"was carried out near Berlin by Karl - Poggensee. Herr Poggensee's experi- wiveovered «a distance: of 4 kilometer, Pam : 3 £ - performed suc Ri 1n Europe, notably in G 4 The first of these recent dermaey,. gives _'meanty details about the. riment | J er at the military fie i "Kuehnau. He fired a iy i a height _of a thousand feet which returned to "the ground, as planned; about 600 feet . distant from its startinz point. The second successful rocket test ment was, in ore respact, more signi- * fleant than' that of Herr Winkler, for his rocket was equipped with scientific Instruments to measure altitude and gpeed. It also held a camera and a parachute, The third bit of .encouragenient for ~yocket enthusiasts comes in the de- "velopment of a new explosive material by Dr. A, Stetbacher, of Zurich, This explosive, which was submitted to the German Chemical Association, con- + 'sists of penthrinit and nitroglycerine, 'While this is not a direct contribu- tion to the development of rockets, it is, nevertheless, of value. Satisfactory progress in rocket design rests wholly upon the development of expl The fourth bit of news concerns Paul Heylandt, who worked with Max Vallier when he first used the com- bination of liquid air and gasoline, He has now announced a fourteen-pound rocket motor, which is said to develop 200 horsepower. Max Vallier, it 'will be recalled, lost his life in one of his experiments, Herr Heylandt has gone on with the development of the motor and has in- creased its power from about forty horsepower, with a weight of seven pounds, to fits present dimensions. 'Herr Heylandt expects to visit this country within the next few months, with this new fnvention. Another German, one Klaus Riedel, using liquid fuel, rccently succeeded in sending a rocket to the height of one and a half kilometers at the Rake- tenflugplatz in Berlin. This rocket, whose construction differs from the convential type, is described by Herr Willy Ley, vice-president of the Berein fur Raumschiffahrt, as resembling a * "flying proving stand" rather than the and of the neon tube and, unlike elther, can be connected directly with ov 'socke! The inventors are Dr. H. I. Spaner, U. W. Doering and Dr. Ed- mund Germer, | ; The mercury-vapor arc lamp is one of the most efficient known; that is, it light than the prdinary incandescent, converts more electric energy into tungsten-filament lamp. Unfortunate- ly, it has marked disadvantages. Jn the first place, it has a ghastly, green ish-blue color, as any one can testify who has ever seen it in a composing room or photographic studio. Furthermore, the mercury vapor can be electrically excited to glow only with direct current, If alternating cur- rent is supplied, which is usually the case, expensive additional services must be used. .In addition, the diffi- culty of starting the tube by shaking it, together with the impossibility of using one device for both alternating current and direct current and the pos- sibility of moving the arc lamp during he operation, has limited its use. Disadvantages of Neon Neon lamps seen in advertising signs are also efficient, but restricted in their applications. They operate only on alternating current at very high voltage. The rare gases in the tube are excited by the electric cur- rent. ' Different gases or vapors give different colors, which explains the red blue and other lights that we see. Moreover, like mercury arcs, these gas tubes' cannot be connected directly with a socket because of the high vol- tages required. What fs wanted is a lamp which will have all the advantages of the mer- cury and neon lamps, which can be made to glow with any color, even if the desired color is an approximation of daylight, and which can be screwed directly into any socket. Dr Spanner is of the opinion that the filament lamp has been developed as far as pos. sible. evolution of existing vapor lamps, It depends for its success largely on the use of an electropositive metal in the cathode, 'When electrically excited ordinary rocket. While this success has been going on In Germany, Ettore Gattanto, an. Italian engineer, ha. recently com- pleted tests with a rocket-propelled plane at the Taliedo airport at Milan, Flights of thirty-four seconds, which have been.attained. Cattaneo is now busy with plans to cross the English Channel in the same machine, More Research Work With such activity in rocket re- search there can be little doubt that we are on the way to the development of a rocket motor that will at least be practical for meteorological work, Unquestionably some of the experi- menters pin their hopes too high. They may set for themselves goals which | will never be realized. But there are, : nevertheless, things which can be ac- complished with a rocket motor that can be accomplished in no other way. It is safe to say that some of these things will be done in the present gen- eration. r { Thr at SE and Luck--Plus! When Irvin 8, Cobb was 27, he came to New York, He then had a wife and sick child to suport. For two weeks he made daily visits to every news- paper in the big city, but there seemed to be no job in sight. His patience at an end, Cobb wrote a letter to the edit- ors, assuring them in no uncertain terms' that he was the world's best newspapen.man. The letter ended as follows: p : "This is positively your last chance. 1 have grown Weary of studying the wallpaper design in your ante-room. A modest appreciation of my own worth "forbids 'me 'doing' business with your head office-boy any longer. Unless you grab me right away, I will go else where and leave your paper flat on its : ht here in. the middle of a mer, 'and your whole life ri be one vast 'surging re- Peations considered in the order in . which they are received; trifiers and & flirts save Write, | Sp atentions) or bol 'at the above fangs veserk ext. day, Cobb had. four jobs to} cose' from --Stoddard, "Luck, Yobr i} Bilent Partner." {Lord St. Leonard's on age Le Sir Fowell Buxton, "I resolv ing law to make Tesolvid ¥ we Felton fr rt wy of ha TE wy line forms on the right; ape" i this metal ejects large quantities of electrons from the atoms of the vapor Le te e------------------------------------------ WELLER BUSINESS COLLEGR CHAMPIONS OF THE WORLD Toronto: 986 Bloor Sireet West i Crange 1 Box 41 Let Champions of the World Instruct you. You will attain greater success and better positions. Last five Can- adian and World Contests won by shis th Vatssos of the Mercury.vapor : "| light is obtained. What is most im- Phe'German invention is a naturgl| a complete statistical record of the | uncertain method of measurement to College. Day, Evening or Correspon- dence Courses. Write for illustrated booklet, N\ ee -- -- ) IMPROVE YOUR APPETITE Feeling] indifferent to food? Out of sorts? ' Depressed] A Simul 8 Fite oe Sie Ri : vegetable. Gentle but thorough. Tey get rid of body poling d give you a new oa Hat and give terest.in food. 25¢ & 75¢ red packages - Ask your druggist for eidis the Ii mc of sud "abou i two hours after eat- alkali is Philips" host It I remained standard i) in the 50 = Hae is | ne wl es Hi sures, ol : pressure, gives a light much like day- ht. i The new lamps glow almost immedi- ately after the current is switched on. After about one minute the light in- tensity increases to the maximum value. There is no liquid in the lamp, nothing that resembles the old mer- cury lamp. Moreover, it is about three times as, efficient as the best filament electric lamp of equal candle-power, which * means that, for the same amount of current, three times more portant, the color is pearly that of day- light, One of the main features of the new lamp is to be seen in the possibility of using any kind of glas from the softest glass to quartz. Especially in using '"uviol" glass, so called because it transmits ultra-violet radiation, the new lamp is very like a little sun so far as the color of its rays is concern- ed, These new lamps can be installed in windowless offices and factories be- cause they give daylight illumination with an amount of ultra-violet rays equal to that in sunshine on a moun- tain 6,000 feet high. ween Foot Dimensions Being: Sought in Great Britain The British Boot, Shoe and Allied Trades Research Association has made researches at Northampton which mark the first step in a statis- tical survey of foot measurements, first of Britain and secondly, it is hoped, of foreign countries, according to the London correspondent of the Journa! of the American Association. "At Northampton 2,600 people of all ages were measured," he says. "Each foot was measured twice, once with and once without the weight of the body on it. The measurements sre declared to have proved the valu of the angles in the new methods of measuring the scaffolds of the feet. When the survey has been extended io other towns, the association will have boot and shoe measurements of Bri- tain. "The investigation on which the re- port is based is the outcome of the invention by the research workers of the association of a foot-measuving machine, which reduces the present a simple formula easily understood by a person with an elementary knowl- edge of trigonometry and geometry. The new machine is the necessary complement of the machine tools used in the mass production of boots and shoes. "For centuries boots and shoes were made by the craftsman, who supple- mented his simple measurements by a mental picture of his customer's feet. "In making the foot measurements one important point seems to have been overlooked. In civilized countries some deformity of the foot due to the wearing of boots and s}oes is practic- ally universal. Therefore measure- ments of races which do not wear these articles and of the few persons who have always worn boots properiy ' made for them by a good craftsman should have been taken in order to ! arrive at the measurements of the normal foot," i mre Thunder Shower Silver pale Runs the 'pata of rivulet and snail Through the dark wood, where each brown bole Drips magic. * There a green nymph stole From the old sycamore's embraces, And there a crooked satyr fled. . . . Oh dim rain-shadowed places, Are your ancient gods not dead? Now the rain Ceases; birds are whispering again; Sunlit, Tour silver swans go by And sunlight, mocking necromancy, Upon a silver lake of cky. . . . Shows me a crooked branch and old; Makes my sweet nymph of fancy A honeysuckle, trailing gold. ~--Bridget: Lowry, in the London Observer. DRAPERIES MADE NEW "When we resumed housekeeping a month ago I found my draperies had become creased from packing. I hung Ey oof sented. until the happy | thought struck me to dye them. 1 Jun area 'them 'a 'deeper green, and Dyes they look have never seen of London presented head boy of ham, with a guinea. Time-honored ceremony was: participated in when the Lord Mayor Christ's Hospital School,, Horse- Here and There The only book possessed by the Es- kimos of Labrador, printed in their own language, has up to now been the Bible. The light emitted by glow-worms has just the same effects on photo- graphic plates as that of X-rays, thieves are more apt to go in "gangs" than girls, who invariably work alone. Britain's wet and windy weather has had the effect of keeping the nation and removing refuse. Wallpaper that is fadeless, wash- able, and very lasting has been made from glass, according to the claim of a German inventor, Silver-tinted 'grease-paint is becom- ing popular for adorning the rims of the eyes in Paris. The new fad is for ! evening dress only, Defects of hearing are increasing among the London school children, while girls are said to be more liable to bad eyesight than boys. by the City of London. It includes lands and fishing rights which were granted to the City as long ago as 1609. Traffic and other noises are said to deter the blind children of New York from learning to walk, as they are guided by the noise of their own foot- steps. Warm weather clothing was the sub- ject of a recent test, the average out- fit of men weighing 8 1b. 6 oz, while that of women weighed only 2 lb. 10 0z. Great Britain and Japan are said to be the greatest foreign investors in China, their total investments being about five times as much as those of the United States. By dropping "dry ice" powder from aeroplanes on the upper side of clouds | a Dutch professor has caused heavy rain to fall. The "dry ice" was pow-, dered carbon dioxide. Rl "Rain" From a Cannon An ingenious device known as the "rain cacnon," used for watering fields, was displayed at Hanover, Ger- many. It consists of a jet mounted on a cylindrical pressure tank. The upper portion of -the tank is filled b with air, which is compressed by the water until there is equillibrium, 'When this is attained a valve located in the nozzle opens an orifice. Owing to the sudden release, the air pressure ejects the water in a powerful jet and throws it a eonsiderable distance and at the same 'ime moves it around slightly. This method is considered a great. i t on the old sprinkler and pipe-line methods. A small rain can- non, requiring only a pressure of two! of three atmospheres, is finding a ready market. ---- Pigeon Travehs 7,200 Mio EE Lae ved this is the longest pigeon fight ever recorded. -- ie Ne Virtue fag dyeing | of cloth' . oT, ., Montreal. The-world admires those who speak to it of virtue eloquently; but God loves those only who know how to Wastice it it with courage and 'perser . Pichot. | Ban: Among juvenile criminals, the boy | healthy by cleaning gutters and drains i Valuable property in Ireland is held _ Paris. --A pigeon selonsed | at Arras. in | France on Aug. 15 has | captured at] Saigon, Ind on Sept. 9, after traveling ho from the start Owl Laffs A cigarette compan; has a new slo- "Keep Kissable!" This will probably lead to one cf those tests where they blindfold you, let you kiss six girls and then tell Mr. Ripley which one you liked best. Neighbor--"Have you seen the new play that 1 wrote about the man and wife who were quarreling?" Mr. Perkins--*"No, but I heard you land your wife rehearsing it." Bus Conductor--"One seat on top, 'ma'am, and one ins'de." Lady--"You surely wouldn't separ-| ate a mother from her daughter?" Conductor (ringing bell)--"Never again, lady, I did it once and 1 have regretted it ever since" Suitor---"Do you cver peep through | | the keyhole when 1 am sitting in the parlor with your sister?" | | Small Brother-="Sometimes, when | mother ain't there," The Golfer--"They're all afraid to play me. What do you :,0k my handi- cap is?" The Girl--"Oh, I don' be your.face." know. It may The woman in the flat above Takes vocal--how we curse-- And every day in every way | She's getting worse and worse. | IE Miss Rayner -"I ho.2 youll dance with me to-night, Mr. Jones." Mr, Jones--"0Oh, rather! I hope you didn't think that I came here merely for pleasure!" . It may have been an apple that caused Adam's dowaofall, but these days men fall mostly for peaches. A" nervous breakdown seems to be a Jux- | ury in which only the rich indulge. [3 man who is only -a follower can't see where he is going for the dust in his eyes. It takes a genuine genius thes~ da . to tell the d'erence be- tween a luxury and an absolute neces- sity. It takes big men to do big things; this holds especially true in public office; big men have a hard time getting public office, true as this is. Perhaps every man at one time makes u fool out of himself ever a wo- man. The lucky ones are those who 'do it early in life ar : get it over with, We are quite sure if we did smoke we would be courteous enough when in a private home to at least ask if there was any objection to smoking before we would light np and try to stink TRE TIT ying Times Mell Your F CR | eo |} Ido} i RN RAGAN Te) i 2) Norwegian jump into the first deep puddle we came to if we could not do without | smoking for a few minutes. A magician sald to his youthful helper: "Now, are you sure there is nothing In the silk hat?" "Positively," replied the urchin, "toe! § rabbit you put in before the shoe el away." a = Limited, Aral Hammond--""Why are files like tele graph operators?" Mrs. Hammond--"Because they dot and dash." MINE FOR SALE OR SALE--PURE NOVA pr mink. My customers won SWeeD- stakes and firsts, Chicago, Por Stockholm Mink Shows, 1930. at va Brook ik number to book. Satisfaction Scotia's oldest minkery, Evolution Age gix--fdather gives Willle roller | Farm, West Middle River, Nova skates. TOCES Age twelve -- father gives Willle H AL. Hare ING oh famous bicycle. tion free. psychologist. N aluabié 1 Write Simpson's, 38 Mi ¢N rontr. TKS: FINEST QUALITY NORTH~ Quebec minks. Write (o Age eighteen--{father gives Willle Ave. To» college education, Age twenty-three--{ather gives Will- ie diploma. Bt py Bertram, Box 30, Age twenty-four--Father gives Will | Hearst, Ont. ie job. Peace Peace cannot be established on the point of a sword. It must be broad- based upon the will of the people. AT nn. Age twenty-four ye father gives Willie up. 1, three days-- The battleship was in port, and visitors were being shown around. The guide was exhibiting a bronze tablet set in the deck. Guide--"Here is where our gallant captain fell." Old Lady--"No wonder, 1 nearly tripped over it myself," i Every noble] crown earth will forever be, thorns.--Thomas Carlyle. is, and on a crown of NEURALGIA p YA application of Min. ard n according to direction just "hits the spot". You'l thet you get wonderful relief! Foreman--"Do you know that I be- gan life as a barefoot boy." | Fireman--"Well, 1 wasn't born with shoes on, either." 21 Diner--"Have you any wild duck?" Waiter--"No, sir; but we can take a tame one and irritate it for you." | Josie--"A boy friend of mine bas several cups for golf, tennis--also medals for rowing." | Carie--"Well, he must be quite an athlete." J Josie--"No, he's a pawn broker." ml ret, When a man is too busy to be happy he is to be pitied. When TEETHING. mokes- HIM FUSSY One of the most important things ! you can do to make a teething baby comfortable is to see that little bowels do their work of carrying off waste matter promptly and regular ly. For this nothing is better than Castoria, a pure vegetable prepara- tion specially made for bables and children. Castoria acts so gently you can give it to young infants to a Xo ra "Cramps aliniost Killed me" wH AT a tragedy! Every month . those awful pains. She suf- fered so.. cramps. Why don't you try Lydia E. Pinke bam's Vegetable Compound during . nearly doubled up with relieve colic. Yet it is always ef: these trying times? fective, for other children, too. Re- sli be f th blets i member, Castoria contains no AD 2 his o Ld aarsh drugs, no narcotics--is abso- Jour DANCER 5+ ACO] Oe aty on your medicine shelf. Their tonic action makes you feel so much bet ter, on days when you're "not well." Just ask for Lydia E. Pinkham's "Tablets. oh la = FAD Nar RN lutely harmless. When your baby 18 fretful with teething or a food ipset, give a cleansing dose of | Jastoria. Be sure you get genuine Jastoria with the name: | Zour Rion CASTORIA i | CHILDREN CRY FOR {IRED AFTER 10 HOURS SLEEP After Lunch Would Sleep 3 Hours NOW SHE HAS "THAT KRUSCHEN FEELING" Everyone knows the meaning of the phrase : ** That Kruschen feel- ing." Well, here is a typical instance of the extreme reverse of that condition, This woman had a perpetual tired feeling, See how it affected her s-- 1 am 84 years old, and the motherof two small sons, So my life is a ve busy one, Ever since I can remember, have always suffered with a feeling of tiredness, and never felt ready to get up in the morning, even after 10 hours sound sleep. I have often felt so tired after lunch, that I have slept for 8 and 4 hours, Baving to do the work in the gvening. 1 Kruschen Salts for a come Bi} lost the tired feeling etely. I feel fresh and wide , and I have never felt better in or life," --Mrs, E.M. W. Millions of men and women all over the world take Kruschen Salts daily--not Cod Liver Ql 5 | ISSUE No. 41--31 because they are really sick, mind ~--but because they know the daily dose of Kruschen kee, weeps them always fit and energetic, and keeps the system free from poisonous matter caused by irregular or insufficient climination. People who take fren Salts every ing don't have are always free from a Salt: Drug Stores at 45¢. and 7c. per '