Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 11 Feb 1932, p. 7

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o great lesson glologists have] i as Bet Garters British' mountain climbers 26,44 eently conquered by a British expedi- tion without the use of oxygen. On the other hand, oxygen was resorted serab 'height of 25,500 feet: "A dead, numbing cold was ereep- fog up my limbs, a thing I had oniy ence before felt. . « Something had to be done.' Like an inspiration the thought of trying the. effect of oxygen. . . . A few niinutes later after the first deep breath I felt the tingling' sensation of returning life and warmth, . . . We connected up ihe apparatus in sueh a way that we could breathe a small quantily of 'exygen throughout the night. yesult was marvelous. We 'slept welll' and warmly. . . . There is little doubt that it was the use of orygen that saved our lives 'during this second might in our high camp." The next day two climbers aided by oxygen made 1,800 fees at an aver- age speed of 900 feet an hour. An- ether party that had set out earlier * without oxygen and in better weather eould progress only 330 feet an hour. Native porters who scoffed at oxygen Jater came to depend on what they eslled "English air." The anti-oxygen climbers rely on acclimatization. To them it is folly 10 "rush" a mountain. A year should ' ' be spent in a high atmosphere. There- . after deep breathing keeps the oxy- * gen-tension as high as need be, so that artificial respiration can lend no additional aid. _ . Dr. Raymond Greene weighs the arguments of the two schools in "Na- | ture" and reaches the conclusion that | the evidence is all in favor of sayges \ in climbing from a low level at alpine speed. But he doubts the efficacy of existing apparatus; It is heavy and ## cannot be trusted to operate. Fail- wre of his oxygen supply would spell death to the unacclimatizéd mountain- eer who reached the top of Everest. To produce an apparatus which will be light, simple and trustworthy 'and which will meet all possible tests in yefrigerators and experimental tun- pels and on European mountains is one of the tasks assumed by a com- mittee of the British Association for the Advancement of Sclence. With ~#ich an apparatus Greene belicves that Everest will be conquered. Sb e%%%%% ofaGuard . %%- v , MORE VITAMINS AND SMALLER ROPS. ; ty Ci It is not often that the scientist! permits himself to speculate on the! future of society, but here comes Dr. Walter Hough with a stion so| plausible that it deserves to spread abroad. It may be mentioned that Dr. Hou 'of anthropology of Her: 'When Business Is Good Advertise Some to Get When Business Is Slow, Advertise More to Get Some. : 1 I you can smile before breakfast it 0d T week. Dr. Car-{ 1s very likely that you can smile the heart is nerveless and| rest of the day. Love at first sight has immortal, ; |= great precedent: Adam's for Eve. 'YGEN OR NOT FOR Many a man has lost his fight by. stop- ard | PIDE to pat himself on the back. Any are divided on the bene- wife knows that the ideal husband is : Ten | One Who can pay her compliments and v in-| her i A lot of he talkies are ; dumb. As soon as a husband is broken' 7 feet) were re-| 0 ne bad habit he acquires another. 'With airplanes and' radios riding the air all the time It is no wonder the air elous ; tragie bucks up occasionally. 3 with Eye ee our Prof. | Purse under - your pillow does not of | necessarily ' mean «| enough to retire on. your present position for a new one, be sure the new one has mor- advant- ages than a mere advance in salary. Here's something for the girls to con- sider: When airplanes become com- mon and take the place of autos, there will be no opportunity to get out and walk back home. He who laughs last laughs best, but he soon gets a repu- tation for being mighty dumb. 2 Haity--"Is Gertrude homely?" | Charles--" '| fortune, her husband didn't marry her | for money." 4 fountain pens?" sell "em." \ "Well, you will keep the one I wae go- ing to buy. able discovery. A tribe of human be- ings that possess no weapons of war fare.) - Listener--""Is that eo? Well, I didn't think there was any part of the. world that you have|that uncivilized." inns, in the quaintest of French set- tlements. As you rush by in one of the innumerable trains that pass it daily, you may catch glimpses of tall| no t.ump bid offe:s ihe better chance trees trailing their branches in the * still stream--hardly a dozen yards wide--of flocks of white ducks pad- dling together, and ef queer punts drawn up on th shelvirg shore or tied to soggy; patched-up landingstairs. Brown--"Waen you sleep, your fore- head reminds me of a story." Light Brown--""What Story, 'Sleep | ing Beauty?" and then, between the trees, a figure kneeling at the water's edge, bending Z~------QUCH! Sam held her hand and she held hiz'n, And then they hugged sand went to They did not know her dad had riz'n, Madder than hops and simply siz'n; And really 'tiz'n right to liz'n, But Sam got hiz'n and went out whiz'n, Trouble Averted in Either Case A man who gies in when he is A man who gives in when he is right Little George (after hie had been in- troduced to the guests for dinner)-- -- NOTICE TO MOTORISTS | GLARING LIGHTS ENDED BY THE rs ¢ t bi Fd the head lamps © Jour automo realy increase your driving vision, | ting th t a painted light bulb. exclusive agency sell STOP-GLARE REFLE win | a smile)--"Surely, son. s--"Well, if her face is her bins, Timid Customer -- "Do you keep Too Smart Saleslady--"No, but we| Timid Customer (walking out) -- iii Explorer--"I Neve made a remark \ French Scene If the sun shines, you can see, now ovr a pile of clothes, washing--her head bound with a red handkerchief, If you are quick, the miniature river will open just before you round the curve, disclosing in the distance groups of willows, and a rickety foot- bridge perched up on poles to keep it dry. All this you see in % flash. But you must stop at the old-fash- joned station, within ten minutes of the Harlem river, cross the road, skirt an old gardn bound with a fence and bursting with flowers, and so pass on through a bare field to the water's edge, before you catch sight of the cosy little houses lining the banks. . . 1 have a love for the out-of-the-way places of the earth when they bristle all over with the quaint and the cld and the odd, and are mouldy with the picturesque. But here is an in-the- way place, all sunshine and shimmer, with never a fringe >f mould upon it, and yet you lose your heart at. a glance. ' It is as charming in its buat life as an old Holland canal; it is as delightful in its shore life as the Seine; and it is as picturesque and en- trancing in its sylvan beauty as the most exquisite of English streams.-- From "A Day at Laguerre's and Other Days," by F. Hopkinson Smith. Auction and Contract players: . bid two lc~-ts and fourth hand has It is the miost delightful of Frerch | bid two gpades. With Hand A, the|eral rule, bid two no trump if you have a double stopper in the suit bid or three hearts if you have three or more only two hearts. [or this reason the hearts to an honor and a sound no trump. What New York Is Wearing dealer should bid no trump, He has a double stopper {1 the spade suit and When I am dead, and ashes in your In a mild Virginia meadow take your stand, B NNEBELLE N h And pause a moment, thinking of the YA EBELLE WORTHINGTON past, Ilustrated Dressmaking L - Those rare road-walking days that ressjiaking, Lesson Bur Think, "This was her body that swung And in especial the Virginia sod. Here we walked together, the wind As on the first bright morning of the Hungry, tired, and tremblingly in love, And something sang, I think a brown These thoughts will pass like summer, 1 shall be there as happy as before. ~ A discussion of 'he following ques. for game. { tion. of a correspondent should interest heart suit, it 1s up to him to bid three ~ hearts; The bid ¢" two no trump indi _ "First hand has bid no trump, sec. cates a strong hand but no particular ond has passed, third has over-called his partner with two hearts and fourth OE [has bid two epade:. Under what con TT " | ditions should the original Hand (a) 'dear, may I have a dime, |bid two no trumps, (b) raise his part-|or king and one other : ner to three hearts." ie C This particular question opens up & ait is" y | very wide field of discussion and one Little George (anxiously) -- "This|that can be handled only in a very ou won't make me give it back | general way. For the purpose of this L visitors are gone, will you |discussion ft will be assumed that . | Daddy dear?" a ¢ neither side has .. reore. Also assume 3 that the dealer has bid one xo trump with each of the following hands: Hearts--Q, 8 Diamongs--K, 10, 9, § Spades--K, J, 7 : B Clubs--A, 10, 4, 2 Spades--10, 4 Cc Diamonds--K, Q, 9, 8 Spades--Q, 7, 2 6 D Clubs--A/K, Q 7, 6, 2 Last Instructions hand, couldn't last. along with me, | The same road the same violets, the very locust tree." Think, "God she loved, and the wit: nesses of God whirled world. wood-dove." Pause no more. I shall be there to watch you turn aside, Remembering. Then fling the ashes wide. b --Virginia Dare in The Montreal Star. re eerie The Interdependence of Nations Detroit News: Every great modern Bess--*"Jack Timid has asked m it he might call to-night. I think he wants fo tell me that he loves me. Tess--"Oh, that goes Without say ing" : The Poet's Day | {The poet's day is : other, : | world economy. Even we in the | our wealth is not simply the coun- | "aiternt trom sa Vitaly. | pot always industrial country is dependent on United States are finding out that try's resources, means of production and population, but is conditioned by the international exchange of goods, services and capital. National self- containment is a pure political phantasy, &s our own rapidly dwind- ling foreign trade with its terrible | concomitants of bankruptcy and um- | employment so tragically" attests. ---- ye whe list of American Presidents | presents an almost unbroken Array | ot British pames."--Havelock Ellis, Bad Attacks of Flu ope «J have had of the 'Au' PPL frequently since Wendel 1055 ache \ very ba ks "1 his partner has a strong Ihelp forithe heart bid. tate to help your partner's suit bid with only two trumps or less, The only exception to this is when you hold ace In Hand B, the dealer should un- doubtedly bid three hearts, He has no stopper in the spade suit and yet very strong help for his partner's heart bid. This hand is a fine example of the type of hand on which to assist partner's suit bid, In Hand C, the.dealer should pass. He has only one stopper in spades and A jess than normal help for his partner's : ; For that reason, he should neither bid two no trump nor three Cluba--a, 30,4, 2. hearts, It is a fine example of a hand . that is just under the requirements for . a two no trump bid. In Hand D, the dealer should bid two Hearts=Q, 10. 7.3 no trump. He has only one stopper in the spades but his set-up club suit Dismonds--H, Q. § makes the hand "a good chance for game in no trump. contains only two small hearts makes aD 2 a threeheart bid inadvisable. a fine example of a hand that is just over the requirements for a two no trump bid. It is manifestly impossible to include Hearis--7, 4 in this discussion all of the various types of hands that might come under Dimonds 2 10,7 the conditions specified in the ques- . tion, but the foregoing examples are Then assume that hie partner has|typical and will act as a guide in the great majority of instances. As a gen- are gathered at the front, to compen- heart suit, The fact that it Keeping the windshield wiper blade Lack at the top of the arc, and wiping the dust from the glass before driving into the sun, Both are so easy that it is surprising more motorists do not see that they are done. overly stiff is really the ideal thing vith which to clean the closed car tip. It gets down into the material .n a fashion that is impossible for a cloth or sponge. A little lukewarm wa:or --and nothing else--is the thing to { use on the brush. i ping back into the carburetor, a con- dition that may cause the eagine to catch fire, especially ix the outside of it is dirty and covered with oil. The four most commen ones are dirt in the carburetor, sticking intake valves, | water in the gasoline, and an air leak ! at' the intake manifold connections. | the windghield open, maki it a { simple matter to reach throuch and Hints to Motorists Front wheels of all cars toe-in, or Stoplight bulbs are more powertul| 43 West Adelaide Street, Toronto, Ont. than many car-owners realize. They N OFFE ! R TO EVE average around fifteen candlepower in A HEEB LAL brilliance. AIDS TO VISIBILITY. Two handy aids to visibility ave: USE OF BRUSH HELPS. A brush with bristles that ave ast CAUSES OF CARBURETOR POPPING There are quite many causes of pup- PUT WINDSHIELD DOWN. Many a car owner is only partially locking his door these days by leaving unlatch a door from the insice. pn en Astronomers Will Toronto--The Royal Astronomical Society of Canada have formed a committee to organize an expedition to Northern Quebec to observe a total eclipge of the sun on August 31. Professor H, R. Kingston, Lon- don, Ont, suggested the possibility of broadcasting the eclipse by tele vislon from an airplane. He sald the path of totally wolld be 100 miles wide. keen ls senior Imports of Canadian toba:c through the Port of London in 16:0 amounted to 728,000 lbs. and in 1981 to 2,070,000 Jbe., and is still on the increase. HER HUSBAND TEASED HER Here's a splendid slip that has quite @ number of points to aid and enhance the matronly figure. There is the bias cut of the upper| pecoming absorbed into your system, edge, so comfortable and slimming to| simply collects and ferments inside back makes it ehadow proof. Style No. 3480 will give you a mar-| the flow of gastric and other juices / velously slimming silhouette, that will| to aid digestion, and then ensures give you a more youthful appearance. complete, yegulat and amfail elimina e du C e You can make it in crepe de chine,| 4,00 of a ae A il and a renewed and whole-hearted lei dpi dete to sere Snipe ini | the Acid 9 an nches bust. of ol It takes but 2% yards of 39-inch penalty. ec Ci material for the medium size. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plain- ize of such crepe satin or flat crepe. ugue in Seven Sharps. your nelgh- But not for long! "1 started taking Kruschen Salts | for biliousness, and for the last two { years I have been rfectly free from | an attack. Now I continue to take { them, as I find they keep me in perfect health, My husband used to joke about me taking Kruschen Salts ; now he takes them himself, so do my children, My sincere thanks." --Mrs. G. P. 'When your gastric or digestive juices refuse to flow, your food, instead of The wrap-over arrangement at the en AT Sat to the root of the trouble. It first stimulates PURELY VEGETABLE 3 ERS Unless the motorist is 0 eo Ramsa, aware of this, he might, in just drop- a att A orneys, 274 Bank ping around to pick up a bulb, get one of inadequate power, It takes quite a bit of brilliance in the signal to miake certain the oncoming driver will catch the "stop." Street, Ottawa, Canada. yiate remittance. Rosenfeld Poultry and View Sun's Eclipse]. n is a combination of sip SHdnmuhatie, SIEPILLS Classified Advertising TYPEWRITERS ONDERFUL BARGAINS IN RBe BUILT typewriter NDE WOODS, REMING PONS. ROYALS wise sate for the fact that the wheels taper | all Soakes of Jortables, Spec r from top to bottom. Hom express prepaid: DER WOULD Lb, factory rebuilt, regular $156 MU P YHT, | cur price .50. Wri CH POWER IN STOP LIGHT CORNEY TYPEWRITERS, olan & List of wanted inventions and full +. Ormation sent free. { t i i OULTRY AND EGGS WANTED: Highest market prices paid. Imme< £€ Co, Montreal. HIGHEST PRICES PAID The Canadian Wool Co. Ltd. 2 CHURCH ST. TORONTO sh tt nt There's something sort of pathetie about a horsefly sitting on the radiator of a truck. NEW DISCOVERY FOR DEAFNESS a pace, so smal oN in the outer ear 1 owerful enough enal ou to hear in Church, Theatra, meetings, heme conversation, ete, Write tor Booklet and trial offer today. The Great Lonion Hing Ald Co. Ltd. Suite 1112 Star Bldg, 80 King W., Toronte "Stomach Ulcer | "Had an ulcer for 7 years with pain two hours after eating; also had hemorrhage. - Took Dr. McLeod's 'Stomachic' and soon pain left me. I have had no return of stomach trouble the past 4 years. 'G. Town- send, Gorrie" For introductory bot tle write: Dr, McLeod, Wroxeter, Ont. Cuticura Soap for Daily Use tieura@intmen To Heal Skin Troubles Scop 28¢. Ointment 25¢. and 50c¢. CHILDREN ITLL ELL! ous health [CTRL] SCOTT'S EMULSION 2» of Norwegian (YR ETTTR oi STS RT Vitamins A and 'D ve S710 INDIGESTION w. oulded bodice| you, producing harmful acids and ACID STauRN 3 waistline, ice gases which ol rise to biliousness, "MEADACHE 4 i * heartburn flatulence. GASES -NAUSE CK jSomachs. sont stomachs and ind ion usually mean excess acid. The stomach over-stimulated. Ave an ) Too much acid makes the st y Hata mn i many times Ci SB pir nl a as ht aa Ri te It i sl i { +

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