essex County Gladys Buckingham, Russell County. Ida Van Der Hoorn, Durham County. New Submarine Lung Enables Crews to Work 50-ft. Deeper Washington--The United States navy has found its men can live 50 feet deeper in the ocean than its most sturdy submarines are expected to descend. Antwerp Building First Skyscraper The Old World is is gradually accept- ing many innovations of modern times. Witness changing sanitation methods, This factor, Rear Admiral George electrical refrigeration, and now Eur- Rock told the House Naval Commit-| ope is to have her first skyscraper. tee, will decrease the dangers of sub: maine disasters in less feet of water. The most modern submarines in| the navy are built to withstand a pressure of 132 pounds to the square inch at 300 feet. But men wearing Belgium is thus responsible for the than 300 ' Continent's first tall business strue-| ture. We read in The Celotex News ' (Chicago): "When Columbus discovered Ameri- ca, Antwerp was already a city with centuries of history behind it; its WiysteryAuto To Race oer | Lonely Beach ' Australia To Contend With British and America for World's Speed Re- : In addition to American and British contenders for the world's speed ree- ord, a prominent Australian racing driver, Norman "Wizard" Smith, has made preparations to attack the late Sir Henry Segrave's record of 231 miles an hour. Smith, for whom special car is now being bulit in Syd. ney, will make his run at the Ninety Mile Beach, in New Zealand, as soom after the middle of February as com ditions on the course permit. Probably no other driver has ever: had the difficulties to face that Smith has. He has obtained one of the famous Schneider Cup aeroplane en- gines used in the successful British machines last year, a compact motor of the most modern design of amazing- ly small bulk, developing 1,900 horse- power. This engine, however, remains | the property of the British governs] ment, as the design is regarded as am Air Ministry secret. It is said that if | the full specifications of the motor were known to foreign powers the matter would probably be regarded as one of international importances the new "lung" have worked under | cathedral of Notre Dame, the finest Smith, therefore, has been forced to, a pressure of 154 pounds, equal to a | example of Gothic architecture in Bel give an undertaking that none except; depth of 350 fet, without any pro- | Gium, was nearly 150 years old. Bat- | himself, the designer of the car, Dom Inventor Claims Saving of Belgium and F rance One-Third on Fuel Costs A fuel)saving of one-third is claim- ed through the use of a small device which has been perfected by Dr. Mil- ler Ri-HbOtchisom, former chief en- gineer for Thomas A. Edison, accord- { ns to a report from New York. The | mechanism will also, It is claimed, reduce the danger of poisonous ex- Glasgow 1 vention of Charles cousin of Robert Louis Stevenson, has been installed at Little: Cum- | bras Lighthouse on tle Firth of Clyde. It gs the first of its kind aad con- sists of a radiotelephone transmis- sion of a fog signal and speech from a gramophone record. It speaks the word "Cumbrae" and counts out the ship's distance in miles, and cables from the signal station. FSO. Santiago Welcomes League Secretary Santiago, Chile.--Sir Erie Drum- mond, secretary general of the League of Nations, afrived hore recently from Buenos Alres. He was welcomed by an official re- ception committee at the railroad sta- tion and later received by President Carlos Ibanez at La Moneda Palace. Chile 1s the fourth Latin-American country visited by Sir Eric on his "good will" tour. The Government ar- ranged an official program for the dis- tinguished visitor, including goveral state banquets, The number of described specles of animals has been estimated at about 750,000 according to Dr, W. T. Calman, Keeper of Zoology British Museum, | agree ment signed in Brusels on May Plan Joint Air Service to Congo Brussels.--The Belgian Chamber is shortly to be called upon to ratify the 23 detween Belgium and France for haust gases and increase the life of the establishment in common of a re- ! Iubricating oils." | gular air service between Antwerp, The inventor says his device will Belgium and Elisabethyille, Belgian give a quantative analysis of the ex- Congo. The line will be worked by haust gases from the engtne to which the two countries in conjunction from it fs attached. By noting the amount Paris to Ligenge ,the two ends, Ant. of unburned fuel passing out of the werp-Paris and Libenge-Elisabethville, exhaust, the motorist may adjust the being served entirely by Belgian per- carburetor for better gasoline con- sonnel and material. sumption. | The agreement is for a period of The invention is attached to tha ten years and is renewable for fur- dash of any car without extra equip- | ther ten-year terms with the option . ment except an auxiliary air valve on | for either country to continue the ex- the intake manifold. This is neces- | ploitati ion should the other, for any Loury so that the driver can eject more | reason, renounce is part. On May 25, air into the carburetor as the indi | 1920, the Sabena Societe anonyme ctor of the device shows carbon | Belge pour l'exploitation de la naviga- monoxide in the exhaust gas. | tion aerienne), the Belgian Govern- -- PY Vario | ment-sabsidized air company, was authorized by Parliament to increase Scotland Installs is capital and modify its statut with A "Talking" Borcan the object of making all neces vy pre- parations. Elisabethville is only the temporary terminus and the service dn be extended as soon as passen- rs, goods and postal traffic warrant t. The service will be of great advant- age to' the northern area of the Bel- gian Congo. Bangui, for example, is now five or six weeks' distance from Brussels, while it should be reached! in seven days by air, and the Fort Lamy region, which it now takes a couple of months to attain, requires but five day's travel in the air. Pasteurization of Milk Montreal Presse: Pasteurization to- day is a great step forward in hygiene. It has already saved lives in towns where It has been introduced. It has prevented illnesses and the mental suffering which accompanies impaired physical health. It is generally admit- ted that milk and milk 'products are] the most important articles in the family larder. The importance of pas- teurization is proved by children's | health organizations. The . national council of the milk industry, an or- ganization composed of representa. tives of all branches of commerce and , College at Guelph. | sections, there 1s undoubtedly {Combination School Proves Attractive | Interest Held by New Plan as Chinese Women Now Never Before, Dairy- men Told London.--The new combined agri- cultural and high school being oper- i ated at Ridgetown is proving .a great | success, and is keeping farm boys and girls in the school two years longer than ever before, the sixty-fourth an- nual convention of tie Dairymeén's As- sociation of Western Ontario was in- formed recently by W. R. Reek, B.S.A., superintendent of the school, and of the Provincial Experimental Farm on which it is located. Mr. Reek said that the new plan, whereby boys and girls were given vo- | cational training in addition to tuition! in cultural subjects, was keeping the 'teen-age boys and girls off the streets | as no educational system had ever, done before, and turning out better farmers and better all-round citizens. Another speaker was Professor J. C. | Steckley, of the Department of Animal Husbandry, the Ontario Agricultural | He declared that the good milker was the man who! could do the work quickly, because ! then tlie greatest amount of milk and the higher percentage of butter fat | were obtainable. In answer to a ques- tion, he sald experiments had shown that it was impossible to get more milk with a milking-machine than by hand. In fact, the results had been found to be about the same. fos men + Outlook Improving The London Free Press takes an optimistic view for the future. We read: "There is no question that tHe] prosperity of Western Canada and the whole of Canada, to a large de- gree, depends upon wheat, so that with the outlook improving there is every: ground for confidence as to the future. However, this does not help out the hard-pressed Prairie Prov- inces, where this winter, In many real hardship. Every reasonable help and assistance should be extended to tide the West over the present crisis." SR tection other than the oxygen provid-! ! tered by centuries of war, the cathe- | Harkness, and two mechanics will be | dral's 400-foot spire has since towered ,y,uaq to even see the engine. ing bag. By the end of the next fiscal year, the chief of the Bureau of Construe- alone over the plains of Flanders. "But now it has a rival in Europe's | Prior to the arrival of the engine in | Austtalia from England, work on the tion and Repair added, the navy ex-| first sky-scraper, the twenty stories of. ,q4iq wag commenced and the neces- pects to have all its submarines. which make it the tallest commercial { wealth. Unmarried daughters | CNR. Prize Awarded equipped with hatches anl "lungs" | building on the Continent. Built along | so crews ean escape to the surface in nearly typical American lines, but to an emergency. the design of Architect Van Hoenack- | er, it is the old world's first major ef- fort to make its cities grow upward in- Have Full Status stead of outward. "Translated as accurately as pos- Nanking. --Equality of men and wo- | sible from the Flemish, the structure's men in this country is provided by al name becomes 'The Farmers Co-opera- law which has passed the Legislative Binig ® ro Its lower floors, fol- Council. lowing the line of a street, swing in a The law, incorporated in the eivil, wide semicircle. This portion of the code, is primarily intended to elevate! | building is approximately the same women to the same position as that' height as other mew Antwerp com- enjoyed by the women of the western | mercial structures. Above this rises world. It is known as the law of the sethack or tower just as on Ameri- family relations. | can sky-scrapers. While under the old laws a Woman | "By permitting the construction of was forbidden to dispose of her pro-| The Farmers Co-operative Building perty without the consent of her hus- | Antwerp has taken the lead among band, she now has full power to do! European cities. In London, for ex- whatever she pleases with her own | ample, the present maximum height is have | ojghty feet with two additional stories the same right of property inheritance | permitted for roofs, spires, turrets as sons. The duty of a wife to obey! and similar ornamental work. That her husband is not recognized by law. al eity to permit the erection of a tall commercial structure is especially noteworthy, because no city of the old To Alberta Farmer Winnipeg. -- Robert Cochrane, of Grande Prairle, Alberta, has been awarded the special Canadian National Railways cash prize in recognition of ! his victory at the Chicago internation- al livestock exposition where he won the world's championship for 1930 in rere timothy seed. The prize is awarded by the Canadian National Railways to! Battery Care the Canadian taking first prize in the! Important Now timothy seed competition. Should Be Kept on as Full The railways' award for the cham- pion in the alfalfa feed class was cap- Charge as Possible During the winter months of all tured by Nick Chjelte, of Ranier, Al- berta, who has been taking champion- ,| parts of the car that should be given more attention than at any other sea- ships at the Chicago show in this division for a number of years. son the battery is cited by mechanics as.being the most important if the BE Quebec Has Record maximum of trouble-free operation is to be enjoyed. Roadbuilding Year Winter makes heavy demands on That 1930 was unexcelled by any previous year in the variety and im- portance of the work carried to com- | this part of the automobile and re- pletion on Quebec highvays is the | quires that it be in good working dictum of the department of rodds | condition. Cold engines are stiff and for the province in a bulletin issued | require a powerful starting effort and this week. a correspondingly heavy discharge from the battery. Naturally, the bat- tery should be kept in a well charged The report points out that, while ten years ago there were only 4,000 condition, For winter work it should always be kept on as full charge as miles of improved road in :the .pro- conditions permit. From the days when Spanish armies the armies of various nations." vince, to-day there are almost 14,000 miles. During the year the depart- . Antwerp should be the first continent- | { world has had a stormier career, | were overrunning the Netherlands and ! Flanders, Antwerp has been a fortified | city, almost continually harassed by | industry, has adopted a resolution re-| Gannets and whales point out where commending that all milk offered for herring-shoals are. The whale goes ment completed the construction on 30 miles of main highway and 1,058 miles of second and third class roads, sale in towns and villages should be round a shoal llke a dog round a The effect of frost on the battery should be atken into consideration, If a battery freezes the plates will be pasteurized. flock 'of sheep. besides. starting work on 500 miles of 'Toad, damaged. Fortunately, a battery 18 likely to freeze only when jt {3 in a sc. discharged condition, and the solution Will Demonstrate at Buenos Aires Show has become weak. Periodical use should be taken into consideration. If meter to test the state of charge. If One of most efficient vessels of its type in world, British aeroplane carrier "Fagle" will shortly be "on display" in Buenos Aires during I re r------------ -------- British Empire Trade exhibition. She will carry special aircraft for d emonstration. the acid is down to 1,100 specific gra- vity, 18 degrees Fahrenheit of frost will freeze it. At 1,160 specific gravity 2 degrees above zero will cause freezing. At 1,220 specific gravity the battery is practically safe and will not freeze at 30 below zero. A specl- fio gravity of 1,240 will withstand freezing at 50 below zero. In winter it is especially important to keep the acld level well above the tops of the plates. reer ee Board Declares London Tramways As "Obsolete" London.--Gradual abolition of Bri- tain's tramways, as street cars are called here, is recommended in the final report of the nation's trafiic sys- tem which a royal commission has just submitted to the Government. * "It 1s our considered view,' the com- mission says, "that tramways, if not an obsolete form of transportation, are at all events In a state of obsolescence and gsuse much unnecessary conges- tion and considerable danger to the public." _ Ia | sitated working entirely from blue eo i prints which had been forwarded from ; e | Britain when authority to obtain the engine was given. . Design of Vehicle. In design Smith's vehicle resembles Segrave's "Golden Arrow" closely. The engine is a twelve-cylinder unit in , three banks of four each, arranged im a "broad arrow." It has been found possible in Smith's car, while still re- taining the curious tri-pointed nose of Segravebs machine, to reduce the area offered wind resistance,.and the car is lower, the overall height being" only three feet 2 inches, against three feet nine inches for Segrave's car. Smith's. automobile will have a very small clearance, the driver's seat be- ing between twin driver shafts to the rear wheels. The steering gear will also be duplicated, and couplzd direct to. each of the front wheels. Great forethought has been given to the front axle to. prevent wabble or "shim- , mying," while both axles are held in place by radius rods, taking the strain off the springs. Each of the massive disc wheels is being turned out of a solid ingot and is carefully tested for | balance. { Cost of Racing Car. The car is to cost $30,000, exclusive | of the engine, which is unlerstood to | have cost about $40,000, and the whole expense is being borne by a resident of Sydney, Fred H. Stewart. When the ear is completed it will be shipped 1,200 miles across the Tasman Sea to New Zealand and will be landed at Auckland. The Ninety Mile Beach, { which is in reality only fifty miles | long, but Is, nevertheless, one of the Vrmost striking stretches of sand in the world, lies 250 miles north of Auck land, at the farthest point in New Zealand on the rugged west coast im a wild and desolate region. After be ing shipped by rail and boat, the car will still have to be transported for seventy-five miles along narrow, pre- cipitous roads through broken forest country to the riearest settlement om the beach, Kaitaia, which is the last link with civilization. Here are situ- ated hotels and telegraph offices, gar- ages and shops, but beyond this for the twenty-five miles to the beach itself are only two tiny hamlets at country crossroads. The beach itself is deserted at nor mal times, the only signs of clviliz- ation being small houses scattered at the back of the sandhills every few miles, Here and there are seen Maori toheroa hunters roaming about im small parties, but few people move about the sand. It is necessary for Smith to erect sheds and garages for his cars, establish a camp for accom- modating his party, and bring in quan- tities of supplies, gasoline and ofl. In addition to the "Stewart Special," Smith will bring another car to New Zealand, a composite vehicle. In this car he made an unofficial world's ten- mile record of 148 miles an hour last year. ' ------ Hand Rope- By 80-Year-Old Oakland, Calif, -- Rope-making by hand, long considered one of the lost arts, has been revived by Adolph Berg, eighty years old. - Berg, a native of Germany, learned the trade in his native country, but after machines started turning out rope he turned to hod carrying. Last year Berg brought out his Old-World ropemaking devices and now basks ia the sun all day, spinning cords, atta twine and rope. J Revived SR TEA ACCESSORIES. tea, thin ginger wafers spread with cream cheese, They may be made fm sandwich form and are quicker and easier to make than bread -t butter sandwiches, lifornian . a Try serving with your five ok ER

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